The common law, as understood by this Court, and the local law
of Indiana as to the effect of conveyances of land bordering on
nonnavigable waters are the same.
Where the State of Indiana acquired land from the United States
under the Swamp Land Act of September 28, 1850, the patent
describing the whole of certain fractional sections enumerated and
bordering on nonnavigable water between Indiana and Illinois, it
acquired all the land under water up to the line of the state, such
being the local law of Indiana. The making of a meander line has no
certain significance, and does not necessarily import that the
tract on the other side of it is not surveyed or will not pass by a
conveyance of the upland shown by the plat to border on the lake.
Hardin v. Jordan, 140 U. S. 371;
Mitchell v. Smale, 140 U. S. 406,
followed.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 190 U. S. 458
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a proceeding to quiet title, brought by the Calumet
Canal & Improvement Company in a court of the State of Indiana.
The company got judgment, which was affirmed by the supreme court
of the state, 150 Ind. 699, and the case is brought here by writ of
error. The land in question is land bordering on and extending
under certain nonnavigable water up to the state line, the Illinois
side of which was the subject of the decisions in
Hardin v.
Jordan, 140 U. S. 371, and
Mitchell v. Smale, 140 U. S. 406. But
the facts in this case are somewhat different. The Calumet company
claims title through mesne conveyances from the State of Indiana.
The State of Indiana got its title under the Swamp Land Act,
September 28, 1850, c. 84, 9 Stat. 520, Rev.Stat. §§ 2479
et seq., and patents
Page 190 U. S. 459
of the United States, dated 1853, purporting to be in pursuance
of that act and referring to the official plat of survey which was
made in 1834. The patent set forth describes "the whole of
fractional sections" enumerated and bordering on the water, in
which sections lies the disputed land. The state afterwards
conveyed by the same description. It is not denied that the company
got the land above the waterline, as shown in the plat referred to,
but it is denied that it got more. The water has been receding and
drying up, so that the question is important. The defendants set up
a later survey in 1875 of the land which was covered by water in
1834, and is covered, to a less extent, still, and patents from the
United States in pursuance of the same, for tracts below the
original waterline. They deny that the state ever owned this land,
or, if it did, that it conveyed it, and they allege the later
survey to be conclusive.
On general principles of conveyancing, the state would have
acquired the land in controversy here by a conveyance from the
United States describing the upland according to the survey,
because the local law of Indiana, and the common law as understood
by this Court, are the same so far as this case is concerned.
Stoner v. Rice, 121 Ind. 51;
Hardin v. Jordan,
140 U. S. 371. The
case is stronger if the land passed under the Swamp Land Act, as
has been held by the state court with regard to this and similar
patents.
Mason v. Calumet Canal & Improvement Co., 150
Ind. 699;
Kean v. Roby, 145 Ind. 221;
Tolleston Club
v. Clough, 146 Ind. 93;
Tolleston Club v. State, 141
Ind.197.
See Mitchell v. Smale, 140 U.
S. 406,
140 U. S.
414.
The making of a meander line has no certain significance.
French-Glenn Live Stock Co. v. Springer, 185 U. S.
47,
185 U. S. 52. It
does not necessarily import that the tract on the other side of it
is not surveyed, or will not pass by a conveyance of the upland
shown by the plat to border on the lake. It is not always a
boundary.
Railroad Co. v.
Schurmeir, 7 Wall. 272;
Hardin v. Jordan,
140 U. S. 371,
140 U. S. 380;
Mitchell v. Smale, 140 U. S. 406,
140 U. S. 414;
Horne v. Smith, 159 U. S. 40,
159 U. S. 43;
Grand Rapids & Indiana Railroad Co. v. Butler,
159 U. S. 87,
159 U. S. 93. In
this case, its immediate import was only to indicate the contour of
the lake. It would
Page 190 U. S. 460
seem, to be sure, that the settled understanding of the Land
Department has been that, in cases like the present, the meander
line marked the limit of the grant. But probably the cases are
comparatively rare in which that understanding was acted on by an
attempt subsequently to convey the land under water on the further
side of the line at dates before the transactions with which we
have to deal. The title to such land was not considered of much
importance in the early days, or worth the trouble of an
independent survey.
See Newson v. Pryor,
7 Wheat. 7,
20 U. S. 11. The
United States was more anxious for settlers than for revenue from
that source. It is not necessary to consider how we should decide
the case with our present light if the question were a new one. It
is not new. For twelve years, the decisions in
Hardin v.
Jordan and
Mitchell v. Smale have stood as
authoritative declarations of the law. Probably in most cases the
statute of limitations has cured the defects of title which those
cases may have shown. Meantime many titles must have passed on the
faith of those decisions. The United States can meet them by the
form of its conveyances. It seems to us that it would be likely to
do more harm than good to allow them to be called in question
now.
It is said that the land under water was not embraced in the
survey of 1834. It would seem from the plat and the field notes
that the sections and dividing lines were clearly marked off and
posts set. The case is similar to
Kean v. Roby, 145 Ind.
221, where the survey was pronounced sufficient. No difficulty was
felt on the ground that the survey did not cover the submerged land
in
Hardin v. Jordan, 140 U. S. 371. But
furthermore, the land was selected as "swamp and overflowed lands"
by the state. It not appearing otherwise, the selection must be
presumed to have included the land overflowed, and if so, it was
confirmed to the state by the Act of March 3, 1857, c. 117, 11
Stat. 251. The confirmation encounters none of the difficulties of
cases like
Stoneroad v. Stoneroad, 158 U.
S. 240. The land surrounding the water, at least, was
surveyed, so that the identification of the submerged portion was
absolute. We are of opinion that the State of Indiana got a title
to the whole land in dispute.
Page 190 U. S. 461
If the State of Indiana got a title, it gave one. There is not
much controversy on this point. We should follow the decision of
the state court in this case so far as this question is concerned,
if there was no other evidence of the state law. But the law of
Indiana is shown, by the other cases cited above, to be clear on
this point.
The resurvey by the United States in 1874 does not affect the
Calumet company's rights. As the United States already had conveyed
the lands, it had no jurisdiction to intermeddle with them in the
form of a second survey.
Hardin v. Jordan, 140 U.
S. 371,
140 U. S. 400;
Grand Rapids & Indiana Railroad Co. v. Butler,
159 U. S. 87,
159 U. S. 94-95;
Railroad Co. v.
Schurmeir, 7 Wall. 272,
74 U. S.
289.
Of course, we shall not undertake to revise the finding of the
state courts that the statute of limitations had not run in favor
of the plaintiffs in error, and that, if anyone is to profit by it,
the Calumet company would prevail.
Judgment affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, with whom concurs MR. JUSTICE McKENNA,
dissenting:
The importance of the question which this cause involves, and
the far-reaching and injurious consequences which, in my opinion,
must arise from the continued application of what seems to me to be
the erroneous theories upon which it is now decided, not only
constrain me to dissent, but cause me to state fully the reasons by
which I am controlled.
The controversy is between opposing claimants to lands once a
part of the beds of certain nonnavigable bodies of waters, styled
lakes and which shall be hereafter referred to by such designation.
Both parties asserted title under patents of the United States.
In 1834, surveys were made by the United States of townships 37
north, in ranges 9 and 10 west, second principal meridian, lying in
Lake County, in the extreme northwestern portion of the State of
Indiana. Township 37 in range 9 was bounded on the west by township
37 in range 10, and the latter was bounded on the west by the State
of Illinois. From
Page 190 U. S. 462
the eastern boundary of township 37 in range 10 there was less
than a mile intervening to the Illinois boundary on the west. In
consequence, the sections or fractional sections appearing on the
plat of survey of that township were only the extreme easterly tier
of sections, being those numbered 1, 12, 13, 24, 25, and 36. A copy
of a portion of the government plat of survey of the townships
named, in which are embraced the lands whose title is in dispute,
is here inserted for convenience of reference.
image:a
The easterly of the two bodies of water, lying partly in both
townships, is known as Lake George, or Mud Lake. The westerly body
is called Wolf Lake. As shown by the plat, the lines of survey were
not actually run across the water of the lakes, and, consequently,
no attempt was made to subdivide the lands in the then beds of the
lakes into legal subdivisions. The lines of survey were in fact run
around the rim of each lake, and the fractional lots resulting from
the meander line were given numbers, as was customary in such
cases.
The land about the margin of the lakes was very flat, and the
average depth of water at the time of the surveys was conjectured
to be about five or six feet.
None of the fractional lots abutting on the two lakes in the
townships in question had been disposed of by the United States
prior to the passage of the Swamp Land Act of September 28, 1850.
Thereafter, the State of Indiana transmitted a list of lands which
it desired should be patented to the state under said act, and the
list embraced the portions of the townships in which Wolf Lake and
Lake George were situated. This list, however, referred only to
entire sections, took no note of the plat of survey, and made no
reference to the fractional lots abutting on the lakes or the other
subdivisions of sections. In the approved list of selections made
by the Secretary of the Interior. the general description of the
lands as given in the state lists was followed, except that where,
by the meander line shown on the plat of survey, it appeared that a
section was made fractional, the section was termed a fractional
section, and the quantity of land shown on the plat to be contained
in each minor subdivision or fractional section was specifically
stated.
Page 190 U. S. 464
A patent dated March 24, 1853, was issued to the State of
Indiana for the approved selections. The mode in which the lands
were described in the patent is illustrated in the following
excerpt:
"Also, the whole of fractional sections one, twelve, thirteen,
and twenty-four, the north half of the southeast quarter, the
southeast quarter of the southeast, quarter, and the northeast
quarter of section twenty-five and the whole of fractional section
thirty-six, all one thousand seven hundred and ninety-one acres and
sixty-hundredths of an acre. . . ."
After the description of the lands was the following:
"According to the official plats of survey of the said lands
returned to the General Land Office by the surveyor general."
Soon after acquiring title in this manner to the border lots,
the State of Indiana conveyed them, by the plat numbers, to private
individuals.
While the record does not show the causes which led to the
drying up of the beds of the two lakes within the meander lines on
the plats of surveys of 1834, it is nevertheless certain that,
about the year 1874, the waters of these lakes had in great part
disappeared. In the years 1874 and 1875, various persons settled on
the uncovered lands referred to with the intent of acquiring title
under the homestead law. Application was made to the Interior
Department for a survey thereof. In virtue of this application, a
survey was made in 1875, known as the Wolcott survey, and a plat
was drawn exhibiting the subdivisions thereof. The confirmation of
this survey was resisted in the Land Department by one who had
acquired title to border lots from the State of Indiana, on the
ground that the United States had no land to survey in the beds of
the lakes, as the effect of the conveyance by the United States to
the state had been to pass title to the beds of the lakes. This
controversy before the Land Department was finally disposed of on
February 23, 1877, by the Secretary of the Interior in favor of the
validity of the Walcott survey. Thereafter, patents for the lands
in the beds of the lakes covered by the survey were issued by the
United States.
In 1895, the Calumet Canal & Improvement Company brought an
action in the Lake Circuit Court of Indiana to
Page 190 U. S. 465
quiet its asserted title to certain of these border lots and its
alleged title as riparian owner to land in front thereof, once part
of the beds of the lakes, and, upon a second trial of the action,
obtained judgment. On appeal, the Supreme Court of Indiana affirmed
the judgment, and the cause was then brought to this Court on a
writ of error prosecuted by claimants under the Wolcott survey
based upon the contention that the decision of the Supreme Court of
Indiana was against a title and right specially set up "under the
statutes, patents, deed of conveyance, and authority of the United
States of America." In deciding against the validity of the Wolcott
survey and the patents to land in the beds of the lakes based on
such survey, the Supreme Court of Indiana said (p. 699):
"In 1875, certain persons, under the assumption that the beds of
the lakes had not been surveyed in 1834, procured a resurvey of
that part of the lands formerly covered by the waters, and it is
through this last survey and the sales made in pursuance thereof
that appellants claim title. The case before us, therefore, insofar
as concerns source of title, does not differ from that of
Kean
v. Roby, 145 Ind. 221. On the authority of the decision in
that case, there can be no question that the resurvey of 1875, as
also the sales made thereunder, were wholly invalid, and
consequently that appellee's title, as based upon the original
survey of 1834, and the sales made under that survey, is good. No
real distinction in this regard has been shown between the two
cases."
It becomes necessary, therefore, to refer to the case of
Kean v. Roby, upon which the Supreme Court of Indiana
rested its conclusion. As, moreover, the comprehension of the
doctrines involved in that case necessitates a consideration of the
course of previous decisions in Indiana relative to the subject
involved, I shall review the Indiana cases preceding
Kean v.
Roby in order, as far as may be, to an exact elucidation of
the legal principles by which the decision of this case was below
controlled.
Ross v. Faust, (1876) 54 Ind. 471, involved the title
to land under the bed of a nonnavigable river. The land abutting on
the stream had been surveyed and the stream had been
Page 190 U. S. 466
meandered. The question was whether patents of the United States
conveyed land under water within the meander lines. Determining the
construction of the patent solely by reference to the laws of the
United States, the court decided that, as the stream was in fact
nonnavigable, the holder of the patent to the border lots had title
to the center of the stream despite the meander line.
Ridgway v. Ludlow, (1877) 58 Ind. 248, involved a
controversy respecting the ownership of land once forming part of
the bed of a nonnavigable lake. The land bordering on the lake had
evidently been acquired from the United States, and the lake had
been meandered. The rule in
Ross v. Faust was applied, the
court saying:
"We can see no difference in principle in this rule, whether
applied to nonnavigable rivers or nonnavigable lakes, when they are
within the congressional surveys."
Edwards v. Ogle, (1881) 76 Ind. 302, presented the
following state of facts: on a plat of survey of a section of land,
which was in great part covered by the waters of a pond, the banks
of the pond were shown as meandered, but the lines of the sections,
half-sections, and quarter-sections were extended across the pond
by dotted lines. A fractional portion of the southwest quarter,
represented as containing 39 acres -- the dry land outside of the
meander -- was patented by the United States in 1845. In 1851, the
United States, under the Swamp Land Act, executed to the State of
Indiana a patent for the east half of the southwest quarter, being
within the meander line. In 1858, the United States issued a patent
to one Ogle for the west half of the same quarter section. Edwards,
as owner of the thirty-nine-acre tract, asserted a right to the
center of the pond, which, if allowed, would have absorbed the land
claimed by Ogle. Edwards was confined to the actual quantity of
land specified in the patent.
Ross v. Faust was
distinguished, the court remarking of that case:
"The bed of the river had not been surveyed as a part of the
public domain, but, on the theory that White River was a navigable
stream, the government surveys had been terminated at the margin
thereof."
State v. Portsmouth Savings Bank, (1886) 106 Ind.
435,
Page 190 U. S. 467
459, involved the question whether conveyances of fractional
lots bordering on Beaver Lake, in Newton County, Indiana, passed
title to land under the bed of the lake. The controversy was
between the state claiming the bed of the lake and certain private
individuals who deraigned title from the state, claiming that, as
the state had transferred to them rights derived under patents from
the United States, their rights were coterminous with the patent,
and extended across a meander line to the center of the lake.
Beaver Lake was a body of water covering about seventeen thousand
acres of land, and averaging from five to seven miles in length and
from two to four miles in width. The border lands had been surveyed
in 1835 by authority of the United States, and were subject to
private entry. In making the survey, the same was extended around
the lake, and a meandering line established. As a necessary result
of the meander line, fractional lots were shown on the plat around
the margin of the lake. Under the Swamp Land Act, the border lands
by the government subdivisions were selected by the Secretary of
the Interior and patented to the State of Indiana.
The Supreme Court of Indiana declared that it was not
necessary
"to determine whether the patents of the United States to the
state for the fractional lots bordering upon and surrounding the
lake, being grants from one government to another, by their own
force carried the bed of the lake."
Reviewing previous decisions of this Court construing the Swamp
Land Act, the Indiana court held that that act was a grant
in
praesenti. It was further held that, although the bed of
Beaver Lake was not embraced in the list of selections made by the
state, yet, by the acts of its officials, immediately after the
grant to it of the border lands, the state had treated the bed of
the lake as swamp and overflowed land, and constructively selected
the same, and that an Act of Congress approved January 11, 1873, 17
Stat. 409, c. 32, releasing and quitclaiming the bed of Beaver Lake
to the State of Indiana, did not operate as a grant, but simply as
a confirmation of the prior selection, thereby perfecting the title
as indefeasible.
The court came next to consider the claims of the grantees of
the state of border lots, described in the patent from the
Page 190 U. S. 468
state according to the plat of survey which had been made by the
United States. It was declared that state patents for border lots
must be construed with reference to the power conferred upon state
officials by the state law, and not by the rules which would govern
a conveyance by a private individual, and, applying this rule, it
was held that the patents for border lots carried to the grantees
"no more of the swamp and overflowed lands than were included in
the several surveyed subdivisions bounded by the lake."
Stoner v. Rice, (1889) 121 Ind. 51, was a controversy
between owners of border lots as a meandered nonnavigable lake
claiming under patents of the United States and patentees of the
United States under a subsequent survey of the bed of the lake.
Despite its previous ruling in
Ridgway v. Ludlow, 58 Ind.
248, it was now held that the rule giving a riparian owner of
fractional lots abutting on a meander line title to the thread or
center of the stream was not applicable. The case was decided upon
what the court assumed to be the law of the United States governing
surveys of the public domain. The court said (p. 54):
"The true doctrine to apply, in the disposition of such land as
is covered by the body of such lakes, we think is that the
government, in making surveys, included in such surveys all the
land within the district surveyed, and if there was a lake or large
pond which covered a part of a subdivision, it was meandered out,
and the dry land in such subdivision designated as a fractional
subdivision or lot; that, in the purchase of such fractional
subdivision or lot, the purchaser took title to it as a riparian
owner, with the right to the land, as the water receded, within the
boundary lines of the subdivision conveyed to the purchaser. In
other words, the purchaser acquired title to all the land within
the subdivision, though it was described as a fractional
subdivision or lot. The authorized survey divided all the land
within the district into subdivisions, and if, by reason of water
upon a tract of land, a portion of it was regarded at the time as
worthless and unsalable, there was a meander line run to ascertain
the amount of dry land, and such subdivision was designated as a
fractional subdivision or lot, and, although thus described, the
sale passed title to the whole subdivision. "
Page 190 U. S. 469
The court declared that the doctrine thus announced by it was
not in conflict with its previous ruling in
Edwards v.
Ogle.
Brophy v. Richeson, (1894) 137 Ind. 114, was a contest
between the patentees of a fractional tract of dry land termed the
southeast fractional quarter of a certain section, lying north and
east of a meandered lake, and the patentees under a later survey
made by the United States of the bed of the lake. It was held --
following
Stoner v. Rice -- that the claimant under the
first patent took title to all the land within the quarter section,
whether dry or covered by the waters of the lake.
Tolleston Club v. State, (1894) 141 Ind.197, was an
action brought by the State of Indiana for the recovery of lands
within the meander lines of a United States survey. The claim was
that the state had acquired title to the lands within the meander
upon selections made under the Swamp Land Act of certain land for
which patents of the United States had been issued to the State of
Indiana in 1853. Although the state had conveyed the border lots
which she had acquired from the United States, the theory of the
claim of the state was that, despite this conveyance, she remained
the owner of, and was entitled to recover, the land within the
meander because it was deemed, in accordance with the ruling in the
Portsmouth Bank case (involving Beaver Lake), that the
state, in transferring the border lots, by their designation on the
government plat of survey, had retained to herself, and not
conveyed, her title to the land under water. The defendants
asserted title derived from the United States under patents issued
subsequent to 1870, based upon a survey made of the bed of the
water by reason of an act of Congress, which is excerpted in the
margin. [
Footnote 1]
Page 190 U. S. 470
It suffices to remark that it was held that, although the United
States survey showed a meander line and fractional lots or sections
thereon, this meander line, under the laws of the United States,
was not a boundary, because, under said laws, its sole purpose was,
not to limit the survey in any way, but simply to indicate how much
dry land there was in the subdivision purchased. Consequently, it
was determined that the land, both dry and wet, should be treated
as having been wholly surveyed, because the lines of survey might
be protracted across the meander so as to make complete surveyed
sections, embracing both the dry and the wet land. The enumeration
in the plat of the quantity of land contained in the subdivisions
of the sections was considered as immaterial, and the doctrine of
Stoner v. Rice was applied.
Whilst the claims of the patentees under the subsequent United
States survey of the land within the meander were therefore
rejected, and the act of Congress directing the survey was decided
to be void, it was yet held that, as the state must recover upon
the strength of her own title, she was not entitled to judgment for
any land within the meander lines, because the grants made by the
state of the fractional lots passed title to the legal subdivision
beyond the meander lines, upon the theory of survey above noticed
and the controlling effect of the decision in
Stoner v.
Rice. A petition for rehearing was filed on behalf of the
state. An opinion denying such rehearing is reported in 141 Ind.
214. The principal contention on behalf of the state was that
"the court erred in holding that the land in controversy had
been surveyed, either by the government of the United States or by
the State of Indiana at the time of the
Page 190 U. S. 471
sale of such border lots by the state."
The court, however, observing that this contention was dangerous
ground for the state to stand upon, considered at length the
provisions of sections 2395 and 2396 of the Revised Statutes of the
United States, and concluded as follows:
"The land in controversy was therefore surveyed into sections,
as provided by law, by the United States government surveyors, in
1834. But even if we were mistaken in this, it would, as we have
said, be a dangerous contention for appellee to undertake to show
that such survey was not made. The Swamp Land Act of 1850, under
which the state claims title, requires that the lands should be
selected, and the selections approved, by the Secretary of the
Interior, as swamp lands. The land in dispute consists of parts of
surveyed sections of land selected, approved, and certified from
the General Land Office of the United States. The land so selected
is described as in township No. 36, range 8 west, and being 'all of
. . . [sections] 12, 15, 17, 18, 19, and 20. All of 21 and 22 [and]
N.W. 1/4 23.' But if there were in fact no survey, then no such
sections would exist -- at least between the meanders of the
Calumet River, and so no selections would ever have been made by
the state or approved by the Secretary of the Interior. The
consequence would be that the state had never received title, and
the unsurveyed lands, having remained in possession of the general
government, were correctly surveyed, and sold under the act of
Congress of 1870. If, therefore, we should admit this main
contention of counsel for appellee, the consequence would
inevitably follow that the state had never acquired title to the
land in dispute. We are satisfied, however, that the conclusions
reached in the original opinion -- that the lands were surveyed in
1834; that they were selected, and the selections approved, under
the Swamp Land Act of 1850; that the state therefore acquired good
title under that act, and that the act of 1870, with the resurvey
and sales thereunder, was a nullity -- are all correct, and we are
quite unable to understand why counsel should here insist upon a
contention which, if agreed to, would cut the ground entirely from
under their own feet."
The
Portsmouth Savings Bank case was distinguished
by
Page 190 U. S. 472
the statement that "Beaver Lake was a large body of water, of
shallow depth, which had not been surveyed by the United States
government."
The precise import of the doctrine which, following
Stoner
v. Rice, the court applied in the case just reviewed is so
aptly portrayed in the case of
Tolleston Club v. Clough,
146 Ind. 93, that it is here noticed out of its chronological
order. The plaintiff commenced his action to quiet title to land
derived from the state through patents issued to the state by the
United States under the Swamp Land Act. The lands in controversy
were part of those which were involved in the case of
Tolleston
Club v. State, supra The exact situation of the lands is shown
on the following plat, which is reproduced from the opinion of the
Supreme Court of Indiana:
image:b
To convey a clear conception of the situation and character of
the land, a passage is here excerpted from the opinion in
Tolleston Club v. State, ub. sup.:
"The lands claimed by the state are within the meander lines of
the United States survey, on each side of the Little Calumet River,
being a tract about six miles in length, and from about
three-quarters of a mile to about a mile and a quarter in width. In
the original field notes of the survey, the region is referred to
as a 'lake,' while on the plat it is marked 'impassable marsh.' At
the time of the United States survey in 1834 the territory was
completely covered with water, in which, outside the river proper,
there was a heavy growth of cattails, wild rice, and other
swamp-like products. "
Page 190 U. S. 473
The plaintiff, deriving title from the patents of the United
States covering the fractional lots outside of the meander line,
claimed to be the owner of the marshland inside of the meander up
to the thread of the stream marked on the plat as a river.
The court followed its ruling in
Tolleston Club v.
State, and said:
"It is plain that the lots described, being lot 1 and parts of
lots 2 and 3, in section 19, and lots 1, 2, 3, and 4 in section 20,
all extend north to the north section lines of their respective
sections."
By this ruling, the lots abutting on the meander were made to
cross that line, embrace the marshland lying between them and the
river, and would have extended across the river, so as to include
practically the entire river in those sections, except where, in
the sinuosity of the river, it crossed the section line. As,
however, the court found that the owner of the lots abutting on the
meander had only claimed to the bed of the river, it limited his
rights in consequence of the pleadings to that extent, thus
preventing the acquisition of the entire section where the section
line was beyond the bed of the river.
I now come to the case of
Kean v. Roby, (1896) 145 Ind.
221, upon the authority of which case the Supreme Court of Indiana
affirmed the judgment of the trial court in the case at bar.
Kean v. Roby was an action brought by the owner of lands
abutting on Wolf Lake to quiet her title to land once part of the
bed of the lake. The plaintiff claimed title to the border lots as
well as to the lakebed land by virtue of the survey made in 1834
and a patent from the United States to the state, made in 1853,
under the Swamp Land Act. The defendants claimed title under
patents, based upon the Wolcott survey of 1875, of lands once part
of the bed of the lake. Despite the fact that, on the plat of
survey the lake was meandered, and there were no sectional corners
to which the lines could be protracted, the court held that the
case was covered by the
Tolleston Club decision because it
was deemed that the field notes showed that it would be possible to
protract the lines so as to make regular and complete sections,
Page 190 U. S. 474
and it was therefore held that the owner or the border lots was
entitled to the adjacent land under water as well.
It therefore results that the doctrine embodied in the case of
Kean v. Roby, and the previous cases commencing with
Stoner v. Rice, was the rule applied in the decision of
the case now under review, and by which the beds of the lakes were
given to the owner of the border lots.
All the cases which have been recapitulated, I submit, divide
themselves into two classes -- the first, those prior to
Stoner
v. Rice; the second, the case of
Stoner v. Rice and
those subsequent to it, including the ruling therein made. Without
pausing to ascertain whether the cases in the first class are
reconcilable with each other, or those in the second class can be
made to harmonize with those in the first, one thing it seems to me
is apparent: that is that all the cases in both the classes,
including the decision in the case at bar, indubitably held --
1. That the government of the United States owned the soil under
all bodies of nonnavigable water lying within the public domain of
the United States, and that the title thereto remained in the
United States until it had parted with it pursuant to the laws of
the United States; and
2. That, in determining whether the United States had parted
with title to such lands, the Indiana court always decided that
question not upon the controlling effect of any supposed rule of
state or local law, but by what it deemed to be the proper
construction of the laws of the United States governing the survey
and disposition of the public domain.
The right of the defendants under patents of the United States,
which they specially set up, having been denied because it was
conceived by the court below that no title vested in them under the
laws of the United States, it would seem that the question arising
for decision is this: did the court correctly interpret the
statutes of the United States?
This is a federal question. But it is pressed that what title to
the beds of the lakes passed to the state from the United States,
either under the Swamp Land Act or in virtue of the patents issued
to the state, is to be determined not by the law of the United
States, but solely by the state or local law; hence, it
Page 190 U. S. 475
is insisted, the case must be decided by the law which is
rightfully applicable to it, and not by the law of the United
States, which the Supreme Court of Indiana erroneously deemed was
essential to its decision. If I entertained the opinion that the
state or local law governed, and in consequence that this case was
to be disposed of by considerations inherently local, I would, of
course, be obliged to conclude that the controversy must be judged
by that law which properly controlled it, and not by the law of the
United States, which was mistakenly applied by the lower court. In
that view, my mind would be driven to the conclusion that this case
should be dismissed for want of jurisdiction, since here there is
no authority to review the action of the state court in a cause
inherently depending upon the state or local law. Nor would this
result be changed because the defendants asserted rights to the
beds of the lakes under patents of the United States issued
subsequent to those relied upon by the plaintiff, as its ultimate
source of title. This follows since the claim of the plaintiff was
that title had passed to it and out of the United States by the
Swamp Land Act or the patents issued prior to those upon which the
defendants relied. Now if the question whether the land claimed by
both parties had passed to the plaintiff or its grantors prior to
the issue of the patents to the defendants is to be determined
solely by the state or local law, it would follow that a decision
of the state court in favor of the right of the plaintiff involved
only a conclusion of state or local law broad enough to sustain the
judgment, wholly irrespective of the federal rights asserted by the
defendants, and also entirely without reference to the soundness of
the reasoning by which the court had reached its all-sufficient and
nonfederal conclusion. Before, therefore, coming to consider the
correctness of the ruling of the state court concerning the United
States law which that court deemed to be decisive, it becomes
necessary for me to ascertain whether, as asserted, the question as
to the extent of the title derived from the United States by the
plaintiff or its grantors is to be determined by the state or local
law.
The issue which first arises, then, is by what law is the
quantity of land which passed to the state under the statutes of
the
Page 190 U. S. 476
United States and its patents to be determined -- by the law of
the United States, which conferred on the state whatever rights it
acquired, or solely by the state or local law, which had no agency
on influence in passing rights from the United States to the state?
In solving this question, it is at once conceded that there are two
cases -- decided by this Court on the same day, one resting upon
the other, and therefore virtually but one case -- announcing the
doctrine that, where the United States has conveyed land bordering
on the meander line of a nonnavigable body of water, the question
of what rights in the land under water passed from the United
States to its grantee is to be determined solely by the state or
local law.
The cases referred to are
Hardin v. Jordan and
Mitchell v. Smale, reported, respectively, in 140 U.S.
140 U. S. 371 and
140 U. S. 406.
Both cases were actions of ejectment, and the judgments reviewed
were rendered by the circuit court of the United States for the
Northern District of Illinois. The plaintiff in each case was the
owner, by mesne conveyances, under patents of the United States
based upon surveys made in 1834 of fractional lots abutting on the
portion of Wolf Lake situated in the State of Illinois, and they
claimed as such abutting owners title to land once forming part of
the bed of the lake. The defendants asserted title to the lakebed
lands upon the survey made in 1874 by the United States, and
patents issued to them founded upon such survey. The trial court
had held that the title of the owners of the border lots extended
only to low water mark, and found in favor of the defendants as to
the land under water. The ground upon which the decision of the
court reversing the trial court in both cases was based is shown in
the following excerpts from the opinion in
Hardin v.
Jordan, pages
140 U. S.
379-381 and
140 U. S.
384.
"The government surveys made in 1834-35, upon which the patent
was issued, not only laid down a meander line next to the lake, but
also described said lines as running 'along the margin of the
lake,' and the plat of the survey, returned to the general and
local land offices and referred to in the patent for identification
of the land granted, exhibited the granted tracts as actually
bordering upon the lake, and the lake itself on said plat was
marked with the words 'navigable lake,' although the fact
Page 190 U. S. 477
found by the court is that the lake was not and is not a
navigable lake, but a nonnavigable fresh water lake or pond. The
patent itself does not contain all the particulars of the survey,
but the grant of the lands is recited to be according to the
official plat of the survey of said lands, returned to the General
Land Office by the surveyor general, thereby adopting the plat as a
part of the instrument."
"
* * * *"
"It has never been held that the lands under water, in front of
such grants, are reserved to the United States, or that they can be
afterwards granted out to other persons, to the injury of the
original grantees. The attempt to make such grants is calculated to
render titles uncertain and to derogate from the value of natural
boundaries like streams and bodies of waters."
"
* * * *"
"Such being the form of the title granted by the United States
to the plaintiff's ancestor, the question is as to the effect of
that title in reference to the lake and the bed of the lake in
front of the lands actually described in the grant. This question
must be decided by some rule of law, and no rule of law can be
resorted to for the purpose except the local law of the State of
Illinois."
"
* * * *"
"It has been the practice of the government, from its origin, in
disposing of the public lands, to measure the price to be paid for
them by the quantity of upland granted, no charge being made for
the lands under the bed of the stream, or other body of water. The
meander lines run along or near the margin of such waters are run
for the purpose of ascertaining the exact quantity of the upland to
be charged for, and not for the purpose of limiting the title of
the grantee to such meander lines."
"
* * * *"
"We do not think it necessary to discuss this point further. In
our judgment, the grants of the government for lands bounded on
streams and other waters, without any reservation or restriction of
terms, are to be construed as to their effect according to the law
of the state in which the lands lie."
What was the law of Illinois with regard to such grants was
Page 190 U. S. 478
next considered, and it was determined "that the law of Illinois
in this regard is the common law, and nothing else," and that the
title of the owners of border lots on a nonnavigable body of water
extended to the middle of the water.
If the doctrine announced in the cases referred to is to be here
applied, then, as I have said, there is an end to this case, and
the writ should be dismissed for want of jurisdiction, since in
that view there is no substantial federal contention in this
record, for the reason, as I have previously remarked, that the
decision of the state question would be broad enough to sustain the
judgment without reference to the federal rights asserted by the
defendants. The doctrine, however, of
Hardin v. Jordan, as
it is given me to understand it, is not only unsound in reason, but
incompatible with many cases decided in this Court prior to and
since its announcement, and besides is in conflict with the
legislation of Congress and the practice of the government from the
beginning. Impressed with the correctness of these views and
entertaining the conviction that the enforcement of the doctrine
will lead to the gravest consequences in the future, it is proposed
to consider its correctness as an original question, before
agreeing that its application in the case at bar is proper. If the
result of my investigation be the conclusion that the state or
local law should not be applied, contrary to the ruling in
Hardin v. Jordan, I shall then proceed to ascertain what
are the rights of the parties when measured by the law of the
United States. If that investigation develops that the court below
erroneously interpreted the law of the United States, and therefore
wrongfully denied the title of the plaintiffs in error, it will be
left for me to consider whether it is my duty under the principle
of
stare decisis to give my assent to the legal wrong
which, under the views stated, was below committed.
It is unnecessary to elaborately demonstrate the elementary
proposition that the United States, under the Articles of
Confederation, was the owner of the public domain, however
acquired, and that, since the adoption of the Constitution, the
United States had also possessed, in full proprietorship, the
public domain, from whatever source its title has been derived.
Page 190 U. S. 479
The doctrine on the subject was summarized by Chancellor Kent,
Com. vol. 1, p. 257, in the following language:
"Upon the doctrine of the court in
Johnson v.
McIntosh, (1823) 8 Wheat. 543, and in that of
Fletcher v. Peck, (1810)
6 Cranch 142,
10 U. S. 143, the United
States own the soil as well as the jurisdiction of the immense
tracts of unpatented lands included within their territories, and
of all the productive funds which those lands may hereafter create.
The title is in the United States by the treaty of peace with Great
Britain, and by subsequent cessions from France and Spain, and by
cessions from the individual states."
The matter was aptly epitomized in
Irvine v.
Marshall, (1858) 20 How. 558, where it was said (p.
61 U. S.
561):
"It cannot be denied that all the lands in the territories not
appropriated by competent authority before they were acquired are
in the first instance the exclusive property of the United States,
to be disposed of to such persons at such times, and in such modes,
and by such titles, as the government may deem most advantageous to
the public fisc, or in other respects most politic."
It is also elementary that land covered by water within the
public domain of the United States is as much a part thereof as the
dry land. Thus, in
Illinois Central R. Co. v. Chicago,
(1900)
176 U. S. 646,
speaking through MR. JUSTICE BROWN, it was said:
"We do not question the general principle that the word 'lands'
includes everything which the land carries or which stands upon it,
whether it be natural timber, artificial structures, or water, and
that an ordinary grant of land by metes and bounds carries all
pools and ponds, nonnavigable rivers, and waters of every
description by which such lands, or any portion of them, may be
submerged, since, as was said by the court in
Queen v. Leeds
& Liverpool Co., 7 Ad. & El. 671, 685, 'lands are not
the less land for being covered with water.'"
But whilst the ownership of the United States, under the
Confederation and under the Constitution, both of the dry land and
that covered with water in the public domain cannot be
controverted, from the beginning it was conceded that the
ownership
Page 190 U. S. 480
of the public domain did not carry with it navigable waters or
the land constituting the beds thereof, as such waters were
considered within the class of public waters to be forever devoted
to the public use. This was recognized by a provision of the
ordinance of 1787 for the government of the Northwest Territory, as
follows:
"The navigable waters leading into the Mississippi and
St.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, without any tax, impost, or duty therefor."
And, early in the history of Congress, prior to the adoption in
1805 of a general system for the survey of the whole public domain
of the United States, the same principle was expressed in the Act
of May 18, 1796, 1 Stat. 464, the ninth section of which act was as
follows:
"SEC. 9.
And be it further enacted, That all navigable
rivers within the territory to be disposed of by virtue of this act
shall be deemed to 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
become common to both."
And because navigable waters were thus, from the beginning,
recognized as public highways, and have ever since then been
treated as sacredly devoted to the public use, they were always in
principle excluded from the sales of the public domain. But the
contrary rule has from the beginning prevailed as respected
nonnavigable waters, which have always been surveyed and sold and
paid for. I shall take occasion hereafter, in reviewing the
legislation of Congress, to demonstrate this fact, and therefore to
point out that the statement to the contrary in the passage from
the opinion in
Hardin v. Jordan which I have already
quoted must have been the result of confounding the general
practice not to sell public waters with the universal practice to
survey and sell nonnavigable or private waters. No better
illustration of the truth of this statement is required than is
shown by this case, where the United States sold and
Page 190 U. S. 481
surveyed the beds of the nonnavigable waters to the defendants
below long after the grant of the border lots, and the same
condition of things is evidenced by other of the Indiana cases
which have been reviewed, and it is to be observed that, in two of
the cases, the grant or direction to sell the land covered by
nonnavigable waters was made by special acts of Congress long after
the border lots had been disposed of.
Doubtless, as the result of the provisions treating navigable
waters as public highways, and from a consideration of the nature
and extent of the powers vested by the Constitution in the federal
government and those reserved to the states, and by a consideration
of the doctrine of public and private waters known to the common
law, it was early decided, and has been repeatedly reiterated, that
the navigable waters and the land under them belonged to the states
-- as well the new as the old -- in virtue of their sovereignty, to
be held in trust for their people subject to the power of Congress
to regulate commerce. And, in harmony with the principle just
stated, it has been decided that such navigable waters and the land
under them in the public domain of the United States within the
territories, while subject to be disposed of by Congress, under the
trust for public use, were yet held by the United States to be
transmitted to the new states to be formed, and which should, when
endowed with statehood, possess them with the same rights and
powers as the original states. A list of the cases in which this
doctrine is stated is appended in the margin. [
Footnote 2]
Page 190 U. S. 482
The doctrine of the cases was clearly stated in the opinion
delivered by Mr. Justice Field, speaking for the Court, in
Illinois Central R. C.o. v. Illinois, 146 U.
S. 387,
146 U. S. 435,
where it was said:
"It is the settled law of this country that the ownership of and
dominion and sovereignty over lands covered by tidewaters 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 the waters,
and subject always to the paramount right of Congress to control
their navigation so far as may be necessary for the regulation of
commerce with foreign nations and among the states. This doctrine
has been often announced by this Court, and is not questioned by
counsel of any of the parties.
Pollard v. Hagan, 3 How.
212;
Weber v. State Harbor
Commissioners, 18 Wall. 57."
"The same doctrine is in this country held to be applicable to
lands covered by fresh water in the Great Lakes, over which is
conducted an extended commerce with different states and foreign
nations. These lakes possess all the general characteristics of
open seas except in the freshness of their waters and in the
absence of the ebb and flow of the tide. In other respects, they
are inland seas, and there is no reason or principle for the
assertion of dominion and sovereignty over and ownership by the
state of lands covered by tidewaters that is not equally applicable
to its ownership of and dominion and sovereignty over lands covered
by the fresh waters of these lakes."
And, as a necessary consequence of the ownership by the states,
in trust, of the navigable waters and the land under them within
their territorial jurisdiction, it came to be decided that rights
in and incident to such navigable waters or the land under them
were to be determined solely with reference to the law of the state
in which such navigable waters were situated.
Barney v.
Keokuk, (1876)
94 U. S. 324;
St. Louis v.
Myers,
Page 190 U. S. 483
(1885)
113 U. S. 566;
Packer v. Bird, (1891)
137 U. S. 669,
137 U. S. 670;
St. Louis v. Rutz, (1891)
138 U.
S. 226,
138 U. S. 242;
Shively v. Bowlby, (1894)
152 U. S.
1,
152 U. S. 40;
Grand Rapids & I. R. Co. v. Butler, (1897)
159 U. S. 87;
St. Anthony Falls Water Power Co. v. St. Paul Water
Commissioners, (1897)
168 U. S. 349.
But, resting as this last rule necessarily does upon the ownership
of such waters by the states, it can have no application to the
proposition that rights in and to the land beneath the nonnavigable
waters of the public domain which belong to the United States, are
to be determined solely by the law of the states. On the contrary,
the decision that the right to the property belonging to the states
is to be determined by the state law because of the state ownership
involves the converse proposition that the effect of a grant of
land and waters in the public domain of the United States, which
are not navigable, and therefore belong to the United States, is to
be determined by the law of the United States.
The ownership by the United States of the public domain being
thus unquestionable, there can be no room for the contention that
the quantity and character of property in the public domain which
passes by grant from the United States is not to be exclusively
measured by the law of the United States, because of want of power
in the United States over the subject matter of sale of the public
domain. Such a contention would be obviously without merit in view
of the express delegation of authority concerning the property of
the United States contained in the third section of the fourth
article of the Constitution, whereby Congress was vested with power
"to dispose of and make all needful rules and regulations
respecting the territory or other property belonging to the United
States."
The comprehensive system of legislation, beginning with the very
birth of the government, providing for the survey and sale of the
public domain, the administrative machinery devised for executing
these laws, and the multitude of decisions of this Court concerning
questions which have arisen thereunder, which have ever been deemed
proper to be determined solely from a consideration of the laws of
the United States, to my mind serve to demonstrate the unsoundness
of the proposition that
Page 190 U. S. 484
any other law than that of the United States measures the nature
and extent of title to the public domain conveyed by authority of
the laws of the United States.
Besides the implication resulting from the general legislation
of Congress concerning the sale and disposition of the public
domain, the special statutes granting rights in, and regulating the
use of, the nonnavigable waters upon the public lands are very
conclusive. Act of July 26, 1866, 14 Stat. 253; Act of March 3,
1877, 19 Stat. 377; Act of March 3, 1891, 26 Stat. 1095; Act of
June 17, 1902, 32 Stat. 388.
See in this connection
Gutierres v. Albuquerque Land & Irrigation Co.,
188 U. S. 545, and
United States v. Rio Grande Dam & Irrigation Co.,
174 U. S. 690,
174 U. S.
704.
I refer to a few cases in which the complete and efficient power
of the United States and the controlling effect of its laws have
been considered and lucidly stated.
In
Bagnell v.
Broderick, (1839) 13 Pet. 436, it was held that a
state legislature was not competent to declare a certificate of
purchase of equal dignity with a patent, and it was observed (p.
38 U. S.
450):
"Congress has the sole power to declare the dignity and effect
of titles emanating from the United States."
Wilcox v.
Jackson, (1839) 13 Pet. 498, was an action in
ejectment, brought in a state court of Illinois, to recover
property which had at one time been part of a military post. The
plaintiff based his claim upon a register's certificate, which the
laws of Illinois declared to be evidence of title sufficient to
support an action in ejectment. In reversing the judgment for the
plaintiff, the Court, in the course of the opinion, speaking
through Mr. Justice Barbour, said (p.
38 U. S.
516):
"It has been said that the State of Illinois has a right to
declare by law that a title derived from the United States, which,
by their laws, is only inchoate and imperfect, shall be deemed as
perfect a title as if a patent had issued from the United States,
and the construction of her own courts seems to give that effect to
her statute. . . . We hold the true principle to be this, that
whatever the question in any court, state or federal, is, whether a
title to land which had once been the
Page 190 U. S. 485
property of the United States has passed, that question must be
resolved by the laws of the United States; but that whenever,
according to those laws, the title shall have passed, then that
property, like all other property in the state, is subject to state
legislation so far as that legislation is consistent with the
admission that the title passed and vested according to the laws of
the United States."
Irvine v.
Marshall, (1858) 20 How. 558, was an action
originally brought in a court of the Territory of Minnesota. It was
alleged that the defendant Marshall, as the agent of the plaintiff,
had purchased certain public lands with funds belonging to
plaintiff and a codefendant; that Marshall thereafter took a patent
certificate in his own name, and refused to convey an undivided
half of the land to the plaintiff. The bill of complaint was
demurred to upon the ground that the action could not be maintained
because of certain provisions of the territorial statute relating
to resulting trusts. Applying its previous ruling in
Wilcox v.
Jackson, the Court, in the course of the opinion, speaking
through Mr. Justice Daniel, said (p.
61 U. S.
563):
"Within the provisions prescribed by the Constitution, and by
the laws enacted in accordance with the Constitution, the acts and
powers of the government are to be interpreted and applied so as to
create and maintain a system, general, equal, and beneficial as a
whole. By this rule, the acts and the contracts of the government
must be understood as referring to and sustaining the rights and
interests of all the members of this confederacy, and as neither
emanating from nor intended for the promotion of any policy
peculiarly local, nor in any respect dependent upon such policy.
The system adopted for the disposition of the public lands embraces
the interests of all the states, and proposes the equal
participation therein of all the people of all the states. This
system is therefore peculiarly and exclusively the exercise of a
federal power. The theater of its accomplishment is the seat of the
federal government. The mode of that accomplishment, the evidences
or muniments of right it bestows, are all the work of federal
functionaries alone. "
Page 190 U. S. 486
In
United States v.
Gratiot, (1840) 14 Pet. 526,
39 U. S. 537,
considering an objection that Congress was without power to lease
the public lands, it was said (p.
39 U. S. 537):
"Congress has the same power over . . . [the public lands] as
over any other property belonging to the United States, and this
power is vested in Congress without limitation."
In
Gibson v.
Chouteau, (1872) 13 Wall. 92, a state statute of
limitations was held ineffective as against a patent from the
United States. The Court, speaking through Mr. Justice Field, said
(p.
80 U. S.
100):
"The same principle which forbids any state legislation
interfering with the power of Congress to dispose of the public
property of the United States also forbids any legislation
depriving the grantees of the United States of the possession and
enjoyment of the property granted by reason of any delay in the
transfer of the title after the initiation of proceedings for its
acquisition. the consummation of the title is not a matter which
the grantees can control, but one which rests entirely with the
government. With the legal title, when transferred, goes the right
to possess and enjoy the land, and it would amount to a denial of
the power of disposal in Congress if these benefits, which should
follow upon the acquisition of that title, could be forfeited
because they were not asserted before that title was issued."
In
Fink v. O'Neill, (1882)
106 U.
S. 272,
106 U. S. 283,
Mr. Justice Matthews, delivering the opinion of the court,
considering the fourth section of the Homestead Act of May 20,
1862, which provided that no lands acquired thereunder should, in
any event, become liable to any debt contracted prior to the
issuing of the patent therefor, it was declared that Congress, by
such provision had made the exemption of such lands from sale on
execution a permanent part of the national policy.
In
Packer v. Bird, (1891)
137 U.
S. 661, the Court passed on the extent of the grant
contained in a patent of the United States to land in California,
one portion whereof abutted on the Sacramento River. The patent was
issued upon a decree of confirmation on a previously existing right
or equity of the patentee to the lands, and the survey made
pursuant to the
Page 190 U. S. 487
decree was incorporated in the patent. In the course of the
opinion, speaking through Mr. Justice Field, the Court said (p.
137 U. S.
669):
"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."
In
Shively v. Bowlby, (1894)
152 U. S.
1,
152 U. S. 44, Mr.
Justice Gray delivering the opinion, the language just quoted was
approvingly referred to, and MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM, speaking for the
Court, in
St. Anthony Falls Water Power Co. v. St. Paul Water
Commissioners, (1897)
168 U. S. 349,
168 U. S. 362,
again approvingly referred to the statement.
How completely these authorities apply to this case becomes, I
think, manifest when it is borne in mind that the question is
whether the United States, by the conveyance which it made of the
land abutting on the water, parted with the title, which it
confessedly owned prior to the conveyance, to the beds of the lakes
themselves. The reservation as to rights and incidents referred to
in the excerpt made above from the opinion in
Packer v.
Bird is but a reiteration of the doctrine enunciated by the
Court in the concluding sentences of the opinion in
Irvine v.
Marshall, supra, and its import is further shown by the
opinion in
Barney v. Keokuk, 94 U. S.
324. In the latter case, the question presented was what
rights in the beds of navigable streams attached to abutting lands
conveyed by grants of the United States, and the Court said that,
as the beds of navigable waters within a state were the property of
the state by virtue of its sovereignty, no rights in the bed of
such a stream could be conferred by a conveyance from the United
States unless the state law vested such rights in the owners of the
upland without reference to the source from which the title to the
upland had been derived. If such be the power of the states as to
navigable waters which they hold in trust, it necessarily
follows
Page 190 U. S. 488
that what rights pass by a conveyance from the United States to
land under nonnavigable waters must be determined by the laws of
the United States, to whom such land and water when situated in the
public domain belong in absolute ownership.
The ownership in the United States and its exclusive power under
the Constitution to administer and control its property being thus
demonstrated, it follows that the state law is not the proper
criterion by which to ascertain what the United States conveyed,
and therefore there is a federal question to be examined.
The court below held, although the United States survey had not,
in fact been extended beyond the meander line, and the lots
conveyed by the United States were described as fractional on the
plat and in the patents, that the patentees yet took full
subdivisions. The principle applied was this: where marshland or
nonnavigable waters were within a meander line upon which
fractional lots were abutted, the conveyance of such lots by the
United States carries also the marshland or nonnavigable water
beyond the meander to the extent of a full subdivision. And in
order to accomplish this result, the marshland and water inside of
the meander will be considered to have been surveyed, and the lines
of the survey be hence protracted across the meander so as to
embrace a full subdivision. Whilst this theory was plainly
irreconcilable with the construction given to the United States law
by the Supreme Court of Indiana in cases decided by it prior to
Stoner v. Rice, 121 Ind. 51, that case announced the rule,
and the subsequent cases in Indiana have sanctioned it down to and
including
Kean v. Roby, upon which the decision in this
case was rested. In
Hardin v. Jordan, the doctrine of
Stoner v. Rice was criticised as an unwarranted departure
from the common law, and it was observed -- as was undoubtedly the
case -- that the Indiana court, in
Stoner v. Rice, but
adopted the rule announced by the Supreme Court of Michigan in
Clute v. Fisher, 65 Mich. 48, decided in 1887, shortly
before the decision in
Stoner v. Rice. Now the opinion in
Clute v. Fisher shows that the Michigan court in that case
but followed a prior ruling made by it at the same term, in
Palmer v. Dodd, 64 Mich. 474. The latter case involved
title to land within a
Page 190 U. S. 489
section made fractional by a meandered lake or marsh, and the
controversy turned upon whether, under the law of the United
States, the rights of the owner of the fractional section extended
beyond the meander line. The Supreme Court of Michigan, in deciding
the question, said:
"When the United States grants by patent land described by a
legal subdivision, the grantee is entitled to all the land embraced
within the legal subdivision contained in his grant, and is not
limited by the number of acres specified in the patent or upon the
government plat. The meanders have no significance as boundaries,
and are not intended as such. They are run simply to afford a means
of computing the area contained in the fraction which the United
States requires payment for on sale of the public domain. But no
grantee by such patent, granting a legal subdivision of land, can
derive title to land upon another legal subdivision. This we have
decided in the cases of
Wilson v. Hoffman, 54 Mich. 246;
Keyser v. Sutherland, 59 Mich. 455, which were based upon
the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in
Brown v.
Clements, 3 How. 650."
It is, hence, apparent that the rule in
Clute v. Fisher
was based upon the construction of the law of the United States
expounded by this Court in
Brown v.
Clements, 3 How. 650. But, long prior to the
decision in
Clute v. Fisher, this Court, in
Gazzam v.
Phillips, (1857) 20 How. 372, had reviewed the case
of
Brown v. Clements, and decided that the sale of a
fractional lot did not convey a full subdivision; and, in
consequence of this view, the case of
Brown v. Clements
was expressly overruled. In subsequent cases in Michigan, the fact
that that court had mistakenly predicated its conclusion in
Clute v. Fisher on a case which this Court had overruled,
has been conceded.
Grand Rapids Ice & Coal Co. v. South
Grand Rapids Ice & Coal Co., 102 Mich. 227. But, whilst
the Michigan court has thus recognized the error into which it
inadvertently fell in
Clute v. Fisher, the Indiana court
has continued to apply that rule, although the sole authority upon
which it rests has been repudiated.
Besides the error in the ruling below which is thus shown to
Page 190 U. S. 490
exist, the principle applied is, moreover, in conflict with
decisions of this Court since the ruling in
Gazzam v.
Phillips.
In
Horne v. Smith, 159 U. S. 40,
certain fractional lots appeared by the plat of survey to be
bounded on the west by the meander line of the Indian river. It
was, however, found as a fact that the waterline which was surveyed
and made the boundary of the lots was the line of a bayou or
savannah, and that there had been an omission to make a survey of
the land west of the bayou and between it and the main bed of the
Indian River. The Court, speaking through MR. JUSTICE BREWER, said
(p.
159 U. S.
45):
"Although it was unsurveyed, it does not follow that a patent
for the surveyed tract adjoining carries with it the land which,
perhaps, ought to have been, but which was not in fact surveyed.
The patent conveys only the land which is surveyed; and, when it is
clear from the plat and the surveys that the tract surveyed
terminated at a particular body of water, the patent carries no
land beyond it."
In
Niles v. Cedar Point Club, 175 U.
S. 300, it appeared that a survey was made in 1834-1835
of fractional townships in the northern part of Ohio, adjacent to
Lake Erie. By the field notes and plat, certain sections were shown
as fractional, because a tortuous meander line was shown upon the
plat of survey upon which the fractional lots abutted. Across this
meander line there was a region of country described as a marsh,
and agreed in the statement of facts to be a body of low, swamp
land, partly boggy and partly dry, stretched beyond to the shores
of Lake Erie. The claim of the owner of the abutting lands was that
his boundary was not the meander at the edge of the marsh, but Lake
Erie. By referring to the plat previously excerpted in reviewing
one of the
Tolleston Club cases, showing the situation of
the land which was in controversy in those cases, it will be seen
that the precise condition passed upon in those cases was involved
in
Niles v. Cedar Point Club, supra. With the exact
situation confronting it, instead of applying the erroneous rule
announced in Indiana, this Court held that the purchaser of the
fractional lots abutting on the meander did not take a complete
subdivision, but was
Page 190 U. S. 491
confined by the meander line and got only the land which he
bought and paid for. The Court, speaking through MR. JUSTICE
BREWER, said (p.
175 U. S.
306):
"It appears distinctly from the field notes and the plat that
the surveyor, Rice, stopped his surveys at this 'marsh,' as he
called it. These surveys were approved and a plat prepared, which
was based upon the surveys and field notes, and showed the limits
of the tracts which were for sale. The patents, referring in terms
to the survey and plat, clearly disclose that the government was
not intending to, and did not, convey any land which was a part of
the marsh."
"
* * * *"
"It may be that surveyor Rice erred in not extending his surveys
into this marsh, but his error does not enlarge the title conveyed
by the patents to the surveyed fractional sections. The United
States sold only the fractional sections, received only pay
therefor, an amount fixed by the number of acres conveyed, and one
receiving a patent will not ordinarily be heard to insist that, by
reason of an error on the part of the surveyor, more land was
bought than was paid for, or than the government was offering for
sale."
And the same meaning was attributed to a meander line in
French-Glenn Live Stock Co. v. Springer, 185 U. S.
54.
But it is said the State of Indiana was entitled to the land
under the beds of the lakes in and by virtue of the act of Congress
of September 28, 1850, known as the Swamp Land Act, and therefore
the error committed below, as to the meaning of the survey and
patents, is without importance. But the state could not acquire a
legal title to land under the Swamp Land Act except by patent,
Niles v. Cedar Point Club, 175
U. S. 390;
Brown v. Hitchcock, 173 U.
S. 473;
Rogers' Locomotive Machine Works v. American
Emigrant Company, 164 U. S. 559,
164 U. S. 574;
Michigan Land & Lumber Co. v. Rust, 168 U.
S. 589,
168 U. S. 592,
and such patent must have been based upon a survey, as the statute
clearly contemplated the selection and patenting only of "legal
subdivisions." Act September 28, 1850, 9 Stat. 519. The survey
having stopped at the bank, and the bed of the lake not having been
surveyed, platted, or subdivided or the area thereof
ascertained,
Page 190 U. S. 492
no right of the state had attached to the lakebed land under the
Swamp Land Act. Indeed, whilst some of the earlier cases in Indiana
construed the Swamp Land Act in direct conflict with the meaning of
that act as interpreted by this Court in the cases above cited, in
a later case (
Tolleston Club v. State), the Indiana court,
on the rehearing, pointed out that, under a correct construction of
the Swamp Land Act, a survey and a patent were essential
prerequisites to the passing of rights to the state under the Swamp
Land Act. And the confirmatory Act of March 3, 1857, 11 Stat. 251,
clearly has no application, as patents had issued in 1853 upon all
the selections made for the state.
The mind cannot fail at once to perceive the serious disturbance
to vested rights which must follow from the suggestion that title
passed to the State of Indiana, under the Swamp Land Act, to land
belonging to the United States which, at the time of the issue of
the patents to the state, had not been surveyed or selected by the
Secretary of the Interior for account of the state, and which was
not parceled into legal subdivisions until 1875, when the lakebed
land in question was surveyed as the property of the United
States.
I am brought, then, to these questions: did the United States,
by running meander lines, lose her title to the lands within such
lines? and did she, by issuing patents for the fractional lots
abutting on lakes which were thus meandered, convey to her grantees
title to the center of the lakes?
It cannot be successfully controverted that, from the beginning,
both under the Confederation and since the adoption of the
Constitution, the laws for the survey and sale of the public domain
have contemplated as well the survey and sale of both dry land and
land covered by water, except that under navigable waters. This so
clearly results from the text of the statutes that I content myself
with making reference to the sections of the Revised Statutes
relating to the subject, and to a citation in the margin of some of
the earlier statutes. [
Footnote
3]
Page 190 U. S. 493
The fact that land under nonnavigable waters was subject to
survey and sale, and the settled practice of meandering navigable
streams and making fractional abutting lots, is aptly illustrated
by the case of
Surgett v.
Lapice (1850) 8 How. 48. The question presented in
that case arose under the Act of March 3, 1811, 2 Stat. 662,
relating to the mode of surveying public lands in the Territory of
Orleans. By the second section of that act, power was conferred to
depart from the rectangular mode of survey as respected lands
abutting on certain waters in the territory. Such lands were to be
laid out into tracts as near as practicable of a specified frontage
and depth on a river or bayou, and to be bounded by such lines as
the nature of the country would render practicable and most
convenient. By the fifth section of the act certain rights of
preemption or double concessions in the lands back of tracts
fronting on such waters were created under described conditions in
favor of the front proprietors, it being provided in the act that
double concessions should in no event extend so far in depth as to
include lands fit for cultivation "bordering on another river,
creek, bayou, or watercourse." Within the area of a double
concession involved in the controversy in the case named, there was
a bayou, and the claim on one side was that the double concession
should extend back and embrace the lands on the bayou on the theory
that it was nonnavigable, while, on the other hand, it was
contended that the bayou should be treated as navigable, and that
the double concession could not be extended back to embrace the
lands bordering on the bayou. Considering the contention that the
waters of the bayou in question, though nonnavigable, came within
the description of watercourses recited in the act, the Court said
(p.
49 U. S. 69):
"To what description of water course did the legislature
refer?
Page 190 U. S. 494
The enacting clause provides that every person who owns a tract
of land, 'bordering' on any river, creek, bayou, or water course,
shall have the right of preemption to the back land. The act of
1811 has been construed, in the Department of Public Lands, for
nearly forty years, to mean that those owners whose lands fronted
on a navigable stream were only provided for, and that the word
'border,' both in the enacting clause and in the exception, meant
to front on a navigable water course; that is to say, such waters
as are described in the third section of the Act of February 20,
1811, by which Louisiana was authorized to form a state
constitution and government, by which act the River Mississippi,
and the navigable rivers and waters leading into the same, or into
the Gulf of Mexico, were declared to be common highways, and
forever free, as well to the inhabitants of the said state, as to
other citizens of the United States."
"Similar provisions as respects navigable waters are common to
other states where there are public lands, and the practice has
been uniform to survey and sell the lands 'bordering' on navigable
streams as fractional sections; nor is the channel ever sold to a
private owner. Of necessity, it had to be left almost exclusively
to the Department of Lands executing the public surveys to
ascertain what stream was navigable, and should be bordered by
fractions and reserved from sale, and on the other hand, what
waters were not navigable, and should be included in square
sections, and the channel sold."
Whilst, of course, the case arose under the act of 1811, the
opinion points to the general rule obtaining for years in the Land
Department on the subject of the sale of land under nonnavigable
waters and the exclusion of land forming the beds of navigable or
public waters from survey and sale.
Without presently developing this subject further, I append in
the margin [
Footnote 4] a
reference to acts of Congress, rules of the
Page 190 U. S. 495
Land Department governing surveys, and reports of the executive
officers charged with the survey and disposition of the public
domain, which, beyond peradventure, show that, from the very
beginning of the government up to the decision in
Hardin v.
Jordan, the general practice was to treat the land under
nonnavigable waters as the property of the United States, and to
survey and sell the same as part of the public domain. Indeed, the
proposition just stated is established by the facts disclosed in
the various cases decided by the supreme court in Indiana which I
have at the outset reviewed.
Whilst, as pointed out in
Surgett v. Lapice, the
existence of a navigable stream was the reason which usually
occasioned a meander line, and hence fractional subdivisions, the
provisions of the surveying laws, both under the Confederation and
since, contemplated such a meander line also wherever there existed
an Indian reservation or private land claim which at the time of
the survey was made prevented the extension of the public surveys.
But it is apparent that from an early day meander lines and
resulting fractional sections came to be established, not only when
occasioned by navigable rivers, Indian reservations, or private
land claims, but from other causes. Thus, where the deputy surveyor
encountered a morass or swamp which he deemed impassable, or such a
body of nonnavigable water as in his judgment it would not be
profitable then to survey, a meander line would be run and
fractional sections created. When this practice first originated,
and whether the surveyor general of the respective surveying
districts applied uniform rules concerning it, the official
documents of which I can take judicial notice do not enable me to
determine. But certain it is that the practice prevailed prior to
1827. This is evidenced
Page 190 U. S. 496
by a communication from the Land Department to the surveyor
general at Washington, Mississippi, dated January 30, 1827, 2
Birchard's Comp. p. 862, and also by a letter from the Commissioner
to the surveyor general at Cincinnati, Ohio, dated March 11, 1836,
2 Birchard's Comp., p. 962. That complaint was sometimes made that
deputy surveyors had mistakenly meandered marshland, which it was
asserted should have been surveyed, subdivided, and platted, is
also indicated by the official communication last referred to. The
practice as to nonnavigable lakes, above alluded to, is moreover
shown by the meandering of the very lakes here in controversy (Wolf
and George) as early as 1835, of Beaver Lake and the lands adjacent
to the Calumet River about the same time, as shown by the Indiana
decisions in the
Portsmouth Bank and
Tolleston
Club cases, and of Cross, Soda, Clear and Fairy Lakes in
Louisiana in 1839. Sen.Doc. 101, 54 Cong. 1st session.
The general practice as to meandering lakes and ponds,
prevailing in the surveying districts created prior to 1850, is,
however, conclusively shown by the "Manual of Instructions" dated
February 22, 1855, issued by the Land Department for the guidance
of the surveyors and deputy surveyors. In a letter transmitting
this manual, the Commissioner of the General Land Office directed
attention to the fact that it was a revised edition of the previous
instructions on the subject. Among the instructions contained in
this manual was the following, 1 Lester Land Laws, p. 714:
"3. You are also to meander, in manner aforesaid, all
lakes and deep ponds of the area of twenty-five acres and
upwards; also navigable bayous;
shallow ponds, readily to
be drained, or likely to dry up, are not to be meandered."
This manual was approved by Congress on May 30, 1862, 12 Stat.
409. Like manuals, reiterating the instructions above referred to,
were issued on May 3, 1881, January 1, 1890, and June 30, 1894 (p.
57), and the manual of 1894 was approved by Congress on August 15,
1894. 28 Stat. 285.
Whilst the statements already made are sufficient to demonstrate
that the rule contained in the manuals but substantially expressed
the practice prevailing from the beginning, such
Page 190 U. S. 497
fact is additionally demonstrated by the report of the
Commissioner of the General Office for 1868 (p. 131), wherein,
referring to the rule, he said that, in substance, it but
reiterated the practice always followed in the Land Department.
There is in reason, then, no support for the proposition
announced in some cases decided by state courts -- presumably on
the authority of the rule in
Hardin v. Jordan -- that the
stopping of a survey at the margin of a nonnavigable body of water
and the meandering of the same operate to deprive the United States
of the title to land within the meanders, which the United States
had owned before the meander lines were run. To say this would be
only to declare that power existed in the executive officers of the
government to strip the United States of its property by a mere
method of survey, when from the beginning no authority to that
effect had been conferred, and no such purpose was contemplated.
The practice of the government and the decisions of this Court, it
seems to me, leave no room for controversy on this subject. Thus,
where a navigable stream was meandered, and within the meander
lines were unsurveyed islands forming part of the public domain of
the United States, and a request was subsequently made under the
provisions of the statutes of the United States for their survey,
12 Stat. 410, the practice of the department was to comply with the
request and survey and dispose of the islands as parts of the
public domain. Report Land Office, 1868, p. 121. And, as said in
the same report, in referring to the rule prevailing from the
beginning concerning the meandering of lakes and ponds, where,
subsequently to such meandering, lake beds were reported as dry,
they "were surveyed and brought into the market. In all these
instances, the United States has but exercised the ordinary right
of proprietorship."
The decisions of this Court already referred to conclusively
establish at the same time that the mere running of a meander line
did not affect the title of the United States to the land within
such meanders. Without going over all the cases, it suffices to
call attention on this point to
Gazzam v.
Phillips, 20 How. 372, and
Niles v. Cedar Point
Club, 175 U. S. 300.
Page 190 U. S. 498
Quite recently the subject was again passed upon in
United
States v. Mission Rock Co., 189 U. S. 391. In
that case, there existed in navigable waters a small island, and,
whilst the title of the state to the land under the navigable
waters was sustained, the title of the United States to the island
was upheld.
The prior title of the United States being unaffected by the
meander, did the conveyance by the United States of a specified
quantity of land contained in described fractional lots abutting on
a meander, the land under water within the meanders being
unsurveyed and unplatted, convey by legal intendment more than the
grant purported to embrace?
It cannot be controverted that, at common law, as elaborately
pointed out in
Hardin v. Jordan, the owner of land
abutting on an unnavigable body of water, by conveying the upland
as bounding on the water without restriction or reservation in the
deed, in legal effect caused the center of the stream to be the
boundary of the land conveyed. But, it seems to me, it cannot be
questioned that the statutes of the United States relating to the
disposal of the public domain confer no power whatever to sell
unsurveyed public land, nor do such statutes invest courts with the
authority to enlarge the grants actually specified in the patents
of the United States. A grant by the United States is to be
interpreted by the statutes of the United States, and therefore is
not subject to be enlarged by any principle of conveyance beyond
the express intendment of the statute under the authority of which
the grant is made. The difference between the rules of construction
applicable to grants made by a government and the grant made by an
individual is that grants of the government are to be strictly
construed in its favor and against the grantee -- in other words,
that nothing passes by the grant but that which is necessarily and
expressly embraced in its terms.
The doctrine on this subject was aptly stated by the court in
Shively v. Bowlby, speaking through Mr. Justice Gray,
where it was said (152 U.S.
152 U. S.
10):
"It was argued for the defendants in error that the question
presented was a mere question of construction of a grant
bounded
Page 190 U. S. 499
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."
Applying this doctrine to the lands in question, as the law of
the United States conferred no authority to transfer unsurveyed
land, and confined the patentee to the land actually described in
the patent as strictly construed, it follows that, by the issue of
its patents for fractional lots abutting on the water, the United
States did not transfer the title to the beds of the lakes in
question within the meander lines.
And the Land Department, in executing the acts of Congress, and
Congress itself, in dealing with the subject, have so uniformly
manifested the purpose that the grants of the United States to land
bordering on a nonnavigable body of water should not convey the
land under the water belonging to the United States beyond the
limits of the land actually expressed in the patent as conveyed,
that it seems to me the statutes for the disposition of the public
domain should be read as if they contained an express provision to
that effect.
I have already shown the rule prevailing from the earliest day
for the meandering of nonnavigable lakes and ponds, and, in doing
so, called attention to the report of the Commissioner of the
General Land Office made in 1868, in which he stated
Page 190 U. S. 500
that it had been the constant practice from the beginning, after
lakes had been meandered and on the lakes becoming dry, to survey
and dispose of the beds thereof. As evidencing this practice, I
call attention to the following:
The Land Department, on July 13, 1874, Copp's Public Land Laws,
p. 765, issued directions which were to govern the survey of the
bed of nonnavigable lakes and other like bodies of water which had
been meandered at the time of the original survey, and which had
become suitable for survey and sale. As the circular of
instructions related only to districts where the office of surveyor
general had been abolished, and could not have been intended to
create a rule in such districts different from that obtaining in
other districts, the legitimate inference from the instructions is
that it was intended to put in effect in such districts the
practice usual in other districts where the office of surveyor
general had not been done away with. This view finds support in the
prelude to the letter forwarding the circular of instructions,
which says:
"As inquiries arise in regard to the survey of the beds of
meandered lakes or other similar bodies of water in districts where
the office of surveyor general has been discontinued, the following
is communicated,"
etc. The instructions which followed authorized the survey of
the beds of such lakes as the property of the United States when
the waters had "so permanently receded or dried up as to leave
within the unsurveyed area dry land fit, in ordinary seasons, for
agricultural purposes." The remainder of the instructions dealt
with the mode of proceeding to have a survey made and title
obtained by individuals.
Here again, as in the case of the rule of 1855 concerning the
meandering of nonnavigable lakes, the fact that it but in substance
formulated the practice prevailing from the beginning is shown by
the report of the Commissioner of the General Land Office made in
1877, Report, Land Office, p. 11, where, referring to the practice
of the department as to surveying islands situated in navigable
waters within a meander and the circular in respect thereto issued
in 1868, and also referring to the circular of July 13, 1874, above
referred to, it was said:
"The regulations embraced in these circulars were not new
Page 190 U. S. 501
in their substance, but were simply a formulation of the
preexisting practice of the office theretofore administered with
reference to the class of lands to which they were applicable."
It is then established that, from the very beginning of the
government until at least the date of the circular just referred
to, the practice was, after nonnavigable bodies of water had been
meandered, when the beds thereof became uncovered, to dispose of
such beds as the property of the United States, separately from the
former border lots. As the record does not disclose the number of
instances in which this practice was observed during nearly one
hundred years prior to
Hardin v. Jordan, I may not state
them, but, as no single instance to the contrary appears, it seems
to me that the statement in
Hardin v. Jordan that the
contrary rule had always prevailed is left without any support
whatever, and must have arisen from confounding the uniform
practice not to sell the channel of navigable rivers, which
belonged to the states, with the uniform practice to the contrary
as to nonnavigable waters, which belonged to the United States. But
the acts of Congress on the subject are so clear that they leave no
room for substantial controversy, and they, in effect, amount to a
legislative approval of the construction of the laws of the United
States affixed by the administrative officers to those laws from
the very foundation of the government. Thus, on July 1, 1870, 16
Stat. 187, after the sale of border lots abutting on the meander of
a marsh and the Little Calumet River, Congress provided for the
survey and sale of the lands within the meanders. So also, after
the patenting to the State of Indiana of the fractional lots
abutting on Beaver Lake, Congress, by Act of January 11, 1873, 17
Stat. 409, granted the bed of the lake to the state. Again, by the
act of February 19, 1874, 18 Stat. 16, the bed of a meandered lake,
known as Tarkio Lake, situated in Holt County, Missouri, was
conveyed to the county, with a reservation, however, that the
county should make title to such person as might have settled upon
any portion of the land once part of the bed of the lake, under the
homestead and preemption laws. Yet a further illustration, which,
because of its brevity and importance, is excerpted
Page 190 U. S. 502
in full. Congress passed an act, approved on December 21, 1874,
18 Stat. 293, which reads as follows:
"
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of
the United States of America in Congress assembled, That so
much of the bed of the marsh or pond in sections fourteen,
twenty-three, and twenty-six, in township sixteen north, of range
twenty east of the fourth principal meridian in the County of
Sheboygan, in the State of Wisconsin, as shall or may be reclaimed
by draining the water from the same, shall be owned and held, so
far as any rights or interests of the United States are concerned,
by the owners of the lands abutting upon said marsh or pond, and
draining the same to the center or thread thereof, and divided
among the several owners adjoining and abutting said marsh or pond,
according to the rules of law, upon payment by said adjoining
owners into the treasury of the United States of $1.25 per acre for
the amount of land that has been or may be so reclaimed."
But, it is said, although it be conceded that the patentee,
under the law of the United States, was confined to the land within
the actual boundaries of the fractional lots conveyed, nevertheless
if, as a matter of conveyancing, a grant by an individual would be
construed under the state law as extending beyond the dry land to
the center of the water, such construction should be applied to the
patents of the United States. This, however, but asserts the same
proposition which I have already fully considered, and, whilst
seemingly accepting the true meaning of the law of the United
States and the interpretation given to it from the beginning,
proceeds to overthrow it.
To argue that, because conveyances made by individuals are
controlled by the law of the states, therefore conveyances made by
the United States are likewise so controlled, involves, as I see
it, not only a
non sequitur, but, besides, amounts to
denying, so far as the public domain is concerned, that there is a
government of the United States having complete ownership and
supreme power in the premises. The suggestion that courts as a
matter of convenience will determine by the state
Page 190 U. S. 503
law the extent of a grant made by the United States is without
force, since courts have no power upon their conception of
convenience to deprive the United States of its property by
resorting to the laws of a state in order to divest the title of
the United States in and to property which it owns, and which it
has never voluntarily parted with if its own laws be applied.
Moreover, the argument of convenience, when inherently considered,
is without merit, since it rests on the assumption that, for the
purpose of convenience, it will be held that what property passed
by a grant of the United States is to be measured by a variable
standard, the divergent laws of the several states, instead of the
law of the United States operating generally throughout the United
States, thus creating uncertainty and confusion by causing it to
come to pass that a grant made by the United States in virtue of
the authority conferred by the statutes of the United States will
mean one thing in one state and a wholly different thing in
another.
As pointed out by this Court in
Irvine v.
Marshall, 20 How. 558,
61 U. S. 563,
one of the very objects of the provision of the Constitution
conferring ample power upon Congress with respect to the property
of the United States was to prevent this very condition of things.
In other words, the proposition is that, for the sake of assumed
convenience, a rule of interpretation should be resorted to to
bring about the very condition of inconvenience which it was the
purpose by the constitutional provision in question to guard
against.
Conceding, however,
arguendo, that a grant by the
United States should be construed as a matter of conveyancing by
the local law prevailing in a particular state, it nevertheless
seems to me clear that the conclusion which the court reaches is
erroneous. As has been shown in the
Portsmouth Bank case,
the Supreme Court of Indiana expressly decided that a conveyance of
border lots by the state was to be governed, not by the rules of
conveyancing applicable to private individuals, but that the power
of the state officers was to be ascertained from the statutes of
the state alone; consequently, it was decided that, where the state
had conveyed the lots abutting
Page 190 U. S. 504
on Beaver Lake by the exact description contained in the patents
of the United States, such conveyances gave no right to the bed of
the lake, because power existed in the officers of the state only
to sell lands which had been regularly surveyed and platted. In
other words, the local decisions in Indiana establish the exact
distinction between the rule of conveyancing applicable to
individuals and those controlling the grant by a government, which
was pointed out by this Court in the passage from the opinion in
Shively v. Bowlby, previously quoted.
Surely, if it be the rule in Indiana that the construction of a
grant made by the State of its public lands is to be controlled by
the state statutes, it should not now be held that a grant by the
United States of its lands situated in Indiana is not to be
construed by the statutes of the United States, but by the rules of
conveyancing applicable to private grants. In other words, that, in
dealing with the lands of the United States, the government is to
be subjected to the local law of Indiana, and yet at the same time
be deprived of the rights which are accorded by that law to the
state, regarded as a government. To now so hold, it seems to me, is
but to declare that it is within the province of the local law to
strip the United States of its governmental attributes and reduce
it to the condition of a mere private individual. This difficulty
cannot be avoided by suggesting that, in this particular case, the
Indiana courts have decided that the transfer of the border lots
carried the beds of the lakes, and hence it must be construed that
such land passed by the local law. As has been previously
demonstrated, the decision of the Supreme Court of Indiana in this
case was in effect predicated on its previous rulings in
Stoner
v. Rice and the
Tolleston Club cases. In those cases,
it was declared that the doctrine previously announced in the
Portsmouth Bank case was not overruled, but the court
proceeded upon the theory that that case was inapplicable, because
it held in the subsequent cases that there had been in those cases
a survey of the land under water at the time the border lots were
conveyed by the United States. This was based, not upon any local
law, but upon the law of the United States as construed by the
state court. That
Page 190 U. S. 505
construction being overthrown by the decision of this Court in
Gazzam v. Phillips and the many other cases in this Court
which have followed it, it results that, by the federal law, upon
which the court based its decision, the beds of the lakes did not
pass. And that this result was understood by the Supreme Court of
Indiana is shown by the opinion on the rehearing in the
Tolleston Club case, where it was expressly declared that,
if the theory of survey announced by the court was incorrect, it
was its opinion that the bed of the lake did not pass, and title
thereto remained in the United States. The decision now announced
therefore holds that the question whether the beds of the lakes
passed is to be determined by the local law as a matter of
conveyancing. When it develops by the decision of the Indiana court
that, under the local law, as a matter of conveyancing, the beds of
the lakes did not pass, it is then in effect decided that the beds
did pass, because it has been decided by the Supreme Court of
Indiana that there had been a survey under the law of the United
States, although the fact that there had been none conclusively
results from a line of decisions of this Court which are not now
questioned. It comes then, as my mind sees it, to this: the beds of
the lakes did not pass by the local law, and they did not pass by
the federal law correctly construed; but, although passing by
neither the federal nor the local law, they must yet be held to
have passed because of a principle of law which it is impossible
for me to state, because my mind does not perceive it.
Pretermitting, however, this view, and considering the case as
controlled by the rule of
Hardin v. Jordan, it only
remains to determine whether, under the principle of
stare
decisis, my duty is to assent to its application in the case
at hand. Undoubtedly, since
Hardin v. Jordan was decided,
rights of property may have accrued predicated on the ruling made
in that case; but it is also unquestionable that rights of property
which had vested prior to that ruling under the acts of Congress,
and the settled construction and practice of the government
prevailing for almost a century, would be divested if that case
were applied. Indeed, the case in hand is but an illustration of
this fact, since patents of the United States to land once
forming
Page 190 U. S. 506
part of the beds of the lakes which are in controversy in this
case were issued prior to the decision in
Hardin v.
Jordan. Two classes of rights of property then must be
considered -- the one resting on the true rule existing from the
foundation of the government, and the other upon the mistaken
theory of
Hardin v. Jordan. I do not feel at liberty to
indulge in the conjecture that the rights which were brought into
existence during a century are less important than those which may
have arisen in the comparatively short period since the decision in
Hardin v. Jordan. Putting this view aside, if only the
rights of those who had actually received the patents of the United
States for the beds of the lakes which had once been meandered were
concerned, it might be that I should consider it my duty to accept
as controlling, under the rule of
stare decisis, the
decision in
Hardin v. Jordan, and thus deprive the
plaintiffs in error, whose rights are here at issue, of their
property, and this upon the assumption that the legislative
department of the government would rectify the wrong which would be
thus inflicted. My mind, however, cannot escape the conviction that
the consequence of adhering to the doctrine of
Hardin v.
Jordan cannot be limited merely to the rights of those who may
have in the past actually acquired from the United States title to
land once forming the beds of meandered lakes. On the contrary,
that doctrine strips the United States of the title to the bed of
every pond or lake which was meandered during the nearly a century
which preceded the decision in
Hardin v. Jordan, where the
lots bordering on such meandered lakes had been disposed of by the
United States. This shows the inadequacy of the suggestion that the
United States may, by a change of the form of conveyancing, obviate
the doctrine now maintained. Whatever be the change in the rules of
conveyancing whenever the bed of a meandered lake hereafter becomes
fit for sale, the question must recur and call for a reiteration of
the ruling now made. Under these circumstances, the line upon which
I should act seems to me to have already been plainly pointed out
by the court in
Gazzam v.
Phillips, 20 How. 372. There, the Court, as I have
said, having been called upon to consider the correctness of the
rule announced by it twelve years
Page 190 U. S. 507
before in
Brown v.
Clements, 3 How. 650, and having concluded that
that case had been wrongly decided, was required to determine
whether it was its duty under the rule of
stare decisis to
perpetuate an erroneous principle or apply a correct one. In
deciding to follow the latter course, the reason which controlled
to the conclusion is so directly applicable to the subject matter
of this case, and was so frankly and ably stated, that I excerpt a
passage from the opinion, as follows (p.
61 U. S. 378):
"It is possible that some rights may be disturbed by refusing to
follow the opinion expressed in that case; but we are satisfied
that far less inconvenience will result from this dissent, than by
adhering to a principle which we think unsound, and which, in its
practical operation, will unsettle the surveys and subdivisions of
fractional sections of the public land running through a period of
some twenty-eight years. Anyone familiar with the vast tracts of
the public domain surveyed and sold, and tracts surveyed and yet
unsold, within the period mentioned, can form some idea of the
extent of the disturbance and confusion that must inevitably flow
from an adherence to any such principle. We cannot, therefore,
adopt that decision or apply its principles in rendering the
judgment of the court in this case."
Concluding that the patents of the United States to the State of
Indiana for the fractional lots abutting upon Wolf Lake and Lake
George did not convey title to land under the water, and that the
patents subsequently issued by the United States, based upon the
Wolcott survey of 1875, purporting to pass the title to land once a
part of the beds of the lakes were valid, I dissent.
I am authorized to say that MR. JUSTICE McKENNA joins in this
dissent.
[
Footnote 1]
"
Act approved July 1, 1870, 16 Stat. 187"
"
Chap. CXCIX -- An Act in Relation to Certain Unsold Lands
in the"
"
Counties of Porter and Lake, in the State of
Indiana"
"Whereas, there is lying along the Little Calumet River, in the
Counties of Porter and Lake in the State of Indiana, a body of
lands supposed to contain about four thousand acres, which has
never been sold or surveyed, and which was described in the
original government surveys as impassable morass, and whereas the
Calumet Drainage Company has been organized under the laws of said
state for the purpose of draining the valley of said river,
including said morass: Therefore,"
"
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of
the United States of America in Congress assembled, That said
unsold lands shall be subject to a lien under the laws of the State
of Indiana for its proper proportion of the cost of such drainage,
and such lien may be enforced against said lands in the same manner
and to the same extent as if the said lands were owned by private
persons:
Provided, That no claim shall be held to exist
against the United States for such drainage."
"SEC. 2. And be it further enacted, That said lands may be
surveyed and sold to the highest bidder, under the directions of
the Secretary of the Interior, subject to said lien."
[
Footnote 2]
Martin v.
Waddell, (1842) 16 Pet. 367,
41 U. S. 410;
Pollard v.
Hagan, (1845) 3 How. 213;
Goodtitle
v. Kibbe, (1850) 9 How. 471;
Doe v.
Beebe, (1851) 13 How. 25;
United
States v. Pacheco, (1864) 2 Wall. 587;
Mumford v.
Wardwell, (1867) 6 Wall. 423;
Smith v.
Maryland, (1855) 18 How. 74;
Weber v.
Harbor Commissioners, (1873) 18 Wall. 57;
Barney v. Keokuk, (1876)
94 U. S. 324;
McCready v. Virginia, (1876)
94 U. S.
391;
St. Louis v. Myers, (1885)
113 U.
S. 566;
Manchester v. Massachusetts, (1891)
139 U. S. 240;
Packer v. Bird, (1891)
137 U. S. 661;
St. Louis v. Rutz, (1891)
138 U.
S. 226;
San Francisco v. Le Roy, (1891)
138 U. S. 656,
138 U. S. 671;
Knight v. Land Association, (1891)
142 U.
S. 161,
142 U. S. 183;
Kaukauna Water Power Co. v. Green Bay & M. Canal Co.,
(1891)
142 U. S. 255;
Illinois Central R. Co. v. Illinois, (1892)
146 U.
S. 387;
Shively v. Bowlby, (1894)
152 U. S.
1;
Grand Rapids & I. R. Co. v. Butler,
(1895)
159 U. S. 87;
St. Anthony Falls Water Power Co. v. St. Paul Water
Comm'rs, (1897)
168 U. S. 349, and
Mobile Transportation Co. v. Mobile, (1903)
187 U.
S. 479.
[
Footnote 3]
Ordinances of Confederation: May 20, 1785, 1 Birchard's Land
Laws, p. 11; July 13, 1787, art. 4; 1 Birchard, p. 18; July 23,
1787, 1 Birchard, p. 24; June 20, 1788, 1 Birchard, p. 29, and July
9, 1788, 1 Birchard, p. 33. Acts of Congress: April 21, 1792, 1
Stat. 257; May 5, 1792, 1 Stat. 266; May 18, 1796, 1 Stat. 464; May
10, 1800, 2 Stat. 73; March 3, 1803, 2 Stat. 233; March 26, 1804, 2
Stat. 277; February 11, 1805, 2 Stat. 313; March 2, 1805, 2 Stat.
329; March 3, 1811, 2 Stat. 662; April 24, 1820, 3 Stat. 566; April
5, 1832, 4 Stat. 503. Revised Statutes: Title XXXII, The Public
Lands, particularly chapter four (Preemptions), chapter five
(Homesteads), chapter seven (Sale and Disposal of the Public
Lands), and chapter 9 (Survey of the Public Lands).
[
Footnote 4]
Act of July 1, 1870, 16 Stat. 187: Act of January 11, 1873, 17
Stat. 409; Act of February 19, 1874, 18 Stat. 16; Act of December
21, 1874, 18 Stat. 293; Manual of Surveying Instructions, February
22, 1855, approved by Congress, May 30, 1862, 12 Stat. 409;
Instructions of Commissioner of General Land Office of July 13,
1874, Copp's Public Land Laws, p. 765; Report of Commissioner of
General Land Office, 1868 (p. 131); Manual of Surveying
Instructions, May 3, 1881, p. 34, January 1, 1890, p. 33, and June
30, 1894, p. 57, which last was approved by Act of August 15, 1894,
28 Stat. 285; Report of the Commissioner of the General Land
Office, 1877, p. 11; Letter of Secretary of Interior in response to
a resolution of the House of Representatives respecting the survey
of Lakes Wolf and George in Indiana and Illinois, H.R.Ex.Doc., No.
83, 45th Congress, 2d session: Report of the Commissioner of the
General Land Office, in response to Senate resolution of January
14, 1896, giving information relative to certain lakes in Louisiana
(Sen.Doc., No. 101, 54th Congress, 1st session).