delivered the opinion of the court.
The State of Tennessee sued Cissna and others in a court of equity of that State, setting up ownership by the State of that portion of the dry lands formerly a part of the bed of the Mississippi River which lay between low-water mark on the Tennessee side and the middle of the river as it .flowed prior to the change in the channel made in the year 1876 by the opening of the Centennial Cut-off; alleging that the defendant Cissna claiming ownership, but having none, and the Muncie Pulp Company acting under him, were cutting and removing timber from a particularly described portion of those lands; and praying for . ah injunction against further -acts of trespass and against the removal of the timber cut, and a recovery of the value of the timber. Cissna pleaded in abatement that the land described in the bill, except a small portion to
The cause was remanded, the pleadings were amended, and the suit remained pending in the trial court, when the State of Arkansas filed its bill in this court against the State of Tennessee to settle the boundary line between these States along that part of the former bed of the Mississippi River which was left dry as a result of the avulsion of 1876, including the portion in dispute in the present-case; this being the same action above mentioned as No. 4,. Original. The pendency of that action was brought by Cissna to the attention of the trial court in the present case, and made the basis of an application for á stay of proceedings until the boundary line between the States should have been fixed and located by this court. This application was overruled and the cause proceeded, with the result that the chancellor made a decree against Cissna on the merits in conformity with the opinion of .the Supreme Court, subject however to an áccóunting with respect to the amount and value of the timber cut and. removed during the pendency of the suit. /Upon appeal to the Supreme Court this decrfce was affirmed, with modifications not necessary to bte mentioned, that
Tt was first argued at the October Term, 1916, when, for reasons stated in
Our jurisdiction is invoked upon the ground that the decision of the state court of last resort was adverse to the federal rights of plaintiff in error in two respects: (I) in overruling his prayer for a stay of proceedings to await the determination of the suit pending in this court to settle the boundary line between the States; and (2) in coming to an erroneous conclusion upon the merits of the question of the proper location of that boundary. Wc need not pass upon the first point, since we arc of the opinion that we have jurisdiction on the second ground, and that the judgment under review must be reversed.
. The record does not show that Cissna specially set up in the state courts any contention that the decision of the merits. turned upon questions of federal law, except as this may appear by inference from the nature of the grounds upon which the decision was rested. But if the Supreme Court of the State treated federal questions as
The opinion of that court (119 Tennessee, 47) shows that it treated the question of jurisdiction presented by the pleas in abatement and the question of the title of the State of Tennessee to the lands in controversy as both dependent upon the location of thé' boundary, because the State claimed the lands as a sovereign under the same treaties and acts of Congress by which its western boundary was defined and established; and the court held that the location of this boundary depended upon the interpretation of the Treaty of 1783 between the United States and Great Britain (8 Stat. 80, 82, Art. II), the act of cession from North Carolina to the United States made in 1790 (1 Stat. 106, c. 6), the Treaty of 1795 between the United States and Spain (8 Stat. 138, 140, Art. IV), the Act of Congress of June 1, 1796, admitting Tennessee into the Union as a State (1 Stat. 491, c. 47), the Louisiana Purchase Treaty of 1803 (8 Stat. 200), and the Act of Congress of June 15, 1836, c. 100, 5 Stat. 50, admitting Arkansas as a State. Upon a consideration of the. Treaty of 1783, which employed the expression “middle of the said River Mississippi” to define the western boundary of the United States, and. interpreting this in view of the use of the same expression in the previous Treaty of 1763 between Great Britain, France, and Spain (3 Jenkinson’s Treaties, 177), and declaring that the treaty with Spain, which provided that the. western boundary of the United. States should be “in the middle of the channel or bed of the. river,” was not only an interpretation of the former treaties, but superseded them, and construing the phrase “middle of the main channel,” employed in the act ad
Since the decision adverse to plaintiff in error turned so clearly and essentially upon questions of federal law, we have jurisdiction to. review the resulting judgment. And as the conclusion reached by the state court upon the question of interpretation is directly opposed to that reached by us in Arkansas v. Tennessee upon a consideration of the same pertinent treaties and acts of Congress, we need only refer to our opinion in that case for a statement of the grounds upon which we hold that the state court erred.
Two additional errors entered into the judgment, so intimately connected with the question of interpretation as to be inseparable from it.
The first of these was a decision to the effect that the question of boundary had been settled by the duly constituted authorities of the two States, by judicial decisions, legislation, long acquiescence, exercise of jurisdiction, and other acts amounting to an agreement or convention defining the limit between the States to be the line midway between the visible banks of the river. Obviously, whether two States of' the Union, either by long acquiescence in a practical location of their common boundary, or by agreement otherwise evidenced, have definitely fixed or changed the limits of their jurisdiction as laid down by the authority of the general Government in treaty or statute, is in its nature a federal question. We have stated briefly, in Arkansas v. Tennessee, the reasons why we are unable to concur with the state court in its decision upon this point.
We conclude, therefore, that the court erred in awarding to the State of Tennessee a recovery of any land or damages for cutting and removing timber from any land lying without the limits of the State as defined in our opinion in Arkansas v. Tennessee, supra, being a line drawn along the middle of the main channel of navigation of the Mississippi River (as distinguished from a line midway between the visible and fixed banks of the stream) as it was at the time when the current ceased to flow therein as a result of the avulsion of 1876, and without regard to changes in the banks or channel that had occurred through the natural and gradual processes of erosion and accretion prior to the avulsion.
It results that the judgment of the state court must be Reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
