Coward v. Hadley

246 P.3d 391, 150 Idaho 282, 2010 Ida. LEXIS 220
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 2010
Docket36981
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 246 P.3d 391 (Coward v. Hadley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coward v. Hadley, 246 P.3d 391, 150 Idaho 282, 2010 Ida. LEXIS 220 (Idaho 2010).

Opinion

W. JONES, Justice.

I. NATURE OF THE CASE

Charles and Anne Coward appeal from the trial court’s decision following a bench trial that they do not have either an express or implied easement over an alleyway connecting their home to a public street through the rear of Crystal Hadley’s lot. Crystal Hadley cross-appeals the district court’s refusal to grant attorney fees below.

II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

This controversy surrounds three neighboring residential lots in the Law’s Second *285 Addition in Sandpoint, Idaho. Lot 1, which is owned by Crystal Hadley, Respondent, sits on a corner with Superior Street and Boyer Avenue bordering its north and west sides, respectively. Lot 2, which is owned by a trust controlled by Charles and Anne Coward, lies directly to the south of lot 1 along Boyer Avenue. Lot 11, owned by persons not parties to this case, is the next lot south of lot 2. A twelve-foot-wide strip of land in the rear of lots 1 and 2, along the eastern edge of the properties, was originally used as an alley to access the back of lot 11.

Freeman Daughters, an individual, acquired lots 1, 2, and 11 together in 1907. In 1922, Daughters conveyed lots 1 and 2 to Ole Sleteger. That deed (“the 1922 deed”) provided that Daughters and “his heirs and assigns shall have a permanent right of way over and across twelve feet on the east side [of lots 1 and 2] for the purpose of an alley.” Daughters later conveyed away lot 11 with a deed noting that a permanent right-of-way existed over the alley on lots 1 and 2 benefiting lot 11.

Both lots 1 and 2 apparently came to be owned simultaneously by Martin and Nellie Mushrow a few years later, and they conveyed the lots separately to different third parties. 1 The deed first conveying away lot 1 to Hadley’s predecessor did not reserve any easement rights benefiting lot 2, which is now the Cowards’ lot. None of the deeds in either chain of title refer to such a right-of-way either. The easement did continue to benefit lot 11 until 1950, when the owner of lot 11 at that time quitclaimed the easement back to the owners of lots 1 and 2. The next day, Hadley and her now-deceased husband, Irvin, purchased lot 1. After that time, the alley was a grassy area occasionally used by occupants of lot 2 to reach an old garage at the back of the lot.

Mrs. Coward bought lot 2 in 1994, then conveyed it to a trust controlled by her and her husband in 2004. 2 In 2007, the Cowards and Hadley executed an Agreement as to Boundary Line (“boundary agreement”) after they discovered that a fence between them intruded into both sides of the property line. The boundary agreement provided that the parties each owned title to their lots unaltered under any legal or equitable theory. Later that year, however, the Cowards began using the alley to construct a garage in the rear of their lot, leading to a dispute as to whether they had any easement rights over Hadley’s property.

The Cowards filed a complaint against Hadley seeking a declaratory judgment that they had obtained an easement by prescription over Hadley’s lot. Five days before trial, the Cowards moved to amend the complaint to add claims for an express easement and an easement by implication, which the trial court granted the day of trial. Hadley also moved at trial to have the prescription claim dismissed, and the court granted the motion from the bench at the end of the trial, finding that there had been only occasional use of the alley over the years and that it was usually permissive. The court later issued a memorandum decision finding in favor of Hadley on the merits of the express- and implied-easement claims as well, but amended the decision in response to motions from both parties. In the amendment, the court withdrew the portions ruling on the merits of the Cowards’ easement claims and held instead that the parties’ boundary agreement extinguished any interests the Cowards might have in Hadley’s lot. The court also refused to award attorney fees to Hadley under I.C. § 12-121, finding that the Cowards had not pursued the action frivolously.

*286 The Cowards appealed and Hadley filed a cross-appeal. The Cowards assert that the 1922 deed reserving an easement for lot 11 also expressly reserved an easement benefiting their lot. Alternatively, they ask the Court to find that the 1922 deed impliedly created an easement in favor of both lots 2 and 11 by identifying the easement as an “alley” in the same way that developers dedicate streets and rights-of-way to public use in a plat. Hadley responds that there was no express easement in the 1922 deed and that there could be no implied easement because the Cowards’ lot adjoins a public street and there is no evidence that anyone continuously used the alley before lots 1 and 2 were conveyed to separate buyers. In her cross-appeal, Hadley asks this Court to award fees below under I.C. § 12-121 for defending against the Cowards’ unsuccessful claims.

III.ISSUES ON APPEAL

1. Whether the Cowards have an express easement over Hadley’s lot.

2. Whether the Cowards have an implied easement over Hadley’s lot.

3. Whether the boundary agreement between the parties terminated any of the Cowards’ potential easement rights.

4. Whether Hadley was entitled to attorney fees in the district court.

5. Whether Hadley is entitled to attorney fees on appeal.

IV.STANDARD OF REVIEW

The district court entered its memorandum decision after a bench trial pursuant to I.R.C.P. 52(a). 3 This Court reviews factual findings made after a trial without a jury for clear error. I.R.C.P. 52(a). This Court exercises free review of the district court’s conclusions of law. Carney v. Heinson, 133 Idaho 275, 278, 985 P.2d 1137, 1140 (1999).

V.ANALYSIS

A. The Cowards Do Not Have an Express Easement over Hadley’s Lot

Before reaching the issue of whether the parties’ boundary agreement extinguished an easement over Hadley’s lot, it is necessary to determine if there were any easements in the first place. The Cowards do not claim that the Mushrows reserved an easement for their lot when they conveyed lots 1 and 2 to different owners, which was the first and last time ownership to the two lots was severed. Instead, they assert that the 1922 deed conveying lots 1 and 2 from Daughters to Sletegar created an appurtenant express easement over lot 1 benefiting lot 2. The 1922 deed provides:

“Lots one (1) and two (2) in Block “JJ” [sic] of Law’s second addition to Sandpoint, Idaho; provided, however, [Daughters], his heirs and assigns shall have a permanent right of way over and across twelve feet on the east side or end of said lots for the purpose of an alley.”

The Cowards, who now own lot 2, believe they are Daughters’ distant “heirs and assigns,” entitled to use the easement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
246 P.3d 391, 150 Idaho 282, 2010 Ida. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coward-v-hadley-idaho-2010.