Malouf v. Fischer

159 P.2d 881, 108 Utah 355, 1945 Utah LEXIS 127
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 12, 1945
DocketNo. 6773.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 159 P.2d 881 (Malouf v. Fischer) 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
Malouf v. Fischer, 159 P.2d 881, 108 Utah 355, 1945 Utah LEXIS 127 (Utah 1945).

Opinions

Plaintiff brought this suit to quiet title to a parcel of land in Lot 3, Block 50, Plat "A", Salt Lake City Survey. Block 50 described is bounded by West Temple and 1st West and by 3rd South and 4th South Streets in Salt Lake City. Much was said during the trial and in the argument about there *Page 356 being no tie in the description of the properties involved to a Government corner. The block was platted and the plat approved and accepted by the City Council and recorded February 21, 1889. We see no necessity to discuss this situation.

Defendant Catherine W. Fischer is conceded in the record to be the present owner of the parcel soon to be described which adjoins plaintiff's land. None of the other defendants named are interested, except that the Magna-Garfield Truck Lines is a tenant of Catherine W. Fischer. Further reference to "the defendant" will mean Catherine W. Fischer as legal owner.

The common predecessor in interest of both plaintiff and defendant acquired title to the whole of Lot 3, Block 50, Plat "A", Salt Lake City Survey, in April, 1873. In 1890 he divided the lot by a conveyance of the tract now owned by defendant which adjoins and fits into the southwest corner of the tract owned by plaintiff. Ever since that time in all recorded transactions, plaintiff's parcel has been substantially described as follows:

Commencing at the Northeast Corner of Lot 3, Block 50, Plat "A", Salt Lake City Survey, and running thence West 108 feet; thence South 3/4 feet; thence West 4 1/2 feet; thence South 9 rods 15 3/4 feet; thence East 46 1/2 feet; thence South 10 rods; thence East 4 rods; thence North 20 rods to the place of beginning.

Likewise, since 1890 the parcel now owned by defendant in all recorded transactions, including tax sales and redemptions, has been substantially described as follows:

Commencing 3 rods 3 feet East from the Southwest Corner of Lot 3, Block 50, Plat "A", Salt Lake City Survey, and running thence East 46 1/2 feet; thence North 10 rods; thence West 46 1/2 feet; thence South 10 rods to the place of beginning.

A map of a survey of the adjoining properties caused to be made by plaintiff and introduced in evidence as Exhibit "A" is here reproduced for the convenience of the reader: *Page 357

[EDITORS' NOTE: EXHIBIT A IS ELECTRONICALLY NON-TRANSFERRABLE.] *Page 358

The Tyng Investment Company, a predecessor in interest of defendant, in 1913 or 1914 built upon defendant's property a one-story, substantial brick building. This building has since stood and continues to stand exactly as erected. The map and survey above reproduced shows that the building at defendant's east property line overlaps and encroaches upon plaintiff's property along a strip 2.08 feet wide at the southeast corner of the building on 4th South Street extending North 0 deg. 17 min. East a distance of 62.3 feet to a width of 2.13 feet at the northeast corner of the building. This strip, occupied by defendant's building, is the only property about which there is a question in this case.

As stated, plaintiff brought this suit to quiet title to his property in the description hereinabove given, which includes that portion occupied inadvertently and through mistake or improper survey by the brick building for more than thirty years. Defendant answered and counterclaimed asking that title be quieted in her to her parcel of land including the strip occupied by the building and extending the east line of her property northerly from the northeast corner of the building a distance of 103.7 feet to the north line of her property, thus attempting to acquire title to a strip of plaintiff's land approximately two feet wide and ten rods long. This is made clear by the map above printed.

In its findings, conclusions and judgment, the trial court finds the issues in favor of defendant on her counterclaim and against the plaintiff on his complaint, and determines that the east boundry line of defendant's property

"for more than twenty years last past has been and still is fixed, established and located by the east face of the east wall of a brick building, the southeast corner thereof being located 64 feet west of the southeast corner of Lot 3 * * * and the east face of the said wall running thence north 0 degrees 17 minutes east 62.30 feet to the northeast corner of said building and thence northerly along the west line of an alleyway 102.70 feet and which boundary line has for all of said time been recognized, acquiesced in and agreed to by the plaintiff and his predecessors in interest and others occupying, holding or owning the adjoining property on the east as the east line of *Page 359 the property held, owned and possessed by the defendant, Catherine W. Fischer, and her predecessors in interest and as the west line of the property now held, owned and claimed by the plaintiff."

The testimony of C.H. Fischer, father of the defendant Catherine W. Fischer, who conveyed the property to her, shows that he loaned the money to the Tyng Investment Company with which it constructed the brick building in question and that he has been familiar with the property ever since that time, 1913 or 1914; that when he took title to the property he assumed the east boundary line consisted of the east wall of the building and running thence north to the north property line; that other than this law suit, no one ever questioned this boundary line and at no time did any predecessor in interest of plaintiff complain to him that his building encroached to any extent on plaintiff's property. There is ample testimony showing that extending north of the east wall of the building there is and has been no fence, wall or other barrier or monument marking a line northerly from the northeast corner of the building, but that the property to the north is open and has for years been used as parking space. Also, it is clearly shown that the west line of the alleyway referred to in the court's description is jagged and does not run on a direct line continuing from the northeast corner of the building.

It is at once apparent that this is not a boundary line dispute. The only conclusion which can be fairly reached is that through inadvertence and improper care in surveying the land defendant's predecessor constructed the building encroaching and overlapping plaintiff's property as described. No adverse possession is claimed, nor could such claim be maintained. Taxes have been paid on both parcels of land for all these years and conveyances have been made, as disclosed by the abstracts of title covering the two parcels, introduced in evidence, under the descriptions first hereinabove given. There is no rule of law and there is no testimony in the record which would give defendant any claim or color of title, right or interest in the open strip running *Page 360 north of the brick building to defendant's north property line. The most that can be said under all the facts and circumstances is that defendant has acquired an easement over the strip of land belonging to plaintiff which is occupied by the east wall of the building, and that the easement will have to continue so long as the building remains standing in its present location. SeeCrane v. Judge, 30 Utah 50, 83 P. 566, 567.

The above cited case involved a situation similar to that in this case. There the plaintiff owned a lot 25 feet by 165 feet and the defendant owned one 29.5 feet by 165 feet fronting on Main Street in Salt Lake City. Plaintiff's adjoined defendant's property on the north and ran parallel the full depth of 165 feet.

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Related

Brown v. Milliner
232 P.2d 202 (Utah Supreme Court, 1951)

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Bluebook (online)
159 P.2d 881, 108 Utah 355, 1945 Utah LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malouf-v-fischer-utah-1945.