Roper v. Elkhorn at Sun Valley

605 P.2d 968, 100 Idaho 790, 1980 Ida. LEXIS 393
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 1, 1980
Docket13019
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 605 P.2d 968 (Roper v. Elkhorn at Sun Valley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roper v. Elkhorn at Sun Valley, 605 P.2d 968, 100 Idaho 790, 1980 Ida. LEXIS 393 (Idaho 1980).

Opinion

BAKES, Justice.

Plaintiff appellants Ropers bring this appeal from a summary judgment entered in favor of defendant respondent Elkhorn at Sun Valley upon plaintiffs’ claim that Elk-horn breached a deed warranty against encumbrances in a conveyance of a building site to the Ropers. The Ropers also appeal from an award of attorney fees made by the district court to Elkhorn. We affirm.

Plaintiff appellants Ropers, husband and wife, purchased a building lot located on the south rim of the Snake River canyon near Twin Falls in May 1976, from defendant respondent Elkhorn at Sun Valley. The Ropers began construction of a home on the lot in the summer of 1976. After construction began, the Twin Falls Highway District asserted a claim to a fifty-foot easement across the Ropers’ building lot to the canyon rim. The claimed easement was centered along a section line located near the center of the Ropers’ lot and passed through that part of the lot upon which the Ropers had begun construction of a home. In order to settle the highway district’s claim of an easement and continue construction of their new home, the Ropers conveyed to the Twin Falls Highway District a right of way of identical size on the eastern border of their lot in exchange for a quitclaim of the district’s claimed easement through the middle of the property.

After conveying the fifty-foot easement on the eastern edge of their lot to the Twin Falls Highway District, the Ropers commenced this action against defendant respondent Elkhorn. They claimed that the highway district’s claimed easement along the section line through the center of their property was not noted on their deed from Elkhorn and that the easement therefore constituted a breach of warranties of title made by Elkhorn in the deed. Elkhorn subsequently filed a third party complaint against the Peters, the parties from whom Elkhorn purchased the property; Lawyers Title Insurance Corporation; Titlefact, Inc.; Twin Falls County; and Twin Falls Highway District. Elkhorn contended that if it were found to be liable to the Ropers upon the title warranties the third party defendants should be held liable to Elkhorn for the amount of the Ropers’ recovery. Third party defendants Lawyers Title Insurance Corporation, Titlefact, Inc., Twin Falls Highway District, and Twin Falls County were dismissed from the suit prior to the trial court’s granting defendant Elkhorn’s motion for summary judgment.

The property in this case was originally part of that land conveyed by the federal government to the State of Idaho for private settlement under the Carey Act, 43 U.S.C. § 641 (1894). It was patented by the State of Idaho to private ownership in two transactions, the first occurring December 11, 1905, and the second August 13, 1906.

The Twin Falls Highway District’s claim to a public easement across the parcel was based upon an 1866 federal statute, 43 U.S.C. § 932, in which the federal government granted a right of way for the construction of highways over public lands not reserved for public use. The basis for the Twin Falls Highway District’s claimed easement, asserted against the Ropers in the summer of 1976, was a resolution passed by the Twin Falls Highway District on February 8, 1919. This resolution, which was submitted by the Ropers and Elkhorn to the district court by stipulation, recited that by “proper proceedings” the Board of County *793 Commissioners of both Cassia County and Twin Falls County “have accepted the [federal] grant of the right of way for the construction of highways over much of the public lands described below . . ” and purported to “confirm” that prior acceptance. The 1919 resolution, however, did not specify when the acceptances referred to may have occurred or where they might be found.

The trial court granted defendant Elk-horn’s motion for summary judgment upon the pleadings and affidavits filed in the case. It was Elkhorn’s contention in its motion for summary judgment that the Twin Falls Highway District had no valid claim to an easement across the Ropers’ property and that, therefore, the highway district’s claimed easement did not constitute an encumbrance upon the Ropers’ title at the time the property was conveyed to the Ropers. Elkhorn’s affidavits in support of its motion for summary judgment indicated that neither the Twin Falls County Commissioners nor the Twin Falls Highway District had ever accepted the federal government’s offer, contained in 43 U.S.C. § 932 (1866), of public easements across unreserved federal property. It was Elk-horn's position that there was in fact no public easement across the Ropers’ property at the time it conveyed the parcel to the Ropers.

In support of its motion for summary judgment defendant Elkhorn submitted an affidavit by T. W. Stivers, president and general manager of Titlefact, Inc., a corporation engaged in the business of writing title insurance policies in Twin Falls County. In this affidavit the affiant asserted that he had examined the records of Twin Falls County in the office of the Twin Falls county recorder and that he found no recorded document which indicated any acceptance or creation of a right of way for highway purposes by Twin Falls County or Twin Falls Highway District along the section lines in question. The affiant also asserted that he had checked the minute journal of the Twin Falls County Commissioners and had failed to find any entry or record establishing or accepting a highway right of way along the section lines. It is undisputed that there never has been in existence a public road or highway extending across the Ropers’ property along the said section line.

Plaintiffs Ropers made no submission in response to Elkhorn’s affidavits and motion for summary judgment, but relied upon the allegations made in their complaint that there was in fact a right of way in Twin Falls County’s favor across their property as a result of the February 8, 1919, resolution of the Twin Falls Highway District set out above. Appellants Ropers point out that Twin Falls County was created out of Cassia County in 1907 and that an acceptance of the federal government’s offer of a right of way may have occurred by the Cassia County Commissioners before the time the land passed out of the public domain in 1905 and 1906. However, the legislative act which created Twin Falls County from Cassia County in 1907 provided that upon passage of the act the county recorder of Cassia County would transcribe and deliver to the Twin Falls County recorder “all instruments, papers and other matters and things relating to or affecting property in the territory included in said county of Twin Falls.” 1907 Idaho Sess. Laws, p. 43. There is in Idaho, as in most states, a presumption of regularity in the performance of official duties by public officers. Farm Bureau Finance Co., Inc. v. Carney, 100 Idaho 745, 605 P.2d 509 (1980); Monson v. Boyd, 81 Idaho 575, 348 P.2d 93 (1959); see G. Bell, Handbook of Evidence for the Idaho Lawyer, 240 — 41 (2d ed. 1972).

Acceptance of the federal grant of a public right of way across unreserved lands made in 43 U.S.C.

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Bluebook (online)
605 P.2d 968, 100 Idaho 790, 1980 Ida. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roper-v-elkhorn-at-sun-valley-idaho-1980.