I've been waiting for several days to find a news story on line about this incredibly important decision by the US Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit. The local paper here in Moab & one in Monticello both have it in the printed papers but not online where it could be linked to.
The gist of the decision is that SUWA, and the BLM lose now. The case invilves 16 road rights-of way the counties assert are theirs under RS 2477. A panel of three judges unanimously rejected the BLM administrative determinations that a judge of the Utah District Court has affirmed in disallowing the roads. The Tenth Circuit Coutr statedhowever, that the BLM lacked the authority to conduct those determinations.
The Tenth Circuit court further rejected numerous standards employed by the BLM determinations, including a requirement that the roads be established by mechanical construction, and rejected the BLM's contention that a 1910 coal withdrawl in the area over which some of the roads run, disqualified the area for establishment of RS 2477 roads.
The Tenth Circuit instead upheld the arguments by the counties that the correct law to apply in determining whether roads are valid under RS 2477 is Utah law which provides that continuous use for 10 years prior to 1976 is sufficient to establish an RS 2477 right-of-way. This decision has been remanded to the District Court for complete review under the standards declared in the Tenth Circuit Court opinion.
This case has been litigation since 1996, when Kane, Garfield, and San Juan counties were accused of trespass for performing maintenance on roads they asserted as their rights-of-way under RS 2477.
Fianlly a court applies a little common sense and sets a clearer standard. The only court higher than the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals is the US Supreme Court. So hopefully this issue is nearly settled & our tax dollars can be spent more constructively to manage the land instead of making the lawyers rich.
The gist of the decision is that SUWA, and the BLM lose now. The case invilves 16 road rights-of way the counties assert are theirs under RS 2477. A panel of three judges unanimously rejected the BLM administrative determinations that a judge of the Utah District Court has affirmed in disallowing the roads. The Tenth Circuit Coutr statedhowever, that the BLM lacked the authority to conduct those determinations.
The Tenth Circuit court further rejected numerous standards employed by the BLM determinations, including a requirement that the roads be established by mechanical construction, and rejected the BLM's contention that a 1910 coal withdrawl in the area over which some of the roads run, disqualified the area for establishment of RS 2477 roads.
The Tenth Circuit instead upheld the arguments by the counties that the correct law to apply in determining whether roads are valid under RS 2477 is Utah law which provides that continuous use for 10 years prior to 1976 is sufficient to establish an RS 2477 right-of-way. This decision has been remanded to the District Court for complete review under the standards declared in the Tenth Circuit Court opinion.
This case has been litigation since 1996, when Kane, Garfield, and San Juan counties were accused of trespass for performing maintenance on roads they asserted as their rights-of-way under RS 2477.
Fianlly a court applies a little common sense and sets a clearer standard. The only court higher than the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals is the US Supreme Court. So hopefully this issue is nearly settled & our tax dollars can be spent more constructively to manage the land instead of making the lawyers rich.