This court has jurisdiction to review by writ of error a
judgment of the highest court of the State of Oregon deciding that
a donation land claim under the act of Congress of September 27,
1850, c. 76, of land bounded by tidewater, passed no title or right
below high water mark, as against a subsequent grant from the
state.
By the common law, the title in the soil of the sea, or of arms
of the sea, below high water mark, except so far as private rights
in it have been acquired by express grant, or by prescription or
usage, is in the King, subject to the public rights of navigation
and fishing, and no one can erect a building or wharf upon it,
without license.
Upon the American Revolution, the title and the dominion of the
tidewaters and of the lands under them vested in the several States
of the union within their respective borders, subject to the rights
surrendered by the Constitution to the United States.
In the original states, by various laws and usages, the owners
of lands bordering on tidewaters were allowed greater rights and
privileges in the shore below high water mark than they had in
England.
The new states admitted into the union since the adoption of the
Constitution have the same rights as the original states in the
tidewaters and in the lands under them within their respective
jurisdictions.
The United States, upon acquiring a territory, whether by
cession from one of the States or by treaty with a foreign country
or by discovery
Page 152 U. S. 2
and settlement, take the title and the dominion of lands below
high water mark of tidewaters for the benefit of the whole people,
and in trust for the future States to be created out of the
territory.
Upon the question how far the title extends of the owner of land
bounding on a river actually navigable, but above the ebb and flow
of the tide, there is a diversity in the laws of the different
States, but the prevailing doctrine now is that he does not, as in
England, own to the thread of the stream.
The title and rights of riparian or littoral proprietors in the
soil below high water mark are governed by the laws of the several
states, subject to the rights granted to the United States by the
Constitution.
The United States, while they hold country as a territory, have
all the powers both of national and of municipal government, and
may grant, for appropriate purposes, titles or rights in the soil
below high water mark of tidewaters.
Congress has not undertaken by general laws to dispose of lands
below high water mark of tidewaters in a territory but, unless in
case of some international duty or public exigency, has left the
administration and disposition of the sovereign rights in such
waters and lauds to the control of the states, respectively, when
admitted into the union.
A donation land claim, bounded by the Columbia River, acquired
under the Act of Congress of September 27, 1850, c. 76, while
Oregon was a territory, passes no title or right in lands below
high water mark as against a subsequent grant from the State of
Oregon pursuant to its statutes.
The original suit was in the nature of a bill in equity, brought
June 8, 1891, by John Q. A. Bowlby and W. W. Parker against Charles
W. Shively and wife, in the Circuit Court for the County of Clatsop
and State of Oregon, to quiet the title to lands below high water
mark in the City of Astoria. The case, as appearing by the record,
was as follows:
On and before May 20, 1854, John M. Shively and wife were the
owners of a donation land claim, as laid out and recorded by him
under the Act of Congress of September 27, 1850, c. 76, 9 Stat.
496, commonly known as the "Oregon Donation Act," embracing the
then town and much of the present City of Astoria, and bounded on
the north by the Columbia River.
On May 20, 1854, John M. Shively laid out and caused to be
recorded a plat of that claim, not only of the land above high
water mark, but also of adjacent tidelands and a portion of the bed
of the Columbia River, including the lands in controversy, and
divided into blocks three hundred feet square,
Page 152 U. S. 3
and separated from each other by streets thirty or sixty feet
wide, some running at right angles to, and the others nearly
parallel with, high water mark, the outermost of which streets were
not within eight hundred feet of the ship channel.
Blocks 4 and 9 were above ordinary high water mark. Block 146
was in front of block 4, and between high and low water mark. In
front of block 9 came blocks 141, 126, and 127, successively. A
strip about fifty feet wide, being the southern part of block 141,
was above high water mark, and the whole of the rest of that block
was below high water mark and above low water mark. The line of
ordinary low tide was on September 18, 1876 at the north line of
that block; but on December 15, 1890, and for some time before this
date, was one hundred feet north of the north line of block
127.
On February 18, 1860, John M. Shively and wife conveyed blocks
9, 126, 127, and 146, "in the town plat of Astoria, as laid out and
recorded by John M. Shively," to James Welch and Nancy Welch, whose
title was afterwards conveyed to the plaintiffs.
On June 2, 1864, John M. Shively laid out and caused to be
recorded an additional plat covering all the space between blocks
127 and 146 and the channel.
In 1865, the United States issued a patent to John M. Shively
and wife for the donation land claim, bounded by the Columbia
River.
On September 18, 1876, the State of Oregon, by its governor,
secretary, and treasurer, acting as the board of school land
commissioners, pursuant to the statute of Oregon of October 26,
1874, (Laws 1874, p. 76) amending the statute of Oregon of October
28, 1872, Laws 1872, p. 129, the provisions of both of which
statutes are set forth in the margin [
Footnote 1] (the words printed in brackets having been in
the statute of 1872 only,
Page 152 U. S. 4
and those printed in italics having been inserted in the statute
of 1874), executed to the plaintiffs a deed of all the lands
lying
Page 152 U. S. 5
between high water mark and low water mark in front of block 9,
including all the tideland in block 141, and also a
Page 152 U. S. 6
deed of all the tidelands in block 146, but never executed to
any one a deed of any tidelands north of block 146.
The plaintiffs afterwards held possession of the lands so
conveyed to them, and maintained a wharf in front of block 127,
which extended several hundred feet into the Columbia River, and at
which ocean and river craft were wont to receive and discharge
freight.
On December 15, 1890, John M. Shively, having acquired whatever
title his wife still had in the lands in controversy, conveyed all
his right, title, and interest therein to the defendant Charles W.
Shively.
Page 152 U. S. 7
On April 7, 1891, the defendants, pretending to act under the
statute of Oregon of February 18, 1891, Laws 1891, p. 594, executed
and recorded an instrument dedicating to the public their interest
in some of the streets adjacent to these lands.
The plaintiffs claimed, under the deeds from the State of
Oregon, the title in all the tidelands on the west half of block
141, on all of blocks 126 and 127 and north thereof, and on the
west half of block 146 and north thereof, between the lines of low
and ordinary high tide of the Columbia River, and also claimed all
the wharfing rights and privileges in front thereof to the ship
channel, and prayed that the cloud created by the defendants'
instrument of dedication might be removed, and the defendants be
adjudged to have no title or right in the premises, and for further
relief.
The defendants denied any title or right in the plaintiffs,
except in the west half of block 146; and, by counterclaim, in the
nature of a cross-bill, stating the facts above set forth, asserted
that, under the patent from the United States to John M. Shively,
and his deed to Charles W. Shively, the latter was the owner in fee
simple of so much of the east half of block 141 as was above high
water mark, and of all the tidelands and riparian and wharfing
rights in front thereof to the channel excepting blocks 126 and
127, and was also the owner of all the riparian and wharfing rights
in front of block 4 to the channel, excepting block 146, and
contended that the second deed from the State of Oregon to the
plaintiffs conveyed no title in the part of block 141 above high
water mark, or in any tidelands, and that Shively's conveyance of
specific blocks by reference to his plat passed no wharfing rights
in front thereof, and prayed that he might have possession of said
premises, and damages against the plaintiffs for withholding the
same, and further relief.
The court sustained a demurrer of the plaintiffs to the
counterclaim except as to that part of block 141 above high water
mark and dismissed that claim, and then, on motion of the
plaintiffs, dismissed their suit, without prejudice to their
interest in the subject thereof.
Page 152 U. S. 8
The defendant Charles W. Shively appealed to the supreme court
of the state, which affirmed the judgment upon the ground that the
grant from the United States, bounded by the Columbia River, passed
no title or right in lands below high water mark as against the
subsequent deeds from the State of Oregon. 22 Or. 410.
The said defendant thereupon sued out this writ of error, and
assigned the following errors:
"First. The Supreme Court of Oregon decided that a grantee of
the United States, under the Act of Congress of September 27, 1850,
known as the 'Oregon Donation Land Law,' of land bounded by the
tidal navigable waters of the Columbia River, obtained by virtue of
said grant no exclusive access to the channel of said river, and no
wharfage rights below ordinary high tide of said river in front of
said high land."
"Second. The Supreme Court of Oregon decided that said state was
the absolute owner of all rights in front of the high land granted
by the United States to said grantee, with said Columbia River as a
boundary, below the meander line, out to the channel of said
Columbia River, to the exclusion of all rights of the grantee
aforesaid of the United States, under the said Act of Congress of
September 27, 1850."
"Third. The Supreme Court of Oregon decided that said state had
the absolute power to dispose of the soil of said river and of all
wharfage rights in front of the high land granted by the United
States to said grantee, the predecessor of the plaintiff in error,
with said Columbia River as a boundary, to a private person, for a
private beneficial use, and had so disposed of the same to the
defendants in error."
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, after stating the facts, delivered the opinion
of the Court.
Page 152 U. S. 9
This case concerns the title in certain lands below high water
mark in the Columbia River, in the State of Oregon, the defendant
below, now plaintiff in error, claiming under the United States,
and the plaintiffs below, now defendants in error, claiming under
the State of Oregon, and is in substance this: John M. Shively,
being the owner, by title obtained by him from the United States
under the Act of Congress of September 27, 1850, c. 76, while
Oregon was a territory, of a tract of land in Astoria, bounded
north by the Columbia River, made a plat of it, laying it out into
blocks and streets, and including the adjoining lands below high
water mark, and conveyed four of the blocks, one above and three
below that mark, to persons who conveyed to the plaintiffs. The
plaintiffs afterwards obtained from the State of Oregon deeds of
conveyance of the tidelands in front of these blocks, and built and
maintained a wharf upon part of them. The defendant, by
counterclaim, asserted a title, under a subsequent conveyance from
Shively, to some of the tidelands, not included in his former deeds
but included in the deeds from the state.
The counterclaim therefore depended upon the effect of the grant
from the United States to Shively of land bounded by the Columbia
River, and of the conveyance from Shively to the defendant, as
against the deeds from the state to the plaintiffs. The Supreme
Court of Oregon, affirming the judgment of a lower court of the
state, held the counterclaim to be invalid, and thereupon, in
accordance with the state practice, gave leave to the plaintiffs to
dismiss their complaint, without prejudice. Hill's Code Or.
§§ 246, 393.
The only matter adjudged was upon the counterclaim. The judgment
against its validity proceeded upon the ground that the grant from
the United States upon which it was founded passed no title or
right, as against the subsequent deeds from the state, in lands
below high water mark. This is a direct adjudication against the
validity of a right or privilege claimed under a law of the United
States, and presents a federal question within the appellate
jurisdiction of
Page 152 U. S. 10
this Court. Rev.Stat. § 709. That jurisdiction has been
repeatedly exercised, without objection or doubt, in similar cases
of writs of error to the state courts.
Railroad
Co. v. Schurmeier, 7 Wall. 272;
Packer v.
Bird, 137 U. S. 661;
Knight v. United States Land Association, 142 U.
S. 161.
It was argued for the defendants in error that the question
presented was a mere question of construction of a grant bounded by
tidewater, and would have been the same as it is if the grantor had
been a private person. But this is not so. The rule of construction
in the case of such a grant from the sovereign is quite different
from that which governs private grants. The familiar rule and its
chief foundation were felicitously expressed by Sir William
Scott:
"All grants of the Crown are to be strictly construed against
the grantee, contrary to the usual policy of the law in the
consideration of grants, and upon this just ground: that, the
prerogatives and rights and emoluments of the Crown being conferred
upon it for great purposes and for the public use, it shall not be
intended that such prerogatives, rights, and emoluments are
diminished by any grant beyond what such grant, by necessary and
unavoidable construction, shall take away."
The Rebeckah, 1 C.Rob. 227, 230. Many judgments of this
Court are to the same effect.
Charles River Bridge v. Warren
Bridge, 11 Pet. 420,
36 U. S.
544-548;
Martin v.
Waddell, 16 Pet. 367,
41 U. S. 411;
Central Transportation Co. v. Pullman's Car Co.,
139 U. S. 24,
139 U. S.
49.
In
Yesler v. Washington Harbor Commissioners, at the
last term, in which the writ of error was dismissed for want of
jurisdiction, it did not appear that the plaintiff in error claimed
under a grant from the United States.
146 U. S. 146 U.S.
646,
146 U. S.
653-654.
The present case being clearly within our jurisdiction, we
proceed to the consideration of its merits.
The briefs submitted to the court in the case at bar, as well as
in
Yesler v. Commissioners, above cited, and in
Prosser v. Northern Pacific Railroad (which now stands for
judgment), have been so able and elaborate, and have disclosed such
a diversity of view as to the scope
Page 152 U. S. 11
and effect of the previous decisions of this Court upon the
subject of public and private rights in lands below high water mark
of navigable waters that this appears to the Court to be a fit
occasion for a full review of those decisions and a consideration
of other authorities upon the subject.
I. By the common law, both the title and the dominion of the
sea, and of rivers and arms of the sea, where the tide ebbs and
flows, and of all the lands below high water mark, within the
jurisdiction of the Crown of England, are in the King. Such waters,
and the lands which they cover, either at all times or at least
when the tide is in, are incapable of ordinary and private
occupation, cultivation, and improvement, and their natural and
primary uses are public in their nature, for highways of navigation
and commerce, domestic and foreign, and for the purpose of fishing
by all the King's subjects. Therefore the title,
jus
privatum, in such lands, as of waste and unoccupied lands,
belongs to the King, as the sovereign, and the dominion thereof,
jus publicum, is vested in him as the representative of
the nation and for the public benefit.
The great authority in the law of England upon this subject is
Lord Chief Justice Hale, whose authorship of the treatise De Jure
Maris, sometimes questioned, has been put beyond doubt by recent
researches. Moore on the Foreshore (3d ed.) 318, 370, 413.
In that treatise, Lord Hale, speaking of "the King's right of
propriety or ownership in the sea and soil thereof" within his
jurisdiction, lays down the following propositions:
"The right of fishing in this sea and the creeks and arms
thereof is originally lodged in the Crown, as the right of
depasturing is originally lodged in the owner of the waste whereof
he is lord, or as the right of fishing belongs to him that is the
owner of a private or inland river. . . . But though the King is
the owner of this great waste, and as a consequent of his
propriety, hath the primary right of fishing in the sea and the
creeks and arms thereof, yet the common people of England have
regularly a liberty of fishing in the sea or creeks or arms thereof
as a public common of piscary, and may not without
Page 152 U. S. 12
injury to their right be restrained of it unless in such places,
creeks or navigable rivers, where either the King or some
particular subject hath gained a propriety exclusive of that common
liberty. . . . The shore is that ground that is between the
ordinary high water and low water mark. This doth
prima
facie and of common right belong to the King, both in the
shore of the sea and the shore of the arms of the sea."
Hargrave's Law Tracts, pp. 11-12. And he afterwards
explains:
"Yet they may belong to the subject in point of propriety, not
only by charter or grant whereof there can be but little doubt, but
also by prescription or usage. . . . But, though the subject may
thus have the propriety of a navigable river part of a port, yet
these cautions are to be added,
viz.: . . . (2) That the
people have a public interest, a
jus publicum, of passage
and repassage with their goods by water, and must not be obstructed
by nuisances, . . . for the
jus privatum of the owner or
proprietor is charged with and subject to that jus publicum which
belongs to the King's subjects, as the soil of an highway is, which
though in point of property it may be a private man's freehold, yet
it is charged with a public interest of the people, which may not
be prejudiced or damnified."
Pp. 25, 36.
So in the second part,
De Portibus Maris, Lord Hale
says that
"when a port is fixed or settled by . . . the license or charter
of the King, or that which presumes and supplies it,
viz.,
custom and prescription, . . . though the soil and franchise or
dominion thereof
prima facie be in the King or by
derivation from him in a subject, yet that
jus privatum is
clothed and superinduced with a
jus publicum, wherein both
natives and foreigners in peace with this Kingdom are interested by
reason of common commerce, trade, and intercourse. . . . But the
right that I am now speaking of is such a right that belongs to the
King
jure prerogativae, and it is a distinct right from
that of propriety, for, as before I have said, though the dominion
either of franchise or propriety be lodged either by prescription
or charter in a subject, yet it is charged or affected with that
jus publicum that belongs to all men, and so it is charged
or affected with that
jus regium, or right of
prerogative
Page 152 U. S. 13
of the King so far as the same is by law invested in the
King."
Hargrave's Law Tracts 84, 89.
In England, from the time of Lord Hale it has been treated as
settled that the title in the soil of the sea, or of arms of the
sea, below ordinary high water mark is in the King except so far as
an individual or a corporation has acquired rights in it by express
grant or by prescription or usage,
Fitzwalter's Case, 3
Keb. 242, 1 Mod. 105; 3 Shep.Ab. 97; Com.Dig. Navigation, A, B;
Bac.Ab. Prerogative, B;
The King v. Smith, 2 Doug. 441;
Attorney General v. Parmeter, 10 Price 378, 400, 401,
411-412, 464;
Attorney General v. Chambers, 4 D. M. &
G. 206, 4 D. & J. 55;
Malcomson v. O'Dea, 10 H.L.Cas.
591, 618, 623;
Attorney General v. Emerson, (1891)
App.Cas. 649; and that this title,
jus privatum, whether
in the King or in a subject, is held subject to the public right,
jus publicum, of navigation and fishing.
Attorney
General v. Parmeter, above cited;
Attorney General v.
Johnson, 2 Wilson Ch. 87, 101-103;
Gann v. Free Fishers of
Whitstable, 11 H.L.Cas. 192. The same law has been declared by
the House of Lords to prevail in Scotland.
Smith v. Stair,
6 Bell, App.Cas. 487;
Lord Advocate v. Hamilton, 1 Macq.
46, 49.
It is equally well settled that a grant from the sovereign of
land bounded by the sea, or by any navigable tidewater, does not
pass any title below high water mark unless either the language of
the grant or long usage under it clearly indicates that such was
the intention. Lord Hale, in Hargrave's Law Tracts. pp. 17, 18, 27;
Somerset v. Fogwell, 5 B. & C. 875, 885, 8 D. & R.
747, 755;
Smith v. Stair, 6 Bell App.Cas. 487;
United States v.
Pacheco, 2 Wall. 587.
By the law of England also, every building or wharf erected
without license below high water mark, where the soil is the
King's, is a purpresture, and may at the suit of the King either be
demolished or be seized and rented for his benefit if it is not a
nuisance to navigation. Lord Hale, in Hargrave's Law Tracts, p. 85;
Mitf.Pl. (4th ed.) 145;
Blundell v. Catteral, 5 Barn.
& Ald. 268, 298, 305;
Attorney General v. Richards, 2
Anstr. 603, 616;
Attorney General v. Parmeter, 10 Price,
378, 411, 464;
Attorney General v. Terry, L.R. 9 Ch. 425,
429,
Page 152 U. S. 14
note;
Weber v. Harbor
Commissioners, 18 Wall. 57,
85 U. S. 65;
Barney v. Keokuk, 94 U. S. 324,
94 U. S.
337.
By recent judgments of the House of Lords, after conflicting
decisions in the courts below, it has been established in England
that the owner of land fronting on a navigable river in which the
tide ebbs and flows has a right of access from his land to the
river, and may recover compensation for the cutting off of that
access by the construction of public works authorized by an act of
Parliament which provides for compensation for "injuries affecting
lands," "including easements, interests, rights and privileges in,
over or affecting lands." The right thus recognized, however, is
not a title in the soil below high water mark, nor a right to build
thereon, but a right of access only, analogous to that of an
abutter upon a highway.
Buccleuch v. Metropolitan Board of
Works, L.R. 5 H.L. 418;
Lyon v. Fishmongers' Co., 1
App.Cas. 662. "That decision," said Lord Selborne,
"must be applicable to every country in which the same general
law of riparian rights prevails, unless excluded by some positive
rule or binding authority of the
lex loci."
North Shore Railway v. Pion, 14 App.Cas. 612, 620,
affirming 14 Canada Sup.Ct. 677.
II. The common law of England upon this subject at the time of
the emigration of our ancestors is the law of this country, except
so far as it has been modified by the charters, constitutions,
statutes, or usages of the several colonies and states, or by the
Constitution and laws of the United States.
The English possessions in America were claimed by right of
discovery. Having been discovered by subjects of the King of
England, and taken possession of in his name, by his authority, or
with his assent, they were held by the King as the representative
of, and in trust for, the nation, and all vacant lands, and the
exclusive power to grant them, were vested in him. The various
charters granted by different monarchs of the Stuart dynasty for
large tracts of territory on the Atlantic coast conveyed to the
grantees both the territory described and the powers of government,
including the property and the dominion of lands under tidewaters;
and, upon the American
Page 152 U. S. 15
Revolution, all the rights of the Crown and of Parliament vested
in the several states, subject to the rights surrendered to the
national government by the Constitution of the United States.
Johnson v.
McIntosh, 8 Wheat. 543,
21 U. S. 595;
Martin v.
Waddell, 16 Pet. 367,
41 U. S.
408-410,
41 U. S. 414;
Commonwealth v. Roxbury, 9 Gray, 451, 478-481;
Stevens
v. Paterson & Newark Railroad, 34 N.J.L. 532;
People
v. New York & Staten Island Ferry, 68 N.Y. 71.
The leading case in this Court as to the title and dominion of
tidewaters and of the lands under them is
Martin v.
Waddell, (1842) 16 Pet. 367, which arose in New
Jersey, and was as follow: the charters granted by Charles II in
1664 and 1674 to his brother, the Duke of York (afterwards James
II) included New York and New Jersey and the islands of Martha's
Vineyard and Nantucket, and conveyed to the duke the territories
therein described,
"together with all the lands, islands, soils, rivers, harbors,
mines, minerals, quarries, woods, marshes, waters, lakes, fishings,
hawkings, huntings and fowling, and all other royalties, profits,
commodities and hereditaments"
thereto belonging or appertaining, and all the "estate, right,
title, interest, benefit, advantage, claim and demand" of the King
of, in or to the same, as well as full powers of government,
provided, however, that all statutes, ordinances and proceedings
should not be contrary to, but, as near as conveniently might be,
agreeable to the laws, statutes, and government of England. All
these rights both of property and of government in a part of those
territories were granted by the Duke of York to the Proprietors of
East Jersey, and they, in 1702, surrendered to Queen Anne all "the
powers, authorities and privileges of and concerning the government
of" the province, retaining their rights of private property.
Leaming and Spicer's New Jersey Grants, 4, 5, 42, 43, 148, 149,
614, 615. An action of ejectment was brought in the Circuit Court
of the United States for the District of New Jersey for land under
tidewaters in Raritan Bay and River, to which the plaintiff claimed
title under specific conveyances of that land from the Proprietors
of East Jersey, and of which the defendants were in possession, for
the purpose of
Page 152 U. S. 16
planting and growing oysters, under a statute passed by the
Legislature of the State of New Jersey in 1824.
This Court, following, though not resting wholly upon, the
decision of the Supreme Court of New Jersey in
Arnold v.
Mundy, 6 N.J.Law 1, gave judgment for the defendants for
reasons assigned in the opinion delivered by Chief Justice Taney,
which cannot be better summed up than in his own words:
"The country mentioned in the letters patent was held by the
King in his public and regal character as the representative of the
nation, and in trust for them."
16 Pet.
41 U. S. 409.
By those charters, in view of the principles stated by Lord Hale in
the passage above quoted concerning the right of fishing,
"the dominion and propriety in the navigable waters and in the
soils under them passed as a part of the prerogative rights annexed
to the political powers conferred on the duke,"
and
"in his hands, they were intended to be a trust for the common
use of the new community about to be established -- a public trust
for the benefit of the whole community, to be freely used by all
for navigation and fishery, as well for shellfish as floating
fish,"
and not as
"private property, to be parceled out and sold by the duke for
his own individual emolument. . . . And, in the judgment of the
court, the lands under the navigable waters passed to the grantee
as one of the royalties incident to the powers of government, and
were to be held by him in the same manner, and for the same
purposes, that the navigable waters of England, and the soils under
them, are held by the Crown."
Pp. 411-413. The surrender by the proprietors in 1702 restored
to the Crown all "its ordinary and well known prerogatives,"
including
"the great right of dominion and ownership in the rivers, bays,
and arms of the sea, and the soils under them, . . . in the same
plight and condition in which they originally came to the hands of
the Duke of York."
P. 416.
"When the Revolution took place, the people of each state become
themselves sovereign, and in that character hold the absolute right
to all their navigable waters, and the soils under them, for their
own common use, subject only to the rights since surrendered by the
Constitution to the general government."
P. 410.
Page 152 U. S. 17
It was in giving the reasons for holding that the royal charters
did not sever the soil under navigable waters, and the public right
of fishing, from the powers of government, and in speaking of the
effect which grants of the title in the seashore to others than the
owner of the upland might have not upon any peculiar rights
supposed to be incident to his ownership, but upon the public and
common rights in, and the benefits and advantages of, the navigable
waters, which the colonists enjoyed "for the same purposes, and to
the same extent, that they had been used and enjoyed for centuries
in England," and which every owner of the upland therefore had in
common with all other persons, that Chief Justice Taney, in the
passage relied on by the plaintiff in error, observed:
"Indeed, it could not well have been otherwise, for the men who
first formed the English settlements could not have been expected
to encounter the many hardships that unavoidably attended their
emigration to the new world, and to people the banks of its bays
and rivers, if the land under the water at their very doors was
liable to immediate appropriation by another as private property,
and the settler upon the fast land thereby excluded from its
enjoyment and unable to take a shellfish from its bottom or fasten
there a stake, or even bathe in its waters, without becoming a
trespasser upon the rights of another."
16 Pet.
41 U. S.
414.
The full extent of that decision may be more clearly appreciated
by referring to the dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Thompson in
that case, and to the unanimous judgment of the Court in the
subsequent case of
Den v. Jersey
Co., (1853) 15 How. 426.
In
Martin v. Waddell, Mr. Justice Thompson unavailingly
contended that the title in the lands under the navigable tidewater
-- the
jus privatum, as distinguished from the
jus
publicum -- passed as private property from the King to the
duke, and from him to the Proprietors of East Jersey, and was
unaffected by their surrender to Queen Anne, and therefore passed
from them to the plaintiff, subject, indeed, to the public rights
of navigation, passing and repassing, and perhaps of fishery for
floating fish, but not to the right of planting,
Page 152 U. S. 18
growing, and dredging oysters, and also that if the King held
this land as trustee for the common benefit of all his subjects,
and inalienable as private property, the State of New Jersey, on
succeeding to his rights at the Revolution, could not hold it
discharged of the trust and dispose of it to the private and
exclusive use of individuals. 16 Pet.
41 U. S.
418-434.
In
Den v. Jersey Co., which was ejectment for land
under tidewater that had been reclaimed and occupied as building
lots by a corporation pursuant to an act of the Legislature of the
State of New Jersey, the plaintiff, claiming under a conveyance
from the Proprietors of East Jersey, contended that the fee of the
soil under the navigable waters of that part of the state was
conveyed to the proprietors as private property, subject to the
public use; that, the public use having ceased as to the land in
question, they were entitled to the exclusive possession, and that
nothing but the right of fishery was decided in
Martin v.
Waddell, but the Court, again speaking by Chief Justice Taney,
held that the decision in
Martin v. Waddell, being in
ejectment, necessarily determined the title to the soil, and
governed this case, and therefore gave judgment for the grantee of
the state, and against the claimant under the proprietors. 15 How.
56 U. S.
432-433.
III. The governments of the several colonies, with a view to
induce persons to erect wharves for the benefit of navigation and
commerce, early allowed to the owners of lands bounding on
tidewaters greater rights and privileges in the shore, below high
water mark, than they had in England; but the nature and degree of
such rights and privileges differed in the different colonies, and
in some were created by statute, while in others they rested upon
usage only.
In Massachusetts, by virtue of an ancient colonial enactment,
commonly called the "Ordinance of 1641," but really passed in 1647,
and remaining in force to this day, the title of the owner of land
bounded by tidewater extends from high water mark, over the shore
or flats, to low water mark, if not beyond one hundred rods. The
private right thus created in the flats is not a mere easement, but
a title in fee,
Page 152 U. S. 19
which will support a real action, or an action of trespass
quare clausum fregit, and which may be conveyed by its
owner with or without the upland, and which he may build upon or
enclose, provided he does not impede the public right of way over
it for boats and vessels. But his title is subject to the public
rights of navigation and fishery, and therefore, so long as the
flats have not been built upon or enclosed, those public rights are
not restricted or abridged, and the state, in the exercise of its
sovereign power of police for the protection of harbors and the
promotion of commerce, may, without making compensation to the
owners of the flats, establish harbor lines over those flats beyond
which wharves shall not thereafter be built even when they would be
no actual injury to navigation. Mass. Colony Laws, ed. 1660, p. 50;
ed. 1672, pp. 90, 91;
Boston v.
Lecraw, 17 How. 426,
58 U. S.
432-433;
Richardson v.
Boston, 19 How. 263, and
65 U. S. 24 How.
188;
Commonwealth v. Alger, 7 Cush. 53, 67-81. It is
because of the ordinance vesting the title in fee of the flats in
the owner of the upland that a conveyance of his land bounding on
the tidewater, by whatever name, whether "sea," "bay," "harbor," or
"river," has been held to include the land below high water mark,
as far as the grantor owns.
Boston v. Richardson, 13
Allen, 146, 155, and 105 Mass. 351, 355, and cases cited. As
declared by Chief Justice Shaw, grants by the colony of
Massachusetts, before the ordinance, of lands bounded by tidewater
did not include any land below high water mark.
Commonwealth v.
Alger, 7 Cush. 53, 66;
Commonwealth v. Roxbury, 9
Gray, 451, 491-493.
See also Litchfield v. Scituate, 136
Mass. 39. The decision in
Manchester v. Massachusetts,
139 U. S. 240,
aff'g 152 Mass. 230, upheld the jurisdiction of the state
and its authority to regulate fisheries within a marine league from
the coast.
The rule or principle of the Massachusetts ordinance has been
adopted and practiced on in Plymouth, Maine, Nantucket, and
Martha's Vineyard since their union with the Massachusetts colony
under the Massachusetts province charter of 1692.
Commonwealth
v. Alger, 7 Cush. 53, 76, and other authorities collected in 9
Gray 523.
Page 152 U. S. 20
In New Hampshire, a right in the shore has been recognized to
belong to the owner of the adjoining upland either by reason of its
having once been under the jurisdiction of Massachusetts or by
early and continued usage.
Nudd v. Hobbs, 17 N.H. 524,
526;
Clement v. Burns, 43 N.H. 609, 621;
Concord Co.
v. Robertson, 66 N.H. 1, 26, 27.
In Rhode Island, the owners of land on tidewater have no title
below high water mark, but by long usage, apparently sanctioned by
a colonial statute of 1707, they have been accorded the right to
build wharves or other structures upon the flats in front of their
lands provided they do not impede navigation, and have not been
prohibited by the legislature, and they may recover damages against
one who, without authority from the legislature, fills up such
flats so as to impair that right. Angell on Tidewaters (2d ed.)
236, 237;
Folsom v. Freeborn, 13 R.I. 200, 204, 210. It
would seem, however, that the owner of the upland has no right of
action against anyone filling up the flats by authority of the
state for any public purpose.
Gerhard v. Commissioners, 15
R.I. 334;
Clark v. Providence, 16 R.I. 337.
In Connecticut also, the title in the land below high water mark
is in the state. But by ancient usage, without any early
legislation, the proprietor of the upland has the sole right, in
the nature of a franchise, to wharf out and occupy the flats, even
below low water mark, provided he does not interfere with
navigation, and this right may be conveyed separately from the
upland, and the fee in flats so reclaimed vests in him.
Lasied
Seamen's Friends Society v. Halstead, 58 Conn. 144, 150-152;
Prior v. Swartz, 62 Conn. 132, 136-138. The exercise of
this right is subject to all regulations the state may see fit to
impose, by authorizing commissioners to establish harbor lines or
otherwise.
State v. Sargent, 45 Conn. 358. But it has been
intimated that it cannot be appropriated by the state to a
different public use without compensation.
Farist Steel Co. v.
Bridgeport, 60 Conn. 278.
In New York, it was long considered as settled law that the
state succeeded to all the rights of the Crown and Parliament
Page 152 U. S. 21
of England in lands under tidewaters, and that the owner of land
bounded by a navigable river within the ebb and flow of the tide
had no private title or right in the shore below high water mark,
and was entitled to no compensation for the construction, under a
grant from the legislature of the state, of a railroad along the
shore between high and low water mark, cutting off all access from
his land to the river, except across the railroad.
Lansing v.
Smith, 4 Wend. 9, 21;
Gould v. Hudson River Railroad,
6 N.Y. 522;
People v. Tibbetts, 19 N.Y. 523, 528;
People v. Canal Appraisers, 33 N.Y. 461, 467;
Langdon
v. New York, 93 N.Y. 129, 144, 154-156;
Mayor New York v.
Hart, 95 N.Y. 443, 450, 451, 457;
In re Staten Island
Rapid Transit Co., 103 N.Y. 251, 260. The owner of the upland
has no right to wharf out without legislative authority, and titles
granted in lands under tidewater are subject to the right of the
state to establish harbor lines.
People v. Vanderbilt, 26
N.Y. 287, and 28 N.Y. 396;
People v. New York & Staten
Island Ferry, 68 N.Y. 71. The law of that state as formerly
understood has been recently so far modified as to hold -- in
accordance with the decision in
Buccleuch v. Metropolitan Board
of Works, L.R. 5 H.L. 418, and contrary to the decisions in
Gould v. Hudson River Railroad, above cited, and in
Stevens v. Paterson & Newark Railroad, 34 N.J.Law 532
-- that the owner of land bounded by tidewater may maintain an
action against a railroad corporation constructing its road, by
authority of the legislature, so as to cut off his access to the
water.
Williams v. New York, 105 N.Y. 419, 436;
Kane
v. New York Elevated Railroad, 125 N.Y. 164, 184;
Rumsey
v. New York & New England Railroad, 133 N.Y. 79, and 136
N.Y. 543.
The law of New Jersey upon this subject was recognized and
clearly stated in a recent judgment of this Court, in which a grant
by commissioners, under a statute of the state, to a railroad
corporation, of a tract of land below high water mark, was held to
preclude a city from continuing, over the flats, a highway
dedicated to the public by the owner of the upland. "In
Page 152 U. S. 22
the riparian laws of the State of New Jersey," said Mr. Justice
Matthews, speaking for the Court,
"it is to be borne in mind that the lands below high water mark,
constituting the shores and submerged lands of the navigable waters
of the state, were, according to its laws, the property of the
state as sovereign. Over these lands it had absolute and exclusive
dominion, including the right to appropriate them to such uses as
might best serve its views of the public interest, subject to the
power conferred by the Constitution upon Congress to regulate
foreign and interstate commerce. The object of the legislation in
question was evidently to define the relative rights of the state,
representing the public sovereignty and interest, and of the owners
of land bounded by high water mark. . . . The nature of the title
in the state to lands under tidewater was thoroughly considered by
the Court of Errors and Appeals of New Jersey in the case of
Stevens v. Paterson & New York Railroad, 34 N.J.Law
532. It was there declared (p. 549)"
"that all navigable waters within the territorial limits of the
state, and the soil under such waters, belong, in actual propriety,
to the public; that the riparian owner, by the common law, has no
peculiar rights in this public domain as incidents of his estate,
and that the privileges he possesses by the local custom, or by
force of the wharf act, to acquire such rights, can, before
possession has been taken, be regulated or revoked at the will of
the legislature. The result is that there is no legal obstacle to a
grant by the legislature to the defendants of that part of the
property of the public which lies in front of the lands of the
plaintiff and which is below high water mark."
"It was therefore held in that case that it was competent for
the legislative power of the state to grant to a stranger lands
constituting the shore of a navigable river under tidewater, below
high water mark, to be occupied and used with structures and
improvements in such a manner as to cut off the access of the
riparian owner from his land to the water, and that, without making
compensation to him for such loss."
Hoboken v. Pennsylvania Railroad, 124 U.
S. 656,
124 U. S. 688,
124 U. S.
690-691 (1887).
Page 152 U. S. 23
The arguments on both sides of that proposition, upon general
principles as well as under the law of New Jersey, are nowhere more
strongly and fully stated than by Chief Justice Beasley, delivering
the opinion of the majority of the court, and by Chancellor
Zabriskie, speaking for the dissenting judges, in
Stevens v.
Paterson & Newark Railroad, above cited, decided in 1870.
Two years later, Chancellor Zabriskie recognized it as settled by
that case
"that the lands under water, including the shore on the
tidewaters of New Jersey, belong absolutely to the state, which has
the power to grant them to anyone, free from any right of the
riparian owner in them."
Pennsylvania Railroad v. New York & Long Branch
Railroad, 23 N.J.Eq. 157, 159.
See also New York &c.
Railroad v. Yard, 43 N.J.Law 632, 636;
American Dock Co.
v. Trustees of Public Schools, 39 N.J.Eq. 409, 445.
In Pennsylvania, likewise, upon the Revolution, the state
succeeded to the rights both of the Crown and of the proprietors in
the navigable waters and the soil under them.
Rundle v.
Delaware & Raritan Canal, 14 How. 80,
55 U. S. 90;
Gilman v.
Philadelphia, 3 Wall. 713,
70 U. S. 726.
But by the established law of the state, the owner of lands bounded
by navigable water has the title in the soil between high and low
water mark, subject to the public right of navigation, and to the
authority of the legislature to make public improvements upon it
and to regulate his use of it.
Tinicum Co. v. Carter, 61
Penn.St. 21, 30-31;
Wainwright v. McCullough, 63 Penn.St.
66, 74;
Zug v. Commonwealth, 70 Penn.St. 138;
Philadelphia v. Scott, 81 Penn.St. 80, 86;
Wall v.
Pittsburgh Harbor Co., 152 Penn.St. 427.
In Delaware, as has been declared by its supreme court, "all
navigable rivers within the state belong to the state, not merely
in right of eminent domain, but in actual propriety."
Bailey v.
Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad, 4
Harrington (Del.) 389, 395.
And see 27 U.
S. Blackbird Creek Co., 2 Pet. 245,
27 U. S.
251.
In Maryland, the owner of land bounded by tidewater is
authorized, according to various statutes beginning in 1745, to
Page 152 U. S. 24
build wharves or other improvements upon the flats in front of
his land, and to acquire a right in the land so improved.
Casey
v. Inloes, 1 Gill, 430;
Baltimore v. McKim, 3 Bland
453;
Goodsell v. Lawson, 42 Md. 348;
Garitee v.
Baltimore, 53 Md. 422;
Horner v. Pleasants, 66 Md.
475;
Potomac Steamboat Co. v. Upper Potomac Steamboat Co.,
109 U. S. 672,
109 U. S. 675,
109 U. S. 684,
in which the question was who was the riparian owner, and as such
entitled to wharf out into the Potomac River in the District of
Columbia under the authority to do so expressly conferred under the
laws of Maryland in force in the District. This Court, speaking by
Mr. Justice Curtis, in affirming the right of the State of Maryland
to protect the oyster fishery within its boundaries, said:
"Whatever soil below low water mark is the subject of exclusive
propriety and ownership belongs to the state on whose maritime
border, and within whose territory, it lies, subject to any lawful
grants of that soil by the state, or the sovereign power which
governed its territory before the declaration of independence; but
this soil is held by the state not only subject to, but in some
sense in trust for, the enjoyment of certain public rights, among
which is the common liberty of taking fish -- as well shellfish as
floating fish."
Smith v.
Maryland, 18 How. 71,
59 U. S. 74.
The State of Virginia was held by this Court, upon like grounds,
to have the right to prohibit persons not citizens of the state
from planting oysters in the soil covered by tidewaters within the
state, Chief Justice Waite saying:
"The principle has long been settled in this Court that each
state owns the beds of all tidewaters within its jurisdiction
unless they have been granted away. In like manner, the states own
the tidewaters themselves, and the fish in them, so far as they are
capable of ownership while running. For this purpose, the state
represents its people, and the ownership is that of the people in
their united sovereignty. The title thus held is subject to the
paramount right of navigation, the regulation of which, in respect
to foreign and interstate commerce, has been granted to the United
States."
McCready v. Virginia, 94 U. S. 391,
94 U. S. 394.
In Virginia, by virtue of statutes
Page 152 U. S. 25
beginning in 1679, the owner of land bounded by tidewaters has
the title to ordinary low water mark, and the right to build
wharves, provided they do not obstruct navigation. 5 Opinions of
Attorneys General 412, 435-440;
French v. Bankhead, 11
Grattan 136, 159-161;
Hardy v. McCullough, 23 Grattan 251,
262;
Norfolk v. Cooke, 27 Grattan 430, 434-435;
Garrison v. Hall, 75 Va. 150.
In North Carolina, when not otherwise provided by statute, the
private ownership of land bounded by navigable waters stops at high
water mark, and the land between high and low water mark belongs to
the state, and may be granted by it.
Hatfield v.
Grimstead, 7 Iredell 139;
Lewis v. Keeling, 1 Jones
(N.C.) 299, 306. The statutes of that state at different periods
have either limited grants of land bounded on navigable waters to
high water mark or have permitted owners of the shore to make
entries of the land in front as far as deep water for the purpose
of a wharf, and any owner of the shore appears to have the right to
wharf out, subject to such regulations as the legislature may
prescribe for the protection of the public rights of navigation and
fishery.
Wilson v. Forbes, 2 Dev. 30;
Collins v.
Benbury, 3 Iredell 277, and 5 Iredell 118;
Gregory v.
Forbes, 96 N.C. 77;
State v. Narrows Island Club, 100
N.C. 477;
Bond v. Wool, 107 N.C. 139.
In South Carolina, the rules of the common law, by which the
title in the land under tidewaters is in the state, and a grant of
land bounded by such waters passes no title below high water mark,
appear to be still in force.
State v. Pacific Guano Co.,
22 S.C. 50;
State v. Pinckney, 22 S.C. 484.
In Georgia also, the rules of the common law would seem to be in
force as to tidewaters, except as affected by statutes of the state
providing that "the right of the owner of lands adjacent to
navigable streams extends to low water mark in the bed of the
stream." Georgia Code 1882, §§ 962, 2229, 2230;
Howard v.
Ingersoll, 13 How. 381,
54 U. S. 411,
54 U. S. 421;
Alabama v.
Georgia, 23 How. 505;
Savannah v. State, 4
Ga. 26, 39;
Young v. Harrison, 6 Ga. 130, 141.
Page 152 U. S. 26
The foregoing summary of the laws of the original states shows
that there is no universal and uniform law upon the subject, but
that each state has dealt with the lands under the tidewaters
within its borders according to its own views of justice and
policy, reserving its own control over such lands or granting
rights therein to individuals or corporations, whether owners of
the adjoining upland or not, as it considered for the best
interests of the public. Great caution therefore is necessary in
applying precedents in one state to cases arising in another.
IV. The new states admitted into the union since the adoption of
the Constitution have the same rights as the original states in the
tidewaters and in the lands below the high water mark within their
respective jurisdictions.
The act of 1783 and the deed of 1784 by which the State of
Virginia, before the adoption of the Constitution, ceded
"unto the United States in Congress assembled, for the benefit
of the said states, all right, title and claim, as well of soil as
jurisdiction,"
to the Northwest Territory, and the similar cession by the State
of Georgia to the United States, in 1802, of territory including a
great part of Alabama and of Mississippi, each provided that the
territory so ceded should be formed into states, to be admitted, on
attaining a certain population, into the union, in the words of the
Virginia cession, "having the same rights of sovereignty, freedom,
and independence as the other states," or, in the words of the
ordinance of Congress of July 13, 1787, for the government of the
Northwest territory, adopted in the Georgia cession, "on an equal
footing with the original states in all respects whatever," and
that "all the lands within" the territory so ceded to the United
States, and not reserved or appropriated for other purposes, should
be considered as a common fund for the use and benefit of the
United States. Charters and Constitutions, pp. 427, 428, 432, 433;
Clayton's Laws of Georgia, pp. 48-51; Acts of Congress of April 7,
1798, c. 28, 1 Stat. 549, May 10, 1800, c. 50, and March 3, 1803,
c. 27, 2 Stat. 69, 229;
Pollard v.
Hagan, 3 How. 212,
44 U. S.
221-222.
In
Pollard v. Hagan, (1844), this Court, upon full
Page 152 U. S. 27
consideration, overruling anything to the contrary in
Pollard v.
Kibbe, 14 Pet. 353;
Mobile v.
Eslava, 16 Pet. 234;
Mobile v.
Hallett, 16 Pet. 261;
Mobile v.
Emanuel, 1 How. 95, and
Pollard v.
Files, 2 How. 591, adjudged that upon the admission
of the State of Alabama into the union, the title in the lands
below high water mark of navigable waters passed to the state, and
could not afterwards be granted away by the Congress of the United
States. Mr. Justice McKinley, delivering the opinion of the Court,
Mr. Justice Catron alone dissenting, said:
"We think a proper examination of this subject will show that
the United States never held any municipal sovereignty,
jurisdiction, or right of soil in and to the territory of which
Alabama or any of the new states were formed, except for temporary
purposes, and to execute the trusts created by the acts of the
Virginia and Georgia Legislatures, and the deeds of cession
executed by them to the United States, and the trust created by the
treaty with the French Republic of the 30th of April, 1803, ceding
Louisiana. . . . When the United States accepted the cession of the
territory, they took upon themselves the trust to hold the
municipal eminent domain for the new states, and to invest them
with it to the same extent, in all respects, that it was held by
the states ceding the territories. . . . When Alabama was admitted
into the union on an equal footing with the original states, she
succeeded to all the rights of sovereignty, jurisdiction, and
eminent domain which Georgia possessed at the date of the cession
except so far as this right was diminished by the public lands
remaining in the possession and under the control of the United
States for the temporary purposes provided for in the deed of
cession and the legislative acts connected with it. Nothing
remained to the United States, according to the terms of the
agreement, but the public lands."
3 How.
44 U. S.
221-223.
"Alabama is therefore entitled to the sovereignty and
jurisdiction over all the territory within her limits, subject to
the common law, to the same extent that Georgia possessed it before
she ceded it to the United States. To maintain any other doctrine
is to deny that Alabama has been admitted into the union on an
equal footing with the
Page 152 U. S. 28
original states, the Constitution, laws, and compact to the
contrary notwithstanding. . . . Then to Alabama belong the
navigable waters, and soils under them, in controversy in this
case, subject to the rights surrendered by the Constitution to the
United States."
3 How.
44 U. S.
228-229.
So much of the reasoning of the learned justice as implied that
the title in the land below high water mark could not have been
granted away by the United States after the deed of cession of the
territory, and before the admission of the state into the union,
was not necessary to the decision, which involved only a grant made
by Congress after the admission of Alabama, and which was followed
in two similar cases in which Congress, after the admission of the
state, had undertaken to confirm Spanish grants made after the
treaty of San Ildefonso of 1800, and therefore passing no title
whatever.
Goodtitle v.
Kibbe, 9 How. 471 (1850);
Doe v.
Beebe, 13 How. 25 (1851). In the first of these
cases, Chief Justice Taney, speaking for the whole Court, of which
Mr. Justice McKinley was still a member, said:
"Undoubtedly Congress might have granted this land to the
patentee, or confirmed his Spanish grant, before Alabama became a
state. But this was not done, and the existence of this imperfect
and inoperative Spanish grant could not enlarge the power of the
United States over the place in question after Alabama became a
state, nor authorize the general government to grant or confirm a
title to land when the sovereignty and dominion over it had become
vested in the state."
9 How.
50 U. S.
478.
IV. That these decisions do not, as contended by the learned
counsel for the plaintiff in error, rest solely upon the terms of
the deed of cession from the State of Georgia to the United States
clearly appears from the constant recognition of the same doctrine
as applicable to California, which was acquired from Mexico by the
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo of 1848, 9 Stat. 926;
United
States v. Pacheco, 2 Wall. 587 (1864);
Mumford v.
Wardwell, 6 Wall. 423 (1867);
Weber v.
Harbor Commissioners, 18 Wall. 57 (1873);
Packer v. Bird, 137 U. S. 661,
137 U. S. 666
(1891);
San Francisco v. Le Roy, 138 U.
S. 656,
138 U. S. 671
(1891);
Knight v. United States Land Association,
142 U. S. 161
(1891).
Page 152 U. S. 29
In
United States v. Pacheco, it was decided that a
grant from the Mexican government, confirmed by a decree of a court
of the United States under authority of Congress, of land bounded
"by the bay" of San Francisco, did not include land below ordinary
high water mark of the bay, because, as was said by MR. JUSTICE
FIELD in delivering judgment:
"By the common law, the shore of the sea, and, of course, of
arms of the sea, is the land between ordinary high and low water
mark -- the land over which the daily tides ebb and flow. When,
therefore, the sea or a bay is named as a boundary, the line of
ordinary high water mark is always intended where the common law
prevails. And there is nothing in the language of the decree which
requires the adoption of any other rule in the present case. If
reference be had to the rule of the civil law, because the bay is
given as a boundary in the grant from the Mexican government, the
result will be equally against the position of the appellants."
2 Wall.
69 U. S.
590.
The State of California was admitted into the union in 1850,
and, within a year afterwards, passed statutes declaring that a
certain line designated upon a recorded plan should "be and remain
a permanent waterfront" of the City of San Francisco, reserving to
the state
"its right to regulate the construction of wharves or other
improvements so that they shall not interfere with the shipping and
commercial interests of the bay and harbor,"
and providing that the city might construct wharves at the end
of all the streets commencing with the bay, not exceeding two
hundred yards beyond that line, and that the spaces beyond, between
the wharves, should remain free from obstructions, and be used as
public slips. In
Weber v. Harbor Commissioners, it was
held that a person afterwards acquiring the title of the city in a
lot and wharf below high water mark had no right to complain of
works constructed by commissioners of the state, under authority of
the legislature, for the protection of the harbor and the
convenience of shipping, in front of his wharf, and preventing the
approach of vessels to it, and MR. JUSTICE FIELD, in delivering
judgment, said:
"Although the title to the soil under the tidewaters of the bay
was acquired by the
Page 152 U. S. 30
United States by cession from Mexico equally with the title to
the upland, they held it only in trust for the future state. Upon
the admission of California into the union upon equal footing with
the original states, absolute property in and dominion and
sovereignty over all soils under the tidewaters within her limits
passed to the state, with the consequent right to dispose of the
title to any part of said soils in such manner as she might deem
proper, subject only to the paramount right of navigation over the
waters, so far as such navigation might be required by the
necessities of commerce with foreign nations or among the several
states, the regulation of which was vested in the general
government."
18 Wall.
85 U. S.
65-66.
In the very recent case of
Knight v. United States Land
Association, Mr. Justice Lamar, in delivering judgment,
said:
"It is the settled rule of law in this Court that absolute
property in, and dominion and sovereignty over, the soils under the
tidewaters in the original states, were reserved to the several
states, and that the new states since admitted have the same
rights, sovereignty, and jurisdiction in that behalf as the
original states possess within their respective borders. Upon the
acquisition of the territory from Mexico, the United States
acquired the title to tidelands equally with the title to upland,
but with respect to the former, they held it only in trust for the
future states that might be erected out of such territory."
142 U.S.
142 U. S. 183.
In support of these propositions he referred to
Martin v.
Waddell, Pollard's Lessee v. Hagan, Mumford v. Wardwell, and
Weber v. Harbor Commissioners, above cited.
In that case it was further held, as it had previously been
declared in
San Francisco v. Le Roy, above cited, that
"this doctrine does not apply to lands that had been previously
granted to other parties by the former government, or subjected to
trusts which would require their disposition in some other
way,"
and that when the United States acquired California from Mexico
by the treaty, they were bound by its stipulations and by the
principles of international law to protect all rights of property
acquired under previous lawful grants from the Mexican government.
142 U.S.
142 U. S.
183-184,
Page 152 U. S. 31
and it was therefore adjudged that under a boundary "by the
bay," in the Mexican grant of the pueblo of San Francisco, duly
confirmed by a decree of a court of the United States and defined
by a survey under the authority of the Secretary of the Interior as
following the general line of high water mark of the bay, crossing
the mouth of a tidewater creek, the title of lands inside of that
line, although below high water mark of the creek, was included,
and therefore did not pass by a deed from the state.
VI. The decisions of this Court, referred to at the bar,
regarding the shores of waters where the ebb and flow of the tide
from the sea are not felt, but which are really navigable, should
be considered with reference to the facts upon which they were
made, and keeping in mind the local laws of the different states,
as well as the provisions of the acts of Congress relating to such
waters.
By the law of England, Scotland, and Ireland, the owners of the
banks
prima facie own the beds of all fresh water rivers
above the ebb and flow of the tide, even if actually navigable, to
the thread of the stream,
usque and filum aquae. Lord
Hale, in Hargrave's Law Tracts 5;
Bickett v. Morris, L.R.
1 H.L.Sc. 47;
Murphy v. Ryan, Ir.R. 2 C.L. 143;
Orr
Ewing v. Colquhoun, 2 App.Cas. 839.
The rule of the common law on this point appears to have been
followed in all the original states -- except in Pennsylvania,
Virginia, and North Carolina, and except as to great rivers, such
as the Hudson, the Mohawk, and the St. Lawrence in New York -- as
well as in Ohio, Illinois, Michigan and Wisconsin. But it has been
wholly rejected as to rivers navigable in fact in Pennsylvania,
Virginia, and North Carolina, and in most of the new states. For a
full collection and careful analysis of the cases,
see
Gould on Waters, 2d ed., §§ 56-78.
The earliest judicial statement of the now prevailing doctrine
in this country as to the title in the soil of rivers really
navigable, although above the ebb and flow of the tide, is to be
found in a case involving the claim of a riparian proprietor to an
exclusive fishery in the Susquehanna River, in which
Page 152 U. S. 32
Chief Justice Tilghman, in 1807, after observing that the rule
of the common law upon the subject had not been adopted in
Pennsylvania, said:
"The common law principle is in fact that the owners of the
banks have no right to the water of navigable rivers. Now, the
Susquehanna is a navigable river, and therefore the owners of its
banks have no such right. It is said, however, that some of the
cases assert that by navigable rivers are meant rivers in which
there is no flow or reflow of the tide. This definition may be very
proper in England, where there is no river of considerable
importance as to navigation which has not a flow of the tide, but
it would be highly unreasonable when applied to our large rivers,
such as the Ohio, Allegheny, Delaware, Schuylkill, or Susquehanna
and its branches."
Carson v. Blazer, 2 Binney 475, 477-478.
It was because of this difference in the law of Pennsylvania
from that of England and of most of the older states, and because
the decisions of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania upon the subject
were deemed binding precedents, that this Court, speaking by Mr.
Justice Grier, held that riparian owners erecting dams on navigable
rivers in Pennsylvania did so only by license from the state,
revocable at its pleasure, and could therefore claim no
compensation for injuries caused to such dams by subsequent
improvements under authority of the state for the convenience of
navigation, and also that by the law of Pennsylvania, preemption
rights to islands in such rivers could not be obtained by
settlement.
Rundle v. Delaware &
Raritan Canal, 14 How. 80,
55 U. S. 91,
55 U. S. 93-94
(1852);
Fisher v.
Haldeman, 20 How. 186,
61 U. S. 194
(1857).
By the acts of Congress for the sale of the public lands, those
lands are to be divided into townships six miles square, unless the
line of an Indian reservation, or of land previously surveyed and
patented, or "the course of navigable rivers, may render it
impracticable," and into sections and quarter-sections, bounded by
north and south and east and west lines, running to the corners,
or, when the corners cannot be fixed, then "to the watercourse . .
. or other external boundary," and it is provided
"that all navigable rivers within the territory to be disposed
of by virtue of this act shall be deemed to
Page 152 U. S. 33
be and remain public highways, and that in all cases where the
opposite banks of any stream not navigable shall belong to
different persons, the stream and the bed thereof shall be common
to both."
Acts of May 18, 1796, c. 29, §§ 2, 9; 1 Stat. 464; May
10, 1800, c. 55, § 3; March 3, 1803, c. 27, § 17; March
26, 1804, c. 35, § 6; Feb. 11, 1805, c. 14; 2 Stat. 73, 235,
279, 313; Rev.Stat. §§ 2395, 2396, 2476.
Those acts also provide that when, in the opinion of the
President, "a departure from the ordinary method of surveying land
on any river, lake, bayou or watercourse would promote the public
interest," the land may be surveyed, and sold in tracts of two
acres in width, fronting on any such water, and running back the
depth of forty acres. Act of May 24, 1844, c. 141; 4 Stat. 34;
Rev.Stat. § 2407.
By the Ordinance of 1787 for the government of the Northwest
Territory,
"the navigable waters leading into the Mississippi and Saint
Lawrence, and the carrying places between the same, shall be common
highways, and forever free as well to the inhabitants of the said
territory as to the citizens of the United States and those of any
other states that may be admitted into the confederacy."
Charters and Constitutions 432; Act Aug. 7, 1789, c. 8; 1 Stat.
50. And the acts relating to the territories of Louisiana and
Missouri contained similar provisions. Acts of March 3, 1811, c.
46, § 12; June 4, 1812, c. 95, § 15; 2 Stat. 666,
747.
In the acts for the admission of the States of Louisiana and
Mississippi into the union, it was likewise declared that
"the River Mississippi and the navigable rivers and waters
leading into the same or into the Gulf of Mexico shall be common
highways, and forever free as well to the inhabitants of the said
state as to other citizens of the United States."
Acts of Feb. 20, 1811, c. 21, § 3; April 8, 1812, c. 50,
§ 1; 2 Stat. 642, 703; March 1, 1817, c. 23, § 4; 3 Stat.
349.
In
Withers v.
Buckley, 20 How. 84 (1857), this Court, affirming
the judgment of the highest court of Mississippi in 29 Miss. 21,
held that this did not prevent the legislature of the state from
improving by a canal the navigation of one of those navigable
rivers, and thereby diverting without
Page 152 U. S. 34
compensation the flow of water by the plaintiff's land, and Mr.
Justice Daniel, in delivering judgment, said:
"It cannot be imputed to Congress that they ever designed to
forbid or to withhold from the State of Mississippi the power of
improving the interior of that state by means either of roads or
canals or by regulating the rivers within its territorial limits,
although a plan of improvement to be adopted might embrace or
affect the course or the flow of rivers situated within the
interior of the state. Could such an intention be ascribed to
Congress, the right to enforce it may be confidently denied.
Clearly Congress could exact of the new state the surrender of no
attribute inherent in her character as a sovereign, independent
state, or indispensable to her equality with her sister states,
necessarily implied and guarantied by the very nature of the
federal compact. Obviously, and it may be said primarily, among the
incidents of that equality is the right to make improvements in the
rivers, watercourses, and highways situated within the state."
20 How.
61 U. S. 93.
See also Willamette Bridge Co. v. Hatch, 125 U. S.
1,
125 U. S. 9-12;
Monongahela Co. v. United States, 148 U.
S. 312,
148 U. S.
329-333.
In
The Genesee
Chief, 12 How. 443 (1851), in which this Court,
overruling its earlier decisions, held that the admiralty and
maritime jurisdiction of the courts of the United States extended
to all public navigable waters, although above the flow of the tide
from the sea, Chief Justice Taney, taking the same line of argument
as Chief Justice Tilghman in
Carson v. Blazer, above
cited, said that in England, where there were no navigable streams
beyond the ebb and flow of the tide, the description of the
admiralty jurisdiction as confined to tidewaters was a reasonable
and convenient one, and was equivalent to saying that it was
confined to public navigable waters, but that when the same
description was used in this country,
"the description of a public navigable river was substituted in
the place of the thing intended to be described, and under the
natural influence of precedents and established forms, a definition
originally correct was adhered to and acted on after it had ceased,
from a change in circumstances,
Page 152 U. S. 35
to be the true description of public waters."
12 How.
53 U. S.
454-455.
In
Jones v.
Soulard, (1860) 24 How. 41, the decision was that a
title acquired under the Act of June 13, 1812, c. 99, 2 Stat. 748,
to land in St. Louis bounded by the Mississippi River included an
island west of the middle of the river, then only a sand bar,
covered at ordinary high water and surrounded on all sides by
navigable water, but which, after the admission of Missouri into
the union as a state, became, by the gradual filling up of the
island and the intervening channel, connected with the shore as
fast land. Mr. Justice Catron indeed, in delivering the opinion,
spoke of the rule of the common law that
"all grants of land bounded by fresh water rivers, where the
expressions designating the water line are general, confer the
proprietorship on the grantee to the middle thread of the stream
and entitle him to the accretions"
as a general and well settled rule, and applicable to the
Mississippi River. 24 How.
65 U. S. 65. But, as stated in that opinion, the charter
of the City of St. Louis extended to the eastern boundary of the
State of Missouri in the middle of the Mississippi River. By the
law of Missouri as theretofore declared by its supreme court, the
title of lands bounded by the Mississippi River extended to low
water mark, and included accretions.
O'Fallon v. Daggett,
4 Mo. 343;
Shelton v. Maupin, 16 Mo. 124;
Smith v. St.
Louis Schools, 30 Mo. 290. And the only question in
Jones
v. Soulard was of the title not in the bed or shore of the
river, but only in accretions which had become part of the fast
land.
The rule, everywhere admitted, that where the land encroaches
upon the water by gradual and imperceptible degrees, the accretion
or alluvion belongs to the owner of the land is equally applicable
to lands bounding on tidewaters or on fresh waters, and to the King
or the state as to private persons, and is independent of the law
governing the title in the soil covered by the water. Lord Hale, in
Hargrave's Law Tracts, pp. 5, 14, 28;
Rex v. Yarborough,
in the King's Bench, 3 B. & C. 91, and 4 D. & R. 790, and
in the
Page 152 U. S. 36
House of Lords, 1 Dow & Clark 178, 2 Bligh N.R. 147, and 5
Bing. 163;
Doe v. East India Co., 10 Moore P.C. 140;
Foster v. Wright, 4 C.P.D. 438;
Handly v.
Anthony, 5 Wheat. 374,
18 U. S. 380;
Jefferis v. East Omaha Co., 134 U.
S. 178,
134 U. S.
189-193;
Nebraska v. Iowa, 143 U.
S. 359;
Minto v. Delaney, 7 Or. 337.
Again, in
St. Clair v.
Lovingston, 23 Wall. 46 (1874), the right of a
riparian proprietor in St. Louis, which was upheld by this Court,
affirming the judgment of the Supreme Court of Illinois in 64 Ill.
56, and which Mr. Justice Swayne, in delivering the opinion, spoke
of as resting in the law of nature, was the right to alluvion or
increase of the upland by gradual and imperceptible degrees. And as
if to prevent any possible inference that the decision might affect
the title in the soil under the water, the learned justice, after
quoting the opinion in
Jones v. Soulard, above cited,
expressly reserved the expression of any opinion upon the question
whether the limit of the land was low water or the middle thread of
the river, and repeated the propositions established by the earlier
decisions of this Court, already referred to:
"By the American Revolution, the people of each state, in their
sovereign character, acquired the absolute right to all their
navigable waters and the soil under them. The shores of navigable
waters and the soil under them were not granted by the Constitution
to the United States, but were reserved to the states respectively,
and new states have the same rights of sovereignty and jurisdiction
over this subject as the original ones."
23 Wall.
90 U. S. 64,
90 U. S. 68.
Some passages in the opinions in
Dutton v.
Strong, 1 Black 23 (1861);
Railroad
Co. v. Schurmeir, 7 Wall. 272 (1868), and
Yates v.
Milwaukee, 10 Wall. 497 (1870), were relied on by
the learned counsel for the plaintiff in error as showing that the
owner of land adjoining any navigable water, whether within or
above the ebb and flow of the tide, has, independently of local
law, a right of property in the soil below high water mark, and the
right to build out wharves so far at least, as to reach water
really navigable.
But the remarks of Mr. Justice Clifford in the first of
those
Page 152 U. S. 37
cases, upon which his own remarks in the second case, and those
of Mr. Justice Miller in the third case, were based distinctly
recognized the diversity of laws and usages in the different states
upon this subject, and went no further than to say that wharves,
piers, and landing places, "where they conform to the regulations
of the state" and do not extend below low water mark, have never
been held to be nuisances unless they obstruct the paramount right
of navigation; that the right of the riparian proprietor to erect
such structures in the navigable waters of the Atlantic states has
been claimed, exercised, and sanctioned from the first settlement
of the country to the present time; that
"different states adopted different regulations upon the
subject, and, in some, the right of the riparian proprietor rests
upon immemorial local usage,"
and that "no reason is perceived why the same general principle
should not be applicable to the lakes" so far as to permit the
owner of the adjacent land to build out as far as where the water
first becomes deep enough to be navigable. 1 Black
66 U. S. 31-32.
And none of the three cases called for the laying down or defining
of any general rule independent of local law or usage or of the
particular facts before the court.
In
Dutton v. Strong, the defendants, being the owners
and occupants of a pier extending into Lake Michigan at Racine, in
the State of Wisconsin, were sued for cutting the hawser by which
the plaintiffs had fastened their vessel to the pier during a
storm, in consequence of which she was driven, by the force of the
wind and waves, against another pier, and injured. And as stated in
the opinion, the pier appeared to be the private property of the
defendants, constructed for their own use; there was no evidence
that it constituted any obstruction whatever to the public right of
navigation; the plaintiffs' vessel was made fast to it by her
master without any authority from the defendants, either express or
implied; and, under the increasing strain of the hawser by the
storm, the piles of the pier began to give way before the hawser
was cut. The only point adjudged was that, the plaintiffs' vessel
having been wrongfully attached to the pier, the defendants, after
she had been requested and had refused to leave, had
Page 152 U. S. 38
the right to cut her loose if necessary to preserve the pier
from destruction or injury. 1 Black
66 U. S. 33-34.
There can be no doubt of the correctness of that decision, for even
if the pier had been unlawfully erected by the defendants as
against the state, the plaintiffs had no right to pull it down or
injure it, and upon the facts of the case were mere trespassers
upon the defendants' possession.
Linthicum
v. Ray, 9 Wall. 241;
Wetmore v. Brooklyn
Gaslight Co., 42 N.Y. 384;
Harrington v. Edwards, 17
Wis. 604;
Johnson v. Barret, Aleyn 10, 11.
In
Railroad Co. v. Schurmeir, the plaintiff claimed
title to lots in a block in the City of St. Paul and State of
Minnesota under a patent from the United States of a fractional
section bounded on one side by the Mississippi River. At the place
in question, there was a small island, lying along the shore of the
river, about four feet lower than the main land, and separated from
it by a channel or slough twenty-eight feet wide, in which at very
low water there was no current and very little water, and that
standing in pools; at a medium stage of the water, the island was
not covered, and there was a current or flow through the channel or
slough, and at very high water the island was submerged. In the
original government survey, the meander lines were run along the
main land of the shore, the quantity of land was estimated
accordingly, and the island and intervening space were not shown or
mentioned. That island and space were afterwards filled up by the
city as a landing place, and were claimed by the railroad company
under a subsequent survey and grant from the United States. The
island therefore was connected with the main land by a space
substantially uncovered at low water, and the improvements
complained of did not extend beyond high water mark of the island.
The question in controversy was whether the plaintiff's patent was
limited by the main shore, or extended to the outside of the
island. The Supreme Court of Minnesota held that, by the law of
Minnesota, land bounded by a navigable river extended to low water
mark at least, if not to the thread of the river, and that the
plaintiff's title therefore extended to the water's edge at low
Page 152 U. S. 39
water mark, and included the island, and gave judgment for the
plaintiff. 10 Minn. 82. This Court affirmed the judgment,
saying:
"Express decision of the supreme court of the state was that the
river, in this case, and not the meander line, is the west boundary
of the lot, and in that conclusion of the state court we entirely
concur. Meander lines are run in surveying fractional portions of
the public lands bordering upon navigable rivers, not as boundaries
of the tract, but for the purpose of defining the sinuosities of
the banks of the stream, and as the means of ascertaining the
quantity of land in the fraction subject to sale, and which is to
be paid for by the purchaser. In preparing the official plat from
the field notes, the meander line is represented as the border line
of the stream, and shows, to a demonstration, that the watercourse,
and not the meander line as actually run on the land, is the
boundary."
7 Wall.
74 U. S.
286-287. The court also expressed an unhesitating
opinion that
"Congress, in making a distinction between streams navigable and
those not navigable, intended to provide that the common law rules
of riparian ownership should apply to lands bordering on the
latter, but that the title to lands bordering on navigable streams
should stop at the stream, and that all such streams should be
deemed to be and remain public highways."
And the Court treated it as too plain for discussion that the
island, separated from the mainland only by a depression in which
at low water there was no continuous flow or line of water, was
included in the first survey, and therefore not affected by the
subsequent survey. 7 Wall.
74 U. S. 288-289.
In
Yates v. Milwaukee, the material facts appear by the
report to have been as follows: the owner of a lot fronting on a
river in the City of Milwaukee and State of Wisconsin had built,
upon land covered by water of no use for the purpose of navigation,
a wharf extending to the navigable channel of the river. There was
no evidence that the wharf was an obstruction to navigation, or was
in any sense a nuisance. The city council afterwards, under a
statute of the state enacted before the wharf was built,
authorizing the city council to establish dock and wharf lines upon
the banks of the
Page 152 U. S. 40
river, to restrain and prevent encroachments upon and
obstructions to the river, and to cause the river to be dredged,
passed an ordinance declaring this wharf to be an obstruction to
navigation and a nuisance, and ordering it to be abated. The point
adjudged was that the mere declaration of the city council that the
wharf already built and owned by the plaintiff was a nuisance did
not make it such or subject it to be removed by authority of the
city. It was recognized in the opinion that by the law of
Wisconsin, established by the decisions of its supreme court, the
title of the owner of land bounded by a navigable river extended to
the center of the stream, subject, of course, to the public right
of navigation.
Jones v. Pettibone, 2 Wis. 308;
Walker
v. Shepardson, 2 Wis. 384, 4 Wis. 486;
Mariner v.
Schulte, 13 Wis. 692;
Arnold v. Elmore, 16 Wis. 536.
See also Olson v. Merrill, 42 Wis. 203;
Norcross v.
Griffiths, 65 Wis. 599. And the only decision of that court
which this Court considered itself not bound to follow was
Yates v. Judd, 18 Wis. 118, upon the question of fact
whether certain evidence was sufficient to prove a dedication to
the public. 10 Wall.
77 U. S.
504-506.
VII. The later judgments of this Court clearly establish that
the title and rights of riparian or littoral proprietors in the
soil below high water mark of navigable waters are governed by the
local laws of the several states, subject, of course, to the rights
granted to the United States by the Constitution.
In
Weber v. Harbor Commissioners, above cited, MR.
JUSTICE FIELD, in delivering judgment, while recognizing the
correctness of the doctrine
"that a riparian proprietor whose land is bounded by a navigable
stream has the right of access to the navigable part of the stream
in front of his land, and to construct a wharf or pier projecting
into the stream for his own use or the use of others, subject to
such general rules and regulations as the legislature may prescribe
for the protection of the public,"
and admitting that in several of the states, by general
legislation or immemorial usage, the proprietor of land bounded by
the shore of the sea, or of an arm of the sea, has a right to wharf
out to the point where the waters are
Page 152 U. S. 41
navigable, said:
"In the absence of such legislation or usage, however, the
common law rule would govern the rights of the proprietor, at least
in those states where the common law obtains. By that law, the
title to the shore of the sea, and of the arms of the sea, and in
the soils under tidewaters is, in England, in the King, and in this
country in the state. Any erection thereon without license is
therefore deemed an encroachment upon the property of the
sovereign, or, as it is termed in the language of the law, a
purpresture, which he may remove at pleasure, whether it tends to
obstruct navigation or otherwise."
18 Wall.
85 U. S.
64-65.
In
Atlee v. Packet
Co., 21 Wall. 389 (1874), which arose in Iowa in
1871, Mr. Justice Miller, in delivering judgment, after referring
to
Dutton v. Strong, Railroad Co. v. Schurmeir, and
Yates v. Milwaukee, above cited, disclaimed laying down
any invariable rule as to the extent to which wharves and landing
places might be built out into navigable waters by private
individuals or municipal corporations, and recognized that a state
might, by its legislation or by authority expressly or impliedly
delegated to municipal governments, control the construction,
erection, and use of such wharves or landings so as to secure their
safety and usefulness and to prevent their being obstructions to
navigation. 21 Wall.
88 U. S.
392-393. And it was adjudged, following in this respect
the opinion of the circuit court in 2 Dillon 479, that a riparian
proprietor had no right, without statutory authority, to build out
piers into the Mississippi River as necessary parts of a boom to
receive and retain logs until needed for sawing at his mill by the
water side.
In
Railway Co. v. Renwick, 102 U.
S. 180 (1880), affirming the judgment of the Supreme
Court of Iowa in 49 Ia. 664, it was by virtue of an express
statute, passed by the Legislature of Iowa in 1874, that the owner
of a similar pier and boom recovered compensation for the
obstruction of access to it from the river by the construction of a
railroad in front of it.
In
Barney v. Keokuk, 94 U. S. 324
(1876), the owner, under a grant from the United States, of two
lots of land in
Page 152 U. S. 42
the City of Keokuk and State of Iowa bounded by the Mississippi
River brought an action of ejectment against the city and several
railroad companies and a steamboat company to recover possession of
lands below high water mark in front of his lots, which the city,
pursuant to statutes of the state, had filled up as a wharf and
levee, and had permitted to be occupied by the railroads and
landing places of those companies. The plaintiff's counsel relied
on
Dutton v. Strong, Railroad Co. v. Schurmeir, and
Yates v. Milwaukee, above cited.
94 U.
S. 329-331 [argument of counsel - omitted]. But this
Court, affirming the judgment of the circuit court of the United
States, held that the action could not be maintained, and Mr.
Justice Bradley, in delivering judgment, summed up the law upon the
subject with characteristic power and precision, saying:
"It appears to be the settled law of that state that the title
of the riparian proprietors on the banks of the Mississippi extends
only to ordinary high water mark, and that the shore between high
and low water mark, as well as the bed of the river, belongs to the
state. This is also the common law with regard to navigable waters,
although in England no waters are deemed navigable except those in
which the tide ebbs and flows. In this country, as a general thing,
all waters are deemed navigable which are really so, and especially
it is true with regard to the Mississippi and its principal
branches. The question as to the extent of the riparian title was
elaborately discussed in the case of
McManus v.
Carmichael, 3 Ia. 1. The above conclusion was reached, and has
always been adhered to in that state.
Haight v. Keokuk, 4
Ia. 199;
Tomlin v. Railroad Co., 32 Ia. 106. . . . It is
generally conceded that the riparian title attaches to subsequent
accretions to the land effected by the gradual and imperceptible
operation of natural causes. But whether it attaches to land
reclaimed by artificial means from the bed of the river or to
sudden accretions produced by unusual floods is a question which
each state decides for itself. By the common law, as before
remarked, such additions to the land on navigable waters belong to
the Crown, but as the only waters recognized in
Page 152 U. S. 43
England as navigable were tidewaters, the rule was often
expressed as applicable to tidewaters only, although the reason of
the rule would equally apply to navigable waters above the flow of
the tide, that reason being that the public authorities ought to
have entire control of the great passageways of commerce and
navigation, to be exercised for the public advantage and
convenience. The confusion of navigable with tidewater, found in
the monuments of the common law, long prevailed in this country
notwithstanding the broad differences existing between the extent
and topography of the British islands and those of the American
continent. It had the influence for two generations of excluding
the admiralty jurisdiction from our great rivers and inland seas,
and, under the like influence, it laid the foundation in many
states of doctrines with regard to the ownership of the soil in
navigable waters above tidewater at variance with sound principles
of public policy. Whether as rules of property it would not be safe
to change these doctrines where they have been applied, as before
remarked, is for the several states themselves to determine. If
they choose to resign to the riparian proprietor rights which
properly belong to them in their sovereign capacity, it is not for
others to raise objections. In our view of the subject, the correct
principles were laid down in
Martin v. Waddell, 16 Pet.
367,
Pollard v. Hagan, 3 How.
212, and
Goodtitle v. Kibbe, 9 How.
471. These cases related to tidewater, it is true, but they
enunciate principles which are equally applicable to all navigable
waters. And since this Court, in the case of
The Genesee
Chief, 12 How. 443, has declared that the Great
Lakes and other navigable waters of the country, above as well as
below the flow of the tide, are, in the strictest sense, entitled
to the denomination of navigable waters, and amenable to the
admiralty jurisdiction, there seems to be no sound reason for
adhering to the old rule as to the proprietorship of the beds and
shores of such waters. It properly belongs to the states by their
inherent sovereignty, and the United States has wisely abstained
from extending (if it could extend) its survey and grants
beyond
Page 152 U. S. 44
the limits of high water. The cases in which this Court has
seemed to hold a contrary view depended, as most cases must depend,
on the local laws of the states in which the lands were situated.
In Iowa, as before stated, the more correct rule seems to have been
adopted after a most elaborate investigation of the subject."
94 U.S.
94 U. S.
336-338.
In
St. Louis v. Myers, 113 U.
S. 566 (1885), the Court, speaking by Chief Justice
Waite, held that the act of Congress for the admission into the
union of the State of Missouri, bounded by the Mississippi River,
which declared that the river should be "a common highway and
forever free," left the rights of riparian owners to be settled
according to the principles of state law, and that no federal
question was involved in a judgment of the Supreme Court of the
State of Missouri as to the right of a riparian proprietor in the
City of St. Louis to maintain an action against the city for
extending one of its streets into the river so as to divert the
natural course of the water and thereby to injure his property.
In
Packer v. Bird, 137 U. S. 661
(1891), the general rules governing this class of cases were
clearly and succinctly laid down by the Court, speaking by MR.
JUSTICE FIELD, as follows:
"The courts of the United States will construe the grants of the
general government without reference to the rules of construction
adopted by the states for their grants; but whatever incidents or
rights attach to the ownership of property conveyed by the
government will be determined by the states, subject to the
condition that their rules do not impair the efficacy of the grants
or the use and enjoyment of the property by the grantee. As an
incident of such ownership, the right of the riparian owner, where
the waters are above the influence of the tide, will be limited
according to the law of the state, either to low or high water
mark, or will extend to the middle of the stream."
137 U.S.
137 U. S.
669-670. And it was accordingly held, affirming the
judgment of the Supreme Court of California in 71 Cal. 134, and
referring to the opinion in
Barney v. Keokuk, above cited,
as specially applicable to the case, that a person holding land
under a patent from the United States, confirming a Mexican grant
bounded by the
Page 152 U. S. 45
Sacramento River, which was navigable in fact, took no title
below the high water mark either under the acts of Congress or by
the local law.
In
St. Louis v. Rutz, 138 U. S. 226
(1891), the Court, speaking by Mr. Justice Blatchford and referring
to
Barney v. Keokuk, St. Louis v. Myers, and
Packer v.
Bird, above cited, said:
"The question as to whether the fee of the plaintiff, as a
riparian proprietor on the Mississippi River, extends to the middle
thread of the stream, or only to the water's edge is a question in
regard to a rule of property, which is governed by the local law of
Illinois."
And it was because
"the Supreme Court of Illinois has established and steadily
maintained, as a rule of property, that the fee of the riparian
owner of lands in Illinois bordering on the Mississippi River
extends to the middle line of the main channel of that river"
that it was decided that a deed of land in Illinois, bounded by
the Mississippi River, passed the title in fee in the bed of the
river to the middle line of the main channel, and to all islands
found in the bed of the river east of the middle of that channel,
and,
"that being so, it is impossible for the owner of an island
which is situated on the west side of the middle of the river, and
in the State of Missouri, to extend his ownership, by mere
accretion, to land situated in the State of Illinois, the title in
fee to which is vested by the law of Illinois in the riparian owner
of the land in that state."
138 U.S.
138 U. S.
242-250.
In the recent case of
Hardin v. Jordan, 140 U.
S. 371 (1891), in which there was a difference of
opinion upon the question whether a survey and patent of the United
States, bounded by a lake which was not navigable, in the State of
Illinois, was limited by the margin, or extended to the center of
the lake, all the justices agreed that the question must be
determined by the law of Illinois. Mr. Justice Bradley, speaking
for the majority of the Court and referring to many cases already
cited above, said:
"With regard to grants of the government for lands bordering on
tidewater, it has been distinctly settled that they only extend to
high water mark, and that the title to the shore and lands under
water in front of lands so granted inures to the state within which
they are
Page 152 U. S. 46
situated if a state has been organized and established there.
Such title to the shore and lands under water is regarded as
incidental to the sovereignty of the state -- a portion of the
royalties belonging thereto, and held in trust for the public
purposes of navigation and fishery -- and cannot be retained or
granted out to individuals by the United States. Such title being
in the state, the lands are subject to state regulation and
control, under the condition, however, of not interfering with the
regulations which may be made by Congress with regard to public
navigation and commerce. The state may even dispose of the usufruct
of such lands, as is frequently done by leasing oyster beds in them
and granting fisheries in particular localities; also, by the
reclamation of submerged flats, and the erection of wharves and
piers, and other adventitious aids of commerce. Sometimes large
areas so reclaimed are occupied by cities, and are put to other
public or private uses, state control and ownership therein being
supreme, subject only to the paramount authority of Congress in
making regulations of commerce and in subjecting the lands to the
necessities and uses of commerce. This right of the states to
regulate and control the shores of tidewaters and the land under
them is the same as that which is exercised by the Crown in
England. In this country, the same rule has been extended to our
great navigable lakes, which are treated as inland seas, and also,
in some of the states, to navigable rivers, as the Mississippi, the
Missouri, the Ohio, and in Pennsylvania to all the permanent rivers
of the state; but it depends on the law of each state to what
waters and to what extent this prerogative of the state over the
lands under water shall be exercised."
140 U.S.
140 U. S.
381-382. And MR. JUSTICE BREWER, in beginning the
dissenting opinion, said:
"Beyond all dispute, the settled law of this Court, established
by repeated decisions, is that the question how far the title of a
riparian owner extends is one of local law. For a determination of
that question, the statutes of the state and the decisions of its
highest court furnish the best and the final authority."
140 U.S.
140 U. S.
402.
In the yet more recent case of
Illinois Central Railroad
v.
Page 152 U. S. 47
Illinois, (1892) which also arose in Illinois, it was
recognized as the settled law of this country that the ownership of
and dominion and sovereignty over lands covered by tidewaters or
navigable lakes within the limits of the several states belong to
the respective states within which they are found, with the
consequent right to use or dispose of any portion thereof, when
that can be done without substantial impairment of the interest of
the public in such waters and subject to the paramount right of
Congress to control their navigation so far as may be necessary for
the regulation of commerce.
146 U. S. 146 U.S.
387,
146 U. S.
435-437,
146 U. S. 465,
146 U. S.
474.
VIII. Notwithstanding the
dicta contained in some of
the opinions of this Court already quoted to the effect that
Congress has no power to grant any land below high water mark of
navigable waters in a territory of the United States, it is evident
that this is not strictly true.
Chief Justice Taney, in delivering the opinion already cited,
after the subject had been much considered in the cases from
Alabama, said:
"Undoubtedly Congress might have granted this land to the
patentee, or confirmed his Spanish grant, before Alabama became a
state.
Goodtitle v. Kibbe, 9 How.
471,
50 U. S. 478. In the cases
from California already referred to, the question whether a Mexican
grant, confirmed by the United States, did or did not include any
lands below high water mark was treated as depending on the terms
of the decree of confirmation by a court of the United States under
authority of Congress. By the application of that test, no such
lands were held to be included, in
United States v.
Pacheco, 2 Wall. 587, and some such lands were held
to be included, in
Knight v. United States Land
Association, 142 U. S. 161. And in
Packer
v. Bird, 137 U. S. 661,
137 U. S.
672, MR. JUSTICE FIELD, speaking for the Court, after
referring to the rule, as stated in
Railroad Co. v.
Schurmeir, 7 Wall. 272,
74 U. S.
288, above quoted, that Congress, by the provisions of
the land laws, intended that the title to lands bordering on
navigable streams should stop at the stream, said:"
"The same rule applies when the survey is made and the patent is
issued upon a confirmation of a previously existing right or equity
of the
Page 152 U. S. 48
patentee to the lands, which, in the absence of such right or
equity, would belong absolutely to the United States unless the
claim confirmed in terms embraces the land under the waters of the
stream."
By the Constitution, as is now well settled, the United States,
having rightfully acquired the territories and being the only
government which can impose laws upon them, have the entire
dominion and sovereignty, national and municipal, federal and
state, over all the territories so long as they remain in a
territorial condition.
American Ins. Co. v.
Canter, 1 Pet. 511,
26 U. S. 542;
Benner v.
Porter, 9 How. 235,
50 U. S. 242;
Cross v.
Harrison, 16 How. 164,
57 U. S. 193;
National Bank v. Yankton County, 101 U.
S. 129,
101 U. S. 133;
Murphy v. Ramsey, 114 U. S. 15,
114 U. S. 44;
Mormon Church v. United States, 136 U. S.
1,
136 U. S. 42-43;
McAllister v. United States, 141 U.
S. 174,
141 U. S.
181.
We cannot doubt, therefore, that Congress has the power to make
grants of lands below high water mark of navigable waters in any
territory of the United States whenever it becomes necessary to do
so in order to perform international obligations or to effect the
improvement of such lands for the promotion and convenience of
commerce with foreign nations and among the several states or to
carry out other public purposes appropriate to the objects for
which the United States hold the territory.
IX. But Congress have never undertaken by general laws to
dispose of such lands, and the reasons are not far to seek.
As has been seen, by the law of England, the title in fee, or
jus privatum, of the King or his grantee was, in the
phrase of Lord Hale, "charged with and subject to that
jus
publicum which belongs to the King's subjects," or, as he
elsewhere puts it,
"is clothed and superinduced with a
jus publicum,
wherein both natives and foreigners in peace with this Kingdom are
interested by reason of common commerce, trade, and
intercourse."
Hargrave's Law Tracts, 36, 84. In the words of Chief Justice
Taney, "the country" discovered and settled by Englishmen "was held
by the King, in his public and regal character, as the
representative of the nation, and in trust for
Page 152 U. S. 49
them," and the title and the dominion of the tidewaters, and of
the soil under them, in each colony passed by the royal charter to
the grantees as "a trust for the common use of the new community
about to be established," and, upon the American Revolution, vested
absolutely in the people of each state, "for their own common use,
subject only to the rights since surrendered by the Constitution to
the general government."
Martin v.
Waddell, 16 Pet. 367,
41 U. S.
409-411. As observed by Mr. Justice Curtis, "This soil
is held by the state, not only subject to, but in some sense in
trust for, the enjoyment of certain public rights."
Smith v.
Maryland, 18 How. 71,
59 U. S. 74. "The
title to the shore and lands under tidewater," said Mr. Justice
Bradley,
"is regarded as incidental to the sovereignty of the state -- a
portion of the royalties belonging thereto, and held in trust for
the public purposes of navigation and fishery."
Hardin v. Jordan, 140 U. S. 371,
140 U. S. 381.
And the territories acquired by Congress, whether by deed of
cession from the original states or by treaty with a foreign
country, are held with the object, as soon as their population and
condition justify it, of being admitted into the union as states,
upon an equal footing with the original states in all respects, and
the title and dominion of the tidewaters, and the lands under them,
are held by the United States for the benefit of the whole people,
and, as this Court has often said, in cases above cited, "in trust
for the future states."
Pollard v.
Hagan, 3 How. 212,
44 U. S.
221-222;
Weber v. Harbor
Commissioners, 18 Wall. 57,
85 U. S. 65;
Knight v. United States Land Association, 142 U.
S. 161,
142 U. S.
183.
The Congress of the United States, in disposing of the public
lands, has constantly acted upon the theory that those lands,
whether in the interior or on the coast above high water mark, may
be taken up by actual occupants in order to encourage the
settlement of the country, but that the navigable waters and the
soils under them, whether within or above the ebb and flow of the
tide, shall be and remain public highways, and, being chiefly
valuable for the public purposes of commerce, navigation, and
fishery and for the improvements necessary to secure and promote
those purposes,
Page 152 U. S. 50
shall not be granted away during the period of territorial
government, but, unless in case of some international duty or
public exigency, shall be held by the United States in trust for
the future states and shall vest in the several states, when
organized and admitted into the union, with all the powers and
prerogatives appertaining to the older states in regard to such
waters and soils within their respective jurisdictions -- in short,
shall not be disposed of piecemeal to individuals as private
property, but shall be held as a whole for the purpose of being
ultimately administered and dealt with for the public benefit by
the state after it shall have become a completely organized
community.
X. The title of the United States to Oregon was founded upon
original discovery and actual settlement by citizens of the United
States, authorized or approved by the government of the United
States, as well as upon the cession of the Louisiana Territory by
France in the treaty of 1803 and the renunciation of the claims of
Spain in the treaty of 1819. American State Papers, 6 Foreign
Relations 666; Barrow's History of Oregon, c. 22, 8 Stat. 202, 256.
While the right to Oregon was in contest between the United States
and Great Britain, the citizens of the one and the subjects of the
other were permitted to occupy it under the conventions of 1818 and
1827. 8 Stat. 249, 360. Its boundary on the north was defined by
the Treaty with Great Britain of June 15, 1846, 9 Stat. 869. So far
as the title of the United States was derived from France or Spain,
it stood as in other territories acquired by treaty. The
independent title based on discovery and settlement was equally
absolute.
Johnson v.
McIntosh, 8 Wheat. 543,
21 U. S. 595;
Martin v.
Waddell, 16 Pet. 367,
41 U. S. 409;
Jones v. United States, 137 U. S. 202,
137 U. S.
212.
By the act of 1848, establishing the territorial government of
Oregon, "all laws heretofore passed in said territory making grants
of land, or otherwise affecting or encumbering the title to lands"
were declared to be void, and the laws of the United States were
"extended over and declared to be in force in said territory, so
far as the same, or any provision thereof, may be applicable." Act
of August 14, 1848, c. 177,
Page 152 U. S. 51
§ 14, 9 Stat. 329. The land laws adopted by the provisional
government of Oregon, established by the people while the
sovereignty was in dispute between the United States and Great
Britain, regulated the occupation only. The settlers had no title
in the soil. The United States, on assuming undisputed dominion
over the territory, owned all the lands therein, and Congress had
the right to confine its bounties to settlers within just such
limits as it chose. The provisions of the general land laws of the
United States were not applicable to the Oregon Territory. And
before 1850, there was no statute under which any one could acquire
a legal title from the United States to lands in Oregon.
Lownsdale v.
Parrish, 21 How. 290,
62 U. S. 293;
Stark v.
Starrs, 6 Wall. 402;
Davenport
v. Lamb, 13 Wall. 418,
80 U. S.
429-430;
Lamb v.
Davenport, 18 Wall. 307,
85 U. S. 314;
Stark v. Starr, 94 U. S. 477,
94 U. S. 486;
Barney v. Dolph, 97 U. S. 652,
97 U. S. 654;
Hall v. Russell, 101 U. S. 503,
101 U. S.
507-508;
Missionary Society v. Dalles,
107 U. S. 336,
107 U. S.
344.
The first act of Congress which granted to settlers titles in
such lands was the Oregon Donation Act of September 27, 1850, c.
76. That act required the lands in Oregon to be surveyed as in the
Northwest Territory, and it made grants or donations of land,
measured by sections, half sections, and quarter sections, to
actual settlers and occupants. It contains nothing indicating any
intention on the part of Congress to depart from its settled policy
of not granting to individuals lands under tidewaters or navigable
rivers. 9 Stat. 496; Rev.Stat. §§ 2395, 2396, 2409.
It is evident, therefore, that a donation claim under this act,
bounded by the Columbia River, where the tide ebbs and flows, did
not of its own force have the effect of passing any title in lands
below high water mark, nor is any such effect attributed to it by
the law of the State of Oregon.
The southern part of the Territory of Oregon was admitted into
the union as the State of Oregon, "on an equal footing with the
other states in all respects whatever," by the Act of February 14,
1859, c. 33, and the act of admission provided that
"the said State of Oregon shall have concurrent jurisdiction on
the Columbia and all other rivers and waters bordering
Page 152 U. S. 52
on the said State of Oregon so far as the same shall form a
common boundary to said state and any other state or states now or
hereafter to be formed or bounded by the same, and said rivers and
waters, and all the navigable waters of said state, shall be common
highways and forever free as well to the inhabitants of said state
as to all other citizens of the United States."
11 Stat. 383.
The Settlers of Oregon, like the colonists of the Atlantic
states, coming from a country in which the common law prevailed to
one that had no organized government, took with them as their
birthright the principles of the common law so far as suited to
their condition in their new home. The jurisprudence of Oregon
therefore is based on the common law.
Van Ness
v. Pacard, 2 Pet. 137,
27 U. S. 144;
Norris v. Harris, 15 Cal. 226, 252;
Cressey v.
Tatom, 9 Or. 541;
Lamb v. Starr, Deady 350, 358.
By the law of the State of Oregon as declared and established by
the decisions of its supreme court, the owner of upland bounding on
navigable water has no title in the adjoining lands below high
water mark, and no right to build wharves thereon, except as
expressly permitted by statutes of the state, but the state has the
title in those lands, and unless they have been so built upon with
its permission, the right to sell and convey them to anyone, free
of any right in the proprietor of the upland and subject only to
the paramount right of navigation inherent in the public.
Hinman v. Warren, 6 Or. 408;
Parker v. Taylor, 7
Or. 435;
Parker v. Rogers, 8 Or. 183;
Shively v.
Parker, 9 Or. 500;
McCann v. Oregon Railway, 13 Or.
455;
Bowlby v. Shively, 22 Or. 410.
See also Shively
v. Welch, 20 F. 28.
In the case at bar, the lands in controversy are below high
water mark of the Columbia River, where the tide ebbs and flows,
and the plaintiff in error claims them by a deed from John M.
Shively, who, while Oregon was a territory, obtained from the
United States a donation claim bounded by the Columbia River at the
place in question.
The defendants in error claim title to the lands in controversy
by deeds executed in behalf of the State of Oregon, by
Page 152 U. S. 53
a board of commissioners, pursuant to a statute of the State of
1872, as amended by a statute of 1874, which recited that the
annual encroachments of the sea upon the land, washing away the
shores and shoaling harbors, could be prevented only at great
expense by occupying and placing improvements upon the tide and
overflowed lands belonging to the state, and that it was desirable
to offer facilities and encouragement to the owners of the soil
abutting on such harbors to make such improvements, and therefore
enacted that the owner of any land abutting or fronting upon or
bounded by the shore of, any tidewaters should have the right to
purchase the lands belonging to the state in front thereof, and
that if he should not do so within three years from the date of the
act, they should be open to purchase by any other person who was a
citizen and resident of Oregon after giving notice and opportunity
to the owner of the adjoining upland to purchase and made
provisions for securing to persons who had actually made
improvements upon tidelands a priority of right so to purchase
them.
Neither the plaintiff in error nor his grantor appears to have
ever built a wharf or made any other improvement upon the lands in
controversy, or to have applied to the state to purchase them. But
the defendants in error, after their purchase from the state, built
and maintained a wharf upon the part of these lands nearest the
channel, which extended several hundred feet into the Columbia
River and at which ocean and river craft were wont to receive and
discharge freight.
The theory and effect of these statutes were stated by the
supreme court of the state in this case as follows:
"Upon the admission of the state into the union, the tidelands
became the property of the state, and subject to its jurisdiction
and disposal. In pursuance of this power, the state provided for
the sale and disposal of its tidelands by the act of 1872 and the
amendments of 1874 and 1876. Laws 1872, p. 129; Laws 1874, p. 77;
Laws 1876, p. 70. By virtue of these acts, the owner or owners of
any land abutting or fronting upon or bounded by the shore of the
Pacific Ocean, or of any bay, harbor, or inlet of the same, and
rivers and their bays in which the tide ebbs
Page 152 U. S. 54
and flows within this state were given the right to purchase all
the tidelands belonging to the state in front of the lands so owned
within a certain time and upon conditions prescribed, and providing
further that in case such owner or owners did not apply for the
purchase of such tidelands, or, having applied, failed to prosecute
the same as provided by law, then that such the lands shall be open
to purchase by any other person who is a resident and citizen of
the State of Oregon; but in consideration of the fact that prior to
1872, as it would seem, these lands had been dealt with as private
property, and sometimes improved by expensive structures, the acts
further provided in such cases that where the bank owners had
actually sold the tidelands, then the purchaser of the tideland
from the bank owner, or a previous bank owner, should have the
right to purchase from the state. These statutes are based on the
idea that the state is the owner of the tidelands, and has the
right to dispose of them; that there are no rights of upland
ownership to interfere with this power to dispose of them and
convey private interests therein except such as the state saw fit
to give the adjacent owners, and to acknowledge in them and their
grantees when they had dealt with such tidelands as private
property, subject, of course, to the paramount right of navigation
secured to the public. These statutes have been largely acted upon,
and many titles acquired under them to tidelands. In the various
questions relating to tidelands which have come before the
judiciary, the validity of these statutes has been recognized and
taken for granted, though not directly passed upon."
22 Or. 415, 416.
The substance and scope of the earlier statute of Oregon of
October 17, 1862, General Laws of 1862, p. 96; Hill's Code of
Oregon §§ 4227, 4228, which is copied in the margin,
[
Footnote 2]
Page 152 U. S. 55
were stated by that court as follows:
"It is true the legislature of this state had made provision by
which the upland owner within the corporate limits of any
incorporated town might build wharves, prior to the acts of 1872
and 1874,
supra, but, within the purview of our
adjudications, it would, as a matter of power, have been equally
competent to have given this privilege to others. But this act is
not a grant. It simply authorizes upland owners on navigable rivers
within the corporate limits of any incorporated town to construct
wharves in front of their land. It does not vest any right until
exercised. It is a license, revocable at the pleasure of the
legislature until acted upon or availed of. Shively did not avail
himself of the license, nor is there any pretense to that effect.
The plaintiffs have built a wharf upon and in front of their
tideland. If the act is as applicable to tidelands as uplands on
navigable waters, they have exercised the right."
22 Or. 420-421.
Upon a review of its prior decisions, the court was of opinion
that, by the law of Oregon, in accordance with the law as formerly
held in New York in
Gould v. Hudson River Railroad, 6 N.Y.
522, with the law of New Jersey, as declared in
Stevens v.
Paterson & Newark Railroad, 34 N.J.Law 532, and recognized
in
Hoboken v. Pennsylvania Railroad, 124 U.
S. 656, and with the law of the State of
Page 152 U. S. 56
Washington, on the other side of the Columbia River, as declared
in
Eisenbach v. Hatfield, 2 Wash.St. 236, and upon the
principles affirmed in decisions of this Court above cited, and
especially in
Hardin v. Jordan, 140 U.
S. 371,
140 U. S. 382,
the authority conferred by the statutes of Oregon upon upland
owners on navigable rivers to construct wharves in front of their
land did not vest any right until exercised, but was a mere
license, revocable at the pleasure of the legislature until acted
upon, and that the state had the right to dispose of its tidelands
free from any easement of the upland owner.
The court thus stated its final conclusion:
"From all this, it appears that when the State of Oregon was
admitted into the union, the tidelands became its property, and
subject to its jurisdiction and disposal; that in the absence of
legislation or usage, the common law rule would govern the rights
of the upland proprietor, and by that law the title to them is in
the state; that the state has the right to dispose of them in such
manner as she might deem proper, as is frequently done in various
ways, and whereby sometimes large areas are reclaimed and occupied
by cities and are put to public and private uses, state control and
ownership therein being supreme, subject only to the paramount
right of navigation and commerce. The whole question is for the
state to determine for itself. It can say to what extent it will
preserve its rights of ownership in them or confer them on others.
Our state has done that by the legislation already referred to, and
our courts have declared its absolute property in and dominion over
the tidelands and its right to dispose of its title in such manner
as it might deem best, unaffected by any 'legal obligation to
recognize the rights of either the riparian owners, or those who
had occupied such tidelands' other than it chose to resign to them,
subject only to the paramount right of navigation and the uses of
commerce. From these considerations it results, if we are to be
bound by the previous adjudications of this Court, which have
become a rule of property, and upon the faith of which important
rights and titles have become vested, and large expenditures have
been made and incurred, that the defendants have no rights or
interests in the lands in question.
Page 152 U. S. 57
Upon this point there is no diversity of judgment among us. We
all think that the law as adjudicated ought not to be disturbed
independent of other reasons and authorities suggested in its
support."
22 Or. 427.
By the law of the State of Oregon, therefore, as enacted by its
legislature and declared by its highest court, the title in the
lands in controversy is in the defendants in error, and, upon the
principles recognized and affirmed by a uniform series of recent
decisions of this Court above referred to, the law of Oregon
governs the case.
The conclusions from the considerations and authorities above
stated may be summed up as follows:
Lands under tidewaters are incapable of cultivation or
improvement in the manner of lands above high water mark. They are
of great value to the public for the purposes of commerce,
navigation, and fishery. Their improvement by individuals, when
permitted, is incidental or subordinate to the public use and
right. Therefore the title and the control of them are vested in
the sovereign for the benefit of the whole people.
At common law, the title and the dominion in lands flowed by the
tide were in the King for the benefit of the nation. Upon the
settlement of the colonies, like rights passed to the grantees in
the royal charters, in trust for the communities to be established.
Upon the American Revolution, these rights, charged with a like
trust, were vested in the original states within their respective
borders, subject to the rights surrendered by the Constitution to
the United States.
Upon the acquisition of a territory by the United States,
whether by cession from one of the states, or by treaty with a
foreign country, or by discovery and settlement, the same title and
dominion passed to the United States for the benefit of the whole
people and in trust for the several states to be ultimately created
out of the territory.
The new states admitted into the union since the adoption of the
Constitution have the same rights as the original states in the
tidewaters and in the lands under them, within their respective
jurisdictions. The title and rights of riparian or
Page 152 U. S. 58
littoral proprietors in the soil below high water mark therefore
are governed by the laws of the several states, subject to the
rights granted to the United States by the Constitution.
The United States, while they hold the country as a territory,
having all the powers both of national and of municipal government,
may grant, for appropriate purposes, titles or rights in the soil
below high water mark of tidewaters. But they have never done so by
general laws, and, unless in some case of international duty or
public exigency, have acted upon the policy, as most in accordance
with the interest of the people and with the object for which the
territories were acquired, of leaving the administration and
disposition of the sovereign rights in navigable waters and in the
soil under them to the control of the states, respectively, when
organized and admitted into the union.
Grants by Congress of portions of the public lands within a
territory to settlers thereon, though bordering on or bounded by
navigable waters convey, of their own force no title or right below
high water mark, and do not impair the title and dominion of the
future state, when created, but leave the question of the use of
the shores by the owners of uplands to the sovereign control of
each state, subject only to the rights vested by the Constitution
in the United States.
The donation land claim, bounded by the Columbia River, upon
which the plaintiff in error relies includes no title or right in
the land below high water mark, and the statutes of Oregon under
which the defendants in error hold are a constitutional and legal
exercise by the State of Oregon of its dominion over the lands
under navigable waters.
Judgment affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
"An act to provide for the sale of tide and overflowed lands on
the sea shore and coast."
"Whereas, in many of the bays, harbors and inlets on the sea
coast of this state, the sea is annually encroaching upon the land,
washing away the shores and shoaling such bays, harbors and inlets;
and"
"Whereas such encroachments can be prevented only at great
expense, and by occupying and placing improvements upon the tide
and overflowed lands belonging to the state; and"
"Whereas it is desirable that facilities and encouragement
should be offered to the owners of the soil abutting upon the coast
in such bays, harbors and inlets to make improvements and
expenditures that will stay such encroachments;"
"Therefore, be it enacted by the Legislative Assembly of the
State of Oregon:"
"SEC 1. That the owner or owners of any land abutting or
fronting upon or bounded by the shore
of the Pacific
Ocean, or of any bay, harbor or inlet [on the sea coast of
this state]
of the same, and rivers and their bays, in which
the tide ebbs and flows, within this state, shall have the
right to purchase [from the state] all the tideland belonging to
[the]
this state in front of [such owner or owners]
the lands so owned, provided that if valuable improvements
have been made upon any of the tidelands of this state before the
title to the land on the shore shall have passed from the United
States, the owner of such improvements shall have the exclusive
right to purchase the lands so improved, extending to low water
mark, for a period of [one year]
three years from the
approval of [this act]
the act to which this is amendatory;
provided further that the Willamette River shall not be deemed a
river in which the tide ebbs and flows within the meaning of this
act or of the act to which this act is amendatory, and the title of
this state to any tide or overflowed lands upon said Willamette
River is hereby granted and confirmed to the owners of the adjacent
lands, or, when any such tide or overflowed lands have been sold,
then in that case to the purchaser or purchasers of such tide or
overflowed lands from such owner of such adjacent lands, or some
previous owner thereof, as the case may be."
"SEC. 2. The officers of this state who now are or who may
hereafter be authorized to dispose of the school lands belonging to
this state, are authorized, empowered and directed to sell such
tidelands, upon proper application to purchase by parties hereby
authorized to purchase, and all such tidelands shall be sold, and
the money resulting from such sale shall be distributed, in
accordance with the laws of this state, which now are or may
hereafter be in force respecting the sale of the school lands of
this state, provided that in the certificates of sale and patents
for such lands the same shall be described as _____ acres of
tideland, or land under water belonging to this state, in front of
the following described premises. (Here describe by legal
subdivisions the lands in front of which said tidelands are
located.)"
"Sec. 3. Every applicant for the purchase of tideland, under
section 1 of this act, shall, with his application, present to the
officer or officers who are or shall be authorized to sell such
lands, the evidences of his title to land which abuts or fronts
upon or is bounded by such tidelands; and before making such sale
such officer or officers shall be satisfied that such applicant is
the owner of such lands so fronting, abutting or bounded as
aforesaid."
"SEC. 4. The value of such tidelands shall be appraised at a
certain sum per acre of the same, and such appraisal shall not
value such lands at less than $1.25 for each acre of such land,
provided the board having in charge the sale of said lands shall
have power to set aside any appraisement on evidence taken of the
true value of the same, and shall make another and true
appraisement based on such evidence."
"SEC. 5. If any person of persons who at the passage of [this
act]
the act of which this is amendatory [shall be]
were entitled [under section 1 thereof] to purchase any
tidelands
under the provisions of section 1 thereof shall
not, [within twelve months from the passage of this act, make
application to purchase such tidelands,]
have applied for the
same within three years from the passage of said act, or,
having made such application, shall have failed to prosecute the
same, as provided by law, then such [lands]
land shall be
open to purchase by any other person who is a citizen and resident
of the State of Oregon, provided that
when any application
shall be made for the purchase of any such tideland by any person
or persons other than the owner or owners of the land adjacent to
such tidelands, or the purchaser or purchasers of such tidelands
from such owner of adjacent lands, or some previous owner thereof,
notice shall be given by said board to the owner or owners of such
adjacent lands, and to any parties who are in possession of, or who
shall have improved such tidelands in any manner, and such owner or
owners of such adjacent lands, or the person in possession of such
tidelands by purchase from such owner of such adjacent lands, or
any previous owner thereof, or who shall have improved the same,
shall have sixty days after service of such notice to make
application for the purchase of such tidelands, and such
application shall have preference over all others, and in case any
person to whom notice is hereby required to be given cannot, after
due diligence, be found, notice may be given at the cost of the
applicant by publication in the state paper for four successive
weeks, and all applications to purchase tidelands by the owner of
adjacent lands shall be accompanied by the affidavit of the
applicant, setting forth the fact that such land is not held by any
other person under a deed from said applicant, or any person under
whom he holds; but this [section]
provision shall not
apply to [any]
the tidelands abutting
upon [or
fronting on or bounded by the sea shore, which are]
lands
owned by the United States. [And] provided further that if the
United States
has parted or shall [hereafter] part with
its title to any lands of which at the passage of [this act]
the act of which this is amendatory it [is]
was
the owner, [fronting or abutting upon or bounded by the sea shore,]
the grantee of such lands shall have [twelve months]
three
years after perfecting his title from the United States to
apply for [the]
all tidelands in front thereof
which
may be owned by the state, and, in case of his failure to make
such application within said period of [twelve months]
three
years, or, having made such application, [in case of his
failure]
shall fail to prosecute the same [as provided by]
according to law, such tide[lands]
land shall be
open to purchase by any other person who is a citizen and resident
of the State of Oregon."
"SEC. 6. Nothing in this act provided shall prevent the
legislature of this state, or the corporate authorities of any city
or town thereof, from regulating the building of wharves or other
improvements in any bay, harbor or inlet of this state, and nothing
in this act provided shall be construed as a grant of an exclusive
right to any person or persons to use the natural oyster beds of
this state, but the grantee of any land in this state, under this
act, shall hold the same subject to the easement of the public, as
provided by the existing laws of this state, to enter thereupon and
remove, under the provisions and restrictions of the laws of this
state, oysters and other shell fish therefrom."
"SEC. 7. All applicants to purchase lands under the provisions
of this act shall at their own expense, cause the same to be
surveyed by the county surveyor of the county in which such lands
are situated, such survey to conform to and connect with the
surveys of the United States adjoining, as far as may be
practicable, and the certificate of the county surveyor, describing
the lands applied for by metes and bounds and designating the
quantity thereof, shall be forwarded under the certificate of
appraisement to the officers of the state who are authorized to
sell the same."
"SEC. 8. Inasmuch as there is no law upon the subject at the
present time, this act shall take effect from and after its
passage."
The act of 1874 contains two additional sections, the one
providing that
the title to all tidelands heretofore sold, and
for which conveyances have already been executed, under the
provisions of the act to which this is amendatory, be and the same
is hereby confirmed unto the purchasers thereof, and the other
providing that,
inasmuch as the existing law does not authorize
the sale of tidelands lying on the ocean beach and the rivers and
bays thereof, this act shall take effect and be in force from and
after its approval by the Governor.
[
Footnote 2]
"An act to authorize the owners of land lying upon a navigable
stream or other like water to build wharves into such stream or
other water, beyond the line of low water mark."
"Be it enacted by the Legislative Assembly of the State of
Oregon, as follows:"
"SEC 1. The owner of any land in this state lying upon any
navigable stream or other like water, and within the corporate
limits of any incorporate town therein, is hereby authorized to
construct a wharf or wharves upon the same, and extend such wharf
or wharves into such stream or other like water, beyond low water
mark, so far as may be necessary and convenient for the use and
accommodation of any ships or other boats or vessels that may or
can navigate such stream or other like water."
"SEC. 2. The corporate authorities of the town wherein such
wharf or wharves is proposed to be constructed shall have power to
regulate the exercise of the privilege or franchise herein granted,
and upon the application of the person entitled to and desiring to
construct such wharf or wharves, such corporate authorities shall
by ordinance or other like mode prescribe the mode and extent to
which the same may be exercised beyond the line of low water mark,
so that such wharf or wharves shall not be constructed any farther
into such stream or other water beyond such low water line than may
be necessary and convenient for the purpose expressed in the first
section of this act, and so that the same will not unnecessarily
interfere with the navigation of such stream or other like water.
"