Day v. Armstrong

362 P.2d 137, 1961 Wyo. LEXIS 97
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMay 23, 1961
Docket2961, 2966
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 362 P.2d 137 (Day v. Armstrong) 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
Day v. Armstrong, 362 P.2d 137, 1961 Wyo. LEXIS 97 (Wyo. 1961).

Opinion

Mr. Justice HARNSBERGER

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff in March, 1958, sought judgment declaring his rights and those of the *139 public, under applicable provisions of the Federal Constitution, the State Constitution, the laws of Wyoming-, and judicial decisions, to go upon the channel, between its high water marks, and to float upon the waters of the North Platte River where it flows upon and across defendants’ lands.

Defendants denied plaintiff’s and the public’s right to either use the channel or to float upon the waters of the river as they crossed their lands, but joined in asking a declaratory judgment.

The State of Wyoming by its Attorney General was allowed to appear as amicus, curiae.

Other parties permitted to intervene likewise asked for declaratory judgment, but claimed for the public only the right to float upon or within the waters of the river as it flowed upon and across the lands of the defendants.

During the course of the action, the Thirty-Fifth State Legislature enacted Ch. 205, S.L. of Wyoming, 1959, §§ 41-527, 41-528, W.S.1957 (1959 Supp.), the first section of which provides as follows:

“§ 41-527. Floating persons and property by boat, canoe or raft on streams.- — -Persons and their property may only float by boat, canoe or raft for any lawful purpose down that part of any stream in the State of Wyoming where the records of the state engineer for the ten years preceding such floating show that part of the stream to have had an average flow of water for the month of July exceeding 1,000 cubic feet per second, and it shall be unlawful to obstruct or prevent such use of such stream, except only so far as may be necessary for the protection of installations now existing or hereinafter ordered constructed by authority of the state board of control in furtherance of the beneficial uses of water; and providing further, that nothing herein shall be construed as preventing such fencing by those invested with property rights and the enjoyment thereof as shall not interfere with such floating. It shall be unlawful for any person floating any stream to go upon, shoot over or into, except with the permission of the owner of such property, or damage or litter property on either side of the waters of such stream. In enforcing this act [§§ 41-527, 41-528], the records of the state engineer shall be conclusive in any trial in any court of the State of Wyoming in determining the flow of any stream. (Laws 1959, ch. 205, § 1.)”

After the passage of this legislation, the intervening parties filed their motion for summary judgment. This was denied by the court which granted the intervenors an exception. Thereafter the matter being submitted on stipulation of facts and arguments as to applicable law, the court found there was" a justiciable controversy and a class action for a declaratory determination of the legal rights, duties and obligations of the parties; found generally for the plaintifif and intervenors and against the defendants; then declared:

“ * * * that the Plaintiff, and all others similarly situated as a class and the Intervenors, have the public rights and privilege of using the bed, channel and water of the North Platte River as it flows through the lands of the Defendants for the following purposes, and that the Defendants shall not fence or use said bed and channel, or any part thereof, so as to interfere with any of the following public purposes to-wit:
“(a) The right to fish from a boat, or while wading or walking, so long as those exercising the right stay in and upon the river bed or well-defined channel, and have the proper license and permission of the State of Wyoming ;
“(b) The right to walk for any lawful purpose in and upon said channel or bed;
“(c) The right to boat and float on the water in and upon said channel;
*140 “(d) The right to hunt in and upon said bed and channel when hunting is permitted by the State and within the licensed authority given by the State.
“It is, further ordered that said public rights of the Plaintiff, and others similarly situated, shall not embrace the right to camp within and upon said bed and channel or use the same for recreation other than enumerated above.
“It is, further, ordered, adjudged and decreed that any part or parts of Chapter 205 of the Session Laws of Wyoming, 1959, which limit or prohibit the exercise by the Plaintiff of the rights above mentioned is unconstitutional and, therefore, void and of no effect upon the public rights enumerated herein.”

From this judgment the intervenors appeal “because Ch. 205, S.L. of Wyoming, 1959, is constitutional and determines the rights of the parties,” and because the order denying intervenors’ motion for summary judgment was erroneous. The defendants also appeal, but from the whole of the judgment, and they designate the complete record and all the proceedings and evidence in the action for inclusion in the record on appeal. This embodies the pleadings of the parties, stipulations, the unchallenged representations of the intervenors’ .brief in support of their motion for summary judgment, uncontradicted affidavits •submitted in connection therewith, and a brief filed by Wyoming Wool Growers Association and Wyoming Stock Growers Association as friends of the court.

The admitted facts as exhibited by the •complaint are: Defendants own land ■through which the North Platte River .flows; at intermittent periods the river can float canoes, rowboats, outboard motors and .other floating craft capable of carrying as many as six people; in the month of August and until spring run-off, craft carrying people and drawing more than one foot of water cannot be floated, with minor exceptions, i. e., short stretches or reservoirs; craft drawing less than one foot of water can be floated carrying people until about the middle of October when freezing occurs; from early days until 1940, the river was used commercially for floating logs, ties and timber; plaintiff can enter the river by boat from lands of a national forest, by boat or wading, or from a point where the county road right of way crosses the channel, or by boat or wading from lands of other private owners, and the channel may sometimes be entered between high water marks by walking.

Plaintiff, for himself and the public, claims the right to use the bed and channel •of the river and its waters to fish under license of the State, either from a boat floating upon the river waters, or while wading the waters, or walking within the well-defined channel of the stream; to walk in and upon the river’s channel; to boat and float upon the waters of the river; to hunt under State license in and upon the channel of the river; and to camp within and upon the channel of the river and use it for recreation.

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Bluebook (online)
362 P.2d 137, 1961 Wyo. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/day-v-armstrong-wyo-1961.