48 Ky. 418 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1849
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Hart having obtained a warrant from the proper officer of Madison county, under the acts of 1835 and' 1837, “to appropriate the vacant lands north and east of the Tennessee river, to the counties in which they lie,” caused it to be surveyed so as to cover a portion of the bed of the Kentucky river to low water mark on each side, in or between the counties of Fayette and Madison. Rogers afterwards, under a warrant regularly obtained in the county of Fayette, caused a survey tó be made covering the same land, and filed a caveat to prevent .the issuing of a patent on the survey of HarL The Court, by its decree, determined the claim of each to be valid to the middle of the stream, and that patents should issue accordingly. And Hart seeks s reversal of the decree.
Upon examination of the statutes defining the boundaries of Fayette and Madison counties ; (1 Litt. Law of Kentucky, 626-7.) We are of opinion that if any' part of the Kentucky river is included within the county of Madison, it is not so included farther than to the middle of the stream, along that part of the river of which) the margin is within that county. This being so, the first section of the act of -1835, (3 St at. Law, 386,) vesting in the several County Courts the vacant lands noi’tfs and east of the Tennessee river, and lying within their respective counties, certainly did not vest in the County Court of Madison, any part of the river beyond the middle of the stream. The power given by the subsequent section, to each County Court or to the several County Courts, to sell and take steps for the appropriation of land by individuals, is based upon the grant of land by the Court, and its exercise by each Court is lim? itecl to the. land vested in that Court by the first section
The statement of these provisions is sufficient without comment, to show that whether we regard the letter or the general scope and object of these statutes, the rights and powers conferred by them upon the several County Courts and their officers, are strictly local or territorial, and that under these statutes no right can be derived either from a County Court or a County Treasurer, to land not lying within their own county.
We are referred to a statute of 1808, (1 Stat. Law, 8S5,) entitled, “an act giving concurrent jurisdiction to the County and Circuit Courts in certain cases,” which provides in substance, that where a river, &c. is' the boundary between two counties, the Circuit and County Courts, Judges, Justices, and all circuit and county officers, (within each county,) shall have concurrent jurisdiction over such river, &c., to all intents and purposes as if such river, &c., was within the body of such
But the act of 1808 obviously relates mainly to the jurisdiction of Courts incivil and criminal cases, and to the acts of officers in furtherance of that jurisdiction. And if the import of the word jurisdiction as there used, may be somewhat more extensive than this, wre are satisfied that it would be carrying the statute beyond its scope and intention, to apply it to proprietory rights vested in the counties or the County Courts for the use of their counties, or to extend it to powers vested in these’Courts or their officers, merely as a consequence of such proprietory right, and to effectuate them for the benefit of the county. It wo.uld also be contrary to the letter and objects of the acts of 1835 and 1837, to construe them as giving a concurrent right of property or of appropriation in regard to the same land, to the Courts or officers of two different counties. It is admissible, and often proper, to construe a later statute by a former one. But unless they are in pari materia, the comparison is of but little avail, and even when they are on the same subject, the latter act in case of inconsistency, must prevail. The later acts now in question, give to the several County Courts exclusive property in the vacant lands within their respective comities, and vest in them respectively, and in their respective officers the exclusive right of selling, and of thus authorizing or commencing the appropriation of the same lands. They did not intend that in any case there should
We cannot, therefore, admit that the act of 1808 can be so applied to the subject, as in any case to convert this exclusive right into a concurrent right. And indeed we think the act of 1808 has no bearing upon the acts of 1835 and 1837, or upon any question of right or power arising under them. If there can be any case of concurrent power under these acts, it must arise not from the application of the act of 1808, but from the fact that the same land is included within the boundaries of two counties,, and is therefore by the act of 1835, literally vested in both. What should be the consequence of such a state of case we need not inquire. Since the county of Madison does not extend across the Kentucky river at airy place, but if it includes any part of it, extends only to the middle of the stream, and since the Court or officers of that county having-no authority under the acts of 1835 and 1837, to sell land not within the county, could not authorize the appropriation of the bed of the river beyond the middle of the stream, it follows that the attempt by Hart to survey and appropriate the bed of the river entirely across the stream to low water mark on the opposite side, under a warrant from the Clerk of the County Court of Madison, founded on a receipt of the treasurer of that county, is not authorized by the acts of 1835 and 1837, and being without the sanction of any law was utterly illegal. Such warrant could at most authorize the survey and appropriation of the land, or bed of the river on the Madison side to the middle of the stream. And as the land from the middle of the stream to the Fayette shore, is as certainly within that county, and as certainly subject to a sale and appropriation by and under its officers, as the adjoining land extending to the Madison shore is within this last county, it follows that the warrant from Fayette obtained by Rogers, is as valid
The question whether the bed of the Kentucky river, is subject to private appropriation under the acts of 1835 and 1837, is not free from difficulty, and the statutes defining the boundaries of the counties of Madison and Fayette, do not conclusively repel the construction which would limit each county to low water mark on its own side, or that which would extend the county of Fayette across the river to low water mark on the Madison side. But as it is entirely certain that the county of Madison does not extend beyond the middle of the stream, and therefore, that the claim of Hart cannot be valid to a greater extent, and as it is equally certain that if Hart’s claim is valid even to that extent, on the one side, the claim of Rogers is valid to a like extent on the other side of the middle of the stream, and that any admissible principle or construction which defeat the claim of Rogers, would also make that of Hart wholly illegal, we do not feel bound to make the
Wherefore, the decree is affirmed.