168 Wash. 2d 627 | Wash. | 2010
¶1 Paul and Dianne Cokeley seek review of a Court of Appeals decision holding that Scott and Kim Merriman sufficiently proved a clear and well-defined boundary between the parties’ properties sufficient to establish the boundary by mutual recognition and acquiescence. Because we agree with the trial court that the Merrimans failed to prove a clear and well-defined boundary by clear, cogent, and convincing evidence, we grant review, reverse the Court of Appeals, and reinstate the trial court’s judgment quieting title in the Cokeleys.
¶2 The Merrimans live on a waterfront lot they purchased from Dan Kosenski in 1996. An adjacent and undeveloped waterfront lot was then owned by Rita Willits. In 1993 Rita’s husband, Ward Willits, had a survey conducted to locate the boundary between Rita’s lot and the lot then owned by Kosenski. The surveyors marked the boundary by placing a survey marker at the road at the front of the lot, another marker at the top of a bluff near the water’s edge, and a third marker about midway between the other two markers. A few months later, Ward Willits installed wooden posts next to the two corner markers and placed a metal stake about halfway along what he thought was the property line. The purported boundary line remained undisturbed from 1993 to 2002. During that time, blackberries, weeds, and ivy grew in the area. In 2002 Ward Willits erected a two-strand, barbed wire fence with steel posts along the survey line.
¶3 After the Merrimans bought Kosenski’s lot in 1996, they wished to also buy Rita Willits’s lot, but the parties could not agree on a price. The Cokeleys bought Rita’s lot instead in 2004. Over the Merrimans’ objections, the Cokeleys obtained permits to build a residence on their lot. The Merrimans erected wooden fence panels and planted shrubs along part of the survey line to enhance privacy around their residence.
¶5 The Merrimans sued the Cokeleys to quiet title to the disputed parcel, asserting adverse possession, estoppel in pais, and mutual recognition and acquiescence in the boundary marked by the original surveyors. The Cokeleys counterclaimed to quiet title in accordance with their survey. After a bench trial, the court determined that the Merrimans failed to prove adverse possession or mutual acquiescence by clear and convincing evidence. It therefore quieted title in the Cokeleys. The Court of Appeals reversed in a divided decision, holding that the Merrimans adequately established the boundary by mutual recognition and acquiescence. Merriman v. Cokeley, 152 Wn. App. 115, 215 P.3d 241 (2009).
¶6 A party claiming title to land by mutual recognition and acquiescence must prove (1) that the boundary line between two properties was “certain, well defined, and in some fashion physically designated upon the ground, e.g., by monuments, roadways, fence lines, etc.”; (2) that the adjoining landowners, in the absence of an express boundary line agreement, manifested in good faith a mutual recognition of the designated boundary line as the true line; and (3) that mutual recognition of the boundary line continued for the period of time necessary to establish adverse possession (10 years). Lamm v. McTighe, 72 Wn.2d 587, 593, 434 P.2d 565 (1967). These elements must be proved by clear, cogent, and convincing evidence. Lilly v. Lynch, 88 Wn. App. 306, 316-17, 945 P.2d 727 (1997). To meet this standard of proof, the evidence must show the ultimate
¶7 At issue is whether the boundary line claimed by the Merrimans was sufficiently certain and well defined before Ward Willits erected the barbed wire fence in 2002.
¶8 The trial court here found that from 1993 to 2002 the area along the lot line marked by the original survey stakes became overgrown with blackberry bushes, weeds, and ivy. The Merrimans did not dispute this finding on appeal, and it was supported by substantial evidence in any event. Despite this finding, the Court of Appeals majority held that the survey markers and adjacent posts were sufficient to establish a certain, well-defined, and physically designated boundary. But where the disputed area is overgrown, more than isolated markers are required to prove a clear and well-defined boundary. A fence, a pathway, or some other object or combination of objects clearly dividing the two parcels must exist. Lamm, 72 Wn.2d at 593. Illustratively, in a case in which there was no fence and no defining point of cultivation (apart from a row of pear trees along the purported boundary line), we held that no well-defined boundary was established. Scott v. Slater, 42
¶9 Accordingly, we reverse the Court of Appeals and reinstate the trial court’s judgment quieting title in the Cokeleys.
The barbed wire fence existed for only a small part of the 10-year adverse possession period, so the certainty of the boundary before that fence was installed is determinative.