95 P. 499 | Idaho | 1908
Lead Opinion
This is an action to quiet title to lot 6 in see. 6, in township 8 south, of range 14 east, and lots 6 and 7 in see. 1, township 8 south, of range 13 east, Boise meridian, in Lincoln county. The real controversy, however, involves lots 6 and 7 in sec. 1, township 8 south, of range 13 east. The plaintiff alleges title in fee; that one William McCandless obtained title to said property by patent and conveyed the same to this plaintiff by a warranty deed; that the defendants claim some interest or estate in said property, but that such claim is without any right whatever. The complaint alleges, also, that the defendants have entered upon a part of said land and planted a crop, and have dug up ditches and ruined and destroyed plaintiff’s fences, and will continue to do so unless restrained by the court. The plaintiff asks judgment requiring the defendants to set forth the nature of their title, and that the court declare the plaintiff to be the owner of said premises, and that the defendants have no interest therein.
The defendants answered and denied that they claim any estate in said property, unless such premises include an unsur-veyed island known as Weatherby Island, situated in Snake river in sec. 1, township 8 south, range 13 east, Lincoln county, Idaho, in which defendant, Walter Gridley, admits that he claims some interest in said property and avers that he is the owner of what is known as Weatherby Island, and denies that the defendants have entered upon the land of the plaintiff, or planted a crop thereon or dug up or destroyed ditches or fences. As an affirmative defense, the defendant, Walter Gridley, alleges that he and his predecessors in interest have been, in the exclusive, open, continuous, notorious
The cause was tried by the court and findings of fact and conclusions of law were made and a judgment entered in favor of defendants. The plaintiff appeals from the judgment.
The real controversy involves the south boundary line of lots 6 and 7 in sec. 1. These lots lie along the north bank of Snake river. In the findings of fact the court found that the plaintiff was the owner of lot 6 in see. 6, township 8 south, of range 14 east, and lots 6 and 7 in sec. 1, township 8 south, of range 13 east, Boise Meridian; that it appears from the official plat of the United States land office, that all the lands within the legal subdivision of sec. 6, township 8 south, of range 14 east, and said sec. 1 of township 8 south, of range 13 east, had been returned to the government as surveyed, and that the remainder of the subdivisions of said sections are shown to be the waters of Snake river, and that the government issued its patent to the predecessor of plaintiff for the fractional subdivisions heretofore described, abutting on a line which purports to meander said stream; that said meander line, on the south of said lote, does not, in fact, meander said north bank or water line of Snake river; that said lots abut on said Snake river, and are bounded on the south thereby; that the said north bank of Snake river, south of said lots, is a well-defined perpendicular bluff or rim-rock; that the north water line of said Snake river, south of said lots, is at the base or foot of said bluff or rim-rock; that said lots extend only to the north water line of said Snake river, which is at the base or foot of said bluff or rim-rock; that defendants are not occupying or claiming any estate or interest in or to said above-described lots or any part thereof; that the defendant, Walter Gridley, is the owner and entitled to the possession of that certain unsurveyed tract of land known as Weatherby Island in sec. 1, township 8 south, of range 13 east; that said tract of land last described is an island in Snake river, and is partly opposite said lots 6 and 7 in sec. 1; that said island, nor any part thereof, is included
As conclusions of law, the court finds that the meander line of said Snake river, south of said lots owned by the plaintiff herein, is not the true boundary line thereof, and the plaintiff, by virtue of the patent to said lots, and the •conveyance to him by the patentee, only takes title to the north water line of said Snake river, and that said plaintiff ■did not, therefore, acquire any estate or interest in or to said Weatherby Island; that the plaintiff is entitled.to have his title quieted in said lots under a proper description, showing that said lots do not include said Weatherby Island.
Upon these findings, the court rendered a decree quieting the plaintiff’s title to the property described in the complaint, bounded on the south by the north water line of Snake river, which is fixed at the foot or base of the north bank of said river as shown by a perpendicular bluff or rim-rock.
A number of errors are assigned by the appellant, but they In effect involve the question as to whether or not the south boundary line of lots 6 and 7 in see. 1 as described in the plaintiff’s complaint is the high-water line of Snake river, as found by that court. The appellant also contends that there was no island in Snake river as claimed by the defendants, under the name of Weatherby Island, but if there was such island, that the same is a part of said lots 6 and 7 as claimed by plaintiff. The plaintiff introduced in evidence in this case the official plat of the land office, embracing the lands involved in this controversy, which official plat shows that all of sec. 1 in which said lots 6 and 7 are a part, was surveyed by the government, and that no island whatever is shown in Snake river in front of said lots. It also appears in this case; without contradiction, that the main channel of Snake river flows to the south of what is termed as Weatherby Island, or upon the opposite side of said island from said lots ■fi and 7.
It has always been the policy of the government, as we understand it, where lands front upon navigable streams, to measure the price of the lands conveyed by the quantity of upland granted, and to require no payment for lands covered by the waters of streams or lakes, and for the purpose of ascertaining the quantity of upland to be paid for, a line meandering the margin of such waters is run, and, where .this is the purpose of running such a meandering line, it is: not regarded as a boundary line, but only points out the sinuosities of the bank, for the purpose of arriving at the area of land to be paid for. (Johnson v. Hurst, 10 Ida. 308, 77 Pac. 784; Railroad Co. v. Schurmeir, 7 Wall. 272, 19 L. ed. 74; Hardin v. Jordan, 140 U. S. 371-380,11 Sup. Ct. 808, 35 L. ed. 428; Horne v. Smith, 159 U. S. 40-43, 15 Sup. Ct. 988, 40 L. ed. 68.) The evidence in this case clearly shows that the body of land designated in the record as Weatherby Island, at ordi
Counsel for both appellant and respondents cite the case of Johnson v. Hurst, 10 Ida. 308, 77 Pac. 784, as authority sustaining their respective positions. An examination of that case, however, at once discloses the fact that it has no bearing upon this particular question. In Johnson v. Hurst, the question decided by this court was as to whom land lying between the meander line of a stream and the water line belonged, and this court held that where it appeared from the notes of the official plats that all the lands within the legal subdivision, as directed to be surveyed by the United States statutes, had been returned as surveyed, and the remainder of those subdivisions are shown to be the waters of a navigable stream, that the grantees to lots or fractional subdivisions abutting on the meander line take title to the stream.
In the case at bar, however, the question of title to the land between the meander line and the stream does not arise. The record in this ease shows that the field-notes were introduced in evidence, but they were not brought to this court by the record. As stated above, the plat showing the government survey of sec. 1 shows that the land not occupied by the Snake river was surveyed and there does not appear to be any island in Snake river in front of lots 6 and 7 in said section. The defendants, however, introduced in evidence a plat and survey of said see. 1, made by one John Koets, county surveyor of Lincoln county, in which is shown an island consisting of twenty-five acres lying in Snake river, mostly in front of said lots 6 and 7 in said sec. 1. This witness testifies that a rim of rock to the north of said island was the north bank of Snake river, and that while lot 6 is designated on the government plat as containing 26.55 acres, yet if said lot ex
It can serve no purpose in this opinion for this court to review the decisions under the common law as to the boundaries of lands lying upon navigable waters. It is sufficient, | however, to state that at common law a conveyance of land i bounded upon a river or stream in which the tide does not ebb i or flow, though navigable in fact, is presumed to carry title Lto the thread of the stream. (5 Cyc. 895; Famham on Water and Water Rights, vol. 1, sec. 50; 4 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 2d ed., 828.) And that in the United States, where the \ test of navigability is navigability in fact, the decisions with ! reference to boundaries of lands lying upon nontidal4 navig
“We feel bound so to construe grants by the government according to the principles of the common law, unless the government has done some act to qualify or exclude the right. .... The United States have not repealed the common law as to the interpretation of their own grants, or explained what interpretation or limitation should be given tó or imposed upon the terms of the ordinary conveyance which they use, except in a few special instances; but these are left to the principles*572 of law and rules adopted by each local government, where the land may lie. We have adopted the common law, and must therefore apply its principles to the interpretation of their grant. ’ ’
•In vol. 1, Farnham on Water and Water Rights, at page ;249, and in 5 Cyc., page 895, the authors have classified the ! different states which follow the letter of the common law, the spirit of the common law, and those refusing to follow the j common law. An examination of the authorities of the several states will at once impress the reader with the conviction that the authorities are in a hopeless conflict, and that the law-writers are even unable to determine accurately what the several courts have held. So it will be seen that in considering this question, we are confronted with an irreconcilable conflict of the law. This is the first time this question has ever been presented to this court for decision. What rule this court will adopt must depend upon what seems ito be the most advantageous to the interest of the public and 'the private citizen in this hew state. Some states have determined this matter by inserting a provision in the eonstitu'tion; others by legislative enactment, but most of the states have merely adopted the common law, and by so doing have declared that the title to the bed of fresh water streams rests 'in the riparian owner. This conflict in the decisions in various states relating to the title to land under fresh water streams has arisen from either a failure to correctly comprehend the comm on-law principles applicable thereto, or a doubt as to the wisdom of applying.such principles.
Under the provisions of sec. 18, Rev. Stat., the common law of England, so far as it is not repugnant to or inconsistent with the constitution or laws of the United States, in all eases not provided for in these Revised Statutes, is the rule of decision in all the courts of this state, unless the same conflicts with the constitution or laws of this state.
In the case of Packer v. Bird, 137 U. S. 661, 11 Sup. Ct. 210, 34 L. ed. 819, the supreme court of the United States, speaking through Justice Field, says:
*573 “The courts of the United States will construe the grants of the general government without reference to the rules of construction adopted by the states for their grants; but whatever incidents or rights attach to the ownership of property conveyed by the government will be determined by the states, subject to the condition that their rules do not impair the efficacy of the grants or the use and enjoyment of the property by the grantee. As an incident of such ownership the right of the riparian owner, where the waters are above the influence of the tide, will be limited according to the law of the state, either to low or high water mark, or will extend to the middle of the stream.” (Hardin v. Jordan, 140 U. S. 371, 11 Sup. Ct. 808, 35 L. ed. 428.)
It appears from the government plat to which reference is made in the patent to plaintiff’s grantor, that the government sold and conveyed all the land in lots 6 and 7 in sec. 1, bounded by the river on the south, and that no reservation whatever was made in said patent. No intention appears on the part of the government to reserve any land lying between said lots 6 and 7 and the river. The only conclusion that can be drawn] from the actions of the government is that it intended to pass title to the plaintiff’s grantor to all lands north of the main channel of said Snake river as a part of said lots 6 and 7, and that the government did not consider the island in question in this case of sufficient importance to reserve the same from said grant. (Hardin v. Jordan, supra; Middleton v. Pritchard, 4 Ill. 510, 38 Am. Dec. 112; McBride v. Whitaker, 65 Neb. 137, 90 N. W. 966; Lamprey v. State, 52 Minn. 181, 38 Am. St. Rep. 541, 53 N. W. 1139, 18 L. R. A. 670; Butler v. Grand Rapids, 85 Mich. 246, 24 Am. St. Rep. 84, 48 N. W. 569; Horne v. Smith, 159 U. S. 36, 15 Sup. Ct. 988, 40 L. ed. 68; Harrison v. Fite, 148 Fed. 781, 78 C. C. A. 447.) This, we think, is the true doctrine, unless see. 2476, Rev. Stat. of the United States (U. S. Comp. Stat. 1901, p. 1567), hereinafter discussed, calls for a different conclusion.
This precise question arose in the case of Chandos v. Mack, 77 Wis. 533, 20 Am. St. Rep. 139, 46 N. W. 803, 10 L. R. A. 207, and the court says: “The inference certainly is very
This case quotes with approval the case of Middleton v. Pritchard, 4 Ill. 510, 38 Am. Dec. 112, in which the supreme court of Illinois held: “That when a government grant is made which does not reserve a right or interest that would ordinarily pass by the rules of law, and the government does no act which indicates an intention to make such reservation, the grant includes all that would pass by it, if it were a private grant; and that as the United States has not imposed any limitation upon its grant of the land in question, which was an island in the Mississippi river, separated from the adjoining land by a slough, the title of the riparian owners extended to the thread of the river, and included the island.”
In the ease of Schurmeir v. St. Paul & Pac. R. R. Co., 10 Minn. (82) 59, 88 Am. Dec. 59, the supreme court of that state in discussing this question says: “We think, therefore, that it is too clear to admit of a reasonable doubt that the river bounds this lot on one side. But this being admitted, the further question is presented, whether the riparian owner takes to high-water or low-water mark, or to the middle thread of the stream. At common law, grants of land bounded on rivers above the tide water carry the exclusive right and title of the grantee to the middle thread of the stream, unless an intention on the part of the grantor to stop at the edge or margin is in some manner clearly indicated; except that rivers navigable in fact are public highways, and the riparian proprietor holds subject to the public easement. In this case no intention is in any way indicated to limit the grant to the water’s edge, and if the common-law rule prevails here, Boberts, by his purchase, took to the center of the river, including the land subsequently surveyed by the government — called Island No. 11 — and which is now claimed by the defendants. The common law of England, so far as it is applicable
This case was affirmed by the supreme court of the United States, 74 U. S. 272, 19 L. ed. 74.
A very concise and forcible statement of this question is to be found in Gavit v. Chambers, 3 Ohio, 496, in which the court says: “It is, we conceive, vitally essential to the public peace and to individual security, that there should be distinct and acknowledged legal owners for both the land and water of the country. This seems to have been the principle upon which the common-law doctrine was originally settled, that where a stream was not subject to the ebb and flow of the tide it should be deemed the property of the owners of the soil bounding upon its banks.”
If the opposite rule be adopted, the court further observes:
“At what point does the right of the owner of the adjoining lands terminate? On the top, or at the bottom of the bank? At high or at low water mark? Does his boundary recede and advance with the water, or is it stationary at some point ? And where is that point? Who gains by alluvion, who loses by the direptions of the streams? No satisfactory rules can be laid down, in answer to these questions, if the common-law doctrine be departed from. .... It cannot be reasonably doubted, that, if all the beds of our rivers supposed to be navigable, and treated as such by the United States, in selling the lands, are to be regarded as unappropriated territory, a door is opened for incalculable mischiefs. Intruders upon the common waste would fall into endless broils among themselves, and involve the owners of the adjacent lands in controversies innumerable. Stones, soil, gravel, the right to fish, would all be subjects for individual scramble, necessarily leading to*576 violence and outrage. The United States would be little interested in preserving either the peace or the property, and, indeed, would be powerless to do it, without an interference with the policy of the state, as unsuitable for the Union to exercise, as it would be inconvenient, if not dangerous, to state sovereignty. We do not believe that it was the intention of the United States to reserve an interest in the bed, banks, or water of the rivers in the state, other than the use for navigation to the public, which is distinctly in the nature of an easement, and all grants of land upon such waters we hold to have been made subject to the rule of the common law, which, in this case, is the plain rule of common sense. And it is this: He who owns the lands upon both banks, owns the entire river, subject only to the easement of navigation, and he who owns the land upon one bank only, owns to the middle of the river, subject to the same easement. This is the rule, recognized not only in England, but in our sister states. ’ ’
In the case of Ingraham v. Wilkinson, 4 Pick. 268, 16 Am. Dec. 342, the supreme court of Massachusetts says:
“The question then arises, to whom belongs an island formed by a division of the waters of a river, where, but for the island, the borderers on the river would meet each other in the middle of the river; and this question must be settled by analogy to cases of a similar nature, which, though they may have arisen in other countries under the jurisdiction of the civil law, have nevertheless been adopted by the common law as fairly coming within its general principles. ’ ’
The court, after quoting at length from the Code of Napoleon and other writers, says:
“Although these wise provisions seem to be confined to the ease of islands recently formed, the same reason will extend them to the case of islands, the origin of which cannot be traced, unless the property in them has been otherwise appropriated according to the rules of law; for whether originally formed by deposits from the water, or by a sudden division of the river, would seem to be immaterial, unless the owner of one side should be able to show that it was created by a disruption from his land. According to these principles,*577 therefore, this island belongs in severalty to these borderers on each side of the stream, if their lands on the main are coextensive with the island; if not, then the owners of the next adjoining lots will have a right to claim a portion of the island conformable to their lines.”
This case was approved in Pratt v. Lamson, 2 Allen, 284; Hopkins Academy v. Dickenson, 9 Cush. 548; Commonwealth v. Alger, 7 Cush. 97. In 9 Cush. 548, a construction is placed on the case of Ingraham v. Wilkinson, and the court says:
“It recognizes the rule of common law, that the property in the soil of rivers not navigable, subject to public easements, belongs to those whose lands border upon them; and from this right of property in the soil in the bed of the river the court deduce the right of property in an island which grad-nally arises above the surface and becomes valuable for use as land. Assuming the thread of the river as it was immediately before such island made its appearance, this rule assigns the whole island, or bare ground formed in the bed of the river, if it be wholly on one side of the thread of the river, to the owner on that side; but if it be so situated that it is partly on one side and partly on the other of the thread •of the river, it shall be divided by such line and held in severalty by the adjacent proprietors.”
Mr. Farnham, in discussing this question in vol. 1, at p. 244, says:
“There is, undoubtedly, a perceptible advantage in owning land adjoining a navigable body of water. So plainly is this true that in all new countries settlers locate upon such waters before they go further inland, and the course of commercial activities follows very closely the lines of navigable waters. To deprive such a settler of his advantage is to take from him a portion of the value of his property. In addition to this there is a value in the use of the bed and shores of the water which can be availed of in subordination to the public right of navigation, and which is very material. A forceful illustration of this is the fact that in almost every instance when a •state has established its title as against the riparian owner, it has immediately proceeded to grant the beds and shores,*578 or a portion thereof, thereby making a revenue for its own use.When, in addition to this, it is remembered that the title, if held to be in the riparian owner, is subject to practically the same trusts to which it would be subject if it was in the public, there is no excuse for the efforts which have been made to deprive the riparian owner of his advantage. The rule of the common law is definite and certain. It has solved all the problems for hundreds of years where- ' it has been adopted; while the opposite rule is indefinite, uncertain and a source of prolific litigation. By the common-law rule the title above tide water is in the riparian owner,, subject to the public use. Under that rule there is no temptation on the part of the state to interfere with the riparian rights of the abutting owner.”
In Hardin v. Jordan, 140 U. S., at page 388, 11 Sup. Ct. 814, 35 L. ed. 428, the court says:
“Of course, as already stated, there is no question where the land abuts and bounds upon a fresh-water stream or river. In such cases the law is perfectly plain. Sir Matthew Hale says: ‘Fresh rivers, of what kind soever, do of common right belong to the owners of the soil adjacent, so that the owners of the one side have, of common right, the proprietary of the soil, and consequently of the right of fishing, usque ad filuto aquae; and the owners of the other side, the right of soil or ownership and fishing unto the 'filum aquae on their side. And, if a man be owner of the land of both sides, in common presumption, he is owner of the whole river, and hath the right of fishing according to the extent of his land in length.’ (De Jure Maris, Pt. I, chap. I.)”
But it is useless to pursue this inquiry further. The authorities are in conflict, and the better reason we think is with the contention that the riparian owner takes title to the thread of the stream, both in navigable and non-navigable rivers, subject to an easement for the use of the public.
The supreme court of Michigan in the ease of Goff v. Cougle, 118 Mich. 307, 76 N. W. 489, 42 L. E. A. 161, says:
*579 “The court left the question to the jury to determine whether or not there was an island in the river, and the jury must have found that there was; so that question must be taken as settled, that there was an island in fact. But, so far as the record shows, there was no island there which had been recognized by the government as such, and which was no part of the main land. The deeds to defendant conveyed to him the lands in controversy, unless the south channel is treated as the Clinton river within the meaning of the deeds. The deeds cannot be so construed, as even upon meandered streams the lands extend to the middle thread; and it appears that the north channel is the main channel, so that defendant’s deeds conveyed land extending to the middle of the main channel.”
To this case is attached a very exhaustive note treating this entire subject, and classifying the eases as to their respective holdings upon this question. The annotator says:
“The common-law rule that the title to nontidal rivers is in the riparian owner has the presumption that it is the rule of common sense behind it, because it has survived the test of time. Moreover, it has the advantage of certainty. No other rule will determine with certainty where the title is. But when it is considered that the riparian owner has a right of access to waters, the title to the beds of which is in the state (State ex rel. Denny v. Bridges, 19 Wash. 44, 52 Pac. 326, 40 L. R. A. 593), and that the state has control of navigable waters although the title to the bed is in the riparian owner, it would seem that it made little difference which rule was followed.”
To hold in this case that the plaintiff under his grant from the government took title only to high-water mark, and that between high and low water mark there is a body of unsurveyed land which was not included in his grant, because it was an island, or in excess of his grant, would the public suffer or be damaged any more than if such unsurveyed land should afterward be surveyed and some other person procure title to the same? Either the plaintiff’s land or the land of such other person would extend to low-water mark
Our attention has not been called to any act of Congress which seems to indicate a grant from the national government to the state, and if title did not pass to the state, then it is apparent that the title to the land between high-water mark and the thread of the stream did pass to the riparian owner or was reserved in the national government. In this case the national government made no such reservation. The patent to the plaintiff’s grantor passed all land bounded by Snake river on the south in lots 6 and 7, sec. 1.
Counsel for respondent also contends that under the provisions of the U. S. Bev. Stat., see. 2476 (U. S. Comp. Stat. 1901, p. 1567), all navigable rivers are reserved as public highways, and because of such reservation, title could not pass to the riparian owner only to high-water mark, as the remainder of the bed of the stream is reserved as a public highway. This section reads as follows:
“All navigable rivers within the territory occupied by the public lands shall remain and be deemed public highway, and in all cases where the opposite banks of any streams not*581 navigable, belong to different persons, the stream and the bed thereof shall become common to both.”
It will be observed that this section reserves the waters of a stream as a public highway, but recognizes that the bed of the stream belongs to the riparian proprietors.
In Schurmeier v. St. Paul & Pac. R. R. Co., supra, the court says:
“This act of Congress provides that all navigable rivers within the territory to be disposed of by virtue of that act, shall be deemed ‘to be and remain public highways.’ At common law, rivers navigable in fact are public highways, and the riparian owner holds subject to the public easement. This act of Congress, therefore, is merely a declaration or affirmance of the common law, and not a modification of it. The fact that these rivers are, and must remain, public highways, is not at all inconsistent with the view that riparian owners have the fee of the bed of the stream.”
In discussing this question in Braxon v. Bressler, 64 Ill. 488, the court says:
“The meaning of the act of Congress declaring that all navigable streams within the territory to be disposed of should be deemed to be and remain public highways is that the river, navigable in fact, should be subject to the public easement; that the public should enjoy its free and uninterrupted navigation, unobstructed by dams, bridges or other structures which might materially impede its commerce; that it should be a common highway for every vessel which might float upon its waters. The intention of Congress was only to reserve the use of the river. This the public could possess without interference with the riparian owner, and the latter could have his right to the bed of the stream without interference with the jus publicum. The peace of society and the security of personal rights demand the legal recognition of ownership of the beds of the streams within the states, as well as the water. He should have the right to protect the bed of the stream from individual trespasses. The opposite view vests the fee in the United States, and makes it the proprietor of every navigable stream in the state. Its inter*582 position in the prosecution of trespasses would be an inter-meddling with the policy of the state, and would be perilous to its sovereignty. The common-law rule would best sub-serve the public peace and protect from violence. ’ ’
Some conflict in the authorities arises out of the question as to what are navigable streams. Applying' strictly the rule generally applied by courts as a test of navigability, perhaps all of the streams in this state would be non-navigable. But we do not deem it wise to apply the same test in deter-mining the navigability of a stream. In the case of Harrison v. Fite, 148 Fed. 781, 78 C. C. A. 447, the court says:
“To meet the test of navigability as understood in the American law, a watercourse should be susceptible of use for purposes of commerce or possess a capacity for valuable floatage in the transportation to market of the products of the country through which it runs. It should be of practical usefulness to the public as a public highway in its natural state and without the aid of artificial means. A theoretical or potential navigability, or one that is temporary, precarious and unprofitable, is not sufficient. While the navigable quality of a watercourse need not be continuous, yet it should continue long enough to be useful and valuable in transportation; and the fluctuations should come regularly with the seasons, so that the period of navigability may be depended upon. Mere depth of water, without profitable utility, will not render a watercourse navigable in the legal sense so as to subject it to public servitude, nor will the fact that it is sufficient for pleasure boating or to enable hunters or fishermen to float their skiffs or canoes. To be navigable, a watercourse must have a useful capacity as a public highway of transportation. ’ ’
If this test be applied to streams of this state, they would-all no doubt fail to come up to the standard thus fixed, of navigability. But we do not believe that this test will fit the conditions prevailing in this state, or best serve the public in the use made of its streams. It is common knowledge that most of the streams of this state rise in the mountains, and are used more generally for floating timber than for
“In those states where lumbering is a principal industrial Interest, it has been found necessary to establish a new rule in respect to the use of the streams, which is not founded upon any principle or precedent of the common law, but solely upon the local exigencies and customs. This rule is, that a fresh-water stream which is capable of being used for the purpose of floating down logs to the mills or to market, although it may be too small to admit of navigation, is ‘ navigable’ (or more properly ‘floatable’) and a public highway, in the sense that the general public have an easement of passage •over it for that purpose, though the title to the bed of the stream may remain in the riparian owners, subject to such public easement.”
We believe, therefore, the conditions prevailing in this state fully justify this court in holding many streams to be navigable which, under the decisions of other states would be non-navigable, and that this court is fully warranted in applying the principle of riparian ownership, as applied in many states to non-navigable rivers, to what we term navigable fivers. The fact that navigable rivers are reserved as public highways, in no way interferes with the legal doctrine that the riparian owner takes to the thread of the stream. Snake river being a navigable river is a public highway, and subject to the use of the public, not only to low-water mark, but to high-water mark, and the riparian owner can in no way interfere with this use. In the ease of Powell v. Springston Lumber Co., 12 Ida. 723, 88 Pac. 97, this court, through •Justice Ailshie, says:
“Navigable streams are public highways over which every ■citizen has a natural right to carry commerce, whether it be by boats or the simple floating of logs. The appellant has an •undoubted right to float his logs and timber down the Coeur*584 d’Alene river, but in doing so, he must have due consideration and reasonable care for the equal right of defendant.” Again, “the right of a riparian owner to use a stream implies the necessity as well as right to pass from the shore to the navigable waters of the stream, and this in turn must require some effective means or medium by which to reach such point for loading or unloading the commercial and floatable commodity.” (People v. Gutchess, 48 Barb. 656.)
Most of the streams in this state have their origin in the-mountains, and are fed from springs and the melting snows, and it is common knowledge to all that the rise and fall of such streams is often very sudden and decided; that within a few hours or days, at most, many of the streams which in ordinary times are but a few feet in width, in times of high water are many hundred feet wide; that during high-water many acres are covered by the waters of said streams, which, during the greater portion of the year are rich agricultural lands and very productive; that to reserve to the state or national government the lands covered during high-water seasons, and limit the riparian owner to the high-water bank, would in many instances take away from the riparian owner the most valuable portions of his landed interest, and deny him the right of access to the water of such streams. To thus limit the boundary lines of the riparian owner would take away without compensation large bodies of land upon which valuable improvements have been made, and upon which many people depend for a livelihood, and which is the source of much of the wealth of this state. It would fix as the boundary line of the riparian proprietor, a line of uncertainty which might shift and change as the high and low water seasons change, and which would result in endless litigation and uncertainty. As stated by the court in Lamprey v. State, 52 Minn. 181, 38 Am. St. Rep. 541, 53 N. W. 1139, 18 L. R. A. 670.
“The incalculable mischiefs that would follow if the riparian owner was liable to be cut off from access to the water, and another owner sandwiched in between him and it, whenever the water line had been changed by accretions and relic-
These reasons so forcibly stated by the author, in our judgment, are unanswerable when applied to the streams of this state, and to adopt a different doctrine would, in our judgment, lead to incalculable injury, not only to the property owner, but to the public at large. Counsel for respondent, however, contends that it would be an injustice in this case to hold that the island in controversy was a part of lots 6 and 7, because by so doing there would pass to appellant under his patent 92 acres of land, when as shown upon the government plat, there was only 44.40 acres in said lots 6 and 7. But-under said patent, the patentee took to the stream, and the fact that upon the plat there is shown to be 26.55 acres in lot 6, and 17.85 acres in lot 7, established only one thing and nothing more, and that is that in issuing said patent, the
“We know of no principle of law whereby any third party can now be heard to complain. If the government has parted with a larger acreage than it received pay for, that fact cannot concern the defendant or any other third person who does not claim title from the government. Indeed, there is doubt if the government itself under the facts in this case, could now be heard to question the plaintiff’s title, but with that issue we have nothing to do in-this ease.”
In the case of Mitchell v. Smale, 140 U. S. 406, 11 Sup. Ct. 819, 35 L. ed. 442, the supreme court of the United States sustained the title of a riparian owner to 25 acres between the meander line and the water line, when the patent called for only a fractional one-quarter section containing 4.53 acres. In the case of Sherwin v. Butzer, 97 Minn. 252, 106 N. W. 1046, the supreme court of that state sustained the title of a riparian owner to 143.93 acres between the meander line and the lake in a different section, where his patent called for 68.6 acres. In opposition to this view, however, the respondent calls our attention to the leading case of Horne v. Smith, 159 U. S. 40, 15 Sup. Ct. 988, 40 L. ed. 68, in which the supreme court of the United States held: “Where the meander line of a government survey was really a mile or more from the main waters of a river and the water line of
In the answer in this case, the defendants set up title by adverse possession, but the court made no finding upon that issue. The transcript discloses that after the respondents had offered certain evidence with reference to the defendants ’ possession-of said property, the plaintiff offered evidence in relation thereto, which was disallowed by the court. Had the court made a finding in favor of the defendants on this issue, the refusal to allow plaintiff to introduce evidence on that issue would have been error. But inasmuch as the court made no finding on this question, the plaintiff was not harmed thereby.
Dissenting Opinion
Dissenting. — I am unable to concur with the majority of the court in the main principle of law involved in this case, and would merely dissent without expressing my views if I did not consider that the rule of law applied to navigable streams of this state was so at variance with the rule as laid down by the supreme court of the United States and the supreme courts of the Pacific Coast states and many other of the leading states of this country. As I view it, the rule laid down is so at variance with the best interests and rights of the people of the state and contrary to the decisions of so many of the courts of last resort of many of the states, that I cannot permit the decision to go unchallenged and without entering my earnest protest against the doctrine therein laid down, which I think is contrary to sound principles of public policy.
The supreme court of the United States is the court of last resort for the interpretation of all laws of Congress, and that court has interpreted many of the land laws of Congress, and has declared and passed upon the extent of the title conveyed by patents from the United States to riparian owners to lands bordering on navigable streams within the states and territories, and it would seem to me that the decisions of that
One of the state court decisions recognized to be the ablest on the question of the extent of the title acquired under a United States patent by a settler on riparian lands is that of McManus v. Carmichael, 3 Iowa, 1. That decision was rendered in 1856, and time has proven the wisdom of the rule there laid down, to wit: That the riparian owner, under a grant from the government, takes to high-water mark only. Gould in his work on Waters, 3d ed., sec. 72, refers to that case as one of the leading American authorities upon this subject, and referring to other decisions, that authority in sec. 67 of said work states that the doctrine that some of the states have held with regard to the private ownership of the beds of navigable waters above the tide, is at variance with sound principles of public policy, and the supreme court of the United States cites the case of McManus v. Carmichael, supra, as holding to the correct rule and as being consistent with the sound principles of public policy.
In Barney v. Keokuk, 92 U. S. 324, 24 L. ed. 224, this question was given profound consideration by that great court. The common-law doctrine of navigable rivers and tide waters was reviewed. The condition existing between the extent and topography of the small British Island and that of the great American continent is there commented on. The influence of the common-law doctrine for two generations is declared to have excluded the admiralty jurisdiction from our great rivers
In the case of Barney v. Keokuk, supra, the supreme court of the United States declared that the beds and shores of navigable streams properly belong to the respective states by their inherent sovereignty, and also declared that the United States has wisely abstained from extending its surveys and grants beyond the limits of high-water mark; while my associates hold that such grants do extend to the thread of the stream, regardless of this decision of the supreme court of the United States. It seems that my associates prefer to take the views of a text-book writer and the decisions of some of the states that have been hampered by the common-law rule which was intended to apply to a country whose longest river is but 300 miles in length, when our own Snake river is more than 1,000 miles long, to the opinion of the supreme court of the United States as to the extent of the government grant to settlers on navigable streams. The supreme court in that case further declares that all cases in which that court has seemed to hold to a contrary view or doctrine depended on the local laws of the state where such lands were situated, and my associates have quoted and rely upon those cases from the supreme court of the United States which were decided and depended upon the local laws of the state from whence such cases were taken, and not upon the sound principles of pub-
“The confusion of navigable with tide water, found in the monuments of the common law, long prevailed in this country, notwithstanding the broad differences existing between the extent and topography of the British Island and that of the American continent. It had the influence for two generations of excluding the admiralty jurisdiction from our great rivers and inland seas; and under the like influence, it laid the foundation in many states of doctrines, with regard to the ownership of the soil in navigable waters above tide water, at variance with sound principles of public policy. Whether, as rules of property, it would now be safe to change these doctrines, where they have been applied, is for the several states themselves to determine. If they choose to resign to the riparian proprietor rights which properly belong to them in their sovereign capacity, it is not for others to raise objections. In our view of the subject, the correct principles were laid down in Martin v. Waddell, 16 Pet. 367, 10 L. ed. 997, Pollard v. Hagan, 3 How. (U. S.) 212, 11 L. ed. 565, and Goodtitle v. Kibbe, 9 How. (H. S.) 471, 13 L. ed. 220. These cases related to tide water, it is true; but they enunciate principles which are equally applicable to all navigable waters. And since this court, in the case of The Genesee Chief, 12 How. (U. S.) 443, 13 L. ed. 1058, has declared that the Great Lakes and other navigable waters of the country, above, as well as below, the flow of the tide, are, in the strictest sense, entitled to the denomination of navigable waters, and amenable to the admiralty jurisdiction, there seems to be no sound reason for adhering to the old rule as to the proprietorship of the beds and shores of such waters. It properly belongs to the states by their inherent sovereignty, and the United States has wisely abstained from extending (if it could extend) its surveys and grants beyond the limits of high water. The cases in which this court has seemed to hold a contrary view depended, as most eases must depend, on the local laws of the states in which the lands were situated.”
“Grants by Congress of portions of the public lands within a territory to settlers thereon, though bordering on or bounded by navigable waters, convey, of their own force, no title or right below high-water mart, and do not impair the title and dominion of the future state when created; but leave the question of the use of the shores by the owners of uplands to the sovereign control of each state, subject only to the rights vested by the constitution in the United States.”
It is there held that the grants by Congress of portions of the public lands within a state or territory to settlers thereon, though bordering on or bounded by navigable waters, whether tide water or not, convey of their own force no title or right below high-water mark, and do not impair the title and dominion of the state to the lands below high-water mark. In the face of that decision, my associates hold that such grants go to the center of the navigable stream, including all islands therein.
In the very celebrated case of the Illinois Central Ry. Co. v. People of the State of Illinois, 146 U. S. 387, 13 Sup. Ct. 110, 36 L. ed. 1018, regardless of the decisions of the supreme court of the state of Illinois in regard to navigable waters, the United States supreme court held that the bed or soil of navigable waters was held by the people of the state in their character as sovereigns in trust for public uses for which they are adapted. By an act of the legislature, it had been undertaken to deprive the state of the fee and control over the bed and waters of the harbor of Chicago, and place the same in the hands of a private corporation, and the court there held that there could be no irrepealable contract in a conveyance of property by a grantor in disregard of a public trust under which he was bound to hold and manage it. The legislature of Illinois by that act endeavored to grant the fee to the
“The same doctrine is in this country held to be applicable to lands covered by fresh water in the Great Lakes over which is conducted an extended commerce with different states and foreign nations.At one time the existence of tide waters was deemed essential in determining the admiralty jurisdiction of courts in England. That doctrine is now repudiated in this country as wholly inapplicable to our condition. .... When the reason of the limitation of admiralty jurisdiction in England was found inapplicable to the condition of navigable waters in this country, the limitation and all its incidents were discarded.The public being interested in the use of such waters, the possession by private individuals of lands under them could not be permitted except by license of the crown, which could alone exercise such dominion over the waters as would insure freedom in their use so far as consistent with the public interest. The doctrine is founded upon the necessity of preserving to the public the use of navigable waters from private interruption and encroachment, a reason as applicable to navigable fresh waters as to waters moved by the tide.”
And it is there held that the bed or soil of navigable waters in this country is held by the people of the state in their character as sovereign, in trust for public uses for which they are adapted. In that ease the legislature of the state had undertaken to deprive the state of its control over the bed of the harbor of Chicago by granting it in fee to the Illinois Central Railroad Company.
My associates appear to be trying to imitate the legislature of Illinois by attempting to convey in fee by judicial construction to the riparian land owners the title to the beds of our navigable streams, without any authority of law or permission granted by the sovereign people, and as I view it, contrary to the decision of the supreme court of the United States as to the extent of a government grant. We, no doubt, will have the same results under this decision that they have had in
Not only that, but there are many islands in Snake river-containing from a few acres of land up to more than a hundred, that my associates have magnanimously bestowed upon, the adjacent riparian land owner as a gift, and, as I think,, contrary to the rights and interests of the people generally.
In the opinion of my associates, it is stated that in the-United States where the test of navigability is navigability in fact, the decisions in reference to the boundaries of land lying upon nontidal, navigable rivers are absolutely in conflict. "We concede that they are in conflict, but contend that my associates have taken the view contrary to the decisions of the United States supreme court, and as that court held in Barney v. Keokuk, supra, to be “at variance with sound principles of public policy,” as well as contrary to the decisions of many of the state courts. Mr. Justice Stewart suggests, after concluding that the authorities are in hopeless conflict, that the text-book writers are unable to determine accurately what the several courts have held. I would suggest that the decisions of the supreme court of the United States; upon this question are not in hopeless conflict. They do not give forth contradictory rules or doctrines, but hold to the one rule that sound principles of public policy require the title to the land under navigable waters to remain in the state. It is not the function of this court to grant and give away lands belonging to the state by adopting a doctrine which the supreme court of the United States has declared to' be at variance with sound principles of public policy, against which doctrine we have such a long list of decisions of courts of last resort of the states of the Union. Under such circumstances, this court should preserve the rights of the state and the people, and the state under proper regulations should protect the rights of the riparian land owner and the rights of all the people to the reasonable use of such streams and their beds and convey them to no private owner.
It is suggested by my associates that it is vitally essential to the public peace and to individual security that boundaries of land should be definitely fixed and that they are definitely fixed by taking the thread of the stream. This is not, and
It is stated in sec. 76 of Gould on Waters, 3d ed., that “T-he true boundary line of a navigable stream or lake is the point to which the water usually rises in ordinary seasons of high water,” and I think that line just as definite and as certain of ascertainment as the thread of the stream.
It is perhaps useless for me to continue this subject further, but the decision of my associates, as I view it, is so at variance with the principles of sound public policy and the rights of the people, that I could not refrain from expressing my opinion upon the main principle of law involved in this case.
It has been suggested that there is no law of the United States transferring the beds of the navigable streams of Idaho to the state. We concede that there is no positive law of Congress to that effect, but under the construction given by the supreme court of the United States to the land laws of Congress, and to the grants of the government, as soon as a territory becomes a state, the title to the beds of all navigable streams goes to'the state. I would suggest that there is no law of this state authorizing this court to transfer lands belonging to the state to private ownership, as has been done in this case. The supreme court of the United States has the authority to construe the extent of grants from the United States government. This court takes the title to the beds of navigable rivers from the people and gives it to private land owners without any authority in law and without any jurisdiction in the court to do so. While generosity is recognized as a good quality of heart, it is not a very just rule for the courts to be more generous with the state’s property than it would be with its own property.
A long line of able decisions, standing at the head of which are those of the United States supreme court, holds that grants
For the reasons above set forth, I think that the beds of our navigable streams should forever remain in the state for the benefit and welfare of the whole people, under proper state regulation, and not gratuitously given to riparian owners by the courts of the state or by the legislature.
Petition for rehearing denied.