212 Mich. 19 | Mich. | 1920
The bill of complaint herein was filed to restrain the defendant from trapping and otherwise taking muskrats and other fur-bearing animals from the property known as Eastman’s or Johnson’s Island, in Grand river, in the county of Ottawa. The appended map or plat, taken from the record, was, introduced and used in evidence upon the hearing of the case. It will aid in an understanding of the situation. We compile from the stipulated statement of facts the following:
That the plaintiff is the owner by grant and in actual possession of the lands described in the bill of complaint, and has been in such actual possession, and has occupied said lands for farming purposes for 25 years and upwards; that he obtained title to said premises by deed of conveyance, under date of December 28, 1892, from the owners of the land adjoining to and abutting upon Grand river; that said premises form an island in Grand river, between the village of
That plaintiff claims ownership of the bed of the river and the soil submerged thereby adjacent to and adjoining his lands to the thread or middle of the stream. He does not take the same by express grant or patent or act of congress from the United States, or from the State of Michigan, but by virtue of his conveyance and as an incident to his ownership of a part of the surveyed fractional section to the center line or thread of the stream such ownership and title is conceded by the defendant.
That the plaintiff by virtue of his aforesaid ownership of, and title to, the bed of the stream adjacent to said lands to the thread of such stream, claims an exclusive right to trap for muskrats and other aquatic animals in and upon the waters of Grand river cover
That upon said island there is a bayou extending from the open water of Grand river at the westerly end of said island up approximately through the center of said island three-eighths of a mile long, and varying in width from 200 to 400 feet; that the center of the down-river end of the bayou at its opening into the main channel is from three to five feet deep, and slopes and shoals so that at the easterly end of the bayou it is not over six inches in depth. There may be places in the bayou where it is deeper, but in these it rarely exceeds three feet, and that the entire bayou is covered with grass and weeds during the greater portion of the year, but the same may at all times be navigated by small boats; that said plaintiff, about the middle of the month of December, 1919, placed and caused to be placed notices upon said premises informing the public and this defendant that no trapping or hunting was to be permitted thereon, in accordance with the statute in such case made and provided; that said defendant knew that said signs had been placed upon said premises and had been informed by the plaintiff that he must not trap upon said premises, and must not in any manner invade said premises; that said lands in the upland and said submerged lands are valuable for the taking of muskrats and other aquatic animals whose hides may be used for fur, and that this plaintiff has realized large sums of money from the taking of muskrats by means of traps from said premises to the extent of $1,000. That said defendant, after the notices were placed upon said premises, and after he had been notified by the plaintiff not so to do, did enter in and upon' said
The defendant claims no right either in himself or in the public to trap in the waters of the channel or ditch forming the northerly boundary of said lands, which ditch was established by the act of a previous owner, and now forms the northerly boundary and a portion of said lands to which plaintiff has absolute title by grant and conveyance, and claims no right either in himself or in the public to trap upon any part of the premises described in the bill of complaint above the ordinary high-water mark of Grand river along the westerly, southerly and easterly sides thereof, and concedes plaintiff’s right to restrain him and any of the public from hunting or trapping thereon, without his consent. The defendant denies that the plaintiff has any exclusive right in, over and upon the water of Grand river along the westerly, southerly and easterly sides of said island, and claims that the public has a right to navigate the said waters, to fish therein, to shoot duck and other wild fowl and to otherwise hunt thereon, and to trap for muskrats and other fur-bearing aquatic animals therein, on all parts of the same between the ordinary high-water mark and the thread of the stream, either from boats during the open season of the year, or through the ice during the seasons when the river is frozen over; and claims that plaintiff’s; title of ownership of and control over the soil under the waters of said Grand river are subservient to the public right of navigation, fish
That the particular and only question involved in this case and to be determined herein and hereby is, as claimed by defendant, whether or not the public, against the objection of the riparian owner who by virtue of, and as incident to his ownership, grant and conveyance of land bordered by the navigable waters of Grand river, and similar navigable waters and rivers in this State, has title to the bed of the stream to the thread thereof, subject to the public rights in, over and upon such waters for the purpose of navigation, the right to fish and the right to hunt and trap in, over and upon such waters between the ordinary high-water mark thereof, and the thread of the strearp, as an incident to, or in addition to a right to navigate such waters; and in so fishing,.hunting and trapping, to anchor a boat to the bed of the stream, and to anchor or attach a trap to the submerged lands and to place a trap thereon for the purpose of securing aquatic animals therein, either by stakes to the bed of the stream, or to the ice formed thereon, to cut holes in the ice covering such submerged lands for the purpose of placing such traps, upon the submerged lands, contrary to the wishes and in direct opposition to notice given by the owner of the lands.
At the hearing, the learned circuit judge, after stating that it was admitted the defendant had no right to hunt or trap upon the uplands of plaintiff, but that he claimed the right to hunt, trap and fish upon the navigable waters of Grand river, even though plaintiff owns the land to the thread of the stream as an incident to his ownership of the land along the banks of said river, was of the opinion that the defendant and all other persons have the right to use the
It is practically admitted by the defendant that the plaintiff is the owner of, and in possession of, the lands described in the bill of complaint, and that the description covers the lands in question, where the defendant had set his traps; that the plaintiff is the absolute owner in fee of the upland and the submerged land covered by the waters of Grand river, subject only to the easement of navigation which the public may have therein.
It is the claim of the plaintiff that the defendant placed traps upon the lands of said plaintiff, as described in the bill of complaint, and also placed them on the shores of said land in the waters of Grand river where said waters were from two to six inches deep; that he placed such traps in the so-called cut or ditch on the northerly side of said island, along the shores of said bayou extending within said island, and on the eastérly end of said island; that the waters of Grand river, the main channel thereof, flow along the westerly, southerly and easterly sides of said island, and a portion of such waters form a shallow bayou extending some three-eighths of a mile into this island, and that this bayou, in the summer time, is filled with weeds and grass, and that the entire island is surrounded with weeds and grass extending from its shores.
It will be observed on an examination of the record that by the answer and statement of facts, together with the findings and decree of the court below, it is sought to inject into the case the questions of hunting and fishing. Under the bill of complaint and facts, as agreed upon, there is no question before this court regarding hunting and fishing, and the only question for this court to decide is in regard to trapping, and we shall confine ourselves to that question.
As we understand the case, there are two propositions for this court to pass upon:
(1) Who is the owner of the submerged lands bordering on navigable waters such as Grand river?
(2) Who has the exclusive right to trap and take the fur-bearing animals in such waters?
We have spent much time in examining the numerous decisions of this court upon the questions here involved, and kindred questions:
1. As has been stated, it is conceded in the answer and in the statement of facts that the plaintiff is the owner of the lands described in the bill of complaint, and that said description covers all of the property shown in the map or plat hereto attached. The owner of the shore lands owns the submerged lands connected therewith to the thread of the stream. Lorman v. Benson, 8 Mich. 18 (77 Am. Dec. 435); Clark v. Campau, 19 Mich. 325; Bay City Gas Light Co. v. Industrial Works, 28 Mich. 182; Fletcher v. Boom Co.,
The owner of the land not only owns the submerged lands to the thread of the stream, but also owns the ice covering the surface of the water over the submerged lands, subject to such rights, if any, that other riparian owners may have, and any interference with these rights constitutes a trespass. Lorman v. Benson, supra; People’s Ice Co. v. Steamer Excelsior, 44 Mich. 229 (38 Am. Rep. 246); Bigelow v. Shaw, 65 Mich. 341; Hoag v. Place, 93 Mich. 450 (18 L. R. A. 39); Grand Rapids Ice & Coal Co. v. South Grand Rapids Ice & Coal Co., 102 Mich. 227 (25 L. R. A. 815, 47 Am. St. Rep. 516).
It also has been held by this court that the gravel in the bed of a navigable stream, as between private parties, is owned by the abutting property owner, to the thread of the stream. This also has been the holding of the United States Supreme Court. McMorran Milling Co. v. Little Co., 201 Mich. 301, 317; Archer v. Gravel Co., 233 U. S. 60 (34 Sup. Ct. 567); Wear v. Kansas, 245 U. S. 154 (38 Sup. Ct. 55, Ann. Cas. 1918B, 586).
2. Counsel have discussed the question: Who has the exclusive right to trap and take fur-bearing animals in these waters? The industry of counsel and our own examination have failed to find much direct authority upon the subject of trapping on submerged lands. It is virtually conceded in this case that in order to trap upon these submerged lands it is necessary to anchor the traps by stakes, or otherwise to the submerged lands if the waters are not frozen over, and to cut holes in the ice covering such submerged lands for the purpose of placing such traps in the winter season.
It is claimed by plaintiff that this court has held
“The sole question now before us is whether Munoskong Bay is included in the waters of Lake Huron, or whether it borders on the river. If the former, thp defendant has no exclusive rights of hunting and fishing, and the decree of the court is right. If the latter, then the defendant owns the subaqueous land to the middle thread of the river, and the decree is wrong.”
See, also, Hall v. Alvord, 114 Mich. 165 (38 L. R. A. 205); Sterling v. Jackson, supra.
It is the contention of plaintiff, and in this we think he is correct, that the defendant had no right to anchor his traps in the submerged lands, or to cut holes in the ice and fix stakes thereto, holding traps. That the party whose private possession has been thus interfered with has a right of action for the protection of his property has, we think, been passed upon and sustained by this court. Giddings v. Rogalewski, 192 Mich. 319, at p. 326; Winans v. Willetts, 197 Mich. 512, 518; Marsh v. Colby, 39 Mich. 626 (33 Am. Rep. 439); Burroughs v. Whitwam, 59 Mich. 279.
We think the right of trapping is a property interest. St. Helen Shooting Club v. Barber, 150 Mich. 571.
That plaintiff has suffered such an irreparable injury as invokes the aid of a court of equity is, we rtfi-nkj clear. Ainsworth v. Hunting & Fishing Club, 153 Mich. 185, 190; 22 Cyc., pp. 763, 764.
“the defendant and all other persons have the right to • use the navigable' waters of this State between ordinary high-water marks for boating, fishing, trapping and hunting purposes, if access is gained without committing a trespass.”
Just what the learned trial judge meant by the expression “without committing a trespass” it is difficult to understand, for it seems, to be conceded that in order for the defendant to successfully trap for muskrats upon the property in question, he must fasten his traps by means of stakes or otherwise to the submerged lands, or to the ice covering the same. This would constitute a trespass by “invading the close” of the plaintiff.
In Sterling v. Jackson, supra, Justice Champian, in the prevailing opinion, said:
“The defendant claims, that he had the right to shoot the wild fowl from his boat, because, as the waters were navigable where he was, he had the right to be there; that, there being no property in wild fowl until captured, if he committed no trespass, in being where he was, no action will lie against him for being there ■and shooting the wild duck. There is a plausibility in the position which, considered in the abstract, is quite forcible, and, if applied to waters where there is no private ownership of the soil thereunder, would be unanswerable. But, so far as the plaintiff is concerned, defendant had no right, to be where he was, except for the purpose of pursuing the implied license held out to the public of navigating the waters, over his land. So long as that license continued, he could navigate the water with his vessel, .and do all things incident to such navigation. He could seek the shelter of the bay in a storm, and cast his anchor therein; but he had no right’to construct a ‘hide/ nor to anchor his decoys, for the purpose of attracting ducks within reach of his shotgun. Such acts are not incident to navigation, and in doing them, defendant was not*31 exercising the implied license to navigate the waters of the bay, but they were an abuse of such license.”
In our opinion the decree of the court below should be enlarged and modified, and one entered here restraining the defendant from entering upon the lands of the plaintiff, and from attaching his traps to the submerged lands, or to the ice covering the same, upon the premises described in the bill of complaint, giving the plaintiff the exclusive right to trap thereon.
We refrain upon this record from passing upon the questions of shooting and fishing as not being involved in this case, and as presenting a moot question.
The decree will therefore be enlarged and modified, and one entered here in accordance with this opinion, with costs to the plaintiff.