T1 The sliver of property at issue here is that part of Lot 17, Block 76, Millsite Reservation to Park City, Utah, that is occupied by a garage. Plaintiff, Michael Fred Nyman (Nyman), claims rights to this property through the doctrines of adverse possession and prescriptive easement. Nyman appeals from the trial court's grant of summary judgment to defendant, Richard N. Miller (Miller), the holder of record title to the property, and the trial court's order quieting title to the property in Miller.
BACKGROUND
2 The two parties, Nyman and Miller, are record title holders of adjoining Park City properties. The property in this area is divided into twenty-five by seventy-five foot lots. Miller is the record title holder of Lot 17 of Block 76 while Nyman holds title to Lots 18 and 19. Miller's chain of title is as follows: Patent from the United States to Nims, April 1877; to Mason and Davis by quitclaim deed, April 4, 1877; to Thomas W. Ferry by quitclaim deed, November 22, 1879; to Edward P. Ferry by deed, July 9, 1880; to David McLaughlin by deed, December 22, 1882; to Summit County by tax sale, 1911; to W.I. Snyder, Trustee of Park City Town-site Company, by quitclaim deed, June 20, 1916; to Summit County by tax sale, December 21, 1985; to United Park City Mines Company by quitclaim deed, December 7, 1959; to Greater Park City Company by special warranty deed, June 11, 1971; to Ramshire, Inc., by special warranty deed, June 12, 1975; to Harry F. Reed et ux and Richard N. Miller et ux by special warranty deed, December 5, 1975; to Patricia K. Miller by quitclaim deed, September 2, 1977; to Richard N. Miller by quitclaim deed, May 29, 1998.
T3 Nyman's predecessor in interest acquired his property by quitclaim tax deed from Summit County, April 9, 1987. The deed referred to the property conveyed as a "Lot on Block 76, Park City, Utah," which Summit County had acquired from John Backman in a tax sale in 1980. The Back-mans had acquired this property through two deeds. First, in 1906, they acquired property described as a dwelling house "together with all out buildings and improvements belonging to said dwelling and sufficient space
'I 4 Tax records indicate that no taxes were assessed against Lot 17 between 1942 and 1959, when Summit County held the title. From 1960 to the present, Miller and his predecessors in interest paid taxes assessed against Lot 17. Nyman and his predecessors in interest have paid taxes on their property, including improvements, since 1987.
{5 Since at least 1948, Nyman and his predecessors have paid taxes on a garage, including the part of the garage that occupies the portion of Lot 17 at issue here.
T6 Nyman initiated this action in Summit County district court, asserting his right to quiet title to the disputed property, or in the alternative, to a prescriptive easement. 1 The trial court granted Miller's motion for summary judgment on Nyman's claim and for an order quieting title in Miller.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
17 "A trial court may properly grant summary judgment when 'there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and ... the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law'" WebBank v. Am. Gen. Annuity Serv. Corp.,
ANALYSIS
18 Nyman asserts that the trial court erred by rejecting his claim to have acquired title to the disputed portion of Lot 17 through adverse possession, or, in the alternative, to a right to maintain his garage on the property through a prescriptive easement. We address each of these assertions in turn. -
I. ADVERSE POSSESSION
19 It is undisputed that Miller holds ree-ord title to all of Lot 17. Under Utah law, Miller is therefore "presumed to have been" in possession of Lot 17, and Nyman's "occupation of the property ... shall be deemed to have been under and in subordination to the legal title, unless it appears that" Nyman held and possessed the property "adversely to such legal title for seven years." Utah Code Ann. § 78-12-7 (2002). Nyman asserts that he has overcome this presumption for that part of Lot 17 underlying his garage through adverse possession of the land during the twenty-four year period, between 1985 and 1959, when Summit County owned Lot 17.
T10 Because Nyman claims adverse possession of county-held land, we must first determine whether his claim is allowed under section 78-12-18 of the Utah Code, which states:
No person shall be allowed to acquire any right or title in or to any lands held by any town, city or county, or the corporate authorities thereof, designated for public use as streets, lanes, avenues, alleys, parks or public squares, or for any other public purpose, by adverse possession thereof for any length of time whatsoever, unless it shall affirmatively appear that such town or city or county or the corporate authorities thereof have sold, or otherwise disposed of, and conveyed such real estate to a purchaser for a valuable consideration, and that for more than seven years subsequent to such conveyance the purchaser, his grantees or successors in interest, havebeen in the exclusive, continuous and adverse possession of such real estate; in which case an adverse title may be acquired.
Utah Code Ann. § 78-12-18 (2002). Such restrictions on adverse possession claims against states or their political subdivisions stem from the "ancient doctrine" of nullum tempus occurrit regi, or "time does not run against the king." Devins v. Borough of Bogota,
{11 Utah's statute, like those in a number of other states, limits the restriction to situations in which the political subdivision has designated the land at issue for some public purpose. Nyman argues that Summit County was not holding the disputed portion of Lot 17 for any public purpose because the land was used for a privately-owned garage. Miller argues in opposition, however, that Summit County's 1985 acquisition of Lot 17 in a tax sale resulting from the former title holder's nonpayment of taxes did serve the public purpose of collecting taxes.
¶ 12 This case therefore raises a novel issue before this court-whether a county's acquisition of property for nonpayment of taxes should be considered a public purpose within the meaning of section 78-12, 13. Although some states have held that such tax takings do not remove land from claims of adverse possession,
2
we follow the majority of states that hold that "[aldverse possession does not lie against land held by the county in connection with a tax sale." Fred E. Young, Inc. v. Brush Mountain Sportsmen's Ass'n,
¶ 13 Nyman asserts that Summit County did in fact convey the disputed portion of Lot 17 to Nyman's predecessor in interest Emil Nyman when it sold Emil Ny-man the former Backman property. Nyman bases this argument on Utah Code section 59-2-1325, which states "[a] tax due upon improvements upon real property assessed to a person other than the owner of the real property is a lien upon the property and improvements." Utah Code Ann. § 59-2-1325 (2000). Under Nyman's theory, when the Backmans failed to pay taxes on their land, they also failed to pay taxes on improvements, including the garage. Although the Backmans did not own the property un
¶ 14 We need not decide whether Nyman's interpretation of section 59-2-1825 is valid. His argument fails because, according to appraisal cards, the garage as it now stands was not built until 1948. 3 Thus, Nyman did not show that the garage was present in 1980, when Summit County acquired the Backman property through a tax sale, or in 19837, when it sold the Backman property to Nyman's predecessor in interest. It is of course possible, as Nyman argues, that other structures stood on the same location before 1948 and that the perimeter of what became Nyman's property was established before that time. 4 However, Nyman cannot overcome the presumption in favor of the legal title holder through mere speculation. We cannot conclude that it "affirmatively appears" that Summit County conveyed the disputed portion of Lot 17 to Emil Nyman. We therefore hold that Nyman cannot establish adverse possession over the disputed portion of Lot 17 while Summit County held legal title to the lot.
115 Nyman further asserts that he can establish adverse possession over the disputed land after Summit County's 1959 quitclaim deed conveyed title of Lot 17 to United Park City Mines Company, Miller's predecessor in interest. Nyman's primary argument is that Miller never received legal title to the portion of Lot 17 underlying Nyman's garage because, at the time of the 1959 conveyance, the disputed land had already been conveyed to Emil Nyman. We have already rejected the latter assertion as mere speculation. Thus, we must also reject Nyman's argument that the disputed portion of Lot 17 was legally severed from the remainder of the lot.
¶ 16 The severance argument also underlies Nyman's contention that the property taxes paid by Miller and his predecessors in interest on Lot 17 since 1959 were not taxes on the disputed portion of the lot. A party seeking to establish title by adverse possession has the burden of showing that he and his predecessors in interest have paid "all taxes which have been levied and assessed upon such land according to law." Utah Code Ann. § 78-12-12; see Marchant v. Park City,
II. PRESCRIPTIVE EASEMENT
¶ 17 The trial court also rejected Ny-man's alternative argument that even if he is not entitled to adverse possession of the disputed portion of Lot 17, he has a right to a prescriptive easement allowing him to continue to use the property for his garage. The trial court held that Nyman's claimed right could not be construed as an easement because it would leave Miller, the holder 'of record title, with no rights at all in the disputed property. Nyman argues that the trial court erred by granting summary judgment to Miller on this issue.
¶ 18 "A prescriptive easement is created when the party claiming the pres
Whenever there is ownership of property subject to an easement there is a dichotomy of interests, both of which must be respected and kept in balance. On the one hand, it is to be realized that the owner of the fee title, because of his general ownership, should have the use and enjoyment of his property to the highest degree possible, not inconsistent with the easement. On the other, the owner of the easement should likewise have the right to use and enjoy his easement to the fullest extent possible not inconsistent with the rights of the fee owner.
N. Union Canal Co. v. Newell,
CONCLUSION
We affirm the trial court's grant of summary judgment to the defendant Miller and its order quieting title in Miller to Lot 17 in its entirety.
Notes
. Although the original action was brought against a number of defendants, we are concerned here only with the dispute between Ny-man and Miller. On June 22, 1998, Miller was substituted as a defendant in place of his ex-wife who no longer had any claim to the disputed property.
. See, eg., Goldman v. Quadrato,
. Nyman argues that Summit County did not start keeping records of the improvements subjected to tax until 1948, suggesting that the garage may have been present before 1948 even though it did not appear on appraisal cards. However, Nyman provides no evidence for this assertion, and the appraisal cards that do mention the garage specifically state it was built in 1948.
. Nyman points out that, according to a survey of Nyman's property, a section of a stone retaining wall is the only improvement that currently lies on Lots 18 and 19. Trustee W.L. Snyder conveyed Lots 18 and 19 "according to possession" to the Backmans on May 15, 1916. Conceivably, the deed designated the wrong lot numbers as conveyed to the Backmans. However, on May 15, 1916, the date of Snyder's conveyance to the Backmans, Summit County held legal title to Lot 17. Certainly, Snyder's conveyance "according to possession" could not have included land that Snyder himself did not own.
. In Edgell v. Canning,
