There will be no word from the nation’s high court on corner crossing.

The U.S. Supreme Court announced Monday that it won’t hear a Wyoming ranch owner’s case against four hunters who crossed diagonally between parcels of public land surrounded by the private ranch.

The case was dismissed earlier this year by the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in a ruling widely seen as declaring corner crossing to be legal in the six states covered by the 10th Circuit.

Iron Bar Holdings, the landowner, appealed the case to the Supreme Court in July. On Monday, the Supreme Court listed the case alongside dozens of others that it won’t take up. No reasoning was given.

That means the ruling from the 10th Circuit stands, and that crossing diagonally between landlocked sections of public land that touch at

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