Olsen v. Park Daughters Investment Company

511 P.2d 145, 29 Utah 2d 421, 1973 Utah LEXIS 826
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 1973
Docket13075
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 511 P.2d 145 (Olsen v. Park Daughters Investment Company) 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
Olsen v. Park Daughters Investment Company, 511 P.2d 145, 29 Utah 2d 421, 1973 Utah LEXIS 826 (Utah 1973).

Opinion

CROCKETT, Justice:

This case involves a dispute over the boundary, and ownership of a strip of land between the properties of the plaintiffs Olsen, lying on the east side of the Provo River, and of the defendants Park opposite on the west side of the river, in the area which has been referred to as “the river bottoms,” west of Provo. The defendants rely upon an ancient deed (1883), and by acquiescence since that time, in the river as the boundary; whereas, the plaintiffs claim the disputed area through metes and bounds straight line description, which overlaps on the west side of the river. Upon a plenary trial the court found the issues in favor of the defendants, rejecting plaintiffs’ contention, and, as between these parties, quieted title in the defendants to the disputed strip of land. Plaintiffs appeal.

In analyzing the plaintiffs’ attack upon the findings and judgment it is appropriate to have in mind these basic propositions : In order for them to prevail, plaintiffs had the burden of proof to establish their case, and to persuade the trial court; and particularly in this action to quiet title, this had to be done on the strength of their own title, and not because of any weakness in that of the defendants. 1 Further, the trial court having refused to be so persuaded, this court on appeal would not upset his findings and judgment, and order findings and judgment to the contrary, unless the evidence were such that all reasonable minds must necessarily so find; and in making that determination, we review the evidence and all reasonable inferences fairly to be drawn therefrom in the light favorable to his findings and judgment.

The tracts owned by plaintiffs and defendants were part of a larger tract originally patented to Brigham Shurtliff. On March 10, 1883, he conveyed a tract of 80 acres west of the river to defendants’ predecessor, David S. Park. That deed described the easterly boundary as the middle of the Provo River. Three years later, August 7, 1886, Shurtliff .conveyed an 80- *424 acre tract on the opposite (east) side of the river to plaintiffs’ predecessor. But instead of using the river as the western boundary, the deed described the tract by metes and bounds:

Commencing at the Southeast corner of the North half of the Southeast quarter of Section 13, in Township 6 South, Range 2 East of the Salt Lake Meridian; thence West 22.50 chains; thence North 7}4 degrees East 40.33 chains; thence East 18.50 chains; thence South 40.00 chains to place of beginning. Area 80 acres.

Following the exact call of the later deed, (as emphasized) the straight-line west boundary does not follow the river, which goosenecks easterly and back. Thus the straight-line call overlaps on the north and south ends of the tract and so purports to convey part of the property Shurtliff had previously conveyed to Park by the 1883 deed.

There is an incidental fact, stressed by the plaintiffs, that the next deed in the defendants’ chain of title, from David S. Park to his son Roy Park in 1918, uses a tax notice metes and bounds description, instead of the Provo River, as the east boundary. (While there still would be some overlap, this line is different than that relied upon by the plaintiffs.) However, it is important to note that the deed to Roy Park did not divest the Parks of the property they had previously acquired up to the Provo River. Further, it made no conveyance which would redound to the benefit or interest of the plaintiffs; and much more importantly, it had no effect whatsoever upon the controlling fact in this case; that the defendants (and predecessors) had been in open, notorious, and continuous occupation of the property up to the river for many years. (The trial court’s,.- finding recited more than 50 years.) There is testimony from several witnesses that the Parks had so occupied their property up to a barbed ■ wire fence which had existed along the west bank of the river since time immemorial; and that no one else ever did so, or made any claim to it, and this includes the plaintiffs and their predecessors. It was on those facts that the trial court rejected plaintiffs’ claim to the ownership of the land and ruled in favor of the defendants on the basis of boundary by acquiescence. 2

Plaintiffs place reliance on the Marketable Record Title Act, Chapter 109, Laws of Utah 1963, now included in our code as Sections 57-9-1 et seq. through 57-9-10. Section 57-9-1 states:

Any person . . . who has an unbroken chain of title of record . for forty years or more, shall be deemed to have a marketable record title . . . *425 as defined in Section 57-9-8, subject only to the matters stated in Section 57-9-2

Section 57-9-8 states:

As used in this act: (1) The words “marketable record title” mean a title of record as indicated in Section 57-9-1, which operates to extinguish such interests and claims, existing prior to the root of title.

Plaintiffs argue that they have had record title to the disputed land since their 1886 deed and that the effect of the statutes just quoted is to “extinguish . claims existing prior to the root of title,” i. e., the defendant’s 1883 deed.

Consideration of plaintiffs argument and the applicability of the quoted statutes as an attack upon the findings and judgment of the trial court renders it desirable to reflect upon some foundational principles applicable to disputes in the ownership of land. A primary one is that the peace and good order of society require that there be stability not only in record land titles, but more importantly, in the ownership and occupation of lands. It is for this reason that it has seemed sound policy that boundary lines which have been long established and accepted by those who should be concerned should be left undisturbed in order to leave at rest matters which may have resulted in controversy and litigation, wherefore there has developed the doctrine of boundary by acquiescence. 3 Its essence is that where there arises a dispute as to the boundary between properties, and it appears that there is a recognizable physical boundary of any character, which has been acquiesced in as a boundary for a long period of time, 4 the conflict should be conclusively presumed to have been reconciled in some manner. It is our opinion that the policy of encouraging peace and good order and of discouraging trouble and controversy demands that that be accepted as the correct doctrine, and that it need not depend upon rationalization as to ideas of estoppel, presumed agreements, lost grants or other fictional concepts. 5

The plaintiffs’ argument presents a confrontation between the doctrine of boundary by acquiescence as just discussed, which we regard as a foundational one relating to lights based on actual possession of land, and the provisions of the Marketable Record Title Act which, as its title indicates, is concerned with matters of record. That Act has the same purpose of *426

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

Related

Anderson v. Fautin
2014 UT App 151 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2014)
Orton v. Carter
970 P.2d 1254 (Utah Supreme Court, 1998)
Breliant v. Preferred Equities Corp.
918 P.2d 314 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1996)
Carter v. Hanrath
885 P.2d 801 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 1994)
Englert v. Zane
848 P.2d 165 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 1993)
Cannefax v. Clement
786 P.2d 1377 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 1990)
Amoco Production Company v. United States
852 F.2d 1574 (Tenth Circuit, 1988)
Amoco Production Co. v. United States
619 F.2d 1383 (Tenth Circuit, 1980)
Elias v. Lea
270 P.3d 414 (Utah Supreme Court, 1978)
Bountiful v. Swift
535 P.2d 1236 (Utah Supreme Court, 1975)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
511 P.2d 145, 29 Utah 2d 421, 1973 Utah LEXIS 826, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olsen-v-park-daughters-investment-company-utah-1973.