San Juan County, Utah v. United States ( 2014 )


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  • Appellate Case: 11-4146          Document: 01019240283     Date Filed: 04/25/2014   Page: 1
    FILED
    United States Court of Appeals
    PUBLISH                             Tenth Circuit
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                           April 25, 2014
    Elisabeth A. Shumaker
    TENTH CIRCUIT                         Clerk of Court
    SAN JUAN COUNTY, UTAH, a Utah
    political subdivision,
    Plaintiff - Appellant,
    and
    STATE OF UTAH,
    Intervenor Plaintiff,
    v.                                                             No. 11-4146
    (D.C. No. 2:04-CV-00552-BSJ)
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA;                                        (D. Utah)
    DEPARTMENT OF INTERIOR;
    NATIONAL PARK SERVICE,
    Defendants - Appellees.
    ---------------------------------------
    SOUTHERN UTAH WILDERNESS
    ALLIANCE; GRAND CANYON TRUST;
    THE WILDERNESS SOCIETY; SIERRA
    CLUB; NATIONAL PARKS
    CONSERVATION ASSOCIATION,
    Amici Curiae.
    __________________________________
    STATE OF UTAH,
    Intervenor Plaintiff –
    Appellant.
    and
    Appellate Case: 11-4146          Document: 01019240283     Date Filed: 04/25/2014   Page: 2
    SAN JUAN COUNTY, UTAH, a Utah
    political subdivision,
    Plaintiff,
    v.                                                             No. 11-4149
    (D.C. No. 2:04-CV-00552-BSJ)
    DEPARTMENT OF INTERIOR;                                          (D. Utah)
    NATIONAL PARK SERVICE; UNITED
    STATES OF AMERICA,
    Defendants - Appellees.
    ---------------------------------------
    SOUTHERN UTAH WILDERNESS
    ALLIANCE; GRAND CANYON TRUST;
    THE WILDERNESS SOCIETY; SIERRA
    CLUB; NATIONAL PARKS
    CONSERVATION ASSOCIATION,
    Amici Curiae.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Utah
    (D.C. No. 2:04-CV-00552-BSJ)
    Anthony Rampton (Bridget K. Romano, Assistant Utah Attorney General and Mark L.
    Shurtleff, Utah Attorney General with him on the brief), Assistant Utah Attorney
    General, Salt Lake City, Utah for the Plaintiff-Appellant State of Utah.
    Shawn T. Welch (Tamara L. Stevenson with him on the brief), Holland & Hart LLP, Salt
    Lake City, Utah for the Plaintiff-Appellant San Juan County, Utah.
    Aaron P. Avila, Attorney, (Bruce D. Bernard, Attorney, Ignacia S. Moreno, Assistant
    Attorney General, U.S. Dep’t of Justice Env’t & Natural Resources Div., Washington,
    DC; David B. Barlow, United States Attorney, Carlie Christensen, Assistant United
    States Attorney, District of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah; G. Kevin Jones, Office of
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    Regional Solicitor, Department of the Interior, Salt Lake City, Utah, with him on the
    brief), of U.S. Dep’t of Justice Env’t & Natural Resources Div., Washington, DC, for
    Defendant – Appellee.
    Before MURPHY, HOLLOWAY, and O'BRIEN, Senior Circuit Judges.
    O’BRIEN, Circuit Judge.
    This Quiet Title Act case requires us to decide whether the district court erred in
    rejecting the claims of San Juan County and the State of Utah1 to a public right-of-way,
    called Salt Creek Road, in Canyonlands National Park. We affirm.
    BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    Salt Creek Road is an unimproved 12.3-mile road intertwined with the creek bed
    in Salt Creek Canyon. The state and county wish to use their claimed right-of-way to
    prevent the United States from closing the Salt Creek Road to vehicle traffic.2 The road
    
    The late Honorable William J. Holloway, United States Senior Circuit Judge,
    fully participated in this appeal and joined this panel opinion, which was then circulated
    to all circuit judges on April 1, 2014. He passed away before the opinion could be filed
    and published. “The practice of this Court permits the remaining two panel judges if in
    agreement to act as a quorum in resolving the appeal.” United States v. Wiles, 
    106 F.3d 1516
    , 1516 n.* (10th Cir.1997); see also 28 U.S.C. § 46(d) (noting circuit court may
    adopt procedures permitting disposition of an appeal where remaining quorum of panel
    agrees on the disposition). The remaining panel members have acted as a quorum with
    respect to the opinion and no judge of this Court has objected to its publication.
    1
    The district judge granted Utah’s motion to intervene as a plaintiff.
    2
    Attachment A to this opinion provides a rough, not-to-scale map of the area in
    question. The map originates in the United States’ brief. San Juan County tells us the
    (Continued . . .)
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    is the primary way for tourists to reach several scenic sites within the Canyonlands
    National Park, including Angel Arch. Without vehicle access, the only way to access
    Angel Arch is to make the nine-mile trek by foot. As the state and county explain, this
    trek renders Angel Arch inaccessible to many people, particularly those who lack the
    physical ability to make arduous hikes.
    The state and county base their claim on Revised Statute (R.S.) 2477. The statute
    read simply: “[T]he right of way for the construction of highways over public lands, not
    reserved for public uses, is hereby granted.”3 Congress enacted R.S. 2477 in 1866, and it
    remained in effect until 1976.4 Even then, however, Congress preserved the rights-of-
    way established under the statute. S. Utah Wilderness Alliance v. Bureau of Land Mgmt.
    (SUWA), 
    425 F.3d 735
    , 741 (10th Cir. 2005). Likewise, when Congress reserved
    map is misleading in that it fails to show Cave Springs road “continu[ing] to travel east
    from [the] Salt Creek road intersection.” (Reply Br. of San Juan County 4.)
    Nevertheless, the map provides a helpful visual aid to understanding the landmarks and
    road closures pertinent to the case. Although the larger road system to which the claimed
    road belongs (a system the United States refers to as “Salt Creek Route”) connects to the
    south side of the park, the terrain permits vehicle travel only from the park entrance to
    Upper Jump.
    3
    Act of July 26, 1866, ch. 262, § 8, 14 Stat. 251, 253, codified at 43 U.S.C. § 932,
    repealed by Federal Land Policy & Management Act of 1976, Pub. L. No. 94-579
    § 706(a), 90 Stat. 2743.
    4
    Federal Land Policy & Management Act of 1976, Pub. L. No. 94-579 § 706(a),
    90 Stat. 2743.
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    Canyonlands National Park in 1964, clearly preventing new rights-of-way across these
    public lands, it made the reservation “subject to valid existing rights.”5
    R.S. 2477 “‘was a standing offer of a free right of way over the public domain.’”
    
    SUWA, 425 F.3d at 741
    (quoting Lindsay Land & Live Stock Co. v. Churnos, 
    285 P. 646
    ,
    648 (Utah 1929)). The public need only accept it. See 
    id. The question
    of whether a
    R.S. 2477 right-of-way has been accepted is a question of federal law. However, “to the
    extent that state law provides convenient and appropriate principles for [implementing]
    congressional intent,” federal law “borrows” from it to “determin[e] what is required for
    acceptance of a right of way.” 
    Id. at 768
    (quotation marks omitted).
    Under Utah law, “[a] highway shall be deemed and taken as dedicated and
    abandoned to the use of the Public when it has been continuously and uninterruptedly
    used as a Public thoroughfare for a period of ten years.” Lindsay Land & Live 
    Stock, 285 P. at 648
    (quoting ch. 12, Laws of Utah 1886, § 2); accord Utah Code Ann. § 72-5-
    104(1). Neither R.S. 2477 nor Utah law requires any “administrative formalities” or
    “formal act of public acceptance” of the right-of-way. 
    SUWA, 425 F.3d at 741
    ; see
    Lindsay 
    Land, 285 P. at 648
    . Accordingly, disputes involving R.S. 2477 rights-of-way
    often require a close examination of historical evidence of public use. 
    SUWA, 425 F.3d at 772-76
    (elaborating on the historical facts of several typical cases).
    5
    Pub. L. No. 88-950, § 1, 78 Stat. 934 (1964).
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    Thus, the issue at trial was whether the public had accepted an R.S. 2477 right-of-
    way on Salt Creek Road through “continuous public use for a period of ten years” prior to
    the reservation of the lands for Canyonlands National Park on September 12, 1964.6
    (Joint App’x Vol. II at 484-85.) During a nine-day bench trial, the state and county
    produced a variety of historical evidence as proof of such use. To summarize, the
    evidence showed (1) residential and grazing uses at a site south of the road beginning in
    the late 1880s or early 1890s; (2) cattle herding and grazing in Salt Creek Canyon starting
    around 1891 and increasing gradually through the 1950s; (3) nascent uses of the canyon
    by boy scouts and tourists beginning as early as 1950; and (4) some uranium mining and
    oil exploration in the mid- to late-1950s.
    Following the trial, a judgment issued in favor of the United States. In the judge’s
    view, although the state and county were able to show a variety of historical uses of the
    road, the evidence was not sufficient to show the road had been in continuous public use
    as a public thoroughfare throughout a ten year period prior to the reservation of
    Canyonlands National Park in September of 1964:
    During the 1950s, a visit to Salt Creek Canyon and Angel
    Arch was an experience marked by pristine solitude.
    Continuous public use of the plaintiffs’ claimed right-of-way
    as a public thoroughfare—to reach Angel Arch or anywhere
    6
    The United States closed the historical access road to the public in late 1968 or
    early 1969. Later, in the mid-1970s, the United States closed a portion of the road near,
    but to the south, of the section claimed by the state and county; the closure started “a
    short distance above (south of) Bates Wilson Campsite.” (Ans. Br. of United States 14.)
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    else in Salt Creek Canyon—had not yet begun by September
    of 1954, and indeed did not commence for some time
    thereafter. By September of 1964, it was certainly arguable
    that the plaintiffs’ claimed right-of-way . . . up Salt Creek
    Canyon to Angel Arch was in continuous public use as a
    public thoroughfare, primarily for the purpose of scenic
    tourism by the growing number of visitors to the Canyonlands
    area, and for other uses as well. By then, the path of the road
    had arguably become discernable on the ground as it
    traversed the Salt Creek stream bed—at least to the extent
    that the tracks were not washed away by the recurring flood
    events that are typical of Salt Creek. But given the evidence
    presented at trial, and this court’s findings based on that
    evidence, the same cannot be said for the ten years preceding
    September 12, 1964, and this court must conclude that the
    plaintiffs have failed to prove by clear and convincing
    evidence the requisite ten years of continuous public use of
    their claimed R.S. 2477 right-of-way as a public
    thoroughfare.
    (Joint App’x Vol. 2 at 550-52 (footnotes omitted).)
    DISCUSSION
    Contrary to the district judge’s decision, the state and county tell us they have
    demonstrated the required ten years of continuous public use of Salt Creek Road prior to
    the park reservation in 1964. Although the United States is satisfied with the judge’s
    merits decision, it contends sovereign immunity deprived the district court of jurisdiction.
    As it explains, this suit is premised on the waiver of sovereign immunity in the Quiet
    Title Act. It claims the limitation periods in the Act have expired, thereby preventing the
    state and county from taking advantage of the waiver.
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    I. Quiet Title Act/Sovereign Immunity
    Because the Quiet Title Act issue is jurisdictional, we consider it first. In doing
    so, “[w]e review de novo both the district court’s determination of subject-matter
    jurisdiction and its ruling on the applicability of a statute of limitations.” Rio Grande
    Silvery Minnow (Hybognathus amarus) v. Bureau of Reclamation, 
    599 F.3d 1165
    , 1175
    (10th Cir. 2010). We review the district court’s findings of jurisdictional fact for clear
    error. 
    Id. Like the
    district judge, we conclude the claims of both the state and county are
    timely.
    Normally, sovereign immunity shields the United States from suit. FDIC v.
    Meyer, 
    510 U.S. 471
    , 475 (1994); see Block v. North Dakota ex rel. Bd. of Univ. & Sch.
    Lands, 
    461 U.S. 273
    , 280 (1983). Unless the United States waives its sovereign
    immunity, thereby consenting to be sued, the federal courts lack jurisdiction to hear
    claims against it. 
    Meyer, 510 U.S. at 475
    ; 
    Block, 461 U.S. at 280
    ; see United States v.
    Sherwood, 
    312 U.S. 584
    , 587-88 (1941). The terms of the waiver “define [the] court’s
    jurisdiction to entertain the suit.” 
    Meyer, 510 U.S. at 475
    (quotation marks omitted).
    The Quiet Title Act, under which the state and county brought their suit, is a
    limited waiver of sovereign immunity. Rio Grande Silvery 
    Minnow, 599 F.3d at 1175
    .
    The Act provides the only way for claimants to “challenge the United States’ title to real
    property.” 
    Id. Although the
    state and county jointly advance the same R.S. 2477 claim,
    the Act provides for both a general limitation period and a limitation period applicable
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    only to claims brought by states. Accordingly, we discuss the claims of San Juan County
    and Utah separately.
    A. San Juan County’s Claim
    For claimants other than states, “Congress . . . limited the waiver” of sovereign
    immunity in the Quiet Title Act to actions filed within twelve years of the date of accrual.
    Knapp v. United States, 
    636 F.2d 279
    , 282 (10th Cir. 1980) (quoting 28 U.S.C.
    § 2409a(f) (now 28 U.S.C. § 2409a(g)); see Rio Grande Silvery 
    Minnow, 599 F.3d at 1175
    . The twelve-year period begins to run when the United States gives notice that it
    does not recognize (or will not continue to recognize) the legitimacy of a claimant’s use
    of federal lands. George v. United States, 
    672 F.3d 942
    , 946-47 (10th Cir.), cert. denied,
    
    133 S. Ct. 432
    (2012). In other words, the period begins when the Quiet Title Act
    claimant “knew or should have known of the existence of some assertion—some claim—
    by the government of an adverse right.” 
    Id. at 947.7
    The “assertion” by the United States
    need only be sufficient to put potential plaintiffs on notice of the need to timely bring a
    quiet title action to protect their rights. See 
    id. This is
    as an “exceedingly light” trigger
    “for starting [the] twelve-year clock running.” 
    Id. at 944.
    But it is a necessary one
    7
    Although the county is a political subdivision of Utah, it correctly chose not to
    claim to be entitled to the more lenient limitation period applicable to suits by states. See
    Park Cnty., Mont. v. United States, 
    626 F.2d 718
    , 720 (9th Cir. 1980); see also N.
    Mariana Islands v. United States, 
    279 F.3d 1070
    , 1072 (9th Cir. 2002) (discussing the
    differential treatment, with respect to the limitation period, of states relative to other
    Quiet Title Act plaintiffs).
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    because we are required to strictly construe the twelve-year limitation period in favor of
    the United States. Rio Grande Silvery 
    Minnow, 599 F.3d at 1176
    . Since San Juan
    County filed its complaint on June 14, 2004, it is timely as long as the claim accrued no
    earlier than June 14, 1992.
    The dispute over the timeliness of the county’s claim centers on whether closures
    of roads within Salt Creek Canyon by the United States gave sufficient notice of its
    assertion of exclusive control. Two closures, illustrated in the attached map, are pertinent
    here. In 1969, the United States closed the “historical access road,”8 which was used to
    access the Salt Creek Road from the Canyonlands’ park entrance road, and constructed a
    new, more circuitous access road. Although the county does not claim a right-of-way to
    the historical access road, the United States argues the historical access road and the Salt
    Creek Road were merely different segments of the same continuous road. Thus, it
    explains, its closure of the historical access road placed the county on notice of its
    exclusive claim to the Salt Creek Road. The United States also points to its mid-1970s
    closure of a road segment south of the claimed road in Salt Creek Canyon. 9 This closure
    started just south of the Bates Wilson Camp and ran south through Upper Jump. While
    8
    To be clear, our use of the term “historical access road” refers only to the small
    portion of the Salt Creek Road immediately northeast of Cave Spring. See Attachment A.
    9
    Like the historical access road, this segment is not part of the road the county
    claims. And unlike the closure of part of the historical access road, the closure of this
    segment did not threaten to impede the public’s access to the claimed Salt Creek Road.
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    this segment is located to the south of the claimed road, it is, like the historical access
    road, nearly adjacent to the claimed section of the road.
    According to the county, these closures did not give notice of an exclusive claim
    because the United States continued to allow the public to use Salt Creek Road, which
    remained accessible via the new access road. In the county’s view, the public’s use under
    the right-of-way can “peaceably coexist,” 
    George, 672 F.3d at 947
    , with the ownership
    interest asserted by the United States.10
    The Ninth Circuit’s decision in McFarland v. Norton illustrates this peaceful
    coexistence. 
    425 F.3d 724
    , 727 (9th Cir. 2005). There, the claimant owned a parcel of
    land within Glacier National Park and sought to enforce an easement to a road serving as
    the primary route to the claimant’s land. 
    Id. at 725.
    The United States had engaged in a
    series of progressively more restrictive management activities, but the court concluded
    they were not sufficiently inconsistent with the claimed easement to put the claimant on
    notice of the United States’ claim to exclusive ownership or exclusive control over the
    road. 
    Id. at 727-28.
    In the 1950s, the United States stopped plowing the road. 
    Id. Later, it
    banned snowmobiles. 
    Id. In the
    1970s, it erected wooden barriers but allowed the
    claimant to move them. 
    Id. at 725.
    In 1976, it erected a locked cable barrier to prevent
    access, but unlocked the barrier whenever the claimant requested. 
    Id. at 725-26.
    Finally,
    10
    It appears the permit gate (see Attachment A) was put in place after 1995 and
    access down Salt Creek Road was thereafter limited; see discussion infra pp. 14-15.
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    in 1999, it told the claimant the road would be closed to everyone during the winter, and
    modified the lock system to deny the claimant winter access. 
    Id. at 726.
    Although the
    United States freely exercised its “power to regulate” the road, none of its pre-1999
    management activities started the limitation period because they did not put the claimant
    on notice of any “claim of exclusive ownership.” 
    Id. at 727.
    In essence, until the
    management activities were inconsistent with the claimed right-of-way, they did not
    provide the notice necessary to start the running of the limitation period.
    The same principle applies here. Perhaps the closure and demolition of the short
    historical access road and construction of the new access road would be sufficient to put
    the county on notice of the United States’ claim of its right to exclude others from using
    the historical access road. The same is, of course, true of the closure of the road segment
    to the south of the claimed right-of-way. But, as the judge found, the United States
    conscientiously ensured the public could continue to use Salt Creek Road. Because the
    public continued to have access to Salt Creek Road consistent with the claimed right-of-
    way, neither of the United States’ road closures provided the county with sufficient notice
    of the United States’ claim of a right to exclude the public, as would be necessary to
    assert a claim of exclusive ownership to Salt Creek Road (its right to exclude offers). See
    
    George, 672 F.3d at 947
    .
    The United States bristles at this result. It intimates the claim to the road was
    artificially constructed to omit any portion of the road for which the county might have
    had some notice of the United States’ claim. The United States may be right, but we see
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    no reason this is improper. As the original plaintiff, the county is master of its own
    claim. Cf. Schmeling v. NORDAM, 
    97 F.3d 1336
    , 1339 (10th Cir. 1996) (observing
    plaintiffs, as “master[s] of the claim,” may prevent removal by omitting federal claims,
    “even if one is available”). As such, it may properly limit the scope of its claim to avoid
    both untimely claims and issues irrelevant to the Angel Arch access they wish to
    preserve. The county’s claim is timely.
    B. Utah’s Claim
    Utah’s claim presents a somewhat different timeliness issue. As we read Utah’s
    brief, it advances two rationales for the timeliness of its claim. First, in its view, the
    United States has done nothing to trigger the Quiet Title Act’s limitation period. And,
    Utah argues, even if the United States’ actions did trigger the limitation period, its claim
    is timely.
    The general trigger for the twelve-year limitation period in the Quiet Title Act is
    not applicable to states. 28 U.S.C. § 2409a(g) (“Any civil action under this section,
    except for an action brought by a State, shall be barred unless it is commenced within
    twelve years of the date upon which it accrued.”) (emphasis added). For states, the
    trigger is different because it requires more than fair notice; it requires substantial activity
    by the United States:
    Any civil action brought by a State under this section with
    respect to lands, other than tide or submerged lands, on which
    the United States . . . has made substantial improvements or
    substantial investments or on which the United States has
    conducted substantial activities pursuant to a management
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    plan such as range improvement, timber harvest, tree
    planting, mineral activities, farming, wildlife habitat
    improvement, or other similar activities, shall be barred
    unless the action is commenced within twelve years after the
    date the State received notice of the Federal claims to the
    lands.
    28 U.S.C. § 2409a(i).
    1. Applicability of the Limitation Period in § 2409a(i)
    Utah first challenges the applicability of the limitation period in § 2409a(i). It
    argues the activities the United States has undertaken on Salt Creek Road are not the
    kinds of substantial activities listed in the statute. Therefore, it says, because the
    condition precedent (substantial activity by the federal government) has not been met, its
    claim does not fall within the ambit of § 2409a(i)’s limitation period. We cannot stretch
    the statute that far.
    As the record demonstrates, the United States has conducted “substantial
    activities” with respect to the road. It reserved the land as Canyonlands National Park in
    1964. It reconstructed the park’s access road. It repaired and maintained the Salt Creek
    Road to ensure it remained passable for vehicles. This has included significant work to
    restore the road after floods. Because of these activities, the twelve-year limitation
    period in § 2409a(i) applies to Utah’s claim.
    2. Notice
    Nevertheless, Utah’s claim is timely. Unlike the Quiet Title Act’s general
    limitation period, the Act’s state-specific limitation period begins to run only when “the
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    State receive[s] notice of the Federal claims to the lands.” 28 U.S.C. § 2409a(i). A state
    receives notice either (1) “by public communications with respect to the claimed lands
    which are sufficiently specific as to be reasonably calculated to put the claimant on notice
    of the Federal claim to the lands” or (2) “by the use, occupancy, or improvement of the
    claimed lands which, in the circumstances, is open and notorious.” 
    Id. § 2409a(k).
    As
    with the general limitation period, the only notice sufficient to start the limitation period
    is notice of an adverse claim. See 
    George, 672 F.3d at 947
    .
    According to the United States, the road closures discussed above, combined with
    a variety of other park management activities, show it provided Utah notice of its claim to
    “exclusive jurisdiction and control over Salt Creek Canyon and Salt Creek route since
    1964.” (Ans. Br. of United States 40.) These activities include (1) a 1965 Master Plan,
    which proposed the destruction of the historical access road; (2) the National Park
    Service’s 1970 recommendation that the upper canyon be designated as wilderness; (3)
    the 1977 “Assessment of Alternatives” “proposing further vehicle closures” (Id. at 41);
    (4) the 1992 Federal Register notice of the preparation of an updated backcountry
    management plan “encompass[ing] visitor use and roads” (Id.); and (5) its routine
    management of the road, including repairs, maintenance, closures, and regulation of
    vehicle traffic.
    Yet, as with the road closures, these activities did not put Utah on notice of a claim
    by the United States adverse to Utah’s claimed right-of-way. Throughout all of these
    activities, the Salt Creek Road remained fully accessible to the public. Indeed, the
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    maintenance activities served to ensure the public continued to have access to the road.
    The first time the United States limited the public’s access to the road was sometime after
    January 1995, when the Park Service implemented the backcountry management plan’s
    proposed day-use permit system. This system allowed only ten private vehicles and two
    commercial vehicles to use the Salt Creek Road each day. Even this restriction may not
    have been sufficiently adverse to put Utah on notice of the United States’ claim of
    exclusive ownership, but, assuming it was, Utah’s claim, filed on April 22, 2005, is
    timely.
    II. Acceptance of the Salt Creek Road as a Public Right-of-Way
    The state and county contend they demonstrated acceptance of an R.S. 2477 right-
    of-way through ten years of continuous public use of Salt Creek Road prior to the
    reservation of Canyonlands National Park in 1964. In particular, they argue the district
    judge erred in (1) requiring them to show the public used the road with any frequency
    greater than “the public finds . . . convenient or necessary” (Opening Br. of San Juan
    County 26 (quotation marks omitted)); (2) requiring a showing of a “jeep road” or a
    “discernable road” (Id. at 30 (quotation marks omitted)); (3) disregarding evidence of
    uses occurring under a private right; (4) disregarding evidence showing Salt Creek Road
    was used by a variety of users since the late 1800s; and (5) concluding their claims must
    be proven by clear and convincing evidence. We see no error.
    In this appeal from a bench trial, our review of the district judge’s application of
    the law is de novo. Keys Youth Servs., Inc. v. City of Olathe, Kan., 
    248 F.3d 1267
    , 1274
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    (10th Cir. 2001). We reverse factual determinations only if they are clearly erroneous.
    
    Id. That occurs
    when a factual finding lacks any support in the record or leaves us “with
    a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made.” 
    Id. (quotation marks
    omitted). “If the district court’s account of the evidence is plausible in light of the
    record . . ., [we] may not reverse it even though convinced that had [we] been sitting as
    the trier of fact, [we] would have weighed the evidence differently.” Anderson v. City of
    Bessemer City, N.C., 
    470 U.S. 564
    , 565 (1985). This is so “regardless of whether the
    district court’s factual findings are based on credibility determinations or on documentary
    evidence.” La Resolana Architects, PA v. Reno, Inc., 
    555 F.3d 1171
    , 1177 (10th Cir.
    2009).
    The parties agree on the general contours of the applicable law. As right-of-way
    claimants, the burden of proof of establishing an R.S. 2477 right-of-way lies with the
    state and county. 
    SUWA, 425 F.3d at 768-69
    . This burden requires the claimants to show
    the public accepted the R.S. 2477 right-of-way by using it continuously as a public
    thoroughfare for ten years prior to reservation of rights by the United States.11 See 
    id. at 771.
    11
    Under Utah law, the public accepts an R.S. 2477 right-of-way through
    continuous public use “as a Public thoroughfare for a period of ten years.” Lindsay 
    Land, 285 P. at 648
    (quoting chapter 12, Laws of Utah 1886, § 2); accord Wasatch County v.
    Okelberry, 
    179 P.3d 768
    , 772-73 (Utah 2008); 
    SUWA, 425 F.3d at 771
    .
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    Appellate Case: 11-4146      Document: 01019240283         Date Filed: 04/25/2014         Page: 18
    A. Frequency of Use
    The parties part ways, however, in their understanding of what the “continuous
    public use as a public thoroughfare for a period of ten years” standard requires. The state
    and county first complain of the district judge’s requirement of “direct proof of an ill-
    defined frequency of use.” (Opening Br. of San Juan County 24.) In their view, no
    particular frequency of use is required; the standard is satisfied when the public use is as
    often as the public finds convenient or necessary during the ten-year period. As they
    explain the law, the standard merely requires ten years of public use uninterrupted by any
    act of the United States intended to interfere with the public’s use; whatever it may have
    been.
    While we agree uninterrupted use is necessary, it is not alone sufficient to
    demonstrate the existence of a public thoroughfare for purposes of R.S. 2477. As we will
    explain, frequency or intensity of use is probative of the existence of a “public
    thoroughfare,” and, to the extent recent changes to Utah law minimize the importance of
    this factor, it nevertheless remains pertinent under federal law.
    Under Utah law, the “continuous public use as a public thoroughfare for a period
    of ten years” standard has three components: (1) continuous use; (2) a public
    thoroughfare; and (3) a ten-year-minimum period of use. See Utah Cnty. v. Butler, 
    179 P.3d 775
    , 780 (Utah 2008). The ten-year minimum is self-explanatory and the Utah
    courts have elaborated on the other two components of this standard.
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    Appellate Case: 11-4146      Document: 01019240283         Date Filed: 04/25/2014     Page: 19
    “Continuous” in this context means “without interruption.” Wasatch County v.
    Okelberry, 
    179 P.3d 768
    , 774 (Utah 2008). It includes any frequency of uninterrupted
    use, so long as the use occurs “as often as the public finds it convenient or necessary.”
    
    Id. at 774.
    But see Heber City Corp. v. Simpson, 
    942 P.2d 307
    , 312 (Utah 1997)
    (applying “convenient or necessary” as an inquiry to the purposes of use rather than the
    frequency of use).
    The “public thoroughfare” element refers to “a place or way through which there
    is passing or travel” by the public. Heber City 
    Corp., 942 P.2d at 311
    (quotation marks
    omitted); Jennings Investment, LC v. Dixie Riding Club, Inc., 
    208 P.3d 1077
    , 1081 (Utah
    Ct. App. 2009). To demonstrate the existence of a public thoroughfare, a claimant must
    show: “(i) passing or travel, (ii) by the public, and (iii) without permission.” Jennings
    
    Inv., 208 P.3d at 1081
    ; see Heber 
    City, 942 P.2d at 311
    .
    Although frequency (or intensity) of use is not an explicit component of the
    “public thoroughfare” analysis, it has always been pertinent to establishing sufficient
    “passing or travel” “by the public.” See 
    SUWA, 425 F.3d at 771
    (“The decisions make
    clear that occasional or desultory use is not sufficient.”). For instance, in Lindsay Land,
    the Utah Supreme Court found the claimed road was used by the public 
    generally. 285 P. at 648
    . It reasoned the evidence showed both frequent and varied use. 
    Id. (“[T]he road
    was used by many and different persons for a variety of purposes [and] the use made of it
    was as general and extensive as the situation and surroundings would permit, had the
    road been formally laid out as a public highway by public authority.”). While the
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    Appellate Case: 11-4146       Document: 01019240283        Date Filed: 04/25/2014     Page: 20
    frequency of use need not be “great,” it must be sufficient to call the road a “public
    thoroughfare.” See Boyer v. Clark, 
    326 P.2d 107
    , 108-09 (Utah 1958); see also Thomson
    v. Condas, 
    493 P.2d 639
    , 641 (Utah 1972) (intermittent or occasional use by hunters,
    fisherman, and shepherds, farmers, and miners is not sufficient); Harding v. Bohman, 
    491 P.2d 233
    , 234 (Utah 1971) (occasional use by deer hunters is insufficient); Cassity v.
    Castagno, 
    347 P.2d 834
    , 834-35 (Utah 1959) (regular use by a single cattleman for
    driving cattle is insufficient).
    1. Significance of Recent Changes in Utah Law
    The state and county resist this interpretation of Utah law. In their view, two 2008
    cases from the Utah Supreme Court, Wasatch County v. Okelberry, 
    179 P.3d 768
    (Utah
    2008), and Utah County v. Butler, 
    179 P.3d 775
    (Utah 2008), announced a new
    interpretation of the “continuous public use as a public thoroughfare for a period of ten
    years” standard. They argue these cases should not be interpreted, as we have done, in
    accord with Utah’s prior case law because the Utah Supreme Court specifically intended
    to jettison its prior standard as unworkable. See 
    Okelberry, 179 P.3d at 774
    . And, they
    say, under this new interpretation, frequency of use is not a pertinent consideration.
    Although we believe the “public thoroughfare” element still requires a showing of
    sufficiently frequent public use, we acknowledge these recent Utah cases can be plausibly
    read to reject any inquiry into frequency of use. In Okelberry, the Utah Supreme Court
    determined that “continuous[] use[] as a public thoroughfare” required use only “as often
    as the public finds convenient or 
    necessary.” 179 P.3d at 774
    . The essential meaning of
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    Appellate Case: 11-4146      Document: 01019240283          Date Filed: 04/25/2014      Page: 21
    “continuous[] use[] as a public thoroughfare,” the Okelberry court explained, is not
    frequent use, but use uninterrupted by an “overt act . . . intended by a property owner to
    interrupt the use of [the] road as a public thoroughfare.” 
    Id. Even if
    the interpretation advanced by the state and county is correct, we
    nevertheless conclude it does not apply here. Federal law governs our interpretation of
    R.S. 2477. 
    SUWA, 425 F.3d at 768
    . True, R.S. 2477 was enacted “against a backdrop of
    common law, without any indication of intention to depart from or change common law
    rules.” 
    Id. at 763.
    Stated another way, state common law has provided “convenient and
    appropriate principles for [carrying out] congressional intent,” and we have used it in the
    past to determine how the public can accept an R.S. 2477 right-of-way and to elaborate
    on the term “highway.” 
    Id. at 768
    ; see 
    id. at 782
    (defining “highway”). However, state
    law ceases to provide “convenient and appropriate principles” when it contravenes
    congressional intent. See 
    id. at 767-68.
    Assuming, arguendo, frequency of use is no
    longer pertinent under Utah law as interpreted in Okelberry and Butler, this interpretation
    contravenes Congress’ express intent in two ways.
    First, as Lindsay Land demonstrates, frequency and variety of use were critical
    common-law inquiries into the acceptance of an R.S. 2477 
    right-of-way. 285 P. at 648
    .
    While it is difficult to crystallize in a verbal formula the precise level of use necessary for
    acceptance of an R.S. 2477 right-of-way, 
    SUWA, 425 F.3d at 772
    , the Utah Supreme
    Court’s new standard defies sensible application in the R.S. 2477 context. Taking the
    new Utah standard at its word, a right-of-way could spring into being at the most
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    Appellate Case: 11-4146      Document: 01019240283         Date Filed: 04/25/2014       Page: 22
    infrequent use of a path by a member of the public, so long as the use remained
    uninterrupted for ten years.12 Not only does such a lenient standard clash with the
    common-law standard, it also eliminates the effect of the limiting phrase “for the
    construction of highways” in the text of R.S. 2477: “[T]he right of way for the
    construction of highways over public lands, not reserved for public uses, is hereby
    granted” (emphasis added). Thus, the “as often as the public finds convenient or
    necessary” standard departs from Congress’ intent in enacting R.S. 2477. The limiting
    phrase “for the construction of highways” should be read as congruent with the common-
    law understanding of “public thoroughfare” 13 and the multi-factor common-law analysis
    exemplified in Lindsay 
    Land. 285 P. at 648
    ; see 
    SUWA, 425 F.3d at 763
    (reasoning R.S.
    2477’s “statutory terms must be read as embodying their common law meaning”).
    12
    Moreover, such meager uses may, reasonably, escape notice by federal
    authorities or, if noticed, be tolerated because of their insignificance. We are unwilling to
    presume such trivial events are sufficient to establish a public thoroughfare across federal
    lands.
    13
    This definition is consistent with the common understanding of the term
    “thoroughfare.” Merriam-Webster’s online dictionary, at http://www.merriam-
    webster.com/dictionary/thoroughfare, defines “thoroughfare” as:
    1 : a way or place for passage: as
    a : a street open at both ends
    b : a main road
    Cambridge Dictionaries Online, at http://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/
    american-english/thoroughfare, is more direct: a “thoroughfare” is “a road that connects
    to other roads.”
    - 22 -
    Appellate Case: 11-4146       Document: 01019240283        Date Filed: 04/25/2014      Page: 23
    Second, and perhaps more importantly, when Congress repealed R.S. 2477, it
    chose to preserve only those rights-of-way existing on the date of repeal, October 21,
    1976. See Sierra Club v. Hodel, 
    848 F.2d 1068
    , 1083 & n.14 (10th Cir. 1988) (noting
    scope of R.S. 2477 right-of-way is determined with respect to state law as of date of
    repeal of statute), overruled on other grounds, Village of Los Ranchos De Albuquerque v.
    Marsh, 
    956 F.2d 970
    (10th Cir. 1992). Applying the Utah Supreme Court’s more lenient
    2008 standard would retroactively broaden the public’s eligibility for R.S. 2477 rights-of-
    way beyond what Congress could have intended to preserve.
    The intensity of public use remains a pertinent component in determining the
    existence of a public thoroughfare. The district judge did not err in considering it.
    B. Proprietary Interests
    The state and county also argue certain cattle-grazing uses of the Salt Creek Road
    should have been considered. The district judge found these uses were not particularly
    probative as to the existence of a public thoroughfare because the users had “proprietary
    interests in upper Salt Creek.”14 (Joint App’x Vol. II at 545.)
    The evidence at trial suggested one of the more prominent uses of the Salt Creek
    Road prior to the reservation of Canyonlands National Park was cattle ranching. Cattle
    ranchers—particularly the ranchers of the Scorup-Somerville Cattle Company—used Salt
    14
    Although San Juan County complains there was no evidence to support the
    district court’s reference to grazing permits, the record supports this reference. (Joint
    App’x Vol. 7 at 1807-1809; Vol. 9 at 2330-2375; Vol. 10 at 2597-2625.)
    - 23 -
    Appellate Case: 11-4146        Document: 01019240283         Date Filed: 04/25/2014      Page: 24
    Creek Road to move cattle between winter and summer grazing. The judge concluded
    the cattle-grazing evidence did not establish the existence of a public thoroughfare
    because (1) the grazing use occurred pursuant to federal grazing permits and a “1942
    deed to 80 acres of land near Kirk’s Cabin,” and (2) “it would strain the language to
    characterize [the ranchers’] presence as a ‘public’ use, or [to say the] Salt Creek Canyon
    was then being used as a ‘public thoroughfare.’” (Id.)
    Again, the judge properly considered these facts. As to the grazing permits, the
    Utah courts have consistently held “‘[u]se under private right is not sufficient’” to
    demonstrate public use. Heber 
    City, 942 P.2d at 311
    (quoting Morris v. Blunt, 
    161 P. 1127
    , 1131 (Utah 1916)); see 
    Butler, 179 P.3d at 782
    ; Jennings 
    Inv., 208 P.3d at 1082
    .
    The judge did not err in disregarding use under private right in considering the existence
    of a public thoroughfare.
    The state and county suggest the grazing permits and deed only authorized the
    grazing, not the travel to and from the grazing sites. That is a stretch, but even if true, the
    trial judge still did not err in concluding the cattle grazing did not establish a public
    thoroughfare. Indeed, the Utah Supreme Court reached the same conclusion on similar
    facts in 
    Cassity. 347 P.2d at 834-35
    . There, although the claimant regularly drove his
    cattle along a strip of land to reach winter grazing lands, this use was not sufficient to
    establish the strip as a public highway. 
    Id. Here, similarly,
    the cattle-grazing uses were
    not, by themselves, sufficient to demonstrate the existence of a public thoroughfare.
    During much of the time in question, the cattle-grazing appeared to be the only apparent
    - 24 -
    Appellate Case: 11-4146      Document: 01019240283         Date Filed: 04/25/2014      Page: 25
    use of the road, and the grazing was primarily done by a single user—the Scorup-
    Somerville Cattle Company. This was not use “by many and different persons for a
    variety of purposes.” See Lindsay 
    Land, 285 P. at 648
    .
    The assessment of the cattle-grazing evidence was properly done.
    C. Constructed Jeep Road/Discernible Road Standard
    The state and county also argue the district judge erred in “requir[ing] a
    constructed jeep road.” (Opening Br. of San Juan County 30.) We see no error.
    Although R.S. 2477 was a grant for the “construction of highways over public
    lands,” mechanical construction is not necessary to prove a R.S. 2477 right-of-way.
    
    SUWA, 425 F.3d at 777-78
    . Nevertheless, “evidence of actual construction (appropriate
    to the historical period in question), or lack thereof, can be taken into consideration as
    evidence of the required extent of public use, though it is not a necessary or sufficient
    element.” 
    Id. at 778.
    This is what the trial judge did. He did not require a constructed jeep road.
    Rather, he considered the presence (or lack) of a discernible road as probative of whether
    a public thoroughfare existed. He noted that, as scenic tourism developed in the late
    1950s and early 1960s, the road began to become “discernable on the ground.” (Joint
    App’x Vol. 2 at 551.) He explained how this lack of a discernible road during the ten
    years prior to the reservation of Canyonlands National Park was consistent with the
    “pristine solitude” prevailing in the Salt Creek Canyon at the time. (Id. at 550.) And, he
    considered this evidence alongside the other evidence probative of the existence of a
    - 25 -
    Appellate Case: 11-4146       Document: 01019240283          Date Filed: 04/25/2014       Page: 26
    public thoroughfare. Under our precedent, this use of the evidence was correct and
    permissible. See 
    SUWA, 425 F.3d at 778
    .
    D. Full Consideration of the Evidence
    The state and county also argue the trial judge either glossed over or disregarded
    evidence of the public’s use of the road. Both emphasize the evidence of use of Salt
    Creek Road extending back to 1890. According to Utah, for instance:
    Beginning in 1890 and continuing for more than 100 years, homesteaders
    . . . , ranchers . . . , miners, and adventurers . . . forged, and thereafter used
    as desired, a road through Salt Creek Canyon that stretched more than 12
    sandy miles, meandering in and out [of] a streambed, but always taking the
    user where it was convenient and necessary to go.
    (Opening Br. of Utah 47.)
    The state and county put on a strong case, but so did the United States. In the end,
    whether the public used the claimed road continuously for ten years prior to the
    reservation of the park is a factual issue. It is the role of the judge to weigh the evidence
    presented at a bench trial. See Keys Youth 
    Servs., 248 F.3d at 1274-75
    . The trial judge
    determined both the credibility and relative persuasiveness of the evidence presented.
    See 
    id. We have
    carefully reviewed those determinations, and they do not leave us with a
    “definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made.” See 
    id. Nor can
    we identify
    any factual findings without support in the record. See 
    id. There was
    no clear error in the
    assessment of the evidence.
    - 26 -
    Appellate Case: 11-4146      Document: 01019240283          Date Filed: 04/25/2014    Page: 27
    E. Evidentiary Standard
    Because the judge correctly concluded the evidence of the existence of a public
    thoroughfare failed to satisfy either the more lenient “preponderance of the evidence”
    standard or the more stringent “clear and convincing evidence” standard, we need not
    resolve the dispute over the proper standard.
    CONCLUSION
    The state and county failed to carry their burden of establishing ten years of
    continuous public use of the Salt Creek Road as a public thoroughfare prior to reservation
    of Canyonlands National Park in 1964.
    AFFIRMED.
    - 27 -
    Appellate Case: 11-4146   Document: 01019240283    Date Filed: 04/25/2014   Page: 28
    ATTACHMENT: ROADMAP WITH LANDMARKS
    - 28 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 11-4146

Filed Date: 4/25/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/14/2015

Authorities (23)

Keys Youth Services, Inc. v. City of Olathe , 248 F.3d 1267 ( 2001 )

Rio Grande Silvery Minnow v. Bureau of Reclamation , 599 F.3d 1165 ( 2010 )

United States v. Quentin T. Wiles , 106 F.3d 1516 ( 1997 )

Schmeling v. Nordam , 97 F.3d 1336 ( 1996 )

village-of-los-ranchos-de-albuquerque-anne-bullock-steven-ruffennach-edward , 956 F.2d 970 ( 1992 )

La Resolana Architects, PA v. Reno, Inc. , 555 F.3d 1171 ( 2009 )

Park County, Montana, and Sweet Grass County, Montana v. ... , 626 F.2d 718 ( 1980 )

john-james-mcfarland-v-gale-a-norton-in-her-capacity-as-secretary-of-the , 425 F.3d 724 ( 2005 )

Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands v. United ... , 279 F.3d 1070 ( 2002 )

United States v. Sherwood , 61 S. Ct. 767 ( 1941 )

sierra-club-a-non-profit-corporation-national-parks-and-conservation , 848 F.2d 1068 ( 1988 )

leland-m-knapp-anna-r-knapp-thomas-e-knapp-theodore-l-knapp-lois , 636 F.2d 279 ( 1980 )

Anderson v. City of Bessemer City , 105 S. Ct. 1504 ( 1985 )

Federal Deposit Insurance v. Meyer , 114 S. Ct. 996 ( 1994 )

Wasatch County v. Okelberry , 179 P.3d 768 ( 2008 )

Heber City Corp. v. Simpson , 942 P.2d 307 ( 1997 )

Thomson v. Condas , 27 Utah 2d 129 ( 1972 )

Utah County v. Butler , 179 P.3d 775 ( 2008 )

Boyer v. Clark , 7 Utah 2d 395 ( 1958 )

Block v. North Dakota Ex Rel. Board of University & School ... , 103 S. Ct. 1811 ( 1983 )

View All Authorities »