Ernest Emmert v. Robert Garten

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 4, 2020
Docket52766-9
StatusUnpublished

This text of Ernest Emmert v. Robert Garten (Ernest Emmert v. Robert Garten) 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
Ernest Emmert v. Robert Garten, (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

August 4, 2020 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II ERNEST EMMERT and THERESA No. 52766-9-II EMMERT, husband and wife,

Respondents,

v.

ROBERT GARTEN and JANE DOE UNPUBLISHED OPINION GARTEN, husband and wife, and HAWN GARTEN, and all other persons or parties unknown claiming any right, title, lien, or interest in the real estate described in the complaint herein,

Appellants.

CRUSER, J. — Robert Garten, Jane Doe Garten, husband and wife, and Hawn Garten

(collectively, “Gartens”) appeal the trial court’s order finding them in contempt of court for

violating a court order. The Gartens argue that the trial court erred because (1) the trial court’s

finding that the Gartens violated the trial court’s order is not supported by substantial evidence;

(2) even if they violated the trial court’s order, substantial evidence does not support a finding that

they did it intentionally; (3) the order did not include a purge clause; (4) the court awarded attorney

fees and costs to Ernest Emmert and Theresa Emmert, husband and wife, (collectively,

“Emmerts”); and (5) the court did not award them attorney fees and costs from the injunction bond.

The Gartens also request attorney fees and costs on appeal, as do the Emmerts.

We conclude that substantial evidence supports the trial court’s contempt finding. We hold

that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in granting attorney fees and costs to the Emmerts,

and we decline to decide the Gartens’ remaining challenges to the contempt order and their claim No. 52766-9-II

that they are entitled to attorney fees and costs from the injunction bond. We also decline the

Gartens’ request for attorney fees and costs on appeal. Finally, we award attorney fees and costs

on appeal to the Emmerts.

Accordingly, we affirm.

FACTS

A. BACKGROUND

The Emmerts purchased a waterfront property in Jefferson County in 1995 via statutory

deed. In 2013, the Gartens purchased the tidelands parcel directly south of the Emmerts’ waterfront

parcel.1 The Gartens also purchased the neighboring waterfront parcel, which was directly east of

the Emmerts’ property. Thus, the Emmerts shared their southern and eastern boundary lines with

the Gartens.

In 2015, a dispute between the neighbors erupted about the location of the

northern/southern boundary line between their two properties. The Emmerts disassembled a shelter

that the Gartens had built on the beach, believing it was located beyond the northern boundary of

the Gartens’ tidelands property, therefore within the southern part of their property. The Gartens

confronted the Emmerts about the destruction of the shelter and began yelling and screaming at

the Emmerts, claiming that the shelter was located on their tidelands property.

B. PRETRIAL EVENTS

The Emmerts filed suit against the Gartens. The Emmerts sued for trespass, emotional

distress, and interference with the quiet enjoyment of their property. The Emmerts asked for a

judgment against the Gartens in the amount proven at trial, as well as attorney fees and costs. The

1 This tidelands parcel is directly below the portion of the beach owned by the Emmerts. 2 No. 52766-9-II

Emmerts requested the court enter an order establishing the boundary line between the parties’

properties as set forth in their deed and a survey recorded in 1995, or in the alternative, by adverse

possession. The Emmerts’ deed relied on the 1995 survey as establishing their boundary lines. The

Emmerts also requested a restraining order against the Gartens from trespassing on their property

and using threatening language against the Emmerts.

In their answer to the Emmerts’ complaint, the Gartens contested the Emmerts’ ownership

of the disputed property, claiming they had ownership via quit claim deed. The Gartens claimed

that the southern boundary of the Emmerts’ parcel was actually higher, or farther north, than the

boundary line as described in the Emmerts’ deed. The Gartens also claimed the Emmerts

committed trespass and claimed that they were entitled to damages and attorney fees and costs.

The Emmerts moved for a preliminary injunction to restrain the Gartens from trespassing,

damaging, or occupying their property as described in their deed and the 1995 survey. On July 22,

2016, the trial court granted the Emmerts’ motion and ordered the Gartens to “cease and desist

crossing the boundary line established by the 1995 survey and maintained by Emmerts.” Clerk’s

Papers (CP) at 38. The trial court also ordered the Emmerts to post a surety bond as security in the

amount of $10,000 to the registry of court.

The Emmerts moved for partial summary judgment, arguing that they had legal ownership

of the disputed property by deed, or in the alternative, by adverse possession. The Emmerts also

argued that they were entitled to damages because the Gartens’ defense that they owned the

disputed property was frivolous. The trial court denied the Emmerts’ motion.

3 No. 52766-9-II

The Emmerts moved for reconsideration of their summary judgment motion. Although

their complaint and their summary judgment motion relied on their deed and the 1995 survey for

their proposed boundary line, the Emmerts relied on a 2016 survey performed by Kathleen Cassou

(the “Cassou Survey”) in their reconsideration motion. The Emmerts asked the court to rule that

their correct southern boundary line was the boundary line established in the Cassou Survey,

referred to as the balanced government meander line. This line, the “Cassou meander line,” is

located north of the boundary line described in the Emmerts’ deed and the 1995 survey.

The Emmerts also asserted in their motion for reconsideration that their claim of adverse

possession pertained to only the strip of land south of the Cassou meander line and north of the

boundary line established by their deed and the 1995 survey. The Emmerts claimed that they would

pursue their claim of adverse possession at trial.

On April 19, 2017, the trial court granted the Emmerts’ motion for reconsideration. The

court’s order stated, however, that title to the property “legally described in the Complaint is

hereby quieted in” the Emmerts. Id. at 217. The court’s order stated that the Gartens were

“permanently ordered to cease and desist crossing the boundary line at the balanced government

meander line confirmed by the Cassou Survey.” Id. at 217. Thus, the order was internally

inconsistent. The Emmerts’ complaint relied on the line set forth in their deed, which was south of

the Cassou meander line.

The trial court also entered a contemporaneous memorandum opinion. The court’s

memorandum stated that the Cassou meander line established the southern boundary of the

Emmerts’ property and the northern boundary of the Gartens’ property. The court ruled that the

Emmerts’ deed improperly granted the Emmerts additional property south of the Cassou meander

4 No. 52766-9-II

line. The court also repeated its order that the Gartens not cross the Cassou meander line. The issue

of adverse possession to the area south of the Cassou meander line was reserved for trial. The court

also ordered the bond filed by the Emmerts to be exonerated.

The Gartens moved for clarification and reconsideration of the court’s April 19, 2017 order.

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