Evans v. Board of County Com'Rs

Decision Date04 November 2005
Docket NumberNo. 20040739.,20040739.
Citation123 P.3d 432,2005 UT 74
PartiesJamie EVANS, Plaintiff and Petitioner, v. BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS, Defendant and Respondent.
CourtUtah Supreme Court

Alexander Dushku, Daniel J. McDonald, Jason W. Beutler, Salt Lake City, for plaintiff.

Craig V. Wentz, Barton H. Kunz, Salt Lake City, for defendant.

On Certiorari to the Utah Court of Appeals

NEHRING, Justice:

¶ 1 Jamie Evans claims an easement over land owned by the Board of County Commissioners of Utah County. The court of appeals reversed the trial court's summary judgment finding that Mr. Evans' easement was too vague to be enforced. We affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 2 In 1926, Knight Investment Company recorded the Ironton Plat, a subdivision located in Utah County. The plat is roughly rectangular in shape with its length running north to south. Eight east-to-west streets dedicated to public use divide the plat into seven blocks upon which lots are laid out. Pine Street is the southernmost of these streets. In 1935, the State of Utah realigned Highway 89 to traverse the length of the west side of the plat as part of its route from Provo City to Springville City. Pine Street, which intersects Highway 89, is the only of the Ironton streets to feature prominently in this appeal.

¶ 3 At a later date, R.L. Bird Company acquired land within the Ironton Plat immediately south of Pine Street along with several additional lots located along the plat's eastern boundary. Bird also obtained title to a substantial tract of land surrounding the southeast corner of the plat, which we will call the corner property. The corner property abutted the strip of land Bird owned south of Pine Street and the lots Bird owned on the east boundary of the plat.

¶ 4 In 1983, Bird quit-claimed its interest in its land within the plat, the strip south of Pine Street and the lots, to Utah County. Bird retained ownership of the corner property and, as part of the conveyance to Utah County, reserved an easement and right-of-way over the strip and Pine Street to provide access to the corner property from Highway 89. The reservation read

Reserving to the grantor the public use and right-of-way over and into Pine Street from the State Highway and a 56' wide right-of-way over and across the last parcel of land [included in the quit claim deed (the Strip)], from Pine Street to connect with grantor's remaining property over which Utah County agrees to build a good gravel road within 90 days of the date of this instrument to provide access to grantor's remaining land.

¶ 5 As of the date Utah County acquired Bird's interest in the plat the subdivision had not been developed and the dedicated streets, including Pine Street, had not been constructed. Utah County subsequently built a public works facility comprised of a public works building, a service station, and a parking lot on part of its property within Ironton Plat. It also vacated three streets at the plat's south end, but did not vacate Pine Street. Although Pine Street retained its status as a dedicated street, Utah County removed a substantial amount of earth in and around it in the course of building the public works facility.

¶ 6 In 1995, Bird conveyed the corner property, including the easement and right-of-way to Jamie and Terry Evans.1 The Evans' sued Utah County seeking, among other forms of relief not relevant to this appeal, enforcement of the easement. Utah County resisted the enforceablity of the easement on the grounds that the deed did not identify its location with sufficient specificity. The trial court agreed.

¶ 7 On appeal, the court of appeals reversed. It characterized the grant in the deed as an enforceable "floating" easement. We granted certiorari to review the court of appeals' decision.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶ 8 "On certiorari, we review the decision of the court of appeals and not that of the district court." State v. Brake, 2004 UT 95, ¶ 11, 103 P.3d 699. Our review is for correctness, and we grant no deference to the court of appeals' opinion.

ANALYSIS

¶ 9 The court of appeals determined that the absence of a description of the location of the easement in the Evans deed did not amount to a fatal omission of an essential term. It reached this conclusion after analyzing its features as a "floating" or "roving" easement. The court drew the term "floating or roving easement" from Salt Lake City v. J.B. & R.E. Walker, 123 Utah 1, 253 P.2d 365, 368 (1953), where we used it to describe an easement grant that does not fix the location of the easement

but which may be fixed by agreement of the parties, the [acquiescent] use of the parties in a particular way . . . for a considerable period of time, or by one party in whom the grant vests the right of selection or the right to fix the grant, or where the rule of necessity determines the location because any other place would annul, ruin or militate against the grant.

Id. at 368.

¶ 10 Although the court of appeals' analytical approach was, in many respects, equal to the task of properly resolving the issue before it, the floating easement definition used in Walker did not account for the factual circumstance we face here: no express description of the location of the Evans's easement and no vesting in anyone the authority to position the easement.

¶ 11 We have chosen to follow a different course than that taken by the court of appeals, but one that reaches the same result. Our approach is one that we believe tests more directly and reliably the merits of the County's claim that an express term in the Evans's deed fixing the location of the easement on the strip was essential to its enforceability.

¶ 12 Guiding and informing our approach to ascertaining whether the Evans's easement description contained all essential terms is the core principle that the burden of the servitude must be communicated to the owner of the servient estate with sufficient clarity to understand it. The principle is an application to easements of the basic concepts of the law of contracts that the duties of a party to a contract must be described in detail sufficient to make it possible to ascertain whether the agreement has been kept or broken. Nielsen v. Gold's Gym, 2003 UT 37, ¶ 13, 78 P.3d 600.

¶ 13 Of course, the goal of communicating the scope of a servitude is most easily achieved by fixing the location of the easement in descriptive language within a deed. Although certainly desirable in most instances, language fixing the location of an easement is not always necessary when other terms of the easement safeguard the servient estate from the risk that its burden may be greater than that for which it bargained.

¶ 14 The facts of this case illustrate this point. The minimum extent of the servitude can be easily extracted from the text of the deed. The area of the servient estate, the strip, is precisely described, as is the width of the easement, fifty-six feet. At minimum, the length of the easement would be equal to the width of the strip at a point bounded by Pine Street on one side and the Evans's property on the other. The minimum gross area of the strip subject to the servitude can be easily calculated by multiplying the length by the width. The dominant estate, the Evans's corner property, is identified. The stated purpose of the easement, a road connecting Pine Street to the corner property, is clear. Whatever uncertainty the County may have about the ultimate location of the Evans's easement, the deed unambiguously communicated a full complement of data describing its minimum burden to the County's fee interest. Although the location of the easement was not fixed, the deed language removed from all doubt that the grantor and grantee intended to create an easement for a particular purpose, covering an ascertainable minimum area.

¶ 15 This is not to diminish the importance of the location of the Evans's easement on the strip. The three word phrase, "location, location, location," has earned its claim to hackneyed banality on the strength of the truth that it imparts about real property. There can be little question that where the Evans's easement finally alights will materially affect its burden on the County's land. Were the legal analysis to end here, we would agree with the County that a locating description for the easement was an essential term and that without it the easement would be unenforceable. But the analysis need not, and should not, end here.

¶ 16 There is no dispute that the County was fully aware that the strip was burdened by an easement. Based on the language of the deed it could determine with precision what its minimum burden was. This sizeable quantity of evidence firmly establishes an intent to create an easement and unambiguously defines all essential features of the servitude except its location. Confronted with this evidence, we have an obligation to explore whether the deed's failure to identify the location of the easement can be remedied without altering in any material way the bargain struck between the grantor and grantee. Corbin on Contracts encourages this effort, stating

If the parties have concluded a transaction in which it appears that they intend to make a contract, the court should not frustrate their intention if it is possible to reach a fair and just result, even though this requires a choice among conflicting meanings and the filling of some gaps that the parties have left.

Corbin on Contracts, § 4.1 (rev. ed.1993).

¶ 17 The role of the court as contract "gap filler" is neither new nor revolutionary. See, e.g., Homestead Golf Club, Inc. v. Pride Stables, 224 F.3d 1195 (10th Cir.2000); Honolulu Waterfront Ltd. P'ship v. Aloha Tower Dev. Corp., 692 F.Supp. 1230 (D.Haw.1988); In re Sing Chong Co., 1 Haw.App. 236, 617 P.2d 578 (1980); Bergin v. Century 21 Real Estate Corp., 2000 WL 223833, 2000 U.S. Dist. Lexis 2088 (D.N.Y.2000); Zvonik v. Zvonik, 291 Pa.Super. 309, 435 A.2d 1236 (198...

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