Evich v. Kovacevich

204 P.2d 839, 33 Wash. 2d 151, 1949 Wash. LEXIS 430
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 8, 1949
DocketNo. 30741.
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 204 P.2d 839 (Evich v. Kovacevich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evich v. Kovacevich, 204 P.2d 839, 33 Wash. 2d 151, 1949 Wash. LEXIS 430 (Wash. 1949).

Opinion

*153 Steinert, J.

Plaintiff instituted suit to obtain a decree adjudging and declaring that he has an easement of way over a parcel of land owned by the defendants, adjoining a similar parcel owned by the plaintiff, and, further, to obtain a mandatory order compelling the defendants to remove a picket fence which the latter had constructed along the dividing line between the two properties; the plaintiff also sought to have the defendants enjoined from further interfering with plaintiff’s free use and enjoyment of the way, and, in general, prayed for such other relief as might be deemed just and equitable in the premises. The cause was tried to the court without a jury, and a decree was subsequently entered in favor of the plaintiff. The defendants moved for a new trial, on the grounds (1) that the evidence was insufficient to support the decision of the court; (2) that the decree is contrary to law; and (3) that error in law occurred in the trial of the case. Upon denial of their motion, defendants appealed.

The facts out of which the instant controversy arose are as follows: Lot 6, block 7, Amended Plat of Fairhaven, Bellingham, Washington, is a fifty-foot lot located on the east side of Twelfth street in that city. In about the year 1900, Angus Rankin, being then the owner of the lot, constructed thereon two dwelling houses facing west, toward Twelfth street, separated from each other by a strip of ground slightly over eight feet in width. Until about 1919, Rankin rented these houses to various tenants.

Appellants, Anton Kovacevich and Andrea Kovacevich, husband and wife, are the present owners of the north half of the lot, together with the house thereon, commonly known as 1025 Twelfth street. Respondent, Matt Evich, now a widower, is the present owner of the south half of the lot, together with the house thereon, commonly known as 1027 Twelfth street.

The front and rear entrances to both houses were originally served by a wooden walk which ran in an easterly-westerly direction, approximately along the middle of the intervening eight-foot strip of ground. Sometime prior to 1916, the wooden walk was replaced by a concrete walk, *154 which, except for later additions of certain connecting walks at the rear of the properties, has at the present time the same location and dimensions as when it was originally-constructed. This concrete walk is thirty-five inches in width and, measured from its respective near edges, is about thirty-five and one-half inches distant' from the south side of appellants’ house, and about twenty-seven inches distant from the north side of respondent’s house. At its front, or westerly, end, the walk flares outwardly in both a northerly and a southerly direction so as to give access to the front steps of both houses. This flare, or apron, constitutes, in part, the top of a flight of six concrete steps leading from the walk previously described down toward the public sidewalk on Twelfth street.

In January, 1919, Angus Rankin, then owner of the entire lot 6, conveyed the south half thereof, as then improved, to one Whitney, who, later in that year, conveyed the same one-half to respondent. In April, 1919, Rankin conveyed the north half of the lot, as then improved, to a predecessor in interest of appellants.

In 1932, respondent made extensive alterations on that portion of lot 6 which he had purchased, by excavating a basement and garage underneath his residence, closing off the outside door at the rear, or east end, of the house, and opening a new outside door on the back portion, but on the north side, of the building facing the walk here in question.

In 1935, appellants began their occupancy of the house located on the north half of lot 6, as tenants of one Norman, who then owned that portion of the property. In 1945, appellants purchased, or ' completed their purchase of, the north half of the lot from Norman and thereafter continued in possession thereof.

Shortly after becoming owners of the north half of the lot, appellants constructed a picket fence along the dividing, or common boundary, line of the two properties. The fence extended from the rear portion of lot 6, westwardly. toward Twelfth street, to a point about nine and one-half inches from the edge of the top step of the flight of concrete steps leading toward the public sidewalk. This act on the part of *155 the appellants resulted in locating substantially all of the concrete walk, described above, on their side of the fence, from its easterly end almost to its juncture with the flight of concrete steps. Furthermore, if the fence line were extended westwardly, down the steps, it would locate about four-fifths of the width of the stairs on appellants’ side. Under the present condition, respondent has a space about twelve and one-half inches in width through which to pass in entering upon or leaving the flared apron leading to his front entrance. He is, of course, no longer able to make use of the concrete walk for purposes of ingress and egress to and from the back entrance to his home, but must, instead, use the twenty-seven-inch unpaved passage between the fence and the north side of his house. Also, the screen door at the present back entrance cannot be fully opened, on account of the proximity of the fence. On the south side of respondent’s house, however, there is a space, fifty-four inches in width, between that side of the house and respondent’s south boundary line.

From the time the houses were first constructed, in about 1910, down to the time when the fence was built, in 1945, the entire walk, described above, and the concrete steps leading therefrom toward the public sidewalk in front of the houses have been used by the occupants of both residences, their families and friends, tradesmen, and children at play. They also served as part of a short cut to Knox street, which intersects Twelfth street to the south and which was customarily reached by passing over what the parties herein have termed “the old Rankin place.” Whether one approached or withdrew from either of the two houses, by way of Twelfth street or by way of Knox street was a matter of choice, dependent upon his own convenience. As to the “right” to make use of the walk here in question, it is fairly well characterized by the statements made by various witnesses at the trial, such as: “Everybody used it”; “. . . we were all friends”; and “Never anything said.”

In consequence of appellants’ construction of the fence, respondent shortly thereafter instituted this action in the *156 superior court. During the trial of the case, the trial judge, accompanied by attorneys representing the parties, visited and viewed the premises. At the conclusion of the hearing, and after taking the matter under advisement, the trial court entered its decree, making its full findings therein, adjudging and declaring that an easement over the walk and steps existed for the proper use and enjoyment of respondent’s property, ordering appellants to remove the fence, and enjoining them from further obstructing or interfering with respondent’s free use and enjoyment of the way.

This appeal followed, and, at this point, we deem it proper to say that appellants’ counsel did not try the case in the superior court, but came into it only upon the appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
204 P.2d 839, 33 Wash. 2d 151, 1949 Wash. LEXIS 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evich-v-kovacevich-wash-1949.