Nelson v. Provo City

2000 UT App 204, 6 P.3d 567, 398 Utah Adv. Rep. 20, 2000 Utah App. LEXIS 61, 2000 WL 854858
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJune 29, 2000
Docket990578-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2000 UT App 204 (Nelson v. Provo City) 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
Nelson v. Provo City, 2000 UT App 204, 6 P.3d 567, 398 Utah Adv. Rep. 20, 2000 Utah App. LEXIS 61, 2000 WL 854858 (Utah Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION

JACKSON, Associate Presiding Judge:

4 1 This is our second round with this case. About six years ago, we issued Nelson v. Provo City, 872 P.2d 35 (Utah Ct.App.1994), and remanded to the trial court for further proceedings. Boyd and Lorraine Nelson and Steven and Sheila Whitlock (Landowners) now challenge the trial court's decision on remand. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

12 The facts are undisputed. At issue is title to land in Provo that formerly served as 900 South Street between 100 East Street and University Avenue (Old 900 South). Old 900 South abuts the Landowners' property.

183 Under the Federal Townsite Act of 1867, ch. 177, 14 Stat. 541 (1867), codified as 43 U.S.C. § 718, repealed by PL. 94-579, Title VII, § 7083(a), 90 Stat. 2789 (1976), 1 the United States government deeded legal title to the property within the Provo townsite, including Old 900 South and the abutting lands, to Provo Mayor Abraham O. Smoot, as trustee. Even before this conveyance, Old 900 South served as a public road. However, the Landowners' predecessors in interest occupied neither Old 900 South nor the abutting land when the conveyance occurred.

In 1871, Smoot deeded land north of [Old 900 South] to James Dunn, who in 1876 deeded the parcel to Peter Stubbs. In 1982, a portion of the Stubbs parcel was deeded to appellants Stephen Whitlock and Sheila Whitlock. In 1985, Stephen Whit-lock alone received another portion of the Stubbs parcel. Finally, in 1991, appellants Boyd Nelson and Lorraine Nelson received a deed for another portion of the Stubbs parcel.
In 1875, Smoot deeded land south of [Old 900 South] to John P.R. Johnson, as trustee of the First Ward Pasture Company. In 1927, First Ward Pasture Company deeded its parcel to [Provo]. 900 South continued to be used as a public roadway.
In its regularly scheduled meeting of August 22, 1989, the Provo Municipal Council passed ordinance number 0-89-055, which purported to vacate and set aside the [rloadway. ... [Provo] then rerouted a portion of 900 South onto the property it owned to the south of the original route and sold the vacated portion of the original route to a commercial developer....
Landowners sued [Provo] claiming a re-versionary interest in [Old 900 South] from their property lines to the middle of the {former rloadway. They sought compensation and, in. the alternative, the setting aside of the vacation. City counterclaimed for quiet title to [Old 900 South].
On July 6, 1992, the trial court quieted title in [Provo] as against Landowners, concluding that [Provo] held fee simple title since the time of the Townsite Conveyance. Landowners moved for specific findings regarding [Provo's] compliance *569 with the Townsite Act and with the State Township Act. The trial court denied the motion. Landowners appeal[ed].

Nelson v. Provo City, 872 P.2d 35, 36 (Utah Ct. App.1994).

T4 On appeal, we decided that defective notice rendered a nullity Provo's attempted vacation of Old 900 South. See id. at 88. We further determined that Provo could only have had fee simple title to the land if it had "explicitly reserved the Roadway or obtained a deed to the Roadway pursuant to section 57-T-8 or -17"-which it had not. Id. at 87; see also Utah Code Ann. § 57-T-8 (1994) (repealed 1999) ("If a city commissioner or the mayor of any city or the president of the board of trustees of any town shall be a claimant of lands in such city or town, the recorder or the clerk thereof, as the case may be, shall, upon the certificate of the district court made as in the case of other claimants, execute a deed of conveyance to such claimant for the lands finally adjudged to him by the court."); id. § 577-17 (repealed 1999) ("Lots or parcels of land necessary for streets ... may be reserved by the city commissioners, the mayor, the president of the board of trustees or the district judge, as the case may be; and he may execute and deliver to the proper party a deed for any property set aside for such purposes."). We therefore held that "[Provol remains holder of the Roadway in trust," Nelson, 872 P.2d at 37, and remanded to the trial court for the limited purpose of considering Provo's "role as trustee of the Roadway, with its attendant fiduciary duties to the beneficiaries." Id. at 38.

15 The trial court held a trial on February 6, 1995 in which it heard testimony and took documentary evidence. As they have argued throughout this litigation, Landowners asserted again on remand "that a conveyance of land abutting a road impliedly conveys the land to the middle of the road (in spite of a metes and bounds description which does not include any portion of the Roadway)" Ne-son v. Provo City, No. 910400527, slip op. at 4 (Utah Dist.Ct. Feb. 17, 1995). They therefore contended that they own the land area of Old 900 South to the center of the former roadway abutting their parcels and that, upon Provo's vacation of Old 900 South, use and possession of that strip of land reverted to them.

I 6 The trial court responded,
In the Court's determination, the fact that the City held title to the land on which the Roadway was located (albeit in trust) leads to the conclusion that the Roadway was not a road made pursuant to the grant of an easement which would carry with it a reversionary interest. Even supposing that an easement was created when the City received the land in trust which already contained the Roadway, the holder of the easement would be Provo City and the collective occupants of the City of Provo-the same parties who held title to the underlying fee-under these circumstances the easement would merge with the fee. The Court cannot conceive of (and Plaintiffs have not presented preponderating evidence of) how the conveyance of property abutting the Roadway deprives the owners of the underlying fee to the Roadway of their title.

Id. at 4-5 2

T7 The trial court went on to hold that, although Provo did not properly vacate Old 900 South, vacation proceedings were unnecessary in this case to effect a vacation or abandonment of that street. Finally, the trial court determined

that [Provo] acted within its fiduciary powers and responsibility when it determined that it was in the best interest of the *570 collective occupants of the city of Provo to realign the Roadway to create a functional intersection, and when it sold [Old 900 South] which it held in trust to a private party and deposited the proceeds in the general treasury for the benefit of the collective occupants of the city of Provo.

Id. at 5-6 (footnote omitted).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Allen v. Hall
2005 UT App 23 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2005)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2000 UT App 204, 6 P.3d 567, 398 Utah Adv. Rep. 20, 2000 Utah App. LEXIS 61, 2000 WL 854858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-v-provo-city-utahctapp-2000.