Dickson v. State, Dept. of Natural Resources

433 P.3d 1075
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 2018
Docket7307 S-16468
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 433 P.3d 1075 (Dickson v. State, Dept. of Natural Resources) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dickson v. State, Dept. of Natural Resources, 433 P.3d 1075 (Ala. 2018).

Opinion

MAASSEN, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

The owners of real property near Big Lake appeal a superior court decision, following trial, in favor of the State, Department of Natural Resources (DNR), that recognized an RS 2477 right of way over their property for the Historic Iditarod Trail and a prescriptive easement for public use of a road. The property owners argue that the evidence did not support the court's findings of the right of way and the easement; that the court made a number of procedural and evidentiary errors that collectively deprived them of procedural due process; and that the large attorney's fees award in favor of the State was excessive in light of its likely deterrent effect and the State's decision to vigorously litigate this case for its precedential effect.

We conclude that the court did not clearly err in its findings of fact, and we affirm its decision recognizing the RS 2477 right of way for the Historic Iditarod Trail and the prescriptive easement for the road. We see no abuse of discretion in the court's procedural and evidentiary rulings. However, we conclude that there may be a compelling reason to vary the presumptive attorney's fees award under Alaska Civil Rule 82(b)(3). We remand for the superior court's further consideration of this issue.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

Kelly Dickson and Donna DeFusco own adjacent parcels of land near Big Lake. The property's original 160 acres were homesteaded in 1958 by their father, Benjamin Cowart, who received a patent from the federal government in 1965. He later purchased two 40-acre tracts that bordered his acreage *1079 to the southeast. Dickson and DeFusco inherited the property upon their mother's death in 2007. Dickson now owns the eastern 80 acres of the original homestead plus the two added 40-acre tracts; DeFusco owns the western 80 acres. 1 The property is situated between the community of Knik to the east and the community of Susitna to the northwest.

At issue in this case are two easements the superior court found to exist across Dickson and DeFusco's property. The first involves the Historic Iditarod Trail, 2 a trail running from Seward to Nome that was first surveyed in the early 1900s. The second easement is for part of Homestead Road 3 and was created in 1958 when a neighbor, Charles Sassara, Sr., used a D8 Caterpillar to improve access to his and other homesteads in the area.

1. The Historic Iditarod Trail

The Historic Iditarod Trail was first formally surveyed in 1908 as part of the route from Seward to Nome; a section of the trail lay between Knik and Susitna Station. The Alaska Road Commission rerouted the trail in 1912 to create a more direct route between those two points, and it designated the newly realigned portion as Route 20A. The Historic Iditarod Trail was used as a mail route in the 1910s and had dogsled and foot traffic. By 1921 the new railroad had taken over mail delivery; according to Bryan Taylor, a DNR employee qualified as an expert in "the trail history at issue in this case," the Road Commission "abandoned" the Historic Iditarod Trail around this time in the sense that it was "not going to be maintaining it any longer." But people in the area continued to use the trail for trapping and transporting freight to their homesteads.

In 1978 Congress dedicated portions of the Seward-to-Nome trail as the Iditarod National Historic Trail (the National Trail). 4 The route is distinct from the Historic Iditarod Trail, though some sections are the same. In 1979, as part of a National Trail survey, the State surveyed the Historic Iditarod Trail from Knik to Goose Creek; in 1983 it surveyed the trail from Goose Creek to Susitna Station. The State then asked the Matanuska-Susitna Borough to vacate some of the easements for the Historic Iditarod Trail identified in the 1983 survey and realign those parts of the trail to the section lines in order to make the trail continuous. The Mat-Su Borough followed the State's recommendations and vacated portions of the Historic Iditarod Trail on borough lands.

In 1983 the State sent Cowart a letter advising him that the Historic Iditarod Trail crossed his property. The State's information was based on the 1983 National Trail survey, interviews of people who used the Historic Iditarod Trail, and aerial maps, among other things. Shortly thereafter, Cowart asserted a right to block the trail. The Iditarod Trail Race was scheduled to cross his property the following year; Cowart sent a letter to the Knik Chapter of the Iditarod Trail Blazers in December 1983, stating that his property was "posted and trespassing will not be permitted." He placed a metal post where the Historic Iditarod Trail entered his property, bearing a sign that read, "POSTED," "PRIVATE PROPERTY," and "NO TRESPASSING." The sign was still there decades later when this case went to trial.

A significant issue at trial was whether the Historic Iditarod Trail crossed the property before Cowart homesteaded it in 1958 and thus took the land out of the public domain. To prove that the trail preexisted Cowart's homesteading activities, the State called several *1080 expert witnesses. Rockford Beard-Weber, a DNR employee, testified that he had assembled a Geographic Information System (GIS) data file of surveys, aerial photos, and other material that could be layered onto maps of the area encompassing Dickson and DeFusco's property. The available resources included lidar, which Beard-Weber described as "a digital elevation model" created through aerial imagery. 5 He testified that lidar uses "a signal that hits the ground and reflects back to the plane" and has the advantage of being able to "penetrate[ ] a good deal of foliage," allowing a view "below the canopy, to some extent." He testified that he could see the Historic Iditarod Trail to the east of Dickson and DeFusco's property in the 1960 and 1962 aerial photos but the trees on their land made it much harder to find. The lidar, however, allowed him to penetrate the canopy and make out the trail as a line crossing the property.

Beard-Weber also visited the property and walked across it holding a GPS device that showed where DNR believed the Historic Iditarod Trail to be. He testified that "a lot of times it's easier to find old trails by looking up instead of looking down" because of the absence of tall trees in a line where tall trees are expected. He reported finding "a fairly straight line with no large trees right along the middle of the lineal feature or immediately adjacent to it." He testified that the Historic Iditarod Trail was one of the easier trails to locate using this method.

The State also called a professional photogrammetrist-someone who, as the trial court explained, "uses a blend of aerial photos to create a three-dimensional map." The witness, Bryan O'Malley, testified about the conclusions he drew from aerial photos taken in 1950, 1951, 1960, and 1962.

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Bluebook (online)
433 P.3d 1075, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickson-v-state-dept-of-natural-resources-alaska-2018.