Sleeping Indian Ranch, Inc. v. West Ridge Group, L.L.C.

107 P.3d 1028, 2004 WL 2003993
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 31, 2005
Docket02CA2329
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 107 P.3d 1028 (Sleeping Indian Ranch, Inc. v. West Ridge Group, L.L.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sleeping Indian Ranch, Inc. v. West Ridge Group, L.L.C., 107 P.3d 1028, 2004 WL 2003993 (Colo. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge GRAHAM.

Defendant, West Ridge Group, L.L.C., appeals from the trial court’s judgment establishing adverse possession and quieting title in favor of plaintiff, Sleeping Indian Ranch, Inc. (SIR). We reverse.

I. Ownership

The facts in this unusual case derive from a series of contracts for deed under which several persons occupied various portions of an 800-acre tract for a number of years without receiving formal conveyances of title.

SIR is the record title holder of a 40-acre parcel: SW1/4NE1/4, Section 9, Township 46 North, Range 7 West, N.M.P.M., Ouray County, Colorado. West Ridge is the record title holder of an adjacent 40-acre parcel due east of SIR’s property: SE1/4NE1/4, Section 9, Township 46 North, Range 7 West, N.M.P.M., Ouray County, Colorado.

Robert Perkins and his friends and family previously occupied SIR’s property and, treating it as their own, constructed a cabin on land abutting and overlapping the western border of West Ridge’s property in 1979. This cabin and approximately three acres on which the cabin is located, referred to as tract 2 (subject property), form the basis of this appeal.

A. Chain of Title

The subject property, located near Ridge-way, Colorado, is surrounded and encompassed by the 800-acre tract of land that was originally owned by the Holmans. On or about May 24, 1971, the Holmans entered into an installment real estate contract with Murray Gell-Mann. The contract called for a down payment and annual installments of principal and interest. The deed conveying the parcel to Gell-Mann was signed in August 1972, but was not recorded until May 1983.

Gell-Mann entered into an “Agreement of Sale and Purchase” dated May 14,1973, with Donald D. and Judith F. Ethridge and Der-rell and Charlene M. Kinney (as joint tenants). This agreement was also an installment contract requiring a down payment and annual installments of principal and interest by the Ethridges and the Kinneys. The contract was filed as an encumbrance of record on July 9, 1973. The deed conveying title to the property was signed by Gell-Mann in June 1973, but was not recorded until May 18,1983.

On July 12, 1973, pursuant to an “Assignment and Participation Agreement,” the Eth-ridges and the Kinneys assigned their rights under their contract with Gell-Mann to Charles C. Ashby, June M. Ashby, David G. Wood, and Raymond P. Wood. Pursuant to the Assignment and Participation Agreement, the Ethridges and the Kinneys allocated portions of the 800-acre parcel to the various assignees in exchange for the assignees “assuming the obligations” that the Eth-ridges and the Kinneys owed to Gell-Mann “in direct proportion to the amount of acreage which they are each going to take.” The property allocated to the Ashbys was 120 acres.

In 1974, Charles Ashby approached Robert Perkins and Alfred Stuck regarding their sharing the 120-aere portion. Perkins and Stuck each agreed to “step in” to assist the Ashbys under the Assignment and Participation Agreement by each paying the Ashbys one-third of the Ashbys’ financial obligation in yearly installments for their portions over a 15-year period in exchange for acquiring a 40-acre parcel. There are no *1030 formal documents describing the arrangement.

The deed from the Ethridges and the Kin-neys conveying title to the 120-acre portion to the Ashbys was signed June 17, 1988 and recoi'ded on June 20, 1988. Meanwhile, on June 10, 1988, Charles Ashby (June Ashby having died 1976) conveyed by deed to Stuck and Perkins two 40-acre parcels within the larger 120-acre parcel. Stuek’s deed was filed of record on June 10, 1988, and Perkins’s deed was filed of record on June 20, 1988.

Charles Ashby conveyed his 40-acre parcel to his second wife, Emilia Vargas, by quitclaim deed that was signed in November 1984 but not recorded until June 20, 1988. Vargas quitclaimed her interest to West Ridge on April 15, 1999. The quitclaim deed was recorded April 21,1999.

On January 10, 1990, Perkins conveyed by quitclaim deed his interest in his 40-acre parcel to certain of his friends and relatives (the Perkins Group). The Perkins , Group conveyed the 40-acre parcel to SIR in June 1996 by quitclaim deed and general warranty deed.

In summary, the numerous assignors and assignees sold or assigned their interests during the period 1971-1988. The Holmans were the record owners of the entire 800-acre parcel until May 18, 1983. On May 18, 1983, Gell-Mann’s deed was recorded, and he conveyed title to the Ethridges and the Kin-neys that same day. The Ethridges and the Kinneys remained record owners of the property until June 20, 1988, when they signed and recorded a deed conveying title to a 120-acre parcel to the Ashbys. On that date, Charles Ashby executed two warranty deeds conveying title of a 40-acre parcel to Perkins and a 40-acre parcel to Stuck, the men who had “stepped in” to assist the Ashbys in paying installments due under the Assignment and Participation Agreement. The Ashbys’ parcel is now owned by defendant, West Ridge, while the Perkins parcel is now owned by plaintiff, SIR.

B. Perldns’s Use of the Subject Property

The subject property is located on the western edge of the Ashbys’ 40-acre parcel,where it meets the eastern edge of Perkins’s parcel. Both Perkins and Stuck testified at trial that Ashby, Perkins, and Stuck each “owned” their respective 40-aere parcels exclusively and had no rights to the others’ parcels.

Perkins testified at trial that he and members of the Perkins Group used the subject property for hunting for a couple of weeks every fall, beginning in 1974. The group originally camped in trailers on the property. Then in 1978, construction of the log cabin began. Although Perkins assured himself that he was building the cabin on what he understood to be his 40-acre parcel, the cabin was actually located on the western edge of Ashby’s property. Ashby was not aware that the cabin was on his property, and Perkins testified that Ashby would not have consented to its construction there if he had known. The Perkins Group used the cabin as a hunting camp annually until 1996, when the property was conveyed to SIR. SIR, a cattle ranching company, has continued to use the cabin as a shelter and occasional lunch spot for its employees, and has maintained the area surrounding the cabin by installing culverts and cattle guards.

The trial court, after a bench trial, concluded that SIR established that the Perkins Group’s use of the subject property satisfied the elements of adverse possession. The court quieted title in favor of SIR, and this appeal followed.

II. Possession Adverse to the Vendor

As part of its appeal, West Ridge argues that the trial court erred because Perkins, as a vendee, could not have established adverse possession against Ashby, as the vendor. We agree.

An appellate court cannot substitute itself as a finder of fact, and the factual findings of the trial court sitting without a jury are not to be disturbed upon appeal unless clearly erroneous and not supported by the record. Gebhardt v. Gebhardt, 198 Colo. 28, 595 P.2d 1048 (1979).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Sleeping Indian Ranch, Inc. v. West Ridge Group, LLC
119 P.3d 1062 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 2005)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 P.3d 1028, 2004 WL 2003993, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sleeping-indian-ranch-inc-v-west-ridge-group-llc-coloctapp-2005.