Mark & Debra Martin v. Benjamin & Corey Orvold

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 9, 2021
Docket53831-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of Mark & Debra Martin v. Benjamin & Corey Orvold (Mark & Debra Martin v. Benjamin & Corey Orvold) 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
Mark & Debra Martin v. Benjamin & Corey Orvold, (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON March 9, 2021 DIVISION II MARK E. MARTIN and DEBRA A. No. 53831-8-II MARTIN, husband and wife,

Respondents,

v.

BENJAMIN ORVOLD and COREY UNPUBLISHED OPINION ORVOLD, husband and wife, and the marital community composed thereof,

Appellants.

GLASGOW, J.—After a bench trial, the trial court concluded that Mark and Debra Martin

had acquired a piece of their neighbors’ land through adverse possession. The trial court also

ordered injunctive relief in the Martins’ favor and entered mutual restraining orders.

Barbara and Corey Orvold, the affected neighbors, appeal, arguing that several findings of

fact were not supported by substantial evidence. They contend the trial court erred by concluding

that the Martins satisfied the elements of hostility and open and notorious use necessary to prove

adverse possession. The Orvolds also argue that the trial court abused its discretion by entering a

restraining order against them. The Orvolds further assert that the trial court erred by awarding

attorney fees to the Martins without segregating fees for some claims. Both parties request attorney

fees on appeal.

We affirm. We also award attorney fees to the Martins on appeal. No. 53831-8-II

FACTS

This case concerns a dispute over a gravel parking strip located in a cul-de-sac in Puyallup,

Washington. After a three-day bench trial that involved testimony from 27 witnesses, including

the Martins, the Orvolds, and many neighbors, the trial court made findings of fact and conclusions

of law. The following facts were found by the trial court after a bench trial and most of these facts

are not in dispute.

A. Background

The Martins and the Orvolds own property across the street from each other. The Martins’

and Orvolds’ properties are part of a residential subdivision that includes a private road running

north to south and ending in a cul-de-sac. The private road runs down the center of a 60-foot-wide

nonexclusive easement, and the road is narrower than the easement.

Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 494.

As shown in the photo above, the Orvolds’ house is on the west side of the road and the

Martins’ house is on the east side of the road. The Martins’ driveway was steep and only wide

enough for one car at a time. In 1992, to make parking easier, add additional parking, and provide

2 No. 53831-8-II

a flat space for their garbage cans, the Martins created a parking area below their driveway. The

parking strip that the Martins built is the black triangular shaped area in the photo above.

As the red property boundary lines in the photo reflect, the Orvolds’ property originally

extended across the private road. In a summary judgment ruling and stipulation that the Orvolds

do not appeal, the Martins were awarded title through adverse possession to the portions of the

Orvolds’ land east of the road abutting their property (part of the landscaped hillside and the

Martins’ driveway), except the parking area represented by the black triangle, which the Martins

were awarded following a bench trial. This parking area is the subject of this appeal.

B. Gravel Parking Strip

To create the parking area in 1992, Mark1 “excavated and flattened a [7 foot by 25 foot]

section of the hill” above the street. CP at 1004. He then brought in gravel and covered the surface

of the parking strip. The Martins landscaped the hillside area above the parking strip by planting

ivy. They then maintained the gravel parking strip and hillside landscaping.

The Martins never asked for and were never given permission from anyone else to create

or use the parking strip. In 1993, Jon Pulicicchio, a prior owner of the Orvold property, told the

Martins he had just learned that he owned the area where the gravel parking strip was located, as

well as a portion of the landscaped hillside and the Martins’ driveway. Pulicicchio also told the

Martins that he obtained insurance coverage for those areas. The Martins did not ask Pulicicchio

for permission to use or maintain his land and Pulicicchio did not give them permission to do so.

Neither of the other prior owners of the Orvold property gave the Martins permission to use or

maintain the parking strip, nor did they object to their use.

1 We use the first names of the Martins and Orvolds to avoid confusion. 3 No. 53831-8-II

Members of the Martin family were the primary users of the gravel parking strip from 1992

to 2015, using the space “between 90-100 [percent] of the use, compared to the rest of the world.”

CP at 1006. Mark parked his truck in the gravel strip daily until 2008. Debra used the parking strip

when it snowed, and her social guests also used it regularly. From 1992 until the mid-2000s,

Mark’s mother parked there several times a week to babysit the Martins’ youngest daughter,

Lindsey. Once Lindsey got a driver’s license, she parked in the gravel strip daily from 2008 to

2012. The Martins’ other adult children and grandchildren also used the parking strip when they

visited.

The trial court found that property owners on the Martins’ side of the road typically “treated

the easternmost unpaved strip [of the easement] as extensions of their property” and used this strip

for landscaping and parking, while property owners on the Orvolds’ side of the road “typically did

not . . . use or maintain the easternmost unpaved strip.” CP at 1003. If someone other than an east

side owner wanted to use the unpaved strip on the eastern side of the road, they generally asked

permission of the “owner of the immediately abutting eastern lot,” and this “usually only

[occurred] on special occasions where overflow parking was needed.” Id.

The trial court found that third parties only occasionally used the parking strip and “the

Martins usually either gave their permission or allowed the parking as a neighborly

accommodation.” CP at 1006. The Orvolds do not dispute, however, that the Martins told two

other neighbors not to park their vehicles in the parking strip.

The Martins were the only people who maintained the gravel parking strip. CP at 1006.

The trial court found that “[t]here was no evidence presented that at any time between 1992-2015,

4 No. 53831-8-II

the Martins ceased using or maintaining the [gravel parking strip,]” but the Orvolds dispute this

finding. CP at 1007.

C. Relationship Between the Martins and the Orvolds

In 2015, the Orvolds purchased and moved to the property across the street from the

Martins. The Orvolds testified that they began using the parking strip in 2015, they believed they

owned it, and the Martins did not initially object. The Martins and the Orvolds had a cordial

relationship until April 2018, when Corey and one of the Martins’ daughters got in a heated

argument about the parking strip.

In May 2018, the Martins re-graveled the parking strip. The Orvolds then called the police,

who talked to both parties but took no further action. Shortly after the police left, Corey pulled her

car into the gravel parking strip, followed by another neighbor, Ryan Radke, who parked his car

behind hers. The two “high fived” and then moved their cars about 20 minutes later. CP at 1009.

The trial court also found that the Orvolds’ home security system recorded both audio and

video.

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