Englert v. Zane

848 P.2d 165, 207 Utah Adv. Rep. 29, 1993 Utah App. LEXIS 28, 1993 WL 41756
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedFebruary 18, 1993
Docket920448-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 848 P.2d 165 (Englert v. Zane) 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
Englert v. Zane, 848 P.2d 165, 207 Utah Adv. Rep. 29, 1993 Utah App. LEXIS 28, 1993 WL 41756 (Utah Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

GREENWOOD, Judge:

Plaintiffs, Charles C. and Jo Ann Eng-lert, appeal a judgment resolving their property dispute with adjoining landowners, co-defendants, Henry E. and Dorothy G. Zane and John A. and Kathy McNeil. We affirm the decision awarding the first disputed parcel to the Zanes through boundary by acquiescence and the second parcel to the McNeils by quiet title subject to their compensating plaintiffs for the land to be acquired.

BACKGROUND

A land ownership dispute arose when plaintiffs’ prepurchase survey demonstrated that co-defendants’ homes encroached on building lots which plaintiffs purchased. The contested property had originally been subdivided in the mid-1960’s by then-owners Russell and Patricia Walter, when they created the Brookside Summer Homes Subdivision on their tract of land in Veyo, Washington County, Utah. In planning this subdivision, Mr. Walter had hired a surveyor, instructing him to use the Santa Clara River traversing the property as a boundary for building lots to be platted on either side of the river. Although the surveyor did not mark the river on the completed subdivision map, Mr. Walter assumed that the meandering border down the center of the subdivision reflected his expressed intent that the common boundary of the lots that fronted on the river should be the center line of the river.

Based upon this assumption, Mr. Walter informed each buyer, including the predecessors in interest of both plaintiffs and co-defendants, that they were acquiring title to the river center and nothing on the other side of the river. To guarantee this boundary line in the event that the river’s course should change, he inserted, in most of the subdivision deeds, a reservation stating: “less any part crossing the Santa Clara River.” 1

Despite these assumptions, representations and reservations, a problem arose in 1988 when plaintiffs’ resurvey showed that the river was not, in fact, the boundary between adjoining Lots 6 and 7 on one side of the river and Lots 12 and 13 on the other side. Instead, Lots 12 and 13 extended beyond the river to include two additional portions of property, one formerly considered part of Lot 6 and the other considered part of Lot 7. The two homes, one thought *167 to be situated on Lot 6 and the other on Lot 7, actually straddled the boundary line between those lots and Lots 12 and 13. A dispute then arose between plaintiffs who purchased Lots 12 and 13 and co-defendants, the Zanes and the McNeils.

Mr. Walter first sold Lot 7 to the Karrs, predecessors in interest to the Zanes. The Karrs immediately took possession of the property, began using it for recreational pursuits and access to the river, and landscaped and groomed the area to the water’s edge. They also constructed a house on the lot which they completed at least by the beginning of 1968.

Shortly after selling Lot 7, Mr. Walter sold Lot 6, eventually purchased by the McNeils, to the Meyers. Although evidence did not establish either the exact date of this sale or when the Meyers placed a mobile home on the building lot, the county tax records indicate the presence of the mobile home in 1970. The Meyers’ use of their property extended to the water’s edge in the same manner as the Karrs’. This use of both disputed parcels of land continued through various owners including both co-defendants. No one prior to plaintiffs ever objected.

On July 1, 1988, plaintiffs’ offer to purchase the undeveloped Lots 12 and 13 was accepted by then-owner Mrs. Wertz. At that time, the parties to the sale assumed the center of the Santa Clara River was the boundary dividing Lots 12 and 13 from Lots 6 and 7. Plaintiffs, however, both sophisticated real estate buyers, retained their own surveyor to check the location of Lots 12 and 13. Resurvey results, available before closing, indicated, as stated above, that Lots 12 and 13 extended beyond the river and included property upon which portions of co-defendants’ homes were situated.

Plaintiffs sued co-defendants, requesting that the court order the removal of the alleged encroaching structures and award them attorney fees. Co-defendants answered that plaintiffs had no cause of action and raised several affirmative defenses including:

1. Adverse possession;
2. Statute of limitations;
3. Boundary by acquiescence;
4. Boundary by agreement; and
5. Prescriptive easement (profit a pren-dre).

After a two day bench trial, the court made the following findings of fact. The subdivider, the County Tax Assessor 2 , and all of the parties’ predecessors assumed that the river constituted the boundary between the various pieces of property, although a routine survey would have shown the discrepancy. As the subdivision was actually platted, the river bisected Lots 12 and 13, isolating small parcels of those lots which were unsuitable for construction and effectively inaccessible from the main portions of Lots 12 and 13. The home currently owned by the Zanes encroached onto Lot 12, but had been constructed more than twenty years before the filing of this lawsuit. The McNeils’ home, which straddled the boundary between Lot 6 and the intersection of Lot 12 and 13, was less than twenty years old. The encroaching structures, each valued at between $80,000.00 and $85,000.00, would be destroyed or severely damaged by removal from their present site. Testimony and on-site inspection indicated that the recreational and gardening use of Lots 6 and 7 suited the nature of the property and continued uninterrupted in the pattern set by co-defendants’ predecessors. Plaintiffs were aware of the boundary dispute at the time they purchased Lots 12 and 13 for $22,900.00. *168 Plaintiffs had not yet undertaken any construction of improvements on Lots 12 and 13 and the main, undisputed portions of those lots were sufficient to accommodate the residence plaintiffs testified they intended to build.

Based upon these facts, the trial court quieted title in the Zanes because they had acquired title based either on the doctrine of boundary by acquiescence or on the doctrine of profit a prendre. As to the parcel contested by the McNeils, the court became convinced, in weighing the equities of the situation, that “requiring removal of the encroaching structures would not do equity” and determined that plaintiffs had an adequate remedy at law. The court, therefore, ordered that title to the property claimed by the McNeils be quieted in their favor after they compensated plaintiffs for the land awarded to them.

Plaintiffs appeal this decision claiming three errors:

(1) the trial court erred in applying the doctrine of boundary by acquiescence to the property awarded to the Zanes;
(2) the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to give plaintiffs injunctive relief ordering removal of the McNeils’ encroachment; and

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
848 P.2d 165, 207 Utah Adv. Rep. 29, 1993 Utah App. LEXIS 28, 1993 WL 41756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/englert-v-zane-utahctapp-1993.