Mullinax Concrete Service Co. v. Zowada

2010 WY 146, 243 P.3d 181, 2010 Wyo. LEXIS 151, 2010 WL 4485895
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 2010
DocketS-09-0237
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2010 WY 146 (Mullinax Concrete Service Co. v. Zowada) 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
Mullinax Concrete Service Co. v. Zowada, 2010 WY 146, 243 P.3d 181, 2010 Wyo. LEXIS 151, 2010 WL 4485895 (Wyo. 2010).

Opinion

HILL, Justice.

[¶1] Appellant, Mullinax Concrete Service Co., Inc. (Mullinax), protested against a petition filed by the Appellees, Merlin H. and Lori Zowada (Zowadas), for the establishment of a private road across lands owned by Mullinax. The Sheridan County Board of County - Commissioners - (Commission - or Board) approved a road other than the one which historically had been used by the Zo-wadas to access their property. That road crossed lands owned by Mullinax. Both the Zowadas and Mullinax sought review of the Commission's decision in the district court. The district court reversed the Commission's decision, in part, and remanded the case to the Commission for further proceedings. Mullinax now seeks review in this Court of the district court's order reversing the Commission's order. We will affirm the district court's order, in part, and remand to the district court with directions that it modify its order reversing and remanding as set out more fully below.

ISSUES

[¶2] Mullinax raises these issues:

A. Substantial evidence was introduced into the record for the Commission to determine that the most reasonable and convenient location for the private road was the modified Industrial Drive option that was chosen and the Commission's findings adequately support that location.
B. Alternatively, the district court's order that a third set of appraisers and viewers must be appointed is incorrect and unworkable.
*183 C. Alternatively, if the Commission's road location findings are remanded for further proceedings, the district court did not have authority to require the Commission to find that any location that the Commission settles on after remand must have BNSF consent for a right-of-way crossing.

The Zowadas restate the issues thus:

1. There was no evidence introduced into the record to support the [Commission's] location of the private road.
2. Mullinax's claims [of a) planned future use is not credible, was refuted, and should not be considered.
3. The findings and order of the district court are fully supported by the record.
4. There is sufficient evidence in the ree-ord for the Appellate Court to direct selection of the location of the private road as requested by the [Zowadas].

In its reply brief, Mullinax contends:

A. Zowadas cannot raise or argue an issue in this appeal that they lost before the district court and did not appeal to this Court (Issue 2, above).
B. Jurisdiction to complete any remand fact finding in this case rests solely with the [Commission].
C. - Zowadas' new appendices C and H are not part of the record on appeal.

[¶8] We will not address issue C, immediately above, because this Court made no use of Appendices C and H in resolving this appeal.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

[¶4] The proceedings below were governed by Wyo. Stat. Aun. §§ 24-9-101 and 24-9-108 (LexisNexis 2005), and they bear directly on the resolution of the issues raised in this appeal. For purposes of ready reference, they are set out in APPENDIX A at the end of the opinion. Those statutes were changed quite significantly in 2007 and 2008. See Wyo. Stat. Ann. §§ 24-9-101 and 24-9-103 (LexisNexis 2009). However, our review will be guided by the earlier version of those statutes.

[¶5] On January 31, 2006, the Zowadas filed before the Commission a petition to establish a private road, in accordance with §§ 24-9-101 and 24-9-108. A very similar petition was filed on May 15, 2006, and it included a certificate of compliance alleging service on both Mullinax and the BNSF Railway Company (BNSF). By letter dated March 20, 2006, a representative for BNSF agreed "that the language contained in the deed [to Zowadas] does, in fact, indicate a continued right to use the crossing that they have been using for the past ten years." BNSF was represented in all the proceedings before the Commission, but it has not participated in either the appeal to the district court or in the appeal to this Court. In closing arguments before the Commission, BNSF made clear that its only concern, and its principal reason for participating in the proceedings, was to ensure that none of the options considered by the Commission included use of the roadbed, of the railroad's right-of-way, as a part of the private road to be allowed to the Zowadas (as opposed to merely crossing the railroad's right-of-way so as to use that portion of the private road that continued on the other side of the tracks). BNSF conceded that, to the extent the railroad bed needs to be crossed as a matter incidental to several of the road options placed in issue, the railroad bed and tracks are no longer in use and are not maintained (and that has been the case for several decades). BNSF figures in this appeal only because the district court included a mention of BNSF in its order reversing and remanding the Commission's decision to the Commission, for further proceedings there. We will address that more fully later in this opinion.

[¶6] Only Mullinax and the Zowadas are parties to this appeal, but there were several other parties below. That was so because six different routes were considered by the Commission, as well as by the Viewers and Appraisers appointed by the Commission in accordance with the governing - statutes. "Route 1" is the route the Zowadas had used for 10 years or so prior to the inception of this litigation. The exact amount of time the Zowadas had used the road was disputed by Mullinax. However, whether the Zowadas' *184 use of the route was more or less than ten-plus years makes no difference to our resolution of this appeal. By order of the Commissioners the Zowadas have been permitted to continue to use that road since the inception of this litigation in 2006.

[¶7] "Route 1" was the route selected by the Viewers and Appraisers and recommended to the Commission. See APPENDIX B. "Route, 2" was one of the alternative routes suggested by Mullinax and it would have funneled Zowadas' traffic through the parking/truck-operating area owned by Big Horn Beverage, Inc. "Route 2" was rejected by the Viewers and Appraisers, as well as the Commission, and that decision is not challenged in this appeal. "Route 3," which is immediately east of Big Horn Beverage's property and within 20 feet of Goose Creek, was also rejected and that is not challenged herein either. "Route 4" was rejected by the Viewers and Appraisers because it would have provided the Zowadas with access to their property from the east and north across undeveloped land owned by Mullinax. In addition, to the need for considerable road building, it would have been necessary for the Zowadas to build a bridge across Goose Creek from north to south. The rejection of that route is not challenged in this appeal. "Route 5" made use, in part, of an existing road called Industrial Drive, and then crossed lands owned by Mullinax as well as lands owned by N.A. and Ellen Nelson (Nelsons). The Nelsons made an appearance in writing and asked that a copy of the Viewers and Appraisers Report be sent to them.

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Related

Zowada v. Mullinax Concrete Service Co.
2014 WY 121 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2014)
Merlin H. Zowada and Lori Zowada
2014 WY 121 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2014)
Mullinax Concrete Service Co. v. Zowada
2012 WY 55 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2012)

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Bluebook (online)
2010 WY 146, 243 P.3d 181, 2010 Wyo. LEXIS 151, 2010 WL 4485895, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mullinax-concrete-service-co-v-zowada-wyo-2010.