165 So. 219 | Ala. | 1936
Appellee filed a bill in equity for an injunction to prevent trespassing on her property by entering upon it against her will and protest for the purpose of fishing in the Cabaha river. Complainant is the owner of land through which the stream runs. It is a small fresh-water, nonnavigable river. She owns the land on both sides of the stream in consequence of her ownership of a part of S.E. 1/4 of N.W. 1/4, section 35, township 18, range 2, in Jefferson county. She has built a dam across it entirely on her land, which extends across the river, and about 60 feet north of the southern boundary line. Fishing seems to be good immediately below the dam, on her land. There is a small island in it, also north of her southern boundary line. Over her protest, defendant has been entering the stream below the line of her property on land she did not own, and proceeding upstream in the river to and beyond the southern boundary line of her property, and fishing in the river at that point where she owned the land, standing on the bottom and the island. *410
Defendant claims this right under the Act of March 18, 1933 (Acts 1933, Ex. Sess., p. 67), and section 2724, Code. That Code section, codifying the act of 1915 (page 145), undertakes to declare that the beds and bottoms of all rivers, bayous (and the named waters), within this state are the property of the state. The act of 1933 declares that all waters of this state are public if they flow through the lands of more than one person, and are private if they are wholly on the land of one person, except branches; but provides "that before any person may go or be upon the posted lands of another for the purpose of fishing he or she shall procure the consent of the land-owner or his agent." Section 4. Complainant's land was so posted. Respondent's claim is that the bed of the river was by those acts vested in the state, and that he did not go upon any lands of complainant, since the bed and bottom of the river was the property of the state. The state owns the bed and bottom of navigable streams in Alabama, but not those which are nonnavigable. Pollard v. Hagan, 3 How. 212,
At the time this court in Cleveland v. Alba,
Since all public land in Alabama was ceded to the government by the deed of April, 1802, supra, and nonnavigable streams are treated as a part of the public domain, any state legislation which would affect the ownership of such land including the beds of those streams affects the title of the government. This cannot be done. United States v. Utah, supra; Olive v. State,
If section 2724, Code, and the act of 1933, should be held to apply to nonnavigable streams, so as to vest in the state the beds of such streams and divest them out of those who derive title from the government, to that extent it would exceed the powers which the legislature has.
The owner of such land undoubtedly has the exclusive fishing rights in nonnavigable streams running through it. Yolande Coal Coke Co. v. Pierce,
Those acts are therefore held by us to apply only to those waters over beds which are owned by the state and to exercise its police power in other waters, but not to take away property rights secured by the Constitution.
It is conceded in brief that complainant is entitled to an injunction if she has the exclusive right of fishing in those waters as they run through her land. We hold that she has such right, and the injunction was properly decreed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and BOULDIN, JJ., concur.