David L. Snyder, et ux v. Lance Campbell, et ux

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 8, 2020
Docket37317-7
StatusUnpublished

This text of David L. Snyder, et ux v. Lance Campbell, et ux (David L. Snyder, et ux v. Lance Campbell, 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
David L. Snyder, et ux v. Lance Campbell, et ux, (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

FILED DECEMBER 8, 2020 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

DAVID L. SNYDER and MARY B. ) SNYDER, husband and wife,, ) No. 37317-7-III ) Respondents, ) ) v. ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) LANCE CAMPBELL and BRIDGET ) CAMPBELL, husband and wife, ) ) Appellants. )

FEARING, J. — Landowners Lance and Bridget Campbell appeal the trial court’s

grant of summary judgment to their southerly neighbors David and Mary Snyder in a

quiet title action. The Campbells claim title to the disputed territory by way of adverse

possession. We affirm the grant of summary judgment in favor of the Snyders and an

award of reasonable attorney fees and costs in favor of the Snyders.

FACTS

The parties dispute ownership of a strip of land along the boundary between their

respective Spokane residential lots. Plaintiffs David and Mary Snyder own 5017 North No. 37317-7-III Snyder v. Campbell

Altamont Street, the residence property adjacent to the south of the Campbell Property.

Defendants Lance and Bridget Campbell own the property located at 5021 North

Altamont Street. David Snyder’s parents purchased the Snyder Property in 1945, and

David inherited the home from his mother’s estate in 1991. David and Mary Snyder have

lived at 5017 North Altamont Street since 1996. The Campbells moved to 5021 North

Altamont Street in February 2015. Since the trial court granted David and Mary Snyder

summary judgment, we gather facts from summary judgment affidavits.

The Campbell and Snyder residences sit within Spokane’s Hillyard neighborhood,

platted and developed around 1910. The two homes lie in close proximity. The south

side of the Campbell house and the abode’s eave encroach onto the northern section of

the Snyder property. This awkward and compact situation between adjoining houses

repeats on plots along Altamont Street.

The Snyder family, including David Snyder’s parents, had always granted

permission to the residents of 5021 North Altamont Street to enter the Snyder land in

order to access the south side of the Campbell home. Despite the encroachment and

permitted use by the neighbors, David and Mary Snyder and their predecessors in interest

continuously treated the property immediately south of the Campbell house, to the extent

the property falls within their legal description, as their own. The Snyders watered and

mowed the lawn and planted bushes, flowers, and shrubs in this area. The Snyders also

2 No. 37317-7-III Snyder v. Campbell

used this north portion of their yard for entertaining, gardening, and playing with

grandchildren and pets.

In 1997, eighteen years before Lance and Bridget Campbell purchased their

property, David and Mary Snyder constructed a chain link fence enclosure in their

backyard to contain their dog and grandchildren. The Snyders did not erect the fence on

the boundary line between the two lots due to a fragile plant lying on the line. The

Snyders placed the fence one and a half to two feet south of the boundary. The chain link

fence, together with a separate wooden fence, hog wire, and a garage, created an enclosed

backyard. A 1.5-2 by 135 foot strip remained between the fence and the boundary line

with the 5021 North Altamont Street lot.

Sherry Schmidt owned 5021 North Altamont Street between 1995 and 2006. The

Snyders informed Schmidt that they did not place the chain link fence on the boundary

line and that they did not intend for the fence to become the boundary line between the

lots. The Snyders continued to use and maintain the strip of property between the fence

and the boundary line. Until the autumn of 2014, Mary Snyder monthly cut, with a weed

whacker, the strip of lawn north of the fence.

Sherry Schmidt sold 5021 North Altamont Street to Wade McClure, and McClure

resided at the residence from March 29, 2006 to December 17, 2014. McClure

understood that the Snyders’ fence enclosure did not represent a delineation of the

3 No. 37317-7-III Snyder v. Campbell

property line between the Campbell property and the Snyder property. McClure knew

that David and Mary Snyder installed the fence completely on their land to contain their

grandchildren and dog. Federal National Mortgage Association foreclosed on 5021

North Altamont in December 2014.

Lance and Bridget Campbell purchased 5021 North Altamont from Federal

National Mortgage Association in February 2015 and moved to the lot then. David

Snyder then informed Lance Campbell that the chain link fence did not lie on the

property line nor mark the boundary line between 5017 and 5021 North Altamont Street.

According to David Snyder, Campbell acknowledged the same.

According to Bridget Campbell, when they purchased their residence, they

concluded that the disputed area north of the fence belonged to their lot. The disputed

strip then contained a row of juniper bushes, two to six feet high, which extended from

the east end of the chain link fence toward the front of the Campbell house. The row of

bushes sat two to three feet from the south side of the Campbell house. Grass grew on

the south side of the bushes, but, between the bushes and the Campbell house, only dirt

and weeds adorned the landscape.

Beginning in February 2015, Lance and Bridget Campbell accumulated chattels,

including wood, tires, and vehicles in their back yard. The Campbells’ possessions

spilled over onto the Snyders’ property and up against the chain link fence. In the

4 No. 37317-7-III Snyder v. Campbell

summer of 2015, David and Mary Snyder removed the present fence and installed a new

chain link fences closer to the true boundary line. In the front yard, the fence ran east to

west, parallel to the boundary line, but two inches south of the line. In the backyard, the

fence also ran east to west, parallel to the boundary line, eight to twelve inches south of

the boundary line. The Snyders did not build the fence on the boundary line due to the

wood, tires, and other personal property in the Campbells’ backyard that rested over the

boundary line.

In July 2015, Lance and Bridget Campbell installed a plywood structure to cover a

window on the south side of their home. The structure extended beyond the boundary

line with the Snyders’ property. David and Mary Snyder requested that the Campbells

remove the plywood structure to eliminate the encroachment. The Campbells refused.

Because of the dispute over the boundary line, David and Mary Snyder

commissioned Rudy Kitzan to survey their property and the north boundary line with

5021 North Altamont. The survey, performed on July 8, 2015, depicted the southern

portion of the Campbells’ home and eave as encroaching onto the Snyders’ lot. The

survey confirmed the Snyders’ understanding of the location of the boundary line.

David and Mary Snyder hired attorney Tricia Usab to attempt to negotiate a

compromise with Lance and Bridget Campbell. Usab and the Campbells’ attorney, Joe

Carrol, engaged in extensive pre-litigation negotiations, during which Usab proposed

5 No. 37317-7-III Snyder v. Campbell

several, non-exclusive easements that would allow the Campbells to access the south side

of their house and run water and sewer lines across the Snyder lot. The Snyders also

offered to purchase the Campbell Property. The Campbells rejected the proposals and

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