163 N.E. 683 | Ill. | 1928
Lead Opinion
Appellant, the Dupue Rod and Gun Club, a corporation, filed its bill in the circuit court of Bureau county to restrain appellees, seven in number, from hunting and fishing on lands claimed by appellant. Upon issue being joined the cause was referred to a master, who recommended that the bill be dismissed for want of equity as to the land covered by the waters of Lake Dupue. Exceptions to the report were overruled, a decree was entered as recommended, and an appeal has been prosecuted to this court.
Appellant claims to be the owner of certain lands and the lessee of other lands in Bureau county, consisting of several hundred acres, used as a private hunting and fishing preserve. On a part of this land is Lake Dupue, which is about three and a half miles long, from twenty-four to fifty rods wide, and is connected with the Illinois river. The bill alleged that appellant was in possession of all of this land, either as owner or lessee, and that the land had been conveyed by the United States to the State of Illinois by a patent under the Swamp Lands act of 1850, and subsequently had been conveyed bymesne conveyances to appellant and its lessors; that appellees had committed numerous acts of trespass on the land by hunting and fishing after repeated warnings from appellant. The prayer was for an injunction against appellees to prevent further trespasses. Appellees by their answer denied the trespasses, and alleged that appellant and its lessors were not the owners of the fee or entitled to the possession of the waters of Lake Dupue or the bed thereof but that the title thereto was in the State of Illinois in trust for the use of the public. Upon the hearing before the master appellant proved its chain of title by a patent from the United States under the Swamp Lands act and mesne conveyances to itself and its lessors. *324 It proved the trespasses and warnings as alleged in the bill. Appellees offered evidence that the lake in a state of nature was navigable at the time Illinois was admitted to the Union. The master found that the lake was navigable at the time Illinois was admitted to the Union; that the bed of the lake belongs to the State in trust for the people; that the patent from the United States was null and void; that the bill should be dismissed as to any part of the land covered by the waters of the lake, and that a permanent injunction should issue as to any and all of the other lands owned or leased by appellant. The decree confirmed the report and dismissed the bill for want of equity.
The questions at issue are as to the ownership of the bed of the lake and the right of appellees to question the title of appellant and its lessors in this proceeding.
When Illinois was admitted to the Union, in 1818, it became vested with the title to the beds of certain navigable lakes and bodies of water within its borders. Whether or not title became so vested depended upon the test of navigability as applied to any particular body of water. Where a lake or pond is not navigable and has never been meandered by the Federal government and the land under the water has been sold or conveyed, the owners are entitled to the exclusive possession thereof. (Wilton v. VanHessen,
On June 22, 1852, the legislature of Illinois passed a statute which provided that all swamp and overflowed lands granted to the State of Illinois by the act of Congress of September 28, 1850, be granted to the counties, respectively, in which the same might lie, for the purpose of reclaiming the same. Section 3 made it the duty of the Auditor of Public Accounts to furnish to each county a full abstract of all the swamp and overflowed lands within the limits of the county. Section 5 made it the duty of the county surveyor to survey all such lands and file with the county a plat thereof. Other sections provided the manner in which the land might be sold by the counties. In 1854 the act of 1852 was amended, by providing that the lists of swamp lands should be sufficient evidence of the title to the lands therein described and should have the same force and effect as patents issued for school lands, and that duly certified copies of such lists should be received in all courts and have the same force and effect as the original lists. (Laws of 1854, p. 14.) *326
The evidence shows a compliance with the act of 1852. The Auditor of Public Accounts furnished to Bureau county a full abstract of all swamp and overflowed lands within its limits as patented to the State from the United States. The county surveyor of Bureau county surveyed the lands as certified and filed a plat thereof with the county. The county then proceeded to sell the lands as provided in the act of 1852, and appellant and its lessors hold title by mesne conveyances from the purchasers at those sales.
It has been held that the determination by the Federal government, by the Secretary of the Interior as head of the land department, that certain lands are swamp or overflowed lands is the determination of a question of fact by a tribunal specially authorized and empowered to determine such fact, and that such determination is conclusive except in a direct attack for fraud or mistake. (State v. New, supra; Bristol v. CarrollCounty,
It is claimed by appellees that the facts in evidence come within the exceptions above stated, for the reason that at the time Illinois was admitted to the Union Lake Dupue was navigable, the title to the bed of the lake vested in the State, and therefore the United States was without authority to issue a patent under the act of 1850 to lands which already belonged to the State. In all of the cases which announce an exception to the rule it appears from the facts that the cases came clearly within some one of the exceptions. Where it becomes the duty of the Secretary of the Interior to determine whether lands are swamp lands or otherwise, such determination, based upon a finding of fact, cannot be attacked except in a direct proceeding on the ground of fraud or mistake. It is very apparent from the evidence in this case that the question as to whether or not Lake Dupue was navigable was a question of fact, depending upon conflicting evidence. The Secretary of the Interior decided that the lake was not navigable, and his decision *328
comes clearly within the rule that it cannot be attacked except directly for fraud or mistake. His classification of this land was sent to the Governor of Illinois, who accepted it, requested a patent, and the patent was issued. The validity of this classification was recognized not only by the Governor, but it was recognized by the legislature by the passage of the act of 1852 giving the land to Bureau county and authorizing the county to sell it. No attack was made on the classification by the State, and it was not within the power of appellees after all these years, in a collateral proceeding, to say that the patent was null and void and that the lake was navigable at the time the State was admitted to the Union. St. LouisSmelting Co. v. Kemp, supra; United States v. Throckmorton,
The decree will be reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to enter a decree as prayed in the bill.
Addendum
The foregoing opinion reported by Mr. Commissioner Partlow is hereby adopted as the opinion of the court, and judgment is entered in accordance therewith.
Reversed and remanded, with directions.