Dansie v. Hi-Country Estates Homeowners Association

1999 UT 62, 987 P.2d 30, 372 Utah Adv. Rep. 6, 1999 Utah LEXIS 98, 1999 WL 410239
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1999
Docket970517
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1999 UT 62 (Dansie v. Hi-Country Estates Homeowners Association) 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
Dansie v. Hi-Country Estates Homeowners Association, 1999 UT 62, 987 P.2d 30, 372 Utah Adv. Rep. 6, 1999 Utah LEXIS 98, 1999 WL 410239 (Utah 1999).

Opinion

HOWE, Chief Justice:

¶ 1 Plaintiff J. Rodney Dansie appeals from a judgment in this declaratory judgment action that his eighty acres of real property were subject to the covenants, conditions, and restrictions which had been imposed on an adjacent subdivision, the Hi-Country Estates Phase I Subdivision (the “Subdivision” or “Phase I”), and that his property was subject to assessments made by defendant Hi-Country Estates Homeowners Association (the “Association”).

BACKGROUND

¶ 2 Dansie owns two forty-acre parcels of real property (collectively, the “Property”) located in southwest Salt Lake County, Utah. These parcels abut the Subdivision to the south and west; specifically, these parcels are described as the southwest quarter of the southwest quarter (the “westerly parcel”) and the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter (the “easterly parcel”) of section 5, township 4 south, range 2 west, Salt Lake Base and Meridian. Dansie also owns two lots within the Subdivision — lots 43 and 51.

¶ 3 In 1970, Gerald H. Bagley, Charles Lewton, and Keith Spencer (the “developers”) began to develop the Subdivision. At that time, they recorded a “Declaration of Protective Covenants” for the Subdivision. Soon afterwards, Dansie became aware of the planned Phase I development following the erection of a sign announcing the Subdivision’s development. Dansie then met the developers in connection with negotiations for an agreement between them and Dansie’s father to provide water to the Subdivision. Dansie also reviewed a sales brochure which indicated lot sizes and prices and described the Subdivision as a private community, accessible through an electronic gate. In early 1973, Lewton organized the Association, a Utah non-profit corporation, and filed a certificate of incorporation. According to the certificate of incorporation, the purpose of the Association was

to provide for maintenance, upkeep and preservation of the streets, roads and common area within [the Subdivision] and also to ... promote the health, safety and welfare of the residents within [the Subdivision] and any additions thereto as may hereafter be brought within the jurisdiction of this Association ....

*32 ¶4 In December 1973, Lewton and an entity described as “Hi-Country Estates Second” sold to Bagley, under a written contract, five forty-acre parcels of land adjacent to the Subdivision that included the Property. In this real estate contract (the “1973 Contract”), Bagley received the right to use the Association’s roads in the Subdivision for access to the property he was purchasing. In return, Bagley would become a member of the Association and pay a proportionate share of the costs of road maintenance and other services. Although the 1973 Contract’s terms specifically bound Bagley’s assigns and successors, it was not recorded in the Salt Lake County Recorder’s Office.

¶ 5 In 1977, Bagley hired Dansie as a contractor to assist with the development and maintenance of the Subdivision’s water system, by digging water lines, making connections, and repairing pumps. Acting in that capacity, Dansie aided in the placement and installation of a 40,000-gallon water tank on the westerly parcel in 1978.

¶ 6 Dansie acquired lots 51 and 43 within the Subdivision in 1984 and 1985, respectively. In November 1985, Bagley conveyed the westerly parcel to Dansie by warranty deed. Prior to that conveyance, however, Bagley had executed a trust deed in favor of United Bank, whose successor foreclosed on the westerly parcel in February 1989 (the “foreclosure”) and later sold it to Fidelity National Insurance Company. With Dansie’s aid, his in-laws, Paul G. and Ida F. Evans (the “Evanses”), purchased the westerly parcel at a public sale in March 1989. The Evanses ultimately conveyed the westerly parcel to Dansie in 1993 as part of a divorce settlement between Dansie and their daughter. In 1989, Bagley’s attorney, Ralph Marsh, conveyed the easterly parcel to Dansie. None of the aforementioned deeds to the Property made any reference to any covenants, conditions, or restrictions on the Property, nor did any appear in the Property’s chain of title.

¶ 7 In 1986, prior to the foreclosure, Dan-sie conveyed the westerly parcel and lot 43 in the Subdivision to himself and his wife by a quit-claim deed to create a joint tenancy in the parcels. This quit-claim deed describes the property conveyed as:

PARCEL ONE:
The Southwest Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of Section 5, Township 4 South, Range 2 West, Salt Lake Base and Meridian.
PARCEL TWO:
ALL OF Lot 43, HI-COUNTRY ESTATES, according to the official plat thereof on file in the Office of the Salt Lake County Recorder, State of Utah.
TOGETHER WITH a right-of-way over and across and [sic] the private roads located within said subdivision.
SUBJECT TO covenants, conditions, and restrictions on HI-COUNTRY ESTATES, as recorded in Book 3541, Page 68, Entry No. 2607748, Official Records, and the Rules and Regulations of the HI-COUNTRY ESTATES Homeowner’s Association. ALSO SUBJECT TO restrictions, rights-of-way, and easements appearing of record or enforceable in law and equity.

¶ 8 In 1990, the Association began sending the Evanses assessment notices for the westerly parcel. Dansie acted as their agent and attempted to ascertain the reason for the Association’s attempted collection of assessments on a parcel outside the boundaries of the Subdivision. While the Association had previously assessed Dansie for lots 43 and 51 in the Subdivision, and while he was aware of the specific breakdown of the Association’s assessments, he had not received assessment notices on the westerly parcel at any time he had owned the parcel prior to the foreclosure. In November 1991, Backman-Stewart Title Services, Ltd., paid the “1991 Association assessment, gate repair fee plus interest, penalties and fees” on Dansie’s behalf, although the payment was made under Dan-sie’s protest.

¶ 9 The Association continued in its attempts to collect fees and assessments on the Property from Dansie. In response to these repeated attempts, Dansie filed this declaratory judgment action against the Association, seeking a determination that he was entitled to an easement either by prescription and/or implication across the roads of the Subdivi *33 sion, and that the Subdivision’s covenants, conditions and restrictions (“CC&Rs”) and the Subdivision’s “right to make such assessments [pursuant to the CC&Rs] is limited as a matter of law against property located within the physical boundaries” of the Subdivision and not against the Property. The Association counterclaimed, seeking a judgment against Dansie for all unpaid assessments, interest on the assessments, and attorney fees, alleging that under the 1973 Contract, Dansie was a member of the Association and was therefore subject to the Subdivision’s CC&Rs and was also subject to all corresponding fees and assessments.

¶ 10 At trial, the court dismissed with prejudice Dansie’s claim for a prescriptive easement and for declaratory relief.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1999 UT 62, 987 P.2d 30, 372 Utah Adv. Rep. 6, 1999 Utah LEXIS 98, 1999 WL 410239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dansie-v-hi-country-estates-homeowners-association-utah-1999.