Young v. Robson

429 F. App'x 716
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJuly 8, 2011
Docket11-4055
StatusUnpublished

This text of 429 F. App'x 716 (Young v. Robson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young v. Robson, 429 F. App'x 716 (10th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

MARY BECK BRISCOE, Chief Judge.

In this legal malpractice case brought under Utah law pursuant to the district court’s diversity of citizenship jurisdiction, plaintiff David Young is appealing the memorandum decision and order entered by the district court granting summary judgment in favor of: (1) defendants Kevin Robson, Daniel Bertch, and Bertch & Robson, Inc. (the “Bertch Defendants”); and (2) defendants Gordon Duval, Gregory Hansen, Duval Haws & Moody, P.C., and Duval Hansen Witt & Morley, P.C. (the “Duval Defendants”). Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we affirm. 1

I.

This legal malpractice case involves Young’s claim to ownership of three parcels of real property, known as Plats E, G, and H, located in the Wade Springs Subdivision in Pleasant Grove, Utah (the “Property”) and a related quiet title action that was filed by Young in a Utah state court in May 2002. The background and chronology of the relevant events and the underlying state and federal court litigation are as follows:

1. In May 1976, Walker Bank and Trust Company contracted to sell the Property to A & H Investments (A & H).

2. In December 1976, A & H contracted to sell the Property to McKean Construction Company (“McKean”).

3. In October 1977, McKean assigned its contract rights pertaining to the Property to Scott Construction Company (“Scott”).

4. In January 1979, Scott contracted to sell the Property to Young.

5. Neither McKean, Scott, nor Young ever received or recorded a deed to the Property.

6. In December 1980, Young recorded a document entitled “Notice of Interest in *719 Real Property” in the Utah County Recorders Office. This document described the Property and stated that Young had an “interest” in it.

7. In May 1981, A & H recorded a “Trustee’s Deed” to the Property in the Utah County Recorders Office. Walker Bank and Trust Company was one of the grantors of the Trustee’s Deed. This is the first deed pertaining to the Property that A & H recorded in the Utah County Recorders Office.

8. In June 1981, an attorney purporting to represent A & H sent a letter to Young informing him that Scott was in default under its contract with A & H and that A & H was therefore going to seek the return of the Property. Young claims that he never received the notice of default letter and did not learn of it until 2004.

9. In March 1982, Wendell P. Hansen, as “General Partner” of A & H, recorded an Affidavit in the Utah County Recorders Office which states that A & H had repossessed the Property because Scott was in default and had breached its agreement with A & H and therefore no longer had any right, title, or interest in the Property.

10. In February 1993, A & H sold Plat E of the Property to All American Development & Construction, L.C. (“All American”), and All American received and recorded two deeds for Plat E. As relevant to this action, All American then built infrastructure for a residential housing development and subdivided Plat E into six lots. All American eventually built a house on each lot and sold all six houses on Plat E to individual homeowners, who also received and recorded deeds for their properties. The individual homeowners continuously resided in their homes on Plat E through May 2002.

11. In January 1995, A & H sold Plats G and H of the Property to All American, and All American received and recorded two deeds for Plats G and H. As relevant to this action, All American then built infrastructure for a residential housing development and subdivided Plats G and H into six lots. All American eventually built a house on each lot and sold all six houses on Plats G and H to individual homeowners, who also received and recorded deeds for their properties. The individual homeowners continuously resided in their homes on Plats G and H through May 2002.

12. Young claims that he did not learn that houses had been built on Plats E, G, and H of the Property until 2000. Young claims that he owns Plats E, G, and H by virtue of his transaction with Scott in 1979 and the recording of his Notice of Interest in 1980.

13. In early August 2000, Young retained the Bertch Defendants to represent him, and Young claims that he instructed the Bertch Defendants to immediately file a lawsuit on his behalf to protect his interest in the Property. Although the Bertch Defendants subsequently drafted a complaint for Young to review, the Bertch Defendants never filed any type of legal action on behalf of Young, and they withdrew as counsel for Young in February 2001.

14. In late February 2001, Young retained the Duval Defendants to represent him. Fourteen months later, in May 2002, the Duval Defendants filed a quiet title action in a Utah state court against the individuals who were living in the homes that were built by All American on Plats E, G, and H of the Property. As recognized by the state court, the only cause of action asserted by Young in the state court case was a “claim of quiet title by equita *720 ble conversion,” R., Doc. 75, Ex. D at 10, 2 and Young never claimed that he held legal title to Plats E, G, and H of the Property.

15. On January 20, 2004, the state court entered an order granting summary judgment in favor of the Plat E homeowners based on their defense of adverse possession under color of title. Without examining the time that All American had adversely possessed Plat E, the state court concluded that each of the individual Plat E homeowners had obtained title to their lots under Utah law by adversely possessing their lots under color of title and by paying all assessed real property taxes for seven years before the quiet title action was filed in May 2002. In reaching this conclusion, the state court treated “each homeowner, and his or her claim to the property, separately because, according to [a Utah] statute, ‘when the property so included consists of a tract[ ] divided into lots, the possession of one lot is not deemed a possession of any other lot of the same tract.’ ” Id. at 11 (quoting Utah Code Ann. § 78-12-8 (2003)).

16. Subsequently, on May 17, 2005, the state court entered an order granting summary judgment in favor of the Plat G and Plat H homeowners. In this order, the state court did examine the time that All American had adversely possessed Plats G and H. In addition, the state court went beyond the question of adverse possession and also addressed the issue of whether Young ever had an ownership interest in the Property. The court’s findings and conclusions of law were as follows:

1. There are no genuine issues of material fact that relate to the Motions for Summary Judgment [regarding Plats Gand H]....
2. The Complaint was filed on May 31, 2002.

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Bluebook (online)
429 F. App'x 716, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-robson-ca10-2011.