SCOTUS Hands Partial Victory To Embattled Private Property Owners
SCOTUS reversed lower courts that had accepted the federal government's arguments to take private property.
Trapper Peak, Bitterroot National Forest, USFS photo.
The U.S. Supreme Court announced that two property owners in Montana will have their day in court to prove that the U.S. Forest Service illegally encroached on their land. It reversed lower courts that accepted the agency’s arguments to dismiss their case on procedural grounds.
“Today’s decision is a major victory for property rights,” said Pacific Legal Foundation attorney Jeffrey McCoy, who argued the case before the Court. According to a release, he said, “The decision affirms that the government cannot manipulate procedural rules to prevent property owners from defending their constitutional rights.”
In Wilkins v. United States, Wil Wilkins and Jane Stanton, who have properties adjacent to the Bitterroot National Forest, claimed the U.S. Forest Service unilaterally and illegally changed the terms of a decades-old agreement that allowed the Forest Service to cross Wil and Jane’s private land to access the nearby National Forest.
The Ninth Circuit Court held that the statute of limitations of the Quiet Title Act — which allows property owners to sue the United States over a disputed title to property in which the federal government has claimed an interest — is “jurisdictional,” meaning a court cannot consider the merits of a case if the time limit for the complaint has expired.
Wil and Jane’s case was dismissed before they could demonstrate how the Forest Service changed the terms of the easement. In fact, they weren’t even able to fully argue that they brought the case within the time limit.
But the Supreme Court disagreed. Writing for the majority in a 6-3 decision, Justice Sonia Sotomayor said “All told, neither this Court’s precedents nor Congress’ actions established that §2409a(g) is jurisdictional."
As a result, the case will go back to the district court, where Wil and Jane will have their day in court. The precedent will open courthouse doors for many other future landowners in disputes against the federal government.
This case marks Pacific Legal Foundation’s fifteenth victory at the Supreme Court of the United States.