Kay & Rick Johnson, Et Ux, Apps v. Roy Kissler & Janie Luzzi-kissler, Et Ux Resps. ( 2014 )


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  •                                                                                      20I1O Trf          r   9; I
    STATE
    BY
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGT
    DIVISION II
    KAY        JOHNSON         and   RICK     JOHNSON,                     No. 45116 -6 -II
    husband and wife and their marital community,
    Appellants,
    v.
    ROY KISSLER and JANIE LUZZI -KISSLER,                           UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    husband and wife and their marital community,
    and KISSLER MANAGEMENT, INC.,
    LEE, J. —   Kay and Rick Johnson appeal the superior court' s order granting Roy and Janie
    Kisslers' motion for summary judgment and dismissing the Johnsons' adverse possession claim.
    The Johnsons argue that the superior court erred because there were genuine issues of material fact
    precluding summary judgment. We reverse the superior court and remand for further proceedings.
    FACTS
    The Johnsons own property adjacent to the Kisslers' property. A chain -link fence separates
    the two   properties.    The chain -link fence is approximately three feet away from the property line
    on the Kisslers' property. The three feet between the chain -link fence and the property line is the
    property   at   dispute here ( the disputed   parcel).
    No. 45116 -6 -II
    The Johnsons' property        was   originally    owned     by    Dona   Gainey   Mathews (    Gainey),   who
    acquired it in 1977. In 1982, George Fleming, a predecessor owner of the Kisslers' propery, built
    a house on his property and installed the chain -link fence that currently separates the two
    properties. After Fleming installed the chain -link fence, Gainey treated the disputed parcel as her
    own property by clearing it and planting a garden. Gainey maintained the garden and treated all
    the property on her side of the fence as her own until she sold her property to David and Judy
    Sizemore in 1996. She also installed a dog run on part of the disputed parcel. In 2007, the Johnsons
    bought the property from the Sizemores.
    Fleming     sold   his property to the Halls in 1992.         The. Halls subsequently sold the property
    to the Kisslers.
    The Kisslers and Johnsons began having disagreements about the use of the disputed
    parcel. The Johnsons filed a complaint, alleging that they had acquired the disputed parcel through
    adverse possession.'         The Kisslers filed a motion for summary judgment to dismiss the Johnsons'
    adverse   possession     claim and    to   quiet   title to the   disputed   parcel   in the Kisslers.    The Kisslers
    submitted evidence showing that, in 1984, a survey of the property was done that showed the
    chain -link   fence   was not on     the property     boundary      line.   They also submitted an affidavit from
    David Sizemore in which he stated that ( 1) the 1984 survey was attached to the deed transferring
    the property to him, (2) he knew the          chain -link   fence   was not   the true   boundary   line, ( 3) he had an
    agreement with the Kisslers that he could use the disputed parcel as long as he did not plant
    The complaint actually included several claims, many of which were related to an easement on a
    differentpiece of the property. The remaining claims were dismissed when the Johnsons took a
    voluntary nonsuit under CR 41.
    2
    No. 45116 -6 -II
    vegetation with invasive root structures, and ( 4) he had the same understanding and agreement
    with   the Kisslers'    predecessors,   the Halls.      Similarly, Roy Kissler submitted an affidavit stating
    that he also knew the fence was not the boundary line and he gave the Sizemores permission to
    use the disputed parcel so long as they did not plant vegetation with invasive root structures. The
    Kisslers also submitted the deeds transferring the property from Gainey to the Sizemores, and the
    Sizemores to the Johnsons; neither of these deeds mentioned the disputed parcel.2
    In their response to the Kisslers' motion for summary judgment, the Johnsons presented an
    affidavit   from   Gainey. Gainey stated that she and Fleming considered the chain -link fence the
    boundary line between the properties and that they never had an agreement in which Fleming gave
    her   permission   to   use   the disputed   parcel.
    When Fleming sold the property to the Halls in 1992,
    the chain -link fence was understood to be the boundary between the properties, and Gainey never
    obtained the Halls' permission to continue using the disputed parcel. After Fleming installed the
    chain -link fence in 1982, Gainey used and maintained the disputed parcel as if it was her own
    property, never discussed the use with Fleming, and continued using and maintaining the disputed
    parcel until she sold it to the Sizemores in 1996.
    The Johnsons also presented Kay Johnson' s affidavit, which stated that Judy Sizemore had
    shown her the property numerous times; and that Judy showed her the plants that she had planted
    on the disputed parcel and the new sprinkler system that the Sizemores had installed. Judy never
    once mentioned that the disputed parcel was not their property, that they used it with the Kisslers'
    permission, or that they had an agreement with the Kisslers regarding the use of the disputed parcel.
    2 The deed from the Sizemores transfers the property to " Kay Pruitt" who is now Kay Johnson.
    3
    No. 45116 -6 -II
    Kay also stated that although she had numerous conversations about the disputed parcel with the
    Kisslers, the Kisslers never mentioned that the disputed parcel was their property .or that they
    previously had      an agreement with        the Sizemores relating to the disputed          parcel.   In addition, the
    Johnsons submitted the disclosure form that the Sizemores had signed during the sale of the
    property in which they stated that there was no disputed property or agreements regarding the use
    of their property.
    The superior court granted the Kisslers' motion for summary judgment dismissing the
    Johnsons' claim. The superior court also quieted title to the disputed parcel in the Kisslers, ordered
    the Johnsons to remove any plants or improvements from the disputed parcel, and awarded the
    Kisslers attorney fees. The Johnsons appeal.
    ANALYSIS
    We review motions for summary judgment de novo and engage in the same inquiry as the
    superior court.     Cole   v.   Laverty,   
    112 Wn. App. 180
    , 184, 
    49 P. 3d 924
     ( 2002).   Summary judgment
    is appropriate if there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to
    judgment    as a matter of      law. CR 56( c);    Cole, 112 Wn. App. at 184. We consider the facts and all
    reasonable      inferences in the light     most   favorable to the nonmoving party.          Cole, 112 Wn. App. at
    184. If reasonable minds could reach but one conclusion from all the evidence, summary judgment
    is   correct.   Harberd v. City of Kettle Falls, 
    120 Wn. App. 498
    , 507 -08, 
    84 P. 3d 1241
    , review
    denied, 
    152 Wn.2d 1025
     ( 2004). Bare assertions that a genuine issue of material fact exists will
    not defeat summary judgment in the absence of actual evidence. Harberd, 120 Wn. App. at 508.
    To establish ownership of a piece of property through adverse possession, a claimant must
    prove    that   possession of     the property   was "(   1)   open and notorious, (   2)   actual and uninterrupted,
    No. 45116 -6 -II
    3)   exclusive, (   4) hostile    and under a claim of right, ( 5)        for   a period of   10   years."   Shelton v.
    Strickland, 
    106 Wn. App. 45
    , 50, 
    21 P. 3d 1179
    ,       review   denied, 
    145 Wn.2d 1003
     ( 2001).          Title
    automatically    vests     in   a claimant who satisfies     the   elements      for the 10 -year   period.   Gorman v.
    City    of Woodinville, 
    175 Wn.2d 68
    , 72, 
    283 P. 3d 1082
     ( 2012). " Adverse possession is a mixed
    question of law and fact: whether the essential facts exist is for the trier of fact, but whether the
    facts   constitute adverse possession         is for the   court   to determine     as a matter of   law." Lingvall v.
    Bartmess, 
    97 Wn. App. 245
    , 253, 
    982 P. 2d 690
     ( 1999).
    The Johnsons argue that the superior court erred by granting the Kisslers' motion for
    summary judgment because title to the disputed parcel vested in Gainey before the property was
    ever transferred to the Sizemores, and therefore, any agreement that the Sizemores may have had
    with the Halls and Kisslers could not have transferred title of the disputed parcel back to the Halls
    or the Kisslers and is immaterial. We agree.
    It is undisputed that Gainey' s use of the disputed parcel was open and notorious, actual and
    uninterrupted, exclusive, and         for   a period of at   least 10   years.    Gainey' s affidavit establishes that
    she cleared the disputed parcel and maintained it as a garden as if it were her own property for the
    entire period between 1982 and 1996, when she sold her property. Therefore, the only element at
    issue here is whether Gainey' s use of the disputed parcel was hostile.
    To satisfy the hostility element, the claimant' s use must be adverse to the title owner' s
    interest. Herrin      v.   O' Hern, 
    168 Wn. App. 305
    , 311, 
    275 P. 3d 1231
     ( 2012).            Subjective belief in
    ownership does        not establish    hostility. Chaplin v. Sanders, 
    100 Wn.2d 853
    , 861, 
    676 P. 2d 431
    1984).    When a person landscapes and maintains the property as if it were his or her own, in the
    same manner as an owner, the use satisfies the hostility element. Maier v. Giske, 
    154 Wn. App.
                                                        5
    No. 45116 -6 -I1
    6, 19, 
    223 P. 3d 1265
     ( 2010); Lingvall, 97 Wn.          App.    at   254.   However, a claimant' s use is not
    hostile if the title owner granted the claimant permission to use the disputed property. Harris v.
    Urell, 
    133 Wn. App. 130
    , 139, 
    135 P. 3d 530
     ( 2006), review denied, 
    160 Wn.2d 1012
     ( 2007).
    The Kisslers assert that because a property survey was completed after the chain -link fence
    was installed, it can be inferred that Fleming knew the correct property boundary. Therefore, the
    appropriate inference is that Fleming gave Gainey permission to use the disputed parcel for her
    garden. However, in a motion for summary judgment, all reasonable inferences must be drawn in
    favor of the nonmoving party. Here, the Johnsons are the nonmoving party and are entitled to all
    reasonable inferences being drawn in their favor. Therefore, drawing the inference that Fleming
    gave Gainey permission to use the property, which is an inference in favor of the Kisslers, is
    improper in a summary judgment motion brought by the Kisslers.
    The Kisslers also argue that the Johnsons cannot establish the hostility requirement because
    Sizemore' s declaration shows that he knew and agreed that the property belonged to the Kisslers.
    However, once adverse possession is established by. 10 years of adverse use, title automatically
    passes    to the   claimant.   Halverson v. City of Bellevue, 
    41 Wn. App. 457
    , 460, 
    704 P. 2d 1232
    1985).    There is sufficient evidence to show that Gainey used the disputed parcel as her own from
    1982 to 1996.       Therefore, for summary judgment purposes, the Johnsons have demonstrated that
    title to the disputed parcel vested in Gainey during the period that she owned her property.
    Once title passed to Gainey, the Sizemores' purported understanding that the property
    actually belonged to the Kisslers did      not   divest title   of   the disputed   parcel.   In Mugaas v. Smith,
    
    33 Wn.2d 429
    , 431, 
    206 P. 2d 332
     ( 1949), our Supreme Court stated:
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    No. 45116 -6 -II
    We have on several occasions approved a statement which appears in
    Towles v. Hamilton, 
    94 Neb. 588
    , 
    143 N.W. 935
    , 936, that:
    It is elementary that where the title has become fully vested by disseizin
    so long continued as to bar an action, it cannot be divested by parol abandonment
    or relinquishment or by verbal declarations of the disseizor, nor by any other act
    short of what would be required in a case where his title was by deed."
    See McInnis   v.   Day [ Lumber] Co.,         
    102 Wash. 38
    , 172 [ P]. 844 [ 1918];   King
    County v. Hagen, 30 Wn.(2d) 847, 194 P.( 2d) 357 [ 1948].
    Appellants    cite   no   cases,    and we have found none, supporting their
    contention    that,   under a   recording     statute ...    a conveyance of the record title to a
    bona fide purchaser will extinguish a title acquired by adverse possession.
    Accordingly, the Kisslers' contention that the Sizemores' purported understanding and agreement
    with the Halls and the Kisslers somehow terminated or extinguished the title acquired by Gainey' s
    adverse possession of the disputed parcel lacks merit.
    The superior court erred by granting the Kisslers' motion for summary judgment because,
    as a matter of law, title of the disputed parcel vested in Gainey and ultimately transferred to the
    Johnsons.   We reverse the superior court' s order granting summary judgment to the Kisslers and
    remand for further proceedings. 3
    3 Because we reverse the superior court' s order granting summary judgment in favor of the
    Kisslers, we also reverse the superior court' s other orders predicated on the order granting
    summary judgment: the order of ejectment and order granting injunctive relief.
    Furthermore, we decline the Johnson' request to grant summary judgment in their favor.
    Although, as a matter of law, title to the disputed parcel was transferred to them, the Johnsons did
    not file a cross -motion for summary judgment in the superior court. And, we reject the Johnsons'
    contention that it is appropriate for them to make, and for us to grant, a cross- motion for summary
    judgment for the first time on appeal. Accordingly, there is no basis for us to grant judgment in
    the Johnsons favor.
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    No. 45116 -6 -II
    ATTORNEY FEES
    The Johnsons argue that the superior court erred by granting attorney fees to the Kisslers.
    We review a superior court' s decision regarding attorney fees for an abuse of discretion. Morgan
    v. Kingen, 
    166 Wn.2d 526
    , 539, 
    210 P. 3d 995
     ( 2009).
    RCW 7. 28. 083( 3) allows the superior court to award attorney fees to the prevailing party
    on an adverse possession claim. Here, the superior court improperly granted the Kisslers' motion
    for summary judgment; therefore, the Kisslers were not the prevailing party. Because the Kisslers
    were not the prevailing party, the superior court erred by awarding the Kisslers their attorney fees.
    The Johnsons request attorney fees on appeal under RAP 18. 1 and RCW 4. 84. 185. RCW
    4. 84. 185 allows an award of attorney fees to a party opposing a frivolous action or defense. The
    Johnsons argue that the Kisslers' defensethat the Sizemores' purported agreement with the Halls
    or   the Kisslers   defeated the Johnsons'      claim   for   adverse possession —was        frivolous and advanced
    without a reasonable          basis.   A defense is frivolous if, considering the defense in its entirety, it
    cannot    be   supported   by    any   rational argument      based in fact    or   law. Dave Johnson Ins., Inc. v.
    Wright, 
    167 Wn. App. 758
    , 785, 
    275 P. 3d 339
    ,    review    denied, 
    175 Wn.2d 1008
     ( 2012). Here, the
    Kisslers   were     relying   on arguments    that   prevailed    in the   superior court.   Although incorrect, we
    do not consider the Kisslers' position frivolous.
    The Kisslers     also request    attorney fees   on appeal.       However, given that the Kisslers have
    not prevailed on appeal, they are not entitled to attorney fees.
    8
    No. 45116 -6 -II
    We reverse the superior court' s order granting summary judgment in favor of the Kisslers
    and all subsequent orders predicated on the superior court' s summary judgment order. We also
    reverse the superior court' s order granting the Kisslers attorney fees. We remand for further
    proceedings.
    A majority of the panel having determined that this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate reports, but will be filed for public record in accordance with RCW
    2. 06. 040, it is so ordered.
    We concur:
    9