Whitham v. Creamer

525 P.3d 746
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 2, 2023
Docket48876
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 525 P.3d 746 (Whitham v. Creamer) 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
Whitham v. Creamer, 525 P.3d 746 (Idaho 2023).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO Docket No. 48876

KENT G. WHITHAM and LINDA M. ) WHITHAM, Trustees of the KENT G. ) WHITHAM AND LINDA M. WHITHAM ) REVOCABLE TRUST, ) ) Boise, September 2022 Term Plaintiffs/Appellants/ ) Cross-respondents, ) Opinion Filed: March 2, 2023 ) v. ) Melanie Gagnepain, Clerk ) JEFFREY DAVID CREAMER, an individual, ) ) Defendant/Respondent/ ) Cross-appellant. )

Appeal from the District Court of the First Judicial District of the State of Idaho, Bonner County. Barbara Buchanan, District Judge.

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

Stephen Snedden, Snedden Law, P.C., Sandpoint, for plaintiffs/appellants/cross- respondents, Kent and Linda Whitham, trustees of the Kent G. Whitham and Linda M. Whitham Revocable Trust.

Rex A. Finney, Finney Finney & Finney, P.A., for defendant/respondent/cross- appellant, Jeffrey David Creamer. _____________________

STEGNER, Justice. This is an appeal from a bench trial that sought to determine the respective rights and responsibilities of the property owners whose properties are either benefited or encumbered by an express easement. 1 Kent and Linda Whitham, trustees of the Kent G. Whitham and Linda M. Whitham Revocable Trust, own a property that benefits from the use of a forty-foot private road easement that they and several neighbors use to access their homes in rural Bonner County. Jeff Creamer owns a portion of the land that is encumbered by the easement. The easement consists of a dirt road that is prone to erosion in the spring following snow melt and heavy rainfall. Because

1 Historically, properties that benefit from the use of an easement have been called “dominant estates,” and properties that are encumbered by an easement have been called “servient estates.”

1 their property benefits from the easement, the Whithams take much of the responsibility for the maintenance of the road. In an effort to combat erosion, Creamer installed a French drain across a portion of the roadway that runs on his property. Kent Whitham then filled in the drain with dirt, rendering it inoperable. Creamer then re-installed the French drain. This back-and-forth conduct repeated itself several times and ultimately led the parties to district court in Bonner County when the Whithams sued Creamer. Following the bench trial below, the district court permitted Creamer to install a French drain on a portion of the roadway easement that encumbers his property and prohibited the Whithams from interfering with the drain. Both parties timely appealed. For the reasons discussed below, we affirm in part and vacate in part the judgment of the district court. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND The easement in dispute in this case was created by the recording of a survey in Bonner County. In 1996, the prior owners of both the Whithams’ and Creamer’s properties, the Stangels, recorded a Road Maintenance Agreement (the “Agreement”). The Agreement defined “a 40 foot Private road easement for the purposes of ingress, egress, and utilities[.]” (Capitalization in original.) This easement is referred to by the parties and the district court as “Lightning Peak Road” or “The Private Road Easement” (and will be referred to here as “the Private Road Easement”). The Private Road Easement is an old, unpaved logging road. A portion of the Private Road Easement runs through Creamer’s property. The Agreement further specified that “[a]ll costs of maintenance, improvements or relocation of said road shall be borne in equal shares by future owners of adjoining lands using said road [the Private Road Easement].” The Stangels transferred title to a portion of their property along the Private Road Easement to Kent and Linda Whitham (“the Whithams”) via warranty deed in September 2007. The Whithams later conveyed the property to the Kent G. Whitham and Linda M. Whitham Revocable Trust (“the Trust”) via quitclaim deed. At the time the Agreement was recorded, the Stangels also owned the property that now belongs to Jeff Creamer. The property changed hands several times prior to its sale to Creamer, who ultimately acquired it in 2013 via a quitclaim deed. The Private Road Easement is unpaved and, therefore, subject to erosion caused by rainfall,

2 snow melt, and heavy traffic. In 2009, Kent Whitham purchased a tractor to maintain the road. 2 Most of Kent’s maintenance of the Private Road Easement involves “smoothing and grading the road surface[] and plowing snow from the road.” He can also attach a box scraper to the tractor, if needed, that “can be adjusted to vary the level at which the grading of the road surface can take[] place.” Kent usually takes responsibility for maintaining the Private Road Easement from the Whitham property at one end of the Private Road Easement down to the other end where the Private Road Easement meets the paved Rapid Lightning Creek Road. The current dispute between the Whithams and Creamer began in August 2019, when Creamer and another nearby property owner dug a trench across the Private Road Easement some distance past Creamer’s driveway, though still “located on the section of the road that is on the Creamer Property.” Shortly thereafter, Creamer filled the trench with drain rocks to create a French drain. 3 After filling the drain with rocks, Creamer and the neighbor packed the rocks down to “grade the surface of the drain to make it easier for vehicles to cross over it.” At trial, Creamer explained that the purpose of the drain was to help prevent erosion of the Private Road Easement by creating a course for the water to travel without causing further damage to the road. Creamer did not discuss the French drain with the Whithams prior to installing it. About one month later, Kent used his tractor to fill in the French drain with dirt, which destroyed its function. He then smoothed the surface. Kent explained at trial “that he filled in the French drain because he anticipated that the rocks in the French drain would make it difficult for him to plow snow during the upcoming winter, because the rocks would get stuck in the plow and damage his equipment.” He further “testified that with snow covering the drain, he would not be able to see the drain rocks, and because the drain is below grade, when the blade of his plow goes over the drain, it would catch on the opposite side whenever he is plowing.” Both Kent and Linda Whitham testified at trial that, after Creamer had installed the French drain, neither of them had experienced any issues driving over the French drain or the Private Road Easement with their tractor or passenger vehicles.

2 When necessary, the Whithams will be referred to by their first names for the sake of clarity. No disrespect is intended by doing so. 3 A French drain is a type of water diversion device in which a shallow ditch is dug, in this case across a road, and then filled with small rocks. When the water runs down the middle of the road and perpendicular to the drain, the water is diverted to the side of the road through the French drain to avoid the creation of additional and deeper ruts in the road. (The French drain is apparently named for the man who popularized it in America in the mid-1800s—Henry French, a judge, farmer, and United States Assistant Secretary of the Treasury from Concord, Massachusetts. HENRY F. FRENCH, FARM DRAINAGE: THE PRINCIPLES, PROCESSES, AND EFFECTS OF DRAINING LAND (1859)).

3 After Kent filled the first drain, Creamer installed a second French drain across the Private Road Easement north of the first drain. Kent subsequently filled in this drain as well. This back-and-forth action repeated five or six times, and tensions escalated to the point that the Bonner County Sheriff’s Office became involved.

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Bluebook (online)
525 P.3d 746, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitham-v-creamer-idaho-2023.