Zonnebloem, Llc, Respondent/cross-app v. Blue Bay Holdings, Llc, Appellant/cross-resp ( 2017 )


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  •                                                                                               Filed
    Washington State
    Court of Appeals
    Division Two
    August 15, 2017
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION II
    ZONNEBLOEM, LLC, a Washington limited                              No. 49308-0-II
    liability company, MANDL HOLDINGS,
    LLC, a Washington limited liability company,
    Respondents/Cross-Appellants,
    v.                                                  PART PUBLISHED OPINION
    BLUE BAY HOLDINGS, LLC, a Washington
    limited liability company,
    Appellant/Cross-Respondent,
    MAXA, A.C.J. – Blue Bay Holdings, LLC appeals the trial court’s summary judgment
    order dismissing its damages claim against Zonnebloem, LLC and Mandl Holdings, LLC for
    interference with a prescriptive easement that Blue Bay claimed over Zonnebloem’s and Mandl’s
    properties. Blue Bay alleged that its prescriptive easement followed the historical route of an
    electric power line that went from a power pole on the edge of Zonnebloem’s parking lot
    property, across the Mandl building, and to Blue Bay’s building.
    After Blue Bay demolished an existing structure and replaced it with a new building, it
    asked Puget Sound Energy (PSE) to reconnect the power line to its new building. But PSE
    required a written easement from Zonnebloem and Mandl before it would reconnect the line,
    No. 49308-0-II
    even if Blue Bay had a prescriptive easement along the power line’s historical route.
    Zonnebloem and Mandl could not agree with PSE on the easement’s terms, and Blue Bay was
    required to obtain power through a different route at significant expense. Blue Bay asserted that
    Zonnebloem and Mandl’s refusal to grant an express easement to PSE constituted a wrongful
    interference with Blue Bay’s use of its claimed prescriptive easement.
    On summary judgment, the trial court dismissed Blue Bay’s claim for damages against
    Zonnebloem and Mandl for wrongful interference with the claimed prescriptive easement. After
    a bench trial, the court ruled that Blue Bay had established a prescriptive easement.
    In the published portion of this opinion, we hold that although an owner of property
    subject to an easement has an obligation to not unreasonably interfere with the use of an
    easement, as a matter of law Zonnebloem and Mandl’s refusal to grant an express easement to
    PSE for an area broader than the prescriptive easement did not constitute unreasonable
    interference. Therefore, we affirm the trial court’s dismissal on summary judgment of Blue
    Bay’s claim for wrongful interference with its prescriptive easement.
    In the unpublished portion of this opinion, we address and reject Zonnebloem and
    Mandl’s claim that the trial court erred in ruling that Blue Bay had a prescriptive easement over
    their properties and Blue Bay’s claim that the trial court erred in ruling that Mandl had acquired
    a portion of Blue Bay’s property by adverse possession. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court
    on all issues on appeal.
    2
    No. 49308-0-II
    FACTS
    Power Access to Blue Bay’s Property
    Blue Bay and Mandl own adjoining commercial buildings on Front Street in Poulsbo, and
    Zonnebloem owns a parking lot located behind those buildings. Historically, a line from a power
    pole on Zonnebloem’s parking lot provided electric power to both the Mandl building and the
    Blue Bay building. The line connected to the Mandl building before running down the side of
    that building and connecting to the Blue Bay building. When Blue Bay demolished the existing
    building on its property, it disconnected the power line.
    Blue Bay subsequently requested that PSE reconnect the power line to its new building.
    But PSE required a written easement for an area two feet on either side of the power line as it ran
    from the power pole on the Zonnebloem parking lot to the side of Blue Bay’s building.
    Zonnebloem and Mandl negotiated with PSE, but PSE would not agree to Zonnebloem and
    Mandl’s request to include a termination clause in the easement. Therefore, no easement was
    executed, PSE would not reconnect the power line along the historical route, and Blue Bay was
    forced to install a power connection along a different route at a cost of over $50,000.
    Quiet Title Lawsuit
    In October 2013, Zonnebloem and Mandl filed a complaint against Blue Bay regarding
    certain property disputes. Blue Bay filed a counterclaim, alleging that it had a prescriptive
    easement for the power line from the power pole on the Zonnebloem property to the Blue Bay
    building. Blue Bay also asserted a damages claim based on the allegation that Zonnebloem and
    Mandl’s refusal to grant an express easement with PSE unreasonably interfered with Blue Bay’s
    claimed prescriptive easement.
    3
    No. 49308-0-II
    Zonnebloem and Mandl filed a motion for summary judgment on Blue Bay’s damages
    claim. The trial court granted summary judgment and dismissed Blue Bay’s damages claim for
    interference with the claimed prescriptive easement.
    Blue Bay appeals the trial court’s summary judgment dismissal of its damages claim.
    ANALYSIS
    A.     SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARD
    We review summary judgment orders de novo. Keck v. Collins, 
    184 Wash. 2d 358
    , 370,
    
    357 P.3d 1080
    (2015). On summary judgment, we construe all evidence and reasonable
    inferences in favor of the nonmoving party. 
    Id. Summary judgment
    is appropriate when the
    record shows “no genuine issue as to any material fact” and “the moving party is entitled to a
    judgment as a matter of law.” CR 56(c); see 
    Keck, 184 Wash. 2d at 370
    . A fact is material if it
    affects the case’s outcome. 
    Keck, 184 Wash. 2d at 370
    n.8. A genuine issue of material fact exists
    if the evidence would be sufficient for a reasonable jury to find in favor of the nonmoving party.
    
    Id. at 370.
    “If reasonable minds can reach only one conclusion on an issue of fact, that issue may
    be determined on summary judgment.” Sutton v. Tacoma Sch. Dist. No. 10, 
    180 Wash. App. 859
    ,
    865, 
    324 P.3d 763
    (2014).
    On summary judgment, the moving party has the initial burden to show there is no
    genuine issue of material fact. Lee v. Metro Parks Tacoma, 
    183 Wash. App. 961
    , 964, 
    335 P.3d 1014
    (2014). A moving defendant meets this burden by showing that there is an absence of
    evidence to support the plaintiff’s case. 
    Id. Once the
    moving party has made such a showing,
    the burden shifts to the nonmoving party to set forth specific facts that rebut the moving party’s
    4
    No. 49308-0-II
    contentions and show a genuine issue of material fact. See Elcon Constr., Inc. v. E. Wash. Univ.,
    
    174 Wash. 2d 157
    , 169, 
    273 P.3d 965
    (2012).
    B.     CLAIM FOR INTERFERENCE WITH A PRESCRIPTIVE EASEMENT
    Blue Bay argues that the trial court erred in dismissing its damages claim for wrongful
    interference with its claimed prescriptive easement, which it argues occurred when Zonnebloem
    and Mandl refused to grant a written easement to PSE.1 We disagree.
    1.   Legal Principles
    An easement is a nonpossessory right to use the land of another. Maier v. Giske, 
    154 Wash. App. 6
    , 15, 
    223 P.3d 1265
    (2010). The person who benefits from an easement, known as
    the easement holder or dominant estate owner, has a property interest in the land subject to the
    easement, known as the servient estate. M.K.K.I., Inc. v. Krueger, 
    135 Wash. App. 647
    , 654-55,
    
    145 P.3d 411
    (2006). The easement represents a burden on the servient estate. 
    Id. at 655.
    In general, the owner of a servient estate may use his or her property in any reasonable
    manner that does not interfere with the easement holder’s use of the easement. See Littlefair v.
    Schulze, 
    169 Wash. App. 659
    , 665, 
    278 P.3d 218
    (2012). In addition, a servient estate owner may
    engage in reasonable conduct that affects access to the easement as long as that conduct does not
    unreasonably interfere with the easement holder’s use. See Nw. Props. Brokers Network, Inc. v.
    Early Dawn Estates Homeowner’s’ Ass’n, 
    173 Wash. App. 778
    , 792-93, 
    295 P.3d 314
    (2013)
    (addressing the installation of a gate that restricted access to an easement). The reasonableness
    1
    Zonnebloem and Mandl initially argue that Blue Bay did not preserve this issue because it cites
    different authorities on appeal than it cited in the trial court. But RAP 2.5(a), which bars errors
    raised for the first time on appeal, does not prohibit parties from citing new authorities on appeal.
    See Greenfield v. W. Heritage Ins. Co., 
    154 Wash. App. 795
    , 801, 
    226 P.3d 199
    (2010). Because
    Blue Bay clearly raised this issue before the trial court, it was preserved for appeal.
    5
    No. 49308-0-II
    of a restraint depends on a balancing of the necessity of the restraint for the protection of the
    servient estate against the degree of interference with the easement holder’s use. 
    Id. at 793.
    The Restatement (Third) of Property: Servitudes states the same rule: “[T]he holder of
    the servient estate is entitled to make any use of the servient estate that does not unreasonably
    interfere with enjoyment of the servitude.” RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF PROPERTY: SERVITUDES
    § 4.9 (AM. LAW INST. 2000). Comment c to that section further states, “The owner of the
    servient estate is not entitled to interfere unreasonably with legitimate enjoyment of the
    servitude. . . . Actions that make it more difficult to use an easement . . . are prohibited by the
    rule stated in this section, unless justified by the needs of the servient estate.” RESTATEMENT
    (THIRD) OF PROPERTY: SERVITUDES § 4.9 cmt. c.
    An easement holder may obtain any appropriate remedy for unreasonable interference
    with an easement. See Bauman v. Turpen, 
    139 Wash. App. 78
    , 92, 
    160 P.3d 1050
    (2007) (citing
    RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF PROPERTY: SERVITUDES § 8.3). The Restatement states that one
    appropriate remedy is a claim for compensatory damages. RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF PROPERTY:
    SERVITUDES § 8.3. This statement is consistent with the general rule that the holder of a
    nonpossessory interest in property can sue for damage to that interest. Affiliated FM Ins. Co. v.
    LTK Consulting Servs., Inc., 
    170 Wash. 2d 442
    , 458, 
    243 P.3d 521
    (2010).
    Under these authorities, a servient estate owner is liable for damages if he or she
    unreasonably interferes with the easement holder’s use of the easement. Further, in this context
    there is no legal difference between the rights of an express easement holder and the rights of a
    prescriptive easement holder. Therefore, we apply the same standard of liability to interference
    with a prescriptive easement.
    6
    No. 49308-0-II
    2.   Scope of Servient Estate Owner’s Obligation
    Blue Bay argues that the evidence presented at summary judgment showed that
    Zonnebloem and Mandl interfered with its claimed prescriptive easement by not granting an
    express easement over the Zonnebloem and Mandl properties to PSE. Blue Bay asserts that the
    reasonableness of Zonnebloem and Mandl’s refusal to grant PSE an easement must be
    determined as a question of fact rather than on summary judgment.
    Blue Bay’s argument is based on the assumption that a servient estate owner has a legal
    obligation in certain circumstances to take affirmative action – in this case, to grant an express
    easement to PSE – to facilitate the easement holder’s use of the easement. No Washington case
    has addressed this issue.2
    Blue Bay relies on a California case, Dolnikov v. Ekizian, in which the court held that a
    servient estate owner could be liable for unreasonable interference with an easement for failing
    to take an affirmative action that was necessary for the easement holder to use the easement. 
    222 Cal. App. 4th 419
    , 422, 
    165 Cal. Rptr. 3d 658
    (2013). In that case, the easement holder had an
    express easement for a driveway over the servient estate that had fallen into disrepair. 
    Id. at 423-
    24. The easement holder was constructing two houses on the parcel serviced by the easement
    and wanted to repair the easement driveway. 
    Id. In order
    to obtain construction permits for the
    2
    Blue Bay argues that because Zonnebloem and Mandl did not cite any controlling authority in
    support of its summary judgment motion, they did not meet their burden as the moving party and
    summary judgment should have been denied on that basis. This argument reflects a
    misunderstanding of summary judgment procedure. On summary judgment, the moving party
    has the initial burden to show there is no genuine issue of material fact. 
    Lee, 183 Wash. App. at 964
    . A moving defendant can meet this burden by showing that there is an absence of evidence
    to support the plaintiff’s case. 
    Id. But there
    is no requirement that a moving party present
    controlling legal authority to obtain summary judgment, particularly when no such authority
    exists.
    7
    No. 49308-0-II
    driveway, the easement holder needed the servient estate owner to sign a community driveway
    covenant. 
    Id. at 424-25.
    The servient estate owner repeatedly refused, resulting in a revocation
    of the driveway permits. 
    Id. A jury
    found the servient estate owner liable for interfering with
    the easement, and the trial court awarded damages to the easement holder and required the
    servient estate owner to sign any necessary forms. 
    Id. at 426-27.
    On appeal, the court held that a servient estate owner must not unreasonably interfere
    with the use of an easement, relying on the Restatement (Third) of Property: Servitudes § 4.9 and
    comment c. 
    Dolnikov, 222 Cal. App. 4th at 429-30
    . The court stated that whether the servient
    estate owner’s particular conduct constitutes an unreasonable interference with the easement is a
    question of fact. 
    Id. at 430.
    But the court concluded that the servient estate owner’s refusal to
    sign the covenant was unreasonable and could constitute an unreasonable interference with the
    easement holder’s use and enjoyment of the easement. 
    Id. at 431.
    We acknowledge that, as in Dolnikov, there may be circumstances in which a servient
    estate owner can be liable for wrongful interference with an easement for failing to take a
    reasonable affirmative action to facilitate the easement holder’s use of the easement. But the
    existence of such a rule does not resolve this case. The question here is whether Zonnebloem
    and Mandl’s failure to take a specific affirmative action – granting an express easement to PSE –
    creates a genuine issue of material fact on wrongful interference with Blue Bay’s prescriptive
    easement.
    Two factors are significant here. First, by granting an express easement to PSE,
    Zonnebloem and Mandl would relinquish a valuable property right – part of the bundle of rights
    associated with fee ownership of property – to a third party. See Kiely v. Graves, 
    173 Wash. 2d 8
    No. 49308-0-II
    926, 936, 
    271 P.3d 226
    (2012). The facts here are significantly different than in Dolnikov, where
    the servient estate owner was required to undertake only a ministerial act to allow the easement
    holder to use the easement for a community driveway. Blue Bay provides no authority for the
    proposition that a servient estate owner can be subject to liability for failing to give up a property
    right to facilitate an easement holder’s use of the easement.
    Second, the easement that PSE requested and that Blue Bay demanded be granted was for
    an area broader than the area of use that created the prescriptive easement. Again, the facts here
    are significantly different than in Dolnikov, where the servient estate owner’s requested act did
    not change the parameters of the easement. Generally, a trial court has no authority to change
    the location of an easement at the request of an easement holder. See Kave v. McIntosh Ridge
    Primary Road Ass’n, 
    198 Wash. App. 812
    , 820-21, 
    394 P.3d 446
    (2017). Blue Bay provides no
    authority for the proposition that a servient estate owner can be subject to liability for failing to
    grant an express easement that is broader – covering a different location – than the existing
    prescriptive easement in order to facilitate the easement holder’s use of the prescriptive
    easement.
    Based on these two factors, we hold as a matter of law that (1) it was not unreasonable
    for Zonnebloem and Mandl to refuse to grant an express easement to PSE even though that
    refusal interfered with Blue Bay’s use of its prescriptive easement, and (2) their refusal did not
    constitute an unlawful interference with Blue Bay’s claimed prescriptive easement.
    Accordingly, we hold that the trial court did not err in granting summary judgment in favor of
    Zonnebloem and Mandl on Blue Bay’s damages claim.
    9
    No. 49308-0-II
    CONCLUSION
    We affirm the trial court’s dismissal on summary judgment of Blue Bay’s damages claim
    for interference with its claimed prescriptive easement. We consider the remaining issues in the
    unpublished portion of this opinion. We affirm the trial court on all issues on appeal.
    A majority of the panel having determined that only the foregoing portion of this opinion
    will be printed in the Washington Appellate Reports and that the remainder shall be filed for
    public record in accordance with RCW 2.06.040, it is so ordered.
    ADDITIONAL FACTS
    The trial in this case involved various property disputes among the parties. The only
    issues on appeal are Blue Bay’s claim of a prescriptive easement for power and cable lines and
    Mandl’s adverse possession claim for a small area of Blue Bay’s property called Area #3.
    Prescriptive Easement Claim
    Mandl is owned by Marion and Loretta Sluys, who have owned the Mandl property in
    various ownership forms since 1971. They purchased the two Zonnebloem properties in 2001
    and transferred ownership to Zonnebloem in 2005. Zonnebloem is owned by the Sluyses’ son
    Daniel Sluys and a partner. Blue Bay purchased its property in 2012.
    The Blue Bay and Mandl buildings run parallel to each other, facing Front Street. The
    northwest wall of the Mandl building historically abutted the Blue Bay building. The back of the
    Blue Bay and Mandl properties slope upward to the Zonnebloem parking lot, which is
    approximately level with the second story of the buildings. A wood pathway leads from the back
    door of the Mandl building to the Zonnebloem parking lot. After purchasing its property in
    2012, Blue Bay demolished the existing building and constructed a new structure.
    10
    No. 49308-0-II
    Electricity for the Mandl building and the Blue Bay building came from an overhead
    power line that originated at a power pole on the southern edge of the Zonnebloem parking lot.
    That route was established before 1971, when the Sluys purchased the Mandl building. The
    parties submitted no evidence regarding the circumstances surrounding the installation of the
    power line.
    The power line’s path ran from the power pole, above a portion of the Zonnebloem and
    Mandl properties, to two “strikes” – power boxes – located on the Mandl building’s northwest
    wall. Blue Bay’s line ran from one strike down the side of the Mandl building and to the Blue
    Bay building. Blue Bay’s cable line followed the same route. After Blue Bay disconnected its
    power and cable lines to construct its new building, it requested that PSE reconnect the power
    line. However, Blue Bay requested that the lines run directly to a strike on Blue Bay’s new
    building rather than to the strike on the Mandl building.
    Use and Possession of Area #3
    Blue Bay and Mandl used each other’s property at various locations along their property
    lines. One such location, Area #3, was a triangular area along the hillside located immediately
    behind the Blue Bay building. One side extended along the east side of Blue Bay’s property for
    5.76 feet, a second side extended for 23.97 feet parallel to the Zonnebloem parking lot, and the
    third side ran nearly parallel to the Blue Bay property’s southern line toward the Zonnebloem
    parking lot.
    Area #3 is included in Blue Bay’s title. However, the northeast corner of the Mandl
    building and a retaining wall behind the building encroached into the area. The remainder of
    Area #3 is largely inaccessible and is covered by blackberries and other vegetation. Blue Bay
    11
    No. 49308-0-II
    conceded that Mandl has adversely possessed the portions of Area #3 on which the Mandl
    retaining wall and building sit, but contested the remaining area.
    The parties elicited testimony and submitted declarations into evidence about Area #3.
    Marion Sluys testified that he would clear the vegetation when necessary. He also testified that
    he maintained a plum tree in the corner of Area #3 before removing it approximately 30 years
    ago. Ricky Moon, a contractor for Mandl since 2003, testified that he cleared the area a few
    times each year for two or three years. Kristin Reed, who had done maintenance for Mandl for
    10 years at the time of trial, testified that she weeded and sprayed the area. Tammy Mattson,
    who rented the second story of the Mandl building, and Daniel Sluys both stated that Reed would
    perform yard maintenance in Area #3 quite a bit in the summer. Daniel Sluys agreed that during
    the growing season, Reed would do this on a regular schedule.
    Blue Bay submitted two declarations by previous owners of its property. Roberto
    Soltero, who owned a restaurant on the Blue Bay property from 2002 to 2005, stated that he
    would “trim and maintain” the vegetation in Area #3. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 195-96. Eric
    Waltenburg, who owned the property from 2007-2012, stated that “[o]n occasion [he] would
    maintain the area” and that Mandl did not do so to the best of his knowledge. CP at 570 (Ex.
    65a).
    Mandl also elicited testimony about the pathway leading from the Mandl building and
    crossing over Area #3. Marion Sluys testified that the pathway had originally been a rubber mat
    that led to a small bridge spanning the gap between the hillside and the Mandl building. Mattson
    testified that the footbridge was located near where Mandl had recently installed a new HVAC
    system, on the northern corner of Area #3. Marion Sluys testified that this makeshift pathway
    12
    No. 49308-0-II
    was in place until 2004 or 2005, at which point Mandl installed a wooden walkway in the same
    space.
    Trial Court’s Ruling
    After a bench trial, the trial court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law. The
    court ruled, among other things, that Blue Bay had established a prescriptive easement for the
    electric and cable lines from the power pole on the Zonnebloem parking lot property to Blue
    Bay’s building and that Mandl had adversely possessed the entirety of Area #3. The trial court
    entered a judgment that (1) quieted title in Blue Bay to an easement for electric and cable lines
    from the power pole on Zonnebloem’s property to Blue Bay’s new building, and (2) quieted title
    in Mandl to Area #3.
    ANALYSIS
    A.       STANDARD OF REVIEW
    Blue Bay’s prescriptive easement claim for the power and cable lines and Mandl’s
    adverse possession claim for Area #3 both involve the trial court’s findings of fact and
    conclusions of law after a bench trial. When reviewing a trial court’s decision following a bench
    trial, we ask whether substantial evidence supports the trial court’s findings of fact and whether
    those findings support the trial court’s conclusions of law. Viking Bank v. Firgrove Commons 3,
    LLC, 
    183 Wash. App. 706
    , 712, 
    334 P.3d 116
    (2014). Substantial evidence is the quantum of
    evidence sufficient to persuade a rational, fair-minded person that the premise is true. 
    Id. We view
    the evidence and all reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the
    prevailing party, and we do not review the trial court’s credibility determinations. Columbia
    State Bank v. Invicta Law Group PLLC, 
    199 Wash. App. 306
    , 319, ___ P.3d ___ (2017).
    13
    No. 49308-0-II
    We review both the trial court’s application of facts to law and its legal conclusions de
    novo. Viking 
    Bank, 183 Wash. App. at 712
    . We review legal conclusions de novo even if those
    conclusions are styled as findings of fact. Kitsap County Consol. Hous. Auth. v. Henry-
    Levingston, 
    196 Wash. App. 688
    , 697, 
    385 P.3d 188
    (2016).
    B.     EXISTENCE OF A PRESCRIPTIVE EASEMENT
    Zonnebloem and Mandl argue that the trial court erred in ruling that Blue Bay had
    established a prescriptive easement for electric and cable lines. Specifically, they claim that Blue
    Bay did not establish adverse use, one of the requirements for a prescriptive easement. We
    disagree.
    1.   Legal Principles
    An easement can be created by an express grant in a written instrument or by adverse
    use.3 810 Props. v. Jump, 
    141 Wash. App. 688
    , 696, 
    170 P.3d 1209
    (2007). Establishing an
    easement through adverse use, known as a prescriptive easement, requires a person claiming the
    eaeement to use another’s land for a period of 10 years in a manner that satisfies certain
    elements. Gamboa v. Clark, 
    183 Wash. 2d 38
    , 43, 
    348 P.3d 1214
    (2015). When the claimant
    satisfies the requirements of a prescriptive easement for 10 years, ownership of that easement
    automatically vests without the necessity of filing suit to quiet title. See Gorman v. City of
    Woodinville, 
    175 Wash. 2d 68
    , 72, 74, 
    283 P.3d 1082
    (2012) (stating rule for adverse possession).
    Prescriptive rights are not favored in the law. 
    Gamboa, 183 Wash. 2d at 43
    . To establish a
    prescriptive easement, the person claiming the easement has the burden of proving that he or she
    3
    There also are other types of non-express easements that are not relevant here. See Boyd v.
    Sunflower Props. LLC, 
    197 Wash. App. 137
    , 143, 
    389 P.3d 626
    (2016).
    14
    No. 49308-0-II
    used another person’s land for 10 years in a manner that (1) was open and notorious; (2) was
    continuous or uninterrupted; (3) passed over a uniform route; (4) was adverse to the servient
    estate owner; and (5) occurred with the servient estate owner’s knowledge, so that the servient
    owner could have asserted his or her legal rights. 
    Id. Zonnebloem and
    Mandl challenge only the adverse use element. Whether the claimant’s
    use of another’s property was adverse or permissive generally is a question of fact, but the nature
    of the use can be resolved as a question of law if the essential facts are undisputed. Imrie v.
    Kelley, 
    160 Wash. App. 1
    , 8, 
    250 P.3d 1045
    (2010).
    We review whether a claimant has established the elements of a prescriptive easement as
    a mixed question of fact and law. 
    Gamboa, 183 Wash. 2d at 44
    . We determine whether substantial
    evidence supports the trial court’s findings of fact. 
    Imrie, 160 Wash. App. at 6
    . But we review de
    novo whether the facts as found establish a prescriptive easement. 
    Gamboa, 183 Wash. 2d at 44
    .
    2.   Adverse Use Requirement
    Adverse use generally means that the claimant’s use was without the landowner’s
    permission. 
    Id. Use is
    adverse when the claimant “ ‘uses the property as the true owner would,
    under a claim of right, disregarding the claims of others, and asking no permission for such
    use.’ ” 
    Imrie, 160 Wash. App. at 8
    (quoting Kunkel v. Fisher, 
    106 Wash. App. 599
    , 602, 
    23 P.3d 1128
    (2001)). However, the fact that no permission was expressly asked and no permission was
    expressly given does not preclude a use from being permissive as opposed to adverse. Cuillier v.
    Coffin, 
    57 Wash. 2d 624
    , 626, 
    358 P.2d 958
    (1961).
    The starting point of the adverse use analysis is the claimant’s first use of the
    landowner’s property. A person’s use generally cannot be adverse when the use is “permissive
    15
    No. 49308-0-II
    in its inception.” 
    Gamboa, 183 Wash. 2d at 45
    . A use can be permissive in its inception either
    expressly, as when the landowner grants actual permission, or when the use arises “ ‘out of
    mutual neighborly acquiescence.’ ” 
    Id. (quoting Roediger
    v. Cullen, 
    26 Wash. 2d 690
    , 713, 
    175 P.2d 669
    (1946)). A use permissive at its inception cannot develop into a prescriptive right no
    matter how long it continues unless the user subsequently makes a distinct and positive assertion
    of a right hostile to the owner. 
    Gamboa, 183 Wash. 2d at 45
    .
    Even if a use was not permissive in its inception, we presume in certain situations that a
    claimant enters onto land with the landowner’s permission. 
    Id. at 44.
    The presumption of
    permissive use applies in three factual scenarios: (1) when the land entered is unenclosed land,
    (2) when it is reasonable to infer that the use of enclosed or developed land was permitted by
    neighborly sufferance or acquiescence, or (3) when the landowner created or maintained a road
    and the neighbor used the road in a noninterfering manner. 
    Id. The person
    claiming a prescriptive easement may defeat the presumption of permissive
    use by showing either that the facts and circumstances demonstrate that the use was adverse and
    hostile to the owner’s rights or that the landowner has indicated by some action an admission that
    the claimant has a legal right to the easement. 
    Id. at 44-45.
    To show that land use is adverse and
    hostile to the rights of the owner, the claimant must present evidence that “he or she interfered
    with the owner’s use of the land in some manner.” 
    Id. at 52.
    When the alleged easement involves a road, who created the road and who used it are
    important factors in determining whether we can infer neighborly acquiescence. 
    Cuillier, 57 Wash. 2d at 627
    . When the landowner constructs and uses the road and the claimant simply shares
    16
    No. 49308-0-II
    the road, there is an inference of permissive use.4 
    Id. Such an
    inference is particularly
    appropriate when the claimant’s use does not interfere with the landowner’s use. Miller v.
    Jarman, 
    2 Wash. App. 994
    , 998, 
    471 P.2d 704
    (1970).
    But evidence that the claimant constructed the road for his or her exclusive use is more
    persuasive of adverse use. 
    Cuillier, 57 Wash. 2d at 627
    . And the joint efforts of the claimant and
    landowner to construct a common driveway to be used by both also tends to indicate adverse use.
    
    Jarman, 2 Wash. App. at 998
    .
    In addition, earlier cases held that use of another’s property for the 10-year prescriptive
    period without formal permission created an opposite presumption – that the use was adverse.
    See 
    Cuillier, 57 Wash. 2d at 626-27
    . The court in Cuillier clarified that a more accurate statement
    is that the claimant’s unchallenged use of another’s property for the 10-year prescriptive period
    allows an inference of adverse use that may be considered along with other circumstances. 
    Id. at 627.5
    3.   Absence of Specific Finding on Adverse Use
    The trial court did not make a specific finding of fact that the running of the power and
    cable lines from the power pole on Zonnebloem’s property to Blue Bay’s new building
    constituted an adverse use.6 Zonnebloem and Mandl argue that the absence of this finding means
    4
    This statement in Cuillier also is the basis for the third factual scenario supporting a
    presumption of permissive use. 
    Gamboa, 183 Wash. 2d at 44
    .
    5
    The court in Gamboa acknowledged this clarification in Cuillier, but chose not to resolve
    whether unchallenged use created a presumption of adverse use or merely an 
    inference. 183 Wash. 2d at 46
    , 50.
    6
    We believe that the trial court likely erred in changing the path of the prescriptive easement.
    Blue Bay’s established use was from the power pole to the strike on the Mandl building, and the
    17
    No. 49308-0-II
    that there was no factual support for the trial court’s conclusion that Blue Bay established the
    elements of a prescriptive easement. We disagree.
    In certain situations we can imply an essential finding of fact. See Little v. King, 
    160 Wash. 2d 696
    , 707, 
    161 P.3d 345
    (2007) (in reviewing a default judgment, implying a finding of
    fact that the plaintiff suffered damages in the amounts awarded). Here, the trial court expressly
    listed in its conclusions of law the five elements of a prescriptive easement. And the court made
    an express “finding of fact” that “Blue Bay has established that it is entitled to a prescriptive
    easement for power from the PSE power pole directly to a strike on the Blue Bay Building.”7 CP
    at 463. In reaching this conclusion, the court necessarily made a factual finding that Blue Bay
    had satisfied each of the elements of a prescriptive easement, including adverse use.
    The better course of action for the trial court would have been to make express findings
    of fact on the five elements of a prescriptive easement. However, we will treat the court’s
    conclusion that Blue Bay was entitled to a prescriptive easement as an implied finding of fact
    that Blue Bay’s use of the power and cable lines was adverse.
    trial court changed the route from the power pole to the side of the new Blue Bay building.
    Generally, a trial court has no authority to change the location of an easement. See 
    Kave, 198 Wash. App. at 820-21
    . But Zonnebloem and Mandl do not assign error to or present any argument
    concerning the trial court’s prescriptive easement route, possibly because they would prefer that
    any new lines run directly to the Blue Bay building. Therefore, we do not address this issue.
    7
    This “finding of fact” actually was a conclusion of law and we must treat it as a legal
    conclusion regardless of what the trial court called it. See 
    Henry-Levingston, 196 Wash. App. at 697
    .
    18
    No. 49308-0-II
    4.   Analysis
    a.   No Permission at Inception
    Initially, there is no evidence that Zonnebloem’s and Mandl’s predecessors gave
    permission to Blue Bay’s predecessors when the power and cable lines were first run over their
    property. The trial court found that the power line had been present since before the Sluys
    purchased the Mandl property, and neither party presented evidence about the circumstances
    surrounding the first installation of the power line. Therefore, Zonnebloem and Mandl were not
    entitled to a finding of permissive use based on permission at the inception of the use.
    b.   No Presumption of Permissive Use
    The next question is whether this case presents a scenario allowing a presumption of
    permissive use. Zonnebloem and Mandl’s primary argument is that the second presumption
    scenario, when it is reasonable to infer that the use of land was permitted by neighborly
    sufferance or acquiescence, applies here.8 
    Gamboa, 183 Wash. 2d at 44
    . We must decide whether
    there was sufficient evidence to apply the presumption.
    The Supreme Court in Gamboa described the neighborly sufferance standard as a “fairly
    low bar.” 
    Id. at 51.
    A presumption of permissive use in such situations also furthers policy
    concerns:
    8
    Zonnebloem and Mandl argue that the other two factual scenarios should apply as well. We
    disagree. The first exception for unenclosed land does not necessarily apply to parcels of land
    that lack a fence, but rather applies when a parcel is “ ‘vacant, open, unenclosed, [or]
    unimproved.’ ” McMilian v. King County, 
    161 Wash. App. 581
    , 601, 
    255 P.3d 739
    (2011)
    (quoting Sharp v. Kieszling, 
    35 Wash. 2d 620
    , 623, 
    214 P.2d 163
    (1950)). Therefore, this exception
    does not apply to a paved parking lot in a developed area. The third exception for roads created
    and used by a landowner also does not apply because there is no evidence either way who
    installed the electric and cable lines.
    19
    No. 49308-0-II
    “The law should, and does[,] encourage acts of neighborly courtesy; a landowner
    who quietly acquiesces in the use of a path, or road, across his uncultivated land,
    resulting in no injury to him, but in great convenience to his neighbor, ought not to
    be held to have thereby lost his rights.”
    
    Id. at 48
    (alteration and emphasis in original) (quoting 
    Roediger, 26 Wash. 2d at 709
    ). This policy
    helps incentivize friendly and neighborly cooperation and avoids requiring landowners to have
    an antagonistic attitude in order to protect their property rights. 
    Gamboa, 183 Wash. 2d at 48-49
    .
    Regarding the Zonnebloem parking lot, there is no evidence in the record that at the time
    the lines were installed the same person owned both the parking lot and the Mandl property, as
    the Sluys later did. This means that both Blue Bay’s predecessors and Mandl’s predecessors
    encroached on the parking lot property, and there is no indication that the parking lot owner used
    the encroaching lines or benefitted from them. As a result, there can be no inference that the
    owner of the parking lot allowed Blue Bay’s predecessors to use the route for the line through
    neighborly acquiescence.
    Regarding the Mandl property, the record again does not show the circumstances
    surrounding the line’s installation to a strike on the Mandl building. Mandl’s predecessors may
    have knowingly allowed Blue Bay’s use as a good neighbor. But the power company also may
    have installed the wire that way as a matter of convenience without consulting Mandl’s
    predecessors. In the absence of any evidence, the record does not support an inference that Blue
    Bay was using the power and cable lines through the neighborly acquiescence of Mandl’s
    predecessors.
    c.   Inference of Adverse Use and Other Evidence
    The ultimate question is whether there is substantial evidence to support the trial court’s
    implied finding that use of the power and cable lines by Blue Bay’s predecessors was adverse.
    20
    No. 49308-0-II
    Because no presumption of permissive use applies, we can infer adverse use based on the
    undisputed fact that Blue Bay’s predecessors satisfied the remaining elements of a prescriptive
    easement claim by using the power and cable lines for 10 continuous years. 
    Cuillier, 57 Wash. 2d at 627
    . And an inference is sufficient to constitute substantial evidence, particularly in the
    absence of any contrary evidence. See Columbia State 
    Bank, 199 Wash. App. at 319
    (noting that
    prevailing party below is entitled to all reasonable inferences). Therefore, the inference that Blue
    Bay’s use was adverse provides substantial evidence to support a finding of adverse use.
    d.   Summary
    Viewing the evidence and reasonable inferences in a light most favorable to Blue Bay,
    we hold that the trial court’s implied factual finding that the use by Blue Bay’s predecessors of
    the power and cable lines was adverse was supported by substantial evidence. Accordingly, we
    hold that the trial court did not err in concluding that Blue Bay was entitled to a prescriptive
    easement regarding the route of the power and cable lines.
    C.     ADVERSE POSSESSION OF AREA #3
    Blue Bay argues that the trial court erred in concluding that title of Area #3 should be
    quieted in Mandl based on adverse possession. Blue Bay claims that substantial evidence did not
    support the trial court’s findings of fact regarding the elements of adverse possession and that
    those findings did not support the court’s conclusion that Mandl adversely possessed the entirety
    of Area #3. We disagree.
    1.    Legal Principles
    To establish adverse possession of a parcel of land, a claimant is required to demonstrate
    by a preponderance of the evidence that the possession was (1) exclusive, (2) actual and
    21
    No. 49308-0-II
    uninterrupted, (3) open and notorious, and (4) hostile. Nickell v. Southview Homeowners Ass’n,
    
    167 Wash. App. 42
    , 50, 
    271 P.3d 973
    (2012). Each element must have existed for a period of 10
    years. 
    Id. Possession is
    open and notorious if either the title owner had actual notice of the adverse
    use or if the claimant used the land in a manner that would make a reasonable person believe the
    claimant owned it. 
    Id. The nature
    and location of the land in question are relevant to the
    claimant’s type of use. Shelton v. Strickland, 
    106 Wash. App. 45
    , 50, 
    21 P.3d 1179
    (2001). For
    possession to be exclusive, the claimant must possess the parcel as an owner would. Crites v.
    Koch, 
    49 Wash. App. 171
    , 174, 
    741 P.2d 1005
    (1987). An occasional, transitory use by the true
    owner usually will not prevent adverse possession if the claimant permits the use as a
    “neighborly courtesy.” 
    Id. at 175-76.
    Possession is hostile if the claimant treats the land as his
    own throughout the period, without regard to subjective intent. Chaplin v. Sanders, 
    100 Wash. 2d 853
    , 860-61, 
    676 P.2d 431
    (1984).
    When establishing the boundary of an adversely possessed parcel, the trial court need not
    find a clearly etched line, but rather may project one between objects where reasonable and
    logical to believe the claimant’s use of the land was open and notorious. Riley v. Andres, 
    107 Wash. App. 391
    , 396, 
    27 P.3d 618
    (2001). This demarcation may include ground around areas
    where direct evidence shows actual possession when reasonably necessary to settle a boundary
    dispute. Lloyd v. Montecucco, 
    83 Wash. App. 846
    , 853-54, 
    924 P.2d 927
    (1996).
    2.    Trial Court’s Findings
    The trial court made several findings of fact relevant to the parties’ use of Area #3:
    A. In Area #3, the wall of the Mandl Building, space directly adjacent to it, and a
    retaining wall, encroach over the surveyed property line.
    22
    No. 49308-0-II
    B. The evidence showed that Area #3 had been used and maintained by the Sluys
    for a long time. Mandl maintained it – including the removal of a plum tree in Area
    #3.
    C. In its former configuration a pathway existed from the roof of the Mandl
    Building to the Parking Lot. This pathway consisted of a footbridge and was in
    Area #3. It went next to the garage on the Mandl property. The bridge and pathway
    were maintained by Mandl and its predecessors in excess of ten years. . . .
    D. Blue Bay presented no testimony to rebut the testimony . . . that [these] areas
    [were] used exclusively by Mandl for over ten years.
    E. Blue Bay has no feasible access to Area #3. It admitted that the Mandl Building
    and retaining wall in Area #3 have been adversely possessed.
    F. Mandl has shown by clear and convincing evidence that it and its predecessors
    have occupied this area exclusively, openly, notoriously, continuously under a
    claim of right for over ten years.
    CP at 461. The trial court concluded that “Mandl and its predecessors have proven by clear and
    convincing evidence that its, and its predecessors’ use of Area[] #3 . . . was actual, open and
    notorious, hostile, continuous and exclusive” and that title to Area #3 would be quieted in Mandl.
    CP at 466.
    3.    Analysis
    Trial testimony provided substantial evidence to support the trial court’s findings of fact,
    which in turn supported the court’s legal conclusion. There was evidence that Marion Sluys and
    Mandl’s employees maintained Area # 3 on a consistent basis for more than 10 years. Even
    though the maintenance did not occur year-round, it was continuous in that it occurred when
    necessary, i.e. during the summer. Considering the type of land at issue – a steep slope that was
    otherwise unusable – Mandl’s maintenance is the type of use consistent with ownership and
    23
    No. 49308-0-II
    hostile to Blue Bay’s title. In addition, there was testimony that a footbridge from the Mandl
    building crossed Area #3.
    Blue Bay argues that Mandl’s use was not exclusive. The declarations of Blue Bay’s
    predecessors vaguely indicated that they also took part in the area’s upkeep. However,
    occasional use by a true owner is not fatal to adverse possession. 
    Koch, 49 Wash. App. at 174
    .
    Testimony that Mandl employees regularly maintained the area in the summer suggests that any
    maintenance by the true landowners was limited. The location of the area, which could not be
    reached directly from the Blue Bay building, also supports a conclusion that Mandl was
    primarily responsible for the area’s maintenance.
    Blue Bay also argues that trial testimony did not identify which portions of Area #3
    Mandl used. But Marion Sluys and Mattson, Mandl’s renter, testified that the footbridge crossed
    Area #3. Further, photographs of the area show that it was largely covered in vegetation.
    Mandl’s witnesses testified that Mandl and its employees controlled any growth when necessary.
    This evidence would allow a rational person to conclude that Mandl had exercised possession of
    the entirety of Area #3. And in a case like this, where the record leaves substantial gaps because
    witness testimony involved significant gesturing and pointing to pictures and maps, the trial
    court is in the best position to resolve issues of witness credibility, conflicting testimony, and
    persuasiveness of the evidence. See Harris v. Urell, 
    133 Wash. App. 130
    , 139, 
    135 P.3d 530
    (2006) (noting the appropriateness of such deference).
    We hold that substantial evidence supports the trial court’s findings of fact and that these
    findings support the trial court’s conclusion that Mandl adversely possessed the entirety of Area
    #3. Therefore, we affirm the trial court on this issue.
    24
    No. 49308-0-II
    D.     ATTORNEY FEES ON APPEAL
    Both parties request reasonable attorney fees under RCW 7.28.083. RCW 7.28.083
    provides that we may award all or a portion of costs and reasonable attorney fees to the
    prevailing party in an action asserting title to real property by adverse possession “if, after
    considering all the facts, the court determines such an award is equitable and just.”
    Blue Bay argues that RCW 7.28.083 applies to prescriptive easement claims, and that it is
    entitled to an attorney fee award as the prevailing party on its prescriptive easement claims.
    Mandl argues that it is entitled to attorney fees as the prevailing party on its Area #3 adverse
    possession claim. However, because we conclude that neither party substantially prevailed on
    this appeal, we exercise our discretion and decline to award attorney fees to either party.
    CONCLUSION
    We affirm the trial court’s conclusion that Blue Bay was entitled to a prescriptive
    easement regarding the power and cable lines and that Mandl obtained Area #3 through adverse
    possession.
    MAXA, A.C.J.
    We concur:
    LEE, J.
    SUTTON, J.
    25