Real Estate Disputes · Statewide Utah

Utah Real Estate Dispute Attorney

When a property line, a title defect, or a failed deal puts your real estate at risk, you need clear answers and a decisive plan. We represent Utah property owners, buyers, and sellers in real estate disputes across the state.

Free Consultation Flat-Fee & Hourly Options Serving All of Utah

How We Help

Real Estate Disputes We Handle

Boundary & Easement Disputes

Fence lines, encroachments, survey conflicts, boundary by acquiescence, prescriptive easements, and rights-of-way — resolving where your property truly begins and ends.

Quiet Title & Title Defects

Quiet title actions to clear clouded titles, remove wrongful liens or claims, and resolve competing ownership interests so you can sell, refinance, or build with confidence.

Purchase & Sale Disputes

Earnest money disputes, breach of a Real Estate Purchase Contract (REPC), failure to disclose defects, and specific performance claims for deals that fall apart.

Partition Actions

When co-owners can't agree — inherited property, former partners, or family land — a partition action can force a fair sale or division of the property.

HOA Disputes

Representing homeowners and associations in disputes over covenants, assessments, fines, and enforcement.

Liens & Lis Pendens

Recording or removing lis pendens, responding to wrongful liens, and protecting your interests while a property dispute is pending.

Free Consultation

Tell Us About Your Property Dispute

Send a brief description of your situation and we'll follow up to discuss your options — or call (801) 823-4379 and leave a message with the property address and a short summary.

Property disputes are rarely improved by waiting. Deadlines can apply to lien claims, contract remedies, and quiet title matters, and positions tend to harden the longer a conflict runs. An early consultation lets you understand your options while all of them are still open.

Common Questions

Utah Real Estate Dispute FAQs

01

Do I need a survey before pursuing a boundary dispute?

Often, yes — a current survey is usually the foundation of a boundary case. If you don't have one, we can discuss whether to obtain one before or after demand is made.

02

What does a quiet title action do?

It asks the court to determine who owns an interest in real property and to remove invalid claims from the title, so the record is clear going forward.

03

Can I force the sale of co-owned property?

Utah law allows a co-owner to seek partition. Courts can divide the property or order it sold and the proceeds split according to each owner's interest.

04

What will this cost?

It depends on the matter. We offer hourly and, where appropriate, flat-fee arrangements, and we discuss fees candidly in the initial consultation before you commit to anything.

Protect Your Property Rights

One conversation is usually enough to understand where you stand and what your options are.

Call (801) 823-4379