Goosemaster
Well-known member
Yes, you can cross private land, but do it quickly.
Need to stay clear of you!Alls I know Golden Huor is if it's my land you want to tresspass on you better get pretty good at balancing on that middle fence post. I could care less if youre after phezz, deer, gopher, or what the hell. Illegal is illegal brother.![]()
If I was going to get busted by this guy, it would have happened 30 years ago. He doesn't care. It's out in the middle of nowhere.I hunt a place in Montana that involves crossing several acres of land that is locked up.Im not too worried about it anyway.
Yeah I've got some land in Florida that you can buy from me...Need to stay clear of you!
This is a surprise… thought it would take years.The US Court of Appeals in Denver, CO has upheld the ruling in this Wyoming corner crossing case today. They sided with the original lower court's ruling, stating that private landowners (in this case, Iron Bar Ranch) do not own the airspace above their property. The four hunters from the original incident have prevailed.
This is a major victory for hunters, and public land hunters in this country. Thousands of acres of federal land will remain open to public hunting, provided the public does not physically step on private land when accessing corner crossings of parceled land.
How could you own the air space above your land. If you own land by an airport and you got tired of planes coming over you could make the airport change the runways so they dont go over your air space. WTF If you dont touch their property, I say you are good. I suppose now they will put razor wire on their corners.
This is a crucial point. The corner at question in this case was a surveyed corner with a marker. One of the hunters is a fence builder in real life, and thus is familiar with surveying, corner markers, etc. He had also built a ladder-like contraption to span the corner, allowing them a little more "breathing room" when making the crossing. Iron Bar never asserted that these hunters stepped onto its ground, only that they had passed through the airspace. Finding the actual corner and accurately knowing path of the boundaries creates a pretty high bar for "staying legal". All of a sudden those corner markers that few us have seen or noticed are really important. OnX or any GPS device/service isn't accurate enough if you truly want to stay legal. There will be lots of activity out there about those corner markers. Regardless, it's still a victory for public access.The issue will be documented corners, if a 80 year old barb wire fence is 10 foot off the real line your trespassing. Do your homework first
If you send me the coordinates I can go check it out for youI think this is a bigger question out west, but I've wondered about it in Iowa and now a new spot I just saw in MN. Can you corner cross on two diagonal pieces of public land with the inverse pieces of land both being private? I know of one piece in Iowa they re-did a bunch of habitat two years ago and noticed that they put up a large fence that prevented this practice. I thought of this yesterday because to my joyful surprise I found a new piece of land kitty-corner to one of my favorite public spots, and it's owned by a small independent habitat group and sounds like will be turned into a public hunting spot. Then I started to do a little digging and found a whole pile of different land that was recently turned over to the state or will be in the near future. It was a bright spot of my day to know that this land will be preserved as wildlife habitat, and a bonus that it's in an area I tend to frequent come October.
It was thought to be illegal in Wyoming too until this case.I believe corner crossing is generally illegal in most states.
In Minnesota I would bet if a landowner called you in you would likely get a ticket. You then hire a good attorney and proceed down the same path as Wyoming case with precedence on your side.
The Wyoming case may have went through Federal courts because the public land was Federal land.