1. A railroad company whose road traverses an embankment built
up from low water mark in the bed of a navigable stream to a level
above that of ordinary high water is not entitled, under the Fifth
Amendment, to claim compensation from the United States for
additional cost of protecting the embankment necessitated by the
action of the Government in raising the water level above natural
high water mark, by means of a dam for the purpose of improving
navigation. So
held although the embankment was remote
from the natural channel and from the course of navigation through
the pool formed by the dam, and did not obstruct navigation. Pp.
312 U. S. 593,
312 U. S.
596.
2.
United States v. Lynah, 188 U.
S. 445, in part overruled. P.
312 U. S.
597.
3. The power of the Government over navigation covers the entire
bed of a navigable stream, including all lands below ordinary high
water mark. Whether title to the bed is retained by the State or is
in the riparian owner, the rights of the title-holder are
subservient to this dominant easement. P. 596.
113 F.2d 919 reversed.
Certiorari, 311 U.S. 642, to review the affirmance of a judgment
on a verdict awarding compensation to the railroad company and to
the telegraph company against the United States in a condemnation
proceeding.
Page 312 U. S. 593
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question for decision is whether the United States must
compensate a riparian owner for injury to structures located
between high and low water marks where the damage is caused by the
raising of the water level in a navigable stream for the
improvement of navigation. The importance of the question, and a
conflict in the decisions of this court, led to the grant of
certiorari. 311 U.S. 642.
The tracks of the respondent railroad and the pole lines of the
respondent telegraph company in Wabasha and Winona counties,
Minnesota, as relocated in 1910, are, in part, on an embankment on
the westerly side of the Mississippi River. The embankment was
adequately riprapped, where necessary, to protect it in times of
high water.
In the prosecution of a project for the improvement of
navigation, the United States has been, and is, engaged in
constructing a series of locks and dams in the upper reaches of the
Mississippi. One of the dams authorized by Act of Congress
[
Footnote 1] raises the level
of the river and creates a pool which inundates bottom lands along
the west bank.
In 1933, the Government instituted condemnation proceedings to
acquire the right to back water across the respondents' right of
way and against their embankment. Since the dam raises the water
level from 5.6 to 7.5 feet
Page 312 U. S. 594
above ordinary high water mark, the respondents were compelled
at certain points to add additional riprap to prevent damage to
their embankment.
At the trial in the condemnation proceeding, the Government
offered to prove that four segments of the embankment lie between
the ordinary high and ordinary low water marks of the river, are
therefore subject to the federal power to improve navigation, and
that any injury to them by additional flooding is an incident of
the exercise of the power, and not the subject of compensation. The
respondents objected to the offer as immaterial for the reason that
neither before nor after the improvement did the embankment
constitute an obstruction or menace to navigation, and its
maintenance was and is therefore a right of private property, the
injury to which, in the prosecution of the federal project,
entitled the owner to compensation.
The District Court rejected the offer of proof. Thereupon, the
Government moved to dismiss from the proceedings all question of
compensation for the four encroachment areas where the embankment
was claimed to be located between high and low water marks. The
motion was denied. A verdict and judgment ensued for damages to the
entire length of the embankment, both where it was admitted to be
located on fast land and where it was claimed to lie between high
and low water marks. Each party appealed. Thereafter, by
stipulation, all questions, except that touching the four segments
of the embankment which the Government claimed were located between
high and low water marks, were eliminated from the cause. It was
stipulated by the respondents that one of the four segments in
question was so located, but, as to the other three, the parties
are in disagreement. The Court of Appeals, for the purpose of
decision, assumed that all four were so located, but held
nevertheless that the Government was bound
Page 312 U. S. 595
to compensate the respondents for damage to all of them, and
affirmed the judgment of the District Court. [
Footnote 2]
Certain matters are not in dispute. The Mississippi River at the
points in question is navigable. The respondent railroad is the
riparian owner and, as such, its title extends to ordinary low
water mark. The natural channel and the course of navigation
through the pool formed by the dam lie at a considerable distance
from the embankment, which does not, and will not, obstruct or
interfere with actual navigation. The lands lying between the
embankment and the natural channel were low lands which, prior to
the improvement, were, to a great extent, covered with trees and
scrub.
The respondents assert that the power of the Government to take
private lands for the improvement of navigation is confined to the
natural widths, levels, and flows of the river, and that, if more
is taken, compensation must be made. Their position is that the
embankment can be injured without compensation only if it
constitutes an encroachment, and thus a hindrance or obstruction,
to actual navigation. The Government, on the other hand, insists
that its power is not confined to the mere making or clearing of
channels and removing hindrances and obstructions to their
navigation, but embraces the exercise of every appropriate means
for the improvement of navigable capacity, and that, in the
provision of any such means, it is entitled to deal with and alter
the level of the stream to any extent up to ordinary high water
mark without being answerable to riparian owners for injury to
structures lying below that line.
Commerce, the regulation of which between the states is
committed by the Constitution to Congress, article 1, § 8, cl.
3, includes navigation.
"The power to regulate commerce comprehends
Page 312 U. S. 596
the control for that purpose, and to the extent necessary, of
all the navigable waters of the United States which are accessible
from a State other than those in which they lie. For this purpose,
they are the public property of the nation, and subject to all the
requisite legislation by Congress. [
Footnote 3]"
And the determination of the necessity for a given improvement
of navigable capacity, and the character and extent of it, is for
Congress alone. [
Footnote 4]
Whether, under local law, the title to the bed of the stream is
retained by the State or the title of the riparian owner extends to
the thread of the stream, or, as in this case, to low water mark,
[
Footnote 5] the rights of the
titleholder are subordinate to the dominant power of the federal
Government in respect of navigation. [
Footnote 6]
The power of Congress extends not only to keeping clear the
channels of interstate navigation by the prohibition or removal of
actual obstructions located by the riparian owner or others, but
comprehends as well the power to improve and enlarge their
navigability. [
Footnote 7]
The bed of a river is
"that portion of its soil which is alternately covered and left
bare as there may be an increase or diminution in the supply of
water, and which is adequate to contain it at its average and mean
stage during the entire year, without reference to the
extraordinary freshets of the winter or spring, or the extreme
droughts of the summer or autumn. [
Footnote 8]"
The dominant power of the federal Government, as has
Page 312 U. S. 597
been repeatedly held, extends to the entire bed of a stream,
which includes the lands below ordinary high water mark. The
exercise of the power within these limits is not an invasion of any
private property right in such lands for which the United States
must make compensation. [
Footnote
9] The damage sustained results not from a taking of the
riparian owner's property in the stream bed, but from the lawful
exercise of a power to which that property has always been
subject.
The respondents admit that this is the settled rule, but insist
that it has been applied only in cases where the control of the
Government was exercised to extend the area of practicable
navigation either by constructing channels for actual use or by
removing obstructions to navigation. They assert, and the court
below was of opinion, that
United States v. Lynah,
188 U. S. 445, and
United States v. Cress, 243 U. S. 316,
sanction a different principle where the improvement consists in
the raising of the level of a stream to the injury of structures
erected by the riparian owner between high and low water mark.
What was said in the
Cress case must be confined to the
facts there disclosed. In that case, the Government's improvement
in a navigable stream resulted in the flooding of the plaintiffs'
land in and adjacent to a nonnavigable stream. The owners of the
land along and under the bed of the stream were held entitled to
compensation for the damage to their lands. The question here
presented was not discussed in the opinion.
In the
Lynah case, the plaintiff's rice plantation was
rendered worthless by the Government's raising the water in the
Savannah River. Three questions were considered
Page 312 U. S. 598
at length by this Court: whether the trial court (the then
Circuit Court) had jurisdiction; whether there was a taking of
plaintiff's property, and whether the government was bound to
compensate therefor. All were answered in the affirmative. Applying
earlier decisions, it was held that the permanent flooding of land
adjacent to a stream in the improvement of navigation, pursuant to
statutory authority, amounted to a taking, and that the court had
jurisdiction to award compensation upon the footing of an implied
contract of the Government to pay for what it took. But, as the
court below points out, the quoted findings show, and the opinion
adverted to the fact, that the plantation lay, in part, between the
high and low water lines, and this Court held that the flooding
constituted a taking of the whole, for which compensation was due
under the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution. Moreover, three
justices based their dissent largely on the fact that compensation
was awarded for injury to lands lying below high water mark. We are
bound, therefore, to determine whether we shall follow that
decision in respect of the issue involved in the instant case. The
decision was by a divided court, and later, in a similar case,
there was an affirmance by an equally divided court. [
Footnote 10] The case has often been
cited as authority for the settled doctrine that an authorized
taking of property for public use gives rise to an implied promise
to pay just compensation. But we think this Court has never
followed it as a binding decision that compensation is due for
injury or destruction of a riparian owner's property located in the
bed of a navigable stream. And we think that, so far as it
sanctions such a principle, it is in irreconcilable conflict with
our later decisions, [
Footnote
11] and cannot be considered as expressing the law.
Page 312 U. S. 599
It is not true, as respondents maintain, that only structures in
the bed of a navigable stream which obstruct or adversely affect
navigation may be injured or destroyed without compensation by a
federal improvement of navigable capacity. On the contrary, any
structure is placed in the bed of a stream at the risk that it may
be so injured or destroyed, and the right to compensation does not
depend on the absence of physical interference with navigation. The
ratio decidendi and the circumstances disclosed in
numerous cases lead inevitably to this conclusion. [
Footnote 12]
The respondents claim that two of the sections of embankment in
question not only are above ordinary high water mark, but also
claim that they abut not on the Mississippi River, but on a
nonnavigable tributary, and that another, though along the bank of
the river, is at or above the ordinary high water line. The
Government disagrees. These issues of fact remain for solution by
the District Court.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded to the
District Court for further proceedings in conformity with this
opinion.
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
River and Harbor Act of July 3, 1930, c. 847, 46 Stat. 918,
927.
[
Footnote 2]
113 F.2d 919.
[
Footnote 3]
Gilman v.
Philadelphia, 3 Wall. 713,
70 U. S.
724.
[
Footnote 4]
Scranton v. Wheeler, 179 U. S. 141,
179 U. S.
162.
[
Footnote 5]
Morrill v. St. Anthony Falls Water Power Co., 26 Minn.
222, 2 N.W. 842.
[
Footnote 6]
Gibson v. United States, 166 U.
S. 269,
166 U. S.
271-272.
[
Footnote 7]
United States v. Chandler-Dunbar Co., 229 U. S.
53,
229 U. S. 62;
New Jersey v. Sargent, 269 U. S. 328,
269 U. S. 337;
United States v. Appalachian Electric Power Co.,
311 U. S. 377.
[
Footnote 8]
Alabama v.
Georgia, 23 How. 505,
64 U. S. 515.
[
Footnote 9]
Scranton v. Wheeler, 179 U. S. 141,
179 U. S.
143-144;
Greenleaf Lumber Co. v. Garrison,
237 U. S. 251,
237 U. S. 263;
Willink v. United States, 240 U.
S. 572,
240 U. S. 580;
Delaware R. Co. v. Weeks, 293 F. 114, 120;
Barr v.
Spalding, 46 F.2d
798, 800;
Marret v. United States, 82 Ct.Cls. 1, 13;
United States v. Meyer, 113 F.2d 387, 398.
[
Footnote 10]
United States v. Heyward, 250 U.S. 633.
[
Footnote 11]
See cases cited in
Note
9 supra.
[
Footnote 12]
See the cases cited in
Note 9 and
United States v. Chandler-Dunbar Co.,
229 U. S. 53,
229 U. S. 70;
Lewis Blue Point Oyster Co. v. Briggs, 229 U. S.
82,
229 U. S.
86-88.