Dennis Akers v. D.L. White

CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 7, 2014
StatusPublished

This text of Dennis Akers v. D.L. White (Dennis Akers v. D.L. White) 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
Dennis Akers v. D.L. White, (Idaho 2014).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO

Docket No. 39493

DENNIS LYLE AKERS and SHERRIE L. ) AKERS, husband and wife, ) Moscow, September 2013 Term ) Plaintiffs-Respondents, ) ) 2014 Opinion No. 5 v. ) ) D.L. WHITE CONSTRUCTION, INC., ) Filed: February 7, 2014 DAVID L. WHITE AND MICHELLE V. ) WHITE, husband and wife ) ) Stephen Kenyon, Clerk Defendants-Appellants, ) ) and ) ) VERNON J. MORTENSEN and MARTI E. ) MORTENSEN, husband and wife, ) ) Defendants. )

Appeal from the District Court of the First Judicial District of the State of Idaho, Kootenai County. Hon. John T. Mitchell, District Judge.

The judgment of the district court is affirmed in part, vacated in part, and remanded for apportionment of attorney fees.

Robert Covington, Hayden, for appellants.

James, Vernon & Weeks, P.A., Coeur d’Alene, for respondents. Susan P. Weeks argued. _______________________________________________

HORTON, Justice. This appeal arises from a bench trial concerning an easement and trespass dispute. David and Michelle White, and D.L. White Construction, Inc. appeal from the district court’s judgment regarding the scope and location of the Whites’ easement across Dennis and Sherrie Akers’ property and the district court’s award of compensatory and punitive damages for trespass and emotional distress. We affirm the district court’s judgment locating the easement and awarding damages, but remand the case for apportionment of attorney fees.

1 I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND This is the third time this case has appeared before this Court. Following a bench trial, this Court heard the first appeal in 2005 and issued Akers v. D.L. White Const., Inc., 142 Idaho 293, 127 P.3d 196 (2005) (Akers I). After remanding the case to the district court in Akers I, it again came before this Court in 2008 and we issued Akers v. Mortensen, 147 Idaho 39, 205 P.3d 1175 (2009) (Akers II), which remanded the matter for additional fact finding. Previous appeals in this matter included two additional parties, Vernon and Marti Mortensen. However, the Mortensens have chosen to appeal the district court’s findings and conclusions on second remand separately. Nonetheless, this opinion refers to the Whites, D.L. White Construction, Inc., and the Mortensens collectively as “Appellants.” The facts of this case are set out in detail in Akers I and supplemented by Akers II. However, the essential facts necessary to resolve the issues before the Court in this third appeal are as follows. There are three parcels of real property involved in this case: (1) Government Lot 2; (2) Parcel A; and, (3) Parcel B that all come together at a four-way corner, the section 19/24 corner. Government Lot 2 is located to the northeast, and Parcel B is to the northwest. The Akers own the southwestern corner of Government Lot 2 and the southeastern corner of Parcel B. Parcel A is located to the southwest and much of Parcel A, including that adjoining Parcel B, is owned by the Whites. The Mortensens own a portion of Parcel A located to the south of that owned by the Whites. The Reynolds Property[1] is located to the southeast. Akers II, 147 Idaho at 42, 205 P.3d at 1178. Government Lot 2 is bisected roughly north to south by a county road, Millsap Loop Road. [The Whites] hold an easement for ingress and egress to Millsap Loop Road across portions of the Akers’ property. Because the properties meet at a four-way corner, Parcel A and Government Lot 2 do not actually share a border. It is therefore physically impossible to access Parcel A from Millsap Loop Road in Government Lot 2 without also passing through some other property. Id. The “other property” is the southwest corner of Parcel B, owned by the Akers. It is the route of passage though Parcel B where the Whites have a prescriptive easement that is the subject of this third appeal. At one time, all of the real property at issue in this case was owned by W.L. Millsap. Around 1966, and possibly much earlier, an access road matching the general contours of the

1 The Reynolds property is not at issue in this case nor are its owners a party; it has simply been used as a geographical reference throughout the course of this litigation.

2 easement at issue in this case ran from Millsap Loop Road, westward across the southern part of Government Lot 2. The road then went beyond the western boundary of Government Lot 2 into Parcel B, and then turned south into Parcel A. The Millsaps sold Parcel A to the Peplinskis in 1967. The deed expressly conveyed with Parcel A an easement across Government Lot 2. During the Peplinskis’ ownership of Parcel A, they used the access road in the same manner as the Millsaps had used it. The Akers purchased their property in 1980, the deed to which provides that they took the land subject to “easements of record or in view.” Akers I, 142 Idaho at 297, 127 P.3d at 200. After the Akers moved onto their property, they altered the route of the access road at its eastern end where it connects to Millsap Loop Road. Rather than meeting Millsap Loop Road after a sharp turn to the north as before, (the original approach) the altered approach (the curved approach) starts to turn earlier and curves more gently to the north before meeting the county road. Both the original and curved approaches to the access road are on a triangle of land (the triangle) the ownership of which has been disputed …. [T]he Peplinskis[2] sold their property, Parcel A, to the Mortensens. The Mortensens later sold much of Parcel A, including the portion adjacent to Parcel B, to the Whites. According to later findings by the district court, the Whites and the Mortensens entered into a business relationship in which they planned to split their land in Parcel A into smaller lots to create a housing development. The court found that in order to accommodate their projected housing development, the Appellants also planned to widen the access road that crossed the Akers’ property and connected the Appellants’ land to Millsap Loop Road. In January 2002 or before, the Akers blocked the Appellants’ use of the curved approach to the access road and also forbid the Appellants to travel on the western end of the access road, where it passes through Parcel B before connecting to the Appellants’ property in Parcel A. The Appellants then brought in heavy equipment, including a bulldozer, to carve a route around the Akers’ gate and to otherwise alter the access road. This led to a series of confrontations between the Akers and the Appellants, as well as alleged damage to the Akers’ property and alleged malicious behavior by the Appellants. In response, the Akers filed [suit] for trespass, quiet title, and negligence. Id. at 297–98, 127 P.3d at 200–01. Following a bench trial, the district court quieted title in favor of the Akers to the triangle area and granted the Whites an easement 12.2 feet in width through Government Lot 2. This included an easement across the disputed triangle through the original approach, but not the

2 The Peplinskis made minor changes to the access road with the permission of the Akers in approximately 1993. See infra p. 20.

3 curved approach, to Millsap Loop Road. However, the district court determined that the easement ended at the western boundary of Government Lot 2 and did not cross the section line into Parcel B. As a result, the easement was ruled to run from Millsap Loop Road to a point very close to, but not actually reaching, the Whites’ property. The district court also awarded the Akers damages arising from the Appellants’ trespass in the amount of $17,002.85, which was trebled pursuant to I.C. § 6-202 to a total of $51,008.55, to be paid by the Appellants jointly and severally. Sherrie Akers was awarded $10,000 in compensatory damages for emotional distress, also to be paid jointly and severally by the Appellants.

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Dennis Akers v. D.L. White, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dennis-akers-v-dl-white-idaho-2014.