Wild Horse Observers Ass'n v. N.M. Livestock Bd. ( 2022 )


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    1       IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    2 Opinion Number:
    3 Filing Date: July 22, 2022
    4 No. A-1-CA-37810
    5 WILD HORSE OBSERVERS
    6 ASSOCIATION, INC.,
    7          Plaintiff-Appellee,
    8 v.
    9 NEW MEXICO LIVESTOCK BOARD,
    10          Defendant-Appellant,
    11 and
    12 SHELLEY MCALISTER, NATHAN
    13 LIPPERT, and TEEATTA LIPPERT,
    14          Defendants by Intervention.
    15 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF LINCOLN COUNTY
    16 Daniel A. Bryant, District Judge
    17 Steven K. Sanders & Associates, LLC
    18 Steven K. Sanders
    19 Albuquerque, NM
    20 for Appellee
    21   Hector H. Balderas, Attorney General
    22   Olga Serafirmova, Assistant Attorney General
    23   Santa Fe, NM
    24
    25   for Appellant
    1 Falen Law Offices, LLC
    2 Brandon L. Jensen
    3 Cheyenne, WY
    4 for Amici Curiae New Mexico Cattle Growers’ Association and New Mexico Farm
    5 and Livestock Bureau
    6 Reynolds Law Office
    7 David G. Reynolds
    8 Placitas, NM
    9 for Amici Curiae Caroline McCoy, Clint Skeen, Michael S. Neas, Susan
    10 Blumenthal, Carolyn Kennedy, and Lynn Montgomery
    1                                      OPINION
    2 HANISEE, Chief Judge.
    3   {1}   In this appeal, we again examine the protection afforded to New Mexico’s
    4 free-roaming horses under NMSA 1978, Section 77-18-5 (2007). We first did so
    5 seven years ago, when we concluded in Wild Horse Observers Association, Inc. v.
    6 New Mexico Livestock Board, (Wild Horse I) that certain undomesticated, unowned,
    7 free-roaming horses could not be characterized as “livestock” or “estray” rather than
    8 as “wild horses.” 
    2016-NMCA-001
    , ¶ 16, 
    363 P.3d 1222
    . In the case at hand, the
    9 New Mexico Livestock Board (the Board) appeals from a district court order
    10 granting declaratory and injunctive relief sought by Wild Horse Observers
    11 Association, Inc. (WHOA) under the New Mexico Declaratory Judgment Act,
    12 NMSA 1978, §§ 44-6-1 to -15 (1975), and the Livestock Code, NMSA 1978, §§ 77-
    13 2-1 to -18-6 (1869, as amended through 2015). As was the case in Wild Horse I, the
    14 Board wishes to classify certain horses—this time corralled by a private citizen onto
    15 private property—as estray livestock, rather than as wild horses. We agree with the
    16 district court that the Board may not do so; however, we reverse the district court’s
    17 determination that when the Board unlawfully captures horses on private land, the
    18 testing requirements of Section 77-18-5(B) apply, potentially triggering the
    19 unjustified removal of wild horses from their natural habitat. See id. (providing that
    20 a wild horse “captured on public land shall have its conformation, history and
    1 deoxyribonucleic acid tested [DNA]”). We remand for further proceedings
    2 consistent with this opinion and for additional consideration of attorney fees.
    3 BACKGROUND
    4   {2}   In 2016, private land lessor Carolyn McCoy contacted the Board complaining
    5 about a herd of free-roaming horses near her property in Alto, an unincorporated
    6 community in Lincoln County, New Mexico. The Board informed McCoy that it
    7 was only permitted to take possession of horses that are corralled or captured by a
    8 private citizen. Afterward, McCoy corralled twelve horses—seven mares and five
    9 foals (the subject horses)—and contacted the Board again. 1 In August 2016, the
    1
    The parties dispute whether McCoy lured the horses onto her property. The
    district court determined that the subject horses “had been enticed or ‘lured’ into a
    corral” by “Carolyn McCoy to have them adopted out or sold.” The Board now
    asserts that “[a]t no point did . . . McCoy lure the horses onto her property, which is
    entirely surrounded by other private property.” While McCoy testified to that effect,
    WHOA presented evidence to the contrary, including Facebook posts from McCoy
    stating her intent to lure the subject horses. “We will not reweigh the evidence nor
    substitute our judgment for that of the fact[-]finder.” Clark v. Clark, 2014-NMCA-
    030, ¶ 26, 
    320 P.3d 991
     (alteration, internal quotation marks, and citation omitted);
    see also Skeen v. Boyles, 
    2009-NMCA-080
    , ¶ 37, 
    146 N.M. 627
    , 
    213 P.3d 531
    (stating that when the district court hears conflicting evidence, “we defer to its
    determinations of ultimate fact, given that we lack opportunity to observe demeanor,
    and we cannot weigh the credibility of live witnesses”). In any event, the Board
    identifies no evidence on appeal that contradicts the district court’s finding that
    McCoy lured or enticed the subject horses. See Chan v. Montoya, 
    2011-NMCA-072
    ,
    ¶ 9, 
    150 N.M. 44
    , 
    256 P.3d 987
     (“It is not our practice to rely on assertions of counsel
    unaccompanied by support in the record. The mere assertions and arguments of
    counsel are not evidence.” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)). Lastly,
    2
    1 Board took possession of the subject horses, transported them to Santa Fe, and
    2 informed Lincoln County residents that the horses would ultimately be returned to
    3 Lincoln County, which incorporates Alto, in the following weeks. Such was
    4 inconsistent, however, with that which the Board posted on its website, namely that
    5 the subject horses would be sold at auction.
    6   {3}   WHOA filed a complaint for declaratory relief and emergency injunctive
    7 relief on August 29, 2016, asserting that the Board exceeded its authority and
    8 unlawfully treated the subject horses as estray livestock. A month later, WHOA filed
    9 a petition for declaratory relief seeking an order declaring the subject horses to be
    10 wild horses, as well as a temporary restraining order (TRO) preventing the Board
    11 from impounding or selling the subject horses. The district court granted WHOA’s
    12 request for a TRO, thereby prohibiting the Board from “taking any action to sell,
    13 dispose, move away, separate or dissipate” the subject horses “during the pendency
    14 of this cause.” The TRO expressly permitted the Board to “work[] with [WHOA],
    15 or any member of the public in Lincoln County who is willing to provide real estate,
    16 stables, pens, food and services for the care and preservation of [the subject] horses
    17 during the pendency of this cause of action.” The district court denied the Board’s
    18 request that WHOA be required to post a bond upon entry of the TRO.
    the manner in which the subject horses came to be corralled on private property does
    not affect the resolution of the issues on appeal.
    3
    1   {4}   Subsequently, nine individual residents of Lincoln County—some of whom
    2 became intervening parties to the proceeding—executed certificates agreeing to
    3 provide shelter, food, and health care for the subject horses together at a designated
    4 location in Alto, during the pendency of this action. WHOA moved to extend the
    5 TRO in December 5, 2016, which the district court did. The TRO was modified in
    6 February 2017 to allow two of the subject horses to be adopted for medical reasons.
    7 One year later, the district court again modified the TRO allowing the intervening
    8 parties who were caring for the subject horses to be removed from any obligations
    9 agreed upon under the certificates they signed. The district court further ordered that
    10 WHOA and the Board share the expenses of caring for the subject horses until a trial
    11 on the merits, and required the parties to determine a new location for the subject
    12 horses to reside. Pursuant to that order, the subject horses were transferred to a
    13 fenced property within Lincoln County, near Carrizozo, New Mexico.
    14   {5}   The district court presided over a four-day bench trial in May 2018.
    15 Afterward, the court issued its findings of fact and conclusions of law, determining
    16 that the Board’s actions to take possession and sell the subject horses are contrary to
    17 the Board’s statutory authority. The district court additionally concluded that the
    18 Board failed to comply with its statutory duties under Section 77-18-5(B), enjoined
    19 the Board from “further unlawful possession and selling” of the subject horses, and
    20 awarded WHOA costs and attorney fees. The Board appeals.
    4
    1 DISCUSSION
    2   {6}   On appeal, the Board asserts that because the subject horses were captured on
    3 private, rather than public land, the district court erred in concluding them to be
    4 “wild horses” under Section 77-18-5(A)(4) and in concluding that the Board must
    5 adhere to Section 77-18-5(B). The Board also contends that the district court made
    6 findings of fact that are unsupported by substantial evidence, issued a vague
    7 injunction, erred in awarding attorney fees, and erred in refusing to impose an
    8 injunction bond upon WHOA.2
    2
    The Board additionally asserts that the district court erred in denying the
    Board’s motion to dismiss for lack of standing and relatedly challenges WHOA’s
    authority to file the underlying litigation. We determine these contentions as raised
    by the Board to be without merit, and we decline to further address them on appeal.
    We remind the Board that litigants are encouraged to limit the number of issues they
    choose to raise on appeal to ensure that those presented are adequately supported by
    argument, authority, and properly cited facts in the record. See Rio Grande Kennel
    Club v. City of Albuquerque, 
    2008-NMCA-093
    , ¶¶ 54-55, 
    144 N.M. 636
    , 
    190 P.3d 1131
     (“[W]e encourage litigants to consider carefully whether the number of issues
    they intend to appeal will negatively impact the efficacy with which each of those
    issues can be presented.”); see also Baker v. Endeavor Servs., Inc., 2018-NMSC-
    035, ¶ 2, 
    428 P.3d 265
     (“Unless findings are directly attacked, they are the facts in
    this court, and a party claiming error on the part of the trial court must be able to
    point clearly to the alleged error.”).
    5
    1 I.      The District Court Did Not Err in Concluding That the Subject Horses
    2         Are Wild Horses Under Section 77-18-5(A)(4), but Erred in Concluding
    3         That When the Board Wrongfully Took Possession of the Subject Horses
    4         on Private Land, the Board Should Have Conformed to its Duties Under
    5         Section 77-18-5(B)
    6   {7}   The primary issue on appeal relates to the Board’s authority and
    7 responsibilities as to the subject horses after they were corralled on McCoy’s private
    8 property. The Board argues that the district court erred by concluding that the subject
    9 horses are “wild horses,” as that term is defined in Section 77-18-15(A)(4), because
    10 they were not “captured on public land,” which is a phrase that appears in a different
    11 subsection of the statute, Section 77-18-15(B), and because the Legislature clearly
    12 intended to distinguish between public land and private land in the Livestock Code
    13 in general. WHOA answers that although the subject horses were captured by a
    14 private citizen on private land, the district court did not err in determining that the
    15 subject horses are wild horses and not estray, and therefore, may not be treated as
    16 estray, because Section 77-18-5 “was enacted to preserve and maintain New
    17 Mexico[’s] public ranges for wild horses, generally, and also to protect Spanish
    18 colonial horses, specifically.”
    19   {8}   We review the district court’s order and injunction for abuse of discretion. See
    20 Rapid Temps, Inc. v. Lamon, 
    2008-NMCA-122
    , ¶ 13, 
    144 N.M. 804
    , 
    192 P.3d 799
    21 (“Generally, a complaint seeking injunctive relief is directed to the sound discretion
    22 of the trial court. However, the trial court abuses [its] discretion when it applies an
    6
    1 incorrect standard, incorrect substantive law, or its discretionary decision is
    2 premised on a misapprehension of the law.” (alteration, internal quotation marks,
    3 and citations omitted)). However, we review the district court’s application of
    4 Section 77-18-5 to the subject horses—whose habitat generally includes public land
    5 but who were corralled on private property—de novo. See Little v. Jacobs, 2014-
    6 NMCA-105, ¶ 7, 
    336 P.3d 398
     (“Statutory interpretation is an issue of law that we
    7 review de novo.” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)). “When construing
    8 statutes our charge is to determine and give effect to the Legislature’s intent.” Id.
    9 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). To discern that “appellate courts
    10 look first to the plain language of the statute, giving the words their ordinary
    11 meaning, unless the Legislature indicates a different one was intended.” Wild
    12 Horse I, 
    2016-NMCA-001
    , ¶ 11 (alteration, internal quotation marks, and citations
    13 omitted). “[W]hen a statute contains language which is clear and unambiguous, we
    14 must give effect to that language and refrain from further statutory interpretation.”
    15 Truong v. Allstate Ins. Co., 
    2010-NMSC-009
    , ¶ 37, 
    147 N.M. 583
    , 
    227 P.3d 73
    16 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). “The statute or statutes, whose
    17 construction is in question, are to be read in connection with other statutes
    18 concerning the same subject matter.” State ex rel. Child., Youth & Fams. Dep’t v.
    19 Djamila B., 
    2014-NMCA-045
    , ¶ 10, 
    322 P.3d 444
     (alteration, internal quotation
    20 marks, and citation omitted).
    7
    1 A.       The Legal Framework Regarding New Mexico’s Wild Horses
    2   {9}    Before turning to the district court’s application of Section 77-18-5, we briefly
    3 set forth the relevant legal background. New Mexico’s wild horses are governed by
    4 federal law and certain New Mexico statutes and administrative code provisions. In
    5 enacting the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act (WHBA), 16 U.S.C.
    6 §§ 1331-1340, Congress declared in 1971 that “wild free-roaming horses and burros
    7 are living symbols of the historic and pioneer spirit of the West” and “shall be
    8 protected from capture, branding, harassment, or death.” § 1331. The WHBA
    9 defines “wild free-roaming horses and burros” as “all unbranded and unclaimed
    10 horses and burros on public lands of the United States.” § 1332(b). “[P]ublic lands”
    11 are defined as “any lands administered by the Secretary of the Interior through the
    12 Bureau of Land Management or by the Secretary of Agriculture through the Forest
    13 Service.” § 1332(e). Importantly, the WHBA also extends protection to such animals
    14 that stray from public land onto private land. § 1334; Kleppe v. New Mexico, 426
    
    15 U.S. 529
    , 546 (1976).
    16   {10}   Our Legislature has also enacted statutes designed to protect wild horses.
    17 Section 77-18-5(A)(4) defines “wild horse” as “an unclaimed horse on public land
    18 that is not an estray.” Section 77-18-5(A)(1) defines “public land” as “not
    19 includ[ing] federal land controlled by the bureau of land management, the forest
    20 service or state trust land controlled by the state land office.” Read in connection
    8
    1 with one another, the federal statute governs wild horses on the federally managed
    2 lands described in § 1332(e), and the state statute governs wild horses on all other
    3 public lands except state trust land that is controlled by the state land office.
    4   {11}   Section 77-18-5 also explains the Board’s role in protecting New Mexico’s
    5 wild horses. See Wild Horse I, 
    2016-NMCA-001
    , ¶ 22 (“We conclude that the
    6 Legislature intended to require the Board to test and relocate horses captured on
    7 public land as provided under Section 77-18-5(B).”). Section 77-18-5(B) provides:
    8          A wild horse that is captured on public land shall have its conformation,
    9          history and [DNA] tested to determine if it is a Spanish colonial horse.
    10          If it is a Spanish colonial horse, the wild horse shall be relocated to a
    11          state or private wild horse preserve created and maintained for the
    12          purpose of protecting Spanish colonial horses. If it is not a Spanish
    13          colonial horse, it shall be returned to the public land, relocated to a
    14          public or private wild horse preserve or put up for adoption by the
    15          agency on whose land the wild horse was captured.
    16   {12}   Section 77-18-5(C) also emphasizes the “necess[ity of] preserving the genetic
    17 stock of the herd and for preserving and maintaining the range” and authorizes the
    18 mammal division at the University of New Mexico to control the wild horse
    19 population through the use of contraceptives. If this division determines that “a wild
    20 horse herd exceeds the number of horses that is necessary for preserving the genetic
    21 stock of the herd and for preserving and maintaining the range,” the division “may
    22 cause excess horses” to be:
    23                (1) humanely captured and relocated to other public land or to
    24          a public or private wild horse preserve;
    9
    1                (2)    adopted by a qualified person for private maintenance; or
    2                (3) euthanized; provided that this option applies only to wild
    3          horses that are determined by a veterinarian to be crippled or otherwise
    4          unhealthy.
    5 
    Id.
    6   {13}   Our analysis of the questions at hand is also guided by relevant precedent
    7 examining the role of the Board. The United States Supreme Court considered the
    8 role of New Mexico’s Livestock Board in Kleppe, following a challenge by the
    9 Board in which a federal district court determined that the WHBA was
    10 unconstitutional. See State v. Morton, 
    406 F. Supp. 1237
     (D.N.M. 1975), rev’d by
    11 Kleppe, 426 U.S. at 534-35. In Kleppe, the Supreme Court reversed the district court
    12 holding that the WHBA was a constitutional exercise of Congressional power under
    13 the Property Clause and prohibited the Board from removing wild burros on federal
    14 public lands. 426 U.S. at 546.
    15   {14}   As previously stated, this Court has also considered the limitations of the
    16 Board. See generally Wild Horse I, 
    2016-NMCA-001
    , ¶ 1. In Wild Horse I, we held
    17 that the Board “unlawfully treated a group of undomesticated, unowned, free-
    18 roaming horses . . . as ‘livestock’ and ‘estray’ rather than as ‘wild horses.’” 3 
    Id.
    Our holding in Wild Horse I is also consistent with the opinion of the New
    3
    Mexico Attorney General, who has explained that “the wild horses do not fit within
    the applicable definition of ‘livestock’ . . . and, therefore, the . . . Board does not
    have the statutory authority to take possession of and sell them as estrays.” N.M.
    Att’y Gen., No. 94-06 (Aug. 25, 1994).
    10
    1 ¶¶ 1, 9. We further concluded that the Livestock Code requires “a determination
    2 about whether a horse is domesticated or wild” and “the Legislature intended to
    3 require the Board to test and relocate horses captured on public land as provided
    4 under Section 77-18-5(B).” Wild Horse I, 
    2016-NMCA-001
    , ¶¶ 18, 22. We further
    5 explained that because “estray” is defined under the Livestock Code as “livestock
    6 found running at large upon public or private lands, either fenced or unfenced,” § 77-
    7 2-1.1(N), and “wild horse” is defined as “an unclaimed horse on public land that is
    8 not an estray,” § 77-18-5(A)(4), the statutory definition of “estray” does not
    9 encompass New Mexico’s wild horses. See Wild Horse I, 
    2016-NMCA-001
    , ¶ 27.
    10 With this legal framework in mind, we now address the issues before us.
    11 B.       Because the Habitat of the Subject Horses Includes New Mexico’s Public
    12          Land, the Subject Horses Meet the Statutory Definition of Wild Horses
    13          and Therefore May Not Be Treated as Estray by the Board
    14   {15}   To determine whether the subject horses are “wild horses,” we revisit the
    15 Legislature’s definition of that phrase in Section 77-18-5(A)(4): “an unclaimed horse
    16 on public land that is not an estray.” The district court made unchallenged findings
    17 that before the herd of horses that included the subject horses were captured, they
    18 roamed various public lands, including but not limited to the property owned by the
    19 Village of Ruidoso, property owned by the City of Alamogordo, as well as state and
    20 county roads and rights of way. The district court additionally determined that the
    21 subject horses “do not and never have had owners, were not born or raised or used
    11
    1 on a ranch or farm” and have been seen “free-roaming the Alto, New Mexico area”
    2 for over thirty years. Because the Board does not challenge these factual findings on
    3 appeal, the question before us is whether they suffice to support the district court’s
    4 determination that the subject horses are not “estray” and separately resolve the
    5 inquiry as to whether they were “on public land.” 4 Section 77-18-5(A)(4). We
    6 answer each question affirmatively, disagreeing with the district court as to the latter
    7 answer.
    8   {16}   In determining whether the subject horses are estray, we first consider whether
    9 the wild horses are “livestock found running at large upon public or private lands,
    10 either fenced or unfenced.” Section 77-2-1.1(N). Wild Horse I makes clear the Board
    11 is prohibited from treating undomesticated wild animals as estray. See 2016-NMCA-
    12 001, ¶¶ 17-18. Wild Horse I further instructs that the Board may not treat a “group
    13 of undomesticated, unowned, free-roaming horses” as estray livestock rather than as
    14 wild horses. Id. ¶ 1. Like the group of horses at issue in Wild Horse I, here the subject
    4
    The Board argues that the district court erred in concluding that “public land”
    as contemplated by Section 77-18-5(A)(1) encompasses all land other than federal
    public land. We agree and conclude that district court erred in incorporating land
    that is privately owned in its definition of nonfederal public land. But this mistake
    of law does not require reversal as to the district court’s central determination that
    the Board acted unlawfully regarding the subject horses. The unchallenged findings
    of the district court establish that the subject horses were on “public land” at various
    points in time, and as we hold today, the fact that they were on private land at the
    moment of capture, does not mean the subject horses were then estray. It follows
    that the Board was not authorized to treat the horses as estray, and the district court
    correctly enjoined them from doing so.
    12
    1 horses are not and were never domesticated. As the district court explained, the
    2 Board has no record of ownership of the subject horses nor have they “been used or
    3 raised as domestic work animals . . . or used or raised as livestock on a farm or a
    4 ranch.” See id. ¶ 15 (interpreting the “definition of ‘livestock’ to include only
    5 domestic or domesticated animals” and rejecting “the argument that all horses
    6 anywhere in New Mexico are livestock because horses are included within the
    7 definition of livestock”). Therefore, we agree with the district court that the subject
    8 horses are indeed “wild horses” under Section 77-18-5(A)(4) and are not “estray.”
    9   {17}   Given that determination, we now consider whether the subject horses were
    10 on “public land” as contemplated by Section 77-18-5(B). The absence of the word
    11 “capture” from the phrase “on public land” in the definition of “wild horse” in
    12 Section 77-18-5(A)(4) casts serious doubt on the Board’s argument that the location
    13 where horses happen to be captured dictates whether they qualify as wild horses, and
    14 that the horses at issue in this appeal do not qualify merely because they were
    15 captured on private land. Had the Legislature intended to make the definition turn
    16 on the nature of the land where horses are captured, it easily could have done so by
    17 using the phrase “captured on”—which the Legislature included in Section 77-18-
    18 5(B) but, critically, omitted from Section 77-18-5(A)(4). 5 See Schultz ex rel. Schultz
    Like the statutory definition, the definition in the New Mexico
    5
    Administrative Code does not state or in any way suggest that whether a horse is a
    wild horse depends on where it is captured. See 21.30.5.7(F) NMAC (defining
    13
    1 v. Pojoaque Tribal Police Dep’t, 
    2013-NMSC-013
    , ¶ 36, 
    484 P.3d 954
     (explaining
    2 that “when the Legislature includes a particular word in one portion of a statute and
    3 omits it from another portion of that statute, such omission is presumed to be
    4 intentional” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)). Rather than adding the
    5 word “captured” to Section 77-18-5(A)(4), see State v. Greenwood, 2012-NMCA-
    6 017, ¶ 38, 
    271 P.3d 753
     (“The Legislature knows how to include language in a statute
    7 if it so desires.” (alteration, internal quotation marks, and citation omitted)), we
    8 conclude that the phrase “on public land” means that the wild horses’ habitat
    9 includes public land, regardless of where such horses are found at any given point
    10 in time.
    11   {18}   Our interpretation in this regard is consistent with the federal definition, which
    12 is based on identical statutory language. See § 1332(b) (defining “wild free-roaming
    13 horses and burros” as “all unbranded and unclaimed horses and burros on public
    14 lands of the United States”); see also 
    43 C.F.R. § 4700.0-5
    (l) (2022) (defining “wild
    15 horses and burros” to include “all unbranded and unclaimed horses and burros that
    16 use public lands as all or part of their habitat” (emphasis added)). For us to allow
    17 the Board to take possession of wild horses captured on a privately owned location
    18 mere feet from the public land included within the horses’ habitat would allow the
    “[w]ild horses” as “feral horses,” and stating that “[f]eral horses are existing in an
    untamed state having returned to a wild state from domestication”).
    14
    1 Board to treat such horses as estray, and would eviscerate the purpose of the statute
    2 in a way that would be not only nonsensical, but potentially harmful to the animals
    3 protected by the statute and other important federal, state, and regulatory enactments.
    4 See § 1331; § 77-18-5(C). Further, such an interpretation would effectively place a
    5 burden on wild horses to somehow avoid private lands in order to maintain their wild
    6 status. See Bishop v. Evangelical Good Samaritan Soc’y, 
    2009-NMSC-036
    , ¶ 11,
    7 
    146 N.M. 473
    , 
    212 P.3d 361
     (“We must also consider the practical implications and
    8 the legislative purpose of a statute, and when the literal meaning of a statute would
    9 be absurd, unreasonable, or otherwise inappropriate in application, we go beyond
    10 the mere text of the statute.”).
    11   {19}   Moreover, Section 77-16-1, which provides “[e]very gardener, farmer, planter
    12 or other person having lands or crops that would be injured by trespassing animals,
    13 shall make a sufficient fence about his land,” places the onus on landowners who
    14 wish to keep out wild animals to build a fence sufficient to accomplish that aim.
    15 Thus, in the case at hand, the duty was not on the subject horses to avoid entering
    16 McCoy’s private property. Rather, under Section 77-16-1, if McCoy does not want
    17 the subject horses to trespass on her property, she “shall make a sufficient fence,”
    18 which is not intended to be used to corral the subject horses on private property, but
    19 instead to keep them from it. Because it is a landowner’s duty to build a fence
    20 sufficient to prevent wild horses from entry onto his or her private property, we
    15
    1 cannot conclude that a wild horse loses its “wild” status, and thus becomes estray,
    2 when it steps over an unenclosed private property boundary, and sets hoof on private
    3 land.
    4   {20}   We, therefore, conclude that the district court committed no reversible error
    5 in finding that the subject horses should be protected as “wild horses” because the
    6 definition of that term does not depend on whether, at the moment of their capture,
    7 the horses happened to be on land that is private, but instead depends on whether the
    8 horses generally roam public land.
    9 C.       Because the Subject Horses Are Wild Horses, the District Court Erred in
    10          Concluding That When the Board Captured the Subject Horses on
    11          McCoy’s Private Land, It Should Have Conducted its Statutory Duties
    12          Under Section 77-18-5
    13   {21}   Because we hold that the subject horses are indeed wild horses under Section
    14 77-18-5(A)(4) and, therefore, may not be treated as estray, we now consider whether
    15 the district court erred in finding that the Board “failed to follow statutory procedures
    16 for handling wild horses” including failing to test the conformation, history, and
    17 DNA of the subject horses.
    18   {22}   In analyzing the plain meaning of Section 77-18-5, we conclude that the
    19 Legislature did not intend to mean that the Board has a duty to test the conformation,
    20 history, and DNA of a wild horse if it is captured on private land. Such would be
    21 contrary to the otherwise exacting requirements of the statute. See Britton v. Off. of
    22 Att’y Gen., 
    2019-NMCA-002
    , ¶¶ 27-28, 
    433 P.3d 320
     (“A construction must be
    16
    1 given which will not render the statute’s application absurd or unreasonable and
    2 which will not defeat the object of the Legislature. . . . We should not attribute to the
    3 Legislature an undue precision in drafting and thereby frustrate legislative intent
    4 when we construe a statute.” (alteration, internal quotation marks, and citations
    5 omitted)). In our view, the directive set forth in Section 77-18-5(B), alongside our
    6 Court’s interpretation of this section in Wild Horse I, is clear and unambiguous—
    7 the Board’s duty to test the conformation, history, and DNA of a wild horse is only
    8 applicable where a wild horse “is captured on public land.” See BOKF v. Unknown
    9 Heirs of Pacheco, 
    2021-NMCA-010
    , ¶ 17, 
    484 P.3d 1020
     (“We may only add words
    10 to a statute where it is necessary to make the statute conform to the Legislature’s
    11 clear intent, or to prevent the statute from being absurd.” (alteration, internal
    12 quotation marks, and citation omitted)). Because this statutory directive does not
    13 contemplate a scenario where a wild horse is captured on private land, we deem it to
    14 be inapplicable to the facts at hand. Therefore, we hold that the Board is only
    15 required to test the conformation, history, and DNA of wild horses captured on
    16 public land, see § 77-18-5(B), and to the extent the district court found otherwise, it
    17 committed reversible error.
    18   {23}   This interpretation of Section 77-18-5(B) is supported by both federal and
    19 state law. 
    16 U.S.C. § 1334
     demonstrates that wild free-roaming horses maintain
    17
    1 their wild status when they stray from public lands. 
    16 U.S.C. § 1334
     provides in
    2 part:
    3                 If wild free-roaming horses . . . stray from public lands onto
    4          privately owned land, the owners of such land may inform the nearest
    5          Federal marshall or agent of the Secretary [of the Interior], who shall
    6          arrange to have the animals removed. In no event shall such wild free-
    7          roaming horses . . . be destroyed except by the agents of the Secretary.
    8 Read in connection with Section 77-18-5(C)—which authorizes a wild horse’s
    9 removal from public lands in only justified and limited circumstances, such as
    10 population control—it is clear that the goal of both Congress and our Legislature is
    11 to leave wild horses in their natural habitat unless there is a valid reason to remove
    12 them. When there is such a valid reason, the requirements of Section 77-18-5(B) are
    13 triggered.
    14   {24}   Therefore, to remove the word “public” from Section 77-18-5(B), and
    15 categorically require the Board to conduct conformation, history, and DNA testing
    16 of all wild horses it captures—even those captured on private land without legal
    17 justification—would allow the Board to remove wild horses with Spanish colonial
    18 ancestry from their natural habitat. Thus, private landowners such as McCoy, would
    19 achieve through violation of Section 77-18-5(B), exactly the result desired: removal
    20 of wild horses that such landowners deem to be a nuisance.
    21   {25}   For these reasons, we hold that the district court did not err in determining that
    22 the subject horses are wild horses under Section 77-18-5(A)(4) and that that the
    18
    1 Board therefore, ran afoul of the Livestock Code by treating the subject horses as
    2 estrays. However, we hold that the district court erred in determining that the Board
    3 failed to follow its statutory duties under Section 77-18-5(B). Rather, in our view,
    4 when the Board is asked to address wild horses captured on private land, it has no
    5 authority to test the conformation, history, and DNA of such horses, any more than
    6 it does to take possession of and remove the wild horses from their public habitat in
    7 circumstances that do not otherwise justify such action. Rather, in such
    8 circumstances as the Board here faced, its duty was to return the subject horses to
    9 the public land they inhabit.
    10 II.      Certain District Court Findings That the Board Argues Are
    11          Unsupported by Substantial Evidence Are Not Determinative to Our
    12          Holding
    13   {26}   The Board contends that many of the district court’s findings are unsupported
    14 by substantial evidence. WHOA answers that not only do the Board’s arguments
    15 related to substantial evidence fail to comply with the New Mexico Rules of
    16 Appellate Procedure, but the findings the Board “addresses are not necessary to the
    17 judgment.” We agree with WHOA’s latter argument and explain.
    18 A.       Findings Related to Caroline McCoy as an Agent of the Board
    19   {27}   The Board argues that “the district court incorrectly concluded that . . .
    20 McCoy, the private landowner who impounded the horses, acted as an ‘agent’ of the
    19
    1 Board.” Specifically, the Board argues that no evidence was presented to support an
    2 agency relationship.
    3   {28}   Even if we were to conclude that substantial evidence did not support the
    4 district court’s conclusion that McCoy was acting as an agent of the Board, such
    5 status or the lack thereof has no impact on our holding today. In our view, it is
    6 irrelevant whether the Board itself or an agent of the Board initially took possession
    7 of the subject horses on private land. Rather, as we explained above, regardless of
    8 how the Board came into possession of the horses, they are wild horses, and
    9 therefore, the Board was not authorized to treat them as estrays.
    10 B.       Findings as Related to the Subject Horses
    11   {29}   The Board additionally argues that the district court’s determinations that the
    12 wild horses of Alto—including the subject horses—“have lived on all unfenced
    13 lands around Alto, that the horses have lived in the area since 1965, and that all
    14 horses are wildlife,” were not supported by substantial evidence. The Board fails to
    15 provide any context to the district court’s statements and misstates the district court’s
    16 findings of fact.
    17   {30}   As an initial matter, the Board fails to meet its burden on appeal regarding this
    18 contention because it neglects to explain the pertinence of the evidence that it seeks
    19 to attack or adequately point to evidence contrary to that which formed the basis of
    20 the district court’s findings. See Rule 12-318(A)(3) NMRA (“A contention that a
    20
    1 verdict, judgment, or finding of fact is not supported by substantial evidence shall
    2 be deemed waived unless the summary of proceedings includes the substance of the
    3 evidence bearing on the proposition.”); see also, Chavez v. S.E.D. Lab’ys, 2000-
    4 NMCA-034, ¶ 26, 
    128 N.M. 768
    , 
    999 P.2d 412
     (“[W]e review substantial evidence
    5 claims only if the appellant apprises the Court of all evidence bearing upon the issue,
    6 [including] both [evidence] that . . . is favorable and [evidence] that . . . is contrary
    7 to [the] appellant’s position.” (emphasis added)), aff’d in part, rev’d in part, and
    8 remanded 
    2000-NMSC-034
    , 
    129 N.M. 794
    , 
    14 P.3d 532
    . Even were we to agree
    9 with the Board that the district court’s finding of fact that the “wild horses of Alto
    10 [including the subject horses] . . . have roamed and occupied all unfenced lands of
    11 Alto” is an inaccurate overstatement, we remain unpersuaded that the findings of
    12 fact the Board seeks to attack are unsupported by substantial evidence. John Lamay,
    13 a witness who testified during the TRO hearing, stated that he had seen the wild
    14 horses in the Alto area on public land for decades. Similarly, another witness, Jack
    15 Reppin, testified that he had seen the wild horses around Bonito Lake, Ski Run Road,
    16 and Monjeau Lookout for ten years. Moreover, we observe no district court finding
    17 stating, as claimed by the Board, that “all horses are wildlife.” See Chan, 2011-
    18 NMCA-072, ¶ 9 (“It is not our practice to rely on assertions of counsel
    19 unaccompanied by support in the record.” (internal quotation marks and citation
    20 omitted)). Therefore, we remain unpersuaded that any of the district court findings
    21
    1 as presented by the Board are unsupported by substantial evidence, or more to the
    2 point here, determinative to any legal point of appeal. We, therefore, decline the
    3 Board’s invitation to undertake a line item review of findings it cherry picks from
    4 the overall body of findings that support the district court’s legal conclusions.
    5 III.     Remaining Issues
    6   {31}   The Board makes three final arguments related to the district court’s order of
    7 injunction, failure to implement an injunction bond, and award of attorney fees.
    8 A.       The District Court’s Injunction Was Not Vague or Impracticable
    9   {32}   The Board asserts because the district court refers to the subject horses
    10 throughout the injunction with “different descriptors [that] are never defined or
    11 reconciled” and orders the Board to engage in “scientifically meaningless DNA
    12 testing” of “an unascertained population of horses in Lincoln County,” the injunction
    13 was “vague, internally contradictory, and irrational.” 6 WHOA answers that the
    14 injunction is not vague as it “is directed at the subject horses, because they are the
    6
    The Board also argues that the district court’s order requiring that the subject
    horses “be set loose in a private residential subdivision whose restrictive covenants
    prohibit animals other than domestic pets” is unlawful. We note that in making this
    argument, the Board concedes that it understands precisely which wild horses the
    district court’s injunction contemplates. However, in making this argument the
    Board fails to adequately explain why this aspect of the district court’s order renders
    it an abuse of discretion, and we, therefore, decline to address it. See Corona v.
    Corona, 
    2014-NMCA-071
    , ¶ 28, 
    329 P.3d 701
     (“This Court has no duty to review
    an argument that is not adequately developed.”); see also Headley v. Morgan Mgmt.
    Corp., 
    2005-NMCA-045
    , ¶ 15, 
    137 N.M. 339
    , 
    110 P.3d 1076
     (“We will not review
    unclear arguments, or guess at what [a party’s] arguments might be.”).
    22
    1 only Lincoln County wild horses held by the [Board.]” We agree with WHOA’s
    2 position and explain.
    3   {33}   “The granting of an injunction is an equitable remedy, and whether to grant
    4 equitable relief lies within the sound discretion of the trial court.” Insure N.M., LLC
    5 v. McGonigle, 
    2000-NMCA-018
    , ¶ 7, 
    128 N.M. 611
    , 
    995 P.2d 1053
    . Thus, the trial
    6 court’s discretion will not be disturbed unless there is an abuse of discretion. Moody
    7 v. Stribling, 
    1999-NMCA-094
    , ¶ 30, 
    127 N.M. 630
    , 
    985 P.2d 1210
    . “An abuse of
    8 discretion occurs when a ruling is clearly contrary to the logical conclusions
    9 demanded by the facts and circumstances of the case.” Insure N.M., LLC, 2000-
    10 NMCA-018, ¶ 7 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). “In determining
    11 whether to grant injunctive relief, a district court must consider a number of factors
    12 and balance the equities and hardships.” Allred v. N.M. Dep’t of Transp., 2017-
    13 NMCA-019, ¶ 36, 
    388 P.3d 998
     (alteration, internal quotation marks, and citation
    14 omitted). “Some of these factors include: (1) the character of the interest to be
    15 protected; (2) the relative adequacy to the plaintiff of an injunction, when compared
    16 to other remedies; (3) interests of third parties; (4) the practicability of granting and
    17 enforcing the order; and (5) the relative hardship likely to result to the defendant if
    18 granted and to the plaintiff if denied.” 
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks and citation
    19 omitted).
    23
    1   {34}   Here, the district court declared, in pertinent part, that
    2          “the [Board] is enjoined from any further unlawful possession and sale
    3          of the Lincoln County wild horses contrary to the Livestock Code” and
    4          that “the [Board] does not have jurisdiction over the Lincoln County
    5          wild horse herd.”
    6 The Board contends that because the district court’s order does not “define the
    7 population of horses to which the . . . injunctions apply, the Board cannot be
    8 reasonably apprised of what conduct will be treated as a violation of the district
    9 court’s order.” It is true that within its order of injunction the district court varyingly
    10 referenced the subject horses, as the “subject wild horses that reside on public lands,”
    11 the “Lincoln County wild horse herd,” and the “unclaimed Lincoln County horses,”
    12 and that such may be considered inconsistent. However, reading the district court’s
    13 order as a whole, it is apparent that the district court was referring to the members
    14 of the wild horse herd of Alto, including the twelve horses, seven mares, and five
    15 foals—the subject horses—of which the Board initially took possession. See Jones
    16 v. Schoellkopf, 
    2005-NMCA-124
    , ¶ 8, 
    138 N.M. 477
    , 
    122 P.3d 844
     (“[W]e review
    17 the evidence in the light most favorable to support the [district] court’s findings,
    18 resolving all conflicts and indulging all permissible inferences in favor of the
    19 decision below.”). Nowhere within its order does the district court suggest its ruling
    20 applies to all wild horses in Alto or indeed to any wild horse other than the subject
    21 horses. Thus, we remain unpersuaded that the differing descriptive nomenclature
    22 employed by the district court renders its injunction impracticable to implement. See
    24
    1 Allred, 
    2017-NMCA-019
    , ¶ 36 (explaining that in issuing an injunction the district
    2 court must consider the practicability of granting and enforcing the order); see also
    3 Wilcox v. Timberon Protective Ass’n, 
    1990-NMCA-137
    , ¶ 45, 
    806 P.2d 1068
    4 (determining that an injunction requiring the removal of ten mobile homes “does not
    5 require either an impossibility or something that is highly impracticable”),
    6 abrogated on other grounds by Agua Fria v. Rowe, 
    2011-NMCA-054
    , ¶ 22, 149
    
    7 N.M. 812
    , 
    255 P.3d 390
    .
    8   {35}   We further recognize that the current and future placement of the subject
    9 horses may differ from the locations contemplated by the district court’s order.
    10 However, such does not require that we overturn the district court’s order given our
    11 holding reversing the district court’s determination that the Board was required to
    12 comply with its duties pursuant to Section 77-18-5, including its duty to relocate
    13 wild horses the Board determined to be Spanish colonial. We emphasize the district
    14 court’s authority, on remand, to address evolving factual circumstances and modify
    15 its injunction accordingly.
    16 B.       Injunction Bond
    17   {36}   The Board additionally contends that the district court “abused its discretion
    18 in refusing to impose an injunction bond” and in denying the Board’s motion to
    19 dissolve the TRO. Specifically, the Board asserts that the district court failed to
    25
    1 explain its reasoning as to why no bond was required at the relevant hearing or in its
    2 written order.
    3   {37}   We review the district court’s decision to grant or deny injunctive relief under
    4 an abuse of discretion. Nat’l Tr. for Historic Pres. v. City of Albuquerque, 1994-
    5 NMCA-057, ¶ 21, 
    117 N.M. 590
    , 
    874 P.2d 798
    ; see MAI Basic Four, Inc. v. Basis,
    6 Inc., 
    962 F.2d 978
    , 980 n.3 (10th Cir. 1992) (affirming the district court’s refusal to
    7 require an injunction bond (quoting Coquina Oil Corp. v. Transwestern Pipeline
    8 Co., 
    825 F.2d 1461
    , 1462 (10th Cir. 1987) (“[A] trial court may, in the exercise of
    9 discretion, determine a bond is unnecessary to secure a preliminary injunction, if
    10 there is an absence of proof showing a likelihood of harm.” (internal quotation marks
    11 and citation omitted))). “No restraining order, preliminary injunction or appointment
    12 of a receiver shall issue or occur except upon the giving of security by the applicant,
    13 in such sum as the court deems proper.” Rule 1-066(C) NMRA; see Gaume v. N.M.
    14 Interstate Stream Comm’n, 
    2019-NMCA-064
    , ¶¶ 13, 14, 
    450 P.3d 476
     (explaining
    15 that injunction bonds provide a remedy for wrongfully enjoined defendants).
    16 However, “for good cause shown and to be recited in the order made, the [district]
    17 court or judge may waive the furnishing of a security.” Rule 1-066(C).
    18   {38}   Here, the district court provided its reasoning in a written order explaining
    19 that it “decline[d] to order the posting of a bond because the [c]ourt has offered the
    20 ability to the [Board] to work with [WHOA] in this case and return the horses to
    26
    1 Lincoln County for their safekeeping during the pendency of this action.” Because
    2 the district court provided a reasonable explanation in a written order as to why it
    3 declined to order an injunction bond, as well as in light of our holding that the
    4 injunction was not impracticable for the Board to comply with, see Gaum, 2019-
    5 NMCA-064, ¶ 13, we determine that the district court did not abuse its discretion.
    6   {39}   Turning to the Board’s assertion that the district court abused its discretion in
    7 “refusing to evaluate the merits of the Board’s motion to dissolve the TRO,” we
    8 remain unpersuaded. Although the Board contends that the district court
    9 mischaracterized the Board’s motion as a motion for summary judgment and applied
    10 an “incorrect standard,” the Board fails to explain what standard was applied or how
    11 such incorrect application resulted in an abuse of discretion. See Farmers, Inc. v.
    12 Dal Mach. & Fabricating, Inc., 
    1990-NMSC-100
    , ¶ 8, 
    111 N.M. 6
    , 
    800 P.2d 1063
    13 (“The presumption upon review favors the correctness of the [district] court’s
    14 actions. [The a]ppellant must affirmatively demonstrate its assertion of error.”).
    15 Moreover, our own review of the record demonstrates that the district court heard
    16 the merits of the Board’s motion, stating that the motion was “styled like a summary
    17 judgment motion,” and determining the motion to be without merit and therefore
    18 declined to order the dissolution of the TRO. Thus, we remain unpersuaded that the
    19 district court abused its discretion in this regard.
    27
    1 C.       Attorney Fees
    2   {40}   The Board finally argues that in awarding WHOA attorney fees in the absence
    3 of any statutory provision or any other legal basis for fee-shifting, the district court
    4 abused its discretion. WHOA answers that this issue is not ripe because no actual
    5 award has been made. Although it appears that a hearing was held in which the
    6 district court considered the amount and propriety of attorney fees while this case
    7 was pending on appeal, the parties direct us to no final order in the record, nor do
    8 they make arguments related to the nature, basis or amount of attorney fees sufficient
    9 to address this issue on appeal. See Kepler v. Slade, 
    1995-NMSC-035
    , ¶ 13, 119
    
    10 N.M. 802
    , 
    896 P.2d 482
     (“Matters outside the record present no issue for review.”
    11 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)); see also Elane Photography, LLC
    12 v. Willock, 
    2013-NMSC-040
    , ¶ 70, 
    309 P.3d 53
     (“To rule on an inadequately briefed
    13 issue, [an appellate court] would have to develop the arguments itself, effectively
    14 performing the parties’ work for them.”). Because the record and arguments
    15 presented by the parties are insufficient to resolve this issue, we decline to further
    16 address it and remand to allow the district court to consider and resolve the propriety
    17 of an award of attorney fees and to issue an order granting or denying attorney fees.
    18 CONCLUSION
    19   {41}   We hold that wild horses whose habitat includes public lands do not lose their
    20 wild status when captured on private lands. We, therefore, affirm the district court’s
    28
    1 order to the extent that it correctly determined that the subject horses are wild horses,
    2 and may not be treated as estray, but reverse the district court’s determination that
    3 the Board should have acted according to its statutory duties under Section 77-18-5,
    4 and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion and further consideration
    5 of attorney fees.
    6   {42}   IT IS SO ORDERED.
    7                                                 _____________________________
    8                                                 J. MILES HANISEE, Chief Judge
    9 WE CONCUR:
    10 ________________________________
    11 ZACHARY A. IVES, Judge
    12 ________________________________
    13 SHAMMARA H. HENDERSON, Judge
    29