Lee v. Konrad

337 P.3d 510, 2014 Alas. LEXIS 184, 2014 WL 4258365
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 29, 2014
Docket6948 S-14503/S-14524
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 337 P.3d 510 (Lee v. Konrad) 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
Lee v. Konrad, 337 P.3d 510, 2014 Alas. LEXIS 184, 2014 WL 4258365 (Ala. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

STOWERS, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Cody Lee and Stacey Dean (collectively referred to as "Lee") and Barbara Konrad dispute the boundary between their lots in an Anchorage subdivision. Lee insists that the boundary line was established by a 1992 survey, which Lee later marked with fence posts. Konrad argues that a survey she commissioned after purchasing her lot in 2008 disclosed the true boundary and that encroachment of fill material caused by Lee along the fenceline between the lots was a trespass. The superior court concluded that Konrad's survey correctly identified the boundary line and that the fill material encroachment was a trespass. The court issued an order requiring Lee to remove the fill material and erect a retaining barrier to prevent future trespass; it declared Konrad the prevailing party and awarded attorney's fees.

This appeal requires us to consider; (1) whether the superior court correctly determined the boundary between the lots; (2) whether the court erred by concluding that dirt and gravel eneroaching onto Konrad's property was a trespass, and, if not, whether the court properly ordered Lee to remove the fill material and construct a retaining wall; and (8) whether the court's attorney's fees award was an abuse of discretion. We conclude that because Lee and Konrad's predecessors agreed to the boundary established by the 1992 survey, and marked that boundary with fence posts in 1999, the boundary between the lots was established by acquiescence. We thus reverse the superior court's boundary line finding. We conclude that the superior court correctly found that the fill material encroaching onto Konrad's property after she purchased her lot was a trespass. But the court erred by ordering Lee to re *514 move fill material that encroached onto the property before Konrad purchased it because this fill material was not a trespass as to Konrad. We also hold that it was an abuse of discretion to order Lee to pay for construction of a retaining wall to prevent future encroachment. Because this opinion affects the superior court's prevailing-party analysis, we vacate the award of attorney's fees and remand for redetermination of prevailing-party status and recalculation of attorney's fees; we also note that when it calculated attorney's fees, the superior court applied an erroneous rate for Konrad's attorneys.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

Shelikof Subdivision is situated south of Dowling Road and west of Lake Otis Road in Anchorage; it was platted in 1972. The boundary line in dispute in this case separates two properties located on Ivan Drive, Lots 13 and 14 of Block 8 of Shelikof Subdivision. Lot 13 sits south of and uphill from Lot 14; there is a gradual slope from Lot 13 to Lot 14. 1

In 1989 Cody Lee purchased Lot 18 on Ivan Street under a warranty deed that incorporated the 1972 plat. Lot 14 was owned and occupied by Jack and Jerrie Southern at the time. In 1992 the Southerns hired surveyor Ken Lang to mark their property line. Lang did not provide the Southerns with records or a written explanation of the survey, but he marked Lot 14's corners with stakes labeled with his license number. The survey was largely consistent with the parties' historical usage, though it indicated that the Southerns' flower bed partially crossed the property line onto Lee's property. After the Lang survey, the Southerns remedied this encroachment by moving the flower bed to their side of the property line.

Stacey Dean married Lee in 1997 and moved into his house on Lot 18. In 1999 Lee decided, with the Southerns' permission, to erect a partial fence to mark the property line between Lots 13 and 14. The fence posts were placed consistent with the parties' mutual understanding of the boundary line's location, and Jack Southern offered to help Lee set the fence posts. In an early affidavit Lee estimated the posts were "several inches on [his] side of the line," but a subsequent review of photos and survey reports led him to believe that a greater setback existed. A. 1999 aerial photo indicated that the fence posts defined a straight line segment beginning at the rear of Lots 18 and 14 and ending about a third of the distance between the rear and street front of the lots.

In 2003 the Southerns sold Lot 14 to David and Patty Jo Wilson, who in 2006 sold the property to their daughter, Sherrie Wilson. 2 The Wilsons and Lee treated the boundary line marked by the fence posts as the true property line without any dispute. Sherrie Wilson stated that she believed the property line extended along her side of the fence line to a light pole on the street.

In 2005 or 2006 Lee excavated a basement crawlspace under his home and placed the fill in his backyard next to the fence posts. Lee approached Sherrie Wilson at the time to inform her that "as [he] placed [the] fill, the slope was tending to partially come onto ... her side of the property line"; Lee offered to "make it better" if she was concerned about the fill. Wilson stated that she was never bothered by the fill, and did not object or ask Lee to remove it.

Lee did not complete the fence until 2007, eight years after he first erected the fence posts, and 15 years after the 1992 Lang survey. The completed fence followed a straight line from the rear of the lots to about halfway down the common property line, at which point it curved into Lot 18 to abut Lee's house. In 2007 Lee "straightened" approximately 16 feet of the curved fence so that it no longer wrapped back to the house.

In 2008 Sherrie Wilson sold Lot 14 and a mobile home on the property to Barbara Konrad. Wilson sold both "as-is" and "did not represent to [Konrad] or any realtor or buyer any boundary inconsistent with the *515 boundary" marked by the fence. Wilson and Konrad did not discuss the boundary line, nor did they discuss who owned the fence between Lots 18 and 14.

Later that year, Konrad hired John Schul-ler of ArcTerra Engineering & Surveying to survey her property. Schuller did not locate any monuments 3 on Lot 14, but he did find rebar markers defining three of the four corners of Lot 14. Schuller was unable to locate the fourth corner (the corner at the street front of the boundary between Lots 13 and 14), so, using as reference points rebar markers on the lot and monuments along Ivan Drive and across the street, he placed his own rebar marker to define the street front corner between Lots 18 and 14.

Lee and Dean owned a construction company, and Dean served on the local Zoning and Planning Board; Lee considered Dean and himself to be familiar with land surveying techniques. Believing that Schuller's re-bar marker improperly defined the street front corner, Lee removed the marker, thereby destroying the value of the survey. 4

On June 4, 2008, Konrad wrote a letter to Lee informing him that she intended to have a permanent marker set to mark the survey; Konrad threatened to pursue legal action if Lee removed this marker. The following day Lee responded with a letter explaining why he believed Schuller's survey was erroneous:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
337 P.3d 510, 2014 Alas. LEXIS 184, 2014 WL 4258365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-konrad-alaska-2014.