Lots patented under the public land laws according to a plat
showing them bordering on a lake extend to the water as a boundary
and embrace pieces of land found between it and the meander line of
the survey where the failure to include such pieces within the
meander was not due to fraud or mistake, but was consistent with a
reasonably accurate survey, considering the areas included and
excluded, the difficulty of surveying them when the survey was
made, and their value at that time. P.
260 U. S.
664.
274 F. 290 and 145 affirmed.
Appeals and certiorari to review decrees of the circuit court of
appeals reversing decrees of the district court favorable to the
United States in suits asserting title to several parcels of land
in Louisiana.
Page 260 U. S. 663
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
These suits involve claims of title on the part of the United
States, hereinafter called the plaintiff, to various parcels of
land lying along the border of Ferry Lake, a navigable body of
water in Caddo Parish, Louisiana. Answering these claims, the
defendants in the respective cases averred that plaintiff, long
before the bringing of the suits, had conveyed by patents to
private persons certain fractional subdivisions bordering on the
lake; that these fractions were represented on the official plat of
the government survey, made by one Warren in 1839 and duly approved
and filed, as bounded on the lake side by the waters of the lake;
that, in each of the cases, the land in controversy was a small
tract, lying along the edge of the lake and constituting part of
the particular fractional subdivision so conveyed, and that,
consequently, plaintiff had divested itself of whatever title it
originally had.
Certain alternative defenses, based upon the alleged ownership
of the lands by the State of Louisiana, were pleaded, but, in view
of the conclusions we have reached, it is not necessary to consider
them. The district court entered decrees for the plaintiff which
the circuit court of appeals reversed (274 F. 145, 290), and the
cases are here upon appeal except the
Loucks case, which
comes on certiorari. The foregoing averments of fact contained in
the answers are established by the record.
Page 260 U. S. 664
In 1916-1917, nearly 80 years after the Warren survey, the lands
in the meantime having become valuable for their deposits of oil
and gas, a new survey was made under the direction of the General
Land Office. This survey shows that the line run by Warren,
purporting to meander the shore of the lake, did not in all
instances coincide precisely with the water's edge. In the four
cases first named in the title, the parcels of land lying between
the meander line and the lake are of small extent. The meander line
throughout its length approximately conforms to the sinuosities of
the shore, sometimes, however, running for short distances inland,
and sometimes for short distances into and through the water. In
the first-mentioned suit, the Warren survey indicates a fractional
subdivision containing 26.80 acres; the new survey adds 5.67 acres.
In the second suit ,the Warren survey indicates 23 acres; the new
survey adds 12.72 acres. In the third suit, the Warren survey
indicates 155 acres; the new survey adds 27.87 acres. In the fourth
suit, the Warren survey indicates 114.80 acres, and the new survey
adds 11.49 acres.
The lands in question are all in township 20, the first
mentioned being in section 3, the second in section 10, the third
in section 13, and the last in section 24. Following the meander
line of the Warren survey, the distance from the first of these
tracts to the last is about five miles. Leaving out of
consideration the large tract involved in
Producers' Oil Co. v.
Hanzen, 238 U. S. 325, and
the large tract involved in
Jeems Bayou Fishing & Hunting
Club v. United States, ante, 260 U. S. 561, the
aggregate of the various parcels lying outside the meander line is
about 70 acres, and the aggregate of the various areas of water
included within the meander line is about 44 acres. The facts bring
the cases fairly within the rule announced by this Court in
Mitchell v. Smale, 140 U. S. 406, and
not within the exception which was followed in the
Jeems
Page 260 U. S. 665
Bayou case. So far as the instant cases are concerned,
there is nothing in the circumstances to suggest the conclusion
that any fraud was committed or palpable mistake made by Warren. At
the time of his survey, the lands were of such little value, the
locality so wild and remote, and the attendant difficulties so
great that the expenditure of energy and money necessary to run the
lines with minute regard to the sinuosities of the lake would have
been quite out of proportion to the gain. We are of opinion that
the survey of 1839, except as to the two large tracts just
mentioned, is not open to challenge. The precisely accurate survey
of 1916-1917 would probably never have been made but for the
greatly increased value of the lands due to the discovery of oil
and gas therein. It is unnecessary to do more than quote the
language of this Court in
Mitchell v. Smale, supra:
"The pretense for making such surveys, arising from the fact
that strips and tongues of land are found to project into the water
beyond the meander line run for the purpose of getting its general
contour, and of measuring the quantity to be paid for, will always
exist, since such irregular projections do always, or in most
cases, exist. The difficulty of following the edge or margin of
such projections, and all the various sinuosities of the water
line, is the very occasion and cause of running the meander line,
which, by its exclusions and inclusions of such irregularities of
contour, produces an average result closely approximating to the
truth as to the quantity of upland contained in the fractional lots
bordering on the lake or stream. The official plat made from such
survey does not show the meander line, but shows the general form
of the lake deduced therefrom, and the surrounding fractional lots
adjoining and bordering on the same. The patents when issued refer
to this plat for identification of the lots conveyed, and are
equivalent to, and have the legal effect of, a declaration that
they extend to and are
Page 260 U. S. 666
bounded by the lake or stream. Such lake or stream itself, as a
natural object or monument, is virtually and truly one of the calls
of the description or boundary of the premises conveyed, and all
the legal consequences of such a boundary, in the matter of
riparian rights and title to land under water, regularly
follow."
While the facts are somewhat different and the extent of the
omission somewhat greater, we think the general rule should
likewise be applied in the remaining two cases. The Warren survey
and plat here indicate an area of about 271 acres in the fractional
subdivisions conveyed. The lands added by the new survey constitute
a compact body of 97.64 acres -- 65.77 acres of which are involved
in the
Greene case and 14.13 acres in the
Loucks
case -- having the outline of a long and rather irregular crescent,
with the outer curve next to the water. The inner boundary, running
between the two points of the crescent, is made up of a series of
straight lines, with intervening angles conforming to the outlying
curve only to a roughly approximate degree. The length of the tract
is nearly 4.000 feet, and the extreme width about 1,200 feet.
Running back from the shore, there are numerous ravines, creating,
in and along the outer rim of the tract, a series of alternating
points and indentations. The evidence justifies the conclusion
that, in 1839, and especially in time of high water reaching back
into the ravines, the establishment of a line precisely coincident
with the water's edge would have been a matter of expense and
difficulty wholly disproportionate to the then value of the omitted
acreage. As in the four cases first discussed, the Warren plat of
the survey referred to in the patent represents the lake as the
boundary. The survey, taken as a whole, with the exception of the
two large tracts already mentioned, follows with a fair degree of
accuracy the contour of the lake, and the evident purpose was to
include in it all the land to the water's edge. Considering
Page 260 U. S. 667
the circumstances in respect to the character and value of the
lands, the wildness and remoteness of the region, and the
difficulties surrounding the work of the surveyors, the failure to
run the lines with more particularity was not unreasonable, and we
are constrained to agree with the lower court in holding that the
waters of the lake, and not the traverse line, constitute the
boundary.
The decrees of the circuit court of appeals in all the cases are
therefore
Affirmed.