Finlayson v. Denver & R. G. W. R.

172 P.2d 142, 110 Utah 319, 1946 Utah LEXIS 126
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 21, 1946
DocketNo. 6891.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 172 P.2d 142 (Finlayson v. Denver & R. G. W. R.) 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
Finlayson v. Denver & R. G. W. R., 172 P.2d 142, 110 Utah 319, 1946 Utah LEXIS 126 (Utah 1946).

Opinion

PRATT, Justice.

Respondents brought this action against appellants for $1000' damages for occupying some .15 acres of respondents’ lands in the construction of a fill for a new railroad line *321 passing respondents’ properties. The jury returned a verdict of $472 for which sum judgment was entered against appellants. This appeal followed.

Two issues are raised upon the appeal: (1) Was the property occupied by appellants included in a deed from respondents to appellants? (2) Were severance damages properly allowable under the facts of this case?

(1) Respondents allege they were the owners of the following described property:

“Commencing 19.60 chains South and 16.54 chains East from the Northwest Corner of the Northwest quarter of Section 2, Township 7 South, Range 2 East of the Salt Lake Base and Meridian; thence South 37° East 12.26 chains; thence North 83° East 3.58 chains; thence North 35%° West 18.16 chains; thence South 3° 20' West 5.38 chains more or less to the place of beginning. Area 4.99 acres * * *.”

That in August 16, 1943, they executed and delivered to appellants the following described piece of their property.

“Commencing 19.60 chains South and 16.54 chains East from the Northwest Comer of the Northwest quarter of Section 2, Township 7 South, Range 2 East, Salt Lake Base and Meridian; thence South 37° East 12.26 chains; thence North 83° East 3.58 chains to the point of beginning of the land herein and hereby conveyed, being a point in the Southwesterly line of the right of way of the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad Company 50 feet southwesterly at right angles from the center line of the original main track of said railroad company, dr 32.78 feet Southwesterly at right angles from the center line of present operated mainline track; thence Northwesterly along said right of way line and parallel with said original main track 700 feet; thence southeasterly in a straight line 691.8 feet to a point in the southerly property boundary of said grantors, South 83° West 17 feet from said point of beginning; thence North 83° East along said southerly property boundary 17 feet to the point of beginning — containing 0.13 of an acre more or less in the Southeast Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of said Section 2.”

That appellants occupied some .15 acres more than is covered by the deed — a strip, they allege, more than 700 feet long and 10‘ feet wide.

During the course of the trial, counsel for respondents, in a discussion with the trial court, had this to say:

*322 “Our point is that it [the deed] doesn’t describe the property that this man [one of respondents] agreed to sell in this preliminary agreement that I’m trying to show.”

Again he said:

“We are attemping to show an agreement was made and then they [appellants] presented something purporting to carry out that agreement, and it wasn’t that at all.”

Recognizing that this was not within the pleadings, the court and both counsel had considerable argument, which ended in the question of what was intended by the deed. Testimony as to the intention of the parties was introduced in the trial upon the theory that there was ambiguity in the deed. In his instruction No. 11, the court said this:

“Thus in descriptions of real estate contained in a conveyance, if the point of beginning, or if any point or course therein is described in various ways, and the different manners of description of that point or course result in different or distinct points or courses, it is the duty of the court' and not of the jury to determine from the instrument and all of the facts and circumstances surrounding the making, execution and delivery of the instrument, which of the contrary points or courses were intended by the parties to be controlling and binding upon them * * * f>

In Instruction No. 12, the court set out his version of the deed as follows:

“Beginning at a point in the Southwesterly line of the right of way of the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad Company, as such Southwesterly line existed prior to the 16th day of August, 1943, the date of the said conveyance, which point of beginning is also the corner post of the intersection of such right of way line with the fence along the Southeasterly portion of the plaintiffs’ property, running thence northwesterly along the said right of way line and parallel with the original main track of the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad Company 700 feet, thence Southeasterly in a straight line 691.8 feet to a point in the southerly fence line of the grantors, south 83 degrees West 17 feet from the point of beginning, thence North 83 degrees East along said Southerly fence line 17 feet to the point of beginning.”

*323 We are of the opinion that there is no ambiguity in the deed of conveyance and that testimony of the intention of the parties should not have been admitted. To illustrate this: Let “B” represent the point from which the land conveyed is to be bounded — “* * * being a point in the southwesterly line of” the railroad right of way. This right of way line is a known fence line. How do we get to that point in order to start that bounding? We start from the northwest corner of the northwest quarter of Section 2, Township 7 South, Range 2 East, Salt Lake Base and Meridian. We travel in a general southeasterly direction “19.60 chains South and 16.54 chains east”; thence southeast again, but at a different angle: “south 37°00' East 12.26 chains”; then we turn northeast: “North 83°00' East 3.58 chains” — and we are supposed to have arrived at point “B.” Now it may be that we are not exactly on the southwesterly line of the railroad right of way; but, if not, the law says that our line may be extended (that is, continued in the same direction) so far as is necessary to bring us upon that southwesterly line, as that is an “artificial monument” which must take precedence over metes and bounds if there is a conflict — this upon the theory that artificial monuments are less apt to be erroneous than are computations. Bullion Beck & Champion Mining Co. v. Eureka Hill Mining Co., 36 Utah 329, 103 P. 881; Park v. Wilkinson, 21 Utah 279, 60 P. 945.

Now what about the “50 feet southwesterly at right angles from the center line of the original main line track” or the “32.78 feet southwesterly at right angles from the center line of” the railroad company’s “present main track” ? Obviously these two descriptions are not intended to take the beginning point — point “B” — out of the southwesterly line of the railroad right of way. They are alternative ways of checking the location of point “B”, measured from two different monuments — but their accuracy depends upon measurements, and, if they are in conflict with the first description, they, too, must give way to a fixed monument point. Especially is this true when they *324

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Bluebook (online)
172 P.2d 142, 110 Utah 319, 1946 Utah LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finlayson-v-denver-r-g-w-r-utah-1946.