Court Opinion

ID: 5137712
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-12-21 14:43:33.300278+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:39:20.333115
License: Public Domain

2014 UT App 222
_________________________________________________________

              THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

               WELLBERG INVESTMENTS, LLC,
                  Plaintiff and Appellant,
                              v.
     GREENER HILLS SUBDIVISION , CHRISTENSEN MOUNTAIN
          PROPERTIES, AND DOROTHY CHRISTENSEN ,
                Defendants and Appellees.

                    Memorandum Decision
                        No. 20130043-CA
                    Filed September 18, 2014

            Fourth District Court, Heber Department
               The Honorable Darold J. McDade
                         No. 110500552

            Walter T. Keane, Attorney for Appellant

      Kraig J. Powell and Shawn W. Potter, Attorneys for
               Appellee Greener Hills Subdivision

       Clark R. Nielsen and Kathryn J. Steffey, Attorneys
        for Appellees Christensen Mountain Properties
                   and Dorothy Christensen

 JUDGE JAMES Z. DAVIS authored this Memorandum Decision, in
   which JUDGES J. FREDERIC VOROS JR. and STEPHEN L. ROTH
                          concurred.

DAVIS, Judge:

¶1     Wellberg Investments, LLC appeals from the district court’s
denial of its motion for summary judgment and its grant of
summary judgment in favor of defendants Greener Hills
Subdivision, Christensen Mountain Properties, and Dorothy
Christensen (collectively, the Defendants). In granting summary
judgment in favor of the Defendants, the district court determined
          Wellberg Investments v. Greener Hills Subdivision

that Wellberg’s land is not benefitted by an express easement that
Greener Hills granted to the Christensen defendants (the
Easement). We affirm.

¶2     “Summary judgment is proper only when there is no
genuine issue of material fact in dispute and the moving party is
entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Canyon Meadows HOA v.
Wasatch Cnty., 2001 UT App 414, ¶ 8, 40 P.3d 1148. “In deciding
whether the trial court correctly granted judgment as a matter of
law, we give no deference to the trial court’s view of the law; we
review it for correctness.” SME Indus., Inc. v. Thompson, Ventulett,
Stainback & Assocs., Inc., 2001 UT 54, ¶ 9, 28 P.3d 669 (citation and
internal quotation marks omitted).

¶3     “An easement is a ‘nonpossessory right to enter and use
land in the possession of another and obligates the possessor not to
interfere with the uses authorized by the easement.’” Marvin M.
Brandt Revocable Trust v. United States, 134 S. Ct. 1257, 1265 (2014)
(quoting Restatement (Third) of Prop.: Servitudes § 1.2(1) (1998));
accord Alliant Techsystems, Inc. v. Salt Lake Cnty. Bd. of Equalization,
2012 UT 4, ¶ 22 n.26, 270 P.3d 441. Because the grant of an
easement is a transfer of an interest in real property, “[u]nder Utah
law, easements must generally comply with the statute of frauds by
being reduced to writing.” Green v. Stansfield, 886 P.2d 117, 122
(Utah Ct. App. 1994). Here, the written Grant of Easement (the
Easement Agreement) provides,

       This Grant of Easement and Right of Way is made
       and entered into this 20 day of October, 2000.
       Greener Hills L.L.C., . . . grants a right of way over
       and across the right of way between Lots 36, 37, 38,
       39, and 40 to the North boundary line of Greenerhills
       Subdivision for the benefit of Harold Christensen
       and Dorothy Christensen their assigns or heirs.
       ....
       A Non-Exclusive 50 foot wide easement for ingress,
       egress, storm drain, water system, sewer,

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          Wellberg Investments v. Greener Hills Subdivision

       landscaping, irrigation, grading, public and private
       utilities, and emergency vehicle use purposes to be
       used in common with others for access to property to
       the north of Greenerhills . . . .

¶4     The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the
Defendants based on their assertion that Wellberg could not claim
any benefit under the Easement. The court relied on Potter v.
Chadaz, 1999 UT App 95, 977 P.2d 533, for the premise that parties
to a deed are prohibited “from expressly creating an easement in
a land transaction for the benefit of a third party who is not
involved in the transaction—i.e., a ‘stranger to the deed.’” See id.
¶ 12. The court identified Wellberg as a “stranger to the
transaction” because it “is not named in the Easement Agreement,
and did not participate in it in any way.” The district court
concluded that as a “stranger to the transaction,” Wellberg was
“not entitled to any right or title to, or interest in, the” Easement or
the Defendants’ properties.

¶5      We agree with the district court’s ruling in favor of the
Defendants, but we also agree with Wellberg’s contention that the
district court’s reliance on Potter is misguided. Accordingly, we
base our affirmance of the district court’s ruling on other grounds
apparent on the record before us. See Okelberry v. West Daniels Land
Ass’n, 2005 UT App 327, ¶ 11, 120 P.3d 34 (“It is well established
that we may affirm the judgment appealed from if it is sustainable
on any legal ground or theory apparent on the record, even though
such ground or theory differs from that stated by the trial court to
be the basis of its ruling or action . . . .” (citation and internal
quotation marks omitted)).

¶6      To interpret easements, we apply the same rules of
construction used in interpreting contracts. Canyon Meadows, 2001
UT App 414, ¶ 7. Accordingly, we first look to the plain language
of the Easement Agreement to discern the parties’ intent in creating
the Easement, see Gillmor v. Macey, 2005 UT App 351, ¶ 19, 121 P.3d
57, because the parties’ intentions “are controlling,” Utah Transit

20130043-CA                        3                2014 UT App 222
         Wellberg Investments v. Greener Hills Subdivision

Auth. v. Salt Lake City S. R.R. Co., 2006 UT App 46, ¶ 8, 131 P.3d 288
(citation and internal quotation marks omitted).

¶7     The district court touched on aspects of a contract-based
interpretation of the Easement Agreement, recognizing that
Wellberg is not mentioned in the Easement Agreement, that there
is no indication in the Easement Agreement that Wellberg
participated in negotiating the Easement Agreement, and that
Greener Hills and the Christensen defendants did not intend the
Easement to benefit Wellberg. The court then relied on the
“stranger to the transaction” principle from Potter to conclude that
Wellberg’s absence from the face of the agreement renders it a
stranger to the transaction and that, as a result, Wellberg “is not
entitled to any right or title to, or interest in, the [Easement].”

¶8      This interpretation misapplies Potter, which explains, in
dicta, that “Utah law prohibits parties from expressly creating an
easement in a land transaction for the benefit of a third party who
is not involved in the transaction—i.e., a ‘stranger to the deed.’”
Potter, 1999 UT App 95, ¶ 12. Here we are not presented with a
situation in which the parties creating the easement—the
Defendants—attempted to “expressly” create an easement that
would benefit Wellberg. Indeed, the crux of the parties’ dispute
here is the scope the Defendants intended the Easement Agreement
to have. In Potter, there was no question that the parties had
intended to create an easement that benefitted a third party that
was not involved in the land transaction. Thus Potter is
inapplicable.1

1. Because of the manner in which we resolve the issue on appeal,
we do not need to address the precedential value of the “stranger
to the deed” principle from Potter v. Chadaz, 1999 UT App 95, 977
P.2d 533, or our obligation to adhere to that principle as a matter of
horizontal stare decisis. And to that end, we recognize that the
requirement that this court adhere to precedent as a matter of
                                                        (continued...)

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          Wellberg Investments v. Greener Hills Subdivision

¶9      Under basic rules of contract interpretation, we determine
that the Defendants’ intent is unambiguously communicated in the
Easement Agreement; their intent was to create an easement “for
ingress, egress, storm drain, water system, sewer, landscaping,
irrigation, grading, public and private utilities, and emergency
vehicle use purposes” for the benefit of “Harold Christensen and
Dorothy Christensen their assigns or heirs” and as a burden on
specific lots within the Greener Hills Subdivision. Wellberg argues
that the Easement Agreement need only contain “enough
specificity to enforce it and the signatures of the servient estate
owners” and that the Agreement’s language permitting “others
access to property to the north of Greenerhills” is sufficiently
specific for Wellberg, as an “other” property owner “north” of
Greener Hills, to benefit from the Easement. (Emphases added.)

¶10 We construe the language in the Easement Agreement
referencing “property to the north of Greenerhills” to encompass
only the Christensen parcel; that parcel is the only property outside

1. (...continued)
horizontal stare decisis need not be applied with the same
inflexibility as the requirements of vertical stare decisis. See State v.
Menzies, 889 P.2d 393, 399 n.3 (Utah 1994) (recognizing that while
“lower courts are obliged to follow the holding of a higher court,
as well as any ‘judicial dicta’ that may be announced by the higher
court,” “[h]orizontal stare decisis does not . . . require that a panel
adhere to its own or another panel’s prior decisions with the same
inflexibility as does vertical stare decisis”); see also Ewing v. Utah
Dep’t of Transp., 2010 UT App 158, ¶ 13, 235 P.3d 776 (“[I]n
accordance with horizontal stare decisis, . . . [an appellate court]
will overrule its own precedent in the limited circumstances where
it is clearly convinced that the rule was originally erroneous or is
no longer sound because of changing conditions and that more
good than harm will come by departing from precedent.”
(alterations and omission in original) (citation and internal
quotation marks omitted)).

20130043-CA                        5                 2014 UT App 222
         Wellberg Investments v. Greener Hills Subdivision

of the subdivision that is referenced within the Easement
Agreement and the only parcel that could logically be considered
the dominant estate based on the Easement Agreement’s
identification of the Christensen defendants as the dominant estate
holders. Wellberg’s assertion that the reference “to property to the
north of Greenerhills” must include its parcel because its parcel is
also to the north of Greener Hills is untenable, particularly in light
of the general rule that we should not construe an easement in a
way that subjects the servient estate to a greater burden than
“necessary to satisfy the purpose described in the grant [of the
easement].” See Weggeland v. Ujifusa, 384 P.2d 590, 591 (Utah 1963).

¶11 Here, it is clear from the language of the Easement
Agreement that the purpose of the Easement was to grant the
Christensen defendants access to their piece of property that abuts
Greener Hills on the subdivision’s northern border, not to grant
any holder of property to the north of Greener Hills northbound
access through Greener Hills or the Christensen parcel. Such an
interpretation would expand the burden Greener Hills bargained
for as the servient estate. Similarly, we do not interpret the word
“others” in the Easement Agreement as impliedly granting
Wellberg, or “other” property owners to the north or other
property owners in general, any benefit or ownership right to
access the Easement. This broad interpretation proposed by
Wellberg would, again, impermissibly expand the burden on
Greener Hills as the servient estate.

¶12 In conclusion, the Easement Agreement unambiguously
demonstrates the Defendants’ intent that the Easement benefit only
the Christensen defendants. We affirm the district court’s ruling.

20130043-CA                       6                2014 UT App 222