Corner crossing SCOTUS appeal

After four years of legal battles, Fred Eshelman’s trespass lawsuit to block people from corner crossing to reach public property will land Oct. 17 on the U.S. Supreme Court conference table, where justices will likely consider a recent law-school graduate’s recommendation whether to take up the case.

The nine justices won’t necessarily be the first ones to scan the 388 pages filed in the case titled Iron Bar Holdings vs Bradley Cape. A clerk — an early career lawyer — will review the file initially, soon joined by two other clerk colleagues.

Before the justices mull Eshelman’s petition, these “three smart kids in their mid to late-20s are conducting the closest and most important reads,” according to Dan Schweitzer, an expert in Supreme Court processes. https://wyofile.com/early-career-cl...ll-first-review-wyoming-corner-crossing-case/
 
obviously the case didn't deal with landlocked public and doesn't give clarity on landlocked public as far as i know.

certainly the conversation has probably bubbled up during this and if it's been talked about in greater detail i'm not remembering... but, one would think the UIA would also come into play when it comes to the public not having the ability access landlocked public, no?
 
obviously the case didn't deal with landlocked public and doesn't give clarity on landlocked public as far as i know.

certainly the conversation has probably bubbled up during this and if it's been talked about in greater detail i'm not remembering... but, one would think the UIA would also come into play when it comes to the public not having the ability access landlocked public, no?
The way the UIA reads yes but the way it's applied or interrupted may be a different story and someone has to bring a case we'll see if it will eventually happens.
 
So re educate me. Does this now only affect the states mentioned in our district or all across the country?
 
So re educate me. Does this now only affect the states mentioned in our district or all across the country?
Yes(WY, CO, KS, OK, UT, NM) but it also sets a precedent for other states if the situation comes up and after seeing how bad this all went for the landowner I would be surprised if anyone really pressed it but people with a lot of money will do anything.
 
So re educate me. Does this now only affect the states mentioned in our district or all across the country?
@blb078 is correct. The decision in the 10th Circuit is binding. It is not binding for other circuits, but odds are pretty good they would follow precedent. At minimum, they would review and reference this case in their decision.
 
Some very welcome good news! My crystal ball says that there will be folks testing this out in Montana very soon...
It will be really interesting to see if the AG in MT tries to prosecute. They dropped one a couple of years ago, because I personally think they would rather get a ruling from SCOTUS and are afraid to make definitive precedent in MT.

For as long as it is unsettled law in MT, the AG and FWP get to keep people from corner crossing out of fear of prosecution. It's actually smart on their part. Make it a risk so people still refrain from doing it, but don't create precedent.

This is why I'm an advocate of taking civil action against a landowner illegally blocking a corner under the unlawful inclosures act. As a community we should be playing offense instead of defense.
 
Not going to lie part of me wanted them to hear the case to give closure to the reaming western states, but I'll take the win especially in New Mexico, Utah, and Colorado.
Pure speculation on my part, but SCOTUS declining this case makes me believe it’s more likely for other circuits to follow the established precedent.
 
@blb078 is correct. The decision in the 10th Circuit is binding. It is not binding for other circuits, but odds are pretty good they would follow precedent. At minimum, they would review and reference this case in their decision.
Not sure why the odds are pretty good? Probably more a toss up. Circuits ignore one another all the time.
 

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