A specific intent to accept the tidal test of navigability, and
so to extend riparian ownership
ad filum aquae on nontidal
streams which are navigable in fact is not predicable of a statute
adopting the common law of England in general terms only,
particularly if enacted later than the decision in
The
Genessee Chief, 12 How. 443. Hence, such a statute,
passed by Kansas Territory in 1859 and retained by the state,
affords no basis even in purport for denying the power of the
Supreme Court of Kansas to apply the test of navigability in fact
as part of the common law, in determining the ownership of a
riverbed as between the state and riparian owners deriving title
under a federal patent issued, before statehood, in 1860.
In a mandamus proceeding to test the right of a state to levy
charges on sand dredged from a stream by a riparian owner under
claim of title
ad filum aquae, the latter has not a
constitutional right to have the question of navigability
determined by a jury.
Whether in such a case the state court may take judicial notice
that the stream is navigable is a question of local law. So
held where judicial notice was taken of the navigability
of the Kaw River, the principal river of Kansas at the state
capital, and the decision was supported by the meandering of the
stream in original public surveys, and by various state and federal
statutes and decisions cited.
Page 245 U. S. 155
Assuming that the taking of sand from the bed of a navigable
stream be of common right, the state may nevertheless exact a
charge from those who take it.
River sand appertains to the riverbed when at rest; its tendency
to migrate does not subject it to acquisition by mere
occupancy.
92 Kan. 169 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a petition for mandamus to require the treasurer of the
state to transfer certain funds from a special account to the
general revenue funds of the state so that they can be used for
paying the expenses of government. The money in question was
collected under the state laws of 1913, c. 259, requiring payment
of ten percent of the market value on the river bank of sand taken
by private persons or corporations from the bed of streams subject
to the control of the state. It was paid by the plaintiffs in error
for sand taken from the Kansas River at Topeka, and it was kept as
a separate fund because the plaintiffs in error paid it under
duress and protest, and claimed the right to recover it before it
should lose its identity by the transfer demanded. Under the state
procedure, the plaintiffs in error were made parties, and came in
and set up title to the fund. The supreme court of the state
overruled
Page 245 U. S. 156
the claim and directed the issue of the peremptory writ.
This case was decided on a motion to quash the answers, the
allegations of which, so far as now material, may be summed up as
follows. In 1859, the Territorial legislature of Kansas enacted
that the Territory should be governed by the common law of England,
which still remains the law of the state. On October 1, 1860, the
United States conveyed land adjoining the Kansas River to the
predecessor in title of the plaintiffs in error, and, as the tides
do not ebb and flow in the river, they allege that the conveyance
carried title to the middle of the stream; that they were the
owners of the sand dredged from the same; that to enforce the
provisions of the Act of 1913 against them would infringe the
Fourteenth Amendment, and that they paid the sums exacted under
protest and duress, the circumstances of which are detailed. The
river was meandered on both sides by the surveys of the United
States up to above this land, and, with the Missouri and
Mississippi, constitutes an open and unobstructed waterway from the
upstream end of the meander lines to the Gulf of Mexico and the
high seas. But the plaintiff in error, Fowler, while adopting this
allegation, alleges that it is not and never has been a navigable
stream, and, in 1864, the Kansas Legislature made a declaration to
that effect. There follow allegations that the sand is migratory,
and, in short, of the nature of animals
ferae naturae, and
that, ever since the admission of the state, the persons within it
have taken the sand as of common right. The presence of the sand is
alleged to interfere with the use of the stream for its proper
purpose of navigation as a valuable commercial highway, the river
being alleged to be a public highway, the use of which, including
the right to take sand, belongs to the people in the state. It also
is suggested that, if the court should entertain jurisdiction and
determine the questions of fact arising in the proceeding, the
Page 245 U. S. 157
plaintiffs in error would be deprived of the equal protection of
the laws contrary to the Constitution of the United States.
The argument of the plaintiffs in error does not need a lengthy
response, or a statement of all the answers that might be made to
it. It was said that the territorial statute gave to the patent of
the United States the effect of a grant
ad filum aquae.
But this attributes too detailed and precise an effect to a general
provision of law. We should be slow to believe that a state
beginning its organized life with an express adoption of the common
law of England stood any differently from one where the common law
was assumed to prevail because the citizens were of English
descent. Therefore, when the Supreme court of Kansas regards the
principle of the common law to be that the fact of navigability,
not the specific test of navigability convenient for England, is
what excludes riparian ownership of riverbeds, it is impossible for
us to say that the territorial statute even purports to give
greater rights.
The Genessee
Chief, 12 How. 443, had been decided before the
Territorial Act of 1859 was passed, and as was observed by Mr.
Justice Bradley in
Barney v. Keokuk, 94 U. S.
324, after that decision, there seemed to be no sound
reason for adhering to the old rule as the proprietorship of the
beds and shores of waters held navigable by that case.
See
further Shively v. Bowlby, 152 U. S. 1,
152 U. S. 58;
Kansas v. Colorado, 206 U. S. 46,
206 U. S. 93-94;
Donnelly v. United States, 228 U.
S. 243,
228 U. S. 261.
We think it too plain for extended argument that the Territorial
Act created no constitutional obstacle to the present decision of
the Kansas court.
Then it was said, if navigability in fact is the test, the
plaintiffs in error were entitled to go to a jury on that fact, as
it was in 1860, the date of the original grant, and the supreme
court of the state was not entitled to take judicial notice that
the river was navigable at Topeka.
Page 245 U. S. 158
But there is no constitutional right to trial by jury in such a
case, and if a state court takes upon itself to know without
evidence whether the principal river of the state is navigable at
the capital of the state, we certainly cannot pronounce it error.
In this aspect, it is a question of state law.
Donnelly v.
United States, 228 U. S. 243,
228 U. S. 262.
See Archer v. Greenville Sand and Gravel Co., 233 U. S.
60,
233 U. S. 68-69.
The fact is of a kind that should be established once for all, not
perpetually retried. The court had, too, in favor of its decision,
the circumstance that the stream was meandered in the original
surveys; the decisions of its predecessors;
Wood v.
Fowler, 26 Kan. 682;
Topeka Water Supply Co. v.
Potwin, 43 Kan. 404, 413;
Johnston v. Bowersock, 62
Kan. 148;
Kaw Valley Drainage District v. Missouri Pacific
Railway Co., 99 Kan. 188, 202;
Kaw Valley Drainage
District v. Kansas City Southern Ry. Co., 87 Kan. 272, 275;
233 U. S. 233 U.S.
75; legislation of the state; Private Laws of 1858, c. 30, §
4, c. 31, § 4, c. 34; 1860, c. 20, § 3, etc., and of the
United States; Act of May 17, 1886, c. 348, 24 St. 57; Act of
January 22, 1894, c. 15, 28 St. 27; Act of July 1, 1898, c. 546, 30
Stat. 597, 633, etc., and the assent, so far as it goes, of this
Court;
Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. v. Kaw Valley Drainage
District, 233 U. S. 75,
233 U. S. 77,
not to speak of the allegations in the answers of the Wear Sand
Company, adopted, notwithstanding his denial of navigability, by
Fowler, the other plaintiff in error before this court.
The allegation that the sand is migratory and belongs to whoever
may reduce it to possession, and the allegation of the public
right, are inconsistent, of course, with the claim of title, and
hardly consistent with the allegation that it is got by dredging.
But the fact that it is liable to be shifted does not change its
character while at rest upon the riverbed, and if there were the
public right alleged, it would not hinder the state from
collecting, for the good of the whole public, a charge from those
individuals who withdraw it
Page 245 U. S. 159
from public access. We see nothing in the case of the plaintiffs
in error that requires further answers that might be made, or
discussion at greater length.
Judgment affirmed.