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You can search the entire site. or go to the recent opinions, or the chronological or subject indices. Janice L. Park v. Bradley Brown and Karen Brown (6/7/2024) sp-7703

Janice L. Park v. Bradley Brown and Karen Brown (6/7/2024) sp-7703, 549 P3d 934

         Notice:  This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER.   

         Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts,  

         303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email  

         corrections@akcourts.gov.  

  

  

                    THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA  



  

JANICE L. PARK,                                             )          

                                                            )         Supreme Court No. S- 18592  

                            Appellant,                      )          

                                                            )         Superior Court No.  3AN-20-04710 CI  

         v.                                                 )          

                                                            )         O P I N I O N  

KAREN DECKER BROWN and                                      )          

BRADLEY BROWN,                                              )        No. 7703 - June 7, 2024  

                                                            )  

                            Appellees.                      )  

                                                            ) 



                   Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third  

                   Judicial District, Anchorage, Andrew Guidi, Judge.  

  

                   Appearances:  Janice L. Park, pro se, Anchorage, Appellant.   

                   Paul J. Nangle, Paul J. Nangle & Associates, Anchorage, for  

                   Appellees.  

  

                   Before:    Maassen,  Chief  Justice,  and  Carney,  Borghesan,  

                   Henderson, and Pate, Justices.  

                     

                   PATE, Justice.  

  



         INTRODUCTION  



                   A longstanding fence imperfectly divides two lots in south Anchorage.   



After a surveyor discovered the fence veered slightly from the platted property line into  



an adjacent lot, the owners of the adjacent lot sued their neighbor for trespass and to  



quiet title.  The neighbor claimed adverse possession.  The superior court ruled in favor  



  



  


----------------------- Page 2-----------------------

  



of the adjacent lot owners, concluding the neighbor failed to established the required  



elements of adverse possession.  



                The neighbor now appeals, arguing that the superior court misapplied the  



law and displayed bias against her.  We agree that it was error to reject the claim  of  



adverse possession.  But we conclude there is insufficient evidence to support a claim  



of judicial bias.  We reverse the judgment and remand for entry of judgment in favor of  



the neighbor.  



        FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS  



        A.      Facts  



                Bradley Brown and Karen Decker Brown have owned a vacant lot in south  



Anchorage since 1991.  Janice Park owns and resides on an adjacent lot.  The lots share  



a common, north-south boundary, with the Browns' lot to the east and Park's lot to the  



west.  



                A chain-link fence runs from the southern meeting point of the lots to a  



point roughly halfway between the northern and southern borders.  The fence does not  



follow the platted property line but instead runs slightly north-northeast, effectively  



annexing a thin, triangular portion of the Browns' lot to Park's backyard.  We refer to  



this triangular portion as the "fenced area" and the  area between the end of the fence  



and  the  northern  boundary  of  the  lot,  following  the  bearing  of  the  fence,  as  the  



"extrapolated area."  The following diagram from the superior court's opinion depicts  



the situation of the properties:  



                                                   -2-                                               7703  


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                   Although  it  is  not  known  who  installed  the  fence,  it  has  existed  in  its  



current location since at least 1991.  Park and her then-husband, Jalal Husseini, acquired  



title  in  Husseini's  name  in  2002  and  made  their  home  on  Lot  2.    They  planted  a  



chokecherry tree in the extrapolated area around 2004.  Park was added to the title in  



2005.  

                   Husseini filed for divorce in 2007.1  The superior court ordered the sale of  



the home  and Lot 2, granted Husseini's motion for a clerk's deed transferring Park's  



                                                                                                                        2 

half interest to Husseini, and issued a writ of assistance ejecting Park from possession.    



On appeal, we concluded the trial court had made insufficient findings to justify the  



order to sell the home and lot, and we consequently vacated both the trial court's order  



                                                                                                                           

         1         See Husseini v. Husseini, 230 P.3d 682, 684 (Alaska 2010).  



         2         Id. at 684-85.  



                                                           -3-                                                       7703  


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requiring sale and the clerk's deed.3  On remand, the superior court awarded the home  



and lot to Park, and a clerk's deed affirming her title was issued in November 2010.  



                 In 2016 the Browns commissioned a  survey that revealed that the fence  



intruded into their lot.  After receiving notice of the encroachment, Park responded in  



2017 with a letter claiming she had already acquired title by adverse possession.  



        B.       Proceedings  



                 The  Browns  sued  Park  to  quiet  title  and  for  trespass  in  2020.    Park  



responded by asserting the affirmative defense of adverse possession.  Park moved for  



summary judgment, which the court  denied.  After a one-day bench trial the superior  



court concluded that Park had failed to establish the elements of adverse possession,  



entered final judgment for the Browns, and awarded them attorney's fees and costs.  



                 Park appeals.  



        STANDARD OF REVIEW  



                 We review legal questions and the application of law to facts de novo,  



adopting  the  rule  of  law  that  is  most  persuasive  in  light  of  precedent,  reason,  and  

policy.4  We review factual findings for clear error and reverse "only when, 'after a  



review of the entire record, we are left with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake  



                      5 

has been made.' "   



        DISCUSSION  



                 To  acquire  title  to  land  by  adverse  possession,  a  claimant  must  prove  



continuous  possession  of  the  land  for  a  period  defined  by  statute.    The  claimant's  



possession must be  open and notorious as well as exclusive and hostile to the record  



                                                                                                             

        3       Id. at 688-89.  



        4        Collins v. Hall, 453 P.3d 178, 185-86 (Alaska 2019); HP Ltd. P'ship v.  

Kenai River Airpark, LLC, 270 P.3d 719, 726 (Alaska 2012).  

        5       Lee v. Konrad, 337 P.3d 510, 517 (Alaska 2014) (quoting Peterson v. Ek,  

93 P.3d 458, 463 (Alaska 2004)).  



                                                    -4-                                                7703  


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owner.6    An  owner  claiming  adverse  possession  to  a  portion  of  an  adjacent  parcel  



because  of  a  "good  faith  but  mistaken  belief  that  the  real  property  lies  within  the  



boundaries"  of the owner's own parcel  must demonstrate that these elements existed  

for  a  continuous  period  of  ten  years.7    This  ten-year  period  may  be  satisfied  by  



successive adverse possessors, who may tack their periods of possession together if  

privity exists between them.8  To acquire title, the adverse claimant must prove each of  



                                                             9 

the elements by clear and convincing evidence.   



                 The  superior  court  found  that  the  fenced  and  extrapolated  areas  were  



adjacent to Park's property and therefore properly considered within the scope of the  



statute governing adverse possession.  The court  concluded that Park's possession of  



the fenced area was open, notorious, exclusive, and hostile, but that she did not exercise  



continuous possession of that area for the ten-year statutory period.  It also concluded  



that  her  possession  of  the  extrapolated  area  was  not  open,  notorious,  exclusive,  or  



hostile.  



                 We hold that Park established continuous and uninterrupted possession of  



both the fenced area and the extrapolated area for the ten-year statutory period between  



2005 and 2015.  While she did not herself maintain title or possession throughout that  



period,  she  satisfied  the  continuous-possession  requirement  under  the  doctrine  of  



tacking.  We also hold that Park presented clear and convincing evidence sufficient to  



satisfy the other elements of adverse possession for the extrapolated area.  



                                                                                                                 

         6       Hurd v. Henley, 478 P.3d 208, 214 (Alaska 2020).  



         7       AS 09.45.052(a).  



         8       See Hubbard v. Curtiss, 684 P.2d 842, 849 (Alaska 1984).  



         9       Hurd , 478 P.3d at 214.  



                                                      -5-                                                  7703  


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         A.      Park's Possession, Tacked With That Of Her Ex-Husband, Was Not  

                 Interrupted.  



                 The Browns argue that Park's possession was not continuous because it  



was interrupted between 2008 and 2010.  In 2008 the superior court handling Park's  



divorce issued a clerk's deed conveying Park's interest in her property to Husseini, as  



                                                                                                            10 

well as a writ of assistance that removed Park from the property for several months.                             



The  Browns argue that this interruption of Park's title and possession prevented her  



from establishing continuous possession for the ten-year statutory period required by  

statute.11  We disagree.  



                 The doctrine of tacking allows a property owner to claim title by adverse  



                                                                                                            12 

possession by tacking her period of possession to that of her predecessors in interest.                          



Adverse possessors in privity with each other may rely on this doctrine to meet the  



statutory duration requirements set out in AS 09.45.052, even when no single possessor  

has  occupied  the  property  for  the  full  statutory  period.13    So  long  as  successive  



occupants  hold  the  property  continuously  and  adversely  to  the  true  title  holder,  the  



current occupant may tack her period of occupancy to that of prior possessors to meet  



the statutory period.  



                 Under  this  doctrine,  Park  may  tack  her  possession  to  that  of  her  ex- 



husband during the divorce proceeding to meet the ten-year statutory period between  

July 2005, when she was first added to the title, and July 2015.14  The Browns point out  



                                                                                                                

         10      Husseini v. Husseini, 230 P.3d 682, 684-85 (Alaska 2010).  



         11      AS 09.45.052(a).  



         12      See Ringstad v. Grannis, 171 F.2d 170, 173-74 (9th Cir. 1948).  



         13      See Penn v. Ivey, 615 P.2d 1, 4-5 (Alaska 1980).  



         14      Because  we  conclude  Park  established  all  of  the  elements  of  adverse  

possession for the ten-year statutory period between July 22, 2005 and July 22, 2015,  

we  do not address whether she may tack her most recent period of possession to any  

  



                                                     -6-                                                  7703  


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that Park's interest was transferred to her ex-husband in October 2008, and Park did not  



reestablish  title  until  November  2010.    But  that  interruption  does  not  break  the  



continuity of Park's adverse possession claim:  At all times during the relevant period,  



either Park or Husseini held possession and title adverse to the Browns, with no break  

in the adverse possession as against the Browns.15  At no point did the Browns enter the  



disputed property or otherwise attempt to assert their title; the "dispossession of the true  

owner" continued uninterrupted.16  Park testified that both she and Husseini understood  



their property to encompass the areas at issue in this case,17  and the clerk's deed is  



                                                                                                               



periods prior to 2005, including the 2002-2005 period when Park and Husseini occupied  

the property.  We likewise do not address whether Park's period of good-faith adverse  

possession ended in 2016, when she learned of the results of the Browns' survey, or  

2020, when this lawsuit was filed.  

         15      See Ringstad, 171 F.2d at 174 (requiring continuous possession "so that  

the  possession  of  the  true  owner  shall  not  constructively  intervene");  Henry  W.  

Ballantine, Title by Adverse Possession, 32 HARV. L. REV. 135, 158 (1918) (explaining  

tacking applies where "[t]he same flag has been kept flying for the whole period," with  

title "consistently asserted and exercised as against the true owner"); Gawf v. Gawf, 240  

P.2d 1095, 1099 (Okla. 1952) (concluding divorce decree did not interrupt possession);  

accord, e.g.,  Wilkinson v. White, No.  1843, 2017 WL 563305, at *6 (Md. Spec. App.  

Feb.  13,  2017)  (tacking  together  periods  of  possession  by  ex-spouses  where  one  

conveyed       interest    in   property      to   other     after   divorce);     Farid     v.   DiLieto,   

No.  NNHCV135034680, 2014 WL 5472182, at *7-8  & n.9  (Conn. Super.  Sept. 30,  

2014) (same).  

         16      See Ill. Steel Co. v. Budzisz, 81 N.W. 1027, 1033 (Wis. 1900) (describing  

continued dispossession of record owner as "the only essential" element of continuity).  

         17      The Browns point out that Husseini did not testify at trial.  But Husseini  

died  in  2018  and  was  therefore  unavailable.    In  an  affidavit,  Park  explained  that  

Husseini "routinely parked vehicles" in the extrapolated area, joined Park in planting a  

tree in the extrapolated area, and never "considered any possibility that the fence was  

not the true boundary."  She also testified that the couple's dogs were kept within the  

fence, including in the fenced area.  The Browns put forward no reason to think Husseini  

believed a thin slice of his fenced yard actually belonged to his neighbors.  



                                                     -7-                                                 7703  


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sufficient to establish privity.18  That is all that is required for the doctrine of tacking to  



                                                       19 

apply under the circumstances of this case.                



                 The superior court acknowledged that our case law recognizes the doctrine  



of tacking, but concluded that the doctrine did not apply in cases where the adverse  



claimant acts on the basis of a good-faith mistake that the disputed land lies within the  



boundaries of the claimant's own property.  Alaska Statute 09.45.052(a) recognizes two  



kinds of adverse possession claimants:  those who acted "under color and claim of title"  



and those who acted because of a good-faith mistake about a boundary line.  



                 The  superior  court  interpreted our decision in Alaska  National  Bank v.  

Linck20 to support the conclusion that tacking applies only to cases involving a claim  



under color of title.  But Linck does not suggest this conclusion.21  We have recognized  



that the doctrine of tacking is generally applicable to all adverse possession claims, not  

only to claims made under color of title.22  While the superior court observed that the  



statute "makes no allowances for persons who do not have legal title," Park established  



that, during the period from October 2008 to November 2010, legal title was held by  



her  predecessor  in  interest  who  shared  her  good-faith  belief  that  the  property  



                                                                                                                

         18      See Ringstad, 171 F.2d at 174 (requiring only "a continuous possession  

by mutual consent" among adverse possessors); Ofuasia v. Smurr, 392 P.3d 1148, 1155  

(Wash. App. 2017) (concluding privity exists where there is "a reasonable connection  

between the successive occupants that will raise their claim of right above the status of  

wrongdoer or trespasser").  

         19      Because  we  conclude  that  the  divorce  litigation  did  not  interrupt  the  

continuity of Park's adverse possession claim, we do not address whether the clerk's  

deed conveying the property to her husband was merely void or, as Park argues, void  

ab initio.  

         20      559 P.2d 1049 (Alaska 1977).  



         21      See id. at 1052 n.7, 1053 n.11.  



         22      See, e.g., Penn v. Ivey, 615 P.2d 1, 4-5 (Alaska 1980); Hubbard v. Curtiss,  

684 P.2d 842, 849-50 (Alaska 1984).  



                                                     -8-                                                  7703  


----------------------- Page 9-----------------------

  



encompassed the area of the Browns' lot that she now claims.  While it may be unusual  



for title and possession to pass between adverse possessors by court order, as it did in  



this case, the result here was exactly what adverse possession requires:  the continuous  



dispossession  of  the  record  owner  for  the  ten-year  statutory  period  by  owners  of  



adjacent real property who were in privity with one another.  The doctrine of tacking  



thus permits Park to establish continuous and uninterrupted title and possession.  



        B.       The 2003 Amendments To AS 09.45.052 Did Not Abolish Or Alter  

                 The Doctrine Of Tacking.  



                 At   oral   argument,   the   Browns   appeared   to   suggest   that   the   2003  



amendments to AS 09.45.052 may have abolished or altered the doctrine of tacking in  



Alaska, but we reject that suggestion.  In 2003 the legislature modified the statute to  

limit the circumstances under which adverse possession is available.23   The superior  



court,  while  not  categorically  ruling  out  the  possibility  of  tacking,  noted  that  its  



conclusion that "any periods of time when the claimant lacks a unity of possession and  



ownership   of   the   adjacent   parcel   do   not   qualify   toward   meeting   the   ten-year  



requirement"       was     "consistent      with    the    legislative     intent    behind     the      2003  

amendments."24  But while the 2003 amendments did narrow the circumstances under  



which  adverse  possession  may  be  claimed,  we  cannot  agree  that  they  abolished  or  



altered the doctrine of tacking.  



                                                                                                               

        23       Ch.  147, SLA 2003; see generally Jennie Morawetz, Note, No Room for  

Squatters: Alaska's Adverse Possession Law, 28 ALASKA L. REV. 341 (2011).  

        24       Emphasis in original.  



                                                     -9-                                                 7703  


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                 "Interpretation of a statute begins with its text."25  "We give unambiguous  



statutory language its ordinary and common meaning,"26 seeking to "give effect to the  



legislature's intent, with due regard for the meaning the statutory language conveys to  

others."27  "Under our sliding scale approach to statutory interpretation, 'the plainer the  



statutory language is, the more convincing the evidence of contrary legislative purpose  



                                                                             28 

or intent must be' to guide our understanding of the statute."                   



                                                                                                                

        25       Blythe P. v. State, Dep 't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs.,  

524 P.3d 238, 246 (Alaska 2023) (quoting Pruitt v. Off. of Lieutenant Governor, 498  

P.3d 591, 600 (Alaska 2021)).  

        26       Roberge v. ASRC Constr. Holding Co., 503 P.3d 102, 104 (Alaska 2022)  

(quoting  Cora G. v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs., 461  

P.3d 1256, 1277 (Alaska 2020)).  

        27       Ray v. State, 513 P.3d 1026, 1033 (Alaska 2022) (quoting City of Valdez v.  

State, 372 P.3d 240, 254 (Alaska 2016)).  

        28       Roberge, 503 P.3d at 109 (quoting Adamson v. Mun. of Anchorage, 333  

P.3d 5, 11 (Alaska 2014)).  



                                                     -10-                                                 7703  


----------------------- Page 11-----------------------

  



                 Adverse possession in general29 and the doctrine of tacking in particular30  



both have deep roots in the common law, and statutes modifying the common law must  

be interpreted narrowly.31  We discern no clear intent in the text of AS 09.45.052(a) to  



abolish  or alter  the  common-law tacking doctrine.  The statute requires an "adverse  



                                                                                                         32 

claimant" to own "adjacent real property" for an "uninterrupted" period of 10 years.                          



                                                                                                             

        29       See Minutes, H. Jud. Comm. Hearing on S.B. 93, 23rd Leg., 1st Sess. at  

44  (May  18,  2003)  (comments  of  Sen.  Scott  Ogan)  (noting  that  change  to  adverse  

possession      statute    would      "change      hundreds      of    years    of    common        law"),  

https://www.akleg.gov/PDF/23/M/HJUD2003-05-181045.PDF;                                 3        WILLIAM  

BLACKSTONE, COMMENTARIES *191, *196; see also Limitation Act  1623, 21 Jac. 1, c.  

16, § 1 (Eng.), reprinted in  1 J.  CHITTY, A  COLLECTION OF  STATUTES OF PRACTICAL  

UTILITY  700-02  (London,  William  Benning  1829)  (imposing  twenty-year  statute  of  

limitations  for  certain  claims  for  recovery  of  real  property);  accord  THE  TWELVE  

TABLES VI.3 (c. 450 B.C.), translated and reprinted in ANCIENT ROMAN STATUTES  10  

(Allan  Chester  Johnson  et  al.  eds.  &  trans.,  1961)  (providing  two-year  period  for  

prescription of real property); THE CODE OF HAMMURABI, KING OF BABYLON § 30, at  

21  (Robert  Francis  Harper  trans.,  2d  ed.  1904)  (c.  1750  B.C.)  ("If  an  officer  or  a  

constable . . . neglect his field, his garden, and his house and leave them uncared for  

(and)  another  after  him  take  his  field,  his  garden,  and  his  house,  and  conduct  his  

business for three years; if the former return and desire . . . his field, his garden, and his  

house, they shall not give them to him; he, who has  taken (them) and conducted the  

business shall continue (to do so).").  

        30       See Fanning v. Willcox, 3 Day 258, 259 (Conn. 1808)  (recognizing that  

adverse possessors could tack continuous periods of possession under early Connecticut  

law);  Overfield v. Christie, 7 Serg. & Rawle 173, 173  (Pa. 1821)  (recognizing same  

under early Pennsylvania law); Sargent v. Ballard, 26 Mass. (9 Pick.) 251, 260 (1830)  

(recognizing same under early Massachusetts law).  But see Mazyck v. Wight, 4 S.C.L.  

(2  Brev.)  151, 152  (S.C.  Const.  App. 1807)  (disallowing  tacking  under  early  South  

Carolina law).  

        31       See  Univ.  of  Alaska v.  Shanti,  835  P.2d  1225, 1228  n.5  (Alaska  1992)  

(observing statutes "which establish rights that are in derogation of common law are to  

be  construed  in  a  manner  that  effects  the  least  change  possible  in  common  law");  

ANTONIN  SCALIA  &  BRYAN  A.  GARNER,  READING  LAW :  THE  INTERPRETATION  OF  

LEGAL TEXTS 318 (2012) ("[S]tatutes will not be interpreted as changing the common  

law unless they effect the change with clarity.").  

        32       AS 09.45.052(a).  



                                                   -11-                                                7703  


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The term "uninterrupted," a well-established element of adverse possession claims at  

common  law,33  does  not  suggest  tacking  is  impermissible.    "Uninterrupted"  has  



appeared in Alaska's color-of-title adverse possession statute for over a century.34  This  



                                                                                                          35 

word did not present any obstacle to our recognition of the doctrine of tacking in 1977.                       



The legislature's choice in 2003 to retain the same language we have construed to allow  



                                                                                                          36 

tacking  does  not  demonstrate  an  intent  to  abolish  or  alter  the  tacking  doctrine.                   



Nothing on the face of the statute otherwise suggests such an intent.  



                 The legislative history underlying the 2003 amendments likewise betrays  



no intent to abrogate the doctrine of tacking.  While the amendments "went further than  



any  other  state  has  gone  in  curtailing  the  application  of  adverse  possession,"  the  



legislature's intent appears to have primarily been to limit the legal rights of "bad faith  



squatters," and not otherwise to modify the contours of the doctrine as applied in cases  

like this one.37  One of the bill's sponsors stated that it would not "abolish all aspects  



                                                                                                              

        33       See Armstrong v. Morrill, 81 U.S (14 Wall.) 120, 145 (1871) (describing  

requirement that possession be "continuous and uninterrupted" as "well-settled law");  

Unger v. Mooney, 63 Cal. 586, 595 (1883) (identifying "continuous and uninterrupted"  

possession as element of adverse possession).  

        34       §  1042,   pt. IV,   Carter's   Annotated   Alaska   Code   (1900)   (requiring  

"uninterrupted" possession); § 1874 Compiled Laws Annotated (CLA) (1913) (same);  

§ 4313 CLA (1933) (same); § 58-7-6 Alaska Compiled Laws Annotated (1949) (same).  

        35       See Alaska Nat'l Bank v. Linck, 559 P.2d 1049, 1052 & n.7 (Alaska 1977);  

former AS 09.25.050 (1962).  

        36       See Buckhannon Bd. & Care Home, Inc. v. W. Va. Dep't of Health & Hum.  

Res., 532 U.S. 598, 615-16 (2001) (Scalia, J., concurring) (explaining that, when the  

legislature  "borrows  terms  of  art  in  which  are  accumulated  the  legal  tradition  and  

meaning of centuries of practice," the legislature is presumed to know and adopt "the  

cluster of ideas that were attached to each borrowed word in the body of learning from  

which it was  taken and the meaning its use will convey to the judicial mind  unless  

otherwise instructed" (quoting Morissette v. United States, 342 U.S. 246, 263 (1952))).  

        37       See Morawetz, supra note 23, at 341, 359-60, 369 (discussing legislative  

history of 2003 amendments).  



                                                    -12-                                                7703  


----------------------- Page 13-----------------------

  



of adverse possession," but rather "eliminate the possibility that a landowner will lose  

property to a squatter who has no claim to the property."38   The legislature sought to  



narrow   the   application   of   adverse   possession   to   circumstances   where   adverse  



possession served a "continuing social utility," such as "[c]leaning up the fence that got  

built two feet on the wrong side of the property line."39  "Tacking" was not mentioned  



at  any  point  in  the  debates  on  the  legislation.    The  chair  of  the  Senate  Judiciary  



Committee disclaimed the idea that the legislation would affect "a good faith mistake  

about someone's property line."40   Given the legislature's desire to preserve "simple  



boundary dispute" adverse possession claims41 and the lack of any indication that the  



legislature  sought  to  abrogate  our  past  decisions  recognizing  tacking,42  we  cannot  



conclude the legislature intended to alter the doctrine of tacking.  



                 In light of the presumption against interpreting statutes in derogation of  



the common law and the absence of clear statutory language or legislative history to the  



                                                                                                              

        38       Minutes, H. Jud. Comm. Hearing on S.B. 93, 23d Leg., 1st Sess.  at 41  

(May  18,   2003)   (comments   of   Sen.   Thomas   Wagoner,   sponsor   of   S.B.   93),  

https://www.akleg.gov/PDF/23/M/HJUD2003-05-181045.PDF.                                 The     legislation  

appears to have been motivated in part by the fact that some land owned by Alaska  

Native corporations was not protected from adverse possession and difficult to police  

for squatters.  See id. at 43-44 (comments of Rep. Albert Kookesh).  

        39       Id. at 45 (comments of Jonathan Tillinghast, lobbyist for Sealaska Corp.).  



        40       Minutes,  S.  Jud.  Comm.  Hearing  on  S.B.  93,  23d  Leg.,  1st  Sess.  at  8  

(May 6, 2003) (comments of Sen. Ralph Seekins, committee chair, and Sen. Wagoner),  

https://www.akleg.gov/PDF/23/M/SJUD2003-05-060806.PDF.  

        41       Minutes, S. Jud. Comm. Hearing on S.B. 93, 23d Leg., 1st Sess.  at 13  

(Apr. 30,      2003)     (comments        of    Tillinghast,     lobbyist     for    Sealaska      Corp.),  

https://www.akleg.gov/PDF/23/M/SJUD2003-04-301348.PDF.  

        42       See Shea v. State, Dep't of Admin., Div. of Ret. & Benefits, 267 P.3d 624,  

633 n.33 (Alaska 2011) ("We assume the legislature is aware of the common law when  

it passes legislation."); Joseph v. State, 293 P.3d 488, 492 (Alaska App. 2012) ("[T]he  

legislature  is  presumed  to  be  aware  of  pertinent  court  decisions  when  it  amends  a  

statute."); Cannon v. Univ. of Chi., 441 U.S. 677, 699 (1979) (same).  



                                                    -13-                                                7703  


----------------------- Page 14-----------------------

  



contrary, we conclude that the 2003 amendments to AS 09.45.052 did not abolish or  



alter the doctrine of tacking.  



         C.      Park Established Open, Notorious, Hostile, And Exclusive Possession  

                 Of The Extrapolated Area.  



                 The superior court concluded that Park failed to establish open, notorious,  



hostile  and  exclusive  possession  of  the  extrapolated  area,  noting  that  this  area  was  



unfenced, that Park had not "perform[ed] any significant maintenance or place[d] any  



permanent  or  semi-permanent  items or  structures  in  the area," and  that she had  not  



"posted or marked  the  property  as  her  own."    It  further  concluded  that  this  lack of  



fencing and signage meant she had not exercised exclusive control over the area.  



                 To  acquire  land  by  adverse  possession  under  AS 09.45.052(a),  the  



claimant must prove by clear and convincing evidence that possession was continuous,  

open and notorious, and exclusive and hostile to the record owner.43   The content of  



each of these requirements "depend[s] on the character of the land in question,"44 and  



the purpose of each is the same:  "to put the record owner on notice of the existence of  



                           45 

an adverse claimant."          



                 In finding that Park's use of the extrapolated area was not open, notorious  



hostile,  and  exclusive,  the  superior  court  relied  on  our  decision  in  Tenala,  Ltd. v.  

Fowler .46   In that case, we concluded that a claimant's use of land as an unimproved  



driveway and occasional storage area was insufficient to establish exclusive possession  



because that type of use did not put the record owners on notice that the claimants were  



                                                                                                               

         43      Hurd v. Henley, 478 P.3d 208, 214 (Alaska 2020).  



         44      Nome 2000 v. Fagerstrom, 799 P.2d 304, 309 (Alaska 1990) (emphasis  

omitted).  

         45      Peters v. Juneau-Douglas Girl Scout Council, 519 P.2d 826, 830 (Alaska  

1974).  

         46      921 P.2d 1114, 1119-20 (Alaska 1996).  



                                                    -14-                                                 7703  


----------------------- Page 15-----------------------

  



asserting a "possessory interest in the driveway strip."47   We concluded instead that  



                                                                  48 

these activities created an easement by prescription.                 



                 Unlike   the   claimants   in       Tenala,   Park   was   not   merely   using   the  



extrapolated area to access her real property or store her personal property.  Instead, she  



maintained and improved the land in common with the rest of her property, mowing the  



area, clearing brush, parking cars, and, most notably, planting a chokecherry tree in the  

area along the extrapolated property line.49  The tree, which Park and Husseini planted  



around 2004, now stands 20 feet high and supports a swing.   These activities are  as  



extensive as those at issue in our prior cases holding that land was acquired by adverse  

possession,50  and suffice to have put the Browns on notice as to the existence of an  



adverse claimant.  



                 The Browns raise the presumption of permissive use and argue Park has  



not rebutted this presumption.  But there is no evidence that Park ever sought or received  



the Browns' permission to use the extrapolated area, and Park has shown that she "at  



                                                                                                                

         47      Id. at 1119.  



         48      Id. at 1119-20.  



         49      The  superior  court  did  not  make  any  express  findings  regarding  the  

chokecherry tree.  To the extent that the findings that Park did not "place any permanent  

or semi-permanent items or structures in the [extrapolated] area" or "use[] the property  

in any way that was visibly inconsistent with the Brown's ownership" are inconsistent  

with  the  uncontradicted  evidence  that  Park  and  Husseini  planted  the  tree  in  the  

extrapolated area in 2004, those findings are clearly erroneous.  See  Gilboe v. Gilboe,  

789 P.2d 343, 345 (Alaska 1990).  

         50      Hurd v. Henley, 478 P.3d 208, 215 (Alaska 2020) (affirming recognition  

of successful adverse possession claim where claimant built shed and carport, parked  

vehicles, and put down gravel); Alaska Nat'l Bank v. Linck, 559 P.2d 1049, 1052-53  

(Alaska 1977) (affirming same where claimant cleared land, maintained barricades, and  

kept property clean).  



                                                     -15-                                                 7703  


----------------------- Page 16-----------------------

  



all times acted as if the land were [hers] and treated it as [hers]."51  While a landowner  



may welcome a neighbor mowing part of his lawn or clearing away untidy brush, and  



the occasional parked car may reflect a neighborly courtesy, we cannot say planting a  



tree that has grown to a height of 20 feet is a reasonable neighborly use of adjacent  



property.  We therefore conclude Park's use of the extrapolated area was inconsistent  



with permissive use of a neighbor's property.  



                 For similar reasons, Park's use of the area also satisfied the exclusivity  



and  hostility  requirements  for  adverse  possession.    The  superior  court  noted  the  



"absence  of  any  fencing,"  "lack  of  any  signage,"  and  non-payment  of  taxes  in  



concluding Park's possession  of the extrapolated area was not exclusive.  Although  



evidence that the adverse possessor installed fencing and signage and paid taxes would  



tend to support an adverse possession claim, such evidence is not required to establish  



exclusivity or hostility.  "Exclusivity requires only that the adverse possessor use the  

land  'as  an  average  owner  of  similar  property  would  use  it.' "52    Hostility  likewise  



requires only that the claimant "act[] toward the land as if he owned it."53  The record  



shows that Park landscaped and maintained the area as her own, in common with the  



rest of her property.  She planted a tree in the area, cleared away brush, and landscaped,  



mowed, and maintained the area continuously and exclusively from at least 2005 to  



2015.    During  this  period  the  Browns  never  entered  the  area  or  challenged  Park's  



possession of the area.   Considering the nature and character of the land at issue, we  



conclude that Park's use comports with the sort of use a reasonable owner would make  



                                                                                                               

        51       Peters v. Juneau-Douglas Girl Scout Council, 519 P.2d 826, 833 (Alaska  

1974).  

        52       Yuk v.  Robertson,  397  P.3d  261,  265  (Alaska  2017)  (quoting  Vezey v.  

Green, 35 P.3d 14, 22 (Alaska 2001)).  

        53       Hubbard v. Curtiss, 684 P.2d 842, 848 (Alaska 1984) (quoting Peters, 519  

P.2d at 832).  



                                                    -16-                                                 7703  


----------------------- Page 17-----------------------

  



of  a  front  yard  of  a  residential  lot  in  south  Anchorage.54    Park  did  not  need  to  do  



anything more with the extrapolated area, in light of its nature and location, to claim it  



as her own.  



                 Cases  from  other  jurisdictions  provide  support  for  our  conclusion  that  



Park's activities were sufficient to establish all the elements of adverse possession.  In  



Chaplin  v.  Sanders,  the  Washington  Supreme  Court  concluded  that  a  claimant  had  



established the elements of adverse possession where the claimant  "cleared, mowed,  



and  maintained"  the  land  at  issue  and  used  it  for  "guest  parking,  garbage  disposal,  

gardening  and  picnicking."55    Particularly  when,  as  here,  a  cleared  and  maintained  



property borders a vacant and overgrown lot, we agree with the Washington Supreme  



Court  that  the  "contrast  between  the  fully  developed  parcel . . .  and  the  overgrown,  

undeveloped parcel" is sufficient to put the owner of the vacant lot on notice.56   The  



Wyoming Supreme Court has likewise noted that "enclosure of land" is not necessary  



to establish open and notorious use, and that planting trees on the land, maintaining the  



property, and showing a "distinction in vegetation" can suffice to establish the elements  



                                                                                                         57 

of adverse possession where such use is in keeping with the nature of the property.                          



                 There is clear and convincing evidence that Park's use of the extrapolated  



area was open, notorious, hostile and exclusive, and that the boundary line she proposes  



is a logical one that reflects her use of the land.  On these facts, we conclude Park has  



                                                                                                                

         54      See Vezey, 35 P.3d at 22.  



         55      676 P.2d 431, 437 (Wash. 1984); see also Krona v. Brett, 433 P.2d 858,  

861 (Wash. 1967), overruled on other grounds by Chaplin, 676 P.2d 431.  

         56      Chaplin, 676 P.2d at 437; see also Frolund v. Frankland, 431 P.2d  188,  

190-91 (Wash. 1967), overruled on other grounds by Chaplin, 676 P.2d 431.  

         57      Graybill v.  Lampman,  332  P.3d  511,  520-21  (Wyo.  2014);  see  also  

Kranenberg v.  Meadowbrook  Lodge,  Inc.,  623  P.2d  1196,  1198-99  (Wyo.  1981)  

(concluding use of land as "yard space," including mowing and installing swing set,  

was sufficient to establish all elements of adverse possession).  



                                                     -17-                                                 7703  


----------------------- Page 18-----------------------

  



proven by clear and convincing evidence that her use of the extrapolated area satisfied  



                                                 58 

all the elements of adverse possession.              



         D.      Park Did Not Demonstrate That The Judge Was Biased Against Her.  



                 Finally, Park asserts that the superior court judge created an "appearance  



of impropriety and bias" by making comments that generally expressed opposition to  

the concept of adverse possession.59  The court stated that it did not "really agree that  



it's a fair result for Ms. Park to actually have ownership of this strip of land," explaining  



that this result struck the court as "not equitable . . . probably because Ms. Park didn't  



pay for  it."  The judge expressed that he was troubled by the idea that "a mislocated  



fence which was wrongly placed suddenly creates a right," which he described as a  



"philosophical problem" he had "with the whole concept of adverse possession."  



                 A judicial officer may be disqualified for bias if that officer "hears, learns,  



or  does  something  intrajudicially  so  prejudicial  that  further  participation  would  be  

unfair."60    A  party  may  also  show  judicial  bias  by  "demonstrat[ing]  that  the  court  



                                                                                                            61 

formed   an   unfavorable   opinion   of   the   party   from   extrajudicial   information."                    



                                                                                               62 

However, such a bias "cannot 'be inferred merely from adverse rulings.' "                          



                 Park   does   not   argue   that   the   judge   considered   any   extrajudicial  



information, and the comments made during the proceedings, which largely reflect the  



                                                                                                                

         58      Although neither party raises the issue of attorney's fees on appeal, this  

conclusion necessarily affects the prevailing party analysis under Alaska Civil Rule 82.   

We therefore vacate the award of attorney's fees.  

         59      We assume without deciding that the bias issue is properly before us.  See,  

e.g., Mengisteab v. Oates, 425 P.3d 80, 90 (Alaska 2018).  

         60      Downs v.  Downs,  440  P.3d  294,  300  (Alaska  2019)  (quoting  Brown v.  

State,  414  P.3d  660,  661  n.3  (Alaska  2018)  (Winfree,  J.,  concurring  in  part  and  

dissenting in part)).  

         61      Id . at 299.  



         62      Id.  at 299-300 (quoting Kinnan v. Sitka Counseling, 349 P.3d 153, 160  

(Alaska 2015)).  



                                                     -18-                                                 7703  


----------------------- Page 19-----------------------

judge's interpretation of the law,63 are insufficient to show bias that would have made  



the judge's continued participation unfair.64  Park has therefore failed to demonstrate  



that the judge was improperly biased against her.  



        CONCLUSION  



               We REVERSE the judgment of the superior court, VACATE the award  



of attorney's fees against Park, and REMAND for entry of judgment in Park's favor.  



        63     See Jourdan v. Nationsbanc Mortg. Corp., 42 P.3d 1072, 1082 (Alaska  

2002)  ("[I]nterpretations of the law  are not sufficient to demonstrate the existence of  

bias.").  

        64     Although Park does not identify sufficient evidence to support a claim of  

judicial bias, she does identify points at which the court used sharp language in rejecting  

her arguments.   We take this opportunity to reiterate that judges are obligated to be  

"patient,  dignified,  and  courteous  to  litigants."    Alaska  Code  Jud.  Conduct  3B(4).  

While this duty applies equally in all cases, it may be especially salient when litigants  

appear without assistance of counsel.  



                                               -19-                                            7703  

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