Rosser v. Elite Craft Homes

2026 UT App 16
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedFebruary 5, 2026
DocketCase No. 20231023-CA
StatusPublished

This text of 2026 UT App 16 (Rosser v. Elite Craft Homes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rosser v. Elite Craft Homes, 2026 UT App 16 (Utah Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

2026 UT App 16

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

JEREMY ROSSER AND BRANDON KILBURN, Appellants, v. ELITE CRAFT HOMES, LLC AND JPC CONTRACTING, INC., Appellees.

Opinion No. 20231023-CA Filed February 5, 2026

Second District Court, Ogden Department The Honorable Craig Hall No. 220903070

Jonathan R. Schofield, Dick J. Baldwin, Steven R. Glauser, and Daniel S. Sorenson, Attorneys for Appellants Peter H. Barlow and Axel Trumbo, Attorneys for Appellees

JUDGE AMY J. OLIVER authored this Opinion, in which JUDGE MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN FORSTER concurred. JUDGE RYAN M. HARRIS concurred with opinion.

OLIVER, Judge:

¶1 On a summer evening in 2021, a fire at a construction site owned and operated by Elite Craft Homes, LLC (Elite) spread to the neighboring house owned and occupied by Jeremy Rosser and Brandon Kilburn (collectively, Residents). Residents escaped the fire, but their pets perished, and their house was destroyed. Residents sued Elite for negligence, negligent infliction of emotional distress, trespass, and nuisance. The district court granted summary judgment on all four claims after concluding that Elite owed Residents no duty and that Residents had not demonstrated the requisite intent for their trespass claim. We Rosser v. Elite Craft Homes

conclude that Elite did owe a duty to Residents as adjacent landowners but that a claim of negligent trespass is not available in Utah. We thus affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment on the trespass claim, but we reverse the grant of summary judgment on the claims for negligence, negligent infliction of emotional distress, and nuisance.

BACKGROUND 1

The Construction Site

¶2 In 2020, Residents purchased a home in Ogden. One year later, Elite began construction of a four-story apartment building (the Building) on the lot adjacent to Residents’ property (the Construction Site). The Building was built at the ten-foot setback from the shared property line.

¶3 By late June 2021, the framing of the Building was nearly complete and the Building was four stories tall, roofless, and made primarily of wood. The Construction Site had no exterior fencing because subcontractors were delivering lumber to all four stories of the Building with telescopic forklifts and Elite believed fencing would inhibit their work. The Construction Site did have a temporary fence in the northeast corner surrounding recently delivered lumber to protect it from theft. Elite’s other anti-theft measures included the following steps at the end of each workday: instructing all subcontractors to remove tools and materials, locking the on-site portable toilet, parking the telescopic forklift so it blocked the only after-hours vehicle entrance, and having one of the superintendents walk the Construction Site to verify compliance. Despite these measures,

1. “When reviewing a grant of summary judgment, we view the facts in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.” Utah Golf Ass’n v. City of N. Salt Lake, 2003 UT 38, ¶ 10, 79 P.3d 919.

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the Construction Site and the Building were still accessible to foot traffic after hours.

¶4 Many unhoused individuals lived in a shelter and a park near the Construction Site. Residents frequently saw individuals who appeared to be unhoused in and around the Construction Site. On one occasion, Residents called the police after they heard screaming coming from inside the Building after workers had left.

¶5 Prior to the fire, Elite knew that unauthorized people had accessed the Construction Site outside of working hours. On more than one occasion, Elite workers noticed makeshift shelters built at the Construction Site. Once it discovered the shelters, Elite immediately removed them and discarded any associated food wrappers or beverage containers. Framers also reported to a superintendent that one morning in late May or early June they found people inside the Building when they arrived for work.

The Fire

¶6 On the evening of June 28, 2021, security cameras from a business across the street from the Construction Site captured footage of people entering and exiting the Construction Site between 8:26 p.m. and 10:14 p.m. At 10:27 p.m., the first signs of a fire were observed through a window in the Building, and several individuals left the Building between 10:29 p.m. and 10:42 p.m. The first 911 call regarding the fire occurred at 10:42 p.m. The police arrived at 10:45 p.m. and immediately began evacuating the surrounding area. Fire trucks began arriving at 10:47 p.m.

¶7 Residents were home asleep when the fire started. The fire awakened Kilburn, who then woke Rosser. When Rosser opened the front door to see what was going on, smoke and heat poured into the home. Residents realized they needed to evacuate immediately and attempted to gather their cat and two dogs, but they were unable to locate them. Residents ultimately fled their house without their shoes or cellphones, leaving the front door

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open so their pets would have a way to escape. As they fled their home, they felt their necks burning from the heat of the fire. While they were fleeing, a transformer located on a power pole between their house and the Construction Site exploded and the debris struck Kilburn, cutting his arm. The fire destroyed their house, and their pets did not survive.

¶8 Fire investigators were unable to determine precisely when the fire began or its exact cause, but it appeared the fire grew gradually until it got so hot that everything in the Building caught fire in a “flashover.” Flames from the Construction Site caused Residents’ home to catch fire. The fire was so intense that it ignited everything nearby and melted security cameras hundreds of feet from the Construction Site.

The Lawsuit

¶9 Residents filed this case against Elite in district court, asserting claims of negligence, negligent infliction of emotional distress, trespass, and nuisance. Residents alleged Elite acted negligently by failing to prevent trespassers from entering the Construction Site when the Building was in a highly flammable state.

¶10 Elite moved for summary judgment on all four claims, arguing that because it had no special legal relationship with Residents, it owed them no duty to protect them from harm that resulted from the criminal acts of a third party. Elite also argued, in the alternative, that Residents could not prove negligent infliction of emotional distress because they could not show they were in the zone of danger or demonstrate severe mental or physical manifestations related to their alleged emotional distress, nor could Residents prove trespass because they could not show that the trespass of the fire onto their property was intentional.

¶11 In response, Residents argued they did not need to prove a special legal relationship because Elite negligently created a

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situation that caused the fire, making Elite’s conduct an affirmative act, not an omission. Residents argued that construction of the Building “without mitigating the risk of trespassers causing a fire constituted an affirmative act, and a duty of care inhered.” Alternatively, Residents argued that they were within the zone of danger and suffered severe manifestations of emotional distress, as well as that Utah case law could be interpreted to allow for recovery on negligent trespass claims.

¶12 The district court granted Elite’s motion for summary judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
2026 UT App 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosser-v-elite-craft-homes-utahctapp-2026.