Granite Beach Holdings, L.L.C. v. Department of Natural Resources

103 Wash. App. 186
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 30, 2000
DocketNo. 44902-8-I
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 103 Wash. App. 186 (Granite Beach Holdings, L.L.C. v. Department of Natural Resources) 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
Granite Beach Holdings, L.L.C. v. Department of Natural Resources, 103 Wash. App. 186 (Wash. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

Kennedy, J.

The appellants, Granite Beach Holdings, [190]*190LLC, Roger W. Sherman, and Arlene R. Tande, purchased property that is completely surrounded by State trust land and can be accessed only by logging roads that run across the State’s land. The Land Conservancy of Seattle and King County (The Land Conservancy) and Manke Lumber Company, Inc. (Manke) hold properties with easement rights to cross State land; however, these easements did not extend to the appellants’ property.1

The appellants requested an easement from the State Department of Natural Resources (DNR) that would facilitate development of a residential subdivision on the appellants’ property. The State determined that its timber management plans precluded granting the appellants’ request for such an easement, while it continued the process to approve the appellants’ application for a resource management easement. The appellants filed suit against the State, The Land Conservancy, and Manke, for the purpose of obtaining unlimited access to their property across State and private land under several theories, including implied easement, prescriptive easement, condemnation of interests in private easements, and inverse condemnation.

The trial court dismissed all of the appellants’ claims on summary judgment. We affirm, concluding that (1) an implied reservation in favor of the United States of America at the date of original ownership may not be found without evidence of congressional intent to imply a reserved easement; (2) appellants fail to show sufficient continuous use necessary to have acquired a prescriptive easement; (3) the appellants cannot obtain joint uses of private ways of necessity that would expand the uses of the condemnees, nor can they obtain full access to their property by use of [191]*191the easements held by The Land Conservancy and Manke; and (4) there is no unconstitutional taking where the claimants cannot establish a right to cross the adjoining State lands in order to develop their property for a residential subdivision, let alone a right that supersedes the statutory authority of the DNR to manage State trust lands.

FACTS

On July 5,1996, the appellants, Granite Beach Holdings, LLC, and Roger W. Sherman and Arlene R. Tande, purchased land in a forested rural area of King County within Section 26, Township 23 North, Range 9 East. The original title for Section 26 was conveyed by the United States of America (USA) through patents in 1919 and 1921. Other sections of Township 23 North were conveyed by the USA on earlier dates under the Homestead Act, and under patents which provided lands to the Northern Pacific Railway Company.

When the appellants purchased their land in Section 26, the State of Washington owned property in Sections 14, 15, 16, 23, 34 and 35, Township 23 North, Range 9 East, which surround Section 26. The State acquired those properties through several land exchanges. The appellants’ property is, therefore, surrounded by Washington State trust lands that are managed by the DNR. The State’s land at issue in this case is administered for the benefit of different trusts established at statehood or under chapter 76.12 RCW (Forest Board Lands).

Granite Creek Road is a logging road that has been extended into this forest area over time, and it currently extends to the appellants’ property in Section 26, from the north. Section 26 had, at a previous time, also been accessed from the south by a logging road (the South Side Road) built between 1958 and 1964. The South Side Road has not been used since 1980, and has since become overgrown with native vegetation, which renders it unfit for travel. The State’s land includes most of the land over [192]*192which the Granite Creek Road and the South Side Road travel. Prior to the appellants’ purchase of land in Section 26, the State had a cooperative policy toward use of the Granite Creek Road across State property whereby those persons using the road would help maintain the road. The previous owner of the State’s land, Weyerhaeuser, had permitted the adjoining landowners to use the road to harvest timber.

In 1964, Richard Zemp bought property in Section 26; he is the oldest living owner of property that is the subject of this lawsuit. Zemp knew that the property was landlocked when he bought it. He worked out a “gentleman’s agreement” with Weyerhaeuser providing mutual access to both parties’ properties. Zemp testified that it was “simply a handshake agreement and no consideration was ever asked.” Clerk’s Papers at 749. Zemp sold the property to Tye River Tree Farms (Tye River) in 1966, and he arranged for a permit from Weyerhaeuser for Tye River to access the property.

Tye River purchased the property for investment and personal recreation purposes. Norman Cromarty, one of the principals of Tye River, testified that he used South Side Road to look at timber on the property two or three times during the 20-year period that Tye River owned the property. In 1987, T)ye River transferred the property to Jim Campbell, Robert Campbell, and Thomas Campbell. Tye River informed the Campbells that there was no formal easement to the property, and that they would need to negotiate a permit to use the road.

In 1991, the State offered the Campbells an opportunity to obtain an easement over Granite Creek Road to access Section 26 from the north, if the Campbells would share in the costs of maintaining the road. The Campbells did not accept that offer. Jim Campbell testified that the Campbells used the South Side road only three times during their nine years of ownership. In 1996, Campbell sold the property to the appellants.

Michael Mitchell, managing agent for Granite Beach [193]*193Holdings, was the principal negotiator for the property. His business involves buying properties that are surrounded by another landowner, referred to as “in-holdings,” where government or conservation groups are buying land. He increases the appraised value of the in-holding by making “paper” improvements such as platting, and then sells it to the government or conservation groups at the enhanced value. Mitchell was informed that there was a problem with legal access to this property by both the title company officer who did the title review, and by the sellers. And, in March 1996, prior to appellants purchasing the property, a DNR district manager advised Mitchell about the DNR easement application process.

In May 1996, the State learned that Granite Creek Road was causing environmental damage to Granite Creek, which parallels the road. The State had the option of either deactivating the road or bringing the road up to forest practice standards, at an estimated cost of $100,000. Because the abutting lands would not be logged for many decades, the State opted to deactivate the upper reach of the road where it parallels the creek.

In October 1996, Mitchell approached the State to accept the easement offer previously made to the Campbells. The DNR advised Mitchell that the offer was no longer open because of the significant expense now required to bring the road up to forest practice standards. Later that month, Mitchell returned to the DNR and submitted $845 and an application for an easement over Granite Creek Road for resource management purposes. The DNR subsequently returned Mitchell’s money and explained by letter the process that the DNR would employ regarding future use of the road.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 Wash. App. 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/granite-beach-holdings-llc-v-department-of-natural-resources-washctapp-2000.