Horse Creek Conservation District v. State Ex Rel. Wyoming Attorney General

2009 WY 143, 221 P.3d 306, 2009 Wyo. LEXIS 156, 2009 WL 4021664
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 23, 2009
DocketS-08-0200
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 2009 WY 143 (Horse Creek Conservation District v. State Ex Rel. Wyoming Attorney General) 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
Horse Creek Conservation District v. State Ex Rel. Wyoming Attorney General, 2009 WY 143, 221 P.3d 306, 2009 Wyo. LEXIS 156, 2009 WL 4021664 (Wyo. 2009).

Opinion

BURKE, Justice.

[¶1] The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the State of Wyoming ruling that, pursuant to an agreement between Horse Creek Conservation District (HCCD) and the State, the public has a perpetual right of recreational use access to HCCD property adjacent to the Hawk Springs Reservoir. On appeal, appellants claim that the district court committed a host of legal errors in arriving at its decision. We will affirm the district court's decision, though on a slightly different basis. We conclude that Wyoming statutes expressly required HCCD to grant public access to its property adjacent to the reservoir as part of the legislation appropriating funds for rehabilitation of the dam and water conveyance systems. When the project agreement is interpreted in accordance with the statutes, it provides for public access to HCCD property. Nevertheless, we remand for reformation of the agreement so that it will conform fully to the statutory language.

ISSUES

[¶2] HCCD and Phase 23 present a multifaceted issue challenging the district court's summary judgment ruling:

I. In granting summary judgment to ap-pellee, did the trial court err by:

A. Incorrectly interpreting and construing the project agreements entered into by the parties as creating a "perpetual, public recreational use access" to the Hawk Springs Reservoir and adjacent lands?
Incorrectly interpreting and construing W.S. §§ 41-2-216 through 41-2-218 as memorializing or creating a "perpetual, public recreational use access" to the Hawk Springs Reservoir and adjacent lands?
Incorrectly determining that Phase 28, LLC, was not a bona fide purchaser?
Incorrectly determining that petitions filed with the Eighth Judicial District Court requesting approval of the project agreements acknowledged a grant of public access and contained sufficient legal descriptions of the property subject to public access?
Incorrectly determining that Horse Creek Conservation District is barred by contract law, laches, es-toppel and applicable statutes of limitations from challenging appel-lee's prior improvements at the Hawk Springs Recreation Area?
Failing to find that the statutory provisions of WS. § 41-2-218(b)(i)(G) purportedly creating a perpetual right of public access over Horse Creek Conservation District property are in violation of the Rule Against Perpetuities?

The State phrases the issues differently:

1. Did Horse Creek Conservation District, in exchange for more than $8,500,000 of taxpayers' money, grant perpetual public access to Hawk Springs Reservoir and all adjacent lands owned by it or the State of Wyoming for the purposes of hunting, fishing and general recreation?
*310 2. Does the right of perpetual public access run with HCCD's land adjacent to the Hawk Springs Reservoir?

FACTS

[¶38] Hawk Springs Reservoir was originally constructed in the early 1900's and is located on Sections 9, 10, 15, 16, 21, and 22 of Township 20 North, Range 61 West, 6th P.M. in Goshen County, Wyoming. HCCD is an irrigation district organized under Wyoming law and owns much of the land covered by and surrounding the reservoir. In 1911, the State Board of School Land Commissioners granted an easement to HCCD's predecessor to allow the reservoir to inundate part of Section 16. 1 Later, HCCD received an additional grant from the State increasing the reservoir easement to encumber the entire east half of Section 16.

[T4] In the late 1970s or early 1980s, Hawk Springs Reservoir was determined to be hydrologically inadequate. 2 In 1983, the Wyoming Legislature passed legislation to provide funding to rehabilitate the dam and water conveyance systems. Wyo. Stat. Ann. §§ 41-2-216 through 41-2-218 (LexisNexis 2007). 3 Because the language of this act is critical to our decision, we will restate most of it verbatim in the discussion below. For now, we note the statute's requirement that, before funds could be released to HCCD for the reservoir construction project, a project agreement had to be made with the Department of Economic Planning and Development (DEPAD), with a provision guaranteeing perpetual public access to the reservoir and adjacent lands.

[¶5] The parties executed the first project agreement on November 7, 1983. The agreement recitals referred to the enabling legislation and indicated that State funding was provided to accomplish a number of goals, including repairing the dam and water delivery systems and constructing "facilities for public benefit." The agreement iterated the legal description of the reservoir and recited the funding apparatus, which included grants and loans from the State to HCCD. The agreement also provided that HCCD could not deny the public access to the reservoir and "adjacent public lands designated for recreational use."

[T6] An additional appropriation of funds was needed to complete the project. Consequently, the parties entered into a second project agreement on April 1, 1985. The second project agreement expressly superseded the first project agreement. Given that the relevant provisions of the project agreements are virtually identical, however, we will not distinguish between the two except where specificity is required.

[T7] HCCD petitioned the district court for approval prior to entry into each project agreement. Pursuant to the petition process, the members of HCCD were given notice and the opportunity to object to the agreements. No HCCD member objected to the project agreements, and the district court entered orders approving them. HCCD and DEPAD also executed mortgages and promissory notes to secure the loans from the State.

[¶8] Using State funds totaling more than $8,500,000, HCCD made the repairs to the dam and water conveyance system. In addition, the State constructed various improvements next to the reservoir, including camping facilities, restrooms, and a boat ramp. Most of the improvements were located on HCCD lands in Section 9. The rest of the public facilities were located immediately to the south on State land in Section 16.

[¶9] On September 11, 2006, HCCD entered into a contract for deed to sell forty acres in Section 9 to Phase 28, LLC. The forty acres included many of the public im *311 provements constructed by the State. The only members of Phase 28 were Ronald and Dorothy Buchhammer. The Buchhammers were members of HCCD when the project agreements were submitted to the district court for approval, and they offered no objections to the agreements. In addition, at the time Phase 23 entered into the contract for deed, Mr. Buchhammer was employed by HCCD as its superintendent. After the contract for deed was executed and notice was given to the State that the property had been sold, Mr. Buechhammer put up a gate and no trespassing signs, thereby terminating public access to the recreation area.

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Bluebook (online)
2009 WY 143, 221 P.3d 306, 2009 Wyo. LEXIS 156, 2009 WL 4021664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horse-creek-conservation-district-v-state-ex-rel-wyoming-attorney-general-wyo-2009.