Pat Mcintyre v. Spokane Valley Heritage Museum, d/b/a Spokane Valley Legacy Foundation

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 5, 2013
Docket30351-9
StatusUnpublished

This text of Pat Mcintyre v. Spokane Valley Heritage Museum, d/b/a Spokane Valley Legacy Foundation (Pat Mcintyre v. Spokane Valley Heritage Museum, d/b/a Spokane Valley Legacy Foundation) 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
Pat Mcintyre v. Spokane Valley Heritage Museum, d/b/a Spokane Valley Legacy Foundation, (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

FILED

March 5,2013

In tbe Office oftbe Clerk of Court W A State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

PAT MCINTYRE, a single man; DAVID ).

THOMPSON, a single man; and GARY )

PETERS, a single man, ) No. 30351-9-III

) Appellants, ) ) v. ) ) SPOKANE VALLEY HERITAGE ) MUSEUM, d/b/a SPOKANE VALLEY ) LEGACY FOUNDATION, a non-profit ) corporation, ) ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION Respondent. )

SIDDOWAY, A.C.J. - The trial court rejected the claims of three owners of retail

businesses in Spokane County to prescriptive rights, in favor of their patrons, to drive

through and park in a parking lot owned by their neighbor to the west. While the

business owners raise a number of objections to the trial court's findings and procedure,

one issue is dispositive: substantial evidence supports the trial court's finding that the

patrons' use of the lot-occurring largely during its ownership by Spokane County-was

permissive. Because hostile use is an essential element of the business owners' claim, we

affirm the trial court's dismissal. No.30351-9-III McIntyre v. Spokane Valley Heritage Museum

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Pat McIntyre, David Thompson, and Gary Peters are owners of retail businesses

that front on the south side of Sprague Avenue, a major east-west arterial in Spokane

County. To the west end of the block on which their businesses are located is the fonner

town hall of the township of Opportunity, built in or about 1910. The township deeded

the town hall property and its adjoining parking lot to Spokane County in 1990. In 2004,

the county conveyed the property to the newly-incorporated city of Spokane Valley,

which conveyed it, in turn, to the Spokane Valley Legacy Foundation, doing business as

the Spokane Valley Heritage Museum.

In 2010, McIntyre, Thompson, and Peters brought this action asking the court to

decree a prescriptive easement to the Museum property for parking, ingress, and egress,

in favor of them and their patrons. Specifically, McIntyre, doing business as Ichabod's,

and Thompson, doing business as Dave's Bar and Grill, asserted a prescriptive right in

their patrons to park in the Museum's parking lot. They and Peters, who owns and

operates Peters Hardware, asked the court to enjoin any limitation on access to their

properties through the Museum's property. The following is a depiction of the relative

locations of the parties' properties, prepared by the trial court:!

I As pointed out by the trial court, its depiction is rough and not to scale.

No. 30351-9-III McIntyre v. Spokane Valley Heritage Museum

SPRAGUE AVE.

MUSEUM 1CAB00S PETER'S SALON RITEAID HARl)WARE E. '12114 E 12116 E. 12122 E. 12222 E. t2118

PARKING

LOT

- --------------______-2A~L=LEY~__ ------- _===::::::= ----- Clerk's Papers (CP) at 65.

The business owners' claims were presented in a two-day bench trial, during

which the trial court viewed the property. At the conclusion of trial, the court issued a

memorandum opinion that it later incorporated into abbreviated findings and conclusions.

Among the incorporated findings were the following statements that appear

(nonsequentially) within the court's memorandum opinion:

Plaintiff Pat McIntyre has owned Ichabod's, a bar and grill, since June of 1981. The establishment itself has been in business at the current location, 12116 E.Sprague, since 1970.

Plaintiff Gary Peters owns Peters' Hardware. The hardware store, located at 12118 E. Sprague, has been in his family since 1940[.]

Plaintiff David Thompson owns Dave's Tavern, a bar and grill, located at

12124 E. Sprague.... In 1989 he purchased [what was then Sig's Tavern]

and re-named it Dave's Tavern.

In approximately 1999, [Thompson] purchased the building between Dave's Tavern and Peters' Hardware, located at 12122 E. Sprague .... For

No. 30351-9-111 McIntyre v. Spokane Valley Heritage Museum

a while Plaintiff Mcintyre [sic] rented that space to someone for use as a hair salon, but it is currently vacant.

Thompson also owns the parking lot to the south of his business, across the alley. In 2007, the City of Spokane Valley "took a piece" of his parking lot and rerouted the alley around [a] new Rite Aid [constructed at the east end of the block].

All three of the businesses (as well as the unoccupied space where the hair salon used to be) have back entrances only. In the front, facing Sprague Avenue, there is a sidewalk but no parking.

Each business has parking areas behind their businesses (to the south, at the back entrances).

For years, the three businesses and their customers have used the [Museum's] parking lot as a thoroughfare (long before it was owned by the foundation), to access the three businesses, and for parking and their own uses.

In 1956, [Opportunity] Township came to own [the property at issue in this case].

In November of 1990, Opportunity Township quitclaimed the (now Museum) lots to Spokane County.

The Museum property [was] managed and maintained by Spokane County from 1996 to 2004. The property was vacant during that time except for one year when the building was leased as a frame shop.

For years there was a "for rent" sign posted at the location, placed there by the Spokane County Department of Parks and Recreation .... [0 ]ver the years there were occasional ("sometimes") wedding receptions or other events held at the premises.

The County did some remodeling over the years, and in 1996 or 1997 the County placed some Jersey (concrete) barriers along the east property line of the county property, between the County property and the Ichabod property. Mr. McIntyre, proprietor of Ichabod's complained, so the County

took the Jersey barriers down.

In 2000, the ... property was rented for approximately one year as a frame shop. The patrons of the three neighbor businesses continued to drive through and use the parking areas as they wished. The proprietor of the frame shop ... wanted people to stop driving through the parking area of the frame shop, so she "put up bumpers" approximately 4 feet high and 5 feet long. The customers just pushed them aside and used the area to drive through and park anyway[.]

On January 5,2004, Spokane County quitclaimed the property to the City of Spokane Valley[.] On March 10,2004, the City of Spokane Valley quitclaimed the (Museum) property to the Spokane Valley Legacy Foundation[.]

When the Museum started having events, [Museum director Jayne Singleton] placed flyers on cars of the businesses stating they could not park on the Museum property.

[S]ometime in the late 2000's the Museum put up a sign that said "MUSEUM PARKING ONLY."

In approximately April of 2009, the Museum put up a fence to keep people from using their parking lot as a thoroughfare, as such traffic (which is described as fast) created a danger to patrons of the Museum (including school children on field trips) and interfered with the Museum's usage of their property.

Plaintiffs' witness Andrea Owens testified she had been going to Ich[a]bod's three times a week for twenty-three years, and parked on what she now knows to be [M]useum property; she thought that parking area belonged to Ichabod's.

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Pat Mcintyre v. Spokane Valley Heritage Museum, d/b/a Spokane Valley Legacy Foundation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pat-mcintyre-v-spokane-valley-heritage-museum-dba-spokane-valley-legacy-washctapp-2013.