Crosbie v. 750 West Owners Assoc.

2026 UT App 9
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJanuary 23, 2026
DocketCase No. 20240892-CA
StatusPublished

This text of 2026 UT App 9 (Crosbie v. 750 West Owners Assoc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crosbie v. 750 West Owners Assoc., 2026 UT App 9 (Utah Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

2026 UT App 9

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

WESTON CROSBIE, Appellant, v. 750 WEST OWNERS ASSOCIATION, TROY A. JUERGENS, RANDI JUERGENS, DANNY MAUGHAN, ANTIDA MACEDONE, AND JOHN MACEDONE, Appellees.

Opinion No. 20240892-CA Filed January 23, 2026

Second District Court, Ogden Department The Honorable Craig Hall No. 230901089

Ken Brown and Zack Hadley, Attorneys for Appellant Blain H. Johnson, Robert L. Janicki, and Matthew A. Jones, Attorneys for Appellees 750 West Owners Association, Danny Maughan, Antida Macedone, and John Macedone Bradley L. Tilt and Felicia B. Canfield, Attorneys for Appellees Troy A. Juergens and Randi Juergens

JUDGE JOHN D. LUTHY authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES GREGORY K. ORME and RYAN M. HARRIS concurred.

LUTHY, Judge:

¶1 Weston Crosbie owns two numbered units in a commercial development in Harrisville, Utah. He also obtained deeds to two unnumbered parcels in the same development. When he did, the owners of the other numbered units asserted that the unnumbered parcels are designated in the development’s Crosbie v. 750 West Owners Association

governing documents as common area and that the purported transfer of those parcels to Crosbie had no legal effect. Crosbie sued the other owners and the owners association, asserting (among other things) a claim to quiet title to the two unnumbered parcels in himself. The other owners and the owners association moved for summary judgment, which the district court granted, concluding that the governing documents unambiguously designate the unnumbered parcels as common area.

¶2 Crosbie appeals, contending that there is ambiguity in the governing documents as to whether the unnumbered parcels are common area, that there remains a genuine dispute of material fact as to the developers’ intent regarding the unnumbered parcels, and that summary judgment was therefore inappropriate. We agree. Accordingly, we reverse the grant of summary judgment and remand this matter for additional proceedings consistent with this opinion.

BACKGROUND 1

The Creation of the Hart Community Ownership Development

¶3 On July 17, 2015, Sean Hart Properties, LLC (the LLC) and the William C. and Shelley A. Hart Amended and Restated Trust (the Trust) (collectively, the Declarants) recorded a plat (the Plat) for the Hart Community Ownership Development (the Development). The Development covers roughly two acres of land mostly adjacent to 750 West in Harrisville. The map portion of the Plat is reproduced below. The same day the Declarants recorded the Plat, they recorded an associated Declaration of

1. “In reviewing a district court’s grant of summary judgment, we view the facts and all reasonable inferences drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party and recite the facts accordingly.” M.A. v. Regence BlueCross BlueShield of Utah, 2020 UT App 177, n.1, 479 P.3d 1152 (cleaned up).

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Covenants, Conditions, Easements and Restrictions (the Declaration).

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The Plat

¶4 The Plat divides the Development—which is identified on the Plat as “Parcel ‘A’”—into multiple, smaller parcels. Five of those parcels are identified as numbered units (the Units), which are each set back roughly twenty-two to twenty-four feet from 750 West.

¶5 Between the Units and the street are thirteen parcels labeled either “CA” or “LCA,” which stand respectively for “COMMON AREA” and “LIMITED COMMON AREA.” The Plat states, “CA = COMMON AREA,” and it defines that term as follows:

FOR COMMON USE OF ALL OWNERS OF COMMERCIAL UNITS IN [the Development] AS SPECIFIED IN [the Declaration] AND IN THE BYLAWS OF THE PROPERTY OWNERS ASSOCIATION, FURTHERMORE THE COMMON AREA IS DEDICATED AS PERPETUAL OPEN AREA AND AS EASEMENTS FOR PUBLIC AND PRIVATE UTILITIES.

The Plat states, “LCA = LIMITED COMMON AREA” and defines that term this way:

PARKING USE FOR THE COMMERCIAL UNIT OWNERS ADJACENT TO AND WEST OF THE THE [sic] AREA DESIGNATED AS “LCA” AS SHOWN HEREON AND AS SPECIFIED IN [the Declaration] AND IN THE BYLAWS OF THE PROPERTY OWNERS ASSOCIATION, FURTHERMORE THE LCA AREA IS DEDICATED AS PERPETUAL EASEMENTS FOR PUBLIC AND PRIVATE UTILITIES.

20240892-CA 4 2026 UT App 9 Crosbie v. 750 West Owners Association

¶6 The Plat identifies an additional parcel (the Trust Parcel) as belonging to the Trust. The Trust Parcel is a strip of land running along the diagonal, western border of the Development. A final, irregularly shaped parcel (the LLC Parcel) sits generally between the Units and the Trust Parcel. When the Plat and the Declaration were recorded, the LLC owned all of the land in the Development except the Trust Parcel.

¶7 Both the Trust Parcel and the LLC Parcel are marked in multiple places on the Plat with the abbreviation “PB.” The Plat notes that “PB” stands for “PARCEL ‘B,’” and it describes “PARCEL ‘B’” in relevant part as follows:

FOR COMMON USE OF ALL OWNERS OF COMMERICAL UNITS IN [the Development] AS SPECIFIED IN [the Declaration] AND IN THE BYLAWS OF THE PROPERTY OWNERS ASSOCIATION. FURTHERMORE THE PARCEL “B” AREA IS DEDICATED AS PERPETUAL OPEN AREA AND AS EASEMENTS FOR PUBLIC AND PRIVATE UTILITIES.

The Plat further notes, “PB PER [the Declaration] IS ‘BASICALLY THE GLOBAL PARCEL A LESS THE UNITS, CA’S AND LCA’S.’ SUCH ENCOMPASSES THE SEPARATE WILLIAM C. & SHELLY HART PARCEL.”

The Declaration

¶8 The Declaration begins with recitals containing metes and bounds descriptions of Parcel A (i.e., the Development in full), the LLC Parcel, and the Trust Parcel. It also contains a recital that states, “The purpose of this instrument is to provide for the preservation of the values of both Units and Common Area within the Project, and for the maintenance of the Common Areas therein.”

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¶9 The Declaration further provides definitions of terms used therein, including the following:

• “1.06 ‘Common Area’ shall mean all real property (including the improvements thereon) owned by the Association for the common use and enjoyment of the Owners, as identified in the Plat. The Common Area to be owned by the Association at the time of the conveyance of the first Unit shall constitute all portions of the Project, except the Units.”

• “1.15 ‘Owner’ shall mean any person who is the owner of record (as reflected by the records in the office of the County Recorder of Weber County, Utah) of a fee or undivided fee interest in any Unit, and any contract purchaser of any Unit.”

• “1.16 ‘Parcel A’ shall consist of the Project, the LLC Parcel and the Trust Parcel.”

• “1.18 ‘Project’ shall mean the Property to be divided into Units, including all structures, improvements, appurtenances and common areas located or constructed thereon or belonging thereto.”

• “1.20 ‘Unit’ shall mean and refer to any one of the numbered Units within the Project as such are shown upon and designated on the Plat for private ownership and individually numbered and are intended to be used and occupied by a single commercial enterprise.”

¶10 Finally, the Declaration contains the following additional relevant provisions:

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• “2.02 Division into Units, Limited Common Area and Common Area. The Project is hereby divided into five (5) Units, each consisting of a fee simple interest in a portion of the Project as said Project is defined in the Plat. The Limited Common Area is for the exclusive use and benefit of the Owner or Owners of the Units served thereby.

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2026 UT App 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crosbie-v-750-west-owners-assoc-utahctapp-2026.