Pioneer Builders Co. of Nevada v. K D A Corp.

2012 UT 74, 292 P.3d 672, 720 Utah Adv. Rep. 43, 2012 Utah LEXIS 152, 2012 WL 5377666
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 2, 2012
DocketNo. 20110050
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 2012 UT 74 (Pioneer Builders Co. of Nevada v. K D A Corp.) 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
Pioneer Builders Co. of Nevada v. K D A Corp., 2012 UT 74, 292 P.3d 672, 720 Utah Adv. Rep. 43, 2012 Utah LEXIS 152, 2012 WL 5377666 (Utah 2012).

Opinion

INTRODUCTION

11 This case requires us to consider what constitutes constructive notice of unrecorded interests in real property under section 57-3-103 of the Utah Code (Recording Statute). Pioneer Builders (Pioneer) financed the purchase of an RV park (Property). At that time, the Property was subject to several existing recorded leases. But the Property was also subject to several unrecorded leases. When Pioneer attempted to foreclose on the property, some of the owners of the unrecorded leases (Defendants 2) argued that Pioneer could not foreclose on their lots because their interests in the Property were superior to Pioneer's.

12 The district court granted the Defendants' motions for summary judgment in their entirety and granted Pioneer's motion for summary judgment in part. The court found that, although Pioneer was entitled to foreclose on its loans, Pioneer had actual and constructive notice of the unrecorded leases. Accordingly, the district court concluded that Pioneer's interest in the Property was inferi- or to the interests of the Defendants. Pioneer argues that the district court incorrectly applied the standard for constructive notice and asks us to reverse the district court's decision. Pioneer also argues that the district court erred in concluding that Pioneer's interest in Parcel 25,3 which is part of the Property, is inferior to the interests of the Defendants. Further, Pioneer asks us to conclude that language in some of the Defendants' purchase contracts prevents them from having an interest in the Property until their contracts are paid in full. And finally, Pioneer asks us to reverse the district court's findings because the Defendants made references in their pleadings to Pioneer's possible insurance coverage.

1 3 We reverse the district court's grant of summary judgment in favor of the Defendants and remand for further proceedings. First, we conclude that the district court applied an incorrect legal standard regarding constructive notice and conflated the issue of whether Pioneer had notice of any recorded leases with whether it had notice of the anrecorded leases at issue. Accordingly, we remand this case so that the district court may conduct further proceedings consistent with the legal standard we clarify in this opinion. Second, although we agree with much of the district court's analysis regarding Parcel 25, we conclude that further proceedings are required to determine whether any of the Defendants have interests in Parcel 25 that are superior to Pioneer's. Third, we conclude that, regardless of the language [676]*676in some of the Defendants' purchase contracts, the Defendants obtained an interest in the Property even though their contracts have not yet been paid in full. And fourth, because Pioneer failed to show any prejudice resulting from the Defendants' references to Pioneer's insurance coverage, we decline to reverse on that basis.

BACKGROUND

1 4 The parties in this case have competing interests in the Property. The Property consists of forty acres of real property near Bear Lake in Rich County, Utah. It is divided into four parcels, which we refer to as Parcel 25, Parcel 36, Parcel 87, and Parcel 38.4 In 1988, KDA Corporation (KDA) owned the Property and converted it into Sunrise Village RV Park. KDA filed various documents for its park (Sunrise Village Documents) with the Rich County Recorder. The Sunrise Village Documents include regulations, maps of the Property, and rules about membership in the park, and specifically state that the Sunrise Village RV Park is "an integrated development with multiple lot owners or leaseholders." Consistent with these documents, KDA sold several one-hundred-year leases on the Property. Each of these leases describe the leased property by site number, and some of them were recorded.

T5 In the meantime, United West was considering purchasing the Property. Steve Baugh, an agent of United West, commissioned an appraisal report on the Property. Mr. Baugh commissioned the report to induce Ralph Call, who is Mr. Baugh's brother-inlaw and the president of Pioneer, to finance the purchase.5 The final appraisal report (Appraisal Report or Report), dated December 29, 2000, is fifty-seven pages long, including a two-page cover letter. Additionally, twelve pages of addenda are attached. But Pioneer asserts that it only received the first two pages of the Report.

T6 The cover letter of the Report states that "[this letter of transmittal is only that and should not be used as a letter appraisal," and concludes that "as of November 14, 2000," the value of the property was $6,630,000. On page six, the report explains that a particular part of the Property "consists of 52 lots ... sold on a membership in an owners' association that will take control after the sale of all the middle lots-there are 24 lots remaining unsold (the land is on a 99 year lease)." Further, a site map within the addenda (Site Map) is titled "Sunrise Village RV. Park" and shows "SOLD" stamped across twenty-eight sites.

T7 On October 17, 2000, KDA and United West executed a "purchase and sale agreement" conveying three of the four parcels of the Property to United West. The fourth parcel of the Property, Parcel 25, was not included in the agreement, and the parties dispute whether this was an accidental oversight. On November 18, 2000, KDA conveyed the three parcels to United West via warranty deed (Warranty Deed). The Warranty Deed states that KDA conveyed the three parcels "[slubject to all ... agreements, memberships, leases and right of ways [sic] of record."

T8 In connection with this conveyance, Pioneer made its first loan to United West. As security for repayment of this loan, United West executed a "Trust Deed with Assignment of Rents" (Trust Deed; together with the Warranty Deed, Original Deeds), dated November 13, 2000, under which United West is the trustor and Pioneer is the beneficiary. The Trust Deed includes a copy of the legal description of the Property conveyed by the Warranty Deed, which conveyed only three parcels. On November 17, 2000, Pioneer recorded its Original Deeds.

T9 In April of 2001, Mr. Call and Mr. Baugh personally visited the Property. The Defendants state that, by that time, the Defendants had made a variety of visible improvements to the Property. But Pioneer [677]*677asserts that very few of those improvements were visible on that visit. Specifically, Mr. Call stated that there was snow on the ground when he visited the Property, and that he saw only "four or five" recreational vehicles and a "few concrete slabs in scattered places."

110 On about August 18, 2001, Pioneer loaned additional money to Pine Ridge, a successor to United West. As security for this additional loan, Pine Ridge executed a "Modification of Trust Deed" in favor of Pic-neer, which stated that it was "made ... for purposes of changing the named trustor and amount secured," and a second "Trust Deed" (together, Modification Deeds). The Modification Deeds conveyed the three parcels that KDA had previously conveyed to United West, and additionally purported to convey Parcel 25, even though KDA had not yet conveyed Parcel 25 to United West or Pine Ridge. Pioneer recorded its Modification Deeds on August 14, 2001.

T 11 On September 24, 2002, Laren Nalder, an employee of the title company that was a party to the Original Deeds, recorded an "Affidavit Concerning Recorded Instruments" (Nalder Affidavit).

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Bluebook (online)
2012 UT 74, 292 P.3d 672, 720 Utah Adv. Rep. 43, 2012 Utah LEXIS 152, 2012 WL 5377666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pioneer-builders-co-of-nevada-v-k-d-a-corp-utah-2012.