158 P. 662 | Or. | 1916
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff objects to this survey, claiming that the surveyor had no warrant nor authority to depart from the easterly boundary as established by the United States government. He claims that, had the surveyor followed the lines so established, the tract would have contained 262.731 acres. The only question, therefore, to be decided on this appeal, is this: In the resurvey of the tract of land in question, was the surveyor warranted in departing from the original survey to the extent of following the present line of ordinary high water of the river, or should he have
“That said line is drawn on the west bank of said Willamette River at the ordinary high-water mark as it now exists, and that all lands between said present line of the ordinary high-water mark and the original line as established by the United States government is now covered by the river at ordinary high water.”
It is well settled that, on an appeal from a judgment in a law action tried without a jury, we are to determine whether there was any competent evidence to support the findings. The main question is: What is the meaning of that part of the agreement providing for a survey of the property, and that if there be less than a certain number of acres, then the purchase price stated shall be rebated? It is apparent from the contract that this provision was made for a survey of land, and not of the river, or of land submerged by water. It may be said that below ordinary high-water mark land is deprived of its usefulness as land by the action of the water remaining upon it so permanently, and becomes what we all know as .the bed of the river: Paine Lbr. Co. v. United States (C. C.), 55 Fed. 854, 865; Sun Dial Ranch v. May Land Co., 61 Or. 205 (119 Pac. 758). The beach or shore of our rivers is the actual as well as the nominal bed of the river: Hoch,
In surveying fractional portions of public lands bordering on navigable rivers, meander lines are run, not as boundaries of the tract, but for the purpose of determining the sinuosities of the banks of a stream, and as the means of ascertaining the quantity of the land in the fraction, subject to sale, which is to be paid for by the purchaser. In preparing the official plat from the field-notes, the meander line is represented as the border line of the stream, and shows to a demonstration that the watercourse, and not the meander line as actually run on the land, is the boundary: Railroad Co. v. Schurmeier, 7 Wall. 272 (19 L. Ed. 74); 14 Ballard’s Law of Real Property, § 45. This rule has been expressly approved by this court in Minto v. Delaney, 7 Or. 337, 342. See, also, Moore v. Willamette T. & L. Co., 7 Or. 356, 357. It has become a settled rule of law in this state that the stream or other body of water, and not the meander line as actually run on the ground, is the boundary of the riparian owner: Weiss v. Oregon Iron & Steel Co., 13 Or. 496, 497 (11 Pac. 255); Turner v. Parker, 14 Or. 340, 341 (12 Pac. 495); French Livestock Co. v. Springer, 35 Or. 312, 317 (58 Pac. 102); Cawlfield v. Smyth, 69 Or. 41 (138 Pac. 227).
The case at bar involves a contract almost identical with that in question in Sun Dial Ranch v. May Land Co., 61 Or. 205 (119 Pac. 758), where it was held that the point to which the water rises in ordinary seasons of high water forms the boundary of the title of the riparian owner; that is, that the stream, and not the actual meander line as run on the ground, is such
Taking the stipulation as to the survey of the land, its description, and all the contents of the agreement of the parties bearing thereon, it is clear that the surveyor properly followed the exact survey of the United States government in every respect except the river line, and that he properly followed the river boundary of this land along the line of ordinary high water as it now exists, and that this was the agreement of the parties as shown by the contract. There was competent evidence to' support the findings made by the trial court. Section 2990, L. O. L., and the cases cited in plaintiff’s brief, relate to the establishing and relocating of lines which constitute the boundaries of legal subdivisions of public lands, and the re-establishing of government corners, and do not apply to meander lines which are not boundary lines. If plaintiff’s position were correct, then, had there been an accretion, instead of an erosion, defendant could have claimed the benefit of the same under his contract, and the plaintiff could not have collected therefor, if the stipulation had been for the payment of so much an acre. It is well established that accretions always pass by a deed of the original upland owner, unless expressly reserved by the grantor. It does not appear to us that the parties contemplated that the plaintiff
It is practically claimed by plaintiff that, because of the fact that it is possible that the property may be restored or will accrete and belong to the owner, he should collect for the acreage as embraced by the meander line. While it is true that accretion is the right of one owning the land on the border of a stream to the additions imperceptibly made to his land by the action of the water, yet such right would be that of the owner at the time the accretion is made, and not some former owner. The claim of plaintiff is tantamount to an assertion of a right to a gain in this respect after the date of sale, without a chance of loss by erosion. After the conveyance was made, these are matters which affected the grantee in that conveyance. It appears that, when the parties used the word “survey” in paragraph Y, they did it advisedly and with a definite purpose. It is evident that the plaintiff intended to sell, and the defendant to buy, a definte quantity of land at $50 an acre, that both parties knew that the river bank had changed its location, and that an actual survey would be necessary to ascertain the quantum of land.
Finding no error in the record, the judgment of the lower court is affirmed. Affirmed.