There's something uniquely evil about locking the public out of public lands.
I'm looking at you, too, Vinod Khosla.
There's something uniquely evil about locking the public out of public lands.
I'm looking at you, too, Vinod Khosla.
I'm not sure that it created any sort of ground easement.
It basically allows you to 'hop' from one quadrant to the cross quadrant without touching the other two quadrants of the corner. The guy in that case used a ladder to do that IIRC so he only violated their 'airspace' up until that ruling.
owns 6000 acres of checkerboard land that’s effectively 20,000 acres with a notorious ranch manager.
Lost his case in Fed courts in Wyoming and on appeal, trying to do Supreme Court now.
Wyofile has consistently good coverage on this.
If I recall correctly it was either basically just a low hanging chain or low fence, but it's awhile since I read it.
Judges are normally loathe to consider much more than the narrowest reading required, so I would be shocked if they considered the possibility of touching the fence or a fence high enough to make a ladder impractical.