Broek v. County of Washakie

2003 WY 164, 82 P.3d 269, 2003 Wyo. LEXIS 201, 2003 WL 22990156
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 2003
Docket03-45
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2003 WY 164 (Broek v. County of Washakie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Broek v. County of Washakie, 2003 WY 164, 82 P.3d 269, 2003 Wyo. LEXIS 201, 2003 WL 22990156 (Wyo. 2003).

Opinion

HILL, Chief Justice.

[T1] Darell and Bonnie Ten Broek, along with Barbara G. and Jay S. Chaney as trustees of the Barbara G. Chaney Living Trust (collectively the Defendants), appeal an order of the district court on a complaint for declaratory judgment filed by the County of Washakie (the County) to establish a stock trail over a portion of their land pursuant to a prescriptive easement. We conclude that a declaratory judgment is not the appropriate means to establish a prescriptive public easement because the legislature has established a specific statutory procedure that requires such claims to be brought initially before the respective board of county commissioners. Accordingly, we vacate the district court's order and reverse and remand with directions to dismiss the County's complaint without prejudice.

ISSUES

[12] The Defendants set forth two issues:

1. Did the district court commit reversible error when, as a matter of law, it concluded that Washakie County does have legal authority to establish a public stock trail by prescriptive easement on private property?
Are the findings and conclusions of the district court that a public stock trail has been established by Washakie County on private property by prescriptive easement clearly erroneous, not supported by substantial evidence and contrary to law?

The County's statement of the issues parallels that of the Defendants.

FACTS

[48] The Defendants own land in Was-hakie County. In October 1999, the Defendants, acting individually, purchased small strips of property adjacent to their own land. The purchased property lay between the De *270 fendants' land and U.S. Highway 16. 1 The property was in a state of neglect with sinkholes, dilapidated fences, overgrowing vegetation and abandoned vehicles on it. The Defendants cleaned up the property and moved their fence lines to encompass their purchases.

[14] In June 2000, the County filed a Declaratory Judgment action against the Defendants. The County alleged that the property purchased by the Defendants had been designated in historical documents as a stock trail. The County also asserted that the public had used the property as a stock trail continuously since at least 1904 and that the fencing of it interfered with that use. The County requested a declaration from the district court that the property was subject to an easement for a stock drive as part of the adjacent road and that the Defendants be ordered to relocate their fences. An unrecorded hearing was held before the district court. On May 4, 2001, the district court issued a decision letter concluding that the County had established a prescriptive casement over the Defendants' property. The district court held two more hearings where additional evidence was taken in response to motions for reconsideration and for rehearing filed by the Defendants. The district court issued an order on December 18, 2002 confirming its original conclusion that the County had established a prescriptive casement. The Defendants have appealed that order.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

[15] When a matter is tried before the district court without a jury, we review the court's findings of fact pursuant to a clearly erroneous standard. Any conclusions of law are reviewed de novo. Davis v. Chadwick, 2002 WY 157, 18, 55 P.3d 1267, 18 (Wyo.2002).

DISCUSSION

[16] The Defendants' main argument is that the County does not have any legal authority to establish a stock trail by pre-seription across private property. 2 The underlying premise to the argument is that there is no specific statutory provision authorizing a county to bring an action to establish a public stock trail by prescription. Under the facts of this case, the Defendants' argument is one of semantics. The phrase "stock trail" is just descriptive of a public use on the adjacent road. In other words, the County is claiming that the public has used U.S. Highway 16, also called Big Horn County Road No. 91, and the portion of the Defendants' land adjacent to that road to drive livestock. The allegations in the County's complaint clearly demonstrate the relationship between the Defendants' property and the road:

1. The Defendant's [sic] in this matter are owners and/or trustees in fee simple of the areas on the South portion of Section 17, Township 4TN, Range 88W.
2. During the late fall of 1999, the Defendants' [sic] Chaney, removed a pole and post fence and re-erected it some feet south, where it is presently located.
3. Defendants' [sic] Ten Broek, built a post and wire fence some feet south from an old highway right-of-way fence, where it is presently located.
4. The Washakie County Commissioners commissioned RL. Hudson, Land Surveyor, to survey this area which he did and a Letter of Transmittal and Report of Surveyor dated March 22, 2000, was given to the Washakie County Commissioners.
5. The Big Horn County Commissioners on or about July 6, 1904, declared the area on the boundary line between Seetion 17 and Section 20, in Tracts 65 and 55, and 56 of the re-survey Township 47N, Range SSW, to be a county road.
*271 6. A notation appears on the 1910 Plat of Ten Sleep, Big Horn County, Wyoming, on file in the Washakie County Clerk's Office, which labels this road as main street with a 66 foot right-of way centered on the section line center of county road with a bearing of 889, 42 minutes west. The road was reconstructed in 1922 and designated as a state highway on November 25, 1929, under project number 1086. The location was easterly along the tract line, then north easterly through a curve to the left and then a curve to the right in the vicinity of the Ten Broek and Chaney property lines.
7. That highway was in use until approximately 1986, when highway 16 was constructed in its present location and designated as such on November 28, 1989, still under project number 1086.
8. U.S. Highway 16 was re-constructed in the 1960's [sic] under project F-036-1(17) on which plan the road in question was noted as a stock drive.
9. The minutes of the Washakie County Board of Commissioners meeting on September 1, 1986, record a motion by Commissioner Horel, and its adoption whereby;
"Whereas a new highway is being constructed from Big Cottonwood Creek to Ten Sleep, Wyoming, re replace from said Cottonwood Creek to Ten Sleep, the present highway No.1 16;" and "Whereas, the State Highway Department of the State of Wyoming is agreeable to leaving in place the old treated timber bridges and all of the culverts on the present Worland-Ten Sleep road from Big Cottonwood Creek into Ten Sleep provided that said present road is designated as a stock driveway and cattle run instead of the new road which is in the process of construction; now therefore, Be it Resolved by the Board of County Commissioners of the County of Was-hakie, State of Wyoming, that the present Worland-Ten Sleep road, being highway No.

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Bluebook (online)
2003 WY 164, 82 P.3d 269, 2003 Wyo. LEXIS 201, 2003 WL 22990156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broek-v-county-of-washakie-wyo-2003.