Cache Valley Banking Co. v. Cache County Poultry Growers Ass'n

209 P.2d 251, 116 Utah 258, 1949 Utah LEXIS 219
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 17, 1949
DocketNo. 7304.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 209 P.2d 251 (Cache Valley Banking Co. v. Cache County Poultry Growers Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cache Valley Banking Co. v. Cache County Poultry Growers Ass'n, 209 P.2d 251, 116 Utah 258, 1949 Utah LEXIS 219 (Utah 1949).

Opinion

*259 WADE, Justice.

The question here posed is whether the evidence sustains the findings of the court that the defendant’s and its predecessor’s use of plaintiff’s property as a right of way for ingress and egress to and from its property was adverse and against plaintiff and its predecessors and not permissive under them. The facts, circumstances, happenings and events surrounding this controversy are not in substantial dispute. The defendant, the Utah Poultry & Farmers Cooperative, respondent here, and its predecessors have used a part of the property now belonging to plaintiff, the Cache Valley Banking Company, executor of the will of Wilford F. Baugh and his heirs, for a period of more than 20 years in entering and leaving its property. This user has been continuous and not interrupted by plaintiff or its predecessors and the only question is whether the evidence sustains the court’s findings that the use was adverse and not permissive only.

The defendant owns a tract of land 99 feet wide on the west side of Main Street between 1st and 2nd South Streets in Logan, Utah. The north boundary line thereof is 177 feet north of the southwest corner of the intersection of 2nd South and Main Streets and runs east and west for a distance of 231 feet. The west 66 feet of this property runs south to the north side of 2nd South Street. On the east side of this 66 foot strip is a 12 foot right of way covering the east 6 feet thereof and the west 6 feet of the property adjoining it to the east and running north and south from 2nd South Street to the south boundary line of defendant’s property on the north. Originally this right of way was 127.5 feet long. While defendant’s tract is 99 feet wide on Main Street and the south side thereof at that point is only 78 feet north from 2nd South, at a point 132 feet west of Main Street the boundary line turned to the north 49.5 feet leaving a narrow strip, owned by someone else, that length and 33 feet wide between the east side of defendant’s property on the west and the west end of its property on the *260 east. At that point the property of the predecessor of the defendant was only 49.5 feet wide from north to south. Later defendant’s predecessor purchased 37 feet of that strip which is marked “D” on the sketch and left the strip only 12.5 feet long and the right of way only 90.5 feet long. The heirs of plaintiff’s testate own the land bounding defendant’s property on the north for the full 231 feet. Their property facing Main Street is 214 feet wide and runs to the west in an irregular shaped tract clear through the block to the east side of 1st West Street.

In 1917 and ’18 the Utah Idaho Central Railroad was constructed from Ogden to Logan, Utah and on into Idaho. The Logan freight depot of that company was established on the property now owned by the heirs of plaintiff’s testate, it also owned most of the property which defendant now owns. At that time the Cache Valley Commission Company which was then doing a commission business in Logan, at the solicitation of the railroad company, was induced to purchase this tract of land from the railroad company at the same price which that company had paid therefore and established its business right next to the freight yards. At the expense of the commission company the railroad company built a spur track along the north side of the property purchased by the commission company from the west out to Main Street. Some distance north from the property line of the property purchased by the commission company and now belonging to the defendant the railroad company constructed its main freight lines running from the west to the west side of Main Street and built its freight house immediately south of those lines with a loading platform on the south side thereof. The Cache Valley Commission Company built its store building immediately south of the spur track on the north side of its property. The following sketch is inserted to aid the reader in visualizing the situation. It is only for illustration purposes and not drawn to scale:

*261

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Rich County-Otter Creek Irrigation Co. v. Lamborn
361 P.2d 407 (Utah Supreme Court, 1961)
In Re Drainage Area of Bear River in Rich County
361 P.2d 407 (Utah Supreme Court, 1961)
Lunt v. Kitchens
260 P.2d 535 (Utah Supreme Court, 1953)
Buckley v. COX
247 P.2d 277 (Utah Supreme Court, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
209 P.2d 251, 116 Utah 258, 1949 Utah LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cache-valley-banking-co-v-cache-county-poultry-growers-assn-utah-1949.