Who legally owns the tank?
I bought a property 4 years ago in WA state that had been recently split off from the original whole piece. The adjacent piece contained a home but a propane tank servicing it and leased by a local propane co-op was sitting 10 feet inside my property. This is not an adverse possession or prescriptive easement case as the original owner of the whole piece gave permission for the homeowners to leave it there (2years elapsed) until I later bought my piece. This owner then sent them 2 letters telling them to move within 30 days it or risk losing it.They ignored the letters. I then called the co-op that leased them the tank and asked them to move it but instead they accepted a check for the tank and then maintained 'they were no longer involved' as it didn't belong to them. I then told them to stop refilling it but they said they were a service provider and couldn't refuse service. I went to an attorney and it cost me $450 for a hot shot real estate lawyer to send these neighbors a certified letter giving them 14 days to remove it. No response. 6 months ago, I decided to try to work the system instead of spending $$$ on lawyers and court costs so I began applying pressure to the propane company for their accepting a check for their tank at the time I directed them to move it and leaving it on my property, selling propane from it. I went so far as to write a certified 2 page letter to their board. Got no response, except the advice during a conversation with a lower level employee to write them a letter to not trespass to refill it. And that the tank could be after all disconnected during the summer months as it wasn't a source of heat. I then sent a certified letter to the homeowners that I was giving 3 weeks notice it would be moved and relocated and to arrange for gas elsewhere. They responded with a letter thanking me for my patience while they hired an attorney to research their rights to a prescriptive easement! There was no offer to move it only, 'Do not move our tank' because it belonged to them. Now, no other companies or backhoe owners on this small isolated island will 'get involved' to move it. I turned the gas off and cut the copper tubing. This was 6 weeks after the notice. They called the local sheriff who refused to cite me for 'criminal mischief' as the wanted. I told him that after 4.5 years of trying to get these deadbeats to get the tank off, I considered it legally mine and would do whatever I wanted with it. They had told neighbors all along that they were trying to grab my land but they are just 5.5 years shy of the adverse situation they need to qualify in this 10 year state. I had hoped with the supply cut off they will be original to lease/buy their own tank, then others will be willing to get involved knowing this isn't their tank. But I would like to know, whose tank is it after all these years legally. Lots of people have said it's mine but I can find no case law that addresses this type of situation in WA state.