Cowan v. Yeisley

255 P.3d 966, 2011 Alas. LEXIS 39, 2011 WL 2084008
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 2011
DocketS-13380
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 255 P.3d 966 (Cowan v. Yeisley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cowan v. Yeisley, 255 P.3d 966, 2011 Alas. LEXIS 39, 2011 WL 2084008 (Ala. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

STOWERS, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

In 1948 Claude Yeisley received a patent to Tract A, consisting of 4.45 acres of land in Ketchikan, from the United States. In 1956 he deeded a lot of land within Tract A to his daughter and her husband, the Cowans, along with a "perpetual right of way running with the land" over a 30-foot strip of "right of way" running along the southeastern side of Tract A. Between 1960 and 1978, Claude Yeisley conveyed most of the remainder of Tract A to his son and daughter-in-law, James and Sharon Yeisley. None of the deeds issued between 1960 and 1973 mentioned the right of way. In 1980 James Yeisley applied for a subdivision of all of Tract A with the exception of the Cowansg' land. The plat showed the right of way; it was approved and recorded. The property was resubdivided in 1981, and the new plat also showed the right of way. By marking the right of way, the two plats had the effect of dedicating the right of way to the Ketchi-kan Gateway Borough.

In 2006 the Cowans filed suit against the Borough, Sharon Yeisley, and other parties, requesting quiet title to the right of way. They argued that the 1956 deed conveyed it to them, or, in the alternative, that they had obtained title through adverse possession. All parties filed motions for summary judgment. The superior court ruled that the 1956 deed did not convey the disputed land to the Co-wans, and denied summary judgment on the adverse possession claim. On the first day of *969 trial, the superior court ruled that it would apply the then-current adverse possession statute (amended in 2003) instead of the statute in effect in 1980. The court found that the 2003 statute foreclosed the Cowans' claims and entered judgment in the defendants' favor. The Cowans appeal the superi- or court's rulings on the 1956 deed, the adverse possession claim, and other claims.

Because we find that it was error to apply the 2003 adverse possession statute and because the Cowans raised a genuine issue of material fact as to whether they adversely possessed the disputed land under the pre-2003 adverse possession statute, we remand for further proceedings on the adverse possession claim.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Land Grant And Conveyance

On April 5, 1948, the United States issued a patent granting Claude Yeisley title to Tract A, consisting of 4.45 acres of land in Ketchikan. 1 In 1953 Harold and Ellen Co-wan built a house on a portion of Tract A with Claude's permission. Claude also commissioned Milford Page to prepare a plat of Lot 1, the portion of Tract A on which the Cowans had built their house. 'The Page plat showed a 30-foot wide "R.O.W.," or "right-of-way," at the southeastern boundary of Tract A, but it was never recorded.

In July 1956 Claude executed and recorded a warranty deed (1956 deed) conveying Lot 1 to the Cowans. The legal description of Lot 1 in the 1956 deed matched the description on the Page plat. The 1956 deed also granted the Cowans "[al perpetual right of way running with the land over the 80 foot strip of right of way, which right of way abuts the southeasternly sideline of ... Tract A."

In 1960 and 1963 Claude executed warranty deeds conveying Lots 2-4 of Tract A to James and Maxine Smith (the Smiths). In 1963 Claude executed and recorded another warranty deed (1963 deed) conveying a lot of land adjacent to the southeastern boundary of Tract A to the Cowans.

In 1971 Claude executed and recorded a warranty deed (1971 deed) conveying Lot 5 of Tract A to his son and daughter-in-law, James and Sharon Yeisley. In 1978 Claude executed and recorded another warranty deed (1973 deed) conveying a large portion of Tract A to James and Sharon.

None of the above deeds explicitly conveyed the 30-foot strip of land (the disputed land) first referred to in the Page plat as a "R.O.W." The sole reference to the disputed land in any of the deeds is the grant of a "perpetual right of way running with the land" in the 1956 deed to the Cowans.

B. Subdivision Of Tract A And Dedication Of Disputed Land To Borough

In 1979 James Yeisley commissioned a subdivision survey as part of a subdivision application he had filed with the Ketchikan Gateway Borough (Borough). In February 1980 the Zoning Administrator for the Borough recommended that the Planning Commission approve the commissioned survey as a plat of the land. In the recommendation, "the right-of-way shown on the proposal"the disputed land-was "confirmed as existing."

During a hearing before the Planning Commission, Harold Cowan objected to the preliminary plat and stated that "he [had] a 30 foot right-of-way and the lower lines [of the commissioned survey] don't show this." The Planning Commission approved the plat with the condition that the final plat note a 30-foot right of way. In March 1980 the Borough recorded a modified version of the 1979 survey as final plat 80-9. The certificate of ownership on plat 80-9 was signed only by the Yeisleys; the Cowans did not sign the plat.

In May 1980 Ellen Cowan wrote a letter to the Borough stating that she was "holding a deed to [the] existing 30 ft right of way" and that she had "no intention of opening up this right of way to anyone." In 1981 there was an additional resubdivision of Tract A. A new plat was recorded as plat 81-40, and only the Yeisleys signed the certificate of ownership.

*970 C. Later Developments On Tract A

After acquiring the land in the 1963 deed, the Cowans built a driveway connecting their home on Lot 1 to the road that ran across part of the disputed land. Ellen Cowan af-fied that the Cowans used the "remainder of the thirty-foot (80°) right-of-way ... in the same manner as the rest of [their] property-as an area for the children to play, to grow flowers, to park cars, etc." In addition, Ellen Cowan affied that Sharon Yeisley attempted to use the disputed land twice, but that she stopped when the Cowans "advised her she was trespassing." Ellen also affied that the Cowans saw "various surveyors" on their property from 1979 to 1981 and that they would ask the surveyors to leave or "chase them off."

In 1986 the Cowans brought suit for quiet title after Sharon Yeisley hired contractors to build on the disputed land in 1984. Sharon did not follow through on her plans to develop the land, and the Cowans' lawsuit was dismissed for lack of prosecution.

In January 2006 Sharon Yeisley conveyed a portion of her property to Gerald and Cherryle Byron (the Byrons).

D. Trial Court Proceedings

In July 2006 the Cowans again filed suit against Sharon Yeisley, the Byrons, and the Borough. The Cowans sought quiet title to the disputed land, claiming that they were its owners through the 1956 deed or through adverse possession, and that plats 80-9 and 81-40 were invalid because, as the owners of Lot 1 with an interest in the disputed land, their signatures were required for a valid plat. They also raised trespass claims against Sharon Yeisley and the Byrons, and claimed that the Byrons had interfered with their water rights.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
255 P.3d 966, 2011 Alas. LEXIS 39, 2011 WL 2084008, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cowan-v-yeisley-alaska-2011.