Battle over 'adverse possession' ruling continues
South Boulder resident fighting decision to rebuild fence, give up land
By Heath Urie (Contact)
Saturday, June 14, 2008
Mohammad and Gay Salim, of Boulder, last month won an "adverse-possession" lawsuit against neighbor Dana Marshall, who tore down a fence that she said property surveys showed was on her land.
Two Boulder couples who sued their neighbor for rights to a fence and a few inches of her land lashed out this week at public criticism over their actions, while the woman who lost her property is readying a public protest.
"We do not think the stories that we wanted to 'grab' our neighbor's land are fair," Mohammad and Gay Salim wrote in a statement to the Camera on Friday.
The Salims last month won an "adverse possession" lawsuit against neighbor Dana Marshall, who tore down a fence that she said property surveys showed was on her land.
Boulder District Court Judge Lael Montgomery ordered Marshall to surrender a slim strip of her south Boulder backyard -- and to rebuild the fence -- after agreeing that the fence and land had been used for more than 18 years by Marshall's neighbors.
"We think Ms. Marshall took down the fence that was not hers, took a view of our yard that was not hers, and took away the privacy that we enjoyed for over 25 years," the Salims wrote. "That is the real 'grab' here. We went to court to restore ourproperty, not to take Ms. Marshall's. The judge agreed with us."
Another set of Marshall's neighbors, Tom and Patty Angerer, released a similar statement Friday.
"We feel that it is unfortunate that Ms. Marshall was led to believe that the fence was hers to do with as she pleased," the couple wrote. "And we regret that we have had to spend tens of thousands of dollars in order to have the opportunity to repair our fence."
The judge's order gives about one-fourth of the disputed fence and property to the Angerer family, said Marshall, who also reacted to the letters.
"The ruling and order is from the plaintiffs' point of view, and the presumption of the law is supposed to be in favor of the record title holder," Marshall said. "Having an old, rickety wood fence facing me for the rest of the time I live here is like boarding up my windows."
Marshall said she has planned a public meeting from 7 to 9 p.m. July 3 at the Boulder Public Library. The meeting is the first gathering of a group calling itself the "Boulder Property Rights Coalition," Marshall said.
"We can talk about adverse possession as a law," Marshall said. "Everyone is vulnerable."
She said the group will also make plans to host a public protest about the law, and it will answer questions about the Marshall case and the case of Don and Susie Kirlin, who lost about a third of their million-dollar lot in another south Boulder land dispute last year.
The group has formed a Web site, with information about the cases, at
www.landgrabber.org.