Tom G. Lutz and Karen Lutz v. Lisa A. Buffington and John Doe Buffington

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 2, 2016
Docket32878-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of Tom G. Lutz and Karen Lutz v. Lisa A. Buffington and John Doe Buffington (Tom G. Lutz and Karen Lutz v. Lisa A. Buffington and John Doe Buffington) 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
Tom G. Lutz and Karen Lutz v. Lisa A. Buffington and John Doe Buffington, (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

FILED March 2, 2016 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

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

TOM G. LUTZ and KAREN LUTZ, ) No. 32878-3-111 husband and wife, ) ) Respondents, ) ) v. ) ) LISA A. BUFFINGTON and JOHN DOE ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION BUFFINGTON, husband and wife, and ) The ESTATE OF DENNIS H. LEMLER ) and/or his heirs, and SETH LEMLER, and ) TONI LEMLER, husband and wife, and ) SCHUYLER LEMLER and JANE DOE ) LEMLER, husband and wife, and ALL ) OTHER PERSONS OR PARTIES ) UNKNOWN Claiming Any right, Title, ) Estate, Lien or Interest in the Real Estate ) Described in this Complaint, ) ) Appellants. )

SIDDOWAY, C.J. -After Lisa Buffington successfully sued to invalidate an

express easement over the northern tip of her property that Tom and Karen Lutz had No. 32878-3-III Lutz v. Buffington

relied on for access to their land for almost 10 years, the Lutzes brought this action under

RCW 8.24.030, asking the court to declare a private way of necessity. Following a bench

trial, the court granted the Lutzes' requested relief conditioned upon their payment to Ms.

Buffington of $12,430 for the taking and as severance damages, together with $35,911 in

attorney fees and costs. The Lutzes satisfied the judgment.

Ms. Buffington appeals, arguing that the Lutzes' present action was a compulsory

counterclaim in her earlier action and is barred by their failure to assert it, that the Lutzes

failed to name as necessary parties other owners of property in the residential

development where Ms. Buffington lives, that the Lutzes did not establish reasonable

necessity, that they should have been denied relief on account of undue delay in seeking

it, and that the compensation awarded for the taking was insufficient. We find no error or

abuse of discretion and affirm. We award Ms. Buffington her reasonable fees and costs

on appeal reduced by 30 percent to account for the extent to which unmeritorious

assignments of error unnecessarily contributed to the cost of the appeal.

FACTS

Ponderosa Park is a subdivision near Goldendale in Klickitat County. It is divided

into parcels of about five acres in size. Private roads serve the subdivision.

2 No. 32878-3-111 Lutz v. Buffington

In 1973, Tom and Karen Lutz purchased 10 acres of property adjacent to

Ponderosa Park, known as lot 113. Lot 113 had no roadway access. The Lutzes reached

the property on foot by using a walking path from a road within Ponderosa Park.

In March 1996, Ponderosa Parcels, Inc. (PPI), the developer of Ponderosa Park,

entered into a real estate contract to sell lot 82 to Lisa Buffington and her now deceased

husband, Dennis Lemler. The real estate contract was recorded with the Klickitat County

auditor later that month.

Six months later, in September 1996, the Lutzes purchased lots 110 and 112 from

Ernest and Jean Brokaw. 1 The two lots were outside of but adjacent to Ponderosa Park,

were adjacent to lot 113, and also lacked access. In connection with this purchase, Mr.

Lutz negotiated for access with W. Kershaw, a principal of PPI and its then-president.

Coincident with the Lutzes' purchase of the two parce.ls, PPI executed a grant of

easement, granting to the Lutzes a nonexclusive perpetual easement "for the use of all

roads located within all recorded Plats of the Ponderosa Park." Clerk's Papers (Oct. 23,

2014) (CP) at 68. Since the terminus of the closest private road to the Lutzes' property

I The statutory warranty deed described the parcels conveyed by section; both were described as located in Section 32, Township 5 North, Range 16 East, W.M. What we will refer to as "lot 110" was described in the deed as "The Northeast Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of the Southeast Quarter." Clerk's Paper's (Oct. 23, 2014) (CP) at 73. What we will refer to as "lot 112" was described in the deed as "The East Half of the Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of the Southeast Quarter." Id.

3 No. 32878-3-III Lutz v. Buffington

(Tamarack Road) was separated from lot 110 by the northern point of the triangular-

shaped lot 82, PPI also conveyed a nonexclusive perpetual access easement "beginning

along the Northerly boundary of ... Lot 82 and extending Southerly for 60 feet,

providing access ... from that private road in Ponderosa Park named 'Tamarack.'" Id.

The Buffingtons did not join in the conveyance of the access easement.

A map appended to the grant of easement roughly depicts the .08 acre piece of lot

82 that was subject to the easement with hash marks:

CP at 69 (partial).

The Lutzes' newly-acquired 10-acre lot 110 is located immediately to the east of

lot 82. The grant of easement provided that in consideration for granting of the

easements, the Lutzes "shall pay to the Ponderosa Park Owners' Association ... a yearly

assessment ... which assessment is not to exceed the amount charged as a road

4 No. 32878-3-III Lutz v. Buffington

assessment to each lot owner in Ponderosa Park subdivision." CP at 68. The Lutzes paid

the yearly assessment for the next 13 years until, in 2009, the homeowners' association

refused to accept the payment.

Shortly after purchasing the additional two lots and acquiring the easement, the

Lutzes used the roads in Ponderosa Park and the easement to construct a gravel access

road that became Lutz Parkway. Consistent with the easement, Lutz Parkway crosses the

northern tip of lot 82 at a maximum width of 60 feet in order to connect Tamarack Road

to lot 110. The Lutzes used the roadway over the years to develop lots 110 and 113,

including to install electrical power, other utilities, water wells and septic systems.

Manufactured homes were placed on lots 110 and 113 and tenants have used Lutz

Parkway for ingress and egress.

In 2006, Ms. Buffington filed a quiet title action to prevent the Lutzes and their

tenants from using the corner of her lot for access. After identifying herself, the Lutzes,

and their ownership of relevant land, her complaint alleged only the following:

3. The defendants claim a right to an easement over plaintiffs property by virtue of an express grant of easement. This grant was not made a [sic] plaintiff or anyone in privity with plaintiff and was made by a person without authority to grant the easement. 4. An order should be entered quieting title in plaintiffs property free from any claims of defendants. WHEREFORE, plaintiff prays for an order quieting title in the aforementioned real property in her free of all claims made by defendants.

5 No. 32878-3-III Lutz v. Buffington

CP at 40-41. 2

In an answer and counterclaim, the Lutzes prayed that Ms. Buffington be denied

her request for relief and that the court enter a judgment quieting title to the 1996

easement in them, free and clear of any claim of Ms. Buffington. They alleged that

"[ o]ne or all" of their parcels was or were "the dominant tenements benefited by" the

1996 easement. 3 CP at 43.

Following a bench trial, the court invalidated the access easement over lot 82,

concluding that PPI lacked authority to grant an easement over the lot after having sold it

under contract to the Buffingtons. The court concluded that the Lutzes were on notice of

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Tom G. Lutz and Karen Lutz v. Lisa A. Buffington and John Doe Buffington, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tom-g-lutz-and-karen-lutz-v-lisa-a-buffington-and-john-doe-buffington-washctapp-2016.