Montana’s enlightened stream access laws have seemingly always been contested by livestock operations and now a wave of wealthy landowners.

Found via the excellent Fly Fishing in Yellowstone blog, we learned a judge recently affirmed the public’s right to access streams where they intersect public roads.

This court case was brought by much-disliked-by-fly-fishermen landowner James Kennedy (Atlanta resident and heir to a media fortune) after he blocked fishing access by attaching fences to bridges, and asserted that the public right of way narrows to the bridge itself where it intersects a waterway.

Fortunately, he’s not just an ass, he’s an ass with a losing legal argument:

A judge ruled this week that the public has the right to get to rivers from county bridges, but also determined landowners can attach fences to bridges in a split decision on a 4-year-old case out of Madison County.

District Judge Loren Tucker said in a case filed by the nonprofit Public Lands Access Association against Madison County that county road rights of way remain 60 feet wide across rivers. That means the public can use bridges to get to public waters under Montana’s stream access law.

James Kennedy, a Ruby Valley landowner and billionaire heir to a media fortune from Atlanta, Ga., an intervener in the case, and whose fences prompted the lawsuit, had argued that county rights of way narrow down to the actual bridge surface. He contended the land below the bridges was private property and therefore the public was trespassing when it crossed fences built up to a bridge.

Tucker soundly rejected that.

“His implicit argument is that a county road may not be utilized in the vicinity of water,” Tucker said. “That argument is unsupported by authority or by logic.” John Gibson, PLAA president, called the decision a major victory for Montanans.

A report from the Underground’s Special Envoy in Charge of Tiny Flies suggests big trout eating little Tricos in Montana, so cast away, Montana fly fishing public while you’re still legally allowed to.

, , ,