FEDS SEIZE FAMILY’S RANCH-Property owners fight government ‘land grab’!!!
When Kit Laney answered a knock on his door Saturday, law enforcement officers from the U.S. Forest Service handed him a piece of paper announcing his Diamond Bar Ranch in southwest New Mexico would be shut down Wednesday and his 300 head of cattle grazing there would be removed – one way or the other.
Other
Forest Service officials were busy nailing similar
notices on fence posts along the highway and
informing neighbors that after Feb. 11, they should
not attempt to enter the Diamond Bar property.
Laney
was not surprised. He knew someday there would be an
on-the-ground confrontation to enforce a 1997 court
ruling which says his cattle are trespassing on
federal land. That day has arrived.
Laney
insists the land in question belongs to him; the
Forest Service says it belongs to the federal
government. So far, the federal court is on the side
of the Forest Service. But Laney is not willing to
throw in the towel and give up the land that has
been in his family since long before there was a
U.S. Forest Service.
Moreover,
in New Mexico, there is a “brand law” that says,
essentially, no cattle may be sold or transported
out of state without approval from the State
Livestock Board.
Local
sheriff Cliff Snyder has notified the Forest Service
and other state and federal officials that even
though the Forest Service has a court order
authorizing the confiscation of the Diamond Bar
cattle, they “cannot be shipped and sold without
being in direct violation of NM Statute.”
His
memo also says “I intend to enforce the state
livestock laws in my county. I will not allow
anyone, in violation of state law, to ship Diamond
Bar Cattle out of my county.”
Last
hope for ranchers?
Kit
and Sherry Laney are one of hundreds, perhaps
thousands, of ranching families who are being
squeezed off their land throughout the West. This
case has the potential to erect a barrier to further
expansion of federal land takeovers in the West or
to erase the last hope of retaining ranching as a
part of Western culture in the United States.
Both
ranchers and federal officials are watching with
great anxiety as the conflict moves toward
resolution.
The
Diamond Bar Ranch is at least 180,000 acres and
includes some of the most beautiful land in
southwest New Mexico, situated between and including
portions of the http://www.wilderness.net/ index.cfm?fuse=NWPS&sec= stateView&state=nm”>Gila
and Aldo Leopold Wilderness areas.
Laney’s
ancestors began the “Laney Cattle Company” there in
1883 when the area was still a territory. In those
days, “prior appropriation” of water determined
grazing rights to the land. That meant the first
person to make beneficial use of water obtained the
“rights” to the water and to the forage within an
area necessary to utilize the available water.
Laney’s
ancestors acquired the water rights and the
attendant grazing rights on the land now claimed by
the federal government.
In
1899, the federal government withdrew from the
public domain the land that later became the Gila
National Forest, which included much of the land on
which Laney’s ancestors had valid claim to water and
grazing rights.
Several
court cases have determined that land to which
others have claims or rights attached cannot be
considered “public land.”
Specifically,
“It is well settled that all land to which any
claims or rights of others have attached does not
fall within the designation of public land,”
according to Bardon vs. Northern Pacific Railroad
Co.
Consequently,
Laney reasons, since his ancestors had acquired
legal rights to the water and adjacent grazing land
before the federal withdrawal, his land could not be
considered a part of the public domain.
Forest
Service stepped in
When
the U.S. Forest Service was created in 1905, one of
its first concerns was to find a way to settle
disputes among ranchers whose water rights resulted
in conflicts over grazing areas. The Forest Service
stepped into these territorial conflicts and
proposed a way to resolve the disputes.
The
rancher parties to the dispute voluntarily agreed to
allow the Forest Service to measure the available
water to which each participant had legal rights and
designate the appropriate forage land required to
make beneficial use of the available water. The
designated area was called an “allotment.”
The
ranchers paid the Forest Service a fee for their
adjudication service, a portion of which went into a
fund from which the ranchers could make improvements
to the range and water access. The Forest Service
issued a permit, which designated the forage area
and the number of cow/calf units, or AUMs, that
could graze the allotment.
Laney’s
ancestors participated in this type of Forest
Service adjudication process in 1907, three years
before New Mexico became a state. The system worked
well until 1934, when Congress enacted the Taylor
Grazing Act. This law changed the status of the
grazing permit from a voluntary process agreed to by
the ranchers, into a “license” required by the
federal government.
Few
ranchers realized this law eventually would strip
them of their rights and the land they had worked
for generations.
Problems
from outset
Laney’s
problems began shortly after he acquired the Diamond
Bar Ranch, adjacent to the original Laney ranch, in
1985.
The
bank from which he bought the ranch had entered into
a Memorandum of Agreement with the Forest Service
which passed to Laney, the new owner. The agreement
required the owner to make certain improvements to
watering systems within the Wilderness Areas on the
ranch.
The
original agreement allowed access to the work areas
by mechanical equipment, but environmental
organizations pressured the Forest Service to forbid
mechanized access, and the agreement was modified.
Laney agreed to use mules and non-mechanical means
to live up to his end of the agreement.
When
he acquired the Diamond Bar, the allotment provided
for 1,188 head of cattle. By 1995, the Forest
Service reduced the allotment to 300 head. When the
permits came due for renewal on the original Laney
ranch and the Diamond Bar, in 1995 and 1996, Laney
decided he would not sign the permits, since he
believed the land was his, not subject to permits
issued for grazing on federal land.
Kit
and Sherry have spent hours in courthouses in
Catron, Grand and Sierra counties, searching titles
and documents all the way back to the original
claims of water and grazing rights in the 1800s.
They
have developed a clear chain of title showing
continuous private ownership of the water rights and
the attendant grazing rights on the land that is now
claimed by the government.
They
believe the government’s original withdrawal of the
land in 1899 could not include their land, since
private property rights had attached to the land.
Neither
the Forest Service nor the federal court are
impressed with Laney’s reasoning, and the Forest
Service is moving to rid the ranch of cattle. And
without a means of utilizing the water and land for
any productive purpose, the Laneys too will have to
leave – unless they can get someone to pay attention
to their rights.
Ridding
the West of ranchers
For
nearly 100 years, federal agencies and ranchers
worked together to improve the range and to develop
a growing economic foundation for Western states.
Things
began to change with the rise of the environmental
movement in the late 1970s. By the mid 1980s, there
was a concerted, coordinated effort to rid the West
of ranchers. In 1992, with the publication of the
Wildlands Project, the reasons for squeezing out the
ranchers, and other resource providers, began to
come into focus.
The Wildlands
Project envisions at least half of the land
area of North America, restored to “core wilderness
areas,” off-limits to humans.
Wilderness
areas are to be connected by corridors of
wilderness, so wildlife will have migration routes
unhampered by people. The Diamond Bar ranch lies
directly in the path of a key wilderness corridor.
Bill
Clinton’s election in 1992 resulted in the placement
of environmental organization executives in key
positions throughout the government.
Bruce
Babbitt, formerly head of the League of Conservation
Voters, became secretary of the Department of
Interior, and George Frampton, formerly head of the
Wilderness Society, became chief of the U.S. Forest
Service. These, and other environmentalists in
government, came from the very organizations that
promoted the Wildlands Project.
Environmental
organizations pressured federal agencies with
lawsuits and good-ol’-boy influence to impose the
goals of the Wildlands Project through various
government initiatives.
Kit
and Sherry Laney are among hundreds whose lives and
livelihoods have been forever uprooted by the
government’s willingness to advance the goals of the
Wildlands Project.
The
Laneys say they have a ray of hope, however. On Jan.
29, 2002, Judge Loren Smith ruled in a similar case
that Wayne Hage “submitted an exhaustive chain of
title which showed that the plaintiffs and their
predecessors-in-interest had title to the fee lands”
which the federal government had claimed to be
federal land.
Wayne
Hage lost his cattle, but now the court has ruled
that a “takings” has occurred, for which the
government must pay “just compensation.”
The
Hage decision has sent ranchers across the West
rushing to courthouses, searching for and
documenting the “chain of title,” to the land,
grazing and water rights.
Kit
Laney has completed his search, and recorded the
“exhaustive chain of title” in each of the county
courthouses where his land lies. He may not be able
to stop the removal of his cattle, even with the
help of the local sheriff. But Laney has served
notice that he does not intend to roll over and let
the government simply take what his family has
worked for generations to build.
He
says he will fight as long as he has breath. The
Forest Service, and the other federal agencies now
know they can no longer pick off a single rancher,
and move on to the next. The Hage decision, and the
determination of Kit Laney has inspired thousands of
ranchers to resist the government’s squeezing and to
push back.
These
ranchers are from the same stock of ranchers who
pushed the United States all the way to the
Pacific ocean; once riled, they may push the
Forest Service all the way back to Washington.
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