Hall v. Peterson

2017 UT App 226, 409 P.3d 133
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedDecember 7, 2017
Docket20150459-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2017 UT App 226 (Hall v. Peterson) 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
Hall v. Peterson, 2017 UT App 226, 409 P.3d 133 (Utah Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Opinion

MORTENSEN, Judge:

¶1 Since 1965, David L. Peterson, individually and through his trust, has owned a large tract of recreational mountain property east of Mount Pleasant in Sanpete County. 1 Part of the property is known as Buckhom Flats. Between 2010 and 2013, Kyle R. Hall purchased four lots near Buckhorn Flats, A dirt road (the Peterson Road) crosses Buckhom Flats and is the only access to another road (the Spur Road) that leads to Hall’s four lots. When Peterson would not allow access across Buckhorn Flats using the Peterson Road, Hall 'sued. At trial, the jury found that the evidence established an easement by estop-pel, allowing Hall to'use the Peterson Road. On appeal, Peterson argues that the evidence at trial was insufficient to support an easement by estoppel and that his motion for a directed verdict should have been granted. 2 Peterson also argues that the'trial court erred in not defining the scope of the easement and in its determination of the prevailing party and award of costs. We reverse the trial court’s denial of Peterson’s motion for.a directed verdict.

BACKGROUND 3

¶2 Peterson owned Buckhom Flats beginning sometime prior to 1965. Peterson conveyed that property to the David L. Peterson Trust in 2006. Adjacent to Buekhorn Flats is land that has been variously owned by other entities. Hall now owns four lots of that adjacent property. The Peterson Road, going across Buekhorn Flats, is the only way to access those lots by vehicle.

¶3 Sometime around 1996 Peterson built a gate that blocked access -to the Peterson Road. Hall’s family obtained a key to the gate, 4 but Peterson changed the locks, around 2008. Hall first personally asked Peterson for a key to the gate in 2010, after he purchased property beyond Buekhorn Flats. Peterson refused, despite Hall showing Peterson proof of ownership of property beyond the gate. Hall then purchased other parcels even though Peterson had denied him a key. Hall eventually brought this action seeking access along the Peterson Road.

¶4 One theory Hall advanced at trial, and upon which he ultimately prevailed, was that through the predecessors in interest to his properties Hall could establish an easement by estoppel across Buekhorn Flats .to access those properties. Therefore, the manner in which Hall’s predecessors in interest used the Peterson Road over the many years was at issue during trial..

Hall’s Predecessors in Interest

¶5 Hall purchased his four lots between 2010 and 2013 — one from Lula Jean Thomas in 2010, two from David Gobel in 2011, and one from Alice Smith in 2013. Alice Smith had acquired her property from her son, Ronald Smith (Smith). 5 Both Thomas and Smith acquired their properties from Diversified Marketing (Diversified) in the 1970s. At trial, Gobel did not testify and there was no evidence presented showing the historical ownership of the Gobel lots.

Predecessors’ Use of the Peterson Road

¶6 Although- Thomas and Smith only visited their respective properties a few times over a period of many years, on the rare occasion that they would travel to their properties, they drove to their lots by use of a dirt road. 6 Smith drove with an unidentified Diversified representative “to what they said was [his] piece of property” shortly after Smith agreed to buy the property. Smith subsequently drove to his property two more times, but he had not been to the property in roughly thirty years. Thomas visited her lots “three, maybe four” times from the time she acquired them in the “late ’60s, early ’70s” until she sold one of her lots to Hall. Thomas never asked for or received permission to use the Peterson Road.

¶7 Diversified, the previous owner of the Smith and Thomas lots, purchased those lots sometime prior to 1974 as .part of roughly 1,650 acres of property to the south of Buck-horn Flats, 7 Diversified began selling “little parcels” of that property. A “spur road” was built off of the Peterson Road and provided access to some of the lots Diversified sold, including Hall’s lots. Hall provided the only testimony at trial about who built the Spur Road, testifying that Diversified built it. Hall also testified, however, that he neither saw Diversified build the Spur Road nor had any supporting documentation as a basis for his testimony.

¶8 Three witnesses testified about the possible use or presence of construction machinery on Diversified’s property, which presumably could only have been brought there through use of the Peterson Road. An excavating contractor, testifying as an expert witness, opined that the Spur Road “was maybe 15 feet across or so, and .:. [that it] would take a machine to build the road that wide, that significant.” A second expert, a general contractor, agreed. These witnesses did not testify about how many machines would have been necessary or how long it would have taken to grade the road. The third witness, Smith, testified that after he purchased the property in the 1970s, but before 1980, on one occasion.he “saw a bulldozer south of [his] property” where Diversified “said there would be a clubhouse” and that Diversified had “bulldozed a' short section of an area south of [his] property[ ] ... in an area which [Diversified] said was what they were selling.” When asked about the bulldozer’s exact location, Smith stated, “I can’t tell you how far south, but it was south of the property.” Smith did not testify that the bulldozer was on the Peterson Road or that it was being used for making a road or any other improvement. -

Other Use of the Peterson Road

¶9 The jury heard testimony from other witnesses — Johansen, Vincent, Seely, Soren-sen, R. Hall, C. Hall, and Matthews — that the Peterson Road had been used on isolated instances over a period of decades without obstruction or restriction.

¶10 Johansen, a person familiar with the area, gave deposition testimony that he drove on the Peterson Road in the 1970s for hunting but at trial testified that he did not ever remember using a vehicle while on the Peterson Road. Johansen acknowledged that when he was deposed he had stated that he saw people from out of state use vehicles on the Peterson Road, but at trial he testified he did not “know of’ any other vehicles using the road back in the 1970s. An affidavit signed by Johansen was read at trial stating that the “south roads have been used as [a] public thoroughfare,” but Johansen did not remember asserting that when questioned at trial. Johansen did not testify that Peterson was present on any of these occasions.

1111 Vincent, a property owner in the area, testified that she had asked Peterson for permission to use the Peterson Road, and that from 1991 to 1996 she had “free access” to her property by use of the road. She also testified that she saw people using ATVs on the road during this time. Vincent in no way quantified whether this was a single occurrence or whether she observed ATVs frequently.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2017 UT App 226, 409 P.3d 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-peterson-utahctapp-2017.