Utah Code § 4-26-102

Current through the 2024 Fourth Special Session
Section 4-26-102 - Adjoining landowners - Partition fences - Contribution
(1) If two or more persons agree to a fence enclosure or to the construction of a partition fence, the cost of construction and maintenance of the fence shall be apportioned between each party to the agreement based upon the amount of land enclosed.
(2) A person who is a party to an agreement described in Subsection (1) and who fails to maintain such person's part of the fence is liable in a civil action for any damage sustained by another party to the agreement as a result of the failure to maintain the fence.
(3)
(a) If a person has enclosed land with a fence and the owner of adjoining land desires to enclose land adjoining the fence so that the existing fence or any part of it will become a partition fence between such tracts of land, the owner of the adjoining land shall, before making the enclosure, pay to the owner of the existing fence one-half of the value of all that part of the fence that will become a partition fence.
(b) If a person whose land is enclosed, in whole or in part, by a partition fence ceases to improve or cultivate that person's land or opens the enclosure, the person:
(i) shall give notice to the other owner of the partition fence and an opportunity to pay for the person's reasonable value of the fence;
(ii) may not remove any part of the partition fence until the earlier of:
(A) 30 days after the day on which the person gave notice to the other owner, as described in Subsection (3)(b)(i); or
(B) the day the other owner pays the person for the person's reasonable value of the fence; and
(iii) notwithstanding Subsection (3)(b)(ii), may not remove the partition fence if the crops enclosed by the fence will be exposed to injury.

Utah Code § 4-26-102

Amended by Chapter 345, 2017 General Session ,§ 293, eff. 7/1/2017.
Renumbered from § 4-26-5 and amended by Chapter 331, 2012 General Session ,§ 6, eff. 5/8/2012.
Amended by Chapter 378, 2010 General Session