Park City Utah Corp. v. Ensign Co.

586 P.2d 446, 1978 Utah LEXIS 1448
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 23, 1978
Docket15410
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 586 P.2d 446 (Park City Utah Corp. v. Ensign Co.) 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
Park City Utah Corp. v. Ensign Co., 586 P.2d 446, 1978 Utah LEXIS 1448 (Utah 1978).

Opinion

MAUGHAN, Justice:

Defendant appeals from a motion for partial summary judgment wherein plaintiff was awarded $98,000. The judgment is affirmed. No costs awarded. All statutory references are to U.C.A., 1953.

This present action is the culmination of the efforts of plaintiff, by a series of motions, to implement a judgment on stipulation rendered July 23, 1971. The judgment by stipulation was predicated on a complaint wherein it was alleged a dispute existed between plaintiff and defendants concerning their respective interests in certain properties subject to an agreement, which was attached to the pleadings as Exhibit A. Plaintiff sought a declaratory judgment wherein the properties would be divided and distributed as contemplated by the parties pursuant to the agreement. The defendant, Ensign Company, was a limited partnership, with Robert W. Ensign, as the general partner. In this present appeal Ensign alone appeals, although there were two other defendants, namely, Ski Park City West, Inc. and Aspen Grove, Inc. (the name of which was changed to National Property Management, Inc.), two corporations.

Exhibit A, the agreement attached to the complaint, was dated January 24,1967, and set forth the terms for the development of a recreational ski resort by Major-Blakeney Corporation and Robert W. Ensign. The complaint alleged Ensign’s interest was assigned to Ensign Company and the corporate defendants acquired an interest in the property. All of the interest in the agreement and to the properties of Major-Blake-ney Corporation was assigned to plaintiff, Park City Utah Corporation on June 26, 1968.

The 1967 agreement provided:

5.Ensign shall be responsible for paying any and all cash consideration, fees, charges and other costs initially and subsequently required to acquire good title to the land which will be conveyed through escrows; this to include installments that become due upon promissory notes secured by mortgages or other security instruments, covering encumbered land thus purchased. .

To terminate their dispute regarding the 1967 agreement and the proper division of property acquired pursuant thereto, the parties entered into a judgment on stipulation. In addition to awarding each party specific parcels, the judgment provided:

It Is Further Ordered That for the protection of the existing original sellers and third party purchasers the defendants shall without restriction or limitation, except as herein provided, apply third party purchasers proceeds to original seller obligations.
A. On receipt of third party proceeds not heretofore assigned and pending disbursements thereof to original seller obligations, the defendants shall deposit said proceeds in a separate trust account, the *448 establishment, terms and conditions of withdrawal therefrom to be subject to the approval of plaintiff. It is the intent hereof that said proceeds are to be segregated from the general funds, accounts and expenditures of defendants and applied only to original seller obligations, and are to be received and held in trust by the defendants to insure performance of the obligations to the original sellers.
It Is Further Ordered That the above stated procedure of permitting defendants to apply third party purchaser proceeds to original seller obligations shall not be construed or interpreted as a waiver, modification or alteration of any other basic agreement or agreements between the parties and should the defendants fail to perform as herein ordered, this payment procedure is without prejudice to plaintiff to revoke the same and reinstate the original contractual prohibition against said payment procedure.
It Is Further Ordered That the above stated payment procedure does not alter, amend or modify defendants’ obligations to original sellers or third party purchasers and is without prejudice to plaintiff invoking all of its rights and remedies against defendants in the event of breach or default.

Subsequent to the entry of the judgment, defendants did not discharge their obligations to the original sellers on certain parcels of land awarded to plaintiffs. (It should be interjected that although defendants had the duty to pay for all the land in the project, the proceeds from third party sales were to be used for this purpose. The land was to be equally divided between plaintiff and defendants; each then sold an equal amount of land to third party buyers, the proceeds from which would be sufficient to pay for the entire acquisition cost.)

Pursuant to a hearing held on February 27 and 28, 1975, an order of the court was issued April 8,1975, wherein the court ruled the judgment on stipulation was final, valid, and binding. It also ruled it was the duty of the defendants to pay and discharge the purchase money obligations on the land divided to plaintiffs. The court further or-dered a means to determine the amounts currently due and owing upon the original purchase money obligations. The court granted plaintiff’s motion for leave to execute as to amounts sufficient to discharge the outstanding purchase money obligations for the release of the land. Thereafter a writ of execution for the sum of $76,653.53 was issued; it was returned unsatisfied. Subsequently, plaintiff filed a motion for a money judgment in the sum of $98,000. According to the motion this amount represented the sum required to release parcels 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, which should have been released by the defendants making the necessary payments as required by the judgment on stipulation of 1971, and the court orders of April 8 and November 6, 1975. Pursuant to this motion, plaintiff moved for partial summary judgment.

In its motion for summary judgment, plaintiff set forth as grounds the judgment on stipulation of July 23, 1971, had been deemed by the court a valid, subsisting decree binding upon all parties thereto. The judgment of July 23, 1971, ordered defendants to discharge the outstanding purchase money obligations encumbering the land awarded to plaintiff, sufficient to cause the release of the property to plaintiff and third party purchasers. Defendants had defaulted on these obligations. The court had confirmed the foregoing facts, and had granted plaintiff’s prior motion to execute, under the judgment of 1971. Defendants had at no time sought to meet their obligations pursuant to the judgment and orders. The court ruled on July 21, 1977, there remained one factual issue for determination, the current money amount due from defendants to plaintiffs for the formers’ default, under the 1971 judgment, and subsequent orders based on it.

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Bluebook (online)
586 P.2d 446, 1978 Utah LEXIS 1448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/park-city-utah-corp-v-ensign-co-utah-1978.