D. Norman Ferguson, Et Ux v. Allen Mckenzie, Et Ux

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 1, 2016
Docket46774-7
StatusUnpublished

This text of D. Norman Ferguson, Et Ux v. Allen Mckenzie, Et Ux (D. Norman Ferguson, Et Ux v. Allen Mckenzie, Et Ux) 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
D. Norman Ferguson, Et Ux v. Allen Mckenzie, Et Ux, (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

March 1, 2016 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II D. NORMAN FERGUSON and KAREN No. 46774-7-II FERGUSON,

Appellants.

v.

ALLEN MCKENZIE and JANE MCKENZIE, UNPUBLISHED OPINION husband and wife,

Respondents.

MELNICK, J — D. Norman and Karen Ferguson appeal the trial court’s judgment in favor

of Allen and Jane McKenzie,1 and its denial of the Fergusons’ request to quiet title and to adjust

the Fergusons’ property to include a disputed strip of property claimed through adverse possession.

The Fergusons argue that substantial evidence did not support the trial court’s findings of fact and

irrelevant evidence should have been excluded. We affirm.

FACTS

I. FACTUAL OVERVIEW

In 1987, Christopher Slye built a house on the southern end of Bainbridge Island. In 1994,

D. Norman purchased the property from Slye and began residing on it. The next year, he married

Karen and together they lived on the property. The Fergusons claimed that since 1994 until the

installation of a fence in 2011, they adversely possessed a strip of property where they installed

landscape grass, trimmed the grass, and used it for their compost pile, wood chopping, and storage.

1 To avoid confusion, we will refer to the parties by their first names. We intend no disrespect. 46774-7-II

The McKenzies own the neighboring parcel east of the Ferguson’s property. They reside

on another parcel north of the east parcel. The strip of property the Fergusons claimed they

maintained is contained within the McKenzie’s property description.

The McKenzies built a fence along the surveyed boundary line between their property and

the Ferguson property, blocking the Fergusons’ access to the disputed strip. Six months after the

construction of the fence, the Fergusons initiated an adverse possession claim. On June 3, 2011,

the Fergusons brought an action seeking to quiet title to the disputed strip, alleging they adversely

possessed the property from June 23, 1994 until approximately June 23, 2004.2

II. FINDINGS OF FACT

After a bench trial, the trial court entered written findings of fact and conclusions of law,

along with a judgment quieting title in the McKenzies. In its findings of fact, the trial court

determined that because the “parties have asserted many contradictory facts . . . this [c]ourt has

carefully considered the credibility of the witnesses.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 542. The trial court

found Slye and the McKenzies to be more credible on all issues of contradiction between the

parties, and that ultimately the Fergusons did not prove the elements of adverse possession by a

preponderance of the evidence. The trial court’s extensive findings, relevant to this appeal follow.

10. The Fergusons claim that during the 10-year period at issue, they stored firewood and furniture on the disputed strip, conducted landscaping on the disputed strip, and participated in other backyard activities there. The McKenzies state that they walked their property from time to time and that they observed none of these activities taking place in the disputed strip.

11. The Fergusons maintain that when they purchased the property from Slye, it was cleared and covered in ornamental plants and grasses. Slye testified that when he owned the property it was covered in thick natural brush, typical of an undeveloped piece of property in the Pacific Northwest.

2 Slye was a named party, but was granted summary judgment and dismissal. None of the parties has appealed from this trial court action.

2 46774-7-II

12. D. Norman Ferguson claims that before purchasing the Ferguson property from Slye, Ferguson and Slye discussed the legal description and the boundary line. The Fergusons claim that Slye identified the boundary as running from a boundary-line marker at the north of the property extending south to the telephone pole. Such a property line would include the disputed strip in the Ferguson parcel.

13. Slye denied this claim. Slye stated that he advised D. Norman Ferguson that there were approximately five feet between the house deck and the legal property line. Slye further stated that he gave D. Norman Ferguson Exhibit D1, a septic system application for permit, during the sale negotiations. The septic system permit application included a plat map of the legal boundaries. D. Norman Ferguson acknowledged receiving only a single page of the septic system permit application, claiming that he did not receive the entire document including the plat map. The Fergusons have not proven by a preponderance of the evidence that D. Norman Ferguson did not receive the entire septic system permit application, including the plat map.

14. On this point, Slye’s testimony is more credible than D. Norman Ferguson’s testimony. It is reasonable, if not likely, that Slye gave D. Norman Ferguson the entire septic system permit application, as it would make little sense for Slye to provide D. Norman Ferguson with only one page of the document. This Court is persuaded that it is more likely that Slye gave D. Norman Ferguson the entire document rather than just the cover sheet. Thus, it would be a clear contradiction and very unlikely that Slye identified the power pole as the property line marker, as claimed by D. Norman Ferguson. Identifying the power pole as the property line marker would be nonsensical in light of the septic system permit application Slye gave D. Norman Ferguson when they discussed the property line prior to the purchase. To accept the Fergusons’ rendition of this representation, Slye would have had to have been unaware of the property line as it legally existed, which is unlikely given its inclusion in the septic system permit application, or would have had to have brazenly misrepresented the property line and contemporaneously called into question his own credibility to the potential purchaser by providing a copy of the septic system permit application while (allegedly) identifying the power pole as the property line marker, inconsistent with the septic system permit application.

15. It is also concerning that Karen Ferguson testified that the Fergusons did not receive the septic system permit application until after commencing the present litigation, contradicting D. Norman Ferguson’s testimony that he received just a single page of the septic system permit-application during the presale negotiations. This raises concern about the credibility of both Fergusons as to their knowledge of the septic system permit application, which in turn leads to credibility concerns

3 46774-7-II

regarding the Fergusons’ claim that Slye identified the power pole as a property line marker.

16. Slye testified that he advised D. Norman Ferguson where the legal property line was in relation to the house and the deck. D. Norman Ferguson denies this. This Court finds that Slye is more credible on this issue in light of the provision of the application for the septic system permit. This is important as the septic system permit application contains a plat map showing the legal description of the property itself. The Fergusons are less credible on this issue given the inconsistencies about when they became aware of the septic system permit application.

17. D. Norman Ferguson relies heavily on photos taken during the construction of the residence. His theory is that Slye cleared the area of the disputed strip during construction and that the partial photographic shots of the construction site show that it was indeed cleared. The photos show only partial areas of the disputed strip.

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