Charles and Bambi Compton v. Lewis Clark Saddle Club

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 27, 2018
Docket34488-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of Charles and Bambi Compton v. Lewis Clark Saddle Club (Charles and Bambi Compton v. Lewis Clark Saddle Club) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Charles and Bambi Compton v. Lewis Clark Saddle Club, (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

FILED MARCH 27, 2018 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

CHARLES and BAMBI COMPTON, ) ) No. 34488-6-III Respondents, ) ) v. ) ) LEWIS CLARK SADDLE CLUB, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) Appellant. )

SIDDOWAY, J. — The Lewis Clark Saddle Club appeals the trial court’s rejection

of its claims that the club’s neighbors, the Comptons, trespassed on club property,

harassed club members, and should have to pay treble damages and the club’s attorney

fees. The club also appeals the trial court’s conclusion that the Comptons acquired title

by adverse possession to approximately a foot of land on the west edge of property to

which the club holds title.

In answering the Saddle Club’s trespass claim, the Comptons defended on the

basis that they had acquired title to the allegedly trespassed property by adverse

possession. The trial court enjoyed discretion under CR 8(c) to treat the defense as a No. 34488-6-III Compton v. Lewis Clark Saddle Club

counterclaim, and did, although the Comptons’ failure to present a legal description of

the adversely-possessed property leaves them with a judgment that establishes their title

somewhat imprecisely. The trial court’s findings support its conclusions and judgment

on the adverse possession issue as far as it goes, however, and support its conclusions and

judgment on other matters the club challenges on appeal. We affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Charles and Bambi Compton’s Clarkston home, which they have owned since

2008, sits immediately west and slightly uphill of property owned by the Lewis Clark

Saddle Club. The Saddle Club, a nonprofit corporation, began operating horse riding

facilities for club members around 1963. At times relevant to this lawsuit, its facilities

included a main arena and a warm-up, or practice arena. The practice arena is located on

the west end of the Saddle Club property, next to the Comptons’ home. A chain link

fence that runs north and south was treated for many years as the boundary line between

the Compton and Saddle Club properties.

Around 2009 the Comptons, complaining that dust drift from club activities had

increased, asked the club to put dust control measures into place. The Saddle Club

updated its sprinkler system, installing larger, automatic sprinklers to wet down its arena.

Unfortunately, water from the sprinklers would hit the Compton home and the area

between the home and fence, causing erosion. According to the Comptons, the erosion

2 No. 34488-6-III Compton v. Lewis Clark Saddle Club

has turned what had been a mere crack in their driveway into a one foot exposure of the

driveway’s underside.

In 2012 the Comptons asked the Saddle Club’s groundskeeper if the club would

object if the Comptons installed a retaining wall on their property along the fence line to

prevent further erosion. After consulting Saddle Club members, the groundskeeper told

the Comptons they could do whatever they wanted on their side of the chain link fence.

The Comptons proceeded to construct a short retaining wall by stacking two non-treated

2 x 12 planks next to the fence. They claim to have later received permission to install a

taller privacy fence which they supported by attaching it to the chain link fence and fence

posts. The club disputes having granted permission for the privacy fence and contends

the Comptons’ retaining wall and privacy fence have pressed against the chain link fence

in places, causing it to lean in toward the practice arena.

The Comptons continued to voice their complaints to club officers and members,

a number of whom testified that Mr. Compton in particular was angry, aggressive and

intimidating in episodes in which he yelled at club members about the dust. In the spring

of 2014, the Comptons purchased surveillance cameras. According to the Comptons, it

was to document the ongoing dust and sprinkler drift onto their property; club members

found the ongoing surveillance to be objectionable, particularly given the number of

children that used the practice arena. Police were called on more than one occasion by

club members or the Comptons.

3 No. 34488-6-III Compton v. Lewis Clark Saddle Club

The parties’ grievances ultimately found expression in the action below. The

Comptons started it, asserting claims for nuisance, negligent property damage, and

trespass. The Saddle Club responded, asserting counterclaims for trespass, waste,

harassment, surveillance, and stalking. The club’s trespass claim was based on a survey

it caused to be performed after the lawsuit was filed, which revealed that based on record

title the true property boundary was not the chain link fence but was between 10 and 16

inches to the west, on property the Comptons used to construct their retaining wall. In

resisting the club’s trespass counterclaim, the Comptons defended in part by claiming

that they and their predecessors had acquired title by adverse possession to any club

property that lay west of the chain link fence.

The dispute proceeded to a bench trial. On the issue of whether the Comptons had

trespassed on Saddle Club property or only on property that the Comptons owned by

adverse possession, Ms. Compton testified that when she and her husband bought the

property, the chain link fence was in place and was treated by them as the boundary line.

A former owner of the Comptons’ property testified that the chain link fence was there

when she bought the property in 1993. One of the club’s members also testified that the

chain link fence had been there for at least 25 years. The club’s groundskeeper testified

that he always thought the fence line was the property line.

Following the conclusion of the bench trial, the court issued a memorandum

opinion in which it rejected every one of the parties’ affirmatively-stated claims for relief.

4 No. 34488-6-III Compton v. Lewis Clark Saddle Club

But in rejecting the Saddle Club’s trespass claim, it found that the chain link fence had

been in place for well over 10 years and the Comptons’ use of the strip of land on its west

side had been “open and notorious, actual and uninterrupted, exclusive and hostile for

well over the statutory period.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 177. It concluded “the property

in dispute to the west of the chain link fence is owned by Plaintiffs as a result of adverse

possession.” CP at 176.

The Saddle Club moved for reconsideration of the adverse possession finding.

The trial court allowed oral argument. At the conclusion of the argument, the court

denied the club’s motion, identifying three grounds: it stated that adverse possession had

been sufficiently pleaded as a defense to trespass, that the Comptons’ claim to ownership

had been tried by express or implied consent of the parties, and that in construing the

pleadings to do substantial justice the court found the claim to have been sufficiently

presented.

The Saddle Club appeals.

ANALYSIS

The Saddle Club’s assignments of error consist of a dozen parts and subparts,

which we group into three issues on appeal. First, they challenge, on both procedural and

substantive grounds, the trial court’s determination that the Comptons own the land to

which the Saddle Club holds record title that lies west of the chain link fence. This

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