In this action to quiet title, the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control (DHEC), the Office of Ocean and Coastal Resource Management (OCRM), and the State of South Carolina (the State) (collectively, Appellants) challenge the Order of the Master-in-Equity (master) holding that Patricia S. Tenney (Respondent) 1 is the fee simple owner of Little Jack Rowe Island (Little Jack Rowe), a 15.45 acre undeveloped island located in Beaufort County. We affirm.
Facts/Procedural Background
This action was precipitated by OCRM’s refusal to process Respondent’s dock permit application without proof of a sovereign’s grant to the property. In 2003, then Attorney General Henry D. McMaster (AG) issued an opinion in response to DHEC’s question of whether it is legal to grant permits for bridges to islands that are presumed to be owned by the State, without a showing of a sovereign’s grant. That opinion stated in accordance with
Coburg, Inc. v. Lesser,
On September 20, 2005, DHEC submitted draft regulations to the Board of Health and Environmental Control (Board)
On June 23, 2006, the General Assembly adopted coastal island regulations promulgated by DHEC. The draft regulation described above was not included in these adopted regulations. Under section 48-39-140 of the South Carolina Code and in volume 23A of the South Carolina Code of Regulations, regulation 30-2-(B)(4), it remained that proof of ownership required only a copy of the deed or other document under which the applicant claimed ownership or authority to build. Nevertheless, on November 10, 2006, DHEC submitted a second public notice informing all interested parties that proof of ownership of undeveloped islands for which an applicant seeks to obtain a dock permit requires the applicant submit proof of a sovereign’s grant, an attorney’s title opinion, and an accompanying abstract of title.
On September 27, 2005, Respondent purchased Little Jack Rowe for $875,000 from Bradbury Dyer, III (Dyer) by way of general warranty deed. The chain of title to Little Jack Rowe dates back to 1865 when the United States government issued a Federal Tax Certificate as a measure to collect delinquent taxes from “insurrectionary districts within the United States.” Little Jack Rowe is a 15.452 acre island located in Bluffton Township, Beaufort County, South Carolina. Before Respondent purchased Little Jack Rowe from Dyer, the island was historically sold as part of Jack Rowe Island. Jack Rowe Island is roughly 53 acres in size and is connected to Little Jack Rowe by a causeway approximately 100 yards in length that can be walked across at high tide. Jack Rowe Island currently has five docks connected to it. Similar to Jack Rowe Island, Little Jack Rowe is bordered on one side by the Cooper River,
2
a deep saltwater tidal river which is part of the
Dyer, the previous owner of the island, held a dock permit approved by OCRM, which expired on May 12, 2005, four months prior to Respondent’s purchase of the island. Respondent planned to build a house on the island, and the only convenient way to access the island is by mooring a boat to a dock. On November 7, 2005, Respondent submitted a critical area permit application to OCRM, seeking to construct a dock from Little Jack Rowe to the Cooper River. On November 29, 2005, OCRM forwarded the application to the AG’s office.
On July 19, 2006, Respondent’s attorney contacted the AG’s office by letter, seeking to discern the AG’s position regarding the dock permit and requesting the AG either approve or deny the application. The AG’s office responded by letter stating that Respondent must produce a sovereign grant covering Little Jack Rowe in order that the office may review the application.
By Complaint dated February 27, 2007, Respondent brought this action to quiet title to Little Jack Rowe, in addition to several other causes of action. Each party submitted Motions for Summary Judgment, and the master denied each of these motions following a hearing, with the exception that the master ordered OCRM to either grant or deny Respondent’s permit application. On March 26, 2008, DHEC issued Respondent a letter denying her permit application.
After trial and oral argument, the master issued an Order granting judgment for the Respondent on the ground that Little Jack Rowe is not a marsh island under Coburg, that Respondent was entitled to quieted title under the forty year statute, S.C.Code Ann. § 15-3-380 (2005), that the Federal Tax Certificate of 1865 represented a sovereign’s grant, and that Respondent qualified for a dock permit under section 48-39-140 of the South Carolina Code and accompanying regulations. This case is before the Court pursuant to Rule 204(b), SCACR.
I. Whether Respondent holds fee simple title to Little Jack Rowe Island.
Standard of Review
This action was commenced as both a quiet title action and a request for declaratory judgment. Typically, an action to remove a cloud on and quiet title to land is one in equity.
Cathcart v. Jennings,
“Declaratory judgment actions are neither legal nor equitable and, therefore, the standard of review depends on the nature of the underlying issues.”
Judy v. Martin,
Analysis
I. Title to Little Jack Rowe Island
Appellants argue the master erred in finding Little Jack Rowe was not subject to a presumption of State ownership, as set forth in
Coburg.
After much consideration, we take this opportunity to overturn the specific holding of
Co-burg
that “[tjitle to islands situate within marshland follows title to the marshland.”
Coburg II,
In
Coburg I,
Lesser received a permit from the South Carolina Coastal Council to construct a walkway and floating dock on marshland that contained two small islands, Glass Island and Small Island.
Coburg I,
In
Coburg II,
this Court found the Lord Proprietors grant upon which Coburg relied did not contain specific language showing the intent to convey land below the high water mark of Wappoo Creek.
Coburg II,
Under the public trust doctrine, the State holds presumptive title to tidal land below the high water mark to be held in trust for the benefit of all people of South Carolina.
McQueen v. S.C. Coastal Council,
The proposition that the public trust doctrine extends to lands above the high water mark first appeared in
Coburg I,
We decide today that neither the facts, nor the holding of
McCullough v. Wall
offer a substantial enough foundation for the principle propounded in
Coburg.
Importantly,
McCullough
involved riparian rights.
McCullough,
4 Rich, at 68, 53 Am.Dec. at 715. This Court has long recognized that riparian property rights differ from the rights of landowners subject to the ebb and flow of tides.
See State v. Pacific Guano Co., 22
S.C. at 79 (“It is a settled principle of the English law that the right of owners of land bounded by the sea or on navigable rivers where the tide ebbs and flows, extends to high water mark.... But grants of land bounded on rivers ... carry the exclusive right and title of the grantee to the centre of the stream”). The brief statement in
Coburg
that title to marsh islands follows title to the surrounding marsh has not been subsequently applied by this States’ courts to quiet title in the State. Instead, our jurisprudence has continued to reflect the longstanding principle that the public trust doctrine extends only up to the land below the high water mark.
See State v. Fain,
The principle that the State is unqualifiedly the presumptive owner of all marsh islands situated in state-owned marsh appears to be unique to South Carolina. In limited instances, some states have found islands to be state-owned
Other grounds by which this Court might narrow the reach of Coburg are similarly flawed. The master in this case found the Coburg principle did not apply to Little Jack Rowe for two reasons: (1) the physical characteristics of the islands differed; and (2) Respondent in this case held a specific title to Little Jack Rowe, whereas in Coburg, there was no evidence of a specific deed or history of record title for the small islands. Although we recognize the master’s effort to reach an equitable solution, in our view, an attempt to limit Coburg, either by physical characteristic or title history, will sacrifice clarity and uniformity for the sake of stare decisis.
The master found Little Jack Rowe was not “situate within marshland” because it is located on the Cooper River. In our view this is a distinction without a difference because both the
Coburg
islands and Little Jack Rowe are bordered by navigable waterways on the Intracoastal Waterway. Therefore, when this Court established the principle that the State is the presumed owner of marsh islands, it did not intend to limit
The master additionally distinguished the islands by size, stating the
Coburg
islands were insubstantial “marsh hummocks,”
3
while Little Jack Rowe is a substantial island of more than fifteen acres.
4
Based on the definition given hammocks by the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources (DNR),
5
both the
Coburg
islands and Little Jack Rowe are considered hammock islands. For clarity, we believe marsh hammocks to be the technical term for “islands situate within marshland,”
Coburg II,
Lastly, the master distinguished the
Coburg
islands by noting those islands lacked a specific deed or history of record title. In
Coburg,
Coburg’s deed description included the two islands; however, the sovereign grant upon which Coburg relied, did not include a specific description of those islands.
Coburg II,
In sum, the jurisprudence of this State is consistent that “[pjresumption of title to marshland rests in the State of South Carolina, to be held in trust for the benefit of the public.”
Coburg I,
CONCLUSION
Appellants raised the additional issues of whether the master erred in declaring Respondent’s forty years of record title defeated the state’s presumption of title, finding the 1865 Federal Tax Certificate represented a sovereign grant, and addressing permitting issues that were not before the court. In light of our disposition of this case, we do not find it necessary to address these remaining issues.
Futch v. McAllister Towing of Georgetown, Inc.,
Notes
. On January 18, 2011, Respondent's counsel informed this Court of Respondent's death. This Court granted counsel's Motion to Substitute, as indicated in the caption.
. South Carolina has two Cooper Rivers: the more well-known Cooper River lies in Charleston, and the less-known Cooper River lies west of Hilton Head Island.
. Also known as hammocks.
. From a scaled plat provided in the record, Appellants estimate that Glass Island is approximately 150 feet x 225 feet, and Small Island is approximately 160 feet x 150 feet.
. Hammocks are back barrier islands "typically located behind the oceanfront barrier islands and adjacent to the larger Sea Islands.” An Ecological Characterization of Coastal Hammock Islands in South Carolina, Final Report to OCRM SCDMV (Dec. 1, 2004) (DNR Report). "Almost all [marsh hammocks] are surrounded by expanses of Salt Marsh, occasionally being bordered by tidal creeks or rivers.” Id.
. These islands range "in size from less than an acre to several hundred acres.” Id. The DNR Report reveals the majority of marsh hammocks are very small — 53.7% are less than one acre and 81.5% are less than five acres. Id.
.South Carolina has "approximately 3,467 coastal islands, not including the larger 'Sea Islands' such as Hilton Head.” Id.
. Developed marsh islands include many of the marsh islands in the Folly and Kiawah regions, for example. Id.
. Currently, DHEC requires a sovereign's grant for only undeveloped marsh islands. Although DHEC has chosen to apply the Coburg principle sparingly, without modification, there is little to preclude DHEC, or any other state entity, from extending the presumption of state ownership to all 3,467 marsh islands.
