Lincoln County Board of Commissioners v. Cook

2002 WY 23, 39 P.3d 1076, 2002 Wyo. LEXIS 22, 2002 WL 193316
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 2002
Docket00-339
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2002 WY 23 (Lincoln County Board of Commissioners v. Cook) 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
Lincoln County Board of Commissioners v. Cook, 2002 WY 23, 39 P.3d 1076, 2002 Wyo. LEXIS 22, 2002 WL 193316 (Wyo. 2002).

Opinion

VOIGT, Justice.

[¶1] This appeal arises from the Lincoln County Board of Commissioners' (the Board) determination that a public road should be established, by prescription, over property owned by Lawrence and Christy Cook (the Cooks). The Cooks appealed the Board's decision to the district court, which reversed the Board. The Board now appeals from that ruling. We affirm the district court's decision.

ISSUES

[¶2] The Board, as appellant, states the issues as follows:

I. Did the district court, erroneously substitute its judgment for the trier of facts of the first instance, the Board of Lincoln County Commissioners.
II. Did the district court err in its interpretation of Wyo. Stat. § 24-1-101 and the doctrine of prescriptive easements in the State of Wyoming.
III. Was the "Order Establishing Little Coal Creek Road Number 12-844 Across the Property of Lawrence L. Cook and Christy Cook" by the Lincoln County Board of Commissioners (a) arbitrary and capricious, an abuse of discretion or not otherwise in accordance with law; (b) in excess of statutory jurisdiction, authority of limitations or lacking statutory right; (c) contrary to a constitutional right, power, privilege or immunity; (d) unsupported by substantial evidence.

The arguments by the Cooks, as appellees, are essentially framed in the context of the issues raised by the Board.

FACTS

[T3] At issue in this appeal is a one-quarter mile section of "ungraveled" or dirt two-track road in remote Lineoln County known as the Little Coal Creek access road (Coal Creek road). The quarter-mile section crosses property owned by the Cooks. In 1995, the Cooks acquired this property from P & M Mining Company (P & M), which had acquired the property from Kemmerer Coal Company. 1 Prior to the Cooks' ownership, the property was "unenclosed" or considered "open range." 2

[¶4] Coal Creek road connects Fonte-nelle Creek road and Pomeroy Basin road, both of which are "considered county roads that the County maintained and the public used...." Coal Creek road provides access to private property and "good" access 3 from the south to the back side of "Miller Mountain and Coal Creek, Cabin Creek and the Fontenelle drainage area ..." in addition to Fort Hill. Coal Creek road is periodically impassable during the winter due to snow and during the spring due to water runoff.

[¶5] In the 1980s, the Board requested that Paul Scherbel, the county land surveyor, provide them an overview of the county's road system, which was in "shambles." At that time, Lincoln County had only officially dedicated one county road, which the Board later attempted to vacate, but ultimately did not due to public opposition. The Board began updating its road system, a process that included acquiring and establishing county roads by prescription. As part of this process, Mr. Scherbel recalled that in 1980 he, Edwin Kirkwood, and then-county commissioners Nancy Peternal and Jim Herschler *1080 viewed Coal Creek road, presumably including the section crossing what is now the Cooks' property, and considered establishing it as a county road. The Board decided not to establish Coal Creek road as a county road at that time.

[¶6] In July 1997, the Board elected to establish Coal Creek road as a county road based on the common law doctrine of pre-seription. The Board recorded a plat and published and served notice on area landowners in accordance with Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 24-1-101 (LexisNexis 2001). The Cooks objected to the county establishing a section of the road across their property, while other landowners apparently did not formally object to the Board's decision. On August 8, 1997, the Board held an open meeting to consider objections to the proposed road, and subsequently entered a formal resolution establishing the road as a county road. The Cooks appealed this determination to the district court. Both parties subsequently stipulated that the case be remanded for a contested case hearing before the Board.

[¶7] The Board appointed a hearing examiner and held a contested case hearing on September 3, 1998. The Board heard from several witnesses, including former county commissioners, county employees, area landowners, and members of the public. Their testimony, which tended to lack specificity, primarily concerned Lincoln County's maintenance of Coal Creek road and the public's historical use of the road.

[T8] Regarding road maintenance generally, the Board found that until Lincoln County "completed the process of formally establishing its roads, the County maintained roads commonly accepted as county roads and private roads, both on a year round and seasonal basis." Nancy Peternal, a county commissioner from 1979 to 1987 and liaison to the south Lincoln County road and bridge department, testified that when she became a commissioner, Lincoln County had been plowing ranch roads "for years" without a set schedule. In addition, there were certain county roads that were maintained during the season they were open (Me., May to November), and other "noncounty" roads that were never graveled, but "plowed in the winter, considering it an emergency for a rancher to be able to get out or something." Regarding roads not considered to be county roads, the department "looked around to see if they could plow another road" when "they got caught up with their work. ..."

[¶9] Ms. Peternal recalled that in 1980 and thereafter, the Board discussed whether the county should continue maintaining private ranch roads, and in the mid 1980s, the Board decided that it would no longer maintain these roads. Edwin Kirkwood, county road and bridge department supervisor until 1988 and a thirty-four year employee of the department, testified:

[IJn 1985 [the Board] startled] cutting out going into the ranch-all these ranch roads, and working on them. We used to blade them, build them, work on them, snow removal on them and they more or less stopped-started stopping that around 1985, and it went on down to, I guess, present to what they're doing now. ...

Everett Cassidy, county commissioner from 1989 to 1992, testified that prior to 1989, the county had implemented an "understanding" with the road and bridge department that it would not maintain private roads, and stopped doing so.

[¶10] As to Coal Creek road specifically, Mr. Kirkwood recalled that in the 1950s, Continental Oil had drilling set "up in there somewhere and we, we would blade the road for them a few times," but not every year. Myles McGinnis, whose family owns land on Coal Creek road, also remembers the county making passes on Coal Creek road in the springtime during the 1950s or 1960s "when Ed Herschler was on the Commission" (the Herschlers owned property on Coal Creek road adjacent to what is now the Cooks' property).

[T11] In the 1960s, the department put "some culverts" in the road, "in different places going through there." According to Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
2002 WY 23, 39 P.3d 1076, 2002 Wyo. LEXIS 22, 2002 WL 193316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lincoln-county-board-of-commissioners-v-cook-wyo-2002.