John K. Kennell, As Managing Member Of Potato Patch v. David Nielsen

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 6, 2018
Docket49988-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of John K. Kennell, As Managing Member Of Potato Patch v. David Nielsen (John K. Kennell, As Managing Member Of Potato Patch v. David Nielsen) 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
John K. Kennell, As Managing Member Of Potato Patch v. David Nielsen, (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

November 6, 2018

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II POTATO PATCH LLC, JOHN K. KENNEL No. 49988-6-II MANAGING MEMBER, a Washington Limited Liability Company,

Appellant,

v.

DAVID GREER NIELSEN and RITA UNPUBLISHED OPINION NIELSON, husband and wife; and EDWARD LUCKE and JOAN LUCKE, husband and wife; and JAMES STOVER and BONNIE STOVER, husband and wife; and WILLIAM TINNESAND and DEBORAH TINNESAND, husband and wife; and PENELOPE RADEBAUGH, a married woman as her separate estate; and JENNIE MOWATT, a single woman,

Respondents.

LEE, A.C.J. — Potato Patch LLC (Potato Patch) owns a landlocked parcel of land in rural

Jefferson County. The only feasible way for Potato Patch to access its property with a vehicle is

through an abutting private road that travels through the property of Potato Patch’s neighbors to

the south. After its neighbors denied Potato Patch access to this road, Potato Patch filed a

complaint seeking declaratory judgment that this private road was actually a public right of way

conveyed to the County in 1943, or in the alternative, declaratory judgment granting Potato Patch

a private way of necessity over the road. No. 49988-6-II

Potato Patch appeals the superior court’s dismissal of its claims on summary judgment and

argues that: (1) there remained a genuine issue of material fact as to Potato Patch’s private way of

necessity claim, (2) there remained a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the abutting road

is the 1943 public right of way, and (3) the superior court erred in failing to determine the precise

location of the 1943 public right of way. We disagree and affirm.

FACTS

A. BACKGROUND

1. The Potato Patch Property

John and Melinda Kennell are the sole members of a limited liability company called

Potato Patch LLC. Potato Patch’s only asset is an undeveloped parcel of property in Jefferson

County. The Potato Patch property is bordered to the East by the Hood Canal and to the North

and West by areas of steep and unstable terrain. South of the Potato Patch property lies a

residential community known as the Point Whitney Tracts. The Washington State Department of

Fish and Wildlife owns the land to the south of the Point Whitney Tracts.

The Potato Patch property is inaccessible by public road. However, a road named Canyon

Creek Road abuts the southern edge of the Potato Patch property, travels down through the Port

Whitney Tracts, and across the State-owned land to the south. Canyon Creek Road connects to a

southeast county road named Bee Mill Road. The owners of the tracts of land comprising the Port

Whitney Tracts consider Canyon Creek Road to be private and have denied Potato Patch’s request

to access its property through Canyon Creek Road.

2 No. 49988-6-II

2. The McGrew Right of Way

G. F. McGrew once owned the land that would eventually become the Point Whitney

Tracts. In 1943, McGrew conveyed by quit claim deed a public right of way over his land to

Jefferson County. The deed described the public right of way as:

A right of way for road, from point where present county road enters their property, thence in a generally northerly direction to the north boundary of their property. This road to follow the eastern boundary as near as possible except where natural obstacles prevent, all in SW ¼ NW ¼ Sec 7, Twp 26N, R 1 W., W.M.1 situated in the County of Jefferson, State of Washington.

Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 48.

In 1987, Marvin and Adelaide Lorenzen purchased the land that would eventually become

the Point Whitney Tracts. The deed to the property stated that the land was “[s]ubject to easement

affecting a portion of subject property for road purposes in favor of Jefferson County as recorded

Dec. 15, 1944, Auditor’s File No. 103323, records of Jefferson County, Washington” (the McGrew

right of way). CP at 55.

However, according to Jefferson County, the McGrew right of way was never opened and

is landlocked. The McGrew right of way does not connect to any roads because McGrew sold the

southern 165 feet of his property three years before granting Jefferson County the McGrew right

of way. The man who purchased the southern 165 feet of McGrew’s property never granted

Jefferson County a right of way. Thus, according to the County, there is presently a 165 foot gap

between the McGrew right of way and the nearest road (Canyon Creek Road). The County does

not intend to build a public road on the McGrew right of way because in order to do so, it would

1 This is the current location of the Point Whitney Tracts.

3 No. 49988-6-II

need to obtain a deed or easement from the present owner of the property south of the Point

Whitney Tracts that make up the 165 foot gap.

3. Canyon Creek Road

In 1990, the Lorenzens settled a lawsuit that they had initiated against other landowners in

the area. The settlement provided that the defendants would grant the Lorenzens and their

successors in interest “a non-restrictive easement for ingress, egress and utilities, thirty (30) feet

in width, extending from the county road known as the Bee Mill Road to the real property of the

[Lorenzens].” CP at 56-57.

In 1991, the Lorenzens subdivided their property into the Point Whitney Tracts.. The

survey plat creating the Point Whitney Tracts showed a “30 ft. easement for ingress, egress and

utilities” beginning at Bee Mill road, traveling west, and then turning north through the Point

Whitney Tracts. CP at 115. The survey plat also identified this easement by reference to the 1990

settlement agreement between the Lorenzens and their then neighboring landowners. This

easement is Canyon Creek Road.

4. The Duesing Properties

Two separate properties, referred to as the Duesing properties,2 abut the southeast corner

of the Potato Patch property and are accessible by a public county road. Potato Patch acquired the

2 The parties refer to these two properties as “the Duesing properties” because the Kennells purchased the properties from Carol Duesing in 2009. Br. of Appellant at 6; Br. of Resp’t at 6. However, the Kennells also purchased the Potato Patch property from Duesing in 2009. Even though Duesing no longer owns any of the property at issue in this case, for clarity, we refer to the two southeastern properties as the Duesing properties because both parties refer to the parcels under this name. It is unclear from the record who purchased the Duesing properties from the Kennells.

4 No. 49988-6-II

Duesing properties at the same time it acquired the Potato Patch property. Potato Patch sold the

Duesing properties in January 2014. As a term of sale, Potato Patch expressly relinquished any

rights to an easement for ingress and egress it had over the Duesing properties.3

5. 2010 Complaint against the State of Washington

In 2010, even though Potato Patch owned the Potato Patch property, the Kennells

personally brought an action to quiet title to the portion of Canyon Creek Road crossing the State-

owned land based on the theories of easement by prescription and easement by implication in an

attempt to secure access to the Potato Patch property.4 The superior court dismissed the Kennells’

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