                 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                        FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT




SOUTHERN UTAH WILDERNESS
ALLIANCE, a Utah non-profit
corporation, et al.,

      Plaintiffs-Appellees,

v.                                         04-4071 & 04-4073

BUREAU OF LAND
MANAGEMENT,

      Defendant-Appellee,

TYLER LEWIS, in his official
capacity as San Juan County
Commissioner, et al.,

      Defendants-Appellants,

and

NORMAN CARROLL, et al.,

      Defendants.

______________________________

NATURAL RESOURCES DEFENSE
COUNCIL, et al.,

      Amici Curiae.


                               ORDER
                               Filed January 6, 2006


Before HENRY, HARTZ, and McCONNELL, Circuit Judges.



      These matters are before the court on the petition for rehearing filed on

behalf of Garfield and Kane Counties. Upon consideration of the petition, and the

responses filed by other parties and amici, we have determined to amend the

original panel opinion on page 86, to include the following sentence:

      This case does not raise the question, and we do not decide, whether
      a road officially laid out or erected for public use by state or local
      governmental authority prior to repeal of R.S. 2477 would qualify as
      a highway without proof of ten years’ continuous public use. See
      Utah Code Ann. Sec. 72-1-102(7) (West 2004).

A copy of the amended opinion is attached to this order. It shall be substituted

for the original. The petition for panel rehearing is otherwise denied in all

respects.


                                             Entered for the Court


                                             by:
                                                    Elisabeth A. Shumaker
                                                    Clerk of Court




                                         2
                                                                     F I L E D
                                                               United States Court of Appeals
                                                                       Tenth Circuit
                                       PUBLISH
                                                                   September 8, 2005
                     UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                 PATRICK FISHER,
                                                                      Clerk of Court
                                   TENTH CIRCUIT



SOUTHERN UTAH WILDERNESS
ALLIANCE, a Utah non-profit
corporation, and SIERRA CLUB, a
non-profit corporation,

               Plaintiffs-Appellees,
       v.                                        Nos. 04-4071 & 04-4073
BUREAU OF LAND
MANAGEMENT,

               Defendant-Appellee,

       and

SAN JUAN COUNTY, Utah; TYLER
LEWIS, in his official capacity as San
Juan County Commissioner; KANE
COUNTY, Utah; and GARFIELD
COUNTY, Utah,

               Defendants-Appellants.

--------------------------------

NORMAN CARROLL, in his
official capacity as Kane County
Commissioner; JOE JUDD, in
his official capacity as Kane County
Commissioner; STEPHEN CROSBY,
in his official capacity as Kane County
Commissioner; LOUISE LISTON, in
her official capacity as Garfield
County Commissioner; D. MALOY
DODDS, in his official capacity as
Garfield County Commissioner;
CLARE M. RAMSAY, in her official
capacity as Garfield County
Commissioner,

        Defendants.


NATURAL RESOURCES DEFENSE
COUNCIL, NATIONAL PARKS
CONSERVATION ASSOCIATION;
THE WILDERNESS SOCIETY;
ALASKA CENTER FOR THE
ENVIRONMENT; ALASKA
WILDERNESS LEAGUE; ARIZONA
WILDERNESS COALITION;
CALIFORNIA WILDERNESS
COALITION; COLORADO
ENVIRONMENTAL COALITION;
COLORADO MOUNTAIN CLUB;
GRAND CANYON TRUST;
GREATER YELLOWSTONE
COALITION; IDAHO
CONSERVATION LEAGUE;
NATIONAL WILDLIFE
FEDERATION; NATIONAL
WILDLIFE REFUGE ASSOCIATION;
NEW MEXICO WILDERNESS
ALLIANCE; NORTHERN ALASKA
ENVIRONMENTAL CENTER;
SAN JUAN CITIZENS COALITION;
SOUTHEAST ALASKA
CONSERVATION COUNCIL;
WYOMING OUTDOOR COUNCIL;
PROPERTY OWNERS FOR
SENSIBLE ROADS POLICY; JANA
SMITH; RON SMITH; STATES OF
UTAH, IDAHO, and WYOMING,


                                     2
             Amici Curiae.


        APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
                  FOR THE DISTRICT OF UTAH
                    (D.C. NO. 2:96-CV-836-TC)


Shawn T. Welch (Robert S. Thompson, III, with him on the briefs), Pruitt Gushee,
Salt Lake City, Utah, for Defendants-Appellants San Juan County and San Juan
County Commissioner Tyler Lewis.

Ralph L. Finlayson, Assistant Attorney General (Mark L. Shurtleff, Attorney
General, with him on the briefs), Salt Lake City, Utah, for Defendants-Appellants
Kane and Garfield Counties.

Jerome L. Epstein, Jenner & Block LLP, Washington, D.C. (Heidi J. McIntosh,
Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance, Salt Lake City, Utah, Edward B. Zukoski,
Earthjustice, Denver, Colorado, and William H. Hohengarten, Jenner & Block
LLP, Washington, D.C., with him on the brief), for Plaintiffs-Appellees Southern
Utah Wilderness Alliance and Sierra Club.

Todd S. Aagaard, Attorney, Appellate Section, Environment & Natural Resources
Division, Department of Justice, Washington, D.C. (Thomas L. Sansonetti,
Assistant Attorney General, M. Alice Thurston, Attorney, Appellate Section,
Environment & Natural Resources Division, Department of Justice, Washington,
D.C., Paul M. Warner, United States Attorney, Salt Lake City, Utah, and Daniel
D. Price, Assistant United States Attorney, Salt Lake City, Utah, with him on the
brief), for Defendant-Appellee Bureau of Land Management.

Mark L. Shurtleff, Utah Attorney General, and J. Mark Ward, Assistant Attorney
General, Salt Lake City, Utah; Steven W. Strack, Deputy Idaho Attorney General,
Boise, Idaho; and Patrick J. Crank, Wyoming Attorney General, Cheyenne,
Wyoming, filed an amici curiae brief for the states of Utah, Idaho, and Wyoming,
in support of Appellants San Juan, Kane, and Garfield Counties.

Michael S. Freeman, Faegre & Benson LLP, Denver, Colorado, filed an amici
curiae brief for Property Owners for Sensible Roads Policy and Jana and Ron
Smith, in support of Appellees Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance, Sierra Club,

                                        3
and the Bureau of Land Management.

Rebecca L. Bernard, Trustees for Alaska, Anchorage, Alaska, and Louis R.
Cohen, James R. Wrathall, and Brian M. Boynton, Wilmer, Cutler, Pickering,
Hale & Dorn LLP, Washington, D.C., filed an amici curiae brief for Natural
Resources Defense Council, National Parks Conservation Association, The
Wilderness Society, Alaska Center for the Environment, Alaska Wilderness
League, Arizona Wilderness Coalition, California Wilderness Coalition, Colorado
Environmental Coalition, Colorado Mountain Club, Grand Canyon Trust, Greater
Yellowstone Coalition, Idaho Conservation League, National Wildlife Federation,
National Wildlife Refugee Association, New Mexico Wilderness Alliance,
Northern Alaska Environmental Center, San Juan Citizens Coalition, Southeast
Alaska Conservation Council, and Wyoming Outdoor Council, in support of
Plaintiff-Appellees.



Before HENRY, HARTZ, and McCONNELL, Circuit Judges.


McCONNELL, Circuit Judge.


      This case involves one of the more contentious land use issues in the West:

the legal status of claims by local governments to rights of way for the

construction of highways across federal lands managed by the Bureau of Land

Management (BLM). In 1866, Congress passed an open-ended grant of “the right

of way for the construction of highways over public lands, not reserved for public

uses.” Act of July 26, 1866, ch. 262, § 8, 14 Stat. 251, 253, codified at 43 U.S.C.

§ 932, repealed by Federal Land Policy Management Act of 1976 (FLPMA),

Pub.L. No. 94-579 § 706(a), 90 Stat. 2743. This statute, commonly called “R.S.

2477,” remained in effect for 110 years, and most of the transportation routes of

                                         4
the West were established under its authority. During that time congressional

policy promoted the development of the unreserved public lands and their passage

into private productive hands; R.S. 2477 rights of way were an integral part of the

congressional pro-development lands policy.

         In 1976, however, Congress abandoned its prior approach to public lands

and instituted a preference for retention of the lands in federal ownership, with an

increased emphasis on conservation and preservation. See FLPMA, 43 U.S.C. §

1701 et seq. As part of that statutory sea change, Congress repealed R.S. 2477.

There could be no new R.S. 2477 rights of way after 1976. But even as Congress

repealed R.S. 2477, it specified that any “valid” R.S. 2477 rights of way “existing

on the date of approval of this Act” (October 21, 1976) would continue in effect.

Pub. L. No. 94-579 § 701(a), 90 Stat. 2743, 2786 (1976). The statute thus had the

effect of “freezing” R.S. 2477 rights as they were in 1976. Sierra Club v. Hodel,

848 F.2d 1068, 1081 (10th Cir. 1988), overruled on other grounds by Village of

Los Ranchos De Albuquerque v. Marsh, 956 F.2d 970, 971 (10th Cir. 1992) (en

banc).

         The difficulty is in knowing what that means. Unlike any other federal

land statute of which we are aware, the establishment of R.S. 2477 rights of way

required no administrative formalities: no entry, no application, no license, no

patent, and no deed on the federal side; no formal act of public acceptance on the


                                           5
part of the states or localities in whom the right was vested. As the Supreme

Court of Utah noted 75 years ago, R.S. 2477 “‘was a standing offer of a free right

of way over the public domain,’” and the grant may be accepted “without formal

action by public authorities.” Lindsay Land & Live Stock Co. v. Churnos, 285 P.

646, 648 (Utah 1929), (quoting Streeter v. Stalnaker, 85 N.W. 47, 48 (Neb.

1901)). In its Report to Congress on R.S. 2477: The History and Management of

R.S. 2477 Rights-of-Way Claims on Federal and Other Lands 1 (June 1993), the

Department of the Interior explained that R.S. 2477 highways “were constructed

without any approval from the federal government and with no documentation of

the public land records, so there are few official records documenting the right-

of-way or indicating that a highway was constructed on federal land under this

authority.”

      To make matters more difficult, parties rarely had an incentive to raise or

resolve potential R.S. 2477 issues while the statute was in effect, unless the

underlying land had been patented to a private party. If someone wished to

traverse unappropriated public land, he could do so, with or without an R.S. 2477

right of way, and given the federal government’s pre-1976 policy of opening and

developing the public lands, federal land managers generally had no reason to

question use of the land for travel. Roads were deemed a good thing. Typical

was the comment by the great nineteenth-century Michigan jurist, Thomas


                                          6
Cooley, that “[s]uch roads facilitate the settlement of the country, and benefit the

neighborhood, and in both particulars they further a general policy of the federal

government. But they also tend to increase the value of the public lands, and for

this reason are favored.” Flint & P.M. Ry. Co. v. Gordon, 2 N.W. 648, 653

(Mich. 1879). Thus, all pre-1976 litigated cases involving contested R.S. 2477

claims (and there are dozens) were between private landowners who had obtained

title to previously-public land and would-be road users who defended the right to

cross private land on what they alleged to be R.S. 2477 rights of way.

      Now that federal land policy has shifted to retention and conservation,

public roads and rights of way in remote areas appear in a different light. Some

roads and other rights of way are undoubtedly necessary, but private landowners

express the fear that expansive R.S. 2477 definitions will undermine their private

property rights by allowing strangers to drive vehicles across their ranches and

homesteads. Conservationists and federal land managers worry that vehicle use in

inappropriate locations can permanently scar the land, destroy solitude, impair

wilderness, endanger archeological and natural features, and generally make it

difficult or impossible for land managers to carry out their statutory duties to

protect the lands from “unnecessary or undue degradation.” FLPMA § 302(b), 43

U.S.C. § 1732(b). They argue that too loose an interpretation of R.S. 2477 will

conjure into existence rights of way where none existed before, turning every


                                          7
path, vehicle track, or dry wash in southern Utah into a potential route for cars,

jeeps, or off-road vehicles. For their part, the Counties assert that R.S. 2477

rights of way are “major components of the transportation systems of western

states,” and express the fear that federal land managers and conservationists are

attempting to redefine those rights out of existence, with serious “financial and

other impacts” on the people of Utah. Kane and Garfield County (K&G C.) Rep.

Br. 21. Thus, the definition of R.S. 2477 rights of way across federal land, which

used to be a non-issue, has become a flash point, and litigants are driven to the

historical archives for documentation of matters no one had reason to document at

the time.

I.    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

      In September and October of 1996, road crews employed by San Juan,

Kane, and Garfield Counties entered public lands managed by the BLM and

graded sixteen roads (or “primitive trails,” as the BLM calls them) located in

southern Utah. The Counties did not notify the BLM in advance, or obtain

permission to conduct their road grading activities. With a few possible

exceptions, none of these roads had previously been graded by the Counties,

though some of them showed signs of previous construction or maintenance

activity. The roads are claimed by the Counties as rights of way under R.S. 2477;

some of them are listed on County maps as Class B or Class D highways. Six of


                                          8
the routes lie within wilderness study areas. Nine are within the Grand Staircase-

Escalante National Monument. Six others traverse a mesa overlooking the

entrance corridor to the Needles District of Canyonlands National Park.

According to the Complaint filed by a consortium of environmental organizations

including the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance (hereinafter collectively referred

to as “SUWA”), the areas affected by the Counties’ road grading activities

“contain stunning red-rock canyon formations, pristine wilderness areas,

important cultural and archeological sits [sic], undisturbed wildlife habitat, and

significant opportunities for hiking, backpacking and nature study in an area

largely undisturbed by road or human . . . development.”

      SUWA protested to the BLM, but these initial protests resulted in no

apparent action against the road grading actions of the Counties. In October of

1996, SUWA filed suit against the BLM, San Juan County, and later Kane and

Garfield Counties, alleging that the Counties had engaged in unlawful road

construction activities and that the BLM had violated its duties under FLPMA, 43

U.S.C. § 1701 et seq., the Antiquities Act, 16 U.S.C. § 431 et seq., and the

National Environmental Policy Act, 42 U.S.C. § 4321 et seq., by not taking

action. The complaint sought declaratory and injunctive relief requiring the BLM

to halt the Counties’ construction activities and enjoining the Counties from

further road construction or maintenance without the BLM’s permission. The


                                          9
BLM filed cross-claims against the Counties, alleging that their road construction

activities constituted trespass and degradation of federal property in violation of

FLPMA. In addition to declaratory and injunctive relief, the BLM sought

damages to cover the cost of rehabilitating the affected areas.

      The Counties defended on the ground that their road improvement activities

were lawful because the activities took place within valid R.S. 2477 rights of

way. The district court acknowledged that “the validity and scope of the claimed

rights-of-way [were the] key to resolving the trespass claims,” Memorandum

Decision of May 11, 1998 at 3, but it also concluded that binding Tenth Circuit

precedent required that “the initial determination of whether activity falls within

an established right-of-way . . . be made by the BLM and not the court.” Id. at 3

(quoting Hodel, 848 F.2d at 1084) (internal quotation marks omitted). It therefore

stayed the litigation and referred the issue of the validity and scope of the claimed

rights of way to the BLM. Although the Counties requested a ruling on “how the

‘findings’ of the [BLM] [would] be utilized” and “the weight [the] court may give

such findings,” the district court declined, stating that the weight it would give

the BLM’s findings was “not presently at issue.” Memorandum Decision of

August 6, 1998, at 2-3.

      The BLM then conducted a thorough informal adjudication of the Counties’

purported rights of way. It first issued an instructional memorandum describing


                                          10
the process it would use to determine the validity and scope of the Counties’

asserted rights of way. The memorandum included a general description of the

evidence the BLM was seeking: evidence that the subject lands “were withdrawn,

reserved or otherwise unavailable pursuant to R.S. 2477,” evidence of

“construction” (undefined), and evidence that the claimed right of way was a

“highway” (defined as “a thoroughfare used . . . by the public for the passage of

vehicles carrying people or goods from place to place”). The BLM then sent

letters to the Counties, requesting that they “provide . . . any and all information

or evidence (i.e., documents, maps, etc.) believed to be relevant to the validity or

scope of the R.S. 2477 claims.” It also published public notices seeking “any

information believed to be relevant” to the Counties’ R.S. 2477 claims.

      The BLM then reviewed a variety of documents, including U.S. and county

public land records and surveys, maps and aerial photography, wilderness

inventory records, and BLM planning, grazing and maintenance records. It also

conducted field investigations of each disputed route with representatives of the

Counties and SUWA. In April of 1999, the BLM issued draft determinations for

review and comment, and in July of 1999 and January of 2000, it issued final

administrative determinations, concluding that the Counties lacked a valid right of

way for fifteen of the sixteen claims, and that Kane County had exceeded the

scope of its right of way in the sixteenth claim, the Skutumpah Road.


                                          11
      SUWA then filed a motion for summary judgment in the district court

seeking enforcement of the BLM’s administrative determinations. In response,

the Counties sought to introduce evidence in addition to that contained in the

administrative record, arguing that the district court should treat the BLM’s

determinations merely as discovery evidence on de novo review. The district

court disagreed. It stated that “[r]eviews of agency action in the district courts

must be processed as appeals,” and therefore characterized SUWA’s motion not

as a request for summary judgment but as an appeal of informal agency

adjudication. Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance v. Bureau of Land Management,

147 F.Supp.2d 1130, 1135 (D. Utah 2001) (emphasis in original) (quoting

Olenhouse v. Commodity Credit Corp., 42 F.3d 1560, 1580 (10th Cir. 1994)).

Accordingly, the court limited its review to the administrative record and applied

the arbitrary and capricious standard of review under the Administrative

Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A), as construed by this Court in Olenhouse.

Id. at 1134-36.

      The district court affirmed the BLM’s determinations in their entirety,

concluding that the BLM’s factual determinations were supported by substantial

evidence in the record and that its interpretation of R.S. 2477 was persuasive

under Skidmore v. Swift & Co., 323 U.S. 134, 140 (1944). Id. at 1137. The

Counties appealed, and we dismissed their initial appeal for lack of jurisdiction,


                                          12
Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance v. Bureau of Land Management, 69 Fed.Appx.

927, 929-31 (10th Cir. 2003), concluding that the district court’s order was not

final because it did not rule on the parties’ requests for injunctive relief and

damages. On remand, the district court entered a final order granting the requests

of SUWA and the BLM for declaratory judgment and denying all other requests

for relief. Order of February 23, 2004 at 1-19. The Counties again appeal.

II.    JURISDICTION AND STANDING

       This Court has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. The district court’s

order of February 23, 2004 constituted a final judgment, resolving all issues

outstanding in the case.

       San Juan County argues that SUWA lacks standing to challenge the

Counties’ purported rights of way. We need not address this issue, however,

because the BLM, which does have standing, has raised the same claims and

sought the same relief as SUWA, both here and before the district court. A

decision on SUWA’s standing, therefore, would in no way avoid resolution of the

relevant issues. See Secretary of the Interior v. California, 464 U.S. 312, 319 n.3

(1984); California Bankers Ass’n v. Shultz, 416 U.S. 21, 44-45 (1974).

III.   TRESPASS CLAIMS AGAINST THE COUNTIES

       In its final order of February 23, 2004, the district court granted SUWA’s

request for a declaration that:


                                          13
      i.     the Counties do not have R.S. 2477 rights-of-way on fifteen of
             the sixteen routes at issue in the court’s June 25, 2001 Order
             (that is, all routes except for the Skutumpah route in Kane
             County); and
      ii.    Kane County’s construction work and/or proposed construction
             work on the Skutumpah route exceeded the scope of that right-
             of-way.

Order of February 23, 2004 at 17. It also granted the BLM’s request for a
declaration that:

      i.     the Counties’ actions at issue in this case did not fall within
             any established right-of-way and were not authorized by the
             BLM; and
      ii.    the Counties’ actions at issue in this case, on public land
             managed by the BLM without the BLM’s authorization,
             violated FLPMA and constituted “unauthorized use” trespass
             under applicable federal regulations.

Id. at 18. These orders may be summarized as (1) a declaratory judgment that the

Counties do not have R.S. 2477 rights of way on fifteen of the roads and

exceeded the scope of the right of way on the Skutumpah road; and (2) a

declaratory judgment that the Counties’ action in grading the roads constituted

trespass. We turn first to the trespass issue and then to the issue of the validity

and scope of the Counties’ R.S. 2477 claims.

      The BLM contends, as it did below, that the Counties’ actions in grading

and realigning the roads in question without prior notice to or authorization from

the BLM constituted trespass, whether or not the Counties have a valid R.S. 2477

right of way on those routes. Under BLM regulations in effect at the time of the

alleged trespass, any use of federal lands that requires a right of way or other

                                          14
authorization and “that has not been so authorized, or that is beyond the scope and

specific limitations of such an authorization, or that causes unnecessary or undue

degradation, is prohibited and shall constitute a trespass.” 43 C.F.R. § 2801.3(a)

(2004) (deleted April 22, 2005). 1 The BLM contends that the Counties’ actions

went beyond prior levels of maintenance, exceeded the authorized scope of prior

rights of way (if any), and were performed unilaterally without consultation with

federal land managers, and therefore that the Counties’ actions constituted

trespass even on the heuristic assumption that they own a valid right of way.

      The district court rejected the BLM’s argument. According to the court,

“[A]s long as [the] County stays within its right-of-way, the scope of which is to

be defined using Utah law, BLM authorization is not required.” Memorandum

Decision of October 8, 1997 at 19, Aplt. App. Vol. 1 at 136. See also

Memorandum Decision of May 11, 1998 at 2-3, Aplt. App. Vol. 1 at 228-29 (“The

United States originally argued that the road work activities of the Counties were

unauthorized, whether or not the Counties held R.S. 2477 rights-of-way over the

land in question. That premise has been rejected by the court. The court’s view

is that the validity and scope of the claimed rights-of-way are key to resolving the


      1
        A revised version of this regulation appears at 43 C.F.R. § 2808.10(a)–(b)
(2005). The only material difference between this regulation and the deleted one
is that the revised regulation gives the BLM explicit authority to consider impacts
on land outside the area of activity to determine if “unnecessary or undue
degradation” is taking place. See 43 C.F.R. § 2808.10(b) (2005).

                                         15
trespass claims asserted by the United States.”). We, however, agree with the

BLM, at least in part, and conclude that the holder of an R.S. 2477 right of way

across federal land must consult with the appropriate federal land management

agency before it undertakes any improvements to an R.S. 2477 right of way

beyond routine maintenance. We remand this issue to the district court to

determine whether the work performed on the routes in this case went beyond

routine maintenance and thus constituted trespass. 2

      The trespass claim presents an issue of “scope,” which was litigated in this

Court in Sierra Club v. Hodel, 848 F.2d 1068 (10th Cir. 1988). In Hodel, the

issue was whether Garfield County could convert a one-lane dirt road on an

established R.S. 2477 right of way into a two-lane gravel (later paved) road.

Applying a state law definition of the scope of the right of way, the Court held

that improvements on a valid R.S. 2477 right of way are limited to those



      2
        San Juan County argues that the BLM waived this argument because the
district court ruled against it below and the BLM did not cross appeal. However,
the BLM has raised this issue as an alternative ground for affirming the district
court’s trespass holding. BLM Br. 22 (“[T]he district court need not have decided
the validity of the Counties’ asserted R.S. 2477 rights-of-way in order to
determine that the Counties’ construction activities constituted a trespass . . . .
BLM’s authority to regulate the use of R.S. 2477 rights-of-way provides an
alternate ground for affirming the trespass finding.”). “[A]n appellee ‘may
defend the judgment won below on any ground supported by the record without
filing a cross-appeal.’” Tinkler v. United States ex rel. FAA, 982 F.2d 1456, 1461
n.4 (10th Cir. 1992) (quoting In re Robinson, 921 F.2d 252, 253 (10th Cir. 1990)).
We therefore consider the argument.

                                         16
“‘reasonable and necessary for the type of use to which the road has been put.’”

Hodel, 848 F.2d at 1083 (quoting Sierra Club v. Hodel, 675 F.Supp. 594, 606 (D.

Utah 1987) (citing Lindsay Land & Live Stock Co. v. Churnos, 285 P. 646, 649

(Utah 1929))). Relying on Nielson v. Sandberg, 141 P.2d 696, 701 (Utah 1943),

for the proposition that “an easement is limited to the original use for which it

was acquired,” Hodel, 848 F.2d at 1083, the Court held that “the correct

‘reasonable and necessary’ definition fixed as of October 21, 1976.” Id. at 1084.

In other words, the scope of an R.S. 2477 right of way is limited by the

established usage of the route as of the date of repeal of the statute. That did not

mean, however, that the road had to be maintained in precisely the same condition

it was in on October 21, 1976; rather, it could be improved “as necessary to meet

the exigencies of increased travel,” so long as this was done “in the light of

traditional uses to which the right-of-way was put” as of repeal of the statute in

1976. Id. at 1083.

      The Hodel court also noted that “Utah adheres to the general rule that the

owners of the dominant and servient estates ‘must exercise [their] rights so as not

unreasonably to interfere with the other.’” Id. (quoting Big Cottonwood Tanner

Ditch Co. v. Moyle, 174 P.2d 148, 158 (Utah 1946)). This requires a system of

coordination between the holder of the easement and the owner of the land

through which it passes. The Court thus concluded that the BLM needed to make


                                          17
an “initial determination” regarding the reasonableness and necessity of any

proposed improvements beyond mere maintenance of the previous condition of

the road. Id. at 1084-85.

      This approach was elaborated and applied in district court cases after

Hodel. In United States v. Garfield County, 122 F. Supp.2d 1201 (D. Utah 2000),

the court held, with reference to the same road at issue in Hodel, that any road

construction within the National Park, beyond “maintenance,” would require

advance notification of the Park Service and mutual accommodation between the

Park Service and the County. Id. at 1246. In United States v. Emery County, No.

92-C-1069S, ¶ 6 (D. Utah, consent decree entered Dec. 15, 1992), litigation

between a Utah county and the BLM was resolved by entry of a consent decree

providing for advance notice to the BLM of any improvements beyond routine

maintenance “so that both the County and the BLM may be satisfied that the

proposed work on the R.S. 2477 highway is reasonable and necessary and that no

unnecessary or undue degradation to the public lands would occur thereby.”

These decisions are consistent with holdings of circuit courts that changes in

roads on R.S. 2477 rights of way across federal lands are subject to regulation by

the relevant federal land management agencies. See Clouser v. Espy, 42 F.3d

1522, 1538 (9th Cir. 1994) (holding that “regardless whether the trails in question

are public highways under R.S.[] 2477, they are nonetheless subject to the Forest


                                         18
Service regulations”); United States v. Vogler, 859 F.2d 638, 642 (9th Cir. 1988)

(holding that proposed improvements to an R.S. 2477 route in a National Preserve

is subject to regulation by the National Park Service); see also United States v.

Jenks, 22 F.3d 1513, 1518 (10th Cir. 1994) (holding that the owner of a patent or

common law easement across national forest lands had to apply for a special use

permit).

      Relying on Hodel as well as common law principles governing easements,

the Garfield County court stated, “Where rights-of-way and easements are

concerned, one party cannot serve as the sole judge of scope and extent, or as the

sole arbiter of what is ‘reasonable and necessary.’” 122 F. Supp.2d at 1242.

“And ‘ordinarily . . . no material changes can be made by either party without the

other’s consent . . . .’” Id. at 1243 (quoting 28A C.J.S. Easements § 173, at 391).

The court concluded:

      Hodel instructs that “the initial determination of whether the activity
      falls within an established right of way is to be made by” the federal
      land management agency having authority over the lands in question.
      848 F.2d at 1085. For the agency to be able to make that
      determination, Garfield County needs to communicate its plans to the
      Park Service in a meaningful fashion, and in turn, the Park Service
      has a duty to evaluate those plans and make the initial determination
      contemplated by Hodel in a timely and expeditious manner. If the
      County disagrees with the agency’s decision, it may appeal or seek
      judicial review . . . .

Id. at 1243-44 (footnote omitted).

      Although Garfield County involved an R.S. 2477 right of way within a

                                         19
National Park, we see no reason why consultation of this sort is not equally

required with respect to R.S. 2477 routes across BLM land. Cf. Clouser, 42 F.3d

at 1538 (holding that National Forest Service had authority to forbid opening R.S.

2477 routes to motorized travel). The principle that the easement holder must

exercise its rights so as not to interfere unreasonably with the rights of the owner

of the servient estate, derives from general principles of the common law of

easements rather than the peculiar status of National Parks. See Jenks, 22 F.3d at

1518 (holding, under “basic principles of property law,” that easement rights are

subject to regulation by the Forest Service as the owner of the servient estate).

Just as the National Park Service has obligations to protect National Park land,

the BLM has obligations to protect the land over which the roads at issue here

pass. See FLPMA § 302(b), 43 U.S.C. § 1732(b) (“In managing the public lands,

the Secretary shall, subject to this Act and other applicable law and under such

terms and conditions as are consistent with such law, regulate, through easements

[and] licences . . . the use, occupancy, and development of the public lands”).

Unless it knows in advance when right-of-way holders propose to change the

width, alignment, configuration, surfacing, or type of roads across federal land,

the BLM cannot effectively discharge its responsibilities to determine whether the

proposed changes are reasonable and necessary, whether they would impair or

degrade the surrounding lands, and whether modifications in the plans should be


                                          20
proposed.

      The Counties argue, in effect, that as long as their activities are conducted

within the physical boundaries of a right of way, their activities cannot constitute

a trespass. But this misconceives the nature of a right of way. A right of way is

not tantamount to fee simple ownership of a defined parcel of territory. Rather, it

is an entitlement to use certain land in a particular way. To convert a two-track

jeep trail into a graded dirt road, or a graded road into a paved one, alters the use,

affects the servient estate, and may go beyond the scope of the right of way. See

Hodel, 848 F.2d at 1083 (“[s]urely no Utah case would hold that a road which had

always been two-lane with marked and established fence lines, could be widened

to accommodate eight lanes of traffic”); Jeremy v. Bertagnole, 116 P.2d 420, 424

(Utah 1941) (“the use to which the way has been put measures the extent of the

right to use”; “[a] bridle path abandoned to the public may not be expanded, by

court decree, into a boulevard”). This does not mean that no changes can ever be

made, but that any improvements must be made in light of the traditional uses to

which the right of way had been put, fixed as of October 21, 1976. Hodel, 848

F.2d at 848. The Counties are correct that, under Hodel, the right-of-way holder

may sometimes be entitled to change the character of the roadway when needed to

accommodate traditional uses, but even legitimate changes in the character of the

roadway require consultation when those changes go beyond routine maintenance.


                                          21
Just because a proposed change falls within the scope of a right of way does not

mean that it can be undertaken unilaterally.

       We note that the Utah legislature in 1993 enacted the Rights-of-Way Across

Federal Lands Act, Utah Code Ann. § 72-5-303, which provides that “[t]he owner

of an R.S. 2477 right-of-way and the owner of the servient estate shall exercise

their rights without unreasonably interfering with one another.”   Id. at § 72-5-

303(2). This reflects a commendable spirit of mutual accommodation that should

characterize the relations of levels of government in our federal system. Both

levels of government have responsibility for, and a deep commitment to, the

common good, which is better served by communication and cooperation than by

unilateral action. See also Restatement (Third) of Property: Servitudes, §4.10 cmt.

a (1998) (“In the absence of detailed arrangements between them, it is assumed

that the owner of the servitude and the holder of the servient estate are intended

to exercise their respective rights and privileges in a spirit of mutual

accommodation.”).

       We therefore hold that when the holder of an R.S. 2477 right of way across

federal land proposes to undertake any improvements in the road along its right of

way, beyond mere maintenance, it must advise the federal land management

agency of that work in advance, affording the agency a fair opportunity to carry

out its own duties to determine whether the proposed improvement is reasonable


                                            22
and necessary in light of the traditional uses of the rights of way as of October 21,

1976, to study potential effects, and if appropriate, to formulate alternatives that

serve to protect the lands. 3 The initial determination of whether the construction

work falls within the scope of an established right of way is to be made by the

federal land management agency, which has an obligation to render its decision in

a timely and expeditious manner. The agency may not use its authority, either by

delay or by unreasonable disapproval, to impair the rights of the holder of the

R.S. 2477 right of way. In the event of disagreement, the parties may resort to the

courts. 4

       In drawing the line between routine maintenance, which does not require

consultation with the BLM, and construction of improvements, which does, we

endorse the definition crafted by the district court in Garfield County:

       Defined in terms of the nature of the work, “construction” for
       purposes of 36 C.F.R. § 5.7 includes the widening of the road, the
       horizontal or vertical realignment of the road, the installation (as
       distinguished from cleaning, repair, or replacement in kind) of


       The BLM also has authority to grant new rights of way. See FLPMA §§
       3

501-511, 43 U.S.C. §§ 1761-1771. Section 501(a) of FLPMA, 43 U.S.C. §
1761(a), authorizes the Secretary “to grant, issue, or renew rights-of-way over,
upon, under, or through [public] lands for . . . (6) roads, trails, highways, . . . or
other means of transportation . . . .” Such rights of way issue “subject to such
terms and conditions as the Secretary concerned may prescribe regarding extent,
duration, survey, location, construction, maintenance, transfer or assignment, and
termination.” FLPMA § 504(c); 43 U.S.C. § 1764(c); see 43 C.F.R. § 2801.2.
       4
           The relative authority of courts and the agency is discussed in Section IV
below.

                                            23
      bridges, culverts and other drainage structures, as well as any
      significant change in the surface composition of the road (e.g., going
      from dirt to gravel, from gravel to chipseal, from chipseal to asphalt,
      etc.), or any “improvement,” “betterment,” or any other change in the
      nature of the road that may significantly impact Park lands,
      resources, or values. “Maintenance” preserves the existing road,
      including the physical upkeep or repair of wear or damage whether
      from natural or other causes, maintaining the shape of the road,
      grading it, making sure that the shape of the road permits drainage [,
      and] keeping drainage features open and operable--essentially
      preserving the status quo.

122 F. Supp.2d at 1253 (footnote omitted). Under this definition, grading or

blading a road for the first time would constitute “construction” and would

require advance consultation, though grading or blading a road to preserve the

character of the road in accordance with prior practice would not. Although

drawn as an interpretation of 36 C.F.R. § 5.7, which applies within national parks,

the district court noted that: “This construction comports with the commonly

understood meanings of the words, the pertinent statutes, agency interpretations,

and the past experience of the parties on the Capitol Reef segment, including the

experience leading up to February 13, 1996.” Id. We therefore find it applicable

to distinguishing between routine maintenance and actual improvement of R.S.

2477 claims across federal lands more generally.

      Drawing the line between maintenance and construction based on

“preserving the status quo” promotes the congressional policy of “freezing” R.S.

2477 rights of way as of the uses established as of October 21, 1976. Hodel, 848


                                        24
F.2d at 1081. It protects existing uses without interfering unduly with federal

land management and protection. As long as the Counties act within the existing

scope of their rights of way, performing maintenance and repair that preserves the

existing state of the road, they have no legal obligation to consult with the BLM

(though notice of what they are doing might well avoid misunderstanding or

friction). If changes are contemplated, it is necessary to consult, and the failure

to do so will provide a basis for prompt injunctive relief. “Bulldoze first, talk

later” is not a recipe for constructive intergovernmental relations or intelligent

land management.

      The record is not sufficient to determine whether the work performed by

the Counties in the Fall of 1996 was routine maintenance or construction. On

remand, therefore, the parties should be permitted to introduce evidence relevant

to the question of trespass, as defined in this opinion.

IV.   PRIMARY JURISDICTION OVER R.S. 2477 RIGHTS OF WAY

      We turn now to the district court’s holding that none of the fifteen

contested routes falls within a valid R.S. 2477 right of way. We address first the

question of whether the district court should have treated this dispute as an appeal

of an informal, but legally binding, administrative adjudication, or instead should

have treated it as a de novo legal proceeding. We then turn to questions of

substantive law.


                                          25
      As noted, on May 11, 1999, the district court stayed the litigation in order

to allow the BLM to make an initial determination regarding the validity and

scope of the Counties’ claimed rights of way. The BLM ruled against the

Counties, and SUWA filed a motion seeking to enforce that decision in the

district court. The district court treated SUWA’s motion as an appeal of informal

agency action and therefore limited its review to the administrative record and

employed the arbitrary and capricious standard of review under the

Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A). In effect, it treated the

initial stay as a binding primary jurisdiction referral. The Counties argue that the

district court should have treated the BLM’s decision not as a binding primary

jurisdiction referral but as an internal, non-binding administrative determination.

      The difference is significant. If the doctrine of primary jurisdiction

applies, the BLM had authority to determine the validity of the R.S. 2477 claims

in question, and judicial review is limited to determining whether there was

substantial evidence in the BLM proceeding to support the agency’s

determinations. See Olenhouse v. Commodity Credit Corp., 42 F.3d 1560, 1574-

75 (10th Cir. 1994). If not, and the district court’s stay of the judicial proceeding

and remand to the agency was solely for the purpose of enabling the agency to

determine its own position in the litigation, then the district court should have

conducted a de novo proceeding based on the plaintiffs’ claims of trespass and


                                         26
requests for declaratory judgments regarding the validity of the R.S. 2477 claims;

the parties were entitled to introduce evidence in court (including but not limited

to the administrative record), and questions of fact would be decided by the court

on a preponderance of the evidence standard.

      The circuits are split over the standard of review of decisions whether to

recognize the primary jurisdiction of an administrative agency. This Court, like

the Fourth and District of Columbia circuits, reviews decisions regarding primary

jurisdiction under an abuse of discretion standard. Marshall v. El Paso Natural

Gas Co., 874 F.2d 1373, 1377 (10th Cir. 1989); Brumark Corp. v. Samson Res.

Corp., 57 F.3d 941, 947-948 (10th Cir. 1995). Accord, Nat’l Tel. Coop. Ass'n v.

Exxon Mobil Corp. 244 F.3d 153, 156 (D.C. Cir. 2001); Envtl. Tech. Council v.

Sierra Club 98 F.3d 774, 789 (4th Cir.1996). Other circuits review such

decisions de novo. E.g., Access Telecomms. v. Southwestern Bell Tel. Co., 137

F.3d 605, 608 (8th Cir. 1998) (reviewing the primary jurisdiction issue de novo

without deciding the question); Newspaper Guild of Salem v. Ottaway

Newspapers, Inc., 79 F.3d 1273, 1283 (1st Cir. 1996); National Communications

Ass'n v. Am. Tel. & Tel. Co., 46 F.3d 220, 222 (2d Cir. 1995); Int’l Bhd. of

Teamsters v. Am. Delivery Ser. Co., 50 F.3d 770, 773 (9th Cir. 1995). We adhere

to this circuit’s standard of review, while noting that any error of law is

presumptively an abuse of discretion and questions of law are reviewed de novo.


                                          27
      Primary jurisdiction is a prudential doctrine designed to allocate authority

between courts and administrative agencies. An issue of primary jurisdiction

arises when a litigant asks a court to resolve “[an] issue[] which, under a

regulatory scheme, ha[s] been placed within the special competence of an

administrative body.” United States v. Western Pac. R.R. Co., 352 U.S. 59, 64

(1956). If the issue is one “that Congress has assigned to a specific agency,”

Williams Pipe Line Co. v. Empire Gas Corp., 76 F.3d 1491, 1496 (10th Cir.

1996), the doctrine of primary jurisdiction allows the court to stay the judicial

proceedings and direct the parties to seek a decision before the appropriate

administrative agency. Western Pac., 352 U.S. at 64. The agency is then said to

have “primary jurisdiction.”

      There is no mechanical formula for applying the doctrine of primary

jurisdiction. In each case, “the question is whether the reasons for the existence

of the doctrine are present and whether the purposes it serves will be aided by its

application in the particular litigation.” Id. at 64. The doctrine serves two

purposes. First, it promotes regulatory uniformity by preventing courts from

interfering sporadically with a comprehensive regulatory scheme. See, e.g.,

United States v. Radio Corp. of America, 358 U.S. 334, 346, 350 (1959) (citing

Texas & P. Ry. Co. v. Abilene Cotton Oil Co., 204 U.S. 426 (1907)). Second, the

doctrine promotes resort to agency expertise by allowing courts to consult


                                          28
agencies on “issues of fact not within the conventional experience of judges.”

Far East Conference v. United States, 342 U.S. 570, 574 (1952); See also Great

N. R.R. Co. v. Merchants Elevators Co., 259 U.S. 285, 291 (1922). These two

concerns—regulatory uniformity and agency expertise—drive the primary

jurisdiction analysis. When a decision by a court would threaten the uniformity of

a regulatory scheme or require the court to confront issues of fact outside of its

conventional experience, the doctrine of primary jurisdiction allows the court to

suspend the judicial process and direct the parties to seek a decision before the

appropriate administrative agency. Western Pac., 352 U.S. at 64.

      All of this assumes that Congress has, by statute, given authority over the

issue to an administrative agency. If not, there is no need to assess uniformity

and expertise because the issue is not one that, “under a regulatory scheme, ha[s]

been placed within the special competence of an administrative body.” Id. at 64.

Thus, before we delve into questions of uniformity and expertise, we must

determine whether Congress has granted the BLM authority to determine validity

of R.S. 2477 rights of way in the first place.

      R.S. 2477 is silent on this question. It makes no mention of what

body—courts or agencies—should resolve disputes over R.S. 2477 rights of way.

The BLM argues that we should interpret this silence against the backdrop of

general statutory provisions that give the BLM authority to execute the laws


                                          29
regulating the acquisition of rights in the public lands. 5 According to the BLM,

there is a presumption that when Congress makes a grant of land and does not

specify which agency, if any, is to administer the grant, the general statutory

provisions giving the BLM authority over the public lands also give it authority

over the grant. The Counties counter that we should interpret the statutory silence

against the backdrop of over one hundred years of practice under R.S. 2477.



      5
        The BLM directs our attention to the Act of April 25, 1812, ch. 68 § 1, 2
Stat. 716 (codified as amended at 43 U.S.C. § 2), which established the General
Land Office and gave it authority:
       to superintend, execute and perform, all such acts and things,
       touching or respecting the public lands of the United States, and
       other lands patented or granted by the United States, as have
       heretofore been directed by law to be done or performed in the office
       of the Secretary of State, of the Secretary and Register of the
       Treasury, and of the Secretary of War, or which shall hereafter by
       law be assigned to the said office.
As amended, this section now provides:
       The Secretary of the Interior or such officer as he may designate
       shall perform all executive duties appertaining to the surveying and
       sale of the public lands of the United States, or in anywise respecting
       such public lands, and, also, such as relate to private claims of land,
       and the issuing of patents for all grants of land under the authority of
       the Government.
43 U.S.C. § 2.
       Also relevant are 43 U.S.C. § 1457, which states, “The Secretary of the
Interior is charged with the supervision of public business relating to the
following subjects and agencies: . . . 13. Public lands, including mines,” and 43
U.S.C. § 1201, which states, “The Secretary of the Interior, or such officer as he
may designate, is authorized to enforce and carry into execution, by appropriate
regulations, every part of the provisions of Title 32 of the Revised Statutes not
otherwise specially provided for.” Title 32 of the Revised Statutes originally
consisted of R.S. §§ 2207-2490.

                                         30
They maintain that both the BLM and the courts have always operated under the

assumption that courts are the final arbiters of R.S. 2477 rights of way, and that

this practice should inform our interpretation of the statute.

      The BLM’s argument, we believe, confuses a land agency’s responsibility

for carrying out the executive function of administering congressionally

determined procedures for disposition of federal lands with the authority to

adjudicate legal title to real property once those procedures have been completed.

The latter is a judicial, not an executive, function. It is one thing for an agency to

make determinations regarding conditions precedent to the passage of title, and

quite another for the agency to assert a continuing authority to resolve by

informal adjudication disputes between itself and private parties who claim that

they acquired legal title to real property interests at some point in the past. 6 In



      6
        We distinguish the case of unpatented claims, where a private party makes
an entry or claim on public land and acquires a provisional interest in the
property, subject to agency supervision and regulation, and obtains title only upon
performance of certain requirements and issuance of a patent by the land agency.
Although unpatented claims are a species of real property, disputes over their
validity are resolved administratively, and unpatented claims can be revoked by
the agency, if an error was made or the agency determines the claim was invalid.
Boesche v. Udall, 373 U.S. 472, 476-78 (1963); Best v. Humboldt Mining Co.,
371 U.S. 334, 337-39 (1963). Only after a patent issues is the claim perfected,
and from that point onward, issues regarding the nature and extent of the property
right are resolved in court. United States v. Schurz, 102 U.S. 378, 396 (1880).
R.S. 2477, unlike most federal land law, does not provide for a patent and does
not provide for any administrative process for perfecting a claim. See pages 33-
34 below.

                                           31
Wilson v. Omaha Indian Tribe, 442 U.S. 653 (1979), for example, the boundary of

an Indian reservation had become unsettled by movement of the Missouri River.

The Bureau of Indian Affairs, as trustee of the tribe’s reservation lands, had land

management authority (much as the BLM has authority here, pursuant to 43

U.S.C. § 2). Yet, rather than conducting an agency adjudication of the issue, with

an appeal on the record in the federal court, the United States went into federal

court and sued to quiet title. Id. at 660. Similarly, in United States v. Jenks, 22

F.3d 1513, 1517 (10th Cir. 1994), the National Forest Service disputed a

landowner’s claim of right to a patent or common law easement over national

forest lands; rather than purporting to resolve the controversy through an

administrative procedure, the Forest Service filed an action in court.

      Perhaps more to the point, for over a century, in every Land Department or

BLM decision in which parties sought a ruling on the validity of an R.S. 2477

claim, the agency maintained that this was a matter to be resolved by the courts.

See pages 35-37 below. And in prior cases in this Circuit, the BLM has appeared

as a litigant, without ever suggesting that its administrative determinations are

entitled to legally enforceable status as a matter of primary jurisdiction. This case

is the first occasion the government has ever purported to exercise the authority to

resolve the validity of R.S. 2477 claims in an informal adjudication before the

agency.


                                          32
      The BLM relies primarily on the Supreme Court’s decision in Cameron v.

United States, 252 U.S. 450 (1920). In that case, the owner of an unpatented

mining claim applied to the Land Department (the BLM’s predecessor) for a

patent, which is the instrument by which the government conveys a grant of

public land to a private person. After a hearing, the Department denied him a

patent, concluding that the land was nonmineral in character and that there had

been no adequate mineral discovery—in effect, declaring the claim invalid. When

the United States later sued in district court to eject the claimant from the

premises, the district court gave conclusive effect to the Land Department’s

declaration of invalidity. On appeal, the claimant argued that this was error; that,

although the Land Department had authority to deny him a patent, it lacked

authority to make a binding declaration on the validity of his claim. The Supreme

Court disagreed, holding that the Land Department had authority to determine the

validity of unpatented mining claims. According to the Court, this authority

rested not on any specific grant of authority in the mineral land law, but on the

general principle that, “in the absence of some direction to the contrary,” the

general statutory provisions giving the Land Department authority to execute the

laws regulating the public lands also give it authority to inquire into claims

against the government under a statutory grant of land. Id. at 461. The Supreme

Court made clear, however, that the agency’s authority continues only “so long as


                                          33
the legal title remains in the government.” Id. at 460. Once legal title passes by

the issuance of a mining patent, “the power of the department to inquire into the

extent and validity of the rights claimed against the government . . . cease[s].” Id.

at 461 (quoting Michigan Land & Lumber Co. v. Rust, 168 U.S. 589, 593 (1897)).

      The BLM urges us to extend the reasoning of Cameron to the R.S. 2477

rights of way at issue here. According to the BLM, the same general statutory

provisions giving the Land Department authority to rule on the validity of

unpatented mining claims should give the BLM authority to rule on the validity of

R.S. 2477 rights of way. However, this argument ignores a fundamental

difference between mining claims and R.S. 2477 rights of way: title to a mining

claim passes by means of a patent, which is issued by the agency in accordance

with specified procedures and subject to specified substantive prerequisites. Title

to an R.S. 2477 right of way, by contrast, passes without any procedural

formalities and without any agency involvement.

      Mining claimants who want legal title must apply to the BLM for a patent.

See 30 U.S.C. § 29 (derived from the Mining Law of 1872, Act of May 10, 1872,

ch. 152, § 6, 17 Stat. 91, 92); 43 U.S.C. § 2; see generally 2 American Law of

Mining § 51.03 (2d ed. 2004). The BLM then has authority to “consider and pass

upon the qualifications of the applicant, the acts he has performed to secure the

title, the nature of the land, and whether it is of the class which is open to


                                           34
sale”—in effect, to decide whether the claim is valid. Steel v. St. Louis Smelting

& Refining Co., 106 U.S. 447, 451 (1882). The BLM will issue a patent—and

thus pass title—only when it is satisfied that all statutory requirements have been

met. United States v. New Jersey Zinc Co., A-30782, 74 I.D. 191, 205-06 (1967).

Furthermore, when a private party protests the issuance or nonissuance of a

patent, the BLM has authority to hold a hearing and pass on the applicant’s

compliance with the statutory requirements. See, e.g., Devereux v. Hunter, 11

Pub. Lands Dec. 214, 215-16 (1890); Alice Placer Mine, 4 Pub. Lands Dec. 314,

316-17 (1886). This determination is binding on courts, reviewable only in

accordance with administrative law or in a direct action to cancel, modify, or

issue the patent. Cameron, 252 U.S. at 460-61, 464; St. Louis Smelting, 104 U.S.

at 640-41; Oregon Basin Oil & Gas Co. v. Work, 6 F.2d 676, 678 (D.C. Cir.

1925). Thus, prior to the issuance of a patent, the BLM retains authority and

control over the subject lands, as well as over the process by which private parties

assert claims. Once title passes, however, the BLM loses authority over the

subject lands, and the title granted by the patent can be challenged only through

the courts. See United States v. Schurz, 102 U.S. 378, 396 (1880).

      Congress established a very different system for R.S. 2477 rights of way.

Because there are no patents, title to rights of way passes independently of any

action or approval on the part of the BLM. All that is required, as we explain


                                         35
further in Section V.B.2, are acts on the part of the grantee sufficient to manifest

an intent to accept the congressional offer. In fact, because there were no notice

or filing requirements of any kind, R.S. 2477 rights of way may have been

established—and legal title may have passed—without the BLM ever being aware

of it. Thus, R.S. 2477 creates no executive role for the BLM to play.

      This suggestion is confirmed by longstanding BLM practice under the

statute. See Sierra Club v. Hodel, 848 F.2d 1068, 1080 (10th Cir. 1988) (practice

under a statute is relevant evidence of how that statute should be interpreted)

(quoting United States v. Midwest Oil Co., 236 U.S. 459, 473 (1915)). Until very

recently, the BLM staunchly maintained that it lacked authority to make binding

decisions on R.S. 2477 rights of way. 7 Illustrative of this position is the BLM’s


      7
        Kirk Brown, 151 IBLA 221, 227 n.6 (1999) (“Normally, the existence of
an R.S. 2477 road is a question of state law for adjudication by state courts.”);
Sierra Club, 104 IBLA 17, 18 (1988) (“[T]he Department has taken the position
that the proper forum for adjudicating R.S. 2477 rights-of-way is the state courts
in the state in which the road is located.”); James S. Mitchell, William Dawson,
104 IBLA 377, 381 (1988) (“[T]he Department has taken the consistent position
that, as a general proposition, state courts are the proper forum for determining
whether, pursuant to [R.S. 2477], a road is properly deemed to be a ‘public
highway.’”); Leo Titus, Sr., 89 IBLA 323, 337 (1985) (“[T]his Department has
considered State courts to be the proper forum for determining whether there is a
public highway under [R.S. 2477] and the respective rights of interested
parties.”); Nick DiRe, 55 IBLA 151, 154 (1981) (“[T]he question of the existence
of a ‘public highway’ [under R.S. 2477] is ultimately a matter for state courts . . .
.”); Homer D. Meeds, 26 IBLA 281, 298 (1976) (“[T]his Department has
considered State courts to be the proper forum to decide ultimately whether a
public highway under [R.S. 2477] has been created under State law and to
                                                                        (continued...)

                                          36
decision (or lack thereof) in Alfred E. Koenig, A-30139 (November 25, 1964).

There, an applicant seeking to purchase certain tracts of land asked the BLM to

adjudicate the validity of an asserted R.S. 2477 right of way. The BLM refused

on the ground that courts, not it, should be the final arbiter of R.S. 2477 claims.

The Secretary of the Interior affirmed:

      The Bureau’s decision does leave the question of the status of the
      [R.S. 2477] road uncertain both for appellant and for the small tract
      lessees who may be affected by any determination regarding the
      status of the road insofar as it conflicts with lands leased by them or
      which may be patented to them. However, . . . . this Department has
      considered State courts to be the proper forum for determining
      whether there is a public highway under that section of the Revised
      Statues and the respective rights of interested parties. Thus, although
      the Bureau’s conclusion may seem unsatisfactory to all of the parties
      concerned here, it was the proper conclusion in the circumstances as
      the questions involved are matters for the courts rather than this
      Department.

Id. at 2-3. This refusal to adjudicate R.S. 2477 disputes has been the consistent

position of the BLM and the IBLA for over one hundred years. 8 In its 1993

      7
        (...continued)
adjudicate the respective rights of interested parties.”); Herb Penrose, A-29507 at
1-2 (July 26, 1963) (“State courts are the proper forums for determining the
protestant’s rights and the rights of the public to use the existing . . . [R.S. 2477]
road.”); Solicitor’s M-Opinion, Limitation of Access to Through-Highways
Crossing Public Lands, M-36274, 62 I.D. 158, 161 (1955) (“Whatever may be
construed as a highway under State law is a highway under [R.S. 2477], and the
rights thereunder are interpreted by the courts in accordance with the State law.”).
      8
       Wason Toll Road Co. v. Creede, 21 Pub. Lands Dec. 351, 354-55 (1895)
appears to go the other way, holding that a townsite patent would issue subject to
an existing R.S. 2477 right of way. But the Land Department abandoned this
                                                                     (continued...)

                                          37
Report to Congress, the BLM explained that “[n]o formal process for either

asserting or recognizing R.S. 2477 rights-of-way currently is provided in law,

regulations, or DOI policy,” and that “[c]ourts must ultimately dertermine [sic]

the validity of such claims.” U.S. Department of the Interior, Report to Congress

on R.S. 2477: The History and Management of R.S. 2477 Rights-of-Way Claims

on Federal and Other Lands 25 (June 1993) (hereinafter cited as 1993 D.O.I

Report to Congress).

       The BLM also has been reluctant, until very recently, to issue regulations

governing R.S. 2477 rights of way. In fact, its earliest regulation on the subject

disclaimed any role for the federal government in implementing R.S. 2477. That

regulation states, in its entirety:

       The grant [under R.S. 2477] becomes effective upon the construction
       or establishing of highways, in accordance with the State laws, over
       public lands not reserved for public uses. No application should be
       filed under said R.S. 2477 as no action on the part of the Federal
       Government is necessary.

43 C.F.R. § 244.55 (1939) (footnote omitted). This regulation reflects the

position that R.S. 2477 gives the BLM no executive role, and indicates that the

BLM interpreted the grant to take effect without any action on its part.




       (...continued)
       8

position the next year in Dunlap v. Shingle Springs & Placerville R.R. Co., 23
Pub. Lands Dec. 67, 68 (1896). See The Pasadena and Mt. Wilson Toll Road Co.
v. Schneider, 31 Pub. Lands Dec. 405, 408 (1902) (noting supersession).

                                         38
Subsequent editions of the Code of Federal Regulations carried forward the same

language, 9 which was not repealed until the code underwent extensive post-

FLPMA (and, thus, post-R.S. 2477) revisions in 1980.

      Moreover, not only has the BLM long declined to regulate R.S. 2477 rights

of way, but Congress had forbidden it from doing so. In 1994, eighteen years

after R.S. 2477 had been repealed, the BLM changed course and proposed

comprehensive regulations governing R.S. 2477 rights of way. See 59 Fed. Reg.

39216, 39219-27 (1994). These rules proposed, for the first time, an

administrative procedure by which the BLM would adjudicate the validity of R.S.

2477 claims. Congress responded with an appropriations provision prohibiting

the Department of the Interior from issuing final rules governing R.S. 2477:

      No final rule or regulation of any agency of the Federal Government
      pertaining to the recognition, management, or validity of a right-of-
      way pursuant to Revised Statute 2477 (43 U.S.C. [§] 932) shall take
      effect unless expressly authorized by an Act of Congress subsequent
      to the date of enactment of this Act [Sept. 30, 1996].



      9
       43 C.F.R. § 244.58(a) (1963) (“Grants of rights-of-way [under R.S. 2477]
become effective upon the construction or establishment of highways, in
accordance with the State laws, over public lands, not reserved for public uses.
No application should be filed under R.S. 2477, as no action on the part of the
Government is necessary.”); 43 C.F.R. § 2822.2-1 (1974) (“Grants of rights-of-
way [under R.S. 2477] become effective upon the construction or establishment of
highways, in accordance with the State laws, over public lands, not reserved for
public uses.”); 43 C.F.R. § 2822.1-1 (1974) (“No application should be filed
under R.S. 2477, as no action on the part of the Government is necessary.”).


                                        39
U.S. Department of the Interior and Related Agencies’ Appropriations Act, 1997,

§ 108, enacted by the Omnibus Consolidated Appropriations Act, 1997, Pub. L.

No. 104-208, 110 Stat. 3009 (1996). 10 The General Accounting Office has

concluded that this provision has the status of permanent law. GAO Opinion B-

277719 at 1-5 (Aug. 20, 1997).

      SUWA argues that this congressional prohibition applies only to “final

rule[s] or regulation[s],” and that Congress therefore must have wanted to

preserve the BLM’s authority to “issu[e] orders and engag[e] in adjudications

related to R.S. 2477.” SUWA Br. 67. But this ignores the fact that for over one

hundred years the BLM had taken the position it could not issue binding orders

adjudicating R.S. 2477 rights of way; there was, accordingly, no such authority to

preserve. Prior to this litigation, even the BLM interpreted the prohibition as an

indication that Congress chose to preserve the status quo, according to which

courts, not the BLM, adjudicate R.S. 2477 rights of way. 11 But even assuming we

      10
        Even before it prohibited the Department of the Interior from issuing
regulations, Congress had forbidden the Department from using funds for
“developing, promulgating, and thereafter implementing a rule concerning rights-
of-way under section 2477 of the Revised Statutes.” General Provisions,
Department of the Interior § 110, enacted by the Omnibus Consolidated
Rescissions and Appropriations Act of 1996, Pub. L. 104-134,, 110 Stat. 1321-
177 (1996).
      11
        In a memorandum issued shortly after the congressional prohibition, the
Secretary of the Interior stated that in light of the prohibition, the BLM could
make non-binding administrative determinations of R.S. 2477 rights of way where
                                                                         (continued...)

                                          40
cannot know the congressional intention behind the prohibition, its mere existence

undercuts the BLM’s primary jurisdiction argument. For primary jurisdiction is

appropriate only if R.S. 2477 is an “issue[] which, under a regulatory scheme,

ha[s] been placed within the special competence of an administrative body.”

United States v. Western Pac. R.R. Co., 352 U.S. 59, 64 (1956). It is highly

unlikely that R.S. 2477 is such an issue when Congress has forbidden the BLM

from issuing regulations on the subject or effectuating proposed rules creating a

procedure for adjudicating R.S. 2477 claims.

      In sum, nothing in the terms of R.S 2477 gives the BLM authority to make

binding determinations on the validity of the rights of way granted thereunder,

and we decline to infer such authority from silence when the statute creates no

executive role for the BLM. This decision is reinforced by the long history of

practice under the statute, during which the BLM has consistently disclaimed

authority to make binding decisions on R.S. 2477 rights of way. Indeed, there

have been 139 years of practice under the statute—110 years while the statute was

in force, and 29 years since its repeal—and the BLM has not pointed to a single


      11
        (...continued)
there was “a demonstrated, compelling, and immediate need”; but that “[t]hose
making claims of the existence of valid R.S. 2477 rights-of-way continue to have
the option of seeking to establish the validity of their claims in court.”
Memorandum from the Secretary of the Interior to the Assistant Secretaries,
Interim Departmental Policy on Revised Statute 2477 Grant of Right of Way for
Public Highways; Revocation of December 7, 1988 Policy 2 (Jan. 22, 1997).

                                         41
case in which a court has deferred to a binding determination by the BLM on an

R.S. 2477 right of way. We conclude that the BLM lacks primary jurisdiction and

that the district court abused its discretion by deferring to the BLM.

      This does not mean that the BLM is forbidden from determining the

validity of R.S. 2477 rights of way for its own purposes. The BLM has always

had this authority. It exercises this authority in what it calls “administrative

determinations.” In its 1993 Report to Congress, the Department of the Interior

explained that the BLM had developed “procedures for administratively

recognizing and . . . record[ing] this information on the land status records.”

1993 D.O.I Report to Congress, at 25. These procedures “are not intended to be

binding, or a final agency action.” Id. Rather, “they are recognitions of ‘claims’

and are useful only for limited purposes,” namely, for the agency’s internal “land-

use planning purposes.” Id. at 25-26. 12 Nonetheless, they may reflect the


      12
         Examples of administrative determinations include Southern Utah
Wilderness Alliance, 111 IBLA 207, 214 (1989) (“[W]hile the courts may be the
final arbiters whether a given R.S. 2477 right-of-way has legal existence, initial
action defining and determining such a right-of-way is properly taken by BLM”
when the issue is one “of ‘administrative concern’ and requires resolution by
BLM in the administration of Departmental regulations respecting planning and
permitting.”); Leo Titus, Sr., 89 IBLA 323, 337-38 (1985) (recognizing an
“administrative necessity” exception to the general rule that “State courts [are]
the proper forum for determining whether there is a public highway under [R.S.
2477] and the respective rights of interested parties.”); Nick DiRe, 55 IBLA 151,
154 (1981) (“[W]hile the question of the existence of [an R.S. 2477 right of way]
is ultimately a matter for state courts, BLM is not precluded from deciding the
                                                                       (continued...)

                                          42
agency’s expertise and fact-finding capability, and as such will be of use to the

court.

         It was this administrative procedure that was at issue in Hodel, where we

stated that “Tenth Circuit precedent requires that the initial determination of

whether activity falls within an established right-of-way is to be made by the

BLM and not the court.” 848 F.2d at 1084 (internal citation and quotation marks

omitted). After the BLM made its initial administrative determination in Hodel,

the district court conducted a twenty-five day trial on the merits, hearing

testimony from twenty-six witnesses and making its own findings of fact. This

was not, as the BLM now argues, a primary jurisdiction referral. It was an

opportunity for the BLM to conduct an administrative determination for its own

land-use planning purposes and to determine its own position in the litigation. It

was not binding on the parties, and it was not the object of formal legal deference

from the district court (though the court’s ultimate decision relied in part on




          (...continued)
         12

issue . . . . The potential conflict is properly a matter of administrative concern.”);
Homer D. Meeds, 26 IBLA 281, 298-99 (1976) (“[T]his Department has
considered State courts to be the proper forum to decide ultimately whether a
public highway under [R.S. 2477] has been created under State law and to
adjudicate the respective rights of interested parties . . . . But where, as in this
case, the BLM has ordered the road closed to public use . . . without any
consideration having been given to the possible implications of the statute, it is
appropriate that the Bureau review the propriety of its actions for its own
purposes . . . .”).

                                           43
evidence from BLM expert witnesses). Nothing in our decision today impugns

the BLM’s authority to make non-binding, administrative determinations, or the

introduction and use of BLM findings as evidence in litigation.

V.    LEGAL ISSUES ON REMAND

      Because the BLM lacks primary jurisdiction over R.S. 2477 rights of way, a

remand is required to permit the district court to conduct a plenary review and

resolution of the R.S. 2477 claims in this case. On remand, the parties are

permitted to introduce evidence regarding the validity and scope of the claims,

including, but not limited to, the evidence contained in the administrative record

before the BLM.

      Bearing in mind the burden this places on the district court, and the

importance of these issues to resolution of potentially thousands of R.S. 2477

claims in the State of Utah and elsewhere, this Court will proceed now to address

some of the significant legal issues that have been briefed by the parties on appeal

and ruled on by the court below. This should not be understood as a

comprehensive catalog of applicable legal principles. Undoubtedly, new legal

issues will arise in the course of the proceedings on remand. 13 More importantly,



      13
        For example, the parties have not addressed the issues of abandonment,
substitution of equivalent routes, or federal government involvement in the
construction or improvement of roads. The parties are free to address these and
other issues on remand, if relevant.

                                        44
as explained below, we are aware that some of the central legal concepts involved

in this case cannot be resolved in the abstract, but must necessarily be fleshed out

in the context of the actual facts of the case.

      A.     State or Federal Law

      The central question in this case is how a valid R.S. 2477 right of way is

acquired. As framed by the parties, the answer to this question turns on whether

federal or state law governs the acquisition of rights of way under R.S. 2477. For

reasons discussed below, we are more doubtful than the parties that the choice

between federal and state law is outcome determinative. The principal difference

between the federal and state standards, according to the parties, is whether

acceptance of an R.S. 2477 right of way is dependent on actual “construction,”

meaning that “[s]ome form of mechanical construction must have occurred to

construct or improve the highway,” (the supposed “federal” standard adopted by

the BLM), or whether it can be established by the “passage of vehicles by users

over time” (the supposed “state” standard advocated by the Counties). San Juan

County (S.J.C.) Br. 27 (quoting BLM Manual 2801, Rel. 2-263, 2801.48B1b

(March 8, 1989). But it is far from clear, first, that “federal” standards are

necessarily those adopted by the BLM in its administrative determinations in this

case; those standards, while presumably helpful in setting forth the agency’s

thinking on the subject, have never formally been adopted in any agency action


                                           45
with the force and effect of law, or adopted by any court as an interpretation of

the terms of R.S. 2477. Moreover, it is far from clear that any of the R.S. 2477

claims under adjudication would pass the “usage” test and flunk the

“construction” test, or vice versa. Much depends on questions of degree: what

type, how frequent, and how well documented need the “passage of vehicles over

time” have been to establish a right of way under state law, if applicable? How

extensive must “construction” activities have been to establish a right of way

under the BLM administrative definition? If the necessary extent of

“construction” is the construction necessary to enable the general public to drive

vehicles over the route, it may well turn out that the two standards will lead to the

same results in most cases.

      We nonetheless begin with this question: which law applies?

      1. The BLM Interpretation

      In making its administrative determinations, the BLM found that three

criteria must be satisfied for a right of way to be recognized under R.S. 2477:

“The claimed right-of-way must have been located on unreserved public lands; it

must have been actually constructed; and it must have been a highway.” The

agency further defined each of these terms. See pages 80, 95, and 97-98 below.

These criteria draw heavily on a 1980 letter written by the Deputy Solicitor of the

Department of the Interior, Frederick Ferguson, to an Assistant Attorney General


                                          46
at the Land and Natural Resources Division of the Department of Justice, James

Moorman. Supp. App. 46 (April 28, 1980). In 1994, the criteria were

incorporated in proposed regulations issued by the BLM. See 59 Fed. Reg.

39,216 (Aug. 1, 1994). Congress, however, passed a permanent appropriations

rider preventing those regulations from taking effect unless expressly authorized

by statute. U.S. Department of the Interior and Related Agencies’ Appropriations

Act, 1997, § 108, enacted by the Omnibus Consolidated Appropriations Act,

1997, Pub. L. No. 104-208, 110 Stat. 3009 (1996). Accordingly, the BLM criteria

have never been adopted by the agency through a formal rule or regulation and do

not have the force of law. Nonetheless, the BLM used these criteria in making

each of the determinations at issue in this case.

      The district court, recognizing that the BLM’s interpretation of the statute

“appears in informal policy statements and opinion letters,” declined to accord the

interpretation Chevron deference, instead giving it “respect,” but “only to the

extent that [it has] the ‘power to persuade.’” Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance

v. Bureau of Land Management, 147 F.Supp.2d 1130, 1135 (D. Utah 2001)

(quoting Christiansen v. Harris County, 529 U.S. 576, 586 (2000), in turn quoting

Skidmore v. Swift & Co., 323 U.S. 134, 140 (1944)). Under Skidmore, the degree

of deference given informal agency interpretations will “vary with circumstances,

and courts have looked to the degree of the agency’s care, its consistency,


                                          47
formality, and relative expertness, and to the persuasiveness of the agency’s

position.” United States v. Mead Corp., 533 U.S. 218, 228 (2001) (footnotes

omitted). Upon consideration of each of the elements of the BLM’s statutory

interpretation, under this standard, the district court found “the BLM’s statutory

interpretation of R.S. 2477 to be both reasonable and persuasive and concur[red]

with the BLM interpretation.” 147 F.Supp.2d at 1145.

      On appeal, the BLM contends that the district court erred in not according

its interpretation Chevron deference, arguing that such deference is applicable to

an agency’s “interpretation of the relevant statute after an extensive adjudicatory

proceeding in a final Secretarial action that carries the force of law, namely its

administrative determinations concerning the validity of the Counties’ right-of-

way claims across public lands administered by the Secretary.” BLM Br. 44.

Because this Court concluded in the previous section of this opinion that the

administrative determinations were not entitled to the force of law, this argument

fails as well. The district court was correct to accord the BLM’s interpretation no

more than Skidmore deference.

      The Counties argue that BLM’s statutory interpretation is entitled to no

deference at all. Describing the BLM’s interpretation as a “mid-litigation attempt

to create a federal standard of highway law,” San Juan County argues that this

Court should defer instead to regulations and policy statements from 1939, 1955,


                                          48
1963, and 1974, which, the County argues, incorporated a state law standard.

S.J.C. Br. 29-30. The County further notes that in 1988 the Secretary of the

Interior issued a policy statement that repudiated arguments based on the 1980

Deputy Solicitor’s letter. Id. at 28. The BLM counters that “[i]n contrast to the

administrative determinations, the Department’s various policy statements over

the years interpreting R.S. 2477 did not have the force of law and did not legally

bind the Department.” BLM Br. 46 n.14. It notes also that the policy statement

issued in 1988 was rescinded in 1997. Id.

      While we have no reason to question the “care” with which the BLM

approached its task of statutory interpretation, or the “formality” with which it

conducted its administrative determinations, this squabble amply demonstrates

that the agency’s interpretation lacks the “consistency” that is required to warrant

strong Skidmore deference. Mead Corp., 533 U.S. at 228. As near as we can tell,

the agency has shifted its position on this issue at least three times since the

repeal of R.S. 2477 in 1976. In light of the fact that FLPMA explicitly preserved

and protected R.S. 2477 rights of way in existence as of October 21, 1976, and

that those rights have the status of vested real property rights, any post-1976

changes in agency interpretation of the repealed statute have questionable

applicability.

      The BLM argues that while the administrative determinations at issue here


                                          49
“reflect the Department’s interpretation of R.S. 2477 as it applies to those

determinations, the Department retains discretion to reconsider its interpretation

of R.S. 2477 in the context of future administrative policymaking, adjudications,

determinations, and rulemaking.” BLM Br. 44-45 n.13. While it is ordinarily

true that agencies with the delegated authority to interpret and enforce federal

statutes have the discretion to reconsider and change their interpretations, Motor

Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n of United States, Inc. v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463

U.S. 29, 42 (1983), it is hard to square such law-changing discretion with the

concept of property rights that vested, if at all, on or before a date almost 30 years

ago. This is further reason to doubt that R.S. 2477 rights are subject to

administrative definition and redefinition.

      Moreover, we are hesitant to give decisive legal weight to an agency’s

interpretation when the regulations in which that interpretation was embodied

were blocked by a vote of Congress. See U.S. Department of the Interior and

Related Agencies’ Appropriations Act, 1997, § 108, enacted by the Omnibus

Consolidated Appropriations Act, 1997, Pub. L. No. 104-208, 110 Stat. 3009

(1996). To be sure, neither the language nor the legislative history of the

congressional prohibition specifies what it was about the regulations Congress

found objectionable. It is possible that Congress objected to the regulation’s

procedural provisions rather than its substantive interpretations of law.


                                         50
Nonetheless, where Congress has taken action to prevent implementation of

agency rules, and those rules have never been adopted by formal agency action,

we do not think it appropriate for a court to defer to those rules in the

interpretation of a federal statute.

      This does not mean we disregard the BLM interpretation. It means only

that the interpretation receives no more “respect” than what comes from its

“persuasiveness.” Mead Corp., 533 U.S. at 228.

      2. Sierra Club v. Hodel

      The Counties, on the other hand, argue that this Court’s decision in Sierra

Club v. Hodel, 848 F.2d 1068 (10th Cir. 1988), established that state law, not

federal law, governs determinations of R.S. 2477 rights of way. San Juan County

argues that in adopting a federal standard, the district court “overruled this

Court’s Hodel decision affirming that establishment of a highway under state law

perfected the right.” S.J.C. Br. 30; see also id. at 17. More cautiously, Kane and

Garfield Counties note that Hodel determined that “state laws govern the scope of

R.S. 2477 rights-of-way,” and that the “bases for its analysis” would lead to the

same result with respect to the validity of a claimed R.S. 2477 right of way. K&G

C. Br. 39.

      The district court concluded that “[t]he Tenth Circuit’s decision in Hodel

addressed only the scope of R.S. 2477 rights-of-way already found to have been


                                          51
established—it did not address the issue in this case, how R.S. 2477 rights-of-way

are established in the first place.” 147 F.Supp.2d at 1142 (emphasis in original).

For the most part, we agree. In Hodel, the parties conceded the existence of the

right of way, and that was not an issue in the case. 848 F.2d at 1079; see id. at

1080 (“The salient issue is whether the scope of R.S. 2477 rights-of-way is a

question of state or federal law.”). Even San Juan County concedes that “validity

was not at issue in Hodel, only scope.” S.J.C. Br. 20. We therefore hold that

Hodel is not determinative of the question.

      3. Statutory text and precedent.

      Having rejected the arguments that deference under administrative law

compels adoption of the BLM’s statutory interpretation or that the precedent of

Hodel compels adoption of state law, we turn then to the statute and to general

principles of interpretation of federal law. R.S. 2477 was originally enacted as

Section 8 of An Act granting the Right of Way to Ditch and Canal Owners over

the Public Lands, and for other Purposes, commonly called the Mining Act of

1866. Act of July 26, 1866, ch. 262, § 8, 14 Stat. 251, 253. The language is

short, sweet, and enigmatic: “And be it further enacted, that the right of way for

the construction of highways over public lands, not reserved for public uses, is




                                         52
hereby granted.” There is little legislative history. 14 Interestingly, Sections 1, 2,

4, 5, and 9 of the Act make explicit reference either to state law or to the “local

customs or rules of miners” in the district. For example, Section 2 gives persons

who discover certain minerals on public land, “having previously occupied and

improved the same according to the local custom or rules of miners in the district

where the same is situated,” the right to apply for and obtain a patent for the tract.

Section 5 provides that “in the absence of necessary legislation by Congress, the

local legislature of any State or Territory may provide rules for working mines

involving easements, drainage, and other necessary means to their complete

development.” This shows that when Congress intended application of state laws

it did so explicitly. On the other hand, Sections 7, 10, and 11 make explicit

reference to other federal laws. Section 7 refers to laws authorizing the President

to appoint certain officers, Section 10 preserves the prior claims of homesteaders

under the Homestead Act, and Section 11 authorizes the Secretary of the Interior

to designate portions of the mineral lands that are “clearly agricultural lands” as

such, making them subject to “all the laws and regulations applicable to the

same.” Section 8 refers to neither state law nor federal law. The Hodel court

suggested that “[t]he silence of section 8 reflects the probable fact that Congress



      14
        What little legislative history exists is summarized in the 1993 D.O.I
Report to Congress, at 9-10.

                                          53
simply did not decide which sovereign’s law should apply.” 848 F.2d at 1080.

       The real question, we think, is not whether state law applies or federal law

applies, but whether federal law looks to state law to flesh out details of

interpretation. R.S. 2477 is a federal statute and it governs the disposition of

rights to federal property, a power constitutionally vested in Congress. U.S.

Const. art. IV, § 3, cl. 2; see Utah Power & Light Co. v. United States, 243 U.S.

389, 405 (1917) (observing that the Property Clause gives Congress the power

over the public lands “to control their occupancy and use, to protect them from

trespass and injury, and to prescribe the conditions upon which others may obtain

rights in them”); Kleppe v. New Mexico, 426 U.S. 529, 539 (1976). As the

Supreme Court has stated, “The laws of the United States alone control the

disposition of title to its lands. The states are powerless to place any limitation or

restriction on that control.” United States v. Oregon, 295 U.S. 1, 27-28 (1935).

“The construction of grants by the United States is a federal not a state question.”

Id. at 28.

       Even where an issue is ultimately governed by federal law, however, it is

not uncommon for courts to “borrow” state law to aid in interpretation of the

federal statute. The Supreme Court has explained that “[c]ontroversies . . .

governed by federal law, do not inevitably require resort to uniform federal rules.

. . . Whether to adopt state law or to fashion a nationwide federal rule is a matter


                                          54
of judicial policy ‘dependent upon a variety of considerations always relevant to

the nature of the specific governmental interests and to the effects upon them of

applying state law.’” United States v. Kimbell Foods, Inc., 440 U.S. 715, 727-28

(1979) (quoting United States v. Standard Oil Co., 332 U.S. 301, 310 (1947)); see

also Wilson v. Omaha Indian Tribe, 442 U.S. 653, 671-72 (1979) (same); P.

Bator, et al., Hart & Wechsler’s, The Federal Courts and the Federal System 768

(2d ed. 1973) (“[I]t may be determined as a matter of choice of law, even in the

absence of statutory command or implication, that, although federal law should

‘govern’ a given question, state law furnishes an appropriate and convenient

measure of the content of this federal law.”), quoted in Wilson, 442 U.S. at 672

n.19.

        In the specific context of federal land grant statutes, the Court has

explained that courts may incorporate state law “only in so far as it may be

determined as a matter of federal law that the United States has impliedly adopted

and assented to a state rule of construction.” Oregon, 295 U.S. at 28; see United

States v. Gates of the Mountains Lakeshore Homes, Inc., 732 F.2d 1411, 1413

(9th Cir. 1984) (“The scope of a grant of federal land is, of course, a question of

federal law. But in some instances ‘it may be determined as a matter of federal

law that the United States has impliedly adopted and assented to a state rule of

construction as applicable to its conveyances.’”) (quoting Oregon, 295 U.S. at 28)


                                           55
(internal citation omitted).

      In determining when to borrow state law in the interpretation of a federal

statute, the Supreme Court has instructed courts to consider: whether there is a

“need for a nationally uniform body of law,” whether state law would “frustrate

federal policy or functions,” and what “impact a federal rule might have on

existing relationships under state law.” Wilson, 442 U.S. at 672. Those were the

considerations the Hodel court consulted in determining that state law should

govern the “scope” of R.S. 2477 grants. Hodel, 848 F.2d at 1082-83. It follows

that to the extent state law is “borrowed” in the course of interpreting R.S. 2477,

it must be in service of “federal policy or functions,” and cannot derogate from

the evident purposes of the federal statute. State law is “borrowed” not for its

own sake, and not on account of any inherent state authority over the subject

matter, but solely to the extent it provides “an appropriate and convenient

measure of the content” of the federal law. Bator, et al., supra, at 768. 15


      15
         To be sure, R.S. 2477 constitutes an offer of rights of way, which requires
acceptance by public authorities of the State. Such acceptance could entail public
responsibilities for upkeep. See Jeremy v. Bertagnole, 116 P.2d 420, 423 (Utah
1941) (“[The] authorities are bound to keep the road open and in suitable repair,
and, if obstructions be placed thereon, it is their duty to remove the same, and
care for the rights of the public.”). Accordingly, some states might wish to
impose a higher standard for acceptance of the grant than is required under
federal law. See, e.g., Tucson Consol. Copper Co. v. Reese, 100 P. 777, 778
(Ariz. Terr. 1909) (requiring that all roads “be located and recorded by authority
of the [county] board of supervisors” after a “petition of 10 or more resident
                                                                        (continued...)

                                          56
      To modern eyes, R.S. 2477 may seem to stand on its own terms, without

need for reference to any outside body of law. At the time of its enactment,

however, the creation and legal incidence of “highways” was an important field

within the common law, with well-developed legal principles reflected in

numerous legal treatises and decisions. See, e.g., Isaac Grant Thompson, A

Practical Treatise on the Law of Highways (1868); Joseph K. Angell & Thomas

Durfee, A Treatise on the Law of Highways (2d ed. 1868); John Egremont, The

Law Relating to Highways, Turnpike-Roads, Public Bridges and Navigable Rivers

(1830); Byron K. Elliott, A Treatise on the law of Roads and Streets (1890); see

also James Kent, 3 Commentaries on American Law 572-76, *432-35 (10th ed.

1860) (subject covered in chapter on law of real property). When Congress

legislates against a backdrop of common law, without any indication of intention

to depart from or change common law rules, the statutory terms must be read as

embodying their common law meaning. Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co. v. Darden, 503

U.S. 318, 322 (1992); Community for Creative Non-Violence v. Reid, 490 U.S.

730, 739-40 (1989). It is reasonable to assume that when Congress granted rights

of way for the construction of highways across the unreserved lands of the West


      15
        (...continued)
taxpayers within the county” before such roads can be considered “public
highways” under R.S. 2477). Such limitations apply not as a matter of federal
law, but as an expression of the authority of the state to govern its own
acceptance of rights of way.

                                        57
in 1866, it was aware of and incorporated the common law pertaining to the

nature of public highways and how they are established.

      In the decades following enactment of R.S. 2477, when disputes arose,

courts uniformly interpreted the statute in light of this well-developed body of

legal principles, most of which were embodied in state court decisions. In one

early case, a landowner acquired title to a parcel of land from the United States

and constructed a fence across what had been used, in previous years, as a public

pathway between the town and its school. The Supreme Court of California held

that under state law, five years of public use was sufficient for the public to

acquire the right to use the path as a public way. McRose v. Bottyer, 81 Cal. 122,

125 (1889). “The fact that the land was public land of the United States at the

time the right to use it as a public way was acquired . . . makes no difference.

The act of Congress of 1866 (sec. 2477, R.S. U.S.) granted the right of way for

the construction of highways over public land not reserved for public uses. By

the acceptance of the dedication thus made, the public acquired an easement

subject to the laws of this state.” Id. at 126. The Hodel court cited some fifteen

decisions in which state law definitions of “acceptance” of a public highway were

employed to resolve R.S. 2477 disputes, 848 F.2d at 1082 n.13, and we have




                                          58
located many more. 16

      One prominent example is the Supreme Court’s decision in Central Pacific

Railway Co. v. Alameda County, 284 U.S. 463 (1932), which involved a conflict

between two rights of way in the bottom of a California canyon, one a public

highway laid out in 1859 and “formed by the passage of wagons, etc., over the

natural soil,” and the other a right of way granted to the Central Pacific Railway

Company under Acts of Congress in 1862 and 1864. Id. at 467. The ultimate

question was whether R.S. 2477 applied retroactively to validate rights of way

established prior to the enactment of the statute in 1866. The Court held that it

did, and in the course of so holding, the Court acknowledged that state law

governed the acceptance of the relevant R.S. 2477 right of way: “[T]he laying out



      16
        See, e.g., Fitzgerald v. Puddicombe, 918 P.2d 1017, 1019 (Alaska 1996);
Hamerly v. Denton, 359 P.2d 121, 123 (Alaska 1961); Boyer v. Clark, 326 P.2d
107, 109 (Utah 1958); Lovelace v. Hightower, 168 P.2d 864, 866-67 (N.M. 1946);
Leach v. Manhart, 77 P.2d 652, 653 (Colo. 1938); Bishop v. Hawley, 238 P. 284,
285 (Wyo. 1925); State ex rel. Dansie v. Nolan, 191 P. 150, 152-53 (Mont. 1920);
Sprague v. Stead, 139 P. 544, 545-46 (Colo. 1914); Stofferan v. Okanogan
County, 136 P. 484, 487 (Wash. 1913); Hughes v. Veal, 114 P. 1081, 1082-83
(Kan. 1911); City of Butte v. Mikosowitz, 102 P. 593, 595 (Mont. 1909);
Montgomery v. Somers, 90 P. 674, 677 (Or. 1907); Van Wanning v. Deeter, 110
N.W. 703, 703-04 (Neb. 1907), rev’d on other grounds, 112 N.W. 902 (Neb.
1907); Okanogan County v. Cheetham, 80 P. 262, 264 (Wash. 1905), overruled on
other grounds by McAllister v. Okanogan County, 100 P. 146, 148 (Wash. 1909);
Walcott Tp. of Richland County v. Skauge, 71 N.W. 544, 546 (N.D. 1897); Wells
v. Pennington County, 48 N.W. 305, 307-08 (S.D. 1891); Murray v. City of Butte,
14 P. 656, 656-57 (Mont. Terr. 1887); Barker v. County of La Plata, 49 F.Supp.2d
1203, 1214 (D. Colo. 1999).

                                        59
by authority of the state law of the road here in question created rights of

continuing user to which the government must be deemed to have assented [when

it passed R.S. 2477].” Id. at 473 (emphasis added). Furthermore, when the

railroad challenged the county’s right of way as having been abandoned, the Court

incorporated state law to guide its decision, citing a string of five state court

decisions for the proposition that “the continuing identity of [a] road must be

presumed until overcome by proof to the contrary, the burden of which rests upon

the [party challenging the validity of an established road].” Id. at 468. In

contrast to this and the many other decisions employing state law standards to

resolve R.S. 2477 disputes, the parties have not cited, and we have not found, any

cases before its repeal in which R.S. 2477 controversies were resolved by

anything other than state law. This unanimity of interpretation over a great many

years is entitled to weight. See Sierra Club v. Hodel, 848 F.2d 1068, 1080 (10th

Cir. 1988) (practice under a statute is relevant evidence of how that statute should

be interpreted) (quoting United States v. Midwest Oil Co., 236 U.S. 459, 473

(1915).

      It was the consistent policy of the BLM, as well as the courts, to look to

common law and state law as setting the terms of acceptance of R.S. 2477 grants.

In 1902, in The Pasadena and Mount Wilson Toll Road Co. v. Schneider, 31 Pub.

Lands Dec. 405 (1902), the Department of the Interior considered whether toll


                                           60
roads could be R.S. 2477 highways. Its answer to that question drew directly

from the common law of “highways,” as reflected in state court decisions,

common law treatises, and legal dictionaries:

      Section 2477 of the Revised Statutes grants “the right of way for the
      construction of highways over the public lands not reserved for
      public uses.” A highway is “a road over which the public at large
      have a right of passage” (Dic. Loc. V.) and includes “every
      thoroughfare which is used by the public, and is, in the language of
      the English books, “common to all the King’s subjects’” (3 Kent.
      Com., 432). Toll roads are highways, and differ from ordinary
      highways merely in the fact that they are also subjects of property
      and the cost of their construction and maintenance is raised by a toll
      from those using them, instead of by general taxation,
      Commonwealth v. Wilkinson (16 Pick., Mass., 175, 26 Am. Dec., 654
      [1834]); Buncombe Turnpike Co. v. Baxter (10 Ired., N. Car., 222
      [1849]). The obstruction of a turnpike toll road is indictable, under a
      statute against obstruction of highways. (Nor. Cent. R. Co. v.
      Commonwealth, 90 Pa. St., 300 [1879].) A highway may be a mere
      footway. (Tyler v. Sturdy, 108 Mass., 196 [1871].) Neither the
      breadth, form, degree of facility, manner of construction, private,
      corporate, or public ownership, or source or manner of raising the
      fund for construction and maintenance, distinguishes a highway, but
      the fact of general public right of user for passage, without
      individual discrimination, is the essential feature. The necessities and
      volume of traffic, difficulties of route, and fund available for
      construction and maintenance, will vary the unessential features, but
      the fact of general public right of user for passage upon equal terms
      under like circumstances is the one constant characteristic of a
      highway.

Id. at 407-408. In its first regulation addressing R.S. 2477 claims, issued in 1939,

the BLM stated that “[t]he grant [under R.S. 2477] becomes effective upon the

construction or establishing of highways, in accordance with the State laws, over

public lands not reserved for public uses.” 43 C.F.R. § 244.55 (1939) (emphasis

                                         61
added). BLM regulations continued to incorporate state law as the standard for

recognizing R.S. 2477 rights of way until the repeal of R.S. 2477 in 1976. See 43

C.F.R. § 244.58 (1963) (“Grants of rights-of-way [under R.S. 2477] become

effective upon the construction or establishment of highways, in accordance with

the State laws, over public lands, not reserved for public uses.”); 43 C.F.R. §

2822.2-1 (1974) (“Grants of rights-of-way [under R.S. 2477] become effective

upon the construction or establishment of highways, in accordance with the State

laws, over public lands, not reserved for public uses.”); see also Solicitor’s M-

Opinion, Limitation of Access to Through-Highways Crossing Public Lands, M-

36274, 62 I.D. 158, 161 (1955) (“Whatever may be construed as a highway under

State law is a highway under [R.S. 2477], and the rights thereunder are

interpreted by the courts in accordance with the State law.”). Both before and

after repeal, and until very recently, BLM administrative decisions took the same

position. See, e.g., Kirk Brown, 151 IBLA 221, 227 n.6 (1999) (“Normally, the

existence of an R.S. 2477 road is a question of state law.”); Homer D. Meeds, 26

IBLA 281, 298 (1976) (“[T]his Department has considered State courts to be the

proper forum to decide ultimately whether a public highway under [R.S. 2477]

has been created under State law and to adjudicate the respective rights of

interested parties.”).

      This did not mean, and never meant, that state law could override federal


                                         62
requirements or undermine federal land policy. For example, in an early decision,

the BLM determined that a state law purporting to accept rights of way along all

section lines within the county was beyond the intentions of Congress in enacting

R.S. 2477. Douglas County, Washington, 26 Pub. Lands Dec. 446 (1898). The

Department described this state law as “the manifestation of a marked and novel

liberality on the part of the county authorities in dealing with the public land,”

and stated that R.S. 2477 “was not intended to grant a right of way over public

lands in advance of an apparent necessity therefor, or on the mere suggestion that

at some future time such roads may be needed.” Id. at 447. 17 Similarly, in 1974,

the BLM issued regulations clarifying that R.S. 2477 rights of way are limited to

highway purposes, and do not encompass ancillary uses such as utility lines,

notwithstanding state law to the contrary. See 43 C.F.R. § 2822.2-2 (1974). In

none of the cases applying state law was there any suggestion of a conflict

between the state law and any federal principles or interests. Rather, state law


      17
        Ultimately, consistent with its policy of not adjudicating R.S. 2477 claims
and leaving the resolution of those claims to courts, see pages 32-34 supra, the
Land Department declined to make express reservation for the asserted right of
way in a patent for a land grant. It explained: “If public highways have been, or
shall hereafter be, established across any part of the public domain, in pursuance
of law, that fact will be shown by local public records of which all must take
notice, and the subsequent sale or disposition by the United States of the lands
over which such highways are established will not interfere with the authorized
use thereof, because those acquiring such lands will take them subject to any
easement existing by authority of law.” Douglas County, Washington, 26 Pub.
Lands Dec. at 447.

                                          63
was employed as a convenient and well-developed set of rules for resolving such

issues as the length of time of public use necessary to establish a right of way,

abandonment of a right of way, and priorities between competing private claims.

      We do not believe application of state law in this fashion offends the

criteria set forth in Wilson for appropriate borrowing of state law in the

interpretation of federal statutes. The first question is whether there is a “need

for a uniform national rule” regarding what steps are required to perfect an R.S.

2477 right of way. See Wilson v. Omaha Indian Tribe, 442 U.S. 653, 673 (1979).

We think not. Although the substantive content of state law could in some cases

conflict with the purposes of federal law (the second Wilson criterion), we do not

think uniformity for uniformity’s sake is necessary in this area of the law.

Indeed, there is some force to the view that interpretation of R.S. 2477 should be

sensitive to the differences in geographic, climatic, demographic, and economic

circumstances among the various states, differences which can have an effect on

the establishment and use of routes of travel. A panel of the Ninth Circuit, for

example, held that its decision in an R.S. 2477 case involving an Alaska claim

“must take into account the fact that conditions in Alaska present unique

questions, not easily answered.” Shultz v. Dep’t of Army, 10 F.3d 649, 655 (9th




                                          64
Cir. 1993). 18 Judge Fletcher, writing for the court, explained:

      Due to its geography, its weather, and its sparse and scattered
      population, Alaska’s “highways” frequently have been no more than
      trails and they have moved with the season and the purpose for the
      transit – what travelled [sic] best in winter could be impassable knee-
      deep swamp in summer; what best accommodated a sled was not the
      best route for a wagon or a horse or a person with a pack. By
      necessity routes shifted as the seasons shifted and as the uses shifted.
      What might be considered sporadic use in another context would be
      consistent or constant use in Alaska.


Id. (footnote omitted). Analogous considerations might pertain in the southern

Utah canyon country in which this case arises. The sparse population, rugged

terrain, scarcity of passable routes, seasonal differences in snow, mud, and stream

flow, fragile and environmentally sensitive land, and paucity of towns or other

centers of economic activity, could have an effect on the location of roads.

      Moreover, for over 130 years disputes over R.S. 2477 claims were litigated

by reference to non-uniform state standards, a fact that casts serious doubt on any

claims of a need for uniformity today. See 1993 D.O.I Report to Congress, at 2

(“There have been few problems regarding R.S. 2477 rights-of-way in most public

land states although states have handled the issue differently. This may be

because of the differences among state laws . . .”). When the BLM proposed



      18
        On panel rehearing, the opinion in Schultz was withdrawn, 96 F.3d 1222
(9th Cir. 1996). We therefore cite the opinion not as authority but for its
persuasive value.

                                         65
nationwide standards for the first time in 1994, Congress responded by passing a

permanent appropriations rider forbidding the implementation of those standards

absent express authorization from Congress. U.S. Department of the Interior and

Related Agencies’ Appropriations Act, 1997, § 108, enacted by the Omnibus

Consolidated Appropriations Act, 1997, Pub. L. No. 104-208, 110 Stat. 3009

(1996). At the time it took this action, Congress was aware that there were no

uniform federal standards. See 1993 DO.I. Report to Congress, at 21 (noting the

existence of “numerous and conflicting state and federal court rulings on R.S.

2477”). Congress’s decision to perpetuate non-uniform standards provides

support for the view that there is no “need for a uniform national rule.” Wilson,

442 U.S. at 673.

      The second Wilson criterion is whether “application of state law would

frustrate federal policy or functions.” Id. As we discuss specific state law

standards, we will advert to congressional intention and other indications of

federal policy. To the extent adoption of a state law definition would frustrate

federal policy under R.S. 2477, it will not be adopted.

      The third Wilson criterion, the “impact a federal rule might have on

existing relationships under state law,” id., points in favor of continued

application of state law. Both right-of-way holders and public and private

landowners faced with potential R.S. 2477 claims have an interest in preservation


                                          66
of the status quo ante. That is best accomplished by not changing legal standards.

In Hodel, this Court observed that “R.S. 2477 rightholders, on the one hand, and

private landowners and BLM as custodian of the public lands, on the other, have

developed property relationships around each particular state’s definition of the

scope of an R.S. 2477 road.” 848 F.2d at 1082-83. The same can be said of the

existence of an R.S. 2477 road.

      We therefore conclude that federal law governs the interpretation of R.S.

2477, but that in determining what is required for acceptance of a right of way

under the statute, federal law “borrows” from long-established principles of state

law, to the extent that state law provides convenient and appropriate principles for

effectuating congressional intent. The applicable state law in this case is that of

the State of Utah, supplemented where appropriate by precedent from other states

with similar principles of law.

      B. Specific Legal Issues

      We turn now to the criteria governing recognition of a valid R.S. 2477 right

of way. First we address burden of proof, and then we turn to substantive

standards. For reasons explained in the previous section, we begin with the

common law standard as developed in the law of the State of Utah, a standard

which is based on continuous public use. We will then address arguments by the

BLM and SUWA that, instead of the public use standard, we should adopt a

                                          67
“mechanical construction” standard, as set forth in the BLM administrative

determinations, and that valid R.S. 2477 claims should further be limited by the

BLM’s proposed definition of “highway.” Finally, we will address arguments by

all parties regarding the meaning of the statutory term “not reserved for public

uses.”

         We review the district court’s legal determinations de novo. United States

v. Telluride Co., 146 F.3d 1241, 1244 (10th Cir. 1998).

         1. Burden of proof

         The district court correctly ruled that the burden of proof lies on those

parties “seeking to enforce rights-of-way against the federal government.” 147

F.Supp.2d at 1136. Under Utah law determining when a highway is deemed to be

dedicated to the use of the public, 19 “[t]he presumption is in favor of the property

owner; and the burden of establishing public use for the required period of time is




         Utah Code Ann. § 27-12-89 (1953) (current version at Utah Code Ann. §
         19

72-5-104(1) (2005)) provides:
       A highway shall be deemed to have been dedicated and abandoned to
       the use of the public when it has been continuously used as a public
       thoroughfare for a period of ten years.
The Utah Supreme Court held a nearly identical earlier version of this statute
applicable to R.S. 2477 claims in Lindsay Land & Live Stock Co. v. Churnos, 285
P. 646, 648 (Utah 1929), relying on Laws of Utah 1886, ch. 12, § 2 (“A highway
shall be deemed and taken as dedicated and abandoned to the use of the Public
when it has been continuously and uninterruptedly used as a Public thoroughfare
for a period of ten years.”).

                                            68
on those claiming it.” Leo M. Bertagnole, Inc. v. Pine Meadow Ranches, 639

P.2d 211, 213 (Utah 1981); Draper City v. Estate of Bernardo, 888 P.2d 1097,

1099 (Utah 1995). 20 Courts in other states have reached a similar conclusion.

See, e.g., Luchetti v. Bandler, 777 P.2d 1326, 1327 (N.M. App. 1989). Because

evidence in these cases is over a quarter of a century old, the burden of proof

could be decisive in some cases.

      This allocation of the burden of proof to the R.S. 2477 claimant is

consonant with federal law and federal interests. As the district court noted,

“‘[T]he established rule [is] that land grants are construed favorably to the

Government, that nothing passes except what is conveyed in clear language, and

that if there are doubts they are resolved for the Government, not against it.” 147

F.Supp.2d at 1136 (quoting Watt v. Western Nuclear, Inc., 462 U.S. 36, 59

(1983), in turn quoting United States v. Union Pac. R.R. Co., 353 U.S. 112, 116

(1957)) (brackets in district court opinion). Other courts have applied this rule to

R.S. 2477 cases, Adams v. United States, 3 F.3d 1254, 1258 (9th Cir. 1993);

United States v. Balliet, 133 F.Supp.2d 1120, 1129 (W. D. Ark. 2001); Fitzgerald

v. United States, 932 F.Supp. 1195, 1201 (D. Ariz. 1996), and we agree. On


       The burden may be different in cases where the R.S. 2477 claim has
      20

previously been adjudicated, or where there is a federal disclaimer of interest,
memorandum of understanding, or other administrative recognition. We have no
occasion in this case to opine on the legal effect of such administrative
determinations.

                                         69
remand, therefore, the Counties, as the parties claiming R.S. 2477 rights, bear the

burden of proof.

      2. The public use standard

      Under the common law, the establishment of a public right of way required

two steps: the landowner’s objectively manifested intent to dedicate property to

the public use as a right of way, and acceptance by the public. 21 Isaac Grant

Thompson, A Practical Treatise on the Law of Highways 48-52 (1868)

(dedication); id. at 54-57 (acceptance); Joseph K. Angell & Thomas Durfee, A

Treatise on the Law of Highways 146-65 (2d ed. 1868) (dedication); id. at 174-83

(acceptance); 6 R. Powell, The Law of Real Property § 84.01 (2005) (hereinafter

Powell); see The President, Recorder and Trustees of Cincinnati v. White’s

Lessee, 31 U.S. (6 Pet.) 431, 438-40 (1832). Dedication by the landowner could

be manifested by express statement or presumed from conduct, usually by

allowing the public “the uninterrupted use and enjoyment of their privilege” over

a specified period of time. Thompson on Highways, supra, at 48-49; see also

James Kent, 3 Commentaries on American Law 604-06, *450-51 (10th ed. 1860);



      21
        Alternatively, where land intended for highway use was privately owned
and the landowner did not dedicate the land to use as a right of way, the
government could proceed by condemnation and compensation. See Joseph K.
Angell & Thomas Durfee, A Treatise on the Law of Highways 64-131 (2d ed.
1868). Because this case involves only routes across land that was public when
the route was established, we will disregard this branch of the law.

                                         70
for a modern example of presumed dedication, see Draper City v. Estate of

Bernardo, 888 P.2d 1097, 1099 (Utah 1995). In the years after its enactment,

R.S. 2477 was uniformly interpreted by the courts as an express dedication of the

right of way by the landowner, the United States Congress. See Murray v. City of

Butte, 14 P. 656, 656 (Mont. Terr. 1887); McRose v. Bottyer, 81 Cal. 122, 126

(1889); Street v. Stalnaker, 85 N.W. 47, 48 (Neb. 1901); Wallowa County v.

Wade, 72 P. 793, 794 (Ore. 1903); Okanogan County v. Cheetham, 80 P. 262, 264

(Wash. 1905), overruled on other grounds by McAllister v. Okanogan County,

100 P. 146, 148 (Wash. 1909); Nicolas v. Grassle, 267 P. 196, 197 (Colo. 1928);

Lindsay Land & Live Stock Co. v. Churnos, 285 P. 646, 648 (Utah 1929). The

difficult question was whether any particular disputed route had been “accepted”

by the public before the land had been transferred to private ownership or

otherwise reserved. As one court noted:

      The act of congress already referred to [R.S. 2477] does not make
      any distinction as to the methods recognized by law for the
      establishment of a highway. It is an unequivocal grant of right of way
      for highways over public lands, without any limitation as to the
      method for their establishment, and hence a highway may be
      established across or upon such public lands in any of the ways
      recognized by the law of the state in which such lands are located;
      and in this state, as already observed, such highways may be
      established by prescription, dedication, user, or proceedings under
      the statute.


Smith v. Mitchell, 58 P. 667, 668 (Wash. 1899).


                                          71
      The rules for “acceptance” of a right of way by the public (whether under

R.S. 2477 or otherwise) varied somewhat from state to state. Some states

required official action by the local body of government before a public highway

could be deemed “accepted.” E.g., Tucson Consol. Copper Co. v. Reese, 100 P.

777, 778 (Ariz. Terr. 1909); Barnard Realty Co. v. City of Butte, 136 P. 1064,

1067 (Mont. 1913) (legislature amended state law in 1895 to prohibit

establishment of a public road by use, unless accompanied by an action on the

part of public authorities). In such states, the appropriation of public funds for

repair was generally deemed sufficient to manifest acceptance by the public body.

Angell & Durfee on Highways, supra, at 181-82. In most of the western states,

where R.S. 2477 was most significant, acceptance required no governmental act,

but could be manifested by continuous public use over a specified period of

time. 22 This was the common law rule. “The common law mode of indicating an


      22
        E.g., Hamerly v. Denton, 359 P.2d 121, 123 (Alaska 1961) (“[B]efore a
highway may be created, there must be either some positive act on the part of the
appropriate public authorities of the state . . . or there must be public user for
such a period of time and under such conditions as to prove that the grant has
been accepted.”); Wilson v. Williams, 87 P.2d 683, 685 (N.M. 1939) (“There is no
particular method required or recognized as the proper one for the establishment
of highways under this grant. Generally the construction of a highway or
establishment thereof by public user is sufficient.”); Lindsay Land & Live Stock
Co. v. Churnos, 285 P. 646, 648 (Utah 1929) (“It has been held by numerous
courts that the grant may be accepted by public use without formal action by
public authorities . . . .”) (citing cases); Hatch Bros. Co. v. Black, 165 P. 518, 519
(Wyo. 1917) (“The continued use of the road by the public for such a length of
                                                                         (continued...)

                                          72
acceptance by the public of a dedication is by a user of sufficient length to evince

such acceptance . . . .” Thompson on Highways, supra, at 54. 23 In some states, the

required period was the same as that for easements by prescription, 24 in some

states it was some other specified period, often five to ten years, 25 and in some

states it was simply a period long enough to indicate intention to accept. 26 See

generally Harry R. Bader, Potential Legal Standards for Resolving the R.S. 2477


      22
         (...continued)
time and under such circumstances as to clearly indicate an intention on the part
of the public to accept the grant has generally been held sufficient” to constitute
acceptance of an R.S. 2477 right of way.), superseded by statute as noted in
Yeager v. Forbes, 78 P.3d 241, 255 (Wyo. 2003); Van Wanning v. Deeter, 110
N.W. 703, 704 (Neb. 1907) (“[T]he acceptance of the congressional grant could
be shown, not only by acts of the public authorities, but by the acts of the public
itself. In the case at bar . . . there is evidence of user, general and long continued.
. . . This, we think, is amply sufficient to show an acceptance by the public of the
congressional grant . . . .”), rev’d on other grounds, 112 N.W. 902 (Neb. 1907).
      23
        “User” is the “enjoyment of a right of use: a right to use resulting from
long-continued use.” Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 2524 (1976);
see Black’s Law Dictionary 1542 (7th ed. 1999) (defining “user” as “[t]he
exercise or employment of a right or property”). We will use the terms “user” and
“continuous public use” interchangeably.

       See, e.g., Vogler v. Anderson, 89 P. 551, 552 (Wash. 1907); City of Butte
      24

v. Mikosowitz, 102 P. 593, 595 (Mont. 1909).
      25
        See Powell, supra, at n.107; Okanogan County v. Cheetham, 80 P. 262,
264 (Wash. 1905) (holding that seven years of public use is sufficient to
constitute acceptance of an R.S. 2477 right of way, as opposed to the ten years
required for an easement by prescription, on the ground that “[i]t is not a matter
of prescription, but of acceptance of a grant”).

       See Powell, supra, at n.105; Hatch Bros. Co. v. Black, 165 P. 518, 519
      26

(Wyo. 1917).

                                           73
Right of Way Crisis, 11 Pace Envtl. L. Rev. 485, 491-94 (1994).

      In the leading Utah decision interpreting R.S. 2477, the state Supreme

Court explained:

      It has been held by numerous courts that the grant may be accepted
      by public use without formal action by public authorities, and that
      continued use of the road by the public for such length of time and
      under such circumstances as to clearly indicate an intention on the
      part of the public to accept the grant is sufficient. Montgomery v.
      Somers, 50 Or. 259, 90 P. 674; Murray v. City of Butte, 7 Mont. 61,
      14 P. 656; Hatch Bros. v. Black, 25 Wyo. 109, 165 P. 518; Sprague v.
      Stead, 56 Colo. 538, 139 P. 544. Other decisions are to the effect that
      an acceptance is shown by evidence of user for such a length of time
      and under such conditions as would establish a road by prescription,
      if the land over which it passed had been the subject of private
      ownership[,] Okanogan Co. v. Cheetham, 37 Wash. 682, 80 P. 262,
      70 L. R. A. 1027; City of Butte v. Mikosowitz, 39 Mont. 350, 102 P.
      593, or of public user for such time as is prescribed in state statutes
      upon which highways are deemed public highways. McRose v.
      Bottyer, 81 Cal. 122, 22 P. 393; Schwerdtle v. Placer County, 108
      Cal. 589, 41 P. 448; Walcott Tp. v. Skauge, 6 N. D. 382, 71 N. W.
      544; Great N. R. Co. v. Viborg, 17 S. D. 374, 97 N. W. 6. See, also,
      annotation on necessity and sufficiency of acceptance, L. R. A.
      1917A, 355.


Lindsay Land & Live Stock Co. v. Churnos, 285 P. 646, 648 (Utah 1929), cited in

Hodel, 848 F.2d at 1082 n.13. Looking to the Utah statutes in force at the time

the right of way was claimed to have been accepted, the Court held that the period

of user necessary for acceptance of an R.S. 2477 right of way was ten years. Id.,

citing Laws of Utah 1886, ch. 12, § 2 (“A highway shall be deemed and taken as

dedicated and abandoned to the use of the Public when it has been continuously


                                        74
and uninterruptedly used as a Public thoroughfare for a period of ten years.”).

      Acceptance of an R.S. 2477 right of way in Utah thus requires continuous

public use for a period of ten years. The question then becomes how continuous

and intensive the public use must be. The decisions make clear that occasional or

desultory use is not sufficient. In the decision just quoted, the Utah Supreme

Court stated: “While it is difficult to fix a standard by which to measure what is a

public use or a public thoroughfare, it can be said here that the road was used by

many and different persons for a variety of purposes; that it was open to all who

desired to use it; that the use made of it was as general and extensive as the

situation and surroundings would permit, had the road been formally laid out as a

public highway by public authority.” Lindsay Land & Live Stock, 285 P. at 648.

      The requirements for establishing acceptance of a right of way by user

cannot, we think, be captured by verbal formulas alone. It is necessary to set

forth the factual circumstances of the decided cases, both those recognizing and

those not recognizing the validity of R.S. 2477 claims. On remand, the district

court will have the difficult task of determining whether the Counties have met

their burden of demonstrating acceptance under these precedents. 27

      In Lindsay Land & Live Stock, the Utah Supreme Court described the


      27
        On remand, the parties and the district court are not limited to precedents
discussed in this opinion.

                                          75
evidence bearing on usage of the claimed road in great detail:

      The road extends across the lands in a general easterly and westerly
      direction following a part of its distance through a narrow canyon or
      pass called Davenport canyon. At the eastern terminus of the road is
      a large area of mountain land valuable for grazing animals in the
      summer season, a portion of which is now the Cache National Forest,
      and a portion in private ownership. This area has been extensively
      used for summer grazing for many years, by owners of sheep who
      trailed them over the route in question from the settled portions of
      the country lying to west, to the summer range in the spring of the
      year and back again in the fall. In 1876 a sawmill was constructed in
      Davenport canyon and the road in question was first definitely
      located and commenced to be used. People generally from the cities
      and villages in Box Elder and Cache counties approaching from the
      West traveled the road for the purpose of hauling lumber from the
      sawmill, and others from Ogden City and Ogden Valley, who had
      access to the eastern terminus of the road in question, used it for
      similar purposes. Other sawmills were set up at different places along
      the road during the years before 1890, and the road was generally
      traveled by many persons who had occasion to do so for the purpose
      of hauling logs to the sawmills and hauling lumber and slabs
      therefrom, and going to and from the sawmills for other purposes. In
      about the year 1885 a mining excitement in the locality resulted in
      the establishment of a mining camp called La Plata near the road in
      question. Houses were built, a post office established, and several
      hundred people resided in the camp for five or more years. During
      this period the road in question was traveled extensively by the
      general public in going to and from the mining camp. During all of
      the time from 1876 until shortly before the commencement of this
      action the road was used by numerous owners of sheep who had
      occasion to go that way for the purpose of trailing their herds to and
      from the summer range, and for the purpose of moving their camps
      and supplies to their herds. The use of the road for this purpose was
      general and extensive. One witness stated that “there must have been
      a hundred herds that went up there,” another that he had “seen as
      high as seven herds a day” going over the road. The mining business
      ceased in about the year 1890 and a few years later the saw mills
      disappeared. From since about the year 1900 the use of the road has
      been confined to stockmen driving their herds and hauling their

                                        76
      supplies and camp outfits over it, and to a less frequent use by
      hunters, fishermen, and others who had occasion to travel over it. At
      times bridges were built and short dugways constructed by persons
      directly interested, but it does not appear that any public money was
      ever expended to maintain or repair the road. During the last four or
      five years the road in places has become impassable to ordinary
      vehicles, and has been used only for driving animals, pack outfits,
      etc., over it. Before the year 1894 the lands traversed by the road
      were unappropriated public lands of the United States. During the
      period of 1894 to 1904 the title to the lands passed from the federal
      government to the plaintiff or its grantors. The use of the road as
      above described was not interrupted by the change in the title or
      ownership of the lands, but continued thereafter as before stated.
      There was evidence that the travel over the road did not always
      follow an identical or uniform line, but at times and in a few places
      varied somewhat therefrom, and that sheep when trailing across
      would sometimes depart from the line of the road. There was ample
      positive evidence, however, that the road as described by the findings
      and decree was substantially the line and course of the road as it had
      been traveled and used for more than fifty years.


Id. at 647. Notwithstanding this extensive evidence of public use, the owner of

the lands over which the route was located contended “that the use of the road, as

proved, was not such as amounted to a continuous and uninterrupted use as a

public thoroughfare.” Id. at 648. The court responded:

      If the claim rested alone upon the use of the road for sawmill
      purposes, or for mining purposes, or for the trailing of sheep, the
      question would be more difficult. But here the road connected two
      points between which there was occasion for considerable public
      travel. The road was a public convenience. When sawmills were
      established on or near the road, it was used, not only by those
      conducting the sawmills, but by many others who went to the
      sawmills to get lumber, etc. During the period when the mining camp
      existed in the vicinity, the road was unquestionably used very
      extensively by the general public for general purposes. And all the

                                        77
      time it was used as a general way for the driving or trailing of sheep.
      This latter use was not by a few persons, but by many persons, and it
      involved more than the mere driving of animals on the road. Camp
      outfits and supplies accompanied the herds and were moved over the
      road in camp wagons and on pack horses.


Id. The court thus concluded that the trial court “was justified in finding that the

road had been continuously and uninterruptedly used as a public thoroughfare for

more than ten years.” Id. at 648-49.

      We think it significant that the Utah Supreme Court stated that if the claim

rested “alone upon the use of the road for sawmill purposes, or for mining

purposes, or for the trailing of sheep, the question would be more difficult.” Id.

at 648. But where the “road was unquestionably used very extensively by the

general public for general purposes,” the court concluded an R.S. 2477 right of

way had been established. Id. At the opposite extreme, in Cassity v. Castagno,

347 P.2d 834, 835 (Utah 1959), the Utah Supreme Court declined to recognize an

R.S. 2477 right of way where one cattleman had a practice of herding his cattle

across the lands of another to get to and from winter grazing land. 28



      28
         In Deseret Livestock Co. v. Sharp, 259 P.2d 607, 609 (Utah 1953), which
involved a claim for a prescriptive easement under state law, the Court found that
the public had acquired a 100-foot wide easement across private land because the
route had been “traveled by various groups for a variety of private and
commercial uses” over a period of 50 years, but rejected a claim that a 3,000-foot
wide right of way had been established on the same route by the twice-annual
trailing of sheep.

                                          78
      Jeremy v. Bertagnole, 116 P.2d 420 (Utah 1941), is similarly instructive.

In that case, the owner of the servient estate conceded that a right of way had

been established by prescription, and the litigation concerned the width of that

right of way. Id. at 421. Nonetheless, the court discussed at length the evidence

in support of that legal conclusion. While technically relevant only to scope, this

discussion provides guidance regarding the quality and quantity of evidence the

Utah courts expect for proof of historical use. According to the Utah Supreme

Court, “some thirteen witnesses testified to the use of the road for vehicular and

other traffic between 1877 and 1900, and an equal number as to its use since the

latter date.” Id. at 423. The testimony covered the period from the 1870s until

the time of trial, around 1940. Id. at 424. The court noted, “True, such testimony

does not reveal that any witness used the road at weekly, monthly, or even yearly

intervals over a period of ten years.” Id. But the court described the “inference”

as “clearly a reasonable one” that the route had been used “for a number of years

in excess of that required,” and that the evidence was sufficient to prove “the

existence for many years of this roadway, openly used as the public might desire

for vehicular, pedestrian, and equestrian traffic.” Id.

      In Leo M. Bertagnole, Inc. v. Pine Meadow Ranches, 639 P.2d 211, 213

(Utah 1981), the Utah Supreme Court upheld a finding of a public road by

prescription where there was “evidence of the use of the road by large flocks of


                                          79
sheep, sheep camps, trucks, jeeps, heavy equipment, hunters, fishermen,

picnickers, campers, and sightseers” over a ten year period.

      In Boyer v. Clark, 326 P.2d 107 (Utah 1958), the Supreme Court of Utah

reversed a lower court judgment which had concluded that a “wagon trail” near

Coalville, Utah, was not an R.S. 2477 right of way. The land over which the road

crossed had passed into private hands in 1902, and the road had never been

maintained at public expense. The evidence recited by the court suggests that the

public use was less extensive than that in the previously discussed cases. The

principal witness, who was 84 years old at the time of trial, testified that he “had

used the road for over 50 years when hauling coal, crossing the open range,

driving cattle, sheep and courting the girl he later married,” and that “anyone who

wanted to” used the road for similar purposes. Id. at 108. An unspecified number

of “other witnesses” testified that the use of the road was not changed when the

property became private and that “anyone who wanted to use it to go deer hunting

or visiting with people living in the vicinity or to dances which were held in

Grass Creek did so.” Id. Apparently, “[t]he use of the road was not great because

comparatively few people had need to travel over it, but those of the public who

had such need, did so.” Id. The Supreme Court held:

      The uncontradicted evidence in the instant case disclosed that for a
      period exceeding 50 years, the public, even though not consisting of
      a great many persons, made a continuous and uninterrupted use of


                                          80
      Middle Canyon Road in traveling by wagon and other vehicles and by
      horse from Upton to Grass Creek and other points as often as they
      found it convenient or necessary. They trailed cattle, and sheep,
      hauled coal, and used this trail for other purposes in traveling from
      Grass Creek and various other points to and from Highway 133. This
      evidence was sufficient as a matter of law to establish a highway by
      dedication and the court erred in finding otherwise.


Id. at 109.

      In other jurisdictions we find decisions of a similar nature. In Wallowa

County v. Wade, 72 P. 793 (Or. 1903), an early decision involving a claimed route

across land homesteaded around the turn of the century, the Oregon Supreme

Court affirmed a decree recognizing a public road and enjoining the defendant

landowner from maintaining a fence across it. The evidence showed that “the

road was used continuously by the public as a highway for more than 10 years

prior to the construction of the fence.” Id. at 793. Witnesses testified that “all

this time it has been a plain, open, well-beaten track, and has been traveled by all

the people that live in that section of the county; that it is the only road used by

them in going to and returning from the county seat.” Id. In Dillingham

Commercial Co., Inc. v. City of Dillingham, 705 P.2d 410, 414 (Alaska 1985), the

Alaska Supreme Court recognized an R.S. 2477 right of way on the basis of the

uncontradicted testimony of two witnesses that the route had been used by the

public for beach access and for hauling freight into town. In Ball v. Stephens,

158 P.2d 207, 211 (Cal. Dist. Ct. App. 1945), the California District Court of

                                           81
Appeal recognized an R.S. 2477 claim along a route used originally by horse and

wagon and later “almost daily” by motor vehicles. The court summed up the

evidence as follows:

      The travel over the road prior to 1928 was irregular but that was due
      to the nature of the country and to the fact that only a limited number
      of people had occasion to go that way. However, many people used
      the road for different purposes. The use of the route by hunters,
      vacationists, miners and oil operators which brought the road into
      existence was a public use. Travel was not merely occasional; it was
      in our opinion substantial and sufficient to prove acceptance of the
      offer of the government of the right of way and to constitute it a
      highway by dedication under the state laws.


Id.

      By contrast, in Luchetti v. Bandler, 777 P.2d 1326 (N.M. Ct. App. 1989),

the New Mexico Court of Appeals affirmed a trial court decision rejecting an R.S.

2477 claim for a right of way, despite testimony by at least four witnesses that

they and other members of the public used the road for picnics, hiking, hunting,

and access to a spring. 29 The court concluded: “we cannot say that use to reach a

single private residence, hike, picnic, or gather wood, or to reach a watering hole,

was sufficient to require a finding of acceptance of the government’s offer to

dedicate the road as a public highway.” Id. at 1328. Similarly, in Moulton v.


      29
         Based on evidence that the road had become impassable and was closed
by wire shortly after the relevant time period, the Court of Appeals suggested that
the trial court “could have doubted that the road was used as extensively as
testified to by defendant’s witnesses.” Id. at 1328-29.

                                         82
Irish, 218 P. 1053 (Mont. 1923), the Montana Supreme Court reversed, as “not

supported by the evidence,” a trial court ruling that an R.S. 2477 highway existed,

where two witnesses testified to use of a “road or trail along the creek,” which

they used “perhaps ‘once a year, twice a year, three times; not over that; maybe

some years not at all.’” Id. at 1055, 1054. See also Hamerly v. Denton, 359 P.2d

121, 125 (Alaska 1961) (acceptance not established by infrequent and sporadic

use, by sightseers, hunters, and trappers, of a dead-end road running into wild,

unenclosed, and uncultivated land); State ex rel. Dansie v. Nolan, 191 P. 150, 152

(Mont. 1920) (“It is inconceivable that it was the intention of Congress and of the

Legislature to say that two or more persons crossing at random on each of a dozen

trails . . . could constitute an acceptance of the government grant as to each of

such trails . . . .”); Town of Rolling v. Emrich, 99 N.W. 464, 465 (Wis. 1904)

(rejecting R.S. 2477 claim on the basis of “a few months’ desultory use by a few

persons of a logging road or trail through the woods, with no acts by the public

authorities of any kind”).

      3. The “mechanical construction” standard

      The BLM and SUWA argue that mere public use cannot suffice to establish

an R.S. 2477 right of way. Instead, following the BLM administrative

determinations in this case, they contend that R.S. 2477 requires that “[s]ome

form of mechanical construction must have occurred to construct or improve the


                                          83
highway.” BLM R.S. 2477 Administrative Determination(s) – San Juan County

Claims at 5, Aplt. App. Vol. 1 at 249 (“San Juan Admin. Det.”); Garfield Admin.

Det. at 4, Aplt. App. Vol. 2 at 307; see also Kane Admin. Det. at 5, Aplt. App.

Vol. 2 at 371. “A highway right-of-way cannot be established by haphazard,

unintentional, or incomplete actions. For example, the mere passage of vehicles

across the land, in the absence of any other evidence, is not sufficient to meet the

construction criteria of R.S. 2477 and to establish that a highway right-of-way

was granted.” “Evidence of actual construction may include such things as road

construction or maintenance records, aerial photography depicting characteristics

of physical construction, physical evidence of construction, testimony or

affidavits affirming that construction occurred, official United States Government

maps with legends showing types of roads, as well as other kinds of information.”

Id.

      The BLM and SUWA cite no pre-1976 authority for this interpretation of

R.S. 2477, and we are aware of none. No judicial or administrative interpretation

of the statute, prior to its repeal, ever treated “mechanical construction” as a pre-

requisite to acceptance of the grant of an R.S. 2477 right of way. The standard

has no support in the common law, which, as we have noted, 30 formed the

statutory backdrop for R.S. 2477. In no state was mechanical construction of a


      30
           See pages 54-60 above.

                                          84
highway deemed necessary for acceptance of a public right of way. Even the

BLM took the opposite position not long ago. See BLM Manual 2801, Rel.

2-263, 2801.48B1b (March 8, 1989), reprinted in 1993 D.O.I. Report to Congress,

App. II, Exh. M (“passage of vehicles by users over time may equal

construction”).

      The Utah Supreme Court has recognized the validity of an R.S. 2477 claim

despite the fact that the road in question “has never been maintained at public

expense,” and without any mention of evidence of construction. Boyer v. Clark,

326 P.2d 107, 108 (Utah 1958). In other cases recognizing R.S. 2477 rights of

way, the Utah Supreme Court noted construction that had been done on the roads,

but only as evidence contributing to the general conclusion of sufficient public

use, and without treating the issue of construction as legally significant. Lindsay

Land & Live Stock Co. v. Churnos, 285 P. 646, 647 (Utah 1929) (“At times

bridges were built and short dugways constructed by persons directly interested,

but it does not appear that any public money was ever expended to maintain or

repair the road.”); Jeremy v. Bertagnole, 116 P.2d 420, 421 (Utah 1941) (calling

the road “well traveled, worked, and defined”). Similarly, in Hughes v. Veal, 114

P. 1081, 1083 (Kan. 1911), the court noted that “work has been done on the road

by those in charge of the highways in that locality,” but in determining that the

right of way had been accepted by the public, the court “rest[ed] the decision” on


                                         85
“the concurring acceptance of the officers and the public itself at and shortly after

the location of the road.”

        The few decisions in which a construction standard is discussed rejected it.

In Nicolas v. Grassle, 267 P. 196, 197 (Colo. 1928), the Colorado Supreme Court

held:

        The district court . . . thought the word ‘construction’ in the
        congressional grant required that, to constitute an acceptance, work
        must be done on the road. We do not think so. The purpose of the
        act was to give every settler, however unable to build a road, lawful
        access to whatever land he chose to enter. If access is feasible
        without work with pick and shovel no such work is necessary, and it
        would be a mistake to hold that action by any governmental authority
        is required.


In Wilkenson v. Dep’t of Interior, 634 F. Supp. 1265, 1272 (D. Colo. 1986), the

federal district court stated:

        The defendants cite the rule of statutory construction that all words
        in a statute must be given effect, and argue that for the grant to be
        accepted, this rule requires that there be actual ‘construction,’
        meaning ‘more than mere use’ of a highway. However, in Colorado,
        mere use is sufficient.
              [T]he statute is an express dedication of a right of way
              for roads over unappropriated government lands,
              acceptance of which by the public results from ‘use by
              those for whom it was necessary or convenient.’ It is
              not required that ‘work’ shall be done on such a road, or
              that public authorities shall take action in the premises.
              User is the requisite element, and it may be by any who
              have occasion to travel over public lands, and if the use
              be by only one, still it suffices.


                                          86
(quoting Leach v. Manhart, 77 P.2d 652, 653 (Colo. 1938)); accord, Barker v.

County of La Plata, 49 F.Supp.2d 1203, 1214 (D. Colo. 1999). See also Wallowa

County v. Wade, 72 P. 793, 794 (Or. 1903) (affirming R.S. 2477 claim despite the

servient landowner’s showing that “the road over the land inclosed by him had

never been worked or improved by the county authorities, or under their

direction”); Fitzgerald v. Puddicombe, 918 P.2d 1017, 1020 (Alaska 1996) (“[n]or

does the route need to be significantly developed to qualify as a ‘highway’ for RS

2477 purposes”); Ball v. Stephens, 158 P.2d 207, 209 (Cal. Dist. Ct. App. 1945)

(recognizing R.S. 2477 right of way even though “it was never improved or

maintained by the county”).

      Consistent with our conclusion that acceptance of the grant of R.S. 2477

rights of way is governed by long-standing principles of state law and common

law, we cannot accept the argument that mechanical construction is necessary to

an R.S. 2477 claim. Adoption of the “mechanical construction” criterion would

alter over a century of judicial and administrative interpretation. This is not to

say that evidence of construction is irrelevant. Construction or repair at public

expense has sometimes been treated as a substitute for public use, 31 as shortening


      31
         Memmott v. Anderson, 642 P.2d 750, 753 (Utah 1982); see Streeter v.
Stalnaker, 85 N.W. 47, 48 (Neb. 1901) (“In this case there was not only evidence
of user, general and long continued, but also proof that the public authorities had
assumed control over the road, and had worked and improved a portion of it.
                                                                       (continued...)

                                          87
the period of public use necessary for establishing acceptance, 32 or as evidence of

public use or lack thereof. 33 Thus, although there are no Utah cases directly on

point, we hold that evidence of actual construction (appropriate to the historical

period in question), or lack thereof, can be taken into consideration as evidence of

the required extent of public use, though it is not a necessary or sufficient

      31
        (...continued)
Both facts were competent evidence tending to show an acceptance of a
dedication.”); Moulton v. Irish, 218 P. 1053, 1055 (Mont. 1923) (finding no
evidence “to establish the construction of a road or its continuous use by the
public over a definite and fixed course”) (emphasis added); Wilson v. Williams,
87 P.2d 683, 685 (N.M. 1939) (“Generally the construction of a highway or
establishment thereof by public user is sufficient.”); Town of Rolling v. Emrich,
99 N.W. 464, 465 (Wis. 1904) (acceptance of R.S. 2477 right of way could be “by
county authorities by surveying, platting, and marking out a road,” or by 20 years’
use by the public); Roberts v. Swim, 784 P.2d 339, 342-43, 346 (Idaho Ct. App.
1989) (right of way could be established under state law by prescriptive easement
on the basis of “open, notorious, continuous, uninterrupted use” for five years, or
as a public highway by public maintenance and use for five years).
      32
        In Washington, the period of public use necessary for acceptance of an
R.S. 2477 right of way was seven years where the road was “worked and kept up
at the expense of the public,” and ten years otherwise. Stofferan v. Okanogan
County, 136 P. 484, 487 (Wash. 1913).
      33
         In the course of rejecting an R.S. 2477 claim, the Wisconsin Supreme
Court noted that “there was no proof of any expenditure of public funds thereon,
or of any working of the same by highway officials.” Town of Rolling v. Emrich,
99 N.W. 464, 465 (Wis. 1904). See also Simon v. Pettit, 687 P.2d 1299, 1303
(Colo. 1984) (“evidence that the city had maintained the footpaths or included
them on a map of the city’s street system would be a strong indication that the
paths had acquired a status as public highways”); Hatch Bros. Co. v. Black, 165 P.
518, 520 (Wyo. 1917) (noting that “those using the road had done considerable
work thereon by making dugways, constructing bridges, etc.; one witness
testifying that he had spent about $500 on it about 1891”) superseded by statute
as noted in Yeager v. Forbes, 78 P.3d 241, 255 (Wyo. 2003).

                                         88
element. This case does not raise the question, and we do not decide, whether a

road officially laid out or erected for public use by state or local governmental

authority, prior to repeal of R.S. 2477, would qualify as a highway without proof

of ten years’ continuous public use. See Utah Code Ann. Sec. 72-1-102(7) (West

2004).

         The BLM and SUWA defend their proposed “mechanical construction”

standard primarily as dictated by the “plain meaning” of R.S. 2477, which grants

the rights of way for the “construction” of highways. The BLM quotes the

definition of “construction” from an 1860 edition of Webster’s Dictionary as

“[t]he act of building, or of devising and forming, fabrication.” BLM Br. 48.

SUWA quotes a similar definition from an 1865 edition of Webster’s as:

         1. The act of construction; the act of building, or of devising and
         forming; fabrication; composition. 2. The manner of putting together
         the parts of any thing so as to give to the whole its peculiar form;
         structure; conformation.


SUWA Br. 21. That same dictionary supplies these synonyms: to “build; erect;

form; make; originate; invent; fabricate.” Id.

         We are not persuaded. First, it would take more semantic chutzpah than we

can muster to assert that a word used by Congress in 1866 has a “plain meaning”

that went undiscerned by courts and executive officers for over 100 years. But

even confining ourselves to the quoted dictionary definitions of “construction,”


                                          89
we are left with a wide range of meanings, including “build,” “form,” and

“make.” If nineteenth-century pioneers made a road across the wilderness by

repeated use—the so-called “beaten path”—this would fall squarely within the

scope of the quoted definition. Such a road would be “formed” and “made” even

if no mechanical means were employed. See Cent. Pac. Ry. Co. v. Alameda

County, 284 U.S. 463, 467 (1932) (referring to R.S. 2477 roads originally “formed

by the passage of wagons, etc., over the natural soil”) (emphasis added); Wallowa

County v. Wade, 72 P. 793 (Or. 1903) (“all this time [the road] has been a plain,

open, well-beaten track”). Moreover, we must not forget that R.S. 2477 was

enacted against a backdrop of a well-developed common law of highways. Early

interpreters naturally assumed that its terms should be read in light of the common

law concepts of dedication and acceptance. Thus, courts would speak of a

highway being “definitely established and constructed in some one of the ways

authorized by the laws of the state in which the land is situated,” including having

been “used or traveled by the people generally for the period named in the statutes

of limitation.” State ex rel. Dansie v. Nolan, 191 P. 150, 152, 153 (Mont. 1920)

(emphasis added and citation and quotations omitted).

      In addition to their “plain language” argument, the BLM and SUWA seek

support in Bear Lake & River Waterworks & Irrigation Co. v. Garland, 164 U.S.

1, (1896), which addressed the meaning of the term “construction” in a different


                                         90
section of the same statute that contained R.S. 2477. That section dealt with

grants of rights of way for “the construction . . . of ditches.” Id. at 17 (quoting

Act of July 26, 1866, Ch. 262, § 9, 14 Stat. 251, 253 (later codified as R.S.

2339)). In Bear Lake, the Court held that no right of way vests against the

government “from the mere fact of such possession, unaccompanied by the

performance of any labor thereon. . . . It is the doing of the work, the completion

of the well, or the digging of the ditch . . . that gives the right to use the water in

the well, or the right of way for the ditches of the canal upon or through the

public land.” 164 U.S. at 18-19. The BLM and SUWA argue that the same word,

“construction,” must be given the same meaning in two sections of what was

originally the same statute.

      Again, we are unpersuaded. The dispute in Bear Lake was over which of

two creditors had priority with respect to a canal owned by the debtor: the canal

construction company, which had a lien on the product of its labors, or the

mortgage company, which held a lien on the debtor’s real property. The outcome

turned on whether the debtor acquired title to the canal property when it began the

project (in which case the mortgage company would prevail), or upon completion

of the canal (in which case the construction company enjoyed a priority). The

Court held that title did not vest until the canal had been dug, just as an R.S. 2477

right of way does not vest until the road is formed, by user or otherwise. The type


                                            91
or degree of work expended on the ditch was immaterial to the decision. It so

happens that canals, unlike roads, cannot be created by mere use, so the question

with which we are concerned could not arise in Bear Lake. 34

      SUWA also points to a number of instances in which the Utah legislature

appropriated funds for the construction of roads, specifying work that included

surveying, cleaning, grading, ditching, macadamizing, and so forth. But that

some roads were built to a higher level of engineering specifications does not

mean that other roads, formed by repeated use, were not “constructed.” 35

      SUWA supplements its argument that “construction” must refer to

“resource-intensive construction,” SUWA Br. 28, by reference to the probable

intention of Congress in granting rights of way for highways. According to

SUWA, Congress enacted R.S. 2477 “to spur investment in and development of

internal improvements” by “grant[ing] a permanent right-of-way in exchange for

the ‘construction’ of highways.” Id. at 33. “Like other land-grant statutes, R.S.



      34
        The same is true of the construction of railroads. See Jamestown & N.
R.R. Co. v. Jones, 177 U.S. 125, 132 (1900) (holding that railroad right of way
under the Act of March 3, 1875, ch. 152, 18 Stat. 482, vested upon “actual
construction” of the road).
      35
        SUWA quotes this Court’s Hodel decision to the effect that
“‘[c]onstruction’ indisputably does not include the beaten path.” SUWA Br. 24
(quoting Hodel, 848 F.2d at 1080). SUWA neglects to note that the quotation is
from the Hodel court’s summary of the position of the Sierra Club in the case, a
position which was not adopted by the Court.

                                        92
2477 provided an incentive and reward for the expenditure required to construct a

highway.” Id. at 28. The trouble with this theory is that those who made the

investment in the road did not receive any rights to it; R.S. 2477 rights of way are

owned by the public and not by the individuals who “constructed” the highways.

A more probable intention of Congress was to ensure that widely used routes

would remain open to the public even after homesteaders or other land claimants

obtained title to the land over which the public traveled. That explanation of

congressional intent is more consistent with the common law interpretation than

with the Appellees’ proposed substitute.

      We must not project twenty-first (or twentieth) century notions of

“mechanical construction” onto an 1866 statute. Historical records of early

southern Utah road “construction” indicate that work was performed as

economically as possible: if wagons could be conveyed across the land without

altering the topography, there was no need for more extensive construction work.

Typically, little more was done than move boulders, clear underbrush or trees, or

dig the occasional crude dugway. See Jay M. Haymond, A Survey of the History

of the Road Construction Industry in Utah 2 (1967) (unpublished M.A. thesis,

Brigham Young University) (on file with the University of Utah Marriott Library)

(“road building in the early days consisted only of removing rocks and stumps and

filling in holes”). This is one reason an early court rejected the argument that


                                           93
“work must be done on the road” to constitute acceptance of an R.S. 2477 grant.

Nicolas v. Grassle, 267 P. 196, 197 (Colo. 1928). “If access is feasible without

work with pick and shovel no such work is necessary, and it would be a mistake

to hold that action by any governmental authority is required.” Id. See also Ball

v. Stephens, 158 P.2d 207, 210 (Cal. Dist. Ct. App. 1945) (the disputed route

“came to be a road by means of being used as a road and in the same fashion that

many other mountain roads have come into existence”); id. at 211 (the land “is

somewhat flat and vehicles could be and were driven across it without the

necessity of road construction”). Surely Congress did not require mechanical

construction where no construction was needed. The necessary extent of

“construction” would be the construction necessary to enable the general public to

use the route for its intended purposes.

      For this reason, we are skeptical that there is much difference, in practice,

between a “construction” standard (if applied in light of contemporary conditions)

and the traditional legal standard of continuous public use. If a particular route

sustained substantial use by the general public over the necessary period of time,

one of two things must be true: either no mechanical construction was necessary,

or any necessary construction must have taken place. It is hard to imagine how a

road sufficient to meet the user standard could fail to satisfy a realistic standard

of construction. Thus, we do not necessarily disagree with the BLM’s statement


                                           94
that:

        A highway right-of-way cannot be established by haphazard,
        unintentional, or incomplete actions. For example, the mere passage
        of vehicles across the land, in the absence of any other evidence, is
        not sufficient to meet the construction criteria of R.S. 2477 and to
        establish that a highway right-of-way was granted.


Aplt. App. Vol. 1 at 249; Aplt. App. Vol. 2 at 307, 452. The standard for

acceptance of an R.S. 2477 right of way in Utah is “continued use of the road by

the public for such length of time and under such circumstances as to clearly

indicate an intention on the part of the public to accept the grant.” Lindsay Land

& Live Stock Co. v. Churnos, 285 P. 646, 648 (Utah 1929). As the precedents in

Utah and other states demonstrate, a road may be created intentionally, by

continued public use, without record evidence of what the BLM defines as

“mechanical construction.” Such action is not haphazard, unintentional, or

incomplete, though it might lack centralized direction; and the legal standard is

not satisfied “merely” by evidence that vehicles may have passed over the land at

some time in the past. That is a caricature of the common law standard.

        Indeed, contrary to the apparent assumptions of the parties, it is quite

possible for R.S. 2477 claims to pass the BLM’s “mechanical construction”

standard but to fail the common law test of continuous public use. See Town of

Rolling v. Emrich, 99 N.W. 464, 464 (Wis. 1904) (rejecting R.S. 2477 claim

despite evidence that two men “cut out a road . . . through the 80 acres in question

                                           95
to haul logs upon”); Roediger v. Cullen, 175 P.2d 669, 674, 677 (Wash. 1946)

(rejecting R.S. 2477 claim despite evidence of construction and repair by

members of the community). For example, according to the BLM administrative

decision, San Juan County route 507, in the Hart’s Point area, shows signs of

mechanical construction: bulldozer grouser marks, berms, pushed trees and debris,

and cut banks, San Juan Admin. Det. at 11-12, Aplt. App. Vol. 1 at 255-56; and a

witness testified that the road was constructed by mining companies in the 1950s,

using bulldozers, for the purpose of accessing seismic lines. Id. at 11, 16. Yet

the BLM found that “the use of this route by the public has been at most sporadic

and infrequent.” Id. 18. 36 The record indicates that the same may be true of

others of the contested routes. Large parts of southern Utah are crisscrossed by

old mining and logging roads constructed for a particular purpose and used for a

limited period of time, but not by the general public. Thus, we cannot agree with

Appellees’ argument that a “mechanical construction” standard is necessary to

avoid recognition of “a multitude of property claims far beyond the scope of

Congress’s express grant in R.S. 2477.” SUWA Br. 39. The common law

standard of user, which takes evidence of construction into consideration along

with other evidence of use by the general public, seems better calculated to


      36
         We make these observations regarding route 507 for purposes of
illustration only, and without prejudice to the district court’s factfinding on
remand.

                                          96
distinguish between rights of way genuinely accepted through continual public

use over a lengthy period of time, and routes which, though mechanically

constructed (at least in part), served limited purposes for limited periods of time,

and never formed part of the public transportation system.

      We therefore see no persuasive reason not to follow the established

common law and state law interpretation of the establishment of R.S. 2477 rights

of way.

      4. Definition of “highway.”

      R.S. 2477 grants “the right of way for the construction of highways over

public lands, not reserved for public uses.” At common law the term “highway”

was a broad term encompassing all sorts of rights of way for public travel. In his

magisterial Commentaries on American Law, Chancellor James Kent wrote that

“Every thoroughfare which is used by the public, and is, in the language of the

English books, ‘common to all the king’s subjects,’ is a highway, whether it be a

carriage-way, a horse-way, a foot-way, or a navigable river.” James Kent, 3

Commentaries on American Law 572-73, *432 (10th ed. 1860). Accord, Isaac

Grant Thompson, A Practical Treatise on the Law of Highways 1 (1868) (“A

highway is a way over which the public at large have a right of passage, whether

it be a carriage way, a horse way, a foot way, or a navigable river”); Joseph K.

Angell & Thomas Durfee, A Treatise on the Law of Highways 3-4 (2d ed. 1868)

                                          97
(“Highways are of various kinds, according to the state of civilization and wealth

of the country through which they are constructed, and according to the nature

and extent of the traffic to be carried on upon them, – from the rude paths of the

aboriginal people, carried in direct lines over the natural surface of the country,

passable only by passengers or pack-horses, to the comparatively perfect modern

thoroughfare.”). The Department of the Interior expressly adopted this

interpretation in a decision in 1902:

      The grant of right of way by Section 2477, R. S., is not restricted to
      those which permit passage of broad, or of wheeled, vehicles, or yet
      to highways made, owned, or maintained by the public. Highways are
      the means of communication and of commerce. The more difficult
      and rugged is the country, the greater is their necessity and the more
      reason exists to encourage and aid their construction.


The Pasadena and Mt. Wilson Toll Road Co. v. Schneider, 31 Pub. Lands Dec.

405, 407-408 (1902). Under traditional interpretations, therefore, the term

“highway” is congruent with and does not restrict the “continuous public use”

standard: any route that satisfies the user requirement is, by definition, a

“highway.”

      The BLM and SUWA urge us to adopt a more restrictive definition. In its

administrative determinations in this case, the BLM offered the following

definition of the statutory term “highways”:

      A highway is a thoroughfare used by the public for the passage of


                                          98
      vehicles carrying people and goods from place to place (BLM
      Instruction Memorandum No. UT 98-56). The claimed highway
      right-of-way must be public in nature and must have served as a
      highway when the underlying public lands were available for R.S.
      2477 purposes. It is unlikely that a route used by a single entity or
      used only a few times would qualify as a highway, since the route
      must have an open public nature and uses. Similarly, a highway
      connects the public with identifiable destinations or places. The
      route should lead vehicles somewhere, but it is not required that the
      route connect to cities. For example, a highway can allow public
      access to a scenic area, a trail head, a business, or other place used
      by and open to the public. Routes that do not lead to an identifiable
      destination are unlikely to qualify.


San Juan Admin. Det. at 5, Aplt. App. Vol. 1 at 249; see also Garfield Admin.

Det. at 5, Aplt. App. Vol. 2 at 308; Kane Admin. Det. at 5, Aplt. App. Vol. 2 at

371. The district court found this interpretation by the BLM “to be both

reasonable and persuasive” and concluded that “BLM did not err in its

interpretation of the term ‘highways’ in R.S. 2477.” 147 F.Supp.2d at 1143-44.

      For purposes of this case, we need not consider the broader implications of

the common law definition, because this case involves exclusively claims for

roads appropriate to vehicular use. 37 Moreover, there is no disagreement

regarding the BLM’s holding that “[t]he claimed highway right-of-way must be

public in nature” and that “[i]t is unlikely that a route used by a single entity or

used only a few times would qualify as a highway, since the route must have an


      37
        The Counties stated at oral argument that they were limiting their claims
to routes appropriate for vehicles.

                                          99
open public nature and uses.” That is simply a restatement of the “continuous

public use” requirement of Utah law. The parties disagree, however, over

whether R.S. 2477 routes are limited to roads that lead to “identifiable

destinations or places.”

      Cases interpreting R.S. 2477, and analogous cases involving claims to

public easements across private land under state law, occasionally refer to a lack

of identifiable destinations as one factor bearing on the ultimate question of

continuous public use. For example, in finding a valid R.S. 2477 right of way in

Lindsay Land & Live Stock Co., the Utah Supreme Court noted that the “road

connected two points between which there was occasion for considerable public

travel,” 285 P. at 648, while in Moulton v. Irish, 218 P. at 1055, the Montana

Supreme Court noted as one reason to reject an R.S. 2477 claim the fact that the

road “did not lead to any town, settlement, post office, or home.” See also

Dillingham Commercial Co., 705 P.2d at 414 (“a right of way created by public

user pursuant to 43 U.S.C. § 932 connotes definite termini”).

      It is far from clear that this factor has much practical significance. None of

the contested rights of way were rejected by the BLM solely on the basis of a lack

of identifiable destinations. It is hard to imagine a road satisfying the

“continuous public use” requirement that did not “lead anywhere.” Moreover,

given the BLM’s concession that “a highway can allow public access to a scenic


                                         100
area, a trail head, a business, or other place used by and open to the public,” it is

hard to imagine much of a road that would not satisfy the standard.

      We therefore hold that, on remand, the district court should consider

evidence regarding identifiable destinations as part of its overall determination of

whether a contested route satisfies the requirements under state law for

recognition as a valid R.S. 2477 claim.

      5. 1910 Coal Withdrawal

      R.S. 2477 rights of way may be established only over lands that are “not

reserved for public uses.” The BLM determined that a 1910 coal withdrawal

“reserved for public use” over 5.8 million acres of land in Utah, including land

over which Garfield County claimed three rights of way. Garfield Admin. Det. at

9, 19, 32, and 38, Aplt. App. Vol. 2 at 312, 322, 335, and 341. It therefore

invalidated those rights of way on the ground that they were not established “at a

time when the lands were open for establishment of a claim under R.S. 2477.” Id.

at 32. The district court affirmed. We must decide whether the coal withdrawal

constitutes a “reserv[ation] for public use” under R.S. 2477. The text of the coal

withdrawal states:

      “[S]ubject to all of the provisions, limitations, exceptions, and
      conditions contained in [the Pickett Act and the Coal Lands Act],
      there is hereby withdrawn from settlement, location, sale or entry,
      and reserved for classification and appraisement with respect to coal
      values all of those certain lands of the United States . . . described as

                                          101
      follows: [describing over 5.8 million acres of land in Utah].”



      a.     Why the 1910 Coal Withdrawal was not a “reservation”

      It is important to note at the outset that “withdrawal” and “reservation” are

not synonymous terms. Although Congress and the Supreme Court have

occasionally used the terms interchangeably, see 1 American Law of Mining §

14.01 n.1 (2d ed. 2004), that does not eliminate their distinct meaning. A

withdrawal makes land unavailable for certain kinds of private appropriation

under the public land laws. Charles F. Wheatley, Jr., II Study of Withdrawals and

Reservations of Public Domain Lands A-1 (1969) (report to Public Land Law

Review Commission). Just as Congress, pursuant to its authority under the

Property Clause, can pass laws opening the public lands to private settlement, so

also it can remove the public lands from the operation of those same laws. That

is what a withdrawal does. It temporarily suspends the operation of some or all of

the public land laws, preserving the status quo while Congress or the executive

decides on the ultimate disposition of the subject lands. Id.

      A reservation, on the other hand, goes a step further: it not only withdraws

the land from the operation of the public land laws, but also dedicates the land to

a particular public use. As the first edition of Black’s Law Dictionary defines it:

“In public land laws of the United States, a reservation is a tract of land, more or


                                         102
less considerable in extent, which is by public authority withdrawn from sale or

settlement, and appropriated to specific public uses; such as parks, military posts,

Indian lands, etc.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1031 (1st ed. 1891). Thus, a

reservation necessarily includes a withdrawal; but it also goes a step further,

effecting a dedication of the land “to specific public uses.” See also 63C Am.

Jur. 2d Public Lands § 31 (2005) (“Public land is withdrawn when the

government withholds an area of federal land from settlement, sale, location, or

entry under some or all of the general land laws in order to limit activities. . . .

‘Reserved’ lands have been expressly withdrawn from the public domain by

statute, executive order, or treaty and dedicated as a park, military post, or Native

American land or for some other specific federal use.”) (footnotes omitted). The

text of R.S. 2477 reinforces this point by requiring not merely that the land be

“reserved,” but that it be reserved “for public uses.”

      The text of the Coal Lands Act of 1910, subject to which President Taft

issued the 1910 coal withdrawal, adheres to this distinction. The Act applied to

all “[u]nreserved public lands . . . which have been withdrawn or classified as

coal lands.” 30 U.S.C. § 83. The use of the phrase, “unreserved public lands

which have been withdrawn,” indicates that lands could be “withdrawn” or

classified as coal lands under the 1910 act and yet remain “unreserved.”

      Turning to the text of the withdrawal, we read that the subject lands were


                                           103
“withdrawn from settlement, location, sale or entry, and reserved for

classification and appraisement with respect to coal values.” On its face,

“withdrawn . . . and reserved” sounds like a reservation. But just because a

withdrawal uses the term “reserved” does not mean that it reserves land “for

public uses.” We must decide whether “reserved for classification and

appraisement with respect to coal values” is equivalent to “reserved for public

uses.”

         We conclude that it is not. As noted above, land is “reserved” when it is

dedicated to a specific public purpose. This is not what the coal withdrawal did.

Instead, the coal withdrawal narrowly, and temporarily, removed potential coal

lands from certain kinds of private appropriation. This is evident from its

historical context. In the early 1900s, the nation confronted a coal shortage which

coincided with the discovery of “widespread fraud in the administration of federal

coal lands.” Amoco Prod. Co. v. S. Ute Indian Tribe, 526 U.S. 865, 868 (1999).

Unscrupulous characters would obtain land under other pretenses, only to use the

land for coal mining without having to pay for the real value. Due to a lack of

funding, the Department of the Interior had to rely on affidavits of entrymen to

determine whether lands were valuable for coal or not. This allowed railroads

and other coal interests to obtain vast tracts of coal lands under railroad and

agricultural grants for a nominal price. President Roosevelt “responded to the


                                          104
perceived crisis by withdrawing 64 million acres of public land thought to contain

coal from disposition under the public land laws.” Id. at 869. This gave the

United States an opportunity “to reexamine and reclassify lands which it thought

might have exceptional value, thus preventing them from being disposed of at a

price which took no account of that value.” Confederated Bands of Ute Indians v.

United States, 1948 WL 5025, *5 (Ct. Cl. 1948) (unpublished). President

Roosevelt’s order did not, however, reserve the withdrawn lands for a public use.

As a 1924 Department of the Interior decision explained: “Temporary withdrawals

made prior to . . . classification or reservation merely for the purpose of

withholding the land from further disposition under the public land laws until

further investigation has been made and a decision arrived at as to the character

of the land and its chief value, have no effect as raising any presumption as to the

character of the land, nor do they dedicate it to any special purpose or reserve it

for any special form of disposal.” George G. Frandsen, 50 Pub. Lands Dec. 516,

520 (1924).

      President Roosevelt’s broad withdrawal outraged homesteaders and other

western interests, as even those homesteaders who had made a valid entry lost the

opportunity to obtain a patent unless they could prove that the land was not

valuable for coal. Amoco Prod., 526 U.S. at 869. Congress thus crafted a

compromise with the Coal Lands Acts of 1909 and 1910. The 1909 Act protected


                                         105
the rights of homesteaders who had entered coal lands prior to President

Roosevelt’s 1906 withdrawal. It authorized the federal government to issue

patents for those lands, subject to “a reservation to the United States of all coal in

said lands.” 30 U.S.C. § 81. The 1910 Act opened the remaining coal lands to

entry under the homestead laws, subject to the same reservation of coal to the

United States. See 30 U.S.C. § 83; Amoco Prod., 526 U.S. at 870. Taken

together, these acts achieved “a narrow reservation of the [coal] resource that

would address the exigencies of the crisis at hand without unduly burdening the

rights of homesteaders or impeding the settlement of the West.” Amoco Prod.,

526 U.S. at 875.

      Thus, not only were the lands subject to the coal withdrawal not “reserved”

for any particular “public use”; they remained open to settlement, sale, and entry

under several important public land laws, including the homestead laws, the

desert-land law, and certain mining laws. See Act of June 22, 1910, ch. 318, 36

Stat. 583 (providing that “unreserved public lands . . . which have been

withdrawn or classified as coal lands . . . shall be subject to appropriate entry

under the homestead laws . . . [and] the desert-land law, to selection under . . . the

Carey Act, and to withdrawal under . . . the Reclamation Act”). 38 Because the


      38
        President Taft issued the 1910 coal withdrawal “subject to all of the
provisions, limitations, exceptions, and conditions contained in [the Pickett Act
                                                                      (continued...)

                                          106
lands subject to the coal withdrawal were “public lands, not reserved for public

uses,” they were available for establishment of rights of way under R.S. 2477.

      Indeed, because R.S. 2477 provided one of the most important means of

establishing access to homestead, desert-land, and mining claims, it would make

little sense for Congress to open public lands to private claims but forbid settlers

to construct highways to access those claims. As the BLM argued in prior

litigation, in response to the argument that withdrawals under the Taylor Act in

the 1930s precluded the establishment of R.S. 2477 rights of way:

      R.S. 2477 was essentially the only authority by which highways
      could be established across public lands by state and local
      governments. . . . The Congress and the Department of the Interior
      in the 1930’s were well aware of the distinction between opening
      lands to possible disposition through patent as opposed to the mere
      creation of an easement in state and local governments. Common
      sense also tells us that Congress would not have intended to leave no
      legal means for state and local governments to acquire highways
      across vast areas of the west.


Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance, IBLA 90-375, Answer of the Bureau of Land



      38
        (...continued)
and the Coal Lands Act].” The Pickett Act limited the effect of withdrawals on
certain of the mining laws, providing that withdrawals would not limit
“exploration, discovery, occupation, and purchase under the mining laws of the
United States, so far as the same apply to metalliferous minerals.” Act of June
25, 1910, ch. 421, 36 Stat. 847, as amended, Act of August 24, 1912, ch. 369, 37
Stat. 497. In other words, lands withdrawn under the Pickett Act remained
subject to the mining laws insofar as they applied to metalliferous minerals, such
as aluminum, copper, gold, iron, lead, nickel, silver, and zinc.

                                         107
Management to Additional Statement of Reasons of Appellants, at 6 (1990).

Common sense also tells us in this case that the narrow 1910 coal withdrawal,

which permitted widespread settlement under the homestead, desert-land, and

mining laws, was not meant to cut off the right to establish access to those claims.

      b.     Humboldt County v. United States

      The BLM seeks support for its position from the Ninth Circuit’s decision in

Humboldt County v. United States, 684 F.2d 1276 (9th Cir. 1982). In that case,

Humboldt County asserted an R.S. 2477 right of way over land withdrawn under

Executive Order No. 6910, issued in 1934, which withdrew “from settlement,

location, sale or entry, and reserved for classification” all of the vacant,

unreserved, and unappropriated public land in twelve western states, including

Nevada (in which Humboldt County lies) and Utah. See Executive Withdrawal

Order, 55 I.D. 205, 207 (1935). The Ninth Circuit focused its attention on what it

saw as the “crucial language” in R.S. 2477: the phrase “public lands.” 684 F.2d

at 1281. It then reasoned syllogistically: (1) “public lands” are lands “subject to

sale or other disposal under general laws”; (2) lands subject to Executive Order

No. 6910 were “not subject to sale or disposition”; (3) therefore, lands subject to

Executive Order 6910 were “not ‘public lands.’” Id.

      We find this argument based on Humboldt unpersuasive for several reasons.

First, neither the BLM nor SUWA has argued that the lands subject to the 1910

                                         108
coal withdrawal were not “public lands” for purposes of R.S. 2477. Instead, they

have argued that the coal withdrawal “reserved [the lands] for public uses.”

Humboldt says nothing about whether withdrawals “reserve” land for public use;

it therefore provides little, if any, support for the Appellees’ position.

      Moreover, even if the analysis underlying Humboldt were applied to lands

subject to the coal withdrawal, it would not lead to the same conclusion. For,

according to Humboldt, lands are “public” if they are “subject to sale or other

disposal under general laws.” Id. And lands covered by the coal withdrawal

remained subject to sale and disposition under the homestead and desert-land

laws, as well as under the metalliferous mining laws. Thus, on Humboldt’s own

terms, lands subject to the coal withdrawal are “public lands” available for

establishment of rights of way under R.S. 2477. 39


      39
        Because the 1910 coal withdrawal, unlike Executive Order No. 6910, left
the affected lands open to settlement, the Ninth Circuit’s Humboldt decision is
distinguishable on its own terms. But there is a further complication. The Ninth
Circuit appears not to have noticed that President Roosevelt issued Executive
Order No. 6910 “subject to the conditions . . . expressed [in the Pickett Act].”
Executive Withdrawal Order, 55 I.D. at 207. One of those conditions is that “all
lands withdrawn under the provisions of this Act shall at all times be open to
exploration, discovery, occupation, and purchase, under the mining laws of the
United States, so far as the same apply to metalliferous minerals.” Act of June
25, 1910, ch. 421, 36 Stat. 847, as amended, Act of August 24, 1912, ch. 369, 37
Stat. 497. In other words, lands withdrawn under Executive Order No. 6910
remained open to sale and disposition under the mining laws insofar as those laws
applied to metalliferous minerals (minerals such as aluminum, copper, gold, iron,
lead, nickel, silver, and zinc). See also 1 American Law of Mining §
                                                                      (continued...)

                                          109
      Finally, it is worth pointing out that in prior litigation the BLM itself has

rejected Humboldt. In a 1990 appeal before the Interior Board of Land Appeals,

the BLM denounced the “convoluted argument that the public lands in the west

were withdrawn from the operation of R.S. 2477 by Executive Order No. 6910.”

Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance, IBLA 90-375, Answer of the Bureau of Land

Management to Additional Statement of Reasons of Appellants, at 3 (1990). It

concluded that “Executive Order 6910 was in no way intended to withdraw the

public lands from the operation of R.S. 2477.” Id. at 6; see also BLM Manual

2801 – Rights of Way Management (stating that “Executive Order[] 6910 . . . [is]

not considered to have removed public lands from unreserved status.”). The BLM

argued that “[t]he Department has operated in a manner inconsistent with [this]

interpretation [of Executive Order No. 6910] for more than 50 years,” and that

such a “legalistic” interpretation of the Order “should not be adopted at this late

date.” Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance, IBLA 90-375, Answer of the Bureau

of Land Management to Additional Statement of Reasons of Appellants, at 5

(1990). If our already strong reasons for rejecting Humboldt were not enough, we



      39
        (...continued)
14.02[1][a][iv] (2d ed. 2004) (“Since the Order [No. 6910] was based on the
Pickett Act, the withdrawn lands were open to location . . . of metalliferous
minerals and to mineral leasing.”). Because the Ninth Circuit did not address this
aspect of Executive Order No. 6910, we do not know how it squares with that
Court’s legal analysis of what constitutes “public lands.”

                                         110
would be loath to overturn 50 years of BLM interpretation by accepting its novel

argument here.

      In sum, we conclude that the 1910 coal withdrawal was not a “reservation”

for purposes of R.S. 2477. The withdrawal did not dedicate the subject lands to a

specific “public use,” but instead left the land open to private appropriation, while

withholding it from appropriation as a coal resource.

VI.   CONCLUSION

      This case is REMANDED to the district court for a de novo proceeding, in

accordance with this opinion. The parties shall be permitted to introduce

evidence including, but not limited to, the administrative record before the BLM

in making its determinations. In that proceeding, the Counties will bear the

burden of proof on their R.S. 2477 claims. The district court shall determine

whether the road work undertaken by the Counties in 1996 constituted a trespass,

whether the Counties have a valid R.S. 2477 claim with respect to the fifteen

disputed routes, and whether Kane County exceeded the scope of its right of way

with respect to the Skutumpah Road.




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