133 Iowa 453 | Iowa | 1906
By Acts 28th General Assembly, chapter 179, the Board of Park Commissioners of Des Moines is vested with jurisdiction and control for park purposes over the Des Moines river and the bed and banks thereof within certain limits which need not here be specifically described. To establish their jurisdiction and right of control, within the provisions of this act, over a portion of the
On the following page is a portion of the plat of Scott & Dean’s addition, and shows block 5 bounded by Walnut street on the north and Pront street, now known and described on the plat as Pirst street, on the east, and extending south'from Walnut street to the line of the alley in the next block east. South of this alley there is no platting of lots abutting upon the river, and Pront or Pirst street is bounded by the river. See Boehler v. Des Moines, 111 Iowa, 417.
Defendant’s claim that their lots extend westward more than one hundred feet beyond the line indicating the western boundary of the lots on the plat and the controversy is over the defendants’ titles to those extensions of their lots. The trial court found that the ownership of defendants was limited to lots having the dimensions indicated on the plat, and established the jurisdiction and right of control of plaintiff over the extensions of these lots claimed by the de
It may be noticed in this connection that by act of Congress of 1870 the Des Moines river has ceased to be in law a navigable stream. The effect of this statute upon defendants’ right of access to the stream has not been discussed in this case' and need not now be considered. We have held, however, that the boundaries of abutting owners have not thereby been extended to the middle of the river, nor, on the other hand, have their rights to accretion been cut off. See Berry v. Hoogendoorn, 133 Iowa, 437 and cases therein cited.
The riparian owner also has the right to accretions to his land gradually added by the action of the stream. Kraut v. Crawford, 18 Iowa, 549; Coulthard v. Stevens, 84 Iowa, 241; Stern v. Fountain, 112 Iowa, 96; Jefferies v. East Omaha Land Co., 134 U. S. 178 (10 Sup. Ct. 518, 33 L. Ed. 872).
Defendants contend that their western boundary, as it was when the plat was originally filed, has been subsequently changed by accretions, so that their lots extend further to the west than at the date of the plat. The evidence does show that these lots have been extended to the westward by filling, but we find no evidence that they have been added to by the action of the water. It is to be remembered in this connection that the title of the riparian owner goes only to high-water mark, and that in order to extend land by accretions the additions by the action of
Some importance is attached in the testimony to certain cottonwood trees growing west of the buildings first erected on defendants’ lots, but it appears that these trees were planted near the shore of the river at the ordinary stage of the water, and not above high-water mark, and that the nature of the trees is such that they will continue to grow, although their roots are submerged for a time each year by high water. We do not regard the existence of these trees as proof that their location was originally above high water. Under the evidence as a whole we are satisfied that the decree of the lower court fixing defendants’ western boundary to correspond with the line representing the western boundary on the plat and giving to defendants the area specified in the plat is correct.
On the whole, we are satisfied of the correctness of the decree of the lower court, and it is affirmed.