
Judges side with hunters in corner crossing case, but issue remains unsettled in Washington, Idaho
The ruling by a three-judge panel in the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals dismissed a lawsuit filed by a Wyoming landowner against four hunters from Missouri who twice hunted public land surrounded by a private ranch.
At issue was whether they trespassed while moving diagonally between public parcels adjoined at the corners but otherwise surrounded by private land.
The y never set foot on the private land, but the landowner argued that the hunters entered the airspace over the private land, and that doing so constituted trespassing.
Not so, the judges ruled unanimously on Tuesday, siding with the hunters and affirming a lower court's decision to dismiss the case.
The ruling, which provides a comprehensive history lesson on the problem of checkerboard landownership, cited the 1885 Unlawful Inclosures Act, which prohibits landowners from putting up barriers to otherwise accessible public lands.
In this case, it means a landowner can't "implement a program which has the effect of 'deny(ing) access to (federal) public lands for lawful purposes,' " the judges wrote.
Access advocates are celebrating the ruling as a groundbreaking win that means corner crossing is legal in the 10th Circuit states — Wyoming, Colorado, Kansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Utah — that means corner crossing is legal.
Outside those six states, however, the legality of corner crossing remains unclear.
Devin O'Dea, the western policy and conservation manager for Backcountry Hunters and Anglers, said in states outside the 10th Circuit the ruling is "persuasive" and could help bolster the case for corner crossing, but isn't legally binding.
"This could be interpreted on a case -by -case basis," O'Dea said. "That's not to say it's illegal. It's still a gray area."
Staci Lehman, a spokesperson for the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, said trespassing is illegal, but that Washington has no laws that explicitly prohibit midair crossings or "crossing property boundaries where two corners come together."
Ditto for Idaho. Roger Phillips, an Idaho Department of Fish and Game spokesman, said there's no legal precedent in either federal or state court that provides any clarity.
"The legality, or illegality, of corner crossing is not a settled legal issue in Idaho," Phillips said in an email.
Settling the question would have a major impact for hunters and other public land users across the West, where more than 8 million public acres are accessible only through corner crossing, according to a report produced by onX Maps.
Washington has 125,000 acres of corner-locked land, while Idaho has 57,000 acres. Wyoming has the largest share of corner-locked property, with 2.44 million acres.
It all traces back to the 1800s, when the federal government used land grants to encourage the construction of a transcontinental railroad. Government officials drew 6-mile-by-6-mile townships within a certain distance of a proposed railroad route, then divided those squares into 36 square-mile sections.
Sections were numbered. Odd sections were given to railroad companies and the federal government held onto the even sections, creating a pattern that looks exactly like a checkerboard.
Through a series of homesteading acts, settlers claimed portions of the federal government's sections. Railroad companies also sold some of their land.
Unspool that for several decades and you get the complex patchwork that exists today, with public land managed by agencies like the Bureau of Land Management and the U.S. Forest Service interspersed with private.
Conflicts arose over access to public lands even in the 1800s, according to the ruling from the 10th Circuit. Competition for pasture lands was intense, and illegal fencing was a significant problem.
That led to Congress passing the Unlawful Inclosures Act. The judges wrote this week that the law was "designed to harmonize public access to the public domain with adjacent private landholdings." The ruling quotes a section of the law that bars landowners from using "force, threats, intimidation or by any fencing or inclosing" to keep people from entering or settling on public lands.
In the Wyoming case, the four hunters from Missouri were hunting BLM land in Carbon County, west of Cheyenne. The corner they crossed was surrounded by the Elk Mountain Ranch, owned by pharmaceutical executive Fred Eshelman's Iron Bar Holdings.
The ranch covers about 50 square miles. Interspersed throughout is about 11,000 acres of public land.
The corner the hunters crossed was marked with a U.S. Geological Survey stake. A photo included in the ruling shows the stake, which sits between a pair of T-Posts put up by staff of the Elk Mountain Ranch, with "No Trespassing" signs attached to them.
The hunters — Bradley Cape, Zachary Smith, Phillip Yeomans and John Slowensky — were there in 2020 and 2021, and they crossed at the corner both times.
The first year, the ruling says, they swung around them, ensuring their feet never touched private property. The next year, they brought a ladder.
Ranch staff had a history of confronting suspected trespassers, even if they were on public land. They confronted the Missouri both times but got more aggressive in 2021. They urged the local prosecutor to bring trespassing charges. They claimed the hunters had trespassed over their private airspace.
A jury acquitted the hunters, but Eshelmen filed a civil trespassing suit immediately after the verdict. A lower court dismissed the case, and Eshelman appealed to the 10th Circuit.
Attorneys for Eshelman had argued that the Unlawful Inclosure Act applied only to physical fences. The judges rejected that argument, citing the portion of the law that refers to threats and intimidation.
The judges wrote that means "no one can completely prevent or obstruct one another from peacefully entering or freely passing over or through public lands."
O'Dea, of Backcountry Hunters and Anglers, which raised more than $200,000 to fund the hunters' defense, said it's possible the landowner will seek to take the case further, perhaps by petitioning the Supreme Court.
But he's also hopeful it might restart conrer crossing conversations in statehouses. Outside of taking simple trespassing cases as far as they can go, state legislatures are the venue where the issue can be settled.
Bills have been introduced in states like Montana, but none has passed.
Bills that would deem corner crossing legal have been introduced in state legislatures, but none have passed.
"Now that there's this big decision, we'll probably see a lot more interest in kind of addressing the issue on the state level," O'Dea said.
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Politico
01-07-2025
- Politico
State PBM regulation hits a SCOTUS roadblock
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Yahoo
18-06-2025
- Yahoo
A win for Utah and Oklahoma: Supreme Court tells EPA to back off
The U.S. Supreme Court favored Oklahoma and Utah against the Environmental Protection Agency in an 8-0 decision on Wednesday, with Justice Samuel Alito not participating. The case, Oklahoma v. Environmental Protection Agency, was a dispute that began over clean air obligations, but what ultimately brought it to the higher court was the issue of exclusive jurisdiction. In 2015, the EPA established new clean air obligations nationwide and required states to submit plans outlining how they would comply. Utah, Oklahoma and 19 other states had their plans to reduce pollution across state lines denied. Two years ago, both states separately took the EPA to court in their shared regional circuit court in Denver, Colorado. The federal agency countered the cases, combining them and arguing that they should be moved to the D.C. Circuit because the augmented air quality standards were a national change. The Colorado court allowed the transfer. The states disagreed, taking it to the Supreme Court. Just because the EPA published a single Federal Register notice to multiple states does not justify moving the cases to Washington, D.C., the states argued. Both Utah and Oklahoma want the cases returned to their shared 10th Circuit. And the Supreme Court agreed. 'The two SIP ( or state implementation plan) disapprovals here are undisputedly locally or regionally applicable actions. A SIP is a state-specific plan, so an EPA disapproval on its face applies only to the State that proposed the SIP,' the ruling said. 'EPA's and the Tenth Circuit's contrary arguments fail.' 'The Tenth Circuit erred in holding that petitioners' challenges should be reviewed in the D. C. Circuit. EPA's disapprovals of the Oklahoma and Utah SIPs are locally or regionally applicable actions. And, these cases are not ones where the 'nationwide scope or effect' exception applies,' Justice Clarence Thomas' opinion added. 'Accordingly, as with most locally or regionally applicable actions, petitioners' challenges can be heard only in a regional Circuit. The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the cases are remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.' Following the ruling, Utah Attorney General Derek Brown and his office, including Utah Solicitor General Stanford E. Purser, who was on the defense team in the case, praised the ruling. 'The Court agreed with Utah's argument involving the Clean Air Act that local courts should handle local issues, and the federal government should collaborate with the states — not ignore their unique differences," Brown said in a statement to the Deseret News. 'I am also proud of Utah's Solicitor General, Stan Purser, for his critical role on the legal team that helped secure this win. ... We are also grateful to the Trump Administration's EPA for reconsidering its ruling that required litigation in the first place, and look forward to our continued partnership on behalf of Utah.'


New York Post
06-06-2025
- New York Post
Federal judge approves Colorado's age limit for firearms purchases
A federal judge upheld Colorado's restriction on firearms sales requiring buyers to be 21 or older after Rocky Mountain Gun Owners and two people looking to purchase firearms sued Democratic Gov. Jared Polis. Chief U.S. District Judge Philip A. Brimmer agreed with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit's decision that age-based requirements for purchase do not fall under the Second Amendment's right to keep and bear arms. The 10th Circuit and Brimmer agree that the issue falls under a 'safe harbor' exclusion, placing it outside the scope of the Constitution. The only exceptions to Colorado's firearm purchase age restriction are for those in the U.S. Military and for peace officers. In both cases, the person must be making the purchase while on duty and is 'serving in conformance with the policies' of their respective agency. 'Governor Polis is committed to making Colorado one of the ten safest states, and common-sense laws encourage responsible gun ownership and keep people safe. For decades in Colorado, you had to be 21 to purchase a handgun, per federal law. The requirement to be 21 was expanded to rifles and shotguns with the signing of SB23-169, and Governor Polis is glad to see the court affirm that Colorado's common sense law does not infringe on Second Amendment rights. Governor Polis is confident this law has and will help keep Coloradans and our communities safe,' Polis' Communications Director Conor Cahill said in a statement to Fox News Digital. 3 A federal judge upheld Colorado's restriction on firearms sales requiring buyers to be 21 or older. REUTERS Brimmer acknowledged that Adrian Pineda and Matthew Newkirk — the two individuals under 21 who sued Polis together with Rocky Mountain Gun Owners — are part of 'the people' as written in the Second Amendment. However, he referred to the 10th Circuit's decision, saying it had resolved the case back in 2023, according to Courthouse News Service (CNS). The decision in Colorado comes in contrast to one issued by the Supreme Court in 2022 in which justices determined that New York issued unconstitutional requirements for carrying a concealed weapon in public. Then-President Joe Biden said he was 'deeply disappointed' by the ruling in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen. He said that SCOTUS had 'chosen to strike down New York's long-established authority to protect its citizens.' 3 The only exceptions to Colorado's firearm purchase age restriction are for those in the U.S. Military and for peace officers. DmyTo – 'This ruling contradicts both common sense and the Constitution, and should deeply trouble us all,' Biden said in a statement at the time. He went on to reaffirm his commitment to reducing gun violence and making communities safer. 3 The 10th Circuit and Brimmer agree that the issue falls under a 'safe harbor' exclusion, placing it outside the scope of the Constitution. Los Angeles Times via Getty Images Brimmer is also going against a decision made by the New Orleans-based U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit, which struck down a federal restriction banning the sale of firearms to anyone below the age of 21. That court held that those aged 18 to 20 are protected under the Second Amendment, according to The Trace, an organization of journalists who report on gun violence in the U.S. 'The federal government has presented scant evidence that eighteen-to-twenty-year-olds' firearm rights during the founding-era were restricted in a similar manner to the contemporary federal handgun purchase ban,' Judge Edith H. Jones wrote in the opinion. Several states, including New York, Massachusetts, California, Florida, Illinois, Delaware and Vermont have raised the age for purchasing firearms, according to the Everytown for Gun Safety Support Fund. While some states have limited the age restrictions to handgun purchases, others have applied the restriction to any kind of firearm.