RHN CORP. v. Veibell

2004 UT 60, 96 P.3d 935, 504 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 2004 Utah LEXIS 129, 2004 WL 1587027
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 16, 2004
Docket20010548
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 2004 UT 60 (RHN CORP. v. Veibell) 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
RHN CORP. v. Veibell, 2004 UT 60, 96 P.3d 935, 504 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 2004 Utah LEXIS 129, 2004 WL 1587027 (Utah 2004).

Opinion

DURHAM, Chief Justice:

BACKGROUND

¶ 1 This case involves two separate boundary disputes between adjacent landowners in Box Elder County. The Veibell family and the Ericksen family have owned adjacent properties in the county since the early 1900s. The parties to this case are J. Alton Veibell (Alton Veibell or Veibell), the successor-in-interest to the Veibell property, and the Leola J. Ericksen Family Limited Partnership (the Partnership), the successor-in-interest to the Ericksen property. The parties have raised claims based on boundary by acquiescence and deed reformation.

I. BOUNDARY BY ACQUIESCENCE CLAIM

¶.2 The first plot in dispute is a small triangle of land located on the north side of the 111.5 rod mark in Section 23 of Box Elder County. 1 The chain of title to this triangle and the surrounding property is as follows: Michael C. Ericksen acquired title to a large parcel of land in Section 23 of Box Elder County in 1901; in 1909, Michael conveyed the property north of the 111.5 rod mark (the Ericksen property) to Joseph Er-icksen, who in turn deeded the property to his son and daughter-in-law, Durell and Leola J. Ericksen, on January 19, 1965; Durell Ericksen passed away in 1978, and his wife, Leola, transferred the property to the Partnership in 1987 before she passed away in 1990.

¶ 3 On November 7, 1938, Michael Erick-sen conveyed the portion of the property south of the 111.5 rod mark (the Veibell property) to James Weibell, 2 father of Alton Veibell. The 1938 deed contained the following property description:

Beginning at a point 111.5 rods South of the northwest corner of the Northeast Quarter of Section 23, Township 12 North, range 2 West of the Salt Lake Meridian, running thence South 208.5 rods; thence East 160 rods; thence North 208.5 rods; thence West 160 rods to the place of beginning, containing 108.5 acres.

*939 Alton Veibell obtained legal title to this property in 1958. The four boundaries of the Veibell property are along straight lines with ninety-degree angles. The 111.5 rod mark, running from east to west, is the record boundary separating the Veibell property from the Ericksen property to the north.

¶ 4 Since before 1938, a diagonal fence (the diagonal fence) has run the width of the property along the boundary between the Ericksen and Veibell properties. The west end of the fence begins at a position south of the 111.5 rod mark on the Veibell property. The fence runs northeast, crosses the rod mark about half way down the property line, and continues onto the Ericksen property north of the 111.5 rod mark. For decades, the Ericksens and Veibells treated this fence, not the 111.5 rod mark, as the boundary between their respective properties.

¶ 5 The location of the diagonal fence and the record boundary line create two triangles of land that are in dispute. The Veibells are the record owners of the west triangle, but it is occupied by the Ericksens. The east triangle is owned by the Ericksens, but it is occupied by the Veibells.

¶ 6 The Ericksens have farmed up to the fence since the late 1930s. Durell Ericksen was not alive to testify at trial as to his belief concerning the boundary line. However his brother, Bryce Ericksen, who helped farm the family’s land until the early 1960s, testified that he believed that the fence was the true boundary line.

¶ 7 James Weibell, Alton Veibell’s father, farmed the Veibell property up to the fence from the 1920s until he passed away in 1951. His son, Alton, continued farming the land up to the fence until the time of trial. Alton Veibell testified that he believed the diagonal fence represented the true boundary line up until 1981, when he had his property surveyed. There is no indication in the record that either family ever objected to the fence as a boundary prior to the 1990s.

¶ 8 While Veibell testified that he did not discover the record boundary was not the fence line until 1981, there is some evidence that as early as 1979, he may have realized that the fence was not the record boundary. In 1979, Veibell sold a lot to his son on the north end of his property that was located precisely on the record boundary, not along the fence line. - In 1981, however, Veibell inconsistently deeded a right-of-way across the east triangle, the property he did not own, to Gregory Collings.

¶ 9 In 1999, Alton Veibell filed an action to quiet title in the east triangle.

II. DEED REFORMATION CLAIM

¶ 10 On April 10, 1967, Alton and Grethe Veibell conveyed by warranty deed (the 1967 deed) a portion of Section 23 south of the fence that ran along the 111.5 rod mark to J. Durell Ericksen and Leola J. Ericksen. The 1967 deed contained the following metes and bounds description of the conveyed property:

Part of the East-half of Section 23, Township 12 North, Range 2 West, SLM, described further as:
Beginning at a point in the N-S centerline of said Section 23, said point being South 2007.8 feet and West 2645.3 feet (South III.5 rods and West 160 Rods by record) from the NE Corner of said Section 23; thence North 81< 36' E 807.5 feet along an existing fence line; thence S 05 < 15' W 1091 feet; thence S 15 < 59' E 1089.5 feet; Thence S 07< 07' W 1332.0 feet more or less to the South line of said Section 23, thence West 927.7 feet along said South line of Section 23, to the N-S centerline of said Section 23; thence north 3348 feet (208.5 rods by record) to the point of beginning. Containing in all 75.8 acres, more or less.

¶ 11 The northern boundary of the conveyed property runs along a fence line that slants slightly to the northeast. The eastern boundary contains three slanted legs. The northernmost two legs run alongside Willow Creek, but the southernmost leg veers slightly west of the creek. The southern boundary runs due west along the south line of Section 23. The western boundary runs due north along the N-S centerline of Section 23.

*940 ¶ 12 The above metes and bounds description contains two errors that give rise to this dispute. First, the true distance from the southeast corner of the conveyed property to the N-S centerline is approximately 816.75 feet, not 927.7 feet as described in the 1967 deed. Due to this error, the property description does not close, and the southern boundary extends 110 feet onto property not owned by the Veibells at the time of the transfer. Second, the 1967 deed purports to convey “in all 75.8 acres, more or less,” but in reality the conveyed property contains only 64.5 acres. Presumably, the error in calculating the acreage resulted from the mistaken call of the southern boundary.

¶ 13 Alton Veibell testified that he and Durell Ericksen negotiated the boundaries prior to the sale of the conveyed property. Regarding the proposed eastern boundary, Veibell testified that he placed four stakes to mark the three slanted legs of the boundary and that these stakes were originally all on the west side of Willow Creek, leaving the creek entirely on Veibell’s property.

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Bluebook (online)
2004 UT 60, 96 P.3d 935, 504 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 2004 Utah LEXIS 129, 2004 WL 1587027, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhn-corp-v-veibell-utah-2004.