Lester And Susan Riley v. David And Susan Valaer

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 7, 2020
Docket52687-5
StatusUnpublished

This text of Lester And Susan Riley v. David And Susan Valaer (Lester And Susan Riley v. David And Susan Valaer) 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
Lester And Susan Riley v. David And Susan Valaer, (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

April 7, 2020 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II LESTER RILEY and SUSAN K. RILEY, husband and wife, No. 52687-5-II Appellants,

v.

DAVID VALAER and SUSAN E. VALAER, UNPUBLISHED OPINION husband and wife,

Defendants,

and

BLAINE HUNTER and MELISSA HUNTER, husband and wife; and BANK OF THE PACIFIC,

Respondents.

GLASGOW, J.—Lester and Susan K. Riley owned two lots, one contained a home, an

attached garage, and a patio (east lot), while the other lot was vacant (west lot). Part of the attached

garage encroached on the otherwise vacant west lot. The encroachment has existed since before

the Rileys owned both lots.

Blaine and Melissa Hunter ultimately purchased the east lot, and they knew at the time that

their garage and patio encroached on the vacant west lot. The Rileys still owned the west lot.

The Rileys sued to force the Hunters to remove the encroachment. After a bench trial, the

trial court ruled that it would be inequitable to order ejectment under the “liability rule,” which

allows a court to decline to require removal of an encroachment if certain factors are met. The trial No. 52687-5-II

court quieted title to the area containing the encroachment in favor of the Hunters and ordered the

Hunters to pay the Rileys for the strip of land.

The Rileys appeal, arguing that the Hunters cannot satisfy the elements of the liability rule

because they knew of the encroachment when they bought the house, and the trial court’s findings

of fact did not support its conclusion of law that it would be inequitable to force the Hunters to

remove the encroachment.

The Rileys do not dispute any of the trial court’s enumerated findings of fact, so we treat

them as verities on appeal, but some findings of fact embedded in the trial court’s conclusions of

law are disputed. These disputed findings are supported by substantial evidence. The trial court

correctly applied the liability rule, and the findings of fact support the trial court’s conclusion of

law that it would be inequitable to force the Hunters to remove the encroachment by tearing down

their garage and potentially undermining the structural integrity of their home. We affirm.

FACTS

The trial court’s enumerated findings of fact are not in dispute. This case involves a strip

of property that is approximately nine feet long and lies between two adjacent parcels. In early

1951, Fred and Alice Neth purchased the east lot, built a house, and made several improvements

to the east lot that encroached several feet onto the adjacent west lot. Later in 1951 they purchased

the west lot. In 1971, the Neths sold both lots to LaVern and Elaine Boespflug, who then sold both

lots to Michael and Suzann Holman in 1975.

In 2000, the Rileys contracted with the Holmans to purchase both lots. Prior to the

purchase, the Holmans notified the Rileys that the attached garage and patio of the home on the

east lot encroached onto the west lot. The Rileys were not concerned about the encroachment

2 No. 52687-5-II

because they were purchasing both lots. In 2004, the Rileys obtained a loan from Argent Mortgage

LLC secured by a deed of trust covering only the east lot. Argent did not inquire about the existence

of any encroachments.

In 2007, the Rileys took steps to initiate a boundary line adjustment to have the house

located entirely on the east lot, but never completed the adjustment. Also in 2007, the Rileys

demolished the steps, pool house, and pool on the west lot, and rebuilt the area where the steps had

been to blend with the preexisting retaining wall. The retaining wall, including the new part that

the Rileys built, also encroached on the west lot.

The Rileys eventually defaulted on their loan, and David and Susan Valaer purchased the

east lot at the subsequent foreclosure sale in 2010. The Valaers did not look up the property on

Clark County’s online property information center, nor did they inquire into the boundary lines,

perform any survey, or contact the Rileys before completing the purchase. The Rileys remained

owners of the vacant west lot.

In 2012, the Rileys sued the Valaers to remove the encroachment from the west lot. In the

meantime, the Hunters entered into an agreement to lease and then purchase the east lot from the

Valaers. The Hunters were aware of the encroachment and the pending lawsuit. The Hunters

contacted the Rileys expressing an interest in either purchasing both lots or buying the east lot

from the Valaers and resolving the encroachment issue with the Rileys. The Rileys never

responded to this letter.

In 2013 the trial court granted partial summary judgment to the Valaers. On appeal, we

reversed and remanded for the case to proceed to trial. Riley v. Valaer, No. 46120-0-II, slip op. at

11 (Wash. Ct App. July 7, 2015) (unpublished), http://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/

3 No. 52687-5-II

D2%2046120-0-II%20%Unpublished%20Opinion.pdf. Relevant to this appeal, we reasoned that

genuine issues of material fact existed as to whether the Valaers acted with due diligence, or simply

took a calculated risk or acted negligently “in locating the encroaching structure.” Id. at 10.

In 2015, the Hunters again contacted the Rileys. They acknowledged the ongoing lawsuit,

but nevertheless wanted to continue with the purchase of the east lot because the Valaers no longer

wanted to lease it and a number of repairs needed to be made to the house. Melissa Hunter was

facing serious medical issues requiring brain surgery, and the Hunters wanted stability for

themselves and their young son. Lester Riley spoke to the Hunters and informed them that he was

not willing to discuss the issue while litigation was ongoing.

In 2016, the Hunters purchased the east lot and entered into an indemnity agreement with

the Valaers in which they acknowledged the existence of this encroachment lawsuit. The Rileys

amended the complaint adding the Hunters as defendants. The Valaers were subsequently

dismissed as a party.

The case proceeded to a bench trial, where the trial court heard testimony from Blaine

Hunter and Lester Riley. Blaine Hunter testified that removal of the encroachment would come at

great cost, it would undermine the structural integrity of the house, and the disputed strip of land

containing the encroachment was essentially worthless on its own. Lester Riley testified that this

ongoing litigation was preventing him from developing the west lot, but he did not explain how

the encroachment itself was damaging the west lot, how he would benefit from its removal, or how

much he thought the disputed strip was worth.

The trial court entered findings consistent with the facts described above. None of the trial

court’s enumerated findings of fact is challenged. The trial court concluded that the Hunters had

4 No. 52687-5-II

satisfied all the elements of the liability rule: (1) they did not simply take a calculated risk, act in

bad faith or negligently, willfully, or indifferently locate the encroaching structure; (2) the damage

the encroachment imposed on the Rileys’ west lot was slight and the benefit of removal equally

small; (3) there was ample remaining room for a structure suitable for the area in the vacant west

lot and there was no real limitation on the property’s future use; (4) it was impractical to move the

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