Niki L. Cantrell v. Dwayne R. Farley & Lisa L. Farley

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 23, 2024
Docket57824-7
StatusUnpublished

This text of Niki L. Cantrell v. Dwayne R. Farley & Lisa L. Farley (Niki L. Cantrell v. Dwayne R. Farley & Lisa L. Farley) 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
Niki L. Cantrell v. Dwayne R. Farley & Lisa L. Farley, (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

April 23, 2024

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II NIKI L. CANTRELL, an individual, No. 57824-7-II

Appellant,

v.

DWAYNE R. and LISA L. FARLEY, husband UNPUBLISHED OPINION and wife,

Respondents.

CRUSER, C.J. — After Niki Cantrell sued her neighbors, Lisa and Richard Farley, 1 for

declaratory relief, the Farleys countersued Cantrell for violating a covenant protecting their views

of water features on the Cantrell property. The claims proceeded to a bench trial where Cantrell

argued that the covenant was abandoned when the Farleys’ predecessors allowed vegetation to

block the view. Cantrell also argued that the Farleys were barred from recovery under the doctrine

of unclean hands. The trial court disagreed and concluded that Cantrell violated the view covenant

by planting hedges and installing screens that blocked the Farleys’ view of the water features on

Cantrell’s property. It ordered Cantrell to remove the obstructions and, when she failed to do so,

it found her in contempt. She was ordered to pay $3,200 in sanctions.

1 We use the name Richard throughout this opinion because the record indicates that Dwayne Richard Farley goes by his middle name. No. 57824-7-II

Cantrell appeals, arguing that the trial court’s findings of fact are flawed and unsupported

by substantial evidence. She also argues that the trial court committed an error of law when it

enforced the covenant against her because the covenant did not run with the land. She argues in

the alternative that even if the covenant is enforceable against her, the trial court erred by

interpreting the covenant contrary to its plain language, by considering extrinsic evidence of the

drafter’s intent, and by rejecting her defenses of abandonment and unclean hands. We disagree

and affirm.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

Lisa and Richard Farley own property in Vancouver, Washington. Niki Cantrell owns the

adjacent property lying directly to the east of the Farley property. The Cantrell property contains

a creek and two ponds. These water features were visible from the Farley property when the

Farleys purchased the property in October 2020, despite vegetation growing near the property line.

The Cantrell and Farley properties were once owned by George Gage, but their chains of

title diverged in 1941 when Gage conveyed the western portion of his land (what is now the Farley

property) to new owners Barrows and Kennedy.

The 1941 conveyance included a covenant protecting the view of Gage’s water features for

what is now the Farley property. Specifically, the 1941 deed provided,

It is mutually agreed by all three parties concerned in this Deed, permanently, that no hedges, fences, or any obstruction shall be placed on the East line of the property described herein, whereby the view of present pools, stream or rockeries shall be impaired for owners of respective holdings, this covenant to run with land and be binding upon successors in interest.

2 No. 57824-7-II

Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 12. The 1941 deed also created an easement, not at issue in this appeal, for

the owner of what is now the Farley property to walk on a path through the Cantrell property. The

1941 deed was recorded by the Clark County Auditor at record number E 49909.

The view-protecting language is not present in any other instrument in the chain of title for

either of the parcels. However, the 1941 deed is referred to by its record number, E 49909, in two

conveyances of what is now the Cantrell property. First, the record number appears in the 1943

deed conveying lot 63 and the eastern portion of lot 64 from Gage to the Dexters. Second, the

record number appears in the 1973 recorded contract conveying the same parcel from the Dexters

to Gregg, which provides that the sale was

SUBJECT to covenants, conditions and restrictions contained in Deed executed by George H. Gage, a widower, dated July 11, 1941, recorded July 16, 1941, under Auditor’s File No. E-49909.

Ex. 1 at 3. In addition to the recorded contract, the 1978 deed for the Dexter to Gregg conveyance

also provides that the parcel was subject to “[c]ovenants, conditions, and restrictions of record,

E 49909.” Id. at 9. Gregg later subdivided the property into four parcels, one of which was

eventually purchased by Cantrell.

Neither the Farleys nor Cantrell knew of the view covenant at the time they purchased their

properties in 2020.

II. LANDSCAPING

Cantrell commenced landscaping work on her property in June 2021. She removed four

large trees from her property to remedy what she found to be overgrown vegetation near the

property line between her property and the Farleys’. Shortly thereafter, Cantrell wanted to install

3 No. 57824-7-II

a chain-link fence to prevent the Farleys’ dog from entering her property to defecate. She also

wanted to install a wooden screen to increase privacy between the properties.

Despite the Farleys’ objection, Cantrell began installing a chain-link fence and wooden

screen near the property line in August 2021. Before the project was complete, on September 23,

2021, the Farleys asked Cantrell to refrain from constructing her proposed 16-foot fence between

the properties. Attached to the Farleys’ letter were copies of the Farleys’ deed history report and

the 1941 deed containing the view covenant language.

Cantrell completed the chain-link fence, planted several hedge plants (arborvitae), and

erected six-foot wooden screens along the boundary line. The wooden screens and arborvitae

plants blocked the Farleys’ view of the water features.

III. LITIGATION

Cantrell sued the Farleys under the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act, ch. 7.24 RCW,

asking the trial court to declare that the view covenant was abandoned through disuse.2 The Farleys

2 Cantrell also asked the court to declare that the easement was abandoned. The Farleys countersued for interference with the easement because Cantrell’s chain-link fence blocked their access. In April 2022, the Farleys moved for a preliminary injunction, asking the court to require Cantrell to install a gate. Following oral argument on the motion, the court granted the motion in part and ordered Cantrell to install a gate in the fence so the Farleys could use the path. Cantrell subsequently installed a gate. The trial court ultimately awarded the Farleys $2,100 in monetary damages for interference with the easement. That ruling is not at issue in this appeal. Cantrell also brought a nuisance action against the Farleys for allegedly allowing their dog to defecate on the Cantrell property. The court determined that the defecation occurred and that this constituted nuisance per se, but declined to award monetary damages. That ruling is not at issue in this appeal.

4 No. 57824-7-II

countersued Cantrell for violating the view covenant by planting hedge plants and installing

screens.3

A. BENCH TRIAL

In September 2022, the case proceeded to a bench trial. Cantrell argued that the view

covenant was abandoned in exchange for increased privacy very shortly after it was created

because the Farleys’ predecessors planted greenery that blocked the view. She also argued that the

Farleys were barred from recovery under the equitable doctrine of unclean hands based on the

same plantings.

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