Thompson v. Nelson

273 P.2d 720, 2 Utah 2d 340, 1954 Utah LEXIS 217
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 26, 1954
Docket8090
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 273 P.2d 720 (Thompson v. Nelson) 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
Thompson v. Nelson, 273 P.2d 720, 2 Utah 2d 340, 1954 Utah LEXIS 217 (Utah 1954).

Opinion

LARSON, District Judge.

In this case defendant, Call Enterprises, Inc., is appellant, and plaintiffs are respondents.

The action is by the Thompsons to quiet title to a building lot in the business district of Brigham City, Utah.

*342 The property owned by appellants and also the property owned by respondents now abuts and at all times in question has 'had its west boundary on Main Street.

Ownership of the property in Thompsons is admitted, subject to a claim of an easement in appellant, 14 feet wide, across the east end of the property, which is 42 feet 5 inches wide.

Appellant claims (1) an easement by prescription; (2) that a public road exists over said 14 feet of the Thompson property; (3) that it has an implied right of way over said 14 feet.

The trial court entered a decree quieting title in the Thompsons against appellants and the defendants, Nelsons. The Nelsons do not appeal.

The J. W. Howard property, occupied by a hotel, adjoins the Thompson property on the north for 64 feet at the east end, and the Morgan Investment Company property adjoins the Howard property on the north 107 feet to Jail Alley, which is a public street extending from Main Street east along the north boundary of the Morgan Investment Company property, to the center of the block and on through to First East Street.

In 1870 one Willis H. Booth, acquired title to Lots 5 and 6 in -Brigham City. These two lots contain about one acre and constitute the north west quarter of the City Block in which they are located.

In 1896 Booth conveyed 10 feet on the south Boundary of his said property to one, Gasberg, and this ten feet is now owned by appellant and is the north part of appellant’s property upon which its theatre is located. Appellant owns an additional 35% feet to the south of the Gasberg property, which it acquired through another chain of title, giving appellant a total frontage of 45% feet on Main Street for its'theatre building; Booth deeded an additional 25 feet adjoining this theatre property on the north to one Christiansen in 1903, which is now owned by appellant and is occupied by its Block Building, both parcels extending east to the center of the block. In 1906 Booth deeded another 16 feet adjoining the Block Building property on the north to John D. Peters and this property is now owned by the Nelson defendants.

Appellant contends that there is and for 55 years has been a well-traveled road 14 feet wide extending north and south along the west center line of the block starting at Jail Alley on the north and terminating at an old Ice House in the south east corner of appellant’s theatre property.

It appears from the evidence and from appellant’s brief that from the time of the above mentioned conveyance of 10 feet to Gasberg in 1896, Mr. Booth conveyed and leased various pieces of ground along Main Street on his Lots 5 and 6, for small business enterprises. He kept open and established, however, a 14 foot right of way from Jail Alley to the south, 44 feet along *343 the east center line of the block, for the use of his lessees and purchasers, and they were at all times permitted by him to travel over this right of way and over any of his property back of their small buildings, to Jail Alley. In 1917 Booth made his last will and provided for a 14 foot right of way along the east line of his property from Jail Alley to the Thompson property. In his will he also reserved a right of way on the east of his premises running diagonally west to the corner of what is known as the hotel barn. The evidence shows that this diagonal driveway would terminate on the north line of respondents’ property with its east boundary some 42 feet west of the east center line of the block. Booth’s last will was probated in 1918 and the above rights of way were decreed to his devisees in accordance with his will.

Extending north and south from Jail Alley along the west center line of the block to appellant’s property there is and has been, since 1945, an oil surfaced road which crosses the Thompson property on its east 14 feet, and runs on to the south across the ■east end of the property owned by the defendants, Nelson, which is 16 feet wide, and on to the property immediately to the south belonging to appellant, which consists of the block building property 25 feet wide, and its theatre property 45 feet and 6 inches wide. The property on Main Street is now closed with buildings so that .appellant has no access to the back of its buildings for vehicular traffic, and appellant cannot now enter to the back of its buildings with vehicles except across the 14 foot right of way claimed across the Thompson property, since the property to its south is privately owned and there is no road or right of way to the street on the south, and appellant is also closed off with private property on its east boundary.

Appellant has no conveyance of any right of way to the rear of its buildings.

Uncontradicted evidence shows that in 1912, or prior thereto, a brick barn and pigeon runs were built and existed on the Howard Hotel property directly across any road that may have run north and south through the center of the block, as contended by appellant. This barn abutted the east property line of the Howard property, was 22 feet 9 inches east and west, and 36 feet north and south. The barn was 14 feet north of the north line of the Thompson property and directly north of the property over which appellant claims an easement. At the same time, in 1912, or before, there existed on the south of said barn, an. elaborate pigeon run, built to within a foot or two of the north end of the property over which appellant claims an easement by prescription.

These buildings interrupted the continued use of any driveway through the center of the block along the east center line.

There is no evidence of 20 years user by appellant or its predecessors prior to that date. The first interest acquired by appellant and its predecessors in its properties was in 1896.

*344 The physical aspects of this situation made it impractical, if not impossible, to continue over the property appellant claims as an easement. Appellant and others would have to go to the west over property appellant does not claim in order to get around the barn and pigeon runs. The barn remained in place until late 1943 or early 1944.

Until 1937 the Booth property was largely open back of the buildings on Main Street to appellant’s theatre building. None of the buildings extended into the back from Main Street far enough to prevent travel from Jail Alley to the back of any of the buildings on Main Street without going over the property over which appellant claims it has an easement. Convincing evidence indicates that all travel to 1937, from Jail Alley to the buildings back of Main Street on the quarter block first owned by Booth and to the east end of the property owned by appellant, was scattered and not over any direct or continuous route across the east 14 feet of the Thompson property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
273 P.2d 720, 2 Utah 2d 340, 1954 Utah LEXIS 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-nelson-utah-1954.