delivered the opinion of the court.
This is аn appeal from a deo'ree of the Circuit Court of the, United States.for the seventh circuit and.district of Indiana. The complainants in the Circuit-Court, the appellants here, filed their
As early as the 12th of October* 1802, little moré than three months'after-the conveyance from G-wathney to the trusteés'.of. Jeffersonville, a'license was.granted by the.territorial government of Indiana tó' Mafstori G. Clarke, one of the persotis named as trustees of the town, to keep a ferry, across the Ohio river from--the town above mentioned. On the 2d day of July, 1807, a • sirnilar license was granted by. the‘same government' tó one Joseph Bowman. In the month of December, 1822* one George White, having* previously purchased the interest of Clarke, and of others claiming under: Clarke, the legislature of the state of Indiana' passed an act confirming to him the right to keep a ferry from Jeffersonville to the opposite shore of the Ohio.
These acts of the territorial and state governments were public and notorious; were parts of the recorded history of the country; the rights théy purported to convey were such as could not be secretly enjoyed, and they appear-to have been uninterruptedly exercised by the grantees. The three'several ferries granted have been united, and have been transferred by purchase to the-defendant, Wathen, conjointly with others^ who are non-residents of the state of Indiana; -and these purchasers, dеriving title from the original grantee^ have, from the commencement of their interest, exercised an ownership separately from, and independently of, either Bowman or the complainants, and exempt from, any asser-. tion of title by any of them, until the.institution of this suit; showing an use and enjoyment of this ferry, for. the space of thirty-eight years'from the date of the grant to Clarke, and of twenty years from the confirmation by the legislature of the license to White..
The complainants, alleging that the Mayor and Common Couri- . cil of Jeffersonville, as successors of the original trustees of the
The answer of the defendant, Wathen, repels the claim of the complainants to the ferry, as having any foundation on the alleged reservatiоn in the deed from Gwathney, or on any exception out of the estate passed to the grantees by that deed; relies upon the validity of the grants' made by the territorial and state governments ; upon the íong and uninterrupted use and enjoyment of the ferry under those grants, and .upon the position of the defend- • ants as a purchaser without notice.
The corporation of Jeffersonville-deny that they were created a corporation by the deed from Gwathney, or that they are the successors of the trustees appointed by that deed; and they claim their corporate character and powers from the authority of the legislature alone; they deny any riparian or ferry privileges-as -belonging to the complainants in virtue of the deed from Gwathney, and disclaim any part in the controversy between the complainants and Wathen..
Upon the hearing, the Circuit Court dismissed the bill with •costs.
In the examination of this cause by the Circuit Court, and in its discussion here, an extensive-range of inquiry has been opened, embracing questions upon the opеration of that clause in the.deed from Gwathney to the trustees of 'Jeffersonville, which relates to the ferry-rights claimed-, as forming either a reservation or an exception according to the principles of the common law, and as affected, therefore, by the presence or absence of words of perpetuity : also upon the connection of these rights with, and their dependence upon, riparian ownership, and upon the necessity for their separation from the sovereign or eminent domain, to permit of their exercise by private persons. These are topics, however, which this court regard
as
beside the real, merits of .the present controversy, or as, superseded by the true principles upon which it ought to be settled. The real question involved touches neither the definition-of ferry privileges. nor the modes of their enjoy
This doctrine of an equitable bar by lapse of time, so distinctly announced by the chancellors of England arid Ireland, has been ruled with equal force by this tribunal in the cases of Prevost v. Gratz,
Can the pretensions of these complainants bear examination by the standard which this rule ordains? The town of Jeffersonville was established, by the. agent óf the original proprietor of the site on which, it stands, in June, 1802. The. first ferry was granted by the territorial government in October, 1802; a period almost coeval with the creatioinof the town itself. This gratit (like :evеry other for a similar purpose mentioned in the record) was. made in no union or connection of interests with the original
It was insisted in the argumeht for the complainants, that Bowman, the ancestor, having remained in Virginia until his death in. 1S26, never had knowledge of an intrusion upon his ferry-rights; and that without suсh knowledge, no presumption on. the score
We 'consider the pretensions of the complainants below, the. appellants here, to be, upon every correct view, within th.e opera
order. ■
■ This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record from the Circuit Court of the United States for the district of Indiana, and was argued by counsel. * On consideration whereof, it is now here ordered and- decreed by this court, that the decree of the said Circuit Court in this cause be and the- same is hereby affirmed, with costs.
