Jacob v. Bate

2015 UT App 206, 358 P.3d 346, 793 Utah Adv. Rep. 78, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 218, 2015 WL 4771606
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedAugust 13, 2015
Docket20130868-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2015 UT App 206 (Jacob v. Bate) 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
Jacob v. Bate, 2015 UT App 206, 358 P.3d 346, 793 Utah Adv. Rep. 78, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 218, 2015 WL 4771606 (Utah Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Opinion

CHRISTIANSEN, Judge:

1 Appellants William T. Jacob and JaNe-ane W. Jacob appeal from the trial court's decision that Appellees Helen T. Bate, Robert T. Bate, and Brad Taysom obtained a limited prescriptive easement in the Jacobs' open alleyway. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

$2 Appellants filed this action seeking to quiet title to real property located on Main Street in American Fork, Utah. 1 Appellants own a commercial building located at 76 West Main Street and an adjacent alley (the Jacob Property). The Bates own the property immediately to the west of the Jacob Property, consisting of two apartment buildings connected by a carport and an "L" shaped commercial building (the Bate Property). Taysom is the Bates' tenant on the Bate Property. 2 The dispute in this case

*350 ¶ 3 In 1913, an investment company owned both the Bate Property and the Alleyway. Due to unpaid property taxes, Utah County took title to the Alleyway in January 1935. Reva Beck Bosone, 3 the Jacobs’ predecessor-in-interest, acquired the Jacob Property, in-eluding the Alleyway, between 1939 and 1940.

¶ 4 In 1936, William Preston and Elmer Bate, Robert Bate’s grandfather, purchased the Bate Property. The real estate contract for the sale purported to grant a perpetual *351 right-of-way over the Alleyway. At the time of the sale, however, the owner of the Bate Property no longer owned the Alleyway: as. a result of the tax sale. The seller of the Bate Property therefore lacked the legal authority to transfer any interest in the Alleyway. In 1951, Elmer Bate conveyed the Bate Proper- . ty to Robert Bate's father. The deed also purported to convey the right-of-way over the Alleyway.

5 In approximately 1945, the Bate family began to operate a hardware store out of the commercial building located on the Bate Property. Robert Bate's father used the Alleyway for loading and unloading, picking up and dropping off goods transported to and from another store in Salt Lake City, and parking cars occasionally. Robert Bate's father would also use the Alleyway to access or perform maintenance on the apartment buildings on the Bate Property. The Bate family continuously used the Alleyway for these purposes until sometime in 1977, when Robert Bate's brother purchased the Jacob Property, took over operation of the family's hardware store, and moved it next door to the commercial building located on the Jacob Property. ' "

1 6 In the 1950s, a grocery store operated out of the Jacob Property. The grocery store took deliveries through the Alleyway. During the time that both the hardware store and the grocery store operated, the two businesses accommodated each other's use of the Alleyway.

17 The Jacob Property was deeded several times without any reference to a right-of-way until 1987. In July 1987, Appellants acquired the Jacob Property, including the Alleyway, by warranty deed. The conveyance to Appellants provided that the Jacob Property was "SUBJECT to a Right of Way" over the Alleyway in favor of the Bate Property. At that time, there was an unlocked chain placed across the Alleyway between two concrete posts. While it is unclear who originally placed the chain across the Alleyway, how long the chain had been there, or the purpose .of the chain, William Jacob placed a lock on the chain in July 1987 after Appellants purchased the Jacob Property.

T8 In 2001, Taysom began to rent part of the commercial building located on the Bate Property for his automotive business. During his time as a tenant, Taysom would perform maintenance on the Bate Property. When he needed to access the Alleyway for maintenance, Taysom would "go over" the chain or "walk through" if the chain was not in place. In November 2006, Taysom agreed to purchase the Bate Property.

T9 In November 2006, Appellees' attorney sent a letter to Appellants objecting to the lock on the chain as it interfered with Appel-lees use of the Alleyway. William Jacob responded to the letter: and acknowledged that Appellees had a "reasonable right to pass over a portion of [the] land" and that "[dJuring the past twenty years the chain has been positioned in such a manner that can be stepped over and your client has enjoyed additional access through an adjoining door to pass over a portion of [the] land." William Jacob also stated that "from time-to-time, and based upon reasonable request, I. have opened the chain to pro'vide‘ reasonable access to [Appellees], various workmen, utility companies, and others." William Jacob concluded his letter, stating that he hoped "[Ap-pellees] will contimie to use the right to pass over my land in accordance with the same reasonable and usual enjoyment.standard, as established during the past 20 years."

{10 During the summer of 2007, Taysom requested a key to the lock on the chain across the Alleyway. When he did not receive a key to remove the lock, Taysom began breaking the chain to access the Alleyway. Taysom also admitted to cutting the concrete posts and the loop connecting the chain to the posts. The Jacobs called the police on about twenty separate occasions in response to Taysom's cutting of the chain and posts.

111 Several years later, Appellants filed this action seeking to quiet title to the Alleyway after William Jacob discovered the defect in the 1985 deed'sultra vires grant of a right-of-way. In the alternative, Appellants sought "to establish title through adverse possession" and requested "damages for civil trespass and injunctive relief." Appellants filed a motion for summary judgment on *352 their claims,. The trial court granted Appellants' motion with respect to the quiet-title claim, stating that there was no express easement or right-of-way over the Alleyway, but denied Appellants' motion as to the claims of trespass and adverse possession.

12 After a bench trial, the court issued a written decision concluding that a prescriptive easement in favor of the Bate Property had developed for "ingress and egress of the [Alleyway] for proper maintenance of the adjacent buildings." The court also concluded that Appellants "were one year short of the required twenty years" to extinguish the prescriptive easement. The court declined to award damages for trespass. Appellants now appeal.

ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW

113 First, Appellants argue that the trial court's conclusion that Appellees had obtained a prescriptive easement in the Alleyway was erroneous because (1) the court incorrectly applied a presumption of adverse use rather than a presumption of permissive use and (2) the finding that a prescriptive easement existed was not supported by sufficient evidence. "[ Wlhether the trial court applied the proper legal standard is a question of law that is reviewed for correctness." Chen v. Stewart, 2004 UT 82, ¶ 19, 100 1177. While the conclusion that a prescriptive easement exists is a question of law, see Valcaree v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2015 UT App 206, 358 P.3d 346, 793 Utah Adv. Rep. 78, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 218, 2015 WL 4771606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacob-v-bate-utahctapp-2015.