SUN VALLEY LAND & MINERALS v. Burt

853 P.2d 607, 123 Idaho 862, 1993 Ida. App. LEXIS 66
CourtIdaho Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 26, 1993
Docket19719
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 853 P.2d 607 (SUN VALLEY LAND & MINERALS v. Burt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
SUN VALLEY LAND & MINERALS v. Burt, 853 P.2d 607, 123 Idaho 862, 1993 Ida. App. LEXIS 66 (Idaho Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

WALTERS, Chief Judge.

In this appeal, William, Jean, and Cynthia Burt (the Burts) contend that the district court erred when it granted summary judgment quieting title to real property in Sun Valley Land & Minerals, Inc. (Sun Valley), after determining that Sun Valley had received the property from a bona fide purchaser. The court also granted summary judgment to the Burts upon Sun Valley’s claim that the Burts had slandered Sun Valley’s title. The Burts challenge the quiet title decision, while Sun Valley cross-appeals the slander of title ruling. We affirm both judgments.

This appeal is the result of years of disputes regarding certain real estate transactions in Blaine County starting in 1951, involving many parties and covering thousands of acres. Lower court decisions regarding many of these transactions have already been appealed twice in Deer Creek, Inc. v. Clarendon Hot Springs Ranch, Inc., 107 Idaho 286, 688 P.2d 1191 (Ct.App. 1984) and Burt v. Clarendon Hot Springs Ranch, Inc., 117 Idaho 1042, 793 P.2d 715 (Ct.App.1990) (Burt v. Ryan). What was once a fight over a vast area has been distilled to a controversy over one acre of land and the rights to the continuous flow of V2 inch of hot water from a geothermic spring.

First, we find it helpful to provide a list of the players in this saga. The Burts appear collectively as the last board of directors and trustees of a dissolved corporation, Deer Creek, Inc. (DCI). They claim the right and title to the one acre and V2 inch of hot water. Sun Valley appears claiming the same interests through a series of transactions beginning with First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Twin Falls (First Federal), which became the first mortgage holder of the property, and as the district court later found, a bona fide purchaser. The property was mortgaged to First Federal by Clarendon Hot Springs Ranch, Inc. (Clarendon), having come originally from DCI. Patrick Ryan was the majority shareholder and alter ego of Clarendon. Lloyd Walker was Ryan’s attorney, Clarendon’s president, and for a time acted as a trustee.

Facts

We present in abbreviated form the chain of transactions creating the basis for this dispute. In 1951, R.B. Randell conveyed real property by warranty deed to Lyle Potter. As stated in the deed, the sale included:

A 20-foot wide right of way for a ditch near the road to carry water from the spillway on the present dam site to other lands owned by [Potter] East of the real property hereby conveyed.
the right to V2 inch continuous flow of hot water from Clarendon Hot Springs, and one acre of land rectangular in form east of the dam and south of and adjacent to the 20-foot wide ditch right of way herein before granted.

In 1961, Potter conveyed thousands of acres to DCI by a warranty deed which described the property by legal subdivisions of twenty different sections. The deed also conveyed the one acre of land, the V2 inch of water from Clarendon Hot Springs, and the 20 foot ditch right-of-way, but the deed did not state in which legal subdivision—or even in which section—the one acre is located. Five years later, in 1966, DCI mortgaged all of this property it had acquired from Potter to John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company (John Hancock). 1 The mortgage and a correction *865 mortgage were recorded that year, and not released until 1978.

In July, 1969, Randell conveyed by warranty deed to DCI other real property, carrying the following legal description, which we label description A:

SW lk SW lk of Section 26, S % SE V* of Section 27, and N V2 NE Vi of Section 34, Township 3 North, Range 17 E, Boise Meridian, Blaine County, Idaho.

The deed was recorded on August 5, 1969. In a previous decision, the district court found that after this conveyance, DCI owned all the property within which the disputed one-acre parcel might be located.

On September 15, 1975, DCI conveyed by warranty deed to Clarendon property with a different legal description, which we label description B:

S V2 SE lh of Section 27, and N % NE lh of Section 34, and NW lh of Section 34, all in Township 3 North, Range 17 E, Boise Meridian, Blaine County, Idaho.

The deed reserved to DCI the ditch right of way and “all water rights appurtenant thereto, including decreed water rights on Deer Creek” but did not specify any exception covering the one acre and V2 inch of hot water. The deed from DCI to Clarendon was recorded on September 24, 1975.

In the meantime, on September 17, 1975, Clarendon executed a note and mortgage to First Federal, covering the same property conveyed by DCI to Clarendon, namely the land encompassed by description B. First Federal recorded the mortgage on September 18. The mortgage did not except DCI’s interest in the one acre and the V2 inch of hot water. On September 29, Sawtooth Title issued a title insurance policy to First Federal which also did not include such an exception.

Eventually, Clarendon fell behind in its mortgage payments to First Federal, which began judicial foreclosure proceedings. On April 19, 1982, the court granted First Federal summary judgment against Clarendon, entitling the former to foreclose and directing that the property be sold. DCI moved to intervene but the motion was denied. The property was sold, and in 1984, First Federal bought it at a sheriffs sale, the certificate for which was recorded on May 25, 1984.

Six months later, First Federal assigned its right, title and interest in the Clarendon note and mortgage to Traveler’s Mortgage Corp. (Traveler’s). The assignment also encompassed the summary judgment against Clarendon awarding foreclosure, the Sheriff’s Certificate of Sale on Foreclosure, and the property. First Federal conveyed the land to Traveler’s by quitclaim deed, and the notice of the assignment was recorded on November 16, 1984. Traveler’s redeemed the property from the lien holders and received a Sheriff’s deed on June 6, 1985. A Sheriff’s Certificate of Sale of Real Estate on Execution, recorded on February 4, 1987, confirmed that Clarendon’s interest was sold at public auction, without excluding the one acre and V2 inch of hot water, to Traveler’s Leasing Corp., (previously Traveler’s Mortgage Corp.). A series of quitclaim deeds brought the property into Sun Valley’s possession in 1988.

In 1989, Sun Valley commenced the instant action against the Burts, as representatives of DCI, to quiet title to the property. Cross motions for summary judgment followed, and the court entered final judgment for Sun Valley on April 21, 1992. The Burts appeal from that judgment and from the court’s two memorandum decisions preceding the judgment, filed on August 8, 1991, and October 31, 1991.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
853 P.2d 607, 123 Idaho 862, 1993 Ida. App. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sun-valley-land-minerals-v-burt-idahoctapp-1993.