The nook crossing battle in Wyoming appears to be over, and public land hunters, a minimum of for now, have gained. Today the District Court of Wyoming discovered that it’s authorized to cross from one nook of public land to a different nook of public land, whereas stepping by personal airspace.
The ruling comes after 4 hunters crossed a nook of the Elk Mountain Ranch, which is held by Iron Bar Holdings, managed by billionaire Fred Eshelman. Iron Bar Holdings introduced felony trespass fees (which the hunters beat final 12 months), and filed a civil swimsuit in federal court docket claiming that the trespassing diminished the ranch’s property worth. The ranch claimed the lads precipitated greater than $7 million in damages.
Chief U.S. District Judge Scott W. Skavdahl dominated in favor of 4 hunters who crossed a nook of the Elk Mountain Ranch.
The Order states: “. . . the Court finds that where a person corner crosses on foot within the checkerboard from public land to public land without touching the surface of private land and without damaging private property, there is no liability for trespass.”
If you haven’t been following this case intently, nook crossing means strolling from one nook of public land to a different nook of public, crossing diagonally between corners of personal land, with out ever setting foot on personal property. Phillip Yeomans, Bradly Cape, John Slowensky, and Zachary Smith, all of Missouri (and nicknamed the Missouri Four), used a small stepladder to cross from one parcel of public land to a different whereas on a hunt in 2021 and in 2020.
The undeniable fact that the hunters gained the civil case may have broad implications for public land hunters in Wyoming.
“It was a pretty full throated endorsement of the principal that as long as you don’t touch private land or cause harm to private land in some way, then you have the right to cross corner-to-corner of public lands,” says Eric Hanson, an lawyer who represented Backcountry Hunters and Anglers on their amicus transient on this litigation.
However, the ruling doesn’t imply that nook crossing in each state is now authorized. It’s additionally potential that different personal landowners may carry nook crossing civil fits, Hanson says.
“This has to work its way up the chain of appeals before it becomes more binding,” Hanson says. “This is a big first step, but it’s not necessarily going to apply outside of Wyoming. The court was very careful to put this in just the context of the case, not a national context”
But nonetheless BHA and the general public land hunters of Wyoming have motive to have a good time.
“Today was a win for the people, both in Wyoming and across the country,” says BHA president Land Tawny. “The court’s ruling confirms that it was legal for the Missouri Four to step from public land to public land over a shared public/private corner. Coupled with recent legislation passed by the Wyoming legislature, we are happy that common sense and the rule of law prevailed. Backcountry Hunters & Anglers applauds the court’s careful balancing of access to public land and respect of private property rights. We look forward to finding more solutions to access – together.”
Of course, the 4 hunters who’ve been battling these instances for years even have motive to have a good time.
“This is a long overdue and singularly great outcome for the entire American public and anybody who enjoys public lands,” the hunters’ lawyer Ryan Semerad advised WyoFile. Semerad says they “fully expect” an enchantment.