Gillmor v. MacEy

2005 UT App 351, 121 P.3d 57, 533 Utah Adv. Rep. 13, 2005 Utah App. LEXIS 349, 2005 WL 2036509
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedAugust 25, 2005
DocketCase No. 20030368-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 2005 UT App 351 (Gillmor v. MacEy) 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
Gillmor v. MacEy, 2005 UT App 351, 121 P.3d 57, 533 Utah Adv. Rep. 13, 2005 Utah App. LEXIS 349, 2005 WL 2036509 (Utah Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

ORME, Judge:

¶ 1 Appellant Nadine Gillmor (Nadine) appeals from several aspects of the trial court’s interpretation of an “Easement And Use Agreement” (the Agreement). Appellees and Cross-Appellants Robin and Ken Macey (the Maceys), individually and as owners of Family Link, L.L.C., and David K. Richards & Co. (Richards Co.), likewise cross-appeal from some of the trial court’s interpretations of the Agreement. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

BACKGROUND

¶ 2 The genesis of this ease dates back to a 1984 dispute between Nadine’s late husband, Charles Frank Gillmor, Jr. (Frank), and David K. Richards (Richards). In 1984, Richards verbally challenged the right of people hunting on Frank’s property (the Gill-mor property 2 ) to use two livestock trails— the Perdue Creek Road and the Neil Creek Road — which ran across Richards’s property from the Weber Canyon highway to the Gill-mor property. Frank began litigation to enjoin Richards’s interference with his and his family’s and friends’ use of the roads and to claim a prescriptive easement over both trails. Frank claimed that the Gillmor family had held a right of way over the dirt roads, and any appurtenant property necessary for animal husbandry, since at least the early 1920s.

¶3 In 1985, rather than pursue their opposing claims through litigation, Richards and Frank negotiated the Agreement, which granted Frank express easements “over and across the Perdue Creek Road and over and across the Neil Creek Road from the intersection of said roads with State Highway 213 (known as the Weber Canyon Road) over and across the Richards Property.” The Agreement also placed several limitations on the purposes for which the easements could be used. During oral argument before us, Nadine characterized Frank’s concessions in settling the litigation as essentially giving up most of his rights in the Neil Creek Road, since Richards had a cabin located near the Neil Creek Road, and accepting in lieu of those rights certain rights of access over the Perdue Creek Road. 3 Once *62 the parties reached settlement in 1985, they had very little disagreement about the use of the roads for over a decade.

¶4 Frank Gillmor passed away in 1995. Frank was survived by two daughters from a previous marriage and Nadine, his spouse at the time he entered into the Agreement and at the time of his death. 4 After Frank’s death, Nadine, her daughter, her son-in-law, and her grandchildren continued using the Gillmor property as well as the easements that were the subject of the Agreement. In 1999, the Maceys, as owners of Family Link, L.L.C., acquired part of Richards Co.’s property. In 2000, the Maceys began construction of a summer home on their property, which was located near the Perdue Creek Road. Also in 2000, the Maceys stopped Nadine’s son-in-law while he was riding a four-wheeled all terrain vehicle (ATV) on Perdue Creek Road and told him that ATVs could not be driven on that road, but that they should be transported by trailer over the road to the Gillmor property. The Maceys based this assertion on the 1985 Agreement, which included as one limitation on the use of the easement that “Gillmor agrees that he will not allow use of and will not himself use any three-wheeled motorized All Terrain Vehicles or any two-wheeled motorcycles or motorized ‘dirt bikes’ on the Easements at any time.”

¶ 5 Again in 2001, the Maceys confronted several of Nadine’s grandchildren and their friends driving four-wheeled ATVs on the same road and informed the group that they could not drive the ATVs on that road. Not long after this last encounter, Nadine, like her husband had done in 1984 when the use of the livestock trails was first challenged, sought to enjoin the Maceys from interfering with her use of . the easement over Perdue Creek road and to seek a declaration of her rights, status, and legal relationship with the Maceys under the Agreement, in accordance with Utah Code sections 78-33-1 to -13. See Utah Code Ann. §§ 78-33-1 to -13 (2002) (governing district court’s “power to declare rights, status, and other legal relations” in an action for declaratory judgment). Richards Co. sought to intervene as a defendant in the action and was joined as a defendant by way of a stipulated order.

¶ 6 Ironically enough, the Agreement that was once a truce in the fight over the use of these easements is now the very source of the current dispute. Twenty years after the Agreement’s creation to resolve the previous litigation, the parties became entangled in new litigation to determine what the Agreement actually means about the use of four-wheeled ATVs on the easements. Nadine moved for partial summary judgment on the question of whether four-wheeled ATVs were precluded from use on the easements under the Agreement, but the trial court concluded that the language in the Agreement was ambiguous and that it would, therefore, deny partial summary judgment and consider extrinsic evidence surrounding the formation of the Agreement to resolve the ambiguity.

¶ 7 The subsequent trial was not confined to the issue concerning four-wheeled ATVs, the dispute having transformed into a multifaceted disagreement about what exactly the Agreement says about Nadine’s use of the easements in several respects. Following a bench trial, the court entered fourteen pages of findings of fact and a six-page judgment interpreting the Agreement and thereby resolving the dispute. Unsatisfied with the trial court’s careful and meticulous attempt to interpret the Agreement and resolve the dispute in a fair and reasonable way, both parties now seek appellate relief from various aspects of the trial court’s judgment.

ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW

¶ 8 The parties raise a variety of issues that stem from the trial court’s interpretation of the Agreement. Nevertheless, the issues mainly turn on the proper interpretation of the Agreement. Because an ease *63 ment agreement is a contract, the same rules of interpretation apply to it as apply to contracts generally. See Canyon Meadows Home Owners Ass’n v. Wasatch County, 2001 UT App 414,¶ 7, 40 P.3d 1148, cert. denied, No. 20020072, 2002 Utah LEXIS 149 (Apr. 17, 2002).

¶ 9 “A contract’s interpretation may be either a question of law, determined by the words of the agreement, or a question of fact, determined by extrinsic evidence of intent.” Peterson v. Sunrider Corp., 2002 UT 43, ¶ 14, 48 P.3d 918 (internal quotations and citation omitted). To the extent the trial court’s interpretation of the Agreement is a question of law, we review its decision for correctness, giving its interpretation no deference. See id. We likewise review the trial court’s determination that the Agreement is ambiguous as a question of law. See Winegar v. Froerer Corp., 813 P.2d 104, 108 (Utah 1991).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2005 UT App 351, 121 P.3d 57, 533 Utah Adv. Rep. 13, 2005 Utah App. LEXIS 349, 2005 WL 2036509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gillmor-v-macey-utahctapp-2005.