Pioneer Investment & Trust Co. v. Board of Education

99 P. 150, 35 Utah 1, 1909 Utah LEXIS 1
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1909
DocketNo. 1969
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 99 P. 150 (Pioneer Investment & Trust Co. v. Board of Education) 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 Investment & Trust Co. v. Board of Education, 99 P. 150, 35 Utah 1, 1909 Utah LEXIS 1 (Utah 1909).

Opinion

ERICK, J.

This is an action upon a covenant of warranty. The appellant is a public corporation, and as such held, occupied, used, and sold the premises hereinafter referred to. The evidence tended to establish that the premises in question for many years had been used for public school purposes, but that for ten or fifteen years immediately preceding the transactions involved in this case they had been abandoned for such purpose for the reason that they were more suitable for other purposes, and were held for sale by appellant, and were finally sold by it, as will more fully appear hereafter. The additional fácts necessary to a full understanding of the points raised by appellant are fairly reflected in the findings of the court, as follows: That on the 1st day of July, 1905, the appellant, for a valuable consideration, sold, and by warranty deed conveyed to one Ered A. Rosenfeld, certain particularly described real estate in Salt Lake City; that said deed was in statutory form, and in which the [6]*6grantor covenanted that it was lawfully seized; that it had good right and authority to convey; that the premises were free from incumbrances, and it warranted the title as against claims generally; that thereafter on the 3d day of July, 1905, the said Eosenfeld, by warranty deed, duly conveyed the premises in question to the respondent; that at the time the premises were conveyed by appellant to Eosenfeld there was situated on the westerly end thereof a portion of a two-story brick building, covering a space of ten and one-half by sixteen feet, which building was claimed and occupied by a certain corporation; that the premises had been used, held,, and occupied by said corporation “continuously, openly, notoriously, peaceably, and adversely against all the world, under claim of right for more than twenty years- next preceding the 1st day of July, 1905, for educational and charitable purposes;” that said building had been erected more than twenty years prior to the 1st day of July, 1905, and had stood upon the place mentioned above during all of said time; that during all of said time no taxes 'had been assessed or levied for any purpose against said building or ground upon which said building was standing; that on the 12th day of February, 1906, the respondent negotiated a sale of the premises conveyed by appellant to Eosenfeld, and by him conveyed to respondent, to one Doyle, but that said Doyle refused to complete his purchase of and to accept the property aforesaid, without the relinquishment of the right of the corporation aforesaid to the portion of the premises upon which said building stood, and of which said corporation was in possession and occupation, as aforesaid; that said corporation claimed title and right to said premises by prescription; that the respondent, in order to make and complete the sale of said premises to Doyle, and to clear the same from the claim of said corporation, was compelled to pay and did pay to said corporation the sum of $150, for the relinquishment of its right and claim in and to said premises, after which payment said corporation relinquished its right to the same to Doyle; that said sum [7]*7of $150, so paid as aforesaid, was reasonable; that in negotiating and in procuring the relinquishment aforesaid from said corporation, respondent was necessarily required to employ an attorney, and the services rendered by him were of the reasonable-value of $75; that respondent duly notified the appellant of the claim of said corporation to the portion of the premises aforesaid, and demanded from appellant that it comply with its covenants of warranty, which appellant. refused to do; that the respondent before the bringing of this' action demanded of appellant the said sums of $150 and $75 paid by respondent as aforesaid. IJpon the foregoing facts the court based its conclusions of law that respondent was entitled to judgment for the sum of $225, and entered judgment accordingly, from which this appeal is prosecuted.

Counsel for appellant have limited their argument to two questions: (1) That the finding of adverse possession is not supported by the evidence; and (2) that, although it be held that the finding is so supported, the doctrine of acquiring title by adverse possession or by prescription is not applicable to the facts in this case-. . It is therefore asserted that the appellant is not liable to respondent as for a breach of the covenants of warranty. As to the first proposition, it is asserted that the evidence discloses that the officers of the corporation which was in possession of the portion of the ground did not claim any right Or title to the premises on behalf of such corporation, that the possession was a mere passive one, and that such a possession was not sufficient to enable said corporation to acquire title by adverse possession or prescription. ^It may be conceded that a mere passive possession, without intending to claim the property, is insufficient, regardless of the length of time such a possession continues, or however open, notorious, or exclusive it may have been. This is so because such a 1 possession is not adverse to the rights and title of the real ownen) It is not the mere possession that determines the rights of the parties, but it is the character of the possession [8]*8chat controls. But bow is the character of the possession to be determined ? It cannot always be determined from the declarations of the party in possession, because he may not make any, nor are his declarations always conclusive as against one claiming under him. Whenever the possession is of such a character that ovg3£»sbi-p may be inferred therefrom, then the possession ordinarily may be presumed to> be hostile to the rights of the true owner; that is, if a party places permanent structures upon the land belonging to another, and uses the land and structures the same as an owner ordinarily uses his land, then, in the 2 absence of something showing a contrary intention, a claim of ownership may be inferred in favor of the party in possession. The controlling facts in this case are that the corporation which was in possession built a permanent structure' upon that portion of the land in question in 1883, and continuously used and treated the land and structure as its own. Moreover, when the respondent directed the attention of the corporate officers to the fact that the building encroached upon respondent’s land, they did not admit that the corporation was a trespasser and had no ■ rights in the premises. True, they did not, in so many, words, declaré that the corporation claimed and held an undisputable title to the strip of ground, but they' did in effect say that they desired to defend whatever claim the corporation might have acquired by-virtue of its possession and use of the building and ground upon which it stood. Further, the. officers of the corporation clearly indicated a claim of. right by asking compensation for removing that part of the building extending onto respondent’s land. By doing this they virtually denied that the corporation was a trespasser, and this declaration necessarily implied that the corporation was in possession under some claim of right. Tf the corporation claimed no rights in thejremises. thnn-irt-wairTrTne-re-was committing a wrong by^remainingjn^-p belonging to_gu other. . By demanding compensation, the corporation disputed the rights of respondent and made a claim [9]*9to tbe premises which could only have been settled amicably by the parties, or in a court of justice in the same way that all disputes are ultimately adjusted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 P. 150, 35 Utah 1, 1909 Utah LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pioneer-investment-trust-co-v-board-of-education-utah-1909.