Davis v. Provo City Corp.

2008 UT 59, 193 P.3d 86, 611 Utah Adv. Rep. 28, 2008 Utah LEXIS 115, 2008 WL 3896923
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 26, 2008
Docket20060909
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 2008 UT 59 (Davis v. Provo City Corp.) 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
Davis v. Provo City Corp., 2008 UT 59, 193 P.3d 86, 611 Utah Adv. Rep. 28, 2008 Utah LEXIS 115, 2008 WL 3896923 (Utah 2008).

Opinion

NEHRING, Justice:

INTRODUCTION

111 While the underlying litigation in this case involves multiple issues and parties, this interlocutory appeal concerns only the dismissal of one of Richard Davis's many causes of action. The district court dismissed Mr. Davis's challenge to Provo City's annexation of his land, holding that he did not bring his challenge within the statutory time limit. The district court held that Utah Code seetion 78B-2-307(8) 1 is the statute of limitations that governs the time for bringing challenges to annexations and that, contrary to Mr. Davis's argument, Utah Code section 10-2-422 does not act as a statute of limitations and does not control when a challenge to an annexation may be brought. We agree and affirm the district court's dismissal of Mr. Davis's claim against Provo City.

BACKGROUND

12 In 1978, Provo City annexed a large tract of land in what came to be known as the Heritage Mountain Annexation. In 1998, Mr. Davis and his business partner, Greg Sperry, purchased a mining claim within the Heritage Mountain Annexation. They paid $75,000 for the property at closing and were to pay another $75,000 by April 10, 1999. Each was to pay half of the remaining $75,000 owed. Mr. Sperry failed to pay his share of the outstanding cost, and Mr. Davis paid the full $75,000. Following the final payment on the property, Mr. Davis learned that Mr. Sperry had transferred his interest to Stephen Kapelow by special warranty deed dated April 5, 1999, and recorded April 14, 1999.

3 Mr. Davis filed a complaint against Mr. Sperry and Mr. Kapelow, alleging intentional misrepresentation, wrongful conveyance of partnership property, wrongful dissolution of partnership, and breach of the partnership agreement. The complaint was later amended to include claims against Loren Kapelow; Design West, LLC; Red Slab, LLC; John L. *88 Valentine; and Provo City Corporation. In the claim against Provo City, Mr. Davis alleged that Provo City illegally annexed his land in 1978. He asserted that Provo City's annexation of his property did not follow the statutorily required procedures and was void.

T4 Provo City filed a motion to dismiss based on the statute of limitations, laches, and the Governmental Immunity Act of Utah. Beginning with the statute of limitations, Provo City first argued that Mr. Davis was barred by Utah Code section 10-2422 from challenging the annexation because the statute requires a resident of the annexed area to contest the annexation within one year. Mr. Davis could not have challenged the annexation under this statute because he did not own the property at the time. In the alternative, Provo City argued that if section 10-2-422 did not apply to Mr. Davis or the previous owners of the property, then section 78B-2-307(8), the catch-all four-year statute of limitations, applied and barred Mr. Davis's claim.

T5 In response, Mr. Davis argued that Utah Code section 10-2-422 was more specific than the general statute of limitations and, as such, was the proper limitations period for his claim against Provo City. Utah Code section 10-2-422 provides as follows:

An area annexed to a municipality under this part [Utah Code Ann. §§ 10-2-401 to -428] shall be conclusively presumed to have been validly annexed if;
(1) the municipality has levied and the taxpayers within the area have paid property taxes for more than one year after annexation; and
(2) no resident of the area has contested the annexation in a court of proper jurisdiction during the year following annexation. 2

Utah Code Ann. § 10-2-422 (2007).

T6 Mr. Davis contended that despite the property's location in an area that had been considered part of Provo City for twenty years, he never received a tax notice assessing Provo City taxes on the property while he had an interest in it. He asserted that since he was never taxed, the property could not be "conclusively presumed to have been validly annexed" and the annexation that took place in 1978 remains open to challenge.

T 7 Although surprising, the absence of any assessment of Provo City taxes on Mr. Davis's property can be explained by the fact that Mr. Davis's property interest is a mining claim. The Utah State Tax Commission is responsible for assessing mines and mining claims. The Commission relies on the counties' mapping of mining claims to determine which taxing district the property is in. Part of Mr. Davis's property is located within Provo City and part is located in unineorpo-rated Utah County. When assessing Mr. Davis's property, however, the Commission admitted to mistakenly treating Mr. Davis's property as being entirely within unineorpo-rated Utah County. As a result, the tax notices Mr. Davis received did not include assessments of Provo City taxes.

T 8 Despite the fact that Mr. Davis's property had never been taxed by Provo City, the district court granted Provo City's motion to dismiss because the statute of limitations had run. The district court found that a challenge to an annexation falls within the catchall four-year statute of limitations in section 78B-2-307(8) and thus bars Mr. Davis's challenge to the 1978 annexation. The court explained that section 10-2-422 is not a statute of limitations, rather it "is a conclusive limitation that can defeat a challenge to an annexation, but it does not prevent a challenge, which is the function of a statute of limitations." We agree and affirm the district court's dismissal.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

19 The district court's application of a statute of limitations is a question of law, *89 which we review for correctness. Nolan v. Hoopiiaina (In re Hoopitaina Trust), 2006 UT 53, % 19, 144 P.3d 1129.

DISCUSSION

' 10 The core inquiry in this case is whether the language in Utah Code section 10-2-422 providing for a conclusive presumption of valid annexation makes section 10-2422 a statute of limitations. Mr. Davis argues that it is a statute of limitations because, in his view, the language in the statute providing for a conclusive presumption if certain conditions are met implies that if those conditions are not met, the annexation of the land can still be challenged. Provo City argues that the conclusive presumption language in seetion 10-2-422 is a substantive rule of law rather than a time limitation on bringing an action.

T11 A statute providing a conclusive presumption is very different from a statute of limitations. First, there are substantial textual differences between the two types of statutes. Second, the purposes of the two types of statutes are distinctly different.

112 Comparison of the text of section 10-2-422 and the text of statutes that clearly limit the filing period shows that section 10-2-422 is not a statute of limitations. Furthermore, an examination of the purpose of conclusive presumptions and the purpose of statutes of limitations demonstrates that Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2008 UT 59, 193 P.3d 86, 611 Utah Adv. Rep. 28, 2008 Utah LEXIS 115, 2008 WL 3896923, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-provo-city-corp-utah-2008.