Skoog v. Seymour

187 P.2d 304, 29 Wash. 2d 355, 1947 Wash. LEXIS 381
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1947
DocketNo. 30288.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 187 P.2d 304 (Skoog v. Seymour) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Skoog v. Seymour, 187 P.2d 304, 29 Wash. 2d 355, 1947 Wash. LEXIS 381 (Wash. 1947).

Opinion

*356 Hill, J.

Record title to lot 4, block 88, “Byrd’s Addition to Tacoma City,” is vested in the appellants, August Seymour and wife. They also claim title, by adverse possession, to the north 3% feet of lot 5, which is adjacent to and immediately south of lot 4.

Record title to all of lot 5 is vested in the respondents, Carl H. Skoog and wife, and this action was commenced by them to quiet their title to all of lot 5 except a tract 16 inches north and south by 25 feet east and west actually occupied, since 1920, by the garage which is part of the house erected in that year on lot 4. The respondents and their predecessors in interest have at all times paid taxes on all of lot 5; hence the appellants, to establish adverse possession, were compelled to prove that their possession was actual and uninterrupted, open and notorious, hostile and exclusive, under a claim of right made in good faith for the statutory period, which in this case is ten years.

As the trial court said in its memorandum opinion, there is no dispute as to the applicable law, the real question being whether the use by the appellants and their predecessors in interest was of such character as to establish title by adverse possession. The trial court was of the opinion that

“. . . the use which defendants [appellants] and their predecessors made of the strip did not constitute open, notorious and exclusive possession under a claim of right for ten years,”

and entered judgment quieting title in the respondents to all of lot 5 except the portion actually occupied by the garage.

The record owners of these lots during the period that is of significance here, and the approximate dates of certain events during that period, are here set forth, in the belief that they will assist in a better understanding of the testimony hereinafter referred to:

*357 Lot 5 Lot 4

Eierman,--1924 Thorsk, 1919-1937

House and garage built 1920

Smart, 1924-1935

House built 1927

Stone wall built 1928 or

Davidson, 1935-1937

Duenwald, 1937-1944 Lindenau, 1937-1946

Seymour, 1944--

Skoog, 1946--

It will be noted that the house and garage on lot 4 was built in 1920, the house on lot 5 in 1927, and the stone wall which figures so much in the testimony, in 1928 or 1929.

For the purpose of our discussion, the 3%-foot strip in controversy may be divided into three sections: section A, the easterly 60 feet; section B, the westerly 56 feet; and section C, an extension of the 3%-foot strip from the westerly lot line to the easterly curb of Union avenue, a distance of some 56 feet.

Along the south line of section A is a stone wall, built in 1928 or 1929 by L. R. Smart, a predecessor in interest of the respondents. Mr. Smart is dead, so we have no direct evidence as to his intention in building the wall. The character of the terrain is such that the top of the wall practically coincides with the level of the ground to the south, and, at its most easterly point, the wall rises some 7% feet above the ground to the north. As it extends westward the wall is lower, until the level of the ground to the south thereof coincides with that to the north of it, at a point some 60 feet west of the east line of the lots, and there the wall ends.

The respondents take the position that this was intended as a retaining wall and not a boundary wall. The only attempted explanation of the fact that the builder erected the wall more than three feet south of his north lot line is the suggestion in the brief that he left that much clearance for the purpose of inspection and repair. There is no evidence that the respondents or any of their predecessors in interest *358 have ever used the strip north of the wall, for the purpose of inspection and repair or for any other purpose. The trial court’s finding that the stone wall “was not intended to constitute a boundary line” is without evidence to support it.

Although part of the easterly 60 feet of lot 4 and of the strip was, some of the time at least, in a rather rough and wild state, it is clear from the evidence that, since the construction of this wall, the owners of lot 4 have used all of the 3%-foot strip lying north of the wall as they have used the rest of their property. There is testimony by Leonard A. Johnson, a gardener, that he worked for the owners of both lot 5 and lot 4. When he worked for the Davidsons (predecessors of the respondents), he worked south of and to that wall; when he worked for the Thorsks and the Duenwalds (predecessors of the appellants), he worked north of and to that wall. There is testimony that the Thorsks and the Duenwalds used the land up to the wall, and that Mrs. Duenwald had flowers growing in the wall. Mrs. Virginia Hennig, who had lived on lot 3, immediately north of lot 4, at all times since 1920, testified that the wall was known as a boundary line; and we get the inference from the testimony of C. H. Schartow, who lived on lot 1 (farther north in the same block) from 1920 to 1935, that it was regarded as a boundary fine. We find that the Thorsks and the Duen-walds so regarded it.

The trial court stated, in its memorandum opinion, that the portion of the strip north of the wall

“. . . has vines and shrubbery on it; also a small evergreen, spruce and lilac trees, as indicated on the map. These have been wholly cultivated and cared for by the defendants [appellants] and their predecessors since the wall was built.”

We quote this to show that there was no doubt in the mind of the trial judge that section A was occupied and used by the Thorsks, Duenwalds, and appellants since 1928 or 1929.

Section B is that portion of the strip extending from the westerly end of the stone wall to the westerly lot line. It is established that along the south line of section B there were *359 loose rocks which represented a continuation of the line of the stone wall for a considerable distance westward. Mr. Lindenau, a predecessor in interest of the respondents, testified that these rocks were laid end to end on top of the ground, and that he never did any cultivating or any work north of the rocks. The gardener, Mr. Johnson, who worked on the premises between 1928 and 1935, described these rocks by saying that the stone wall “graduated up until it was not much of a wall up at all at the top. Just a few small stones,” and it extended almost up to the projection of the garage. (We assume he meant the projection of the west wall of the garage.)

The garage which is part of the house on lot 4 has, at all times since its erection in 1920, projected 16 inches onto the strip for a distance of 25 feet, or almost half the length of section B. There was a drain pipe south of the house and parallel thereto which projected still farther onto the strip. Fireplace wood was carried along the south side of the garage and thrown or piled in the area east of the garage. Mr. Schartow testified that the strip immediately south of the garage was used as a passageway at all times, and that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
187 P.2d 304, 29 Wash. 2d 355, 1947 Wash. LEXIS 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skoog-v-seymour-wash-1947.