Sheridan County v. Spiro

697 P.2d 290, 1985 Wyo. LEXIS 461
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1985
DocketNo. 84-121
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 697 P.2d 290 (Sheridan County v. Spiro) 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
Sheridan County v. Spiro, 697 P.2d 290, 1985 Wyo. LEXIS 461 (Wyo. 1985).

Opinion

ROSE, Justice.

This is an appeal by Sheridan County, the Sheridan County Commissioners and Commissioners W.B. Frith, Burton Kerns and Loal R. Lorenzen, individually, from a judgment entered against them in the Sheridan County district court in favor of Peggy C. Spiro, Raymond M. Spiro and Donis S. Klepinger, plaintiffs-appellees, who collaterally attacked the establishment of a county road1 and asked and have received equitable and other forms of relief from the trial court.

Our principal concern is whether — at the time judgment was entered — a certain North Piney Creek roadway (hereinafter “Piney Creek Road”) in Sheridan County, which traverses very rough and rugged canyon terrain and where a mountain stream rushes and flows, was or was not an existing county road. If Piney Creek Road, which is the only access to the appel-lees’ properties, was a lawfully established and existing county road at the time of the court’s decision, the judgment must be reversed and other issues raised by appellants need not be considered.

FACTS

On September 10, 1910, under statutory provisions then in force, the county commissioners of Sheridan County undertook to establish the county road in issue here.

The history of the Piney Creek Road reveals that in 1911, one year following its purported establishment, approximately two miles of the west end of the roadway was abandoned by the Sheridan County Commissioners through appropriate statutory abandonment proceedings, leaving the road to terminate approximately three quarters of a mile west of the properties of the appellees (see plat, infra, indicating the location of the Spiro gate). The sole access to the land of the owners known as the North Piney Group, which land lies to the west of the appellees’ property, is also by way of the road in controversy here. In 1966 the commissioners received and in 1967 denied a petition to vacate a portion of the road including a section which proceeded through the claimants’ properties in the North Piney Creek Canyon. These county-commissioner actions, which have involved various abandonment proceedings, speak forcefully to the effect that the road in issue here has long been regarded by the county commissioners and the public at large as a county road. The record further discloses that the county has maintained the road for many years and has, on numerous occasions, done maintenance work in response to the appeals of the appel-lees — although admittedly not as well or as often as they and some of the adjoining and otherwise affected landowners would [293]*293have liked.2 Further, the record shows that the county shaled the road across ap-pellees’ property at their request, repaired the bridge where the road crosses the creek, and, as the recognized owner of the road, responded to other of appellees’ inquiries and requests concerning the way.

On August 2, 1983, the commissioners considered a petition by Gulf Oil Company to upgrade a bridge over North Piney Creek and improve the Piney Creek Road so that oil-well drilling equipment might be hauled safely. This request was denied. However, on August 9, 1983, the North Piney Group appeared before the commissioners to support Gulf Oil Company’s request. It was the position of these landowners that the upgrading of the road would encourage the development of their properties for recreational purposes and would insure wintertime access to their holdings.

On August 10, 1983 the county commissioners met to consider whether the road was a county or private road, but no resolution of the issue was had at this meeting. On August 30, 1983 another meeting was held, and owners of land adjacent to the road (Spiro and Robinson) disputed the county engineer’s contention that the road was lawfully established as a county road. Evidence was taken, and the board agreed to hear the matter again.

The board met again in early September to consider the ownership of the road. Numerous landowners were present at this meeting, including the appellees who asked that the road west of the Spiro gate be declared a private road or that it be abandoned. The board adjourned, advising they would consult with the county attorney, and on September 7, 1983, by letter to Mr. and Mrs. Spiro, informed them that it was the commissioners’ decision that the Piney Creek Road was a duly established and existing county road. This decision was spread upon the minutes of the meeting of the commissioners dated September 13, 1983, which minutes read in part as follows:

“ ‘The above referenced subject (North Piney Road) was established as a county road on September 6, 1910. We (the Board) have carefully reviewed the records and information available to us as well as public testimony and we are of the opinion that, due to public usage and county maintenance of the road, it is, in fact, a county road. Therefore, it is our determination that the above subject road remains a county road. Consequently, we must insist you remove your private gate and sign before September 15, 1983.’ ”

When the September 15 deadline, mentioned in the commissioners’ minutes, had passed, and the sheriff found the gate referred to above to be locked, thus denying public access, the county road crew undertook to remove it. The gate was replaced by the appellees, and in early October of [294]*2941983 the commissioners again ordered the county employees to remove the gate. This was accomplished by excavating the gate posts so that the gate would present no further obstruction to travel.

On October 12, 1983, the action out of which this appeal grows was filed and the plaintiffs, appellees here, sought injunctive relief as well as actual and punitive damages. Following a trial of the issues, the court entered a judgment in their favor on April 25, 1984, from which this appeal is taken.

The judgment contains the following language:

« * * * [T]he road in contention in this lawsuit was not established lawfully west of the Spiros’ gate at any time by the Sheridan Board of County Commissioners and in any event, any rights that the County may or may not have had in the road were abandoned by the County and that the County never constructed or substantially maintained any roadway on or near that in contention in this lawsuit.”

This court cannot agree with the trial court in its decision concerning the establishment, the purported abandonment, and the effect of the variance between the physical location as compared to the surveyor’s location of the Piney Creek Road as reflected by the county records.

We will reverse.

Who Owns the Piney Creek Road?

The Questions for Resolve

The appellants define the principal proposition for our consideration as follows:

“It was an error of law for the District Court to determine the North Piney Road was not a county road and to ‘quiet the title to the road west of the Spiro gate’ in the Appellees * ⅜

We see the dispute raised by this assertion as centering upon a question which asks whether the Piney Creek Road, as it presently appears upon the surface of the ground, is in fact and in law the road which was purportedly established in 1910 as a county road.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Zeimens v. City of Torrington
2012 WY 97 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2012)
Carnahan v. Lewis
2012 WY 45 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2012)
Schott v. Miller
943 P.2d 1174 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1997)
Sare v. Sheridan County Board of County Commissioners
784 P.2d 593 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1989)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
697 P.2d 290, 1985 Wyo. LEXIS 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheridan-county-v-spiro-wyo-1985.