delivered the opinion of the Court.
Plaintiffs in error are riparian owners of land bordering on the Fox River, a navigable stream. They own a dam at Appleton, Wisconsin, which has been maintained since its construction in 1878 without permission from any state authority. Since 1841 the statutes of the territory, and later of the state, have forbidden the building of a dam on any navigable river without legislative consent. Laws, 1841, No. 9; R. S. 1849, c. 34; R. S. 1858, c. 41, § 2; 1 Wis. Stat., 1898, c. 70, § 1596; 1 Wis. Stat., 1925, § 30.01 (2).
By § 31.02, Wis. Stat., 1925, the state railroad commission was given supervisory power over the navigable waters of the-state, and control of the construction and maintеnance of dams in navigable rivers. Section 31.07 authorizes it to grant permits to applicants to operate and maintain existing dams. By § 31.09 every applicant for a permit is required to file with his application proposals in writing, consenting, among other things, to the grant of a permit subject to the condition “ that the state of Wisconsin, if it shall have the constitutional power, or any municipality, on not less than one year’s notice, at any time after the expiration of thirty years after the permit becomes effective, -mаy acquire all of the property of the grantee, used and useful under the permit, by paying therefor, the cost of reproduction in their then existing. condition of all dams, works; buildings, or other structures or equipment; used and useful under the permit, as determined by the commission, and by paying in addition thereto the value of the dam site and all flowage *653 rights and other proрerty as determined by the commission prior to the time the permit was granted, as provided in subsection (1), plus the amounts paid out for additional flowage rights, if any, acquired after thе valuation made by the commission as provided in subsection (1); and that the applicant waives all right to any further compensation.”
Plaintiffs in error petitioned the commission for permits to maintain and repair their dam, which, they asserted,
“
does not materially obstruct navigation or violate other public or private rights or endanger life, health or рroperty.” The application was rejected by the commission solely for want of jurisdiction, since the applicants had omitted to file the proposals required by § 31.09. Plаintiffs brought suit in the nature of a mandamus proceeding in the circuit court of Dane County, Wisconsin, to compel the commission to take jurisdiction of the application arid to proceed to a hearing, The bill drew in question the validity of § 31.09 under the due process' clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, alleging that the determination of the commission acting under the statute operated to deprive plaintiffs of their property without due process óf law. The commission answered, admitting the allegations of fact of the bill, setting uр that plaintiffs’ dam had been constructed and was maintained without a permit from the state, and that the application had been dismissed for want of jurisdiction. The trial court , gavе final judgment on the pleadings for defendant in error, upholding the validity of this act. The Supreme Court of Wisconsin affirmed by an evenly divided court.
The right set up in the bill is one under the Federal Constitution. Whether the state court denied that right or failed to give it due recognition is a question upon which the plaintiffs аre entitled to invoke the judgment
*654
of this Court. Our jurisdiction is not affected because the existence of the right for. which constitutional protection is claimed depends upon state law. Cf.
West Chicago R. R.
v.
Chicago,
Plaintiffs’ case rests on the contention that by the law of Wisconsin the rights vested in riparian owners include the right to use the water power and for that purpose to dam the river, subject only to the exercise by the state' of its police power to regulate the use of navigable waters •in the public interest, and to protect public health and safety; that to withhold from plaintiffs, as the state does under the statute, the right to use their own property unless they agree to surrender it to the state at a price which may рrove at the time of transfer to be less than its true value, is a taking of property without due process, prohibited by the Fourteenth Amendment.
We do not pass upon the sufficienсy of the compensa-tion provided for by the statute. For the purpose of decision, it may be assumed that the recapture provisions go too far, if the rights of plaintiffs аre as described. Hence the point first to be determined is whether plaintiffs’ description is accurate. . The atrial court, the only state court to express an opinion on this question, held that the right of the riparian owner to make use of the water power in a navigable river by maintaining a dam is subordinate to the plenary power of the state to regulate the use or obstruction of navigable waters; that the state may forbid all obstruction by dam or otherwise; hence, the right of the riparian owner to develop water power by the construction of the dam remains inchoate until the state has given its consent. “ If the legislature may wholly refuse permission to érect a dam or other structure in thе'navigable waters of the state, it follows that it may *655 grant such permission upon such terms as it shall determine will best protect the interests of the public. The legislature .could imposе the condition that the dam should be removed when it obstructed navigation or that it should be removed at the end'of a definite period of time, for example, thirty years.”
There bеing no question of evasion of the constitutional issue,
Nickel
v.
Cole,
In so holding it does not appear that the court below r,an counter to any established rule of property of the state. An examination of the earlier state decisions discloses no such conflict of authority or inconsistency of judicial opinion on this subject as even to suggest that the court below adopted its view in order to evade the constitutional issue.
Nickel
v.
Cole, supra.
The statе’s consent is necessary for the construction of a bridge or dam in a navigable river, subject to the superior power of the United States over navigation,
Barnes
v.
City of Racine,
We are not concerned with the correctness, of the rule adopted by the state court, its conformity to authority, or its consistency with related legal doctrine. Sauer v. New York, supra. It is for the state court in cases such as this to define rights in land located within the state, and the Fourteenth Amendment, in the absence of an attempt to forestall our review of the constitutional question, affords no protection to supposed rights of prоperty which the state courts determine to be non-existent.
We accept as conclusive the state court’s view of thé nature of the rights of riparian owners. We therefоre find in the refusal of the commission to grant the permit no denial of the property rights of plaintiffs and hence no. violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. Compliance with § 31.09 is the price which plaintiffs must pay to secure the right to maintain their dam. Cf.
Booth Fisheries
v.
Industrial Commission,
Judgment affirmed.
