I would say, ya just never know what could happen, right? Some properties will be affected and others won't. Here in Floirda, we are going through a similar uproar over people in the panhandle (Destin, FL) that now have "private beaches". You can thank that bum Huckabee for starting the problem (turning public beaches into private beaches). Then he sold his house at a huge profit and moved the hell away. POS. There's a recent video in Youtube about this. You all need to watch it. KEEP YOUR MIND OPEN. There are some similarities to the Wyoming case in some sense. Property law is definitely a clusterfuck. Riparian law is an even bigger one. I have a top real estate attorney in Boca Raton that has pointed that out. He has a ton more experience than I. The young attorney from Ohio that argued the case for the Missouri hunters came to the case with a clean slate. Without any baggage. He didn't know a damn thing about Wyoming corner crossing. I believe he was a criminal attorney, if I'm not mistaken.Doubtful, in no state is there a prohibition about floating a river to fish, there is no "exclusivity" in access. The only thing that would change would be a few people wading the river up to the ordinary high water mark (maybe).
Its possible it could bump land values, but it wouldn't be significant, exactly why the prices along streams/rivers in Montana didn't decline a red cent when stream access passed.
Its perception, but not reality. A nice talking point to try to "prove" how horrific public access is. A good talking point for real estate agents who perceive they might lose a nickel on a land sale. Reality proved those fears are unfounded and truly as dumb as they sound.
It's going to be the exact same scenario when corner crossing is legal. Really, how much more traffic is a several thousand acre ranch going to experience, to the point that it devalue's the property? I would say none.
No resumes please, LOLOL.