Randall v. Wooddell
51549
Idaho Ct. App. UMar 20, 2025Background
- This case concerns a property dispute over the use of the unpaved portion of Hawk Haven Avenue between neighbors, the Randalls (plaintiffs) and Wooddell (defendant), in Ada County, Idaho.
- The Randalls and their property’s prior owners used the disputed roadway and land for access to a barn, corral, arena, and pasture since at least 1996.
- In 2019, Wooddell purchased a quitclaim deed for the disputed land from the original developer (Development West) and subsequently sought to exclude the Randalls' access, leading to escalating conflicts.
- The Randalls sued for a declaratory judgment that their access to Hawk Haven Avenue was protected by a prescriptive easement; Wooddell counterclaimed to quiet title and alleged trespass.
- After a bench trial, the district court found the Randalls had established a prescriptive easement and awarded them costs; it also dismissed Wooddell’s trespass claim.
- Wooddell appealed, challenging both the finding of a prescriptive easement and the award of costs; the Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s judgment.
Issues
| Issue | Randall's Argument | Wooddell's Argument | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prescriptive Easement Established? | Use was open, notorious, continuous, adverse, for statutory period | No substantial evidence of required use elements | Randalls proved all elements; easement valid |
| Open and Notorious Use | Prior owners’ and Randalls’ use visible and obvious | Use was not open/prior owners believed use was permissive | Use was open/notorious, evidence sufficient |
| Continuous and Uninterrupted Use | Use by Randalls and predecessors unchanged since 1996 | Lack of maintenance/parking not sufficient for continuity | Evidence supports continuous use |
| Adverse Use Under Claim of Right | Use was adverse by fencing/barn/location, not owners’ mindset | Prior owners thought use was not adverse | Nature of use was adverse; owners’ belief irrelevant |
| Statutory Period Satisfied | Use dates back to 1996, tacking applies, 5-year rule met | No use before 2019 established, so not enough time | Statutory period satisfied by tacking |
| Costs to Prevailing Party | Randalls prevailed on main claim, entitled to costs | Costs improper due to lack of easement | Costs properly awarded to Randalls |
| Attorney Fees on Appeal | Appeal was unreasonable/frivolous | Wooddell should receive fees as prevailing party | Attorney fees awarded to Randalls |
Key Cases Cited
- Latvala v. Green Enters., Inc., 168 Idaho 686 (Idaho 2021) (sets out elements for prescriptive easement in Idaho)
- Hodgins v. Sales, 139 Idaho 225 (Idaho 2003) (discusses tacking and prescriptive easement requirements)
- Backman v. Lawrence, 147 Idaho 390 (Idaho 2009) (presumption of adversity and burdens of proof in prescriptive easement claims)
- H.F.L.P., LLC v. City of Twin Falls, 157 Idaho 672 (Idaho 2014) (Idaho’s disfavor of prescriptive easements)
