OPINION
Plaintiff, Colvin Cattle Co., Inc., the owner of 520 acres of land located near the publicly held Montezuma Allotment in central Nevada, sues here for the alleged taking of its water rights and ranching operations as a result of the government’s denial of an application to graze cattle on federal lands. Plaintiff additionally asserts a breach of contract arising from the government’s cancellation of plaintiffs grazing lease. This ease is before the court on defendant’s motion to dismiss or, alternatively, for summary judgment on the grounds that plaintiffs water rights do not confer a compensable right to graze on federal lands and that its grazing lease does not create a contractually enforceable right against the government. After hearing oral argument on July 20, 2005, we now rule in defendant’s favor and direct the dismissal of plaintiffs claims.
FACTS
The current dispute arose in February 1995 when plaintiff, a long-time rancher on the Montezuma Allotment, failed to pay $966 in grazing fees to the Bureau of Land Management (“BLM”) in connection with its grazing of cattle on publicly held land.
On May 21, 1997, after numerous unsuccessful attempts to settle the trespass claims against plaintiff, the BLM issued a “Proposed Decision Order to Remove and Demand for Payment on the Montezuma Allotment.” In response, plaintiff submitted a June 6,1997, protest in which it continued to challenge the government’s ownership of the land. The BLM rejected plaintiffs challenges in a July 24, 1997, “Final Decision,” concluding that plaintiff had been “knowingly, and willfully grazing livestock without a grazing authorization.” The decision demanded payment in the amount of $37,332.26 for costs and damages associated with plaintiffs unauthorized grazing and provided for the cancellation of plaintiffs grazing lease and the removal of plaintiffs cattle if payment was not made within 15 days. Plaintiff appealed the BLM’s decision to the Interior Board of Land Appeals on September 4, 1997, but that appeal was dismissed on November 28,1997.
After more than three years of additional attempts to remedy the trespass claims against plaintiff, the BLM issued a notice of intent on June 25, 2001, to have plaintiffs cattle removed from the public lands. The following year, on May 1, 2002, in connection with the cancellation of plaintiffs grazing lease, the BLM canceled plaintiffs range improvements permits and ordered plaintiff to remove all materials associated with such improvements within 180 days. Plaintiff did not respond to the cancellation notice and instead filed suit in this court on August 18, 2003. Thereafter, on November 26,2003, the BLM issued a final trespass decision order
Although plaintiff is permitted continued access to the water on the Montezuma Allotment, the BLM has since authorized another rancher, Bud Johns, to graze livestock on that same land. As a condition of that authorization, however, Mr. Johns must haul water to the Montezuma Allotment for use by his cattle.
DISCUSSION
I.
In determining whether plaintiff has suffered a Fifth Amendment taking,
The case law makes clear, and plaintiff concedes, that a grazing permit does not rise to the level of a protectable property interest, nor does it confer any right, title, or interest to the lands of the United States. Light v. United States,
Plaintiffs asserted right to graze cattle on public land is essentially predicated on three sources: the Supreme Court’s decision in Buford,
While plaintiff concedes that even under Buford, a mere statement of the right to graze from the state would be overridden by any future federal reservation because no state statute alone “grants (nor could it grant) a property interest in federal lands that may be enforced against the United States,” Diamond Bar Cattle Co. v. United States,
Whenever, by priority of possession, rights to the use of water for mining, agriculture, manufacturing, or other purposes, have vested and accrued, and the same are recognized and acknowledged by the local customs, laws, and the decisions of courts, the possessors and owners of such vested rights shall be maintained and protected in the same; and the right of way for the construction of ditches and canals for the purposes herein specified is acknowledged and confirmed----
43 U.S.C. § 661.
As the Supreme Court recognized in Jennison v. Kirk,
[W]henever rights to the use of water by priority of possession had become vested, and were recognized by the local customs, laws, and decisions of the courts, the owners and possessors should be protected in them; and that the right of way for ditches and canals incident to such water-rights, being recognized in the same manner, should be “acknowledged and confirmed.”
Id. at 460.
The confirmation by the Mining Act of vested state water rights — including the right for cattle to consume forage adjacent to water — is, in plaintiffs view, a framework recognized by this court in Hage v. United States,
[Njeither the Supreme Court, or other lower federal courts, have addressed the scope of the water rights acknowledged by the [Mining Act]. If Nevada law recognized the right to graze cattle near bordering water as part of a vested right before 1907, when Congress created the Toiyabe National Forest, plaintiffs may have a right to forage adjacent to their alleged water rights on the rangeland.
Id. at 175. In a later decision, the Hage court repeated its “common sense” analysis that “implicit in a vested water right based on putting water to beneficial use for livestock purposes was the appurtenant right for those livestock to graze alongside the water.” Hage v. United States,
The creation of vested water rights under state law and the confirmation of those rights under federal law is, in plaintiffs view, a regime that is further recognized by the Taylor Grazing Act, which provides in relevant part:
[N]othing in this subchapter shall be construed or administered in any way to diminish or impair any right to the possession and use of water for mining, agriculture, manufacture, or other purposes which has heretofore vested or accrued under existing law validly affecting the public lands or which may be hereafter initiated or acquired and maintained in accordance with such law. So far as consistent with the purposes and provisions of this subchapter, grazing privileges recognized and acknowledged shall be adequately safeguarded, but the creation of a grazing district or the issuance of a permit pursuant to the provisions of this subchapter shall not create any right, title, interest, or estate in or to the lands.
43 U.S.C. § 315b. Plaintiff thus argues that the Taylor Grazing Act not only recognizes water rights vested under state law, but also confirms the method of acquiring those rights, specifically by preserving the legal status quo described in Buford and acknowledged by the Mining Act of 1866.
II.
Defendant does not dispute that the right to appropriate water can rise to the level of a compensable property interest. Rather, defendant argues that even if plaintiff in fact possesses such a water right (a contention it does not address), the use of a public resource is not a “stick in the bundle of property rights,” American Pelagic Fishing Co. v. United States,
Defendant begins its argument with the assertion that title to the lands comprising the Montezuma Allotment was conferred on the United States through the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848. United States v. Nye County,
Given this history, defendant argues that any grazing that occurred on the Montezuma Allotment prior to the enactment of the Taylor Grazing Act of 1934 was done at the federal government’s sufferance and not at the state’s, and therefore the grazing could continue only so long as the United States (and not the state of Nevada, as plaintiff contends) did not cancel its “tacit consent.” Light,
[Without passing a statute, or taking any affirmative action on the subject, the United States suffered its public domain to be used for [the pasturing of livestock]. There thus grew up a sort of implied license that these lands, thus left open, might be used so long as the government did not cancel its tacit consent. Its failure to object, however, did not confer any vested right on the complainant, nor did it deprive the United States of the power of recalling any implied license under which the land had been used for private purposes.
Id. at 535,
We do not believe, as plaintiff suggests, that the ownership and control by the United States of public lands is altered by the Supreme Court’s decision in Buford. Although plaintiff reads Buford as recognizing a vested property right in public lands created under state law, a long line of Supreme Court precedent, like Light,
Even if Buford could be construed as acknowledging such a right, however, we do not believe that the state of Nevada ever conferred on plaintiff the right to graze on federal lands in the first instance. Plaintiff traces its water rights to Nevada’s 1925 Stockwatering Act, Nev.Rev.Stat. §§ 533.485-533.510, and three eases it believes link the right to graze with a vested stoekwatering right. See Itcaina,
The state [of Nevada] is not asserting any right or title to the public domain under [the 1925 Stockwatering Act]. All that the state seeks to do pursuant to the [Act] is to exercise police regulations over the public domain.... Furthermore any time the federal government ... in any ... manner undertakes to exercise control over [the public domain], the [Act] becomes inoperative in so far as it conflicts with the authority of the federal government.
Id. at 675. Similarly, in Itcaina, the Nevada Supreme Court held:
No property right can be acquired by [grazing livestock upon the public domain]. All persons so using the public domain do it merely by sufferance of the federal government or, as it is sometimes designated by the courts, by virtue of an implied license. This use is often alluded to as a right. It is not a right that the government of the United States has conferred, and these public range lands may at any time be withdrawn from such use ....
In addition, the Ninth and Tenth Circuits have expressly rejected the assertion that a right to graze on federal lands is attendant to a state water right. In Hunter v. United States,
Whether this “grant” carried with it an easement to graze is a question readily answered. Hunter’s contention is based upon the well-settled rule that the grant of a right in real property includes all incidentals possessed by the grantee and without which the property granted cannot be fully enjoyed. He urges that the adjoining lands provide the means to use the water beneficially and must therefore be deemed appurtenant to it. He claims too much. The appurtenance must be limited to that which is essential to the use of the right granted; it does not include the thing with which the right granted is used.
Id. at 153-54. Accord Gardner v. Stager,
Similarly, in Diamond Bar Cattle,
Nor does the Mining Act of 1866 either confer or confirm any grazing right on federal lands. In Jennison,
We must likewise reject plaintiff’s contention that its position finds support in Hage,
III.
Plaintiff additionally claims that the government had an obligation to prevent both Bud Johns’s cattle and wild horses from infringing upon plaintiffs water rights. Although plaintiff acknowledges that both the Supreme Court and this court have characterized intrusions by wildlife as outside the control of the government and thus not instrumentalities of a taking (see, e.g., Kleppe v. New Mexico,
As to Bud Johns’s cattle, the United States cannot be held responsible for the incursion of water rights by a private party. Alves v. United States,
IV.
In addition to the taking of its water rights, plaintiff also alleges the taking of its ranch under the theory that cattle ranching is the only economically viable use for the property — a use made untenable by the loss of its watering and grazing rights. We do
V.
In addition to its takings claims, plaintiff asserts a breach of contract claim and a claim arising under the Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976, 43 U.S.C. § 1752(g) (2000).
In defendant’s view, section 1752(g) is inapplicable here because plaintiffs lease was not canceled in order to devote the lands to another public purpose. Even if section 1752(g) were applicable, however, defendant argues that plaintiffs section 1752(g) claim is unripe because plaintiff has not exhausted its administrative remedies, specifically by applying to the “Secretary concerned” for plaintiffs “interest in authorized permanent improvements placed or constructed by the permittee or lessee on lands covered by such permit or lease, but not to exceed the fair market value of the terminated portion of the permittee’s or lessee’s interest therein.” 43 U.S.C. § 1752(g).
Because it is undisputed that another rancher is now using the lands in question to graze his cattle, the court is unable to conclude that the lands have been devoted to another public purpose as is required by the terms of the statute. Plaintiffs section 1752(g) claim therefore must fail.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, defendant’s motion to dismiss plaintiffs complaint is granted and the Clerk is directed to enter judgment accordingly. No costs.
Notes
. The Montezuma Allotment comprises 625,000 acres of public land in Nye and Esmeralda Counties, Nevada, which was reserved for federal use by the Taylor Grazing Act of 1934, 43 U.S.C. §§ 315-315r (2000). Plaintiff first applied to the BLM for a grazing lease on the Montezuma Allotment on September 5, 1969, which was in turn granted on January 19, 1970.
. The Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides in relevant part: "nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.” U.S. Const, amend. V, cl. 4.
. 36 C.F.R. § 222.3 (2005) additionally provides: "(a) Unless otherwise specified by the Chief, Forest Service, all grazing and livestock use on National Forest System lands and on other lands under Forest Service control must be authorized by a grazing or livestock use permit, (b) Grazing permits and livestock use permits convey no right, title, or interest held by the United States in any lands or resources.”
. Defendant also claims that plaintiff has not made an effort to transport the water from the public property or sought permission from the BLM to put the water to any alternate use, thus rendering any claim as to a taking of the water itself unripe. See Williamson County Regional Planning Comm'n v. Hamilton Bank of Johnson City,
. Plaintiff attempts to distinguish Hunter, Gardner, and Diamond Bar Cattle on the ground that the plaintiffs in those cases claimed a right to graze "immune from federal pasturage,” whereas in the instant case plaintiff neither claims a right to exclusive possession nor pursues a declaratory judgment but instead seeks the compensation it claims it is owed when the federal government creates physical barriers to its appropriation of water or regulates into extinction its vested right to water and grazing. Although the procedural postures of these cases may differ from our own, the interests claimed are identical. See, e.g., Diamond Bar Cattle,
. Notably the Hage court did not address the question of whether the claimed water right was a compensable property interest or whether the plaintiffs could have used the water if the government had not deprived them of access, leaving those inquiries for a later proceeding.
. The Hage court observed that “[a]t most, [the plaintiffs] may have a right to go on to the land to access the water in which they have a vested right.”
. 43 U.S.C. § 1752(g) provides:
Whenever a permit or lease for grazing domestic livestock is canceled in whole or in part, in order to devote the lands covered by the permit or lease to another public purpose, including disposal, the permittee or lessee shall receive from the United States a reasonable compensation for the adjusted value, to be determined by the Secretary concerned, of his interest in authorized permanent improvements placed or constructed by the permittee or lessee on lands covered by such permit or lease, but not to exceed the fair market value of the terminated portion of the permittee’s or lessee's interest therein.
. Plaintiff relies on United States v. Certain Parcels of Land,
