Published 7 hours ago • loading... • Updated 9 hours ago
Public Land Groups Sue Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks over Corner-Crossing Position
The groups say Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks has wrongly treated corner crossing as trespassing, despite about 871,000 corner-locked acres, onX data show.
On Thursday, the Montana Chapter of Backcountry Hunters and Anglers and the Public Land Water Access Association filed a lawsuit in Lewis and Clark County District Court challenging Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks' position that corner crossing is unlawful.
Lieutenant Governor Kristen Juras defended the state's position during a May 13 presentation to the Environmental Quality Council, arguing corner crossing constitutes trespassing in airspace up to 200 feet above private property.
The conservation groups argue the FWP directive "exceeds the statutory authority of FWP" and violates the Montana Administrative Procedure Act, seeking to overturn the agency's January 2026 memo on corner crossing.
Montana Chapter of BHA Chair Jake Schwaller stated, "we fundamentally disagree with the Department on this issue and believe this must now be decided before a neutral court." Plaintiffs seek to nullify the memo.
With 871,000 acres of corner-locked public land in Montana, the case highlights legal uncertainty in the 9th Circuit, distinct from the 10th Circuit where recent precedents favored access.