111 So. 185 | La. | 1926
The lands over which this controversy arises were once covered by the waters of Cross Lake, Caddo parish, a navigable body of water at the time Louisiana was admitted to the Union. Hence said lands became the property of the state by virtue of her sovereignty when in course of time Cross Lake dried up and the land beneath it became fit for human habitation. State v. Bozeman,
"That all lakes which, by reason of any natural causes whatever, may become dry land over which the surveys of the state may be extended, be, and they are hereby declared to be swamp lands of the same character as those granted to the state by the Acts of Congress approved March 2, 1849, and September 28, 1850."
When the government of the United States finally removed, in 1872, the "Great Raft," which for nearly 100 years had obstructed the flow and navigability of Red river (the history of which is told in State v. Bozeman, supra), the waters of that river and the whole drainage system of that part of the state resumed their former natural course; and thus in time Cross Lake dried up from natural causes (i.e., not by reason of any artificial system of drainage), and the land thus uncovered *849 then became in fact, as well as in law, swamp lands of the same character as those granted to the state by the acts of Congress abovesaid.
Nor do we think that said Act No.
"If, in applying it, we should follow the rules of a nice and fastidious verbal criticism, we should often frustrate the action of the Legislature, without fulfilling the intention of the framers of the Constitution" — quoting from Succession of Lanzetti, 9 La. Ann. 329.
In Atchafalaya Land Co. v. Dibert, Stark Brown Cypress Co.,
"The various levee boards, all organized under similar statutes [Act No.
97 of 1890; Act No.74 of 1892, etc.], and their assigns, acquired such an interest in the lands mentioned in the statutes that (1) the levee boards may at any time demand a conveyance thereof from the proper authorities (State ex rel. *850 Levee Board v. Capdervielle,142 La. 111 ,76 So. 327 ); (2) the assignee of the levee board may enjoin the register of the land office from selling such lands under the general land laws of the state (Atchafalaya Land Co. v. Grace,143 La. 637 ,79 So. 173 ); and (3) such assignee may even cause to have canceled a patent actually issued to a third person for such lands (State ex rel. Levee Board v. Grace,145 La. 962 ,83 So. 206 )."
The reason is that by such grants to the different levee boards, the state intended to and thereby did, withdraw such lands thenceforth from the operation of the general land laws.
And it is clear that, if the lands in controversy are covered by the grant made to the Caddo levee board by Act No.
Now, Act No.
Hence our conclusion is that the injunction herein properly issued.
THOMPSON, J., takes no part.