Munden v. Bannock County

CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 2021
Docket47978
StatusPublished

This text of Munden v. Bannock County (Munden v. Bannock County) 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
Munden v. Bannock County, (Idaho 2021).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO Docket No. 47978

DENNIS L. MUNDEN and SHERRILYN L. ) MUNDEN, husband and wife; COYOTE ) CREEK RANCH, LLC, a Utah limited liability ) company, ) ) Boise, September 2021 Term Plaintiffs-Appellants, ) ) Opinion Filed: December 15, 2021 v. ) ) Melanie Gagnepain, Clerk BANNOCK COUNTY, a political subdivision ) of the State of Idaho, ) ) Defendant-Respondent. )

Appeal from the District Court of the Sixth Judicial District, State of Idaho, Bannock County. Robert C. Naftz, District Judge.

The judgment of the district court is vacated and the case is remanded. The decisions of the district court are affirmed in part and vacated in part.

Petersen Moss Hall & Olsen, Idaho Falls, for appellants Dennis & Sherrilyn Munden and Coyote Creek Ranch, LLC. Nathan M. Olsen argued.

Hall Angell & Associates, LLP, Idaho Falls, for respondent, Bannock County. Blake G. Hall argued.

_____________________

STEGNER, Justice. This case involves the status of a purported public road in Bannock County. The dispute turns primarily on whether Idaho Code section 40-208(7) applies to that contested road. Dennis and Sherrilyn Munden (the Mundens) and their limited liability company, Coyote Creek Ranch, LLC, purchased property in Bannock County in 2012 (the Upper Property), and acquired adjoining property (the Lower Property) in 2014. The Mundens’ ranch is accessible by a gravel road (the Road) which leaves a paved public road before crossing the Lower Property. It then traverses a neighbor’s parcel, and then the Upper Property, before exiting to the north. The Mundens began ranching on the Lower Property in 2013 and started construction of a barn and living quarters on the Upper Property in 2015 after obtaining a three-year building permit.

1 In 2017, the Mundens were informed by the Bannock County Commissioners that, pursuant to a 2006 county ordinance, the Road had been designated by the Commissioners for “snowmobile use only” between December 15 and April 15. All other vehicular use was prohibited during this timeframe. In January 2019, Bannock County passed an ordinance which gave discretion to the Bannock County Public Works Director (the Director) to determine when snowmobile trails would be closed to all but snowmobile use. Subsequently, the Director decided to close the Road for the 2018–19 winter season. The Mundens filed a complaint in district court against Bannock County, bringing several claims involving the Road, and obtained an ex parte temporary restraining order (TRO) to prohibit enforcement of the 2019 ordinance. The County subsequently moved to dissolve the TRO, which the district court granted. The district court then awarded attorney fees to the County. The Mundens amended their complaint to add their ranching operation, Coyote Creek Ranch, LLC, as a plaintiff, to which the County responded with an answer and counterclaim. The County alleged that the Road was a public right- of-way with no winter maintenance that had been designated as a snowmobile trail by the 2006 ordinance. The County moved to dismiss the amended complaint for failure to state a claim. The district court granted this motion, concluding that because the claims turned on a legal determination of the Road’s status, the Mundens were required by Idaho Code section 40-208(7) to first petition for validation or abandonment proceedings with the Board of County Commissioners before they could bring a lawsuit. The district court accordingly entered a judgment dismissing the plaintiffs’ amended complaint in its entirety. The Mundens filed several motions, including the following: an unsuccessful motion to reconsider with declarations (which were subsequently stricken); a motion to correct the judgment (IRCP 60); a motion for certification of the judgment as final (IRCP 54(b)(1), which was ultimately granted); and a motion to disallow the attorney fees the district court had awarded against them. Two notices of appeal to this Court were filed, but each was dismissed by this Court for lack of a reviewable final judgment. Ultimately, the district court entered a judgment certified under IRCP 54(b)(1) authorizing an immediate appeal, and the Mundens timely appealed. For the reasons discussed, we affirm in part and vacate in part the decisions of the district court.

2 I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND A. Factual Background Dennis and Sherrilyn Munden1 purchased the Upper Property, consisting of approximately 768 acres of land in Bannock County in January 2012. In 2013, they purchased an adjoining three- acre corner piece. In August 2014, they purchased the Lower Property, which contained an additional 660 acres situated nearby. In total, the Mundens own approximately 1431 acres of agricultural land. The Mundens’ properties are accessible by the Road, which is a gravel road that leaves a paved public road (West Arimo Road), crosses the Lower Property and a neighbor’s property, then enters the Upper Property before continuing onto a ranch to the north. The Road provides access to several additional properties, including property to the north owned by Dan Williams (Williams). According to Sherrilyn, when the Mundens took possession of the property, they were advised by the County that the Road was not maintained or plowed by the County in the winter, and that it would be their responsibility upon taking ownership. The Road, and its status, is the subject of dispute in this case. Even the Road’s name is in dispute; the Mundens refer to the Road as “South Garden Creek Road,” while the County refers to the Road as simply “Garden Creek Road.” The Mundens now contend that the Road is a private agricultural road, and the County asserts that the Road is a public right-of-way not subject to winter maintenance. The Mundens’ ranching operation, Coyote Creek Ranch, LLC (Coyote Creek), is a limited liability company incorporated in Utah and registered in Idaho. In 2013, Coyote Creek began a calving operation on the Mundens’ Lower property and started developing it, including building corrals in 2014 and constructing “miles of fence line.” The Mundens sought to build a large barn and living quarters on the Upper Property to enable year-round ranching operations and, in August 2015, they obtained a three-year building permit from the County. According to Sherrilyn, the Mundens were again advised by the County that the County did not maintain the Road during the winter. An early winter storm in September 2016 limited the Mundens’ contractor’s access to the Upper Property. According to Sherrilyn, Dennis requested that the County plow the Road to resolve this access issue. The County plowed one side of the Road until January 2017, when

1 The Mundens will be referred to by their first names “Sherrilyn” and “Dennis” when necessary.

3 Williams, the Mundens’ northern neighbor, protested, alleging that plowing the Road made snowmobile travel over it impossible. In December 2017, the Mundens received a letter from a County Commissioner stating that a 2006 county ordinance designated the Road for snowmobile use only between December 15 and April 15, with all other vehicular use being prohibited during that time. Thereafter, the Mundens accessed the Property with a tractor during the 2017-18 winter season. In November 2018, a public meeting was held before the County Commissioners concerning a proposed ordinance that would affect the Road. Several members of the public, including Sherrilyn, provided testimony about maintenance and snowmobile use on the Road. During the winter of 2018-19, the Mundens continued to use their tractor to access the Upper Property. On January 8, 2019, the County passed Ordinance 2019-1 which amended the 2006 ordinance, changing the time during which certain snowmobile trails would be open.

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Bluebook (online)
Munden v. Bannock County, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/munden-v-bannock-county-idaho-2021.