Louise J. Galiher, Trustee of the Louise J. Galiher Trust v. Dennis and Vicki Johnson ( 2017 )


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  •                IN THE SUPREME COURT, STATE OF WYOMING
    
    2017 WY 31
    OCTOBER TERM, A.D. 2016
    March 14, 2017
    LOUISE J. GALIHER, Trustee of the
    Louise J. Galiher Trust,
    Appellant
    (Plaintiff),
    S-16-0188
    v.
    DENNIS and VICKI JOHNSON,
    Appellees
    (Defendants).
    Appeal from the District Court of Teton County
    The Honorable Marvin L. Tyler, Judge
    Representing Appellant:
    Anna Reeves Olson, Park Street Law Office, Casper, Wyoming
    Representing Appellee:
    Matthew E. Turner, Mullikin, Larson & Swift LLC, Jackson, Wyoming
    Before BURKE, C.J., and HILL, DAVIS, FOX, and KAUTZ, JJ.
    NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in Pacific Reporter Third.
    Readers are requested to notify the Clerk of the Supreme Court, Supreme Court Building,
    Cheyenne, Wyoming 82002, of any typographical or other formal errors so that correction may be
    made before final publication in the permanent volume.
    DAVIS, Justice.
    [¶1] Louise Galiher appeals from a judgment ruling that title to a portion of her
    property1 had vested in her neighbor Dennis Johnson and his wife by adverse possession.
    We reverse and remand.
    ISSUES
    [¶2] Galiher asserts that the district court erred as a matter of law in three respects: (1)
    in concluding that the Johnsons had established a prima facie case of adverse possession,
    despite their inability to show that their use of the disputed property was hostile and
    under a claim of right; (2) in calculating when the statute of limitations began to run to
    bar claims against the Johnsons’ use of the property; and (3) in refusing to consider
    evidence that previous owners of Galiher’s property were simply accommodating a
    neighbor when they allowed the Johnsons to park on the disputed property.
    [¶3] However, at the core of each of those assertions, as presented in both Galiher’s
    opening and reply briefs, is a single question of law that in our view is determinative of
    this case:
    Did the district court err when it determined it could not
    consider Johnson’s out-of-court statements as evidence that
    his use of the disputed property had always been permissive?
    FACTS
    [¶4] The parties’ dispute relates to Lot 21 and Lot 23 of the High Country subdivision
    in Teton County near the town of Jackson, Wyoming. In 1977, Johnson’s wife Vicki and
    her former husband, Rick Hollingsworth, purchased a home situated on Lot 21. The
    couple divorced in 1984. Johnson met his wife in 1985 and married her the following
    year. In 1990, Hollingsworth conveyed his interest in the property to the Johnsons, who
    have continued to live there.
    [¶5] Lot 23 is directly south of Lot 21. Between 1978 and Galiher’s purchase in early
    March of 2013, the ownership of Lot 23 had changed eight times. The following map
    shows the two lots and the disputed portion of Lot 23.
    1
    Galiher obtained the property in her capacity as trustee of the Louise J. Galiher Trust and has litigated
    this property dispute in that capacity. The disputed area covers 1,208 square feet.
    1
    1,07 23
    9Q0 poury. UADDOX DR/Vr
    N 87'39'00" E
    150.0D,
    LOT 21
    IV EIEOCIC
    RETAIN:WO WALLS:
    DISPLITI;D.AREA:
    tr0913 FRwr
    'Hotqz        r- L4              Ao/1.20.8 so. FT:
    L5 ¿
    MADDOX
    7         La       Dflrvs
    00" W' 125.00'
    N 0271.
    5'
    -
    The following photo, which was not an actual exhibit presented at trial but rather an
    enlarged photo of a portion of Appellant’s Exhibit D-38, is an aerial view of the lots and
    disputed property. The markings on the photo were placed there by Appellant’s counsel.
    2
    [¶6] On April 15, 2013, Galiher received the report of a survey she had commissioned
    and set out to examine the boundaries of Lot 23. In the extreme northwestern corner of
    her property she discovered what appeared to be a scattering of junk covered in part by
    weeds that were three feet high, as well as evidence of vehicles parking on her property.
    She then phoned the county planning and development office about the process she
    would have to pursue to have the junk removed. That inquiry led Jennifer Anderson, the
    planning office’s code compliance officer, to send a letter to Johnson about the issue on
    April 22, 2013. Sometime after discussing the matter with Anderson, and telling her that
    prior owners had given him permission to use that corner of Lot 23, Johnson telephoned
    Galiher.
    [¶7] Johnson also informed Galiher that previous owners of Lot 23 had given his
    family permission to use that corner of her property for parking for a number of years,
    and he asked for her permission to continue that use. He promised he would maintain it
    in a manner that was acceptable to her. Galiher denied him permission, but granted his
    request for forty-eight hours to remove his things. When Johnson then asked if guests
    could use it for overflow parking on those limited occasions when he was hosting a party,
    she told him she would have to think about it.
    [¶8] A week or more later,2 Johnson called Galiher a second time and told her he was
    not going to remove his things from her property, and that he would continue to use it as
    he had been because he felt he had a right to be there. He did not tell her what prompted
    him to change his mind.
    [¶9] On May 11, 2013, Galiher saw that Johnson was still occupying her property,
    asked her friend Mary Martin to drive out to serve as a witness, and requested that a
    deputy sheriff be sent to the scene. While Galiher spoke to the deputy, Martin recognized
    Johnson as an old acquaintance from days when they both worked as department heads
    for Teton County. Consequently, she went to speak with him.
    [¶10] When Martin asked what he was doing, Johnson replied that he was getting his
    “stuff cleaned off this property” because his neighbor was upset. He also informed
    Martin that previous owners of the property had given him permission to use this small
    corner of it, and that he was really upset the new owner was not being similarly
    neighborly.
    [¶11] On May 24, 2013, Galiher sued to quiet title to Lot 23, alleging that the Johnsons’
    use of the disputed portion of her property had been permissive. The Johnsons filed an
    answer and counterclaim seeking to quiet title to the disputed parcel based upon adverse
    2
    The record is unclear in this regard. Johnson testified that the second call took place about a week after
    the first, but he also testified that the second followed a visit from a sheriff’s deputy. The record reveals
    only one such visit, and it occurred on May 11, 2013. Johnson conceded that he may have told a visiting
    deputy that he had been given permission to use the disputed property by previous owners of Lot 23.
    3
    possession on July 16. On June 20, 2014, they filed a motion for a summary judgment,
    which the district court denied on December 1, 2014. The court concluded that contested
    issues of material fact existed with respect to whether Johnsons’ use of the disputed
    property was sufficiently open, notorious, exclusive, and hostile, and whether use of the
    property was permissive. A bench trial was thereafter held on July 28, 2015.
    [¶12] At the trial, Hollingsworth testified that when he and his then wife purchased the
    house on Lot 21, there were two retaining walls, the southern ends of which later were
    found to intrude slightly onto Lot 23. After two to three years of living there, he
    converted the garage on the southern end of the house into a family room and built a new
    garage and driveway on the northern end of the home. He believed that from that time
    until his divorce his family parked exclusively in the new garage and driveway.
    However, on occasions when they hosted numerous guests, some would park in the
    disputed area when the old driveway was full.
    [¶13] Johnson testified that use of the disputed area increased somewhat after he married
    Hollingsworth’s ex-wife. Each of them had a private vehicle and an employer-provided
    work vehicle. During winters, the slope of the northern driveway sometimes made it
    impractical to park there, so vehicles that could not be stored in the garage were parked in
    the disputed area. Their parking needs increased after 1988 due first to their children
    reaching driving age, and later to the Johnsons’ decision to take in renters after the
    children moved out, as well as the periodic return of some of the children and their
    families to live in the home.
    [¶14] Johnson also testified that he placed other items on the disputed property to the
    east of the area used for parking. He kept construction materials there during remodeling
    work from 2000 to 2003, and he parked a pop-up camper there for five years. During the
    remodeling, he moved a small portable shed that he previously kept close to his house
    onto the disputed area, and he placed a short portable wooden boardwalk there. Neither
    of those items was secured to the ground. The following photograph shows the parking
    area and the shed.
    4
    [¶15] Until Galiher had her property surveyed and her property lines marked, Johnson
    did not know where Lot 21 ended and Lot 23 began, and he thought that her predecessors
    in interest permitted his use of the disputed area out of a sense of reasonable neighborly
    accommodation.3 He recognized all along that his various neighbors owned much of the
    land he was using for parking, and until his first conversation with Galiher, he had taken
    no steps to assert his own ownership over any part of Lot 23.
    [¶16] On March 17, 2016, the district court issued its decision, in which it concluded the
    Johnsons had proven their adverse possession claim. The court identified the central
    question to be whether, in light of Johnson’s satisfaction of his burden of producing
    evidence indicative of adverse possession, Galiher sufficiently rebutted that proof with
    evidence that Johnson’s use of the disputed property was permissive or otherwise not
    hostile to Galiher’s ownership.4
    [¶17] Paragraph 9 in the “Findings and Conclusions” portion of the district court’s
    decision recites:
    Defendants’ subjective intent or any other property owner’s
    subjective intent is irrelevant in proving or disproving adverse
    possession. As such, the Court will only rely on the
    admissible objective evidence and testimony presented at trial
    in considering Defendants’ intent to establish adverse
    possession.
    The court found that between 1977 and 1984, and between 1986 and 2013, neither the
    Hollingsworths nor the Johnsons asked for or received permission from any owner of Lot
    23 to use the disputed property. Finding that Galiher had not shown by admissible
    evidence that such use was permissive or a neighborly accommodation, the court
    determined the Johnsons had adversely possessed the property since 1986 and therefore
    acquired title to it in 1996.
    [¶18] The district court’s judgment to that effect issued on May 3, 2016, and Galiher
    timely perfected her appeal from that judgment.
    3
    One of those predecessors, Hazen Hatfield, confirmed that this was in fact his attitude towards
    Johnson’s use of the disputed area. He owned Lot 23 from 2001 to 2012, and believed all along that he
    was simply being a good neighbor by allowing the Johnsons the convenience of parking in that area.
    4
    Given the nature of this question and the fact, discussed below, that we defer to the trial court’s
    resolution of factual issues, we will not address the court’s evaluation of Johnson’s evidence in any great
    detail. Instead, we will focus on matters that affected its consideration of Galiher’s response.
    5
    DISCUSSION
    [¶19] When this Court reviews a decision of the district court following a bench trial, we
    do not limit ourselves to the extent we would in reviewing a jury verdict. We may
    examine all the properly admissible evidence in the record, giving due regard to the
    district court’s opportunity to assess matters of credibility. We do not reweigh disputed
    evidence or set aside findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous; that is, unless this
    Court’s examination of all the evidence leaves us with the definite and firm conviction
    that a mistake has been made. The district court’s application of the law is reviewed de
    novo. Graybill v. Lampman, 
    2014 WY 100
    , ¶ 25, 
    332 P.3d 511
    , 519 (Wyo. 2014);
    Shores v. Lindsey, 
    591 P.2d 895
    , 899-900 (Wyo. 1979).
    [¶20] One claiming that he has adversely possessed the land of another for the ten-year
    period set out in Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 1-3-103 (LexisNexis 2015) must show that his use of
    the land was actual, open, notorious, exclusive, and continuous, and that it was hostile
    and pursuant to a claim of right or color of title. Hillard v. Marshall, 
    888 P.2d 1255
    ,
    1258 (Wyo. 1995); Turner v. Floyd C. Reno & Sons, Inc., 
    769 P.2d 364
    , 368 (Wyo.
    1989). A hostile possession or use is one that amounts to an assertion of ownership
    adverse to that of the record owner. It must be so incompatible with or so in defiance of
    the rights of the true owner that an ordinarily prudent owner would be on clear notice that
    his ownership is in jeopardy, that the claimant intends to possess the property as his own,
    and that the owner should take some action to protect his title. Graybill, ¶ 
    36, 332 P.3d at 522
    .
    [¶21] Because the requirement of notice is fundamental to a claim of adverse possession,
    we have held that a claimant cannot establish a prima facie case by relying solely on his
    testimony as to his subjective hostile intent. He must introduce evidence that such intent
    was objectively made manifest by his observable words or actions. Braunstein v.
    Robinson Family Ltd. Partnership, LLP, 
    2010 WY 26
    , ¶ 19, 
    226 P.3d 826
    , 835 (Wyo.
    2010); 
    Turner, 769 P.2d at 368
    . Once the adverse claimant establishes a prima facie
    case, the burden shifts to the owner to present evidence rebutting that claim. 
    Hillard, 888 P.2d at 1259
    .
    [¶22] One means of accomplishing that end is to introduce proof that the claimant’s use
    or possession of the disputed land was permissive. No manner, duration, or scope of use
    can be adverse if the owner permitted it. Graybill, ¶ 
    27, 332 P.3d at 519-20
    ; 
    Hillard, 888 P.2d at 1259
    . This Court opined nearly forty years ago that when a landowner allows a
    neighbor to use his land, that use should be deemed permissive. As we noted then, the
    law will not permit “that common neighborliness may only be indulged under penalty of
    encumbering one’s property.” Gray v. Fitzhugh, 
    576 P.2d 88
    , 90-91 (Wyo. 1978). One
    treatise has expressed that same view, noting that “property owners characteristically
    allow slight intrusions onto their land by their neighbors in order to promote good will
    and avoid bad feelings and confrontations,” and that such a “neighbor generally does not
    6
    intend to adversely possess . . . and thereby acquire title to that land.” James C. Smith,
    Neighboring Property Owner § 6:1 (November 2016 update).
    [¶23] For the most part, we take no issue with the district court’s application of these
    principles. However, one ruling is fatally flawed. As noted above, the court concluded
    that none of Johnson’s statements of his subjective intent were relevant to either prove or
    disprove adverse possession, and that consequently the court could not consider those
    statements in deciding the issues before it. Our decisions do not support that ruling.
    [¶24] We have no doubt that the district court derived its view from our oft- repeated
    position that one seeking to establish a prima facie case of adverse possession cannot rely
    solely on his testimony about his subjective intent. Instead, he must introduce evidence
    that such intent manifested itself in objectively observable actions or words sufficient to
    notify the record title holder of that intent. That is a far cry, however, from saying that
    none of the claimant’s statements of subjective intent are relevant.
    [¶25] Statements like Mr. Johnson made out of court, particularly if made to the owner
    of the disputed property or members of the community, can be evidence every bit as
    objective and relevant as the nonverbal act of erecting a banner of conquest on the
    neighbor’s land. Moreover, we have frequently held that a claimant’s out-of-court
    statements that his possession or use of another’s property was permissive may be
    considered as evidence that he lacked the requisite hostile and adverse intent.
    [¶26] We noted long ago that although a claimant’s intent and the character of his
    possession of another’s land may often be ascertained better by his physical actions in
    relation to that land, his verbal actions—his words—in relation to the land should also be
    considered in evaluating the nature of the possession involved. 
    Shores, 591 P.2d at 901
    .
    Thus, we found it significant to those issues that, during a conversation with the owner
    about a piece of property, the claimant left the impression that he recognized the owner’s
    rights in the land. Rutar Farms & Livestock, Inc. v. Fuss, 
    651 P.2d 1129
    , 1135 (Wyo.
    1982). See also 4 Tiffany Real Property § 1142 (3d ed. September 2016 update) (express
    or inferable recognition of title in the true owner will defeat assertion that property of
    another was possessed with adverse and hostile intent); § 1147 (claimant not in adverse
    possession if he acknowledges to owner or third person that title resides with the owner,
    or he disclaims title in himself to such persons).
    [¶27] We have also observed that a claimant’s conduct after he allegedly acquired
    adverse title to land is relevant to establish his intent during the period of his alleged
    adverse possession. Miller v. Stovall, 
    717 P.2d 798
    , 805-06 (Wyo. 1986), overruled on
    other grounds by Ferguson Ranch, Inc. v. Murray, 
    811 P.2d 287
    (Wyo. 1991).
    Consequently, we held that his statements indicating that his use of disputed property was
    consensual should be understood to reach back to the time when the use commenced. 
    Id. This is
    so because the doctrine of adverse possession was never intended to permit the
    7
    acquisition of title to another’s land when use has been permissive. 
    Turner, 769 P.2d at 369
    .
    [¶28] Before this case began, and apparently before Johnson’s second telephone call to
    Galiher, he told four people that Galiher’s predecessors in interest to the disputed
    property had given his family permission to use it as they had been. Even at trial, after
    the battle lines were clearly drawn, Mr. Johnson testified that he never intended to take
    property away from Appellant’s predecessors in interest.
    [¶29] Our case law indicates that those statements were highly pertinent to the questions
    of whether Johnson’s use of the disputed property was permissive all along, and whether
    he ever used or possessed that property with the requisite adverse and hostile intent. The
    use a party makes of disputed property may, as in this case, be as consistent with
    permissive use as with hostile use under a claim of right. Thus the test can look to
    evidence that is both subjective (what was the adverse claimant’s intent – for example,
    was there permission to use the land), and objective (was the use sufficient to hoist a flag
    of hostile intent). Although Mr. Johnson’s intent perhaps arguably became hostile in
    2012, not enough time elapsed after that before Ms. Galiher filed suit to satisfy the
    required statutory period of ten years. Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 1-3-103.
    [¶30] The district court deemed the statements Mr. Johnson made irrelevant and refused
    to consider them. We find it probable that this error of law effectively predetermined the
    case against Galiher. We choose to reverse and remand, rather than to reverse outright,
    so that the district court may consider the statements together with the other testimony
    and evidence in the record. For one thing, the history of the two retaining walls, which
    were permanent modifications to the disputed parcel, is shrouded in mystery. Even if the
    court determines on remand that the use Mr. Johnson made of the property was not
    adverse, those walls may fall into a different category.
    CONCLUSION
    [¶31] Because we have found prejudicial error as to a matter of law, we reverse the
    judgment of the district court and remand for reconsideration in light of this opinion.
    8