Leonard Browning v. Doty Family Trust

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 30, 2014
Docket31412-0
StatusUnpublished

This text of Leonard Browning v. Doty Family Trust (Leonard Browning v. Doty Family Trust) 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
Leonard Browning v. Doty Family Trust, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

FILED

SEPTEMBER 30, 2014

In the Office of the Clerk of Court

W A State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION THREE

LEONARD BROWNING, a single ) person, BARBARA DRAKE, a single ) No. 31412-0-111 person, ) (consolidated with 31508-8-111) ) Appellants, ) ) v. ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) DOTY FAMIL Y TRUST; FOREST C. ) DOTY and LI1 DOTY, husband and wife, ) and the marital community composed ) thereof; CHARLES C. AMBURGEY, SR. ) and SANDRA R. AMBURGEY, husband ) and wife, and the marital community ) composed thereof; TRACY D. MONK ) and PATRICIA 1. MONK, husband and ) wife, and the marital community ) composed thereof; STEVE GREENE, a ) single person; SUSAN BEAMER, a single ) person; CHERITH TRUST; JAMES ) GmSON and SYLVIA GmSON, husband ) and wife, and the marital community ) composed thereof, ) ) Respondents. )

FEARING, J. - Plaintiffs Leonard Browning and Barbara Drake appeal factual

fmdings of the trial court claiming they, not the defendants, told the truth at trial. They No. 31412-0-II1 cons. w/31S08-8-II1 Browning v. Doty Family Trust

fail to recognize that the purpose of an appeal is not to retry the credibility of parties and

witnesses. Since the trial court's factual findings are supported by the trial transcript, we

affirm the rulings of the trial court.

Leonard Browning and Barbara Drake sought declaratory judgment proclaiming

they have a right to drive through a tract of land, designated as the Skookum Creek

segregation, to reach an adjacent farm owned by Drake and leased by Browning. The

two base their rights of passage upon numerous theories: an express easement under the

Skookum Creek Declaration of Protective Covenants and Easements, a prescriptive

easement, an easement by implication, an easement by necessity, and a public road. The

two also asked for damages for the defendants' interference with that right. Professor

Philip A. Trautman, University of Washington Civil Procedure Professor, taught that, if

one throws a party, invite all the neighbors. Browning and Drake followed this advice.

The defendants include the Doty Family Trust, Forest and Lil Doty, Charles and Sandra

Amburgey, Tracy and Patricia Monk, Steve Greene and Susan Beamer Greene, Cherith

Trust, and James and Sylvia Gibson, all of whom own land in the Skookum Creek

segregation, a pristine setting in Pend Oreille County.

The Doty Family Trust and Forest and Lil Doty counterclaimed against Leonard

Browning alleging he removed a fence and trees from their property without their

consent, warranting treble damages under Washington's timber trespass statute. They

also counterclaimed against Leonard Browning and Barbara Drake for a declaration

No. 31412-0-111 cons. w/31508-8-1I1 Browning v. Doly Family Trust

establishing the lot line between their land and Drake's land. The trial court concluded

that Drake and Browning had no right of access through Skookum Creek segregation to

the farm and denied plaintiffs any relief. The trial court also held that Leonard Browning

intentionally removed trees from Forest and Lil Doty's property, warranting treble

damages of$49,350 under RCW 64.12.030. Finally, the trial court declared the boundary

between the Doty land and Barbara Drake's land to be in accordance with a survey

prepared on behalf of the Dotys.

This appeal raises two general issues: (1) whether there exists some form of

easement or right of access through the Skookum Creek large lot segregation to the Drake

farmland, and (2) whether substantial evidence supports the trial court's findings that

Leonard Browning intentionally removed trees from Forest and Lil Doty's property.

FACTS

A diagram and satellite photo below depict the tracts of land owned by the parties.

Barbara Drake owns lot 21 of the Skookum Creek large lot segregation. Drake also owns

the larger parcel ofland that abuts the western edge oflots 21, 22, 25, and 26 and touches

the southern edge of lots 26 and 27. The parties refer to this larger parcel as "the farm."

In 2008, Drake entered a "Lease Purchase Agreement" with Leonard Browning for the

farm. Clerk's Papers (CP) at 219-20. The Doty Family Trust owns lots 22, 23, and 24;

Charles and Sandra Amburgey own lots 17 and 18; Tracy and Patricia Monk own lots 19,

No. 31412-0-III cons. w/31508-8-III Browning v. Doty Family Trust

20 and the southern half of 16; James and Sylvia Gibson through the Cherith Family

Trust own lot 25; and Steve Greene and Susan Beamer Greene own lot 26.

Amburgeys

Monks

Dotys ---+!....

Gibsons - - t -

Greenes

The numbered lots derive from the Skookum Creek large lot segregation. These lots are

subject to the August 8, 1972 Skookum Creek Declaration of Protective Covenants and

Easements. The farm is not subject to this declaration.

In relevant portion, the declaration provides:

ARTICLE C-EASEMENTS AND RESERVATIONS

1. Seller does hereby declare and reserve sixty (60) foot wide non­ exclusive, private easement for ingress, egress, and utilities over and across the Real Property, said easements to be located as shown on the attached Schedule B. Centerline of each of said easements shall follow the centerline of each existing or proposed road as located on the attached Schedule B.

5. All of the easements declared herein shall be divisible, perpetual, and assignable, and shall be appurtenant to and run with the Real Property.

No. 31412-0-III cons. w/31508-8-III Browning v. Doty Family Trust

Seller hereby reserves for itself, its personal representatives, agents and assigns, the right to the use and benefit of all of said easements and further hereby reserves the right to grant the use of said easements to all parties who now are or shall hereafter become Owners and to parties supplying utilities to any portion of the Real Property. 6. The Owners of sixty-six (66) per cent or more in area of the Real Property shall have the right, power, and authority, by written declaration, to dedicate all or any part of any of the above-described easements to public use at any time.

CP at 70-71. The declaration defines "seller" as "THE TRANS- WEST COMPANY";

"Real Property" as "all of the real property described on the attached Schedule B", that is,

the numbered lots; and "Owner" as "the holder of a fee simple interest in any parcel of

the Real Property" CP at 69. The easement and proposed road can be seen on the

diagram above as beginning north oflot 16, running south to lot 23, and turning

southwest at the southern end of lot 23. The used portion of this easement was later

designated Skookum Meadow Drive.

The Dotys purchased lot 24 in 1991. In 1991 or 1992, Forest Doty installed a

single gate across Skookum Meadow Drive near his home on lot 24. He had lot 24

surveyed in 1996. The Dotys purchased lots 22 and 23 in 1998, after which Forest Doty

installed other gates across Skookum Meadow Drive. Skookum Meadow Drive can be

seen on both the satellite photo and the diagram above. The Drive runs along lot 24's

north line and dips into lot 24 in the extreme northwest of the lot.

On the diagram, Skookum Meadow Drive continues past the Doty gates southwest

to lots 25 and 26, belonging to the Gibsons and Greenes respectively. The access leading

No. 31412-0-111 cons. w/31508-8-111 Browning v.

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