[¶ 1] Fred D. Gay, Trustee of the Fred D. Gay Revocable Trust, appeals, and Sheila and Scott Dube and Darrell and Lisa Whitney cross-appeal, from a judgment of the Superior Court (York County, Brennan, J.) regarding the ownership, classification, and use of a road and parcel of land in Dayton. Finding no error, we affirm the judgment.
I. BACKGROUND
[¶ 2] The competing claims giving rise to this dispute may be distilled as follows: The Trust claims title by deed or by adverse possession to a triangular piece of property (“the triangle”) bordering Steele Road in the Town of Dayton and to a fee interest in the road. The Dubes and Whit-neys claim title by deed to the triangle and a fee interest in the road. The Trust also claims that Steele Road, formerly known as Smith Road, should not be classified as a public road, but that within that context, it has been abandoned. The Dubes and Whitneys dispute the abandonment claim.
[¶ 3] The Trust, the Dubes, and the Whitneys each own parcels abutting Steele Road in Dayton. The deed held by the Trust includes the triangle, which can be traced to a 1925 deed from an heir of one William Whittier. However, William’s brother, Joseph Whittier, owned the triangle as late as 1855, and no deed in evidence describes a conveyance of the triangle by Joseph to anyone thereafter. The Trust’s expert witness testified that there is a missing deed from Joseph to William conveying the triangle sometime before 1925. In 2009, the Dubes and Whitneys obtained quitclaim deeds to the triangle from Joseph’s heirs.
[¶ 4] When the Dubes and Whitneys purchased their properties in 2005 and 2006, respectively, they built houses and used Steele Road for access. The road previously had been used by their predecessors in title, other abutting property owners, and people with permission to access adjacent property for agricultural and recreational purposes. The Town has done almost nothing to maintain the road other than occasionally plowing it.
[¶ 5] Fred and Carol Gay, with the Trust later substituted as plaintiff, filed a M.R. Civ. P. 80B complaint against the Town of Dayton in 2006 regarding the status of Steele Road, with additional counts against the Dubes and Whitneys for declaratory and injunctive relief, trespass, nuisance, and an action to quiet title to Steele Road. 1 The Dubes and Whitneys each counterclaimed, with claims including trespass, nuisance, and declaratory and in-junctive relief. In 2009, the Dubes and Whitneys filed a motion to dismiss, which *55 the court granted as to the 80B appeal but denied as to the remaining counts. Subsequently, the Dubes and Whitneys jointly filed a supplemental pleading contesting the Trust’s ownership of a portion of Steele Road, alleging that they own it as Joseph Whittier’s successors in title to the abutting triangle of land. The Trust requested leave to file an amended complaint, which was granted as to the claims for adverse possession over the disputed property but denied as to the claim for slander of title.
[¶ 6] Following a nonjury trial, the court entered partial judgment, finding that Steele Road is a “public road” that had not been abandoned by the public, later clarifying that the road is a “town way.” Although the court found that the Dubes and Whitneys held record title to the triangle, it concluded that the Trust owned the triangle by adverse possession. It also determined that the Dube and Whitney counterclaims, including claims to an easement in Steele Road, were moot. A final judgment was entered in February 2011 in favor of the Dubes and Whitneys on all remaining undecided claims. This appeal followed.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Status of Steele Road
[¶ 7] The Trust argues that the court erred by determining that Steele Road is the type of public road classified as a town way, rather than a private way, and by determining that the road has not been abandoned. “We review a trial court’s factual findings for clear error and its application of the law to those facts de novo.”
Peters v. O’Leary,
[¶ 8] The record includes documentary evidence that in 1855, upon application by property owner Cyrus Smith, Steele Road was laid out by the Dayton selectmen as “a town way for the use of said town,” and it was approved as laid out by a vote at a town meeting. The court’s conclusion that the road is a town way was therefore not in error.
See
R.S. ch. 25, §§ 27, 31 (1841) (permitting town selectmen to lay out a town way and stating that whether a road is considered a town way is to be determined by the selectmen);
Wardens of Christ’s Church v. Woodward,
[¶ 9] The Trust also contends that even if Steele Road is a town way, the court erred by concluding that it has not been abandoned. We evaluate this contention pursuant to the common law doctrine of abandonment because the Trust has not alleged statutory abandonment by the Town.
See
23 M.R.S. § 3028 (2011);
Martin v. Burnham,
[¶ 10] At common law, “a presumption of a public intent to abandon a road may be raised by evidence of nonuse for twenty years or more.”
Shadan v. Town of Skowhegan,
[¶ 11] The court found that Steele Road is a dead-end road that was created to serve Cyrus Smith’s family and its guests, and that it was continuously used by the people for whom it was intended to be used. These findings are not clearly erroneous, and the public’s use of the road must be understood in this context. In this case, use by people who may in some instances be considered separable from the general public in fact constituted the use by the public that was intended when the road was created.
Cf Shadan,
B. Ownership of the Triangle
[¶ 12] The Trust also contends that the court erred by simultaneously adjudicating the Trust’s claim of adverse possession of the triangle of undeveloped land abutting Steele Road and the Dubes’ and Whitneys’ claim of record title to the same parcel. The Dubes and Whitneys argue that there is insufficient evidence to support the Trust’s adverse possession of the triangle.
[¶ 13] The court’s simultaneous adjudication of the parties’ competing claims to ownership of the triangle was not in error. A party’s unproven allegation of adverse possession does not bar a court from simultaneously considering the opposing party’s unproven allegation of title ownership.
See Richards Realty Co. v. Inhabitants of Town of Castle Hill,
[¶ 14] With respect to the court’s resolution of those claims, there was competent evidence in the record — in the form of witness testimony and written deeds — to support the court’s finding that the Dubes and Whitneys were holders of a deed in a valid chain of title to the triangle.
See Rega v. L.S.R.,
[¶ 15] The record thus contained sufficient evidence for the court to find that the use of the triangle by the Trust and its predecessors in title established ownership by adverse possession of that parcel as against the chain of record title ending with the Dubes and Whitneys.
See Weeks v. Krysa,
C. Additional Claims
[¶ 16] The Trust argues that the court abused its discretion by denying the Trust’s motion to amend its complaint to add a claim for slander of title against the Dubes and Whitneys. However, the Trust has failed to demonstrate that, based on the record before the court at the time the motion was filed, the amendment was necessary to prevent injustice or that its denial constituted a clear and manifest abuse of discretion.
See Efstathiou v. The Aspinquid, Inc.,
[¶ 17] Finally, the Dubes and Whitneys contend that the court erred by determining that their claim to an easement over Steele Road was moot based on the court’s conclusion that it is a town way. Whether an issue is moot is a question of law that is reviewed de novo.
See Roberts v. Roberts,
An issue is deemed to be moot when there is no real and substantial controversy, admitting of specific relief through a judgment of conclusive character. When determining whether a case is moot, we examine whether there remain sufficient practical effects flowing from the resolution of [the] litigation to justify the application of limited judicial resources.
Anthem Health Plans of Me., Inc. v. Superintendent of Ins.,
[¶ 18] Because a public easement exists in Steele Road as a town way, no practical consequences for the Dubes’ and Whitneys’ right of access will flow from a decision on their private easement claim, and the claim is properly treated as moot.
See id.; City of Rockland v. Johnson,
[¶ 19] Should Steele Road be discontinued or abandoned by the Town in the future, the judgment will not preclude the Dubes and the Whitneys from asserting
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their easement claim.
See Colquhoun v. Webber,
[¶ 20] The parties’ remaining arguments are without merit and require no further discussion.
The entry is:
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. Central Maine Power Company and Verizon New England, Inc., which was later replaced by FairPoint Communications, were included in the complaint as parties-in-interest. Ruth Smith, Sharon Smith, and Susan Williams, owners of an adjacent property, were joined as intervenors and join the Dubes’ and Whit-neys’ brief on appeal.
. By affirming the Trust’s ownership of the triangle of land abutting the disputed portion of Steele Road, combined with the Trust’s undisputed ownership of the land abutting the opposite side of that strip of road, we necessarily determine that the Trust owns the fee in that section of road.
See
33 M.R.S. § 465 (2011);
Lamb v. Euclid Ambler Assocs.,
