The
National Rivers Website, Rivers of Wyoming:
Who
owns the rivers in Wyoming?
Answers to
frequently-asked questions about river law in Wyoming,
regarding river ownership, use, access, and conservation.
Question: I have been told by one source that rivers in Wyoming
follow the "High Water mark" law. And other sources have lead to make me
feel the opposite (i.e. the river bank and bed are private property).
I am particularly interested in the North Platte River below Grey's Reef.
NORS: The key question is whether the river is "navigable for title
purposes" under federal law. Our impression is that the North Platte is
indeed navigable for title purposes, because it is useable by a variety of
small craft throughout the spring and summer. (Correct us if we are
mistaken.) Therefore, it is held in trust for the public by the state,
and is public land up to the ordinary high water line. The ordinary high
water line is the actual mark you see on the ground, the line between
ground that has been covered during "ordinary high water" (not during
extreme flooding) and the land that has not, as distinguished by the
effects the water has had on the sand, gravel, soil, and vegetation.
Wyoming state law, last we checked, was supportive of this. State law
can modify the management of these public-trust lands along rivers, but
it cannot give them away to adjacent landowners, or deny all public use
of them. (To do so would be a violation of the Public Trust Doctrine, a
body of relevant federal case law.) Any ambiguities in Wyoming law should
not be interpreted so as to narrow the definition of rivers that are
navigable for title purposes--that is a matter of federal law, not state
law.
We will seek further legal review of your question and the above answer,
and post it to this site and to you personally. Meanwhile please advise us
if you have any further news to report.
Review
of the relationship of federal and state law regarding
rivers:
The section on National
River Law discusses river ownership, use, and
conservation law throughout the United States. Following is
a review of what individual states can and cannot lawfully
do with the rivers within their borders.
- The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that rivers that
are navigable, for title purposes, are owned by the states,
"held in trust" for the public. This applies in
all fifty states, under the "Equal Footing Doctrine."
- Rivers that do meet the federal test are
automatically navigable, and therefore owned by the state.
No court or government agency has to designate them as such.
- The federal test of navigability is not a technical
test. There are no measurements of river width, depth, flow,
or steepness involved. The test is simply whether the river
is usable as a route by the public, even in small craft such
as canoes, kayaks, and rafts. Such a river is legally
navigable even if it contains big rapids, waterfalls, and
other obstructions at which boaters get out, walk around,
then re-enter the water.
- The states own these rivers up to the "ordinary
high water mark." This is the mark that people can
actually see on the ground, where the high water has left
debris, sand, and gravel during its ordinary annual cycle.
(Not during unusual flooding.) It is not a theoretical line
requiring engineering calculations. Where the river banks
are fairly flat, this mark can be quite a distance from the
edge of the water during medium water flows. There is often
plenty of room for standing, fishing, camping, and other
visits.
- States cannot sell or give away these rivers and
lands up to the ordinary high water mark. Under the "Public
Trust Doctrine," they must hold them in perpetuity for
public use.
- The three public uses that the courts have
traditionally mentioned are navigation, fishing, and
commerce. But the courts have ruled that any and all
non-destructive activities on these land are legally
protected, including picnics, camping, walking, and other
activities. The public can fish, from the river or from the
shore below the "ordinary high water mark." (Note
that the fish and wildlife are owned by the state in any
case.) The public can walk, roll a baby carriage, and other
activities, according to court decisions.
- States do have authority and latitude in the way
they manage rivers, but their management must protect the
public uses mentioned above. They can (and must) prohibit or
restrict activities that conflict with the Public Trust
Doctrine. "Responsible recreation" must be
allowed, but activities that could be harmful, such as
building fires, leaving trash, and making noise, can legally
be limited, or prohibited, in various areas. Motorized trips
and commercial trips can legally be limited or prohibited by
state governments.
- State and local restrictions on use of navigable
rivers have to be legitimately related to enhancing public
trust value, not reducing it. Rivers cannot be closed or
partially closed to appease adjacent landowners, or to
appease people who want to dedicate the river to fishing
only, or to make life easier for local law enforcement
agencies.
- State governments (through state courts and
legislatures) cannot reduce public rights to navigate and
visit navigable rivers within their borders, but they can
expand those rights, and some states have done so. They can
create a floatage easement, a public right to navigate even
on rivers that might not qualify for state ownership for
some reason, even if it is assumed that the bed and banks of
the river are private land. Note that this floatage easement
is a matter of state law that varies from state to state,
but the question of whether a river is navigable, for title
purposes, and therefore owned by the state, is a matter of
federal law, and does not vary from state to state. Note
that a state floatage easement is something that comes and
goes with the water: When the water is there, people have a
right to be there on it, and when it dries up, people have
no right to be there. But rivers that are navigable for
title purposes are public land up to the ordinary high water
mark, so that even when the river runs dry, people still
have the right to walk along the bed of the river.
- Only federal courts can modify the test of
standards that make a river navigable for title purposes.
States cannot create their own standards, either narrower or
wider in scope. They cant make definitive rulings
about which rivers are navigable for title purposes, only a
federal court can.
- The situation gets confusing when a state agency or
commission holds hearings about navigability and public use
of rivers. Landowners, sheriffs, and other people tend to
think that such an agency or commission can create state
standards that determine which rivers are public and which
are private. But these are matters of federal law which
state agencies cannot change.
- State agencies should make provisional
determinations that various rivers meet the federal test of
navigability for title purposes. These provisional
determinations should be based simply on the rivers'
usability by canoes, kayaks, and rafts. They should then
proceed to the question of how to manage navigation and
other public uses of the river. In these days of government
cut-backs, the agency should look for solutions that use
existing enforcement agencies rather than setting up new
ones. Littering, illegal fires, offensive behavior,
trespassing on private land, and numerous other offenses are
all covered by existing laws, and offenders can be cited by
the local police, sheriff's office or state police.
To
post your question about river law in Wyoming:
Click here to go to
River
Rendezvous--State River News, and post your question
under Wyoming River Law. The webmaster will subsequently ask
a qualified attorney to answer your question, and will add
the question and the answer to the above list.
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Website and the Rivers of Wyoming section are
made possible by the generosity of the members of the
National Organization for Rivers (NORS.) To start or extend
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