Utah Stream Access Coalition v. VR Acquisitions, LLC
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In this action brought by Utah Stream Access Coalition (USAC) after USAC members were cited for trespass for wading in the Provo River on property owned by VR Acquisitions the Supreme Court held that the district court correctly entered judgment against USAC.
In its complaint, USAC claimed that the Public Waters Access Act (PWAA) violated Utah Const. art. XVII and XX and federal common law. The district court entered summary judgment against USAC on its article XVII and federal common law claims but, after a bench trial, determined that the PWAA violated article XX. On appeal, the Supreme Court determined that the district court made a threshold error in reaching its article XX determination and remanded with instruction that the court address the threshold question of whether the easement identified in Conaster v. Johnson, 194 P.3d 897 (Utah 2008), had a historical basis as a public easement at the time the Utah Constitution was framed. On remand, the district court granted summary judgment for VR Acquisitions and the State. The Supreme Court affirmed, holding that because USAC did not identify an affirmative, 19th-century legal basis for a Conaster easement, the district court correctly ruled that USAC did not make the threshold showing.
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