Golden Spike Heritage Foundation v. Montgomery

2024 UT App 179, 562 P.3d 329
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedDecember 5, 2024
DocketCase No. 20230377-CA
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 UT App 179 (Golden Spike Heritage Foundation v. Montgomery) 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
Golden Spike Heritage Foundation v. Montgomery, 2024 UT App 179, 562 P.3d 329 (Utah Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

2024 UT App 179

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

GOLDEN SPIKE HERITAGE FOUNDATION, Appellant, v. CHAD MONTGOMERY, Appellee.

Opinion No. 20230377-CA Filed December 5, 2024

First District Court, Brigham City Department The Honorable Brandon J. Maynard No. 220100008

Zane S. Froerer and Nathan G. S. Jensen, Attorneys for Appellant Barton H. Kunz II, Attorney for Appellee

JUDGE JOHN D. LUTHY authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN FORSTER and RYAN M. HARRIS concurred.

LUTHY, Judge:

¶1 Golden Spike Heritage Foundation (Golden Spike) sued Chad Montgomery, the Box Elder County Recorder/Surveyor (Montgomery), 1 as well as various landowners. Golden Spike’s suit sought to resolve title disputes between itself and the various

1. Although Montgomery was sued in his official capacity, we refer to him by name rather than by his title because Golden Spike’s action is a petition for extraordinary relief “in the nature of mandamus” under rule 65B(d) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure, which form of action “is personal, in that it is directed against the particular officer rather than the office.” Indian Village Trading Post, Inc. v. Bench, 929 P.2d 367, 370 (Utah Ct. App. 1996). Golden Spike v. Montgomery

landowners. It also alleged that Montgomery had failed to perform his statutory duty to maintain accurate plat maps and records and that he had refused to correct errors related to Golden Spike’s interests that had been brought to his attention. Accordingly, Golden Spike petitioned the district court for extraordinary relief in the form of an order directing Montgomery to perform his duties.

¶2 The district court dismissed Golden Spike’s petition against Montgomery with prejudice after determining that the claims therein were barred by the requirement that a petitioner for extraordinary relief show that “no other plain, speedy and adequate remedy is available,” Utah R. Civ. P. 65B(a), and by the statute immunizing county recorders from actions for injuries caused by errors in tract indexes and other instruments, see Utah Code § 17-21-6(5)(e). Golden Spike appeals this dismissal.

¶3 We reverse the dismissal of Golden Spike’s claims for an order directing Montgomery to accurately depict on the Box Elder County (the County) ownership plats Golden Spike’s record title to particular land. We affirm the dismissal of Golden Spike’s claims for an order directing Montgomery to mitigate the legal effects of an allegedly erroneous property description included in a 1939 tax deed prepared by the then County recorder. And we remand the matter for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

BACKGROUND 2

The Railroad Right-of-Ways

¶4 By an act of the United States Congress dated July 1, 1862, the Union Pacific Railroad (Union Pacific) received fee title to a

2. Because we are reviewing a motion to dismiss, “we accept the factual allegations in the [petition] as true and recite the facts (continued…)

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400-foot-wide right-of-way 3 running in a generally east-west direction through parts of the County (the Railroad ROW), for the purpose of completing the Transcontinental Railroad. At some point thereafter, the Southern Pacific Transportation Company (Southern Pacific) obtained title to the portion of the Railroad ROW west of the north-south centerline of Section 30, Township 10 North, Range 3 West, Salt Lake Base and Meridian4 (the Western ROW). Then in April 1992, Southern Pacific transferred the Western ROW to the United States Bureau of Land Management (the BLM) via a recorded quitclaim deed.

¶5 Union Pacific retained title to the portion of the Railroad ROW that runs east of the north-south centerline of Section 30 as

accordingly.” Pead v. Ephraim City, 2020 UT App 113, n.1, 473 P.3d 175, cert. denied, 481 P.3d 1042 (Utah 2021). We also take as true the information contained in copies of various County ownership plats attached to Golden Spike’s petition as exhibits to its expert’s report. See generally Rawcliffe v. Anciaux, 2017 UT 72, ¶ 28 n.16, 416 P.3d 362 (explaining that when a document is attached to a pleading it becomes “part of the pleading” and the court “may review it on a motion to dismiss without converting the motion into a motion for summary judgment”). We include at the end of this opinion a copy of the plat most relevant to this appeal—the one for Section 30, Township 10 North, Range 3 West, Salt Lake Base and Meridian.

3. The term “right-of-way” ordinarily denotes an easement. See Chournos v. D’Agnillo, 642 P.2d 710, 712 (Utah 1982) (adopting the rule that when used in a conveyance, “the words ‘right of way’ . . . denote an easement or servitude rather than an interest in fee simple” unless the instrument “clearly indicates” otherwise). But that is not the meaning intended here. As noted, Congress conveyed the railroad right-of-way to Union Pacific in fee. See Act of July 1, 1862, ch. 120, 12 Stat. 489.

4. The survey sections referenced in this opinion are all part of Township 10 North, Range 3 West, Salt Lake Base and Meridian.

20230377-CA 3 2024 UT App 179 Golden Spike v. Montgomery

well as through Sections 27‒29 and 33‒36 (the Eastern ROW) until 2000. In June 2000, Union Pacific transferred the Eastern ROW via a recorded quitclaim deed to Golden Spike, “a non-profit organization that has received approval and funding from the United States Congress to build and operate an historical re- creation of the Transcontinental Railroad as it once operated in [the] County, using the land on which the historical Transcontinental Railroad was originally built.”

The Disputed Acreage

¶6 The Eastern ROW is bordered by various separately owned parcels. In 1934, the owner of an adjacent parcel to the south of the Eastern ROW as it crosses Section 30 (the Adjacent Parcel) drafted a warranty deed for that parcel “with a description that used imprecise terminology to exclude the Eastern ROW as a remainder.” In 1939, the then County recorder prepared a tax deed for the Adjacent Parcel “based on a misunderstanding” of the imprecise terminology in the 1934 deed. As a result, the 1939 tax deed

called out a metes and bounds [description] for the [Adjacent Parcel] on the mistaken assumption that the southern boundary of the Eastern ROW was 50 feet south of the center line of [the] Eastern ROW— possibly marked at that time by a fence—when the correct southern boundary was 200 feet south of the Eastern ROW center line (i.e., 150 feet south of the 50-foot line).

The 1939 deed “thus mistakenly failed to exclude the southern- most 150 feet of the Eastern ROW.” At the time, this mistake “was relatively benign” because the description was used “only to describe ‘remainders’ (i.e., property to be excluded from a sale).” However, in 1944, the same mistaken description was used in a decree of distribution of a probate estate to convey the Adjacent Parcel. Because of the mistaken description, the decree indicated

20230377-CA 4 2024 UT App 179 Golden Spike v. Montgomery

a conveyance of the Adjacent Parcel as though it contained 150 feet’s worth of the Eastern ROW (the Disputed Acreage).

¶7 Following the 1944 conveyance, the Adjacent Parcel, including the Disputed Acreage, “was conveyed and subdivided several more times until 2019.” In 2019 and thereafter, what was left of the Adjacent Parcel, which still included the Disputed Acreage, was conveyed several additional times and further subdivided.

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Bluebook (online)
2024 UT App 179, 562 P.3d 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/golden-spike-heritage-foundation-v-montgomery-utahctapp-2024.