The City brought an eminent domain action to acquire a forty-foot-wide strip of real property from Respondent. Respondent’s predecessor-in-interest originally acquired title to this property through a federal land patent that reserved a thirty-three-foot-wide easement across the strip of property for “roadway and public utilities purposes.” The City asserted that it sought to utilize its existing rights to the thirty-three-foot right-of-way under the federal land patent’s easement and to attain, by condemnation, the remaining seven-foot portion of land. The district court granted Respondent partial summary judgment and awarded Respondent $394,490 in compensation, concluding that the City lacked any right to use the easement because the federal patent did not specifically name the City. The Supreme Court reversed, holding that the district court erred in (1) determining that the federal land patent did not create a thirty-three-foot-wide easement, as the plain meaning of the patent’s language created a valid public easement; (2) determining that the City’s proposed use of the easement constituted a taking, as the use of this easement was within its scope and did not strip Respondent of a property interest; and (3) awarding Respondent just compensation and attorney fees.
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