This suit involves a dispute between Georgia and South Carolina
over the location of their boundary along the Savannah River,
downstream from the city of Savannah and at the river's mouth, and
their lateral seaward boundary. In 1787, the parties agreed in the
Treaty of Beaufort that the boundary along the river was the
river's "most northern branch or
Page 497 U. S. 377
stream," "reserving all islands in [the river] to Georgia. . .
." In 1922, the Treaty was interpreted to mean,
inter
alia, that where there is no island in the river, the boundary
is midway between the banks, and where there is an island, the
boundary is midway between the island and the South Carolina shore.
Georgia v. South Carolina, 259 U.
S. 572. The Special Master has submitted two Reports,
making several boundary recommendations. Both States have filed
exceptions.
Held:
1. The Special Master's determination that the Barnwell Islands
are in South Carolina is adopted. Georgia's exception is overruled.
South Carolina has established sovereignty over the islands by
prescription and acquiescence, as evidenced by its grant of the
islands in 1813, and its taxation, policing, and patrolling of the
property. Georgia cannot avoid this evidence's effect by contending
that it had no reasonable notice of South Carolina's actions.
Inaction alone may constitute acquiescence when it continues for a
sufficiently long period,
See Rhode Island v.
Massachusetts, 15 Pet. 233,
40 U. S. 274,
and there has been more than inaction on Georgia's part. It was
charged with knowing that the Treaty placed all of the Savannah
River islands in Georgia, yet, despite the fact that cultivation
was readily discernible, there is virtually no record of its
taxation of, or other sovereign action over, these lands. A 1955
Court of Appeals' decision in a condemnation proceeding by the
Federal Government, which recognized Georgia's sovereignty over the
islands, cannot be regarded as fixing the boundary between the
States. Pp.
497 U. S.
388-393.
2. The Special Master's determination that the islands emerging
in the river after the 1787 Treaty do not affect the boundary line
between the States is adopted, and Georgia's exception is
overruled. Georgia's suggestion that the boundary in the vicinity
of each new island runs between that island and the South Carolina
shore would create a regime of continually shifting jurisdiction,
by creating a new "northern branch or stream" for even the smallest
emerging island no matter how near the South Carolina shoreline,
and would frustrate the purpose of the Treaty, which purports to
fix the boundary "forever hereafter." Construing the Treaty to
avoid sudden boundary changes would be more consistent with this
language, and also comports with the simplicity and finality of the
Court's 1922 reading of the Treaty and with the respect for settled
expectations that generally attends the drawing of interstate
boundaries,
cf. Virginia v. Tennessee, 148 U.
S. 503,
148 U. S.
522-525. Pp.
497 U. S.
394-398.
3. The Special Master's conclusion that Oyster Bed Island is in
South Carolina and that the southern side of the Savannah's mouth
is Tybee Island while the northern side is an underwater shoal is
adopted. Georgia's exception is overruled. Customarily, a boundary
would be drawn to an opposing headland. However, due to the
uncommon type of river mouth here, Tybee Island has no counterpart
of high land on the northern side. Rather, the geographical feature
taking its place is the shoal, long recognized as confining the
river. To accept Georgia's proposition that the northern side
should be the closest South Carolina headlands -- islands that are
so distant that they cannot even be said to touch the river --
would result in having Georgia's waters lie directly seaward of
South Carolina's coast and waters. Pp.
497 U. S.
398-400.
4. In drawing the boundary line around islands on the South
Carolina side of the river's thread, when the midline of the stream
encounters an island and must move northward to become the line
midway between the island bank and the South Carolina shore, the
Special Master erred in invoking a right-angle principle --
i.e., using the line midway between the island and the
shore until the island ends and the boundary reverts to the middle
of the river, and then using right-angle lines to connect the
island-to-bank center line with the bank-to-bank center line by the
shortest distance. Georgia's exception is sustained. Georgia's
approach -- to use a point "triequidistant" from the South Carolina
shore, the island shore, and the Georgia shore, resulting in a
boundary that would pass through this point and otherwise be
equidistant from the South Carolina shore and the Georgia shore, or
island -- is sensible, less artificial, fair to both States, and
generally in line with what the Court said in 1922. Pp.
497 U. S.
400-402.
5. The Special Master's determination that additions to Denwill
and Horseshoe Shoal be awarded to Georgia is adopted, and South
Carolina's exception is overruled. The rapidity of some aspects of
dredging and other processes used by the Army Corps of Engineers to
improve the river's navigation channel support the Master's
recommendation that the changes in the Savannah River were caused
primarily by avulsion rather than the natural and gradual process
of erosion and accretion. Pp.
497 U. S.
402-405.
Page 497 U. S. 378
6. Since the Special Master's Second Report clarified any
confusion that may have existed with regard to how the recommended
boundary line affects Bird Island, the boundary dispute as to this
island has been eliminated, and South Carolina's exception,
initially made, is overruled. P.
497 U. S.
405.
7. The Special Master's determination of the lateral seaward
boundary between the States is adopted. His line continues down the
river's mouth until it intersects a line, from Tybee Island's most
northern point to Hilton Head Island's most southern point, where
it proceeds out to sea perpendicularly to that line. His
recommendation gives equitable balance and recognition to the
so-called equidistant principle,
Texas v. Louisiana,
426 U. S. 465, and
to the inland boundary between the States, and does so with the
least possible offense to any claimed parallel between offshore
territory and the coast itself. The States' respective exceptions
are overruled. Pp.
497 U. S.
405-408.
Exceptions of South Carolina overruled; Exception of Georgia to
Special Master's use of right-angle principle sustained; Other
exceptions of Georgia overruled; Special Master's recommendations,
as to which no exceptions have been taken or as to which exceptions
have been advanced but overruled, are adopted.
BLACKMUN, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court with
respect to Parts I, II, III, and VIII, and the opinion of the Court
with respect to Part IV, in which BRENNAN, WHITE, MARSHALL,
STEVENS, O'CONNOR, and SCALIA, JJ., joined; with respect to Part V,
in which BRENNAN, WHITE, MARSHALL, STEVENS, O'CONNOR, and SCALIA,
JJ., joined, and in which REHNQUIST, C.J., and KENNEDY, J., joined
except for a portion thereof; with respect to Part VI, in which
REHNQUIST, C.J., and BRENNAN, STEVENS, O'CONNOR, SCALIA, and
KENNEDY, JJ., joined; with respect to Part VII, in which REHNQUIST,
C.J., and BRENNAN, WHITE, MARSHALL, STEVENS, and O'CONNOR, JJ.,
joined; and with respect to Part IX, in which REHNQUIST, C.J., and
BRENNAN, WHITE, MARSHALL, O'CONNOR, and KENNEDY, JJ., joined.
WHITE, J., filed an opinion dissenting in part, in which MARSHALL,
J., joined,
post, p.
497 U. S. 410.
STEVENS, J., filed an opinion dissenting in part, in which SCALIA,
J., joined,
post, p. 412. SCALIA, J., filed an opinion
dissenting in part, in which KENNEDY, J., joined,
post, p.
497 U.S. 413. KENNEDY, J.,
filed an opinion dissenting in part, in which REHNQUIST, C.J.,
joined,
post, p.
497 U.S.
413.
Page 497 U. S. 379
Justice BLACKMUN delivered the opinion of the Court.*
This litigation was instituted in August 1977, pursuant to Art.
III, § 2, cl. 2, of the United States Constitution and 28
U.S.C. § 1251(a)(1) (1976 ed.), by the presentation to this
Court of a motion by the State of Georgia for leave to file a
complaint against the State of South Carolina. The suit was the
culmination of a prolonged dispute between the two States over the
location of their boundary along the lower reaches of the Savannah
River (that is, downstream from the city of Savannah) and at the
river's mouth. The two States also are in disagreement as to their
lateral seaward boundary.
We granted leave to Georgia to file its complaint. 434 U.S. 917
(1977). The Honorable Walter E. Hoffman, Senior Judge of the United
States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, was
appointed Special Master with the authority customarily granted in
litigation of this kind. 434 U.S. 1057 (1978). South Carolina, in
due course, filed its answer and counterclaims.
Page 497 U. S. 380
The Special Master submitted his First Report (1 Rep.) to this
Court eight years later on March 20, 1986. That Report dealt with
the issues other than the lateral seaward boundary. The Master and
the parties moved that we defer action on the First Report until he
had ruled on the seaward boundary. We complied with that request.
The Special Master's Second and Final Report (2 Rep.) was filed
March 30, 1989. The Court fixed the time for the filing of
exceptions.
See 490 U.S. 1033 (1989). Each State filed
exceptions and each responded to the exceptions of the other.
Briefs were submitted and oral argument followed.
I
Background
On June 9, 1732, nearly 260 years ago, King George II of Great
Britain, France, and Ireland issued letters patent constituting the
Charter of the Colony of Georgia. These letters described the
boundary between that Colony and the existing Colony of South
Carolina as "the most northern part of a stream or river there,
commonly called the Savannah."
See F. Van Zandt,
Boundaries of the United States and the Several States (Geological
Survey Professional Paper 909) 100 (1976).
The precise location of segments of the boundary, however,
proved to be a matter of continuing dispute between South Carolina
and Georgia. Much of the controversy originally concerned
navigation rights on the river. Shortly after the United States
emerged as a nation, commissioners appointed by each of the States
met at Beaufort, S.C., and produced a Convention known as the
Treaty of Beaufort of April 28, 1787.
See Van Zandt, at
99;
see also Georgia v. South Carolina, 257 U.
S. 516,
257 U. S. 518
(1922). The Treaty stated that the boundary was the "most northern
branch or stream of the river Savannah . . . , reserving all the
islands in said rive[r] Savannah . . . to
Page 497 U. S. 381
Georgia. . . ." [
Footnote 1]
The Treaty was ratified in due course by the Legislature of each
State and by the Continental Congress.
See 33 Journals of
the Continental Congress 467 (1936). [
Footnote 2]
Page 497 U. S. 382
Past Litigation
The very existence of the present suit, of course, demonstrates
that the Treaty of Beaufort did not resolve all river-boundary
Page 497 U. S. 383
questions between South Carolina and Georgia. Indeed, this is
not the first, but the third, occasion that some issue concerning
that boundary has come before this Court.
The first case is
South Carolina v. Georgia,
93 U. S. 4 (1876).
South Carolina filed a bill in equity for an injunction restraining
Georgia and certain federal officials from "obstructing or
interrupting" navigation on the Savannah River. This Court
dismissed the bill. It ruled that the 1787 Treaty had no effect
upon the power of Congress to regulate commerce among the several
States. Congress' power over the river was the same as it possessed
over other navigable waters. Thus, Congress could close one of the
several channels in the river if, in its judgment, navigation
thereby would be improved.
The second case is
Georgia v. South Carolina, supra,
decided in 1922. There, the Treaty of Beaufort was central to the
controversy. The Court held, among other things, that (1) where
there is no island in the Savannah River, the boundary is midway
between the banks when the water is at ordinary stage, (2) where an
island is present, the boundary is midway between the island bank
and the South Carolina shore, with the water at ordinary stage, (3)
where a navigable or nonnavigable river is the boundary between two
States, and the navigable channel is not involved, then, in the
absence of contrary agreement, each State takes to the middle of
the stream, and (4) the location of the boundary under the Treaty
was unaffected by the thalweg doctrine because of the Treaty's
provision that each State shall have
Page 497 U. S. 384
equal rights of navigation. The ensuing decree is set forth at
259 U. S. 259 U.S.
572 (1922). [
Footnote 3]
It is to be noted that this Court did not discuss the problem of
emerging islands, that navigability was not itself a factor in
determining the boundary, and that no map or chart illuminated the
Court's reported opinion.
Neither of these cases bears directly upon the specific issues
presently before us. The 1876 case, however, illustrates the type
of boundary problem the Savannah River is capable of producing, and
the 1922 case reveals generally this Court's approach to the Treaty
of Beaufort.
The decision in
United States v. 450 Acres of Land,
etc., 220 F.2d 353 (CA5),
cert. denied, 350 U.S. 826
(1955), must be mentioned. This was a condemnation proceeding
instituted by the Federal Government in the United States District
Court for the Southern District of Georgia to acquire an easement
to enter upon "Barnwell Island," one of the islands of a group
discussed in
497 U. S. for
the deposit of spoil excavated from Savannah Harbor. The complaint
was served upon E.B. Pinckney, who claimed ownership of the island,
and upon certain Beaufort County, S.C., officials. Only Pinckney
made an appearance. He moved to dismiss the complaint for lack of
jurisdiction, on the ground that the land was in South Carolina.
The motion was granted, and the Government's complaint was
dismissed. Georgia then was allowed to intervene. The Court of
Appeals for the Fifth Circuit reversed. It observed:
Page 497 U. S. 385
"The boundary line between Georgia and South Carolina is not in
dispute as between these sovereigns. . . . There is, there can be,
no doubt that the land here involved is in the State of Georgia.
Article I of the Beaufort Convention specifically reserved to
Georgia all the islands in the Savannah River, and the Supreme
Court, by its decision and decree in
State of Georgia v. South
Carolina, 257 U. S. 516 . . . confirmed
that reservation."
Id. at 356.
Although South Carolina did not participate in that case, it
sought leave to file an original-jurisdiction complaint in this
Court to confirm its claimed sovereignty over the Barnwell Islands.
Leave to file was denied.
South Carolina v. Georgia, 350
U.S. 812 (1955). This took place while Pinckney's petition for
certiorari, noted above, in the Fifth Circuit case was pending in
this Court. Later, another application by South Carolina for leave
to file also was denied.
South Carolina v. Georgia, 352
U.S. 1030 (1957).
II
The Special Master's Reports and the Exceptions
The Special Master's two Reports concern, as he listed them, (1)
a small unnamed island upstream, or west, of Pennyworth Island, (2)
an unnamed island east of Pennyworth, referred to as "Tidegate,"
(3) the Barnwell Islands, that is, Rabbit Island, Hog Island, Long
Island, and Barnwell No. 3, (4) Southeastern Denwill, (5) Jones
Island, (6) Horseshoe Shoal and Oyster Bed Island, (7) the mouth of
the river, and (8) the lateral seaward boundary.
The Special Master himself, "[f]or the convenience of the Court
and counsel," described the "major legal issues" covered by his
First Report in this way:
"1. Did the Treaty of 1787, in reserving all islands in the
Savannah River to Georgia, intend to include not only the then
existing islands, but also all islands thereafter emerging by
natural processes on the South Carolina
Page 497 U. S. 386
side of the river? If the answer is in the affirmative, how can
the 1922 decision of this Court be reconciled?"
"2. Is the Special Master correct in determining that the
right-angle principle should be invoked by the demarcator in
drawing the boundary line around islands on the South Carolina side
of the 'thread' of the Savannah River, because of the 'special
circumstances' existing by reason of the preclusive effect of the
1922 Supreme Court decision as it interpreted the Treaty of
1787?"
"3. Has the Special Master correctly ruled that Rabbit Island
accreted to the State of South Carolina, and whether the 'Island
Rule' is applicable?"
"4. Has the Special Master correctly decided that Hog Island and
Long Island have been acquired by the State of South Carolina under
the doctrine of prescription and acquiescence? The Special Master
notes that, even though Hog Island (in existence in 1787) was
acquired by South Carolina under the doctrine of prescription and
acquiescence, there remained at that time a creek separating Hog
Island from the mainland and it was not until the spoilage had been
dumped by avulsive processes that Hog Island became a part of the
South Carolina mainland."
"5. Has the Special Master correctly ruled that the area known
as Southeastern Denwill, if it presently encroaches on the southern
side of the mid-point of the Savannah River as it existed in 1787,
now belongs to Georgia?"
"6. Has the Special Master correctly ruled that Jones Island, at
all pertinent times, was in the State of South Carolina?"
"7. Did the Special Master err in diverting from the doctrine of
medium filum acquae as established by the 1922 decision of
this Court, in proceeding eastwardly
Page 497 U. S. 387
after leaving the southern tip of Turtle Island?"
1 Rep. 112-113.
Georgia's exceptions to both Reports are directed to the Special
Master's recommendations concerning (a) the Barnwell Islands (other
than Rabbit Island, as to which Georgia does not now except), (b)
Oyster Bed Island and the mouth of the Savannah River, (c) the "use
of a right-angle line to connect the boundary in stream around an
island in the Savannah River with the boundary in the mainstream of
the river,"
see Ga. Exceptions ii, (d) the Master's ruling
that islands of natural formation emerging after the Treaty of
Beaufort are not in Georgia if they emerged "on the South Carolina
side of the river,"
ibid., and (e) the Master's use of the
navigation channel, rather than the geographic middle of the
"mouth" of the Savannah River, as the starting point for his
delineation of the lateral seaward boundary. Georgia's exceptions,
so far as the First Report is concerned, thus are directed only to
the first, second, fourth, and seventh of the issues listed by the
Master. Some of the claims Georgia pressed before the Master,
e.g., the one relating to Jones Island, are not presented
for review here; we treat those claims as now abandoned.
South Carolina takes exception to the Master's recommendations
concerning (a) the lateral seaward boundary, (b) "two narrow strips
of land well downstream from the City of Savannah," (c) the
"downstream area known as Horseshoe Shoal," and (d) "the line which
resulted from the placement of Horseshoe Shoal in Georgia."
See S.C. Exceptions 2. So far as the First Report is
concerned, these exceptions thus are directed only to the first,
fifth, and seventh of the issues listed by the Master.
Before we consider these several exceptions specifically, we
note that Georgia's reaction to the First Report is
straightforward. It asserts that, under the 1787 Treaty,
all islands in the Savannah River are in Georgia; that,
despite this treaty provision, the Master would place certain
islands
Page 497 U. S. 388
in South Carolina; and that his First Report
"reflects his fundamental dissatisfaction with the boundary line
as established by the framers of the Treaty of Beaufort and as
construed by this Court in 1922."
Ga. Exceptions 7. This has led the Master
"to diverge, at virtually every opportunity, from the boundary
which has been established since 1787 in order to place his
recommended boundary in or near the mainstream or the navigation
channel of the river."
Id. at 8. South Carolina, of course, disavows this
characterization of the Special Master's decision.
We turn to the exceptions in an order we select.
III
The Barnwell Islands
These islands were four in number, and were named by the
Barnwell family, in downstream order, Rabbit Island, Hog Island
(referred to as "Barnwell Island" on some older U.S. Coast Survey
maps), Long Island (referred to as Barnwell Island No. 2 on some
maps), and Barnwell Island No. 3 (actually the fourth island and
not present when the family named the others). As has been noted,
Georgia takes no exception to the Special Master's recommendation
that Rabbit Island, although in the Savannah River in 1787, now be
adjudged to be in South Carolina. This leaves us with Hog Island,
Long Island, and Barnwell Island No. 3.
Georgia states that the Barnwell Islands remained as islands in
the Savannah River and discernible as such well into the 20th
century, when, because of the activity of the United States Corps
of Engineers, they became affixed to the South Carolina shore. Ga.
Exceptions 13. South Carolina opines that the Barnwell Islands area
is the most valuable land in the present dispute. It consists of at
least 450 acres of high ground only a short distance downstream
from the city of Savannah. It is "clearly capable of future
economic development." Response for South Carolina 1-2.
Page 497 U. S. 389
Georgia's argument is essentially this: long acquiescence in the
practical location of an interstate boundary, and possession in
accordance therewith, often has been used as an aid in resolving
boundary disputes.
See, e.g., 45 U. S.
Massachusetts, 4 How. 591,
45 U. S.
638-639 (1846);
Louisiana v. Mississippi,
202 U. S. 1, 53
(1906). Possession and dominion are essential elements of a claim
of sovereignty by prescription and acquiescence.
Virginia v.
Tennessee, 148 U. S. 503,
148 U. S. 524
(1893). The duration of any purported dominion by South Carolina
was judicially terminated by the above-cited Fifth Circuit decision
in 1955. In line with that decision, and at all times since,
Georgia has exercised dominion, sovereignty, and ownership of the
Barnwell Islands. The Corps of Engineers has possessed and occupied
Barnwell pursuant to a deed granted by Georgia for a spoilage
easement. The doctrine of prescription and acquiescence may not be
used aggressively to acquire territory; it may be used only to
confirm the current status. In any event, proof adduced by South
Carolina falls short of what is required to change the boundary
solemnly accepted by the two States in 1787.
Georgia further asserts that the State asserting the claim must
make a showing of acquiescence by the neighboring State.
New
Jersey v. Delaware, 291 U. S. 361,
291 U. S. 376,
291 U. S. 377
(1934). Inaction, in and of itself, is of no great importance; what
is legally significant is silence in the face of circumstances that
warrant a response. Here, it is said, there is little evidence
either of prescription by South Carolina or of actual or
constructive notice to Georgia sufficient to imply acquiescence by
Georgia. Except for the activity by the Corps of Engineers, the
islands received scant attention from anyone except members of the
Barnwell family. And, apart from some rice planting, there is
little evidence of activity on the islands other than illegal
whiskey production and the raising
Page 497 U. S. 390
of hogs fed with the mash. The fact that moonshining could be
carried on successfully shows how little attention was paid to the
islands by Georgia authorities and the public generally.
Except for the placement of a battery on the islands by
Confederate forces during the War Between the States, there never
was any resident on the islands, and no schools, roads, or other
public improvements.
Georgia acknowledges two grants by South Carolina, one in 1795
and the other in 1813. The grants and accompanying plats, however,
identify the property only as "islands." These, says Georgia, were
invalid because the 1787 Treaty reserved all islands in the river
to Georgia. Thus, South Carolina cannot build its case on those
grants. To be sure, there were 1868 deeds describing the property
as in South Carolina, but these were intrafamily conveyances by the
Barnwells and, in any event, provided no notice to anyone until
they were recorded in 1930. There also was a marriage settlement in
1832 and a mortgage in 1871, but these, too, were intrafamily
transactions. Anyway, their descriptions were insufficient to
constitute notice of claim by South Carolina. The same is true of a
deed in 1896 whereby the Barnwell brothers conveyed their interests
in the islands and other family property to their sisters. A
sheriff's deed in 1940 was insufficient to convey title, because of
inadequate description of the property, and did not constitute
notice to Georgia of any South Carolina claim of jurisdiction. The
same is true of a 1942 deed from the Forfeited Land Commission of
South Carolina to E.B. Pinckney.
There were taxes paid to Beaufort County, S.C., by the Barnwell
family and later by Pinckney, but the tax records contain no
information identifying the property, and even after 1930, there
was no correlation between the acreage reported for taxes and the
acreage conveyed by the deeds. The claim of South Carolina
prescription and Georgia acquiescence
Page 497 U. S. 391
is contradicted "by considerable evidence" that Georgia and
United States officials understood the islands to be in Georgia.
Ga. Exceptions 34. There was a Georgia grant in 1760. In 1825,
1830, and 1831, taxes were paid to Chatham County, Ga. Many maps
show the Barnwell Islands (other than Rabbit) to be on the Georgia
side of the boundary line between the two States.
Thus, the short duration of actual possession, the limited South
Carolina official acts, and the paucity of published or recorded
documents referring to the islands as in South Carolina fall far
short, Georgia claims, of establishing the open and continuous
possession required to confirm a boundary by prescription. This is
especially so since the islands remained as islands in the river
until well into the 20th century, and since South Carolina
continued to recognize officially the Treaty of Beaufort, with its
provision that all islands in the river are in Georgia. This is not
a situation where Georgia can be held to have acquiesced.
South Carolina, in its turn, first takes the position that the
1955 Fifth Circuit case has no effect whatsoever, directly or
indirectly, on the present litigation. South Carolina was not a
party in that case, and the case did not fix the boundary between
the States. It further argues that Georgia asserted no act of
dominion or control over the Barnwell Islands from 1787 until the
1950s, and acquiesced in South Carolina's jurisdiction through long
inaction in the face of the latter's continuing and obvious
exercise of dominion since 1795.
With all this before us, and recognizing that each side advances
some facts favorable to its position, we decide this issue in favor
of South Carolina. We agree that the 1955 case in the Fifth Circuit
cannot be regarded as fixing the boundary between the States.
Although some South Carolinians were served with process, they were
local officials and a person whose name appeared in the chain of
title. South
Page 497 U. S. 392
Carolina itself was never served, and made no appearance.
See Martin v. Wilks, 490 U. S. 755,
490 U. S.
761-762 (1989) (slip op. 4-5). In any event, this Court,
not a Court of Appeals, is the place where an interstate boundary
dispute usually is to be resolved.
See Durfee v. Duke,
375 U. S. 106,
375 U. S.
115-116 (1963). The judgment in the 1955 case,
therefore, does not control the issue of South Carolina's
sovereignty. Nor do the incidental effects of that case transform
the judgment into one that binds South Carolina. This conclusion
needs no additional fortification, but, if it did, we would note
that South Carolina twice, in 1955 and again in 1957, asked this
Court to have the Barnwell area boundary question resolved. Georgia
opposed those applications, and leave to file was denied each time
by this Court. South Carolina attempted to get the issue here, but
until the present litigation was instituted and allowed to proceed,
this aspect of the boundary issue was not before this Court.
[
Footnote 4]
We need not here repeat in detail the extensive record evidence
and the tax and conveyancing documents relied upon by the Special
Master in reaching his conclusion. It suffices to say that the
entire area in the late 18th and early 19th centuries was low
marshy ground. The islands were separated from Georgia by the wide
and deep waters of the Savannah River, but were separated from
South Carolina only by streams so shallow that they were described
as "sometimes dry." S.C.Exh. B-8.
See
Handly's Lessee v.
Anthony, 5 Wheat. 374,
18 U. S. 381
(1820). The South Carolina grant in 1813, the almost-uniform
taxation of the property, the South Carolina seizure and subsequent
sale for unpaid taxes, policing and prosecutorial activities by
South Carolina authorities,
Page 497 U. S. 393
patrolling by South Carolina wildlife officers, and other
factors, all support the Special Master's conclusion that, in any
event, South Carolina established sovereignty by prescription and
acquiescence.
Georgia seeks to avoid the effect of this evidence on the ground
that it had no reasonable notice of South Carolina's actions, and
therefore cannot be said to have acquiesced in them. But inaction
alone may constitute acquiescence when it continues for a
sufficiently long period.
See Rhode Island v.
Massachusetts, 15 Pet. 233,
40 U. S. 274
(1841);
Vermont v. New Hampshire, 289 U.
S. 593,
289 U. S. 616
(1933). And there is more than mere inaction on the part of
Georgia. The record contains substantial evidence of events that
put Georgia on notice of South Carolina's exercise of sovereignty.
Parts of the islands were cultivated, as the Master found, for more
than 30 years prior to 1880. This was readily discernible, for rice
cultivation requires dikes, and the presence of dikes on the
islands appeared on maps of the area as early as 1855. Ga.Exh. 156.
Georgia was chargeable with knowledge that the Treaty of Beaufort
placed all the Savannah River islands in Georgia. Yet Georgia
authorities could have discovered there was no record of taxation
or other sovereign action over these lands by Georgia except,
possibly, for three isolated instances in the early part of the
19th century. Some documents recorded in Georgia, because they also
involved Georgia property, describe the islands as in South
Carolina. There is evidence, too, that Savannah residents were
aware of cultivation on the islands.
"It is conclusively settled in England that open and notorious
adverse possession is evidence of notice not of the adverse holding
only, but of title under which the possession is held. . . . And in
the United States, we deem it to be equally settled."
Landes v.
Brant, 10 How. 348,
51 U. S. 375
(1850).
South Carolina must prevail as to the Barnwell Islands issue,
and we overrule Georgia's exception with respect thereto.
Page 497 U. S. 394
IV
I
slands Emerging After the Treaty of Beaufort
The unnamed island west of Pennyworth, the island east of
Pennyworth called "Tidegate," and Oyster Bed Island all emerged
after the Treaty of Beaufort was signed in 1787. [
Footnote 5] Georgia claims these islands and
argues that, by the terms of the Treaty, the boundary in the
vicinity of each island runs between that island and the South
Carolina shore. The first Article of the Treaty,
see n. 1,
supra, provides:
"The most northern branch or stream of the river Savannah from
the sea or mouth of such stream to the fork or confluence of the
rivers now called Tugoloo and Keowee, . . . reserving all the
islands in the said rivers Savannah and Tugoloo to Georgia . . .
shall forever hereafter form the separation limit and boundary
between the States of South Carolina and Georgia."
This Court considered this provision in 1922 in
Georgia v.
South Carolina, supra. Both States agreed that the presence of
an island on the South Carolina side of the river altered the
boundary so as to bring the island within the jurisdiction of
Georgia. In its decision on the merits, the Court resolved two
contested issues relevant here.
First it held, ruling in Georgia's favor, that
"where, in any of the boundary rivers here involved, there are
no islands, the location of the boundary line between the two
States is the thread of the river -- the middle line of the stream
-- regardless of the channel of navigation. . . ."
257 U.S. at
257 U. S. 521.
It rejected South Carolina's alternative position, which would have
placed the boundary at the low water mark on the Georgia side of
the river:
"The express reservation of the islands to Georgia and the
placing of the boundary line in the most northerly branch of the
Savannah and then of the Tugoloo
Page 497 U. S. 395
river up to the 'northern boundary of South Carolina,' makes it
clear that, where there are islands in the river, the line must be
between them and the South Carolina shore, for otherwise the
Georgia islands would be within the State of South Carolina."
Id. at
257 U. S.
520-521. Because the "northern branch or stream" clause
by definition would bring the boundary north of the low water mark
on the Georgia side, the Court thought it unlikely that the parties
intended the low-water mark to be the benchmark where no islands
were present. The more logical reading of the Treaty was that each
State would take "to the middle of the stream."
Id. at
257 U. S.
521.
Second, the Court held that, where there were islands in the
river, the boundary would be midway between the island and the
South Carolina shore. This conclusion followed from the
determination that the "northern branch or stream" of the river,
where an island was present in the northern half of the river,
would be the "branch or stream" that ran between the island and the
northern shore, and from its first holding that the midpoint of the
relevant body of water was the appropriate place to draw the
boundary.
Two principles established by the 1922 decision are pertinent
here. First, although it is by no means self-evident on the face of
the Treaty that the "northern branch or stream" refers to the
"stream" that each island -- however small and however close to the
northern shore -- creates between itself and the shore to the north
of it, that was the construction of the Treaty agreed upon by the
parties in 1922 and adopted by this Court. Apparently it was
thought that a contrary rule, whereby the "northern branch or
stream" referred only to a "branch or stream" that made a major
departure from the main body of the river, would create an
unmanageable boundary, because then the Treaty's additional
reservation of the islands to Georgia would create pockets of
Georgia territory within South Carolina wherever islands existed on
the South Carolina side of the "northern branch or stream" defined
in this larger sense. Second, under the principle that
Page 497 U. S. 396
each island in the river created a new "northern branch or
stream," each island was not only reserved to Georgia under the
reservation clause of Article I but also formed a point of
reference by which the boundary would be drawn.
The Court, in its 1922 decision, did not expressly determine the
treatment to be given islands that emerged after the Treaty of
Beaufort was signed, so that decision is not controlling on this
issue. The Special Master found, and South Carolina agrees, that
the better reading of the Treaty in light of the 1922 decision is
that the clause "reserving all islands . . . to Georgia" refers
only to islands in existence in 1787, and that the "most northern
branch or stream," as applied to a "branch or stream" going to the
north of an island, similarly refers only to islands in existence
when the Treaty was signed. The Treaty's establishment of the
boundary "forever hereafter" would thus be unaffected by
after-emerging islands. Georgia argues that the provision of
Article I "reserving all islands . . . to Georgia" includes such
after-emerging islands and that, accordingly, the reference in the
Treaty to the "most northern branch or stream of the river
Savannah" means the stream flowing to the north of any island
currently in the river. We think South Carolina and the Special
Master have the better argument.
Georgia's solution, whereby each emerging island not only is
newly "reserv[ed] . . . to Georgia" but also creates a new
"northern branch or stream" by which the boundary between the
States must be drawn, would create a regime of continually shifting
jurisdiction. Even the smallest emerging island, no matter how near
the South Carolina shore, would cause the entire boundary between
the States to shift northward, depriving South Carolina not only of
the land that constitutes the island but also any riverbed between
the island and the center line that previously formed the boundary.
We doubt that the parties, in drafting the Treaty, meant to create
a boundary that shifted so radically each time a new island emerged
in the river. To the contrary, Article I of the
Page 497 U. S. 397
Treaty purports to fix the boundary "forever hereafter," a goal
that would be frustrated were the boundary to jump northward each
time a new island appeared on the South Carolina side of the river.
A construction of the Treaty that avoids sudden changes in the
boundary would be more consistent with this language, and also
comports with the principles of simplicity and finality that
animated the Court's reading of the Treaty in 1922, and with the
respect for settled expectations that generally attends the drawing
of interstate boundaries.
Cf. Virginia v. Tennessee,
148 U. S. 503,
148 U. S.
522-525 (1893).
We recognize, of course, that the normal rules relating to
accretion and erosion may cause the boundary line between the
States to shift over time, so that the line will not necessarily be
fixed as of any particular point. But it is one thing to say that
the parties meant that gradual shifts in the path of the river
would shift the boundary gradually, to the extent of the accretion;
this rule is consistent with settled expectations and with the
parties' interest in maintaining their riparian rights.
See
Nebraska v. Iowa, 143 U. S. 359
(1892). It is quite another thing to infer that the parties meant
that each new island, however formed, would alter the boundary line
to a degree that could be dramatically out of proportion to the
physical change brought about by the formation of the island
itself.
Finally, Georgia points to the statement in the 1922 decree that
all islands "formed by nature" in the Chattooga River, like the
islands in the Savannah and the Tugaloo, were reserved by the
Treaty to Georgia.
Georgia v. South Carolina, 259 U.S. at
259 U. S. 572.
This reference, Georgia contends, necessarily implies that the
reservation clause in the Treaty includes after-emerging islands,
since man-made islands did not exist in the river in 1787. There is
no indication, however, that the Court knew of this fact in 1922.
No issue of after-emerging islands was even before the Court, and
the decree simply described the river as it then was.
Page 497 U. S. 398
In light of the foregoing, we agree with the Special Master that
islands that emerged after 1787 do not affect the boundary line
between the two States. Georgia's exception with respect to that
issue is overruled.
V
Oyster Bed Island and the Mouth of the River
Oyster Bed Island, which was not in existence in 1787 and which
emerged in the 1870s or 1880s, is one of the most easterly or
downstream islands in the Savannah River. It lies north of Cockspur
Island and southeast of Turtle Island. Both Turtle Island and its
westerly neighbor, Jones Island, are now conceded by the parties to
be in South Carolina. Georgia accepts the Special Master's location
of the boundary between the two States immediately upstream and
west of Oyster Bed as midway between Jones Island and certain
Georgia islands in the river. Ga. Exceptions 38-39.
Georgia complains, however, that west of Oyster Bed, opposite
the southern point of Turtle Island, the Special Master's
recommended boundary departs from the middle of the stream and,
going east, makes an "abrupt jog [to the southeast] to reach the
navigational channel of the river."
Id. at 38. The result
is that Oyster Bed Island is placed in South Carolina, a
consequence, Georgia says, that is contrary to this Court's 1922
ruling in
Georgia v. South Carolina, supra.
Georgia fortifies this argument by asserting that, in the 1870s,
a major navigation channel of the river flowed north of Oyster Bed,
but that the Corps of Engineers blocked this northern channel by a
training wall and later by deposit of hydraulic fill in order to
force the water into the channel south of Oyster Bed. It stresses
that only Georgia has exercised dominion and control over Oyster
Bed and, indeed, ceded it to the United States in 1820.
It seems to us that this portion of the controversy between the
two States centers on the determination of the "mouth" of
Page 497 U. S. 399
the Savannah River, and encounters no inconsistency with what
this Court said in
Georgia v. South Carolina. The Savannah
River's "mouth" was not defined in the Treaty of Beaufort. Georgia
argues that the mouth, as referred to in the Treaty, must be
located in the vicinity of Tybee Island, rather than somewhat
upstream. Tybee lies south and east of Cockspur. We accept that
submission, and regard Tybee as forming the south side of the
river's mouth. Usually, there are two opposing "headlands" marking
and constituting the mouth of a river.
See Knight v. United
States Land Assn., 142 U. S. 161,
142 U. S. 207
(1891) (concurring opinion). This is the "headland-to-headland"
principle used in defining the limits of bays and rivers. 2 A.
Shalowitz, Shore and Sea Boundaries § 141, p. 367 (1964). It
is not always that simple, however. Sometimes the mouth of a river
is difficult to delineate.
See S. Jones, Boundary-Making:
A Handbook 130 (1945). Because of the absence of a reasonably close
headland to the north, Georgia is driven to argue that the boundary
at the mouth of the Savannah River must be the geographical middle
between Tybee and the closest points of land in South Carolina,
that is, Daufuskie Island, lying north and northeastward of Turtle
Island, and Hilton Head Island, almost six miles north of
Tybee.
We conclude that this is not a realistic determination of the
Savannah River's mouth, and we agree with the Special Master in
rejecting the argument.
The difficulty lies in the fact that Tybee Island, the most
seaward point of land on the southern side of the river, has no
counterpart of high land on the northern side. The geographical
feature taking the place of the customarily present opposing
headland is, instead, a shoal, long recognized as confining the
river. It is true, of course, that the Corps of Engineers affected
the flow by its training wall and hydraulic fill. But the shoal
which directed that flow has been recognized for many years.
Furthermore, Hilton Head Island and
Page 497 U. S. 400
Daufuskie Island are so far distant that it is impossible to say
that they even touch the Savannah River.
Given this somewhat uncommon type of river mouth, the Special
Master's conclusion that the northern side of the Savannah's mouth
is the underwater shoal is not unreasonable. To accept Georgia's
proposition here would result in having Georgia waters lie directly
seaward of South Carolina's coast and waters.
Georgia's exception with respect to Oyster Bed Island and the
mouth of the Savannah River is overruled.
VI
The "Right-Angle" Principle
This Court in its 1922 decision in
Georgia v. South
Carolina ruled that (1) at any point where there is no island
in the Savannah River, the boundary "is on the water midway between
the main banks of the river when the water is at ordinary stage,"
and (2) where there is an island the boundary "is midway between
the island bank and the South Carolina shore when the water is at
ordinary stage." 257 U.S. at
257 U. S. 523.
This seemingly simple and routine resolution, however, results in a
problem, not decided in the 1922 case, when the midline of the
stream encounters an island and must move northward to qualify as
the line midway between the island bank and the South Carolina
shore. Where and how does this boundary movement to the north take
place? Is it when the midline touches the island, if it does touch
it at all, and does it then move at right angles until it reaches a
point midway between the island bank and the South Carolina shore?
Does it then proceed accordingly until the island is bypassed and
the midline of the stream is to be met and followed, and is a right
angle to be applied there as well?
A line midway between the banks of a river, known as the
medium filum acquae, Shalowitz,
supra, at 374, is
easily established,
Page 497 U. S. 401
for every point of the midline is equidistant from the nearest
points on the opposite shores.
See New Hampshire v. Maine,
426 U. S. 363,
426 U. S. 371
(1976) (dissenting opinion). But, as noted, the ease of
ascertainment disappears when an island and the Treaty of Beaufort
are encountered. Such is the case here, particularly with respect
to the Special Master's treatment of the line around Pennyworth
Island north of the city of Savannah.
This issue clearly was not determined, and perhaps was not even
contemplated, by the framers of the Treaty. What the Special Master
did in the absence of authority -- and we have found none -- was to
use the line midway between an island and the South Carolina shore
(as the parties agree is proper) until the island ended and ceased
to lie opposite the shore. There the boundary was to revert to the
middle of the river. The Master then used a right-angle line
connecting the island-to-bank center line with the bank-to-bank
center line by the shortest distance. South Carolina urges that
this is the most reasonable approach to this unique problem, and
that the Master's recommended device should be adopted.
Georgia's position, also apparently unsupported by decisional
authority,
but see S. Boggs, International Boundaries: A
Study of Boundary Functions and Problems 183 (1966), is that the
use of the right-angle is simply wrong. Instead, Georgia argues,
that, with an island's presence, the boundary is to be marked by
the use of a point which is "triequidistant" from the South
Carolina shore, the island shore, and the Georgia shore. The
boundary then would pass through this point and otherwise be
equidistant from the South Carolina shore and the Georgia shore, or
island, as the case may be.
See Ga. Exceptions 50-51.
We think that Georgia has the better of this argument. Its
submission, it seems to us, is sensible, is less artificial than
other lines, is fair to both States, and is generally in line with
what was said in
Georgia v. South Carolina.
Page 497 U. S. 402
Georgia's exception to the right-angle principle used by the
Special Master is therefore sustained, and Georgia's approach, not
that of the right-angle, is to be utilized wherever this fact
situation is encountered in the stretch of the Savannah River under
consideration.
VII
Southeastern Denwill and Horseshoe Shoal
Elba Island is downstream from the city of Savannah, and
upstream from Jones and Oyster Bed Islands. Denwill is a plantation
on the South Carolina side of the river; it is opposite Elba, but
extends eastward beyond that island. Horseshoe Shoal is slightly
downstream from there.
See App. D of 2 Rep.
Prior to the performance of work in the area by the Corps of
Engineers, the navigation channel north of Elba was a broad expanse
which, in the Corps' estimation, was excessively wide. In the
1880s, the Corps undertook to improve the navigation channel by
restricting the river's width. This was effected by the
construction of a training wall north of Elba Island during
1891-1895, by sedimentation that took place, and by deposits of
dredge material behind the wall. Land in the area of southeastern
Denwill formed initially as marsh islands adjacent to the wall, and
then grew to be connected to the South Carolina shore.
Similar changes took place at Horseshoe Shoal, an area that now
connects Jones Island and Oyster Bed Island.
The Special Master recommended that the additions to Denwill and
Horseshoe Shoal be awarded to Georgia. South Carolina takes
exception to this. Referring to App. D of 2 Rep., South Carolina
asserts: "Approximately 1 mile of riverfront land on the South
Carolina side of the river would be placed in Georgia." S.C.
Exceptions 6. It emphasizes that the additions to Denwill took more
than 40 years to form, that is, between the time the first
diversion wing-dam
Page 497 U. S. 403
structures were built and 1924, when the old bed appeared above
water.
Id. at 7. The training wall, two miles long, was
permeable, and permitted sedimentation behind it before the
dredging and filling occurred. South Carolina observes that the
Special Master nowhere specifically states that the process in fact
was avulsive, but it asserts, pointing to several references by the
Master to avulsive procedures, that "it is clear that he considered
the process to be avulsive."
Id. at 9. South Carolina also
notes that all those activities worked to the benefit of the city
of Savannah, and that "Georgia's port was the only beneficiary of
the dredging." Brief in Rebuttal for South Carolina 5.
Georgia, in its turn, notes the Corps' relocation of the
northern bank of the river at southeastern Denwill over a half mile
south of its original location.
See App. C of 1 Rep. It
asserts that the land in dispute did not form as gradual accretion
from the South Carolina shore toward the river, but instead rose in
the river immediately behind the training wall and was the result
of the construction of the wall and the deposit of dredge spoil
behind it.
South Carolina's exception as to Horseshoe Shoal is like its
Denwill exception. It asserts that, as was the case with Denwill,
training works and dredging by the Corps led to sedimentation and
filling. As a result, the Shoal is now a long isthmus of high
ground connecting Jones Island and Oyster Bed Island. It was formed
"in the same way, and over a comparable period, as the additional
land on Denwill." S.C. Exceptions 13-14. The major training work in
this area, too, was between 1890 and 1894. Wing-dams were placed
and then hydraulic fill. But "even before large-scale dredging and
filling began, the area was close to becoming a dry elevation
solely as a result of the 30 years of sedimentation caused by
training works."
Id. at 14-15.
General rules concerning the formation of riparian land are well
developed, and are simply expressed and well accepted.
Page 497 U. S. 404
When the bed is changed by the natural and gradual processes
known as erosion and accretion, the boundary follows the varying
course of the stream. But if the stream leaves its old bed and
forms a new one by the process known as avulsion, the result works
no change of boundary.
Arkansas v. Tennessee, 246 U.
S. 158,
246 U. S. 173
(1918). Sometimes, the problem is to distinguish between the
two.
Here we have a situation where interference in the river's flow
was not caused by either of the adjoining States, but by the United
States Corps of Engineers. It is generally held, of course, that
one cannot extend one's own property into the water by landfilling
or purposefully causing accretion.
See, e.g., Seacoast Real
Estate Co. v. American Timber Co., 92 N.J.Eq. 219, 221, 113 A.
489, 490 (1920).
We conclude, not without some difficulty, that Georgia has the
better of the argument as to these two areas. It is true, of
course, that avulsive action ordinarily calls to mind something
somewhat sudden or, at least, of short duration, whereas accretion
has as its essence the gradual deposit of material over a period by
action of water flow. This is so even though it may have been
caused partly or wholly by placed obstructions.
See County of
St. Clair v. Lovingston, 23 Wall. 46 (1874).
Some of the changes here were caused gradually by the deposit of
sediment by river waters. Others were caused by the deposit of fill
through the use of a hydraulic-pipeline dredge employed by the
Corps pursuant to the paramount right of the United States
Government to improve navigation.
See South Carolina v.
Georgia, supra. The rapidity of some aspects of the dredging
and other processes led the Special Master to conclude that the
changes in the Savannah River were primarily avulsive in nature.
Although the question is close, on balance, we think this
particular record as to this particular river supports the
recommendation made by the Master. We therefore overrule
Page 497 U. S. 405
South Carolina's exceptions as to southeastern Denwill and
Horseshoe Shoal.
VIII
Addition to Bird Island
Bird Island, as described by South Carolina, "is now part of an
elongated island several miles long, in the middle of the river
across from Jones Island." S.C. Exceptions 16. It has merged with
Long Island.
See Apps. C and D of 2 Rep. South Carolina
initially took exception to the Special Master's conclusion that a
sliver of land on Bird Island was in Georgia rather than in South
Carolina. The latter State's position was that, in line with its
accretion argument with respect to Denwill and Horseshoe Shoal, the
boundary for like reasons should run through part of Bird Island.
S.C. Exceptions 17.
The Special Master's Second Report, on Georgia's motion,
clarified any confusion that may have existed with respect to Bird
Island. His recommended boundary line is now carefully described as
passing north of the island, so that Bird Island in its entirety
would be in Georgia.
See App. D of 2 Rep., modifying App.
F of 1 Rep. And South Carolina "responded by essentially agreeing."
2 Rep. 19. This serves to eliminate the dispute over the island,
and South Carolina's exception, initially made, is overruled.
IX
The Lateral Seaward Boundary.
Each side has noted an exception to the Special Master's
recommendation concerning the lateral seaward boundary between the
States. What the Master has done here begins with his resolution of
the issue concerning the river's mouth, a recommendation we have
approved in Part V hereof. He accepted, as do we, that Tybee Island
is to be regarded as the "headland" for the south side of the mouth
of the Savannah River, and that the long-existing shoal forms the
north side of the mouth.
Page 497 U. S. 406
A seemingly complicating factor is that the Georgia coast and
the South Carolina coast, where they meet at the river, do not run
at exactly the same angle from due north. While each extends
southwest-northeast, Georgia's coast is roughly 20 degrees from
north-south and South Carolina's roughly 47 degrees. Thus, lines
drawn perpendicularly from each coast overlap off the coast, and
overlap more as the distance from the shoreline increases. This
wedge-shaped overlap is the primary focus of the two States'
respective exceptions.
The Master's recommended line continues down the river's mouth
until it intersects a line, from Tybee Island's most northern point
to Hilton Head Island's most southern point, where it then proceeds
out to sea perpendicularly to that line.
South Carolina claims that the described overlap is the only
area reasonably in dispute, but that the Master's line runs at an
angle about six degrees north of the most favorable line Georgia
could expect to receive,
i.e., a line perpendicular to
Georgia's coast. Thus, says South Carolina, the Master's line is
wholly outside the area of overlap. South Carolina urges that the
area of overlap be split "more or less equally." S.C. Exceptions
22.
Georgia's exception "relates only to the starting point of the
proposed lateral seaward boundary." Reply Brief for Georgia 17. It
submits that "the geographic middle of the mouth of the Savannah
River should be used as the starting point of the maritime
boundary,"
ibid., but that if this argument fails, the
boundary as recommended by the Master should be upheld.
The Master observed that neither Georgia's Charter of 1732 nor
the 1787 Treaty of Beaufort made any reference to the lateral
seaward boundary between the States. 2 Rep. 1. He noted that, in
1969, the States reached a tentative agreement upon a boundary
projecting due east from the mouth of the river, but that this
agreement was not ratified by Congress, and never was effective.
Id. at 2. The two States have entered into a stipulation,
approved by the Solicitor
Page 497 U. S. 407
General of the United States, whereby they agree that no
interest of the United States is affected by this Court's ultimate
determination as to the location of the lateral seaward boundary
between the States. The Master accordingly concluded that the
Federal Government was not a necessary party.
Id. at 3. He
then proceeded to apply principles of international law, citing
Wisconsin v. Michigan, 295 U. S. 455
(1935), and
Texas v. Louisiana, 426 U.
S. 465 (1976).
The Master reviewed the States' respective contentions. He noted
that Georgia cited the 1958 Geneva Convention on the Territorial
Sea and the Contiguous Zone, 15 U.S.T. 1607, and particularly the
first paragraph of Article 12 thereof,
id. at 1610, which
recites that neither of two adjacent states is entitled "to extend
its territorial sea beyond the median line every point of which is
equidistant from the nearest points on the baselines." The Baseline
Committee, operating in the 1970s, drew its line between Hilton
Head Island and Tybee Island. The Master noted that he had
determined the mouth of the river to be only approximately a mile
north of the southern end of the baseline at Tybee Island.
Nevertheless, in drawing the lateral seaward boundary, the Master
felt controlled by international law.
"[T]herefore, it does not follow that the starting point of the
lateral seaward boundary must merely be an extension of the land
boundary between the states, although such a factor must be
considered as highly persuasive."
2 Rep. 5. Georgia's claimed starting point for the lateral
seaward boundary was at a point halfway between Hilton Head Island
and Tybee Island, and thus about two miles north of where the land
boundary met the baseline.
The Special Master noted that South Carolina contended that the
boundary line must start at the point where the inland boundary, if
extended, intersected the baseline. This would result in the
boundary's being delimited seaward in a southeasterly direction
running substantially parallel to the channel providing the
entrance to the river. The Master
Page 497 U. S. 408
then turned to the "equidistant principle" referred to in
Texas v. Louisiana, supra. He observed, however, that,
while the equidistant principle "may be a slightly preferred method
of delimitation, it does not reach the stature of a rule of law." 2
Rep. 16. Instead, "it is the principles of equity which should
guide the conclusion in each particular case."
Ibid.
The Special Master recommended that the lateral seaward boundary
between the two States be along a line drawn at right-angles to the
baseline beginning at a point marked "X" on App. A to 2 Rep. until
that line reached the outer limit of the territorial sea as that
outer limit existed on December 27, 1988. [
Footnote 6] He felt that this was a proper utilization
of equitable principles. 2 Rep. 18. He further recommended that
Georgia and South Carolina "be required to suitably mark the
lateral seaward boundary in the water area at the joint expense of
the two states."
Ibid.
We adopt the recommendation of the Special Master as to the
lateral seaward boundary between South Carolina and Georgia. We
conclude that it gives equitable balance and recognition to the
so-called equidistant principle and to the inland boundary between
the two States, and does so with the least possible offense to any
claimed parallel between offshore territory and the coast itself.
The States' respective exceptions as to the lateral seaward
boundary are overruled.
Page 497 U. S. 409
X
In summary:
1. Each exception advanced by South Carolina is overruled.
2. Georgia's exception to the Special Master's use of the
right-angle principle, discussed in Part VI hereof, is
sustained.
3. Each other exception advanced by Georgia is overruled.
4. Each recommendation made by the Special Master in his two
Reports, and as to which no exception has been taken, is adopted
(subject to the reservation expressed in n. 7,
infra,).
5. Each recommendation made by the Special Master, and as to
which an exception has been advanced but overruled, is adopted.
[
Footnote 7]
The parties are directed promptly to prepare an appropriate
proposed decree in line with these conclusions. Because the Special
Master has been discharged,
see 493 U.S. 1053 (1990), the
proposed decree shall be submitted directly to this Court for its
review and consideration. The Court assumes that the parties will
be able to agree upon the form
Page 497 U. S. 410
of the decree. If they are unable to agree, each State shall
submit to the Court its own formulation with any supportive comment
deemed necessary. The Court will then draft the decree and enter
it.
No costs are allowed.
The Court retains jurisdiction to entertain such further
proceedings as from time to time may be necessary or advisable to
effectuate the forthcoming decree and the rights of the respective
parties.
It is so ordered.
* All Members of the Court join in Parts I, II, III, and VIII of
the opinion. Part IV is joined by all except THE CHIEF JUSTICE and
Justice KENNEDY. Part V is joined by all, except that THE CHIEF
JUSTICE and Justice KENNEDY do not join a portion of that Part.
Part VI is joined by all except Justice WHITE and Justice MARSHALL.
Part VII is joined by all except Justice SCALIA and Justice
KENNEDY. Part IX is joined by all except Justice STEVENS and
Justice SCALIA.
[
Footnote 1]
The first two Articles of the Treaty read:
"
Article the first."
"The most northern branch or stream of the river Savannah from
the sea or mouth of such stream to the fork or confluence of the
rivers now called Tugoloo and Keowee, and from thence the most
northern branch or stream of the said river Tugoloo till it
intersects the northern boundary line of South Carolina if the said
branch or stream of Tugoloo extends so far north, reserving all the
islands in the said rivers Savannah and Tugoloo to Georgia; but if
the head spring or source of any branch or stream of the said river
Tugoloo does not extend to the north boundary line of South
Carolina, then a west line to the Mississippi, to be drawn from the
head spring or source of the said branch or stream of Tugoloo river
which extends to the highest northern latitude -- shall forever
hereafter form the separation limit and boundary between the States
of South Carolina and Georgia."
"
Article the second"
"The navigation of the river Savannah at and from the bar, and
mouth, along the north east side of Cockspur Island and up the
direct course of the main northern channel, along the northern side
of Hutchinson's Island, opposite the town of Savannah to the upper
end of the said island, and from thence up the bed, or principal
stream of the said river, to the confluence of the rivers Tugoloo
and Keowee, and from the confluence up the channel of the most
northern stream of Tugoloo river to its source and back again by
the same channel to the Atlantic ocean: Is hereby declared to be
henceforth equally free to the citizens of both States, and exempt
from all duties, tolls, hindrance, interruption or molestation
whatsoever, attempted to be enforced by one State on the citizens
of the other, and all the rest of the river Savannah to the
southward of the foregoing description is acknowledged to be the
exclusive right of the State of Georgia."
It is to be noted that the Treaty did not state whether the
boundary was the middle of the northern branch or stream of the
Savannah River, or whether it was on the South Carolina bank, or
whether the bed was held jointly.
[
Footnote 2]
The 1798 Constitution of Georgia reflected the same theme. It
provided:
"The limits, boundaries, jurisdictions, and authority of the
State of Georgia do, and did, and of right ought to, extend from
the sea or mouth of the river Savannah, along the northern branch
or stream thereof, to the fork or confluence of the rivers now
called Tugalo and Keowee, . . . reserving all the islands in said
rivers Savannah and Tugalo to Georgia. . . ."
Art. I, § 23.
See Document No. 357, The Federal
and State Constitutions, Colonial Charters, and Other Organic Laws,
59th Cong., 2d Sess., vol. 2, p. 794 ( 1909).
Georgia's present Constitution of 1983, as amended, contains no
provision relating to the State's boundaries. Georgia statutes,
however, provide:
"The boundaries of Georgia, as deduced from the Constitution of
Georgia, the Convention of Beaufort, the Articles of Cession and
Agreement with the United States of America entered into on April
24, 1802, the Resolution of the General Assembly dated December 8,
1826, and the adjudications and compromises affecting Alabama and
Florida, are as follows:"
"From the sea, or the mouth of the River Savannah, along the
stream thereof to the fork or confluence made by the Rivers Keowee
and Tugalo, and thence along said River Tugalo until the fork or
confluence made by said Tugalo and the River Chattooga, and up and
along the same to the point where it touches the northern boundary
line of South Carolina, and the southern boundary line of North
Carolina, which is at a point on the thirty-fifth parallel of north
latitude, reserving all the islands in said Rivers Savannah,
Tugalo, and Chattooga, to Georgia. . . ."
Ga.Code Ann. § 50-2-1 (1986).
"The boundary between Georgia and South Carolina shall be the
line described as running from the mouth of the River Savannah, up
said river and the Rivers Tugalo and Chattooga, to the point where
the last-named river intersects with the thirty-fifth parallel of
north latitude, conforming as much as possible to the line agreed
on by the commissioners of said states at Beaufort on April 28,
1787."
§ 50-2-2.
Similarly, South Carolina's present Constitution of 1895, as
amended, has no provision as to that State's boundaries. The State
has a statute which reads:
"From the State of Georgia, this State is divided by the
Savannah River, from its entrance into the ocean to the confluence
of the Toogaloo and Seneca Rivers; thence up the Toogaloo River to
the confluence of the Tallulah and the Chattooga Rivers; thence up
the Chattooga River to the 35th parallel of north latitude, which
is the boundary of North Carolina, the line being midway between
the banks of said respective rivers when the water is at ordinary
stage. And when the rivers are broken by islands of natural
formation which, under the treaty of Beaufort, are reserved to the
state of Georgia, the line is midway between the island banks and
the South Carolina banks when the water is at ordinary stage."
S.C.Code § 1-1-10 (1986).
[
Footnote 3]
The relevant provisions of the 1922 decree read:
"1st. Where there are no islands in the boundary rivers, the
location of the line between the two States is on the water midway
between the main banks of the river when water is at ordinary
stage;"
"2nd. Where there are islands, the line is midway between the
island bank and the South Carolina shore when the water is at
ordinary stage;"
"3rd. That all islands formed by nature in the Chattooga river
are reserved to Georgia as completely as are those in the Savannah
and Tugaloo rivers."
[
Footnote 4]
It also seems to us, for what it may be worth, that there is no
qualitative difference in the type of proof offered by South
Carolina for Rabbit Island and the rest of the Barnwell cluster.
The islands were granted together, often conveyed together, and
taxed in the same manner. Rabbit and Hog were both diked and
cultivated for rice. Yet Georgia has not pursued its claim to
Rabbit Island.
[
Footnote 5]
Some of the Barnwell Islands also may have emerged after the
Treaty, but our conclusion that they belong to South Carolina by
prescription,
see Part III,
supra, makes the time
of their emergence immaterial.
[
Footnote 6]
This date is utilized because, on December 27, 1988, the
President issued a Proclamation that the territorial sea of the
United States thenceforth extended to 12 nautical miles.
See Proclamation 5928, 54 Fed.Reg. 777 (filed Jan. 6,
1989). The Special Master specifically concluded his determination
of the lateral seaward boundary at the outer limit of the
theretofore existing 3-mile territorial sea. He felt that there
were legal problems confronting the coastal States with respect to
the extended portion of the territorial sea and, further, that
consideration of an extended boundary line would exceed this
Court's reference to him. 2 Rep. 27-28.
[
Footnote 7]
One might suggest, perhaps, that the Special Master in his
Second Report assumed that the United States had utilized "straight
baselines" in constructing the coast near the mouth of the Savannah
River.
See 2 Rep. 12-14. Such baseline use would have been
authorized by Article 4 of the Convention on the Territorial Sea
and the Contiguous Zone, 15 U.S.T. 1606, 1608 (1958). Article 4,
however, provides this only as an option. We are not aware of any
instance where that provision has been employed in the
determination of the United States coastline.
See e.g., United
States v. California, 381 U. S. 139,
381 U. S.
167-169 (1965);
United States v. Louisiana
(Louisiana Boundary Case), 394 U. S. 11,
394 U. S. 68-73
(1969);
United States v. Louisiana (Alabama and Mississippi
Boundary Case), 470 U. S. 93,
470 U. S. 99
(1985). If the Special Master in fact made the assumption, we
refrain from adopting that portion of his discussion. The
assumption is not necessary for a decision in the present
litigation, and we leave the question of its propriety for another
day.
Justice WHITE, with whom Justice MARSHALL joins, dissenting in
part.
I join all but Part VI of the Court's opinion. In that Part, the
Court sustains Georgia's exception to the Special Master's use of
the "right angle" principle to delimit the boundary between the two
States where there is an island in the river belonging to Georgia.
Where this is the case, the boundary line is not a line equidistant
from the mainland shores of the two States, as it otherwise would
be, but a line equidistant from the island bank and the South
Carolina shore. In particular dispute is Pennyworth Island, an
island belonging to Georgia just north of the city of Savannah and
in existence when the Treaty of Beaufort was signed. The Special
Master recommends that the boundary at Pennyworth be the
island-South Carolina shore center line only so long as some part
of Pennyworth is opposite the shore, but when that is not the case,
the boundary reverts, at right angles to the shore-to-shore center
line.
This is an eminently reasonable approach, it seems to me.
Furthermore, it is faithful to the Court's decision in 1922. There
the Court ruled as follows:
"(1) Where there are no islands in the boundary rivers, the
location of the line between the two States is on the water midway
between the main banks of the river when the water is at
ordinary
Page 497 U. S. 411
stage; (2) Where there are islands, the line is midway between
the island bank and the South Carolina shore when the water is at
ordinary stage. . . ."
Georgia v. South Carolina, 257 U.
S. 516,
257 U. S. 523
(1922). Thus, the boundary line at any point is determined by
reference to just two banks, either the two main banks or the
island and South Carolina banks. This cannot be carried out by any
method other than the Master's right angle approach.
Georgia's approach, which the Court adopts, would deviate from
the main bank-to-bank center line far short of where any part of
the island is opposite the South Carolina shore. This point, it is
said, is a point "triequidistant" from the South Carolina shore,
the island shore and the Georgia shore -- thus referring to three
banks rather than two. It is true that, from that point onward, the
boundary line as it circumscribes the island would at any point be
equidistant from the island and South Carolina banks, but the point
at which the shore-to-shore center line ceases to be the boundary
at either end of the island requires reference to the two mainlands
and the island. Using Georgia's approach, the boundary is no longer
exclusively determined by either the two mainlands or the island
and the South Carolina banks.
Georgia complains that the Master had no authority for his
position, but he did his best to follow the 1922 decision, noting
that, in that case, Georgia pressed the position that it now urges
-- that when the island-South Carolina bank center line passes the
ends of the island it "deflects" and continues until at some point
it meets the center line between the two main banks. The Court, as
the Master noted, did not endorse this position, for it made no
mention of "deflection." Rather, as I have said, it defined the
boundary everywhere with reference either to the two main banks or
the island-South Carolina banks.
Furthermore, the Master was convinced that Georgia's position
would unfairly deprive South Carolina of the ownership of some
riverbed that does not lie between the island and the South
Carolina shore. The Court concedes that there is no precedent for
Georgia's position, fails to give any deference to the Master's
view of what is a "fair" resolution of the issue,
Page 497 U. S. 412
and, as I see it, misreads
Georgia v. South Carolina,
supra. With all due respect, I dissent.
Justice STEVENS, with whom Justice SCALIA joins, dissenting in
part.
With respect to Part IX of the Court's opinion, I would sustain
South Carolina's exception to the Special Master's determination of
the angle of the lateral seaward boundary. I am persuaded that a
boundary drawn in reference to the full coastlines of the
respective States, rather than one drawn perpendicular to the line
connecting Hilton Head and Tybee Islands, is more equitable and
consistent with the equidistant principle of
Texas v.
Louisiana, 426 U. S. 465
(1976).* The
Page 497 U. S. 413
difference between this boundary and that recommended by the
Special Master becomes particularly clear if one assumes that the
boundary line would not change angles when it crosses the outer
limits of the 3-mile and 12-mile territorial seas.
* South Carolina's coast runs northeast to southwest at
approximately a 47 degree angle, and Georgia's at a 20-degree
angle.
Ante at 27. Lines perpendicular to these coastal
fronts, at approximately 137 degrees and 110 degrees, respectively,
define the overlapping area in the illustrations on the next page
[omitted in computer version]. The Hilton Head-to-Tybee closing
line lies at a 14-degree angle. S.C. Rebuttal Brief 8. The Special
Master and the Court set the boundary east of this closing line at
an angle perpendicular to it, at the azimuth 104 degrees,
completely outside of the overlap of the States' coastal
fronts:
[graphic omitted]
I would extend the boundary eastward from the same starting
point, but at an angle perpendicular to the average angle of the
States' coastal fronts. Assuming that the above-reported measures
of the coastal fronts are correct, the azimuth of this boundary
would be approximately 123 1/2 degrees:
[graphic omitted]
Justice SCALIA, with whom Justice KENNEDY joins, dissenting in
part.
I would sustain South Carolina's exceptions with respect to
southeastern Denwill and Horseshoe Shoal, and I accordingly dissent
from Part VII of the Court's opinion. The Court does not purport to
alter settled principles of law regarding accretion and avulsion
but, applying those principles to the specifics of this record and
acknowledging the question to be close, approves the determination
of the Master. In my view, the facts do not support the Court's
holding.
Justice KENNEDY, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE joins, dissenting
in part.
Georgia's fourth exception concerns the islands in the Savannah
River that came into existence after the States signed the Treaty
of Beaufort in 1787. Agreeing with the Special Master, the Court
finds these islands in South Carolina if they emerged on a portion
of the river bed belonging to
Page 497 U. S. 414
South Carolina. Georgia contends that all islands formed by
natural processes lie within its territory unless South Carolina
has acquired them through prescription. I would sustain Georgia's
fourth exception, and I therefore dissent from Part IV of the
Court's opinion and that portion of Part V concerning Oyster Bed
Island.
The Treaty of Beaufort, in pertinent part, provides:
"The most northern branch or stream of the river Savannah from
the sea or mouth of such stream to the fork or confluence of the
rivers now called Tugoloo and Keowee, and from thence the most
northern branch or stream of the said river Tugoloo till it
intersects the northern boundary line of South Carolina . . .
reserving all the islands in the said rivers Savannah and
Tugoloo to Georgia . . . shall forever hereafter form the
separation limit and boundary between the States of South Carolina
and Georgia."
Ante at
497 U. S. 381,
n. 1. (Emphasis added.) Georgia reasons that the clause reserving
all islands to Georgia gives it sovereignty over all islands
regardless of when or where they emerged. South Carolina maintains
that the treaty placed the islands existing in 1787 in Georgia, and
then vested the rights of the two States with respect to the river
beds. It contends that, under ordinary principles of property law,
it has jurisdiction over any island that arose from its portion of
the river bed after that time.
See St. Louis v. Rutz,
138 U. S. 226, 247
(1891). I agree with Georgia.
South Carolina's view would render superfluous the clause
"reserving all islands" to Georgia. The clause cannot give Georgia
only the islands existing in 1787 because the treaty would give
these islands to Georgia even in the absence of the clause. South
Carolina lies to the north of Georgia. As a result, wherever the
Savannah River contains islands, its northernmost streams flow
between the islands and the South Carolina shore. All islands
existing in 1787, therefore, lay on Georgia's side of the dividing
line, and would belong to Georgia even if the treaty said nothing
about islands.
Page 497 U. S. 415
This is the principle of our decision in
Georgia v. South
Carolina, 257 U. S. 516
(1922). We ruled there that "the location of the boundary line
where the most northern branch or stream' flows between an
island or islands and the South Carolina shore" is midway "between
the island bank on the one side and the South Carolina bank on the
other." Id. at 521-522. Consistent with this earlier
holding, by interpreting the island reservation clause to address
all islands
Page 497 U. S. 416
regardless of when or where they arose, Georgia's view gives
effect to the language of the treaty.
Georgia's rule also seems in keeping with what I think that the
parties to such a treaty must have intended. When two States define
their boundary according to a river, they may expect natural
processes such as erosion and accretion to alter their borders.
Louisiana v. Mississippi, 466 U. S.
96, 100 (1984);
Arkansas v. Tennessee,
246 U. S. 158, 173
(1918). South Carolina takes the position that, although the
boundary between the States moves when accretion and erosion change
the river banks, the boundary does not change when these processes
produce or alter an island within the river. Because the treaty
defines the dividing line according to the most northern stream of
the river, I do not think that those who signed it contemplated
this uneven result.
Georgia's position, in addition, comports better with our 1922
interpretation of the Treaty of Beaufort. In ruling on the status
of islands in the Chattooga River (
i.e., the most
northerly branch of the Tugaloo River), our decree states that all
of the islands belong to Georgia.
See Georgia v. South
Carolina, 259 U. S. 572
(1922). We saw no need, at that time, to distinguish islands that
arose after 1787 from any other islands.
See ibid.
(distinguishing only those islands "formed by nature" from other
islands). Even though we did not need to pass on the specific issue
in this case in 1922, we should give some weight to the language of
our previous order to avoid upsetting settled expectations.
The result advocated by Georgia seems quite reasonable. It has
the benefit of simplicity because, so long as all islands belong to
Georgia, one may discern the boundaries between the two States
without knowing when the islands arose, how much they have eroded,
or where the middlepoint of the river lay at the time of their
emergence. Although the rule will favor Georgia in some instances,
at other times it may work to the benefit of South Carolina. As
Georgia explains in its brief:
"Either state stands to lose riverbed as a result of natural
changes in the river; likewise, each state has the potential of
acquiring additional riverbed as a result of accretion and erosion.
For example, if an island existed in 1787 but was subsequently
eliminated by gradual erosion, the boundary would be moved to the
advantage of South Carolina, and the riverbed previously owned by
Georgia would then be owned by South Carolina."
Ga. Exceptions 56 (footnote omitted). For these reasons, I would
sustain Georgia's fourth exception.
Several consequences follow from my view. First, Oyster Bed
Island would lie within Georgia's territory, and the boundary would
run north of the location adopted by the Court at this point in the
river.
See First Report of Special Master 88, n. 68
(noting that, if the treaty does place all islands in Georgia,
"then the boundary line would definitely be north of Oyster Bed
Island, and the Special Master is in error"). This conclusion
prevents me from joining Part V of the Court's opinion on this
question.
Second, the small unnamed islands upstream and downstream from
Pennyworth Island would belong to Georgia. My conclusion with
respect to these islands prevents me from joining Part IV of the
Court's opinion.
Third, my interpretation of the treaty also implies that the
Barnwell Islands which emerged after 1787 at one time belonged to
Georgia. I agree with the Court, however, that Georgia lost these
islands to South Carolina by prescription. I thus dissent in
part.