Glover v. Glover

92 P.3d 387, 2004 Alas. LEXIS 72, 2004 WL 1278040
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 2004
DocketS-10848
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 92 P.3d 387 (Glover v. Glover) 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
Glover v. Glover, 92 P.3d 387, 2004 Alas. LEXIS 72, 2004 WL 1278040 (Ala. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

FABE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

In this quiet title action, the superior court found that Carl Snyder, Sr. held unrecorded title to a piece of property in Kotzebue that he and his family had lived on for close to fifty years. At trial Clara Glover and Robert Douglass claimed that Snyder held the property only as a lessee. Snyder maintained that his father and predecessor in interest, Dan Snyder, Sr., had gained title by adverse possession. Relying on a theory that neither party presented, the court found that the elder Snyder had gained title by adverse possession because the property changed hands, apparently inadvertently, for ten years. During this period, the court reasoned, Snyder met the requirements for adverse possession and took unrecorded title. We remand the case to the superior court so that it may conduct further factfinding and apply the proper test for determining whether and when a party's occupation of land meets the adverse possession requirements.

*390 II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. - Factual History

Charting the course of this adverse possession controversy requires tracing the complex chain of title of two parcels of land in Kotzebue. They began as a single lot (Lot 9, Block 7, Tract A, Townsite of Kotzebue, U.S. Survey #2863 A & B) that was owned by Mary Johnson in the early 1950s.

We attach as an appendix for ease of understanding an as-built survey of Lot 9 showing its partition into two lots and the strue-tures that existed on it as of 1977. Lot 9 ran about 126 feet north to south and approximately 160 feet east to west. 1 Lot 9 fronted on two streets, Shore Avenue on the west and Kotzebue Way on the east, with 126 feet of frontage on each street. Eventually Lot 9 was divided into two parcels. The southerly parcel, having forty-six feet of frontage on each street, is the parcel with which we are primarily concerned. We refer to it in this opinion as the parties did below as the "sub-jeet lot."

Lot 9 was conveyed to Eva Glover, Mary Johnson's daughter, in 1956. In 1965 Eva CHover's successor in interest, Billy Glover, sold a portion of Lot 9 to Rotman Stores, Inc. According to the 1965 deed from Billy (Hover to Rotman Stores, the parcel conveyed was the southerly eighty feet of Lot 9. Rotman Stores, in turn, sold the same parcel to Lawrence and Barbara Maxson on March 5, 1969. On May 19, 1975, the Maxsons by quitclaim deed transferred the subject lot-the southerly forty-six feet of Lot 9-back to Billy Glover. The quitclaim deed relates that this transaction was "for and in consideration of the exchange of a quitclaim deed for the northerly 80 feet of Lot 9." The record reflects that Billy Clover executed and delivered a deed to the northerly eighty feet of Lot 9 to the Maxsons on the same date that similarly recites that it is in exchange for the deed to the southerly forty-six feet. With the exchange of the quitclaim deeds in May of 1975, Billy Glover owned the subject lot, which had assumed its present shape as shown in the appendix.

The appellants assert that what Billy Glover intended when he first sold part of Lot 9 to Rotman Stores was to sell the northerly portion and that the reference to the southerly portion in the 1965 deed was a mistake. The exchange of the quitclaim deeds and the placement of several buildings on the property may support this claim. 2

On August 4, 1975, Billy Hover leased his interest in Lot 9 to NANA Housing Authority for twenty-five years subject to an automatic renewal of twenty-five years to aid in the construction of a HUD home. A HUD home was built in 1977 on the subject lot. It is marked "new home" on the as-built survey. When the HUD home was completed Billy Glover and his family moved from the structure marked "B" on the as-built survey into the new home. 3

In 1953 or 1954, when Mary Johnson still owned Lot 9, Dan Snyder, Sr., built a house on it. The house is marked "A" on the as-built survey. In exchange for permission to live there, Dan Snyder, Sr. agreed to supply Johnson with game and other food. The superior court declined to find whether the arrangement was a lease or a sale. This gap in the findings is not challenged by either party. Dan Snyder, Sr. died in 1991 and his son, Carl Snyder, Sr. (Snyder) succeeded to his interest in the property. At various times, the Snyder family built a shed and an addition onto the house and for a period kept dogs on the property.

In 1994 appellant Clara Glover, Billy's daughter, prepared a written lease to formalize Snyder's occupancy; it was signed but Snyder denies its validity, claiming that his *391 daughter signed it without his authorization. The superior court resolved the factual conflict by crediting Snyder's testimony, and the appellants do not contest the finding on appeal.

B. Procedural History

Clara Glover and Robert Douglass brought this quiet title action to clear the way for Glover to sell the subject lot to Douglass. Most of the original defendants were members of Glover's family who had a claim on the property through an administrator's deed, making them tenants in common following Billy Glover's death. Douglass and Glover settled with the relatives, leaving only the claim of Carl Snyder. Snyder angwered the quiet title complaint by asserting as an affirmative defense that he held title to the land under his house and the shed his family built through adverse possession. - Glover and Douglass moved for summary judgment. In response, Snyder asserted that his father had purchased the land from Mary Johnson, but did not rest his opposition to summary judgment on his claim of ownership. Instead, he argued that his father acquired title through adverse possession, independent of the agreement between his father and Mary Johnson. After the summary judgment motion was denied, a bench trial was held in June 2002.

The superior court first found that the agreement between Dan Snyder, Sr. and Mary Johnson rendered the Snyders' occupancy of the land permissive. Snyder therefore could not establish that his father gained title through adverse possession against Johnson or her successors. Although neither party argued the theory, the trial court went on to find that because Dan Snyder, Sr. had no similar agreement with Rotman Stores or the Maxsons, the permissive nature of the occupancy disappeared once Billy Glover sold the half of the parcel containing the Snyder house. Snyder's occupancy became hostile, fulfilling the key requirement for establishing a claim of adverse possession. Ten years, the period required to obtain title by adverse possession under AS 09.10.0830, passed between the transfer to Rotman Stores and the Maxsons' quitclaim deed returning the parcel to Billy Glover. The superior court therefore held that before the Glovers re-took record ownership of the parcel, Dan Snyder, Sr. had obtained unrecorded title to the portion that he occupied. Carl Snyder succeeded to this title on Dan's death. Glover and Douglass moved for amendment of findings and judgment or for a new trial, but the motion was denied. This appeal followed.

III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

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Bluebook (online)
92 P.3d 387, 2004 Alas. LEXIS 72, 2004 WL 1278040, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glover-v-glover-alaska-2004.