47 Iowa 370 | Iowa | 1877
It was held in Tomlin v. The Dubuque, Bellevue & Mississippi R. R. Co., 32 Iowa, 106, that a riparian i. riparian proprietor upon the Mississippi river owns the fee ¡an owner.81 of the soil only to ordinary high water mark. In that case, it appearing that the defendant’s road had been built below ordinary high water mark, it was held that the plaintiff’, a proprietor upon the river, could not recover for the land so occupied. In this case the correctness of that decision is not questioned, but the fact is questioned as. to the land in controversy being below high water mark. ■ The land is upon the Mississippi river, at the city of Lansing. It is nearly level but sloping gently towards the river. For a time within the observation of the witnesses, covering a period of fifteen or twenty years, the water at its highest stage has covered the entire land, at least for a day or two every year, with the exception of one or two years. The court instructed the jury in these words: “ The Mississippi river periodically rises and falls, and these rises, as shown by the undisputed evidence, occur usually in June, September and sometimes October. These rises are characterized as high water, and you are instructed that the highest point to which the river ordinarily rises at these times of high water is high water mark.”
The correctness of the decision is entirely obvious. No one freshet water line could be taken, and by a succession of freshets no line is particularly indicated. Besides, freshets are temporary and exceptional in their character. The banks of a river, then, are not to be discovered from the limits of the water in time of freshets. Now while the term freshet is not, we think, usually applied to the periodical rises of the Mississippi river, it is not, as it seems to us, altogether inapplicable. The greatest rises of the Mississippi river occur in spring or early summer. Like the spring rises of small rivers they are caused by melting snows, or by rains and melting snows com- ' bined. They are, then, of the same nature. They come later and stay longer, to be sure, because their waters are gathered from ho inconsiderable portion of a continent. They are, however, temporary and uncertain. If, then, the banks of small rivers are not to be regarded as co-ordinate in all places
Reversed.