Estate of Price v. Hodkin

2019 UT App 137, 447 P.3d 1285
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedAugust 8, 2019
Docket20170279-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2019 UT App 137 (Estate of Price v. Hodkin) 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
Estate of Price v. Hodkin, 2019 UT App 137, 447 P.3d 1285 (Utah Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

ORME, Judge:

¶1 Plaintiff Amy Allen Price (Amy) 1 brought an action to quiet title in a property's mineral rights by challenging a deed that had been recorded 47 years earlier. Because Amy and her predecessors unreasonably delayed in bringing suit after obtaining constructive knowledge of the cause of action and because their lack of diligence likely prejudiced the defendants to her quiet title action, we hold that the district court improperly granted summary judgment in favor of Amy. We thus reverse the summary judgment *1287 and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

BACKGROUND 2

¶2 The property at issue (the Property) consists of two parcels of land in Duchesne County. It was co-owned by two sisters, Virginia Nutter Price (Virginia) and Catherine Nutter Story (Catherine) 3 (collectively, the Sisters), for more than 20 years.

¶3 In 1945, the Property was conveyed by two separate deeds (the 1945 Deeds) to the Sisters "as joint tenants and not as tenants in common, with full rights of survivorship." Their mother, Katherine F. Nutter (Mother), conveyed the first parcel of land to them. Robert E. Mark (Mark), an attorney who, for decades, represented the Nutter family and its business, the Preston Nutter Corporation (PNC), conveyed the second parcel of land to the Sisters. As there is no record of any conveyance taking place between 1945 and 1966 that would have severed the Sisters' joint tenancy, it would appear that their co-ownership of the Property came to an end in 1966 with Catherine's passing.

¶4 Mark served as executor of Catherine's estate. Virginia presented a claim to the estate in the form of a promissory note in favor of Mother that Catherine had signed in 1960 (the Note). The Note was "for the principal sum of $10,000.00 payable six months after [Catherine's] death bearing interest at 6% per annum." It was secured by 210 shares of PNC stock. Virginia succeeded to the Note and its security following Mother's death. And at the time of Catherine's passing, the Note was worth $13,614.99. Because Catherine's estate did not possess sufficient funds to pay the Note, Mark petitioned the district court for authorization to convey Catherine's full "undivided one-half interest" in the Property's surface rights 4 to Virginia in full satisfaction of the debt. This petition (the Petition) stated that in exchange for Catherine's interest in the Property's surface rights, Virginia agreed (1) to pay the estate the difference between the value of Catherine's interest in the Property and the amount owed Virginia on the Note, (2) to return the PNC stock that she had held as security on the Note, and (3) that the conveyance expressly excepted "one-half of all oil and gas and one-half of all other minerals contained in [the Property]." The Petition further indicated that "Virginia N. Price has accepted said offer made to her by [Mark]," and it also bore her signature. Apparently no one at the time questioned whether Catherine's one-half interest in the Property had already passed to Virginia, the surviving joint tenant, upon Catherine's death.

¶5 The court granted the Petition, authorizing Mark to convey Catherine's full interest in the Property's surface rights to Virginia while retaining a half-interest in all oil, gas, and mineral rights. Mark executed and recorded a deed reflecting the court's order in late 1966 (the 1966 Deed). In 1968, the court further ordered that the Property's income from "one-half of all oil and gas and one-half of all other minerals" be distributed to Mark as trustee of Catherine's testamentary trust. Katherine S. Hodkin and Virginia S. Anderson 5 (collectively, Defendants) 6 are *1288 Catherine's daughters and are the beneficiaries of Catherine's testamentary trust.

¶6 In the years following the 1966 transaction, Virginia made a number of payments to Catherine's trust reflecting its share of proceeds from oil and gas leases on the Property, which payments continued after her death in 1977. Upon her passing, Virginia's husband, Howard Price (Howard), succeeded to her interest in the Property. He later married Amy, who likewise succeeded to his interest in the Property following his death in 1982. There is evidence of Amy making intermittent payments to Defendants for Catherine's estate's portion of the proceeds on oil and gas leases on the Property after Howard's passing.

¶7 In 2013, forty-seven years after the 1966 transaction, Amy initiated the current action seeking to quiet title "in and to the surface and subsurface interests in the [Property]" and "seeking related declaratory and equitable relief." In her subsequent motion for summary judgment, Amy argued that because neither sister had severed the joint tenancy ownership of the Property prior to Catherine's death in 1966, Virginia took full title to the Property-including all mineral rights-by right of survivorship. As a result, "[Catherine]'s estate never received, and therefore could not make disposition of, any rights [in the Property]." And as Howard's successor in interest to the Property, who in turn succeeded to Virginia's original interest, Amy argued that the Property's full mineral rights belonged to her by operation of law. She argued that this defeated Defendants' claims of right, title, or interest in any portion of the Property's mineral rights.

¶8 Defendants opposed the motion for summary judgment on several grounds. Among other things, they argued that the 1966 transaction raised a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the joint tenancy created in 1945 had been severed prior to Catherine's passing in 1966. In support of this argument, Defendants relied on Virginia's and Mark's sophistication as well as their conduct following Catherine's death. Specifically, Virginia served as president and treasurer of PNC for more than two decades. At that time, "PNC was one of the largest cattle ranching operations in the Intermountain West, leasing and owning substantial acres of grazing land with cattle herds ... in Utah, in Arizona, and in various other locations." In addition to cattle ranching, PNC also leased oil and gas rights to major oil companies. Virginia was knowledgeable about real property transactions and, while she served as its president, PNC became one of the first companies to separate leases for tar sands from ordinary oil leases, thereby achieving additional revenue for PNC. Moreover, Mark was PNC's long-time attorney and grantor of one of the parcels of land that made up the Property. Defendants argued that a person possessing Virginia's business acumen and knowledge of real property transactions, or Mark's legal expertise, would have known that if the Property was owned in joint tenancy, full title would have passed to Virginia by operation of law following Catherine's death.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2019 UT App 137, 447 P.3d 1285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-price-v-hodkin-utahctapp-2019.