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The Taylor Ranch War: Property Rights Die
 
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The Taylor Ranch War: Property Rights Die [Paperback]

Dick Johnston

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 372 pages
  • Publisher: Authorhouse (March 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1420889796
  • ISBN-13: 978-1420889796
  • Product Dimensions: 22.7 x 15.4 x 2.3 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 544 g

Product Description

Product Description

This book is an example of the past colliding with the present as an ultra liberal Colorado Supreme Court chief justice reached back 1,500 years to Spain's land grants and shared (communal) use of property and tried to mix them with the American concept of private property rights. She ruled in several opinions that, under a 160-year-old Mexican land grant (similar to colonial Spanish grants) and a 150-year-old ambiguous document, an initially undefined number of Costilla County, Colorado, residents would have free "reasonable" use of the 77,500-acre, privately owned, Taylor Ranch, mainly for livestock grazing and timber. A bare majority of the court's justices agreed with her. When the rulings were gradually implemented with a vengeance by a district judge, some 1,200 residents were granted virtually uncontrolled and unlimited use of the Ranch. The Ranch owners not only lost $23 million in market value of the property but were also ordered to pay at least $300,000 in court costs. The rulings were called "stunning" and "unprecedented." As 2006 approached, the residents were assessing the perhaps marginal economic benefits of the access and wondering whether voluntary compliance with a locally-drafted land use plan would save The Mountain's fragile environment. For over 100 years, the mostly Hispanic population of the Culebra River basin adjacent to the Colorado-New Mexico border lived a very isolated Shangri La existence based on subsistence farming and hunting and fishing in the snow-capped Sangre de Cristo Mountains. In 1960, Jack Taylor, a tough timberman from North Carolina, purchased one of the last two major pieces of a one-million-acre Mexican land grant covering the mountains and told the local residents to stop trespassing on it. In 45 years of litigation over rights on the property, Taylor won victories in Federal courts but they were overturned in the State courts, and Jack Taylor's successors were hit hard. In reaction to Jack Taylor's arrogant attitude,

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Amazon.com: 5.0 out of 5 stars (1 customer review)

0 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Taylor Ranch War, Jan 27 2010
By Roger A. Bower "Roger Bower" - Published on Amazon.com
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This review is from: The Taylor Ranch War: Property Rights Die (Paperback)
The Taylor Ranch War would be of interest to anyone who shares an interest in the San Luis Valley, or in Colorado or New Mexico History. Huge tracts of land throughout the South West trace back to Spanish land grants and the Taylor Ranch was one of the largest.
The tangled web of litigation on file regarding the ranch is amazing.

It was disappointing however when the predominately Hispanic people of the valley would not take jobs at a sawmill that was built on the Taylor Ranch. They refused to work there out of spite and there is virtually no employment in the valley outside of Alamosa. The saw mill had to close because they couldn't get any employees.

The Valley culture traces to Spain, and the older people who can speak Spanish speak Costillian Spanish, not Mexican.

Grave Images (Hettinger) is a recent book about the SLV cemeteries. The monuments are mostly homemade and unlike others anywhere in the world.
 Go to Amazon.com to see the review  5.0 out of 5 stars 

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