[T1] Evаn W. Cross and Sandra D. Cross filed an application for a private road with the Crook County Board of County Commissioners (Board). Wayne Curtis Altaffer moved to dismiss the application. After a hearing, the Board granted his motion and dismissed the application. The Crosses filed a petition for judicial review in district court. The district court found that the Board's decision was not in accordance with the law, reversed the ruling and remanded the case to the Board. Mr. Altaffer appealed the district court's order to this Court. We will affirm the district court's decision.
ISSUES
[12] Mr. Altaffer contends the district court erred in reversing the Board's ruling dismissing the private road application. The Crosses assert the Board erred in dismissing the application.
FACTS
[13] The Crosses own land located in Crook County, Wyoming. It is surrounded on all four sides by property owned and managed by the United States Department of Interior, Bureau of Reclamation. Mr. Al-taffer owns land located directly northwest of the Cross property. The southeast corner of his property touches the northwest corner of the Cross property.
[14] The Cross property has no connection or legal access to a public road. The Crosses were aware when they purchased the land that it had no connection to a public road but believed they could purchase an easement for a road from neighboring landowners that would give them access to their land from U.S. Highway 14. Apparently, they were unable to reach an agreement with
[T5] Before the Board considered the application and motion to dismiss, the Crosses also contacted the Bureau of Reclamation in an effort to obtain a special use permit giving them access from the northwest corner of their property across Mr. Altaffer's property to the highway. The Bureau of Reclamation declined to consider the request, concluding it was premature. The Bureau of Reclamation advised the Crosses that it would consider the application at such time as they could show they had legal access to Reclamation lands.
[16] In May 2011, the Board convened a hearing on Mr. Altaffer's motion. Following the hearing, the Board dismissed the application finding that it had no jurisdiction over the Bureau of Reclamation and could not, therefore, condemn Reclamation property to providе access to the Crosses. The Board further found there was no legal authority allowing it to grant a private road that did not actually connect with the landlocked property and any access permit granted by the federal government would not be an incorporeal right appurtenant to the Cross property as required by Wyoming law.
[T7] The Crosses filed a petition for judicial review in district court.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[18] The following standards govern our review:
The board's decision on an application for a private road under § 24-9-101 is subject to review under the Wyoming Administrative Procedures Act. In reviewing the board's decision, we stand in the same position as the district court, and our review is governed by the considerations specified in Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 16-8-114(c) (LexisNexis 2005). Mayland v. Flitner,2001 WY 69 , ¶ 10,28 P.3d 838 , 843 (Wyo.2001). Section 16-3-1l14(c) provides, in pertinent part:
(c) To the extent necessary to make a decision and when presented, the reviewing court shall decide all relevant questions of law, interpret constitutional and statutory provisions, and determine the meaning or applicability of the terms of an agency action. In making the following determinations, the court shall review the whole record or those parts of it cited by a party and due account shall be taken of the rule of prejudicial error. The reviewing court shall:
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(i) Hold unlawful and set aside agency action, findings and conclusions found to be:
(A) Arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion or otherwise not in accordance with law;
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(E) Unsupported by substantial evidence in a case reviewed on the record of an agency hearing provided by statute.
Reidy v. Stratton Sheep Co.,
DISCUSSION
[T9] Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 24-9-101 (LexisNexis 2011) provides in pertinent part that "[alny person whose land has no outlet to, nor connection with a public road, may file an application in writing with the board of county commissioners in the county where his land is located for a private road leading from his land to some convenient public road." Section 24-9-101 derives its constitutional authority from article I, § 32 of the Wyoming Constitution which states in pertinent part: "Private property shall not be taken for private use unless by consent of the owner, except for private ways of necessity...." Thus, the threshold inquiry for establishment of a private road under § 24-9-101 is necessity. Reidy, T11,
[110] There is no dispute that the Crosses have no access to a public road; therefore, as a matter of law, a private road is necessary. The issue in the present case is whether the Board properly dismissed the application because the private road the Crosses sought to establish did not connect directly with their property. Instead the private road travеrsed the Altaffer property to its southeastern boundary and then would require the Crosses to obtain a special permit from the Bureau of Reclamation to eross federal land to reach their property. The Board resolved the issue summarily on three grounds: 1) it did not have jurisdiction to grant a private road across federal lands; 2) there is no legal authority allowing it to grant a private road that did not actually connect with the landlocked propеrty; and 3) any access permit granted by the federal government would not be an incorporeal right appurtenant to the Cross property as required by Wyoming law. We address each of these grounds separately, beginning with the jurisdictional question.
[T11] It is well established that Wyoming courts have no jurisdiction over federal lands and cannot bind the federal government. See United States v. Shaw,
Through its various agencies, the federal government owns over fifty percent of the land in Wyoming. Wyoming 2005-Just the Facts!, hitp://eadiv.statewy.us (2005), citing Gov't Services Admin. Office of Governmentwide Real Property Policy. It goes without saying that many private landowners use roads across federal lands to access their private property. If we were to hold a road across federal land could not be considerеd a public road under our private road statutes, we would be imposing an undue burden upon private landowners in Wyoming to provide access to their neighbors when, in reality, such access was not necessary. We do not believe the legislature intended that result. Therefore, we hold, as a matter of law, a road over federal lands may be considered a public road within the meaning of our private road statutes, provided the characteristics of thе road indicate it is available to the general public.
Id., % 19,
[112] The Board also concluded there is no legal authority allowing it to grant a private road that did not actually connect with the landloсked property. In J & T Properties, LLC v. Gallagher,
[T13]) In reaching the result we did in J & T Properties, we reiterated principles often stated in our private road cases. "[Clon-venience and reason should prevail in the establishment of roads." Id., citing Lindt v. Murray,
[T14] The Board also concluded the Crosses' application must be denied as a matter of law because their connection to a public road was dependent upon issuance of a special permit by the Bureau of Reclamation and such a permit would not constitute an incorporeal right appurtenant to the Cross property as required by Wyoming law. In rеversing the Board's ruling, the district court was persuaded that reason must prevail and when there is no way to obtain access to landlocked property that would constitute an incorporeal right appurtenant to the property, § 24-9-101 must be interpreted to allow an applicant to use other means along with a private road to gain access. We agree with the district court and limit the requirement that access be an incorporeal right aрpurtenant to the property to those cases where other options exist for obtaining access.
[115] The concept of access as an incorporeal right appurtenant to an estate was first recognized in Wyoming in McIlquham v. Anthony Wilkinson Live Stock Co.,
The allegation that he cannot reach either of the county roads mentioned in the petition without going through the defendant's fences is not equivalent to an allegation that he has no other means of accеss to a public highway from his lands. For aught that appears in the amended petition, he may have a better, shorter, and more convenient way from his lands to a public highway than to either of the county roads mentioned in the petition.
Id. at 21-22.
[T16] The Court cited the well settled rule that "where a party has one way by which he can reach a public highway and which affords him reasonable facilities for possessing, using and enjoying his own premises, he is not entitled to another way as a way of necessity." Id. at 22. The Court described the right to a way of necessity as
[117] In Reaves v. Riley, (
[118] On appeal, the Court reversed the board's ruling, holding that the lease did not constitute an "outlet to" or "connection with" a convenient public road within the meaning of § 24-9-101; therefore, Reaves was entitled to apply for a private road. In reaching that result, the Court reasoned that a month to-month lease across someone else's property was not the sort of access that should prevent a landowner from applying for a private road. As in Meliquham, the concept of an incorporeal right appurtenant to the estate was considered in Reaves in the context of property that was not landlocked. Also in Reaves, the concept was used to explain why a landowner who had existing access to his property should still be allowed to pursue a private road under § 24-9-101; it was not used to prevent a landlocked landowner from pursuing a private road.
[119] More recently in Voss v. Albany County Comm'rs,
[120] In an effort to secure access to their property, the Vosses attempted to obtain easements from their neighbors-the Stevens gave them a restricted easement across their portion of the BLM road which allowed the Vosses to use the road but provided the easement would lapse if the Vosses ever sold less than their entire parcel of land; the BLM issued a thirty year renewable right of way permit to allow the Vosses to use its portion of the road; the Goodmans gave the Vosses an unrestricted easement over their pоrtion of the road. Id., 14,
[121] After hearings, the appointment of viewers to visit the property and receipt of the viewers' recommendation, the Board entered an order rejecting the creek road and establishing the BLM road as a private
[122] Like the other cases in which this Court has addressed the concept of an appurtenant right in the context of the private road statutes, Voss is distinguishable from the present case. There, the petitioner asked the Board to establish the private road on an existing road that was part public and part private-the creek road. Instead, the Board established the private road on an existing roаd access to which was dependent in part upon a BLM right of way. The Vosses objected to the Board's order because it was not the road they wanted, did not provide the degree of permanency they desired given the thirty year renewable federal right of way, and there was an existing alternative road available which they preferred. In that context, this Court held the Board could not require the applicant to accept as a private road under § 24-9-101 a route dependent upon a right of way that was not an appurtenant right and did not provide the Vosses with the sort of outlet or connection to a public road contemplated in § 24-9-101.
[128] Voss did not involve an application for a private road where the only route available to connect to a public road necessarily required crossing federal land. Voss likewise did not involve an applicant whose only recourse for obtaining access to his land was to request a private road, a portion of which crossed federal land. This Court did not hold in Voss, nor has it ever held, that where there is no alternative route available, an applicant is prohibited from having his application considered because the private road he seeks is dependent in part on a right that is not appurtenant to his property. We decline to do so now.
[T24] Where a landowner's only outlet or connection to a public road is dependent in part on a grant of access that does not constitute an appurtenant right and the landowner seeks a private road which necessarily depends on a non-appurtenant right, he is entitled to have his application considered. While a Board cannot force an applicant to rely on a non-appurtenant right for access to a public road when an alternative routе is available, a landowner is not prohibited from relying on such a right for access when an alternative route is not available. To hold otherwise would be contrary to long established public policy against land-locking property and rendering it useless. Reidy, ¶ 31,
[125] Mr. Altaffer also argues the Board properly dismissed the Cross application because if it had granted it and then the Bureau of Reclamation declined to grant them a special use permit, there would be a road to nowhere across his property. Section 24-9-
[126] We reverse the Board's order and remand to the district court for remand to the Board for entry of an order consistent with this decision.
Notes
. Before the district court could consider the petition, the Bureau of Reclamation filed a notice of removal оf the case to federal court citing 28 U.S.C. § 1442. The federal district court summarily remanded the case to state district court after determining that it did not have subject matter jurisdiction.
. The road established was actually modified slightly from the existing road to avoid crossing land owned by persons not a party to the proceedings. The modification is not relevant to the issue we address here.
. The district court also instructed the Board on remand to determine whether the Vosses filed their application in good faith. That portion of Voss is not pertinent to the issue here.
