US, v. Clive Bundy
US DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEVADA
9 Jul 2013
The United States filed a complaint on May 14, 2012, for injunctive relief to prevent Bundys alleged unauthorized and unlawful grazing of livestock on property owned by the United States and administered by the Secretary of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management and National Park Service, and for trespass damages.
In an order dated November 3, 1998, this court permanently enjoined Bundy from grazing his livestock within a different area, the Bunkerville Allotment, and ordered Bundy to remove his livestock from the Allotment before November 30, 1998. U.S. v. Bundy, No. CV-S-98-531-JBR (RJJ), 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 23835 (D. Nev. Nov. 4, 1998). The court also ordered that the United States was entitled to trespass damages from Bundy for livestock left on the Bunkerville Allotment after such date.
In its complaint, the United States alleges that, not only has Bundy failed to comply with the courts orders that he remove his cattle from the Bunkerville Allotment and pay the financial penalties, but that Bundys cattle have moved beyond the boundaries of the Bunkerville Allotment and are now trespassing on a broad swath of additional federal land (the New Trespass Lands), including public lands within the Gold Butte area that are administered by the BLM, and National Park System land within the Overton Arm and Gold Butte areas of the Lake Mead National Recreation Area. The United States seeks an order enjoining Bundys unauthorized grazing on the New Trespass Lands...
...Bundy principally opposes the United States motion for summary judgment on the ground that this court lacks jurisdiction because the United States does not own the public lands in question. As this court previously ruled in United States v. Bundy, Case No. CV-S-98-531-JBR (RJJ), 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 23835 (D. Nev. Nov. 4, 1998), the public lands in Nevada are the property of the United States because the United States has held title to those public lands since 1848, when Mexico ceded the land to the United States....Moreover, Bundy is incorrect in claiming that the Disclaimer Clause of the Nevada Constitution carries no legal force, see Gardner, 107 F.3d at 1320; that the Property Clause of the United States Constitution applies only to federal lands outside the borders of states, see id. at 1320; that the United States exercise of ownership over federal lands violates the Equal Footing Doctrine, see id. at 1319; that the United States is basing its authority to sanction Bundy for his unauthorized use of federal lands on the Endangered Species Act as opposed to trespass, see Compl. at ¶¶ 1,3, 26-39; and that Nevadas Open Range statute excuses Bundys trespass...
...Nor is there a legitimate dispute that Bundy has grazed his cattle on the New Trespass Lands without federal authorization. The United States has submitted Bundys deposition excerpts indicating that Bundy has grazed livestock on the New Trespass Lands and further evidence of the trespass of Bundys cattle in those areas. Notwithstanding Bundys contentions that the observed cattle bearing his brand may not in fact be his own, such a denial does not controvert Nevada law regarding prima facie evidence of ownership of branded cattle...
...IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the United States Motion for Summary Judgment (#18) is GRANTED...IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Bundy is permanently enjoined from trespassing on the New Trespass Lands...
Good find, Mr Rogers.
The above piece of your post is the heart of this issue. It is clear that the federal government believes it is the owner of the land in the same way as you and I are property owners. At issue in my mind is whether they are owners or simply caretakers of lands belonging to the public. In that case, and based on the history of the USA, those public lands should be able to be purchased.
In fact, the first national park didn't come into existence until very late in the 19th century....Yellowstone.
My position is that the federal government is not enjoined by the US Constitution to become a huge property owner. At no point does the Constitution indicate that the government would need ownership of anything other than government buildings and military installations.
Too many things in our history indicates that the Fed was caretaker of lands within the borders established for the USA.