In this quiet title action, James A. Atkins appeals the master-in-equity’s ruling that Lowcountry Open Land Trust, as fee simple owner of tidelands adjoining the Ashley River, can bar Atkins from “wharfing out” over its land to obtain access to the river. We affirm.
FACTS/PROCEDURAL HISTORY
By deed dated June 7, 1991, the Legare family donated 448.40 acres of marshland on the west bank of the Ashley River to Lowcountry Open Land Trust (LOLT). 1 Two months later James Atkins purchased an adjacent upland lot. Thereafter, the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control (DHEC) provisionally approved a permit authorizing Atkins to build a sixty-foot dock across LOLT’s property to the Ashley River.
On June 3, 1996, LOLT filed a declaratory judgment action against the State of South Carolina pursuant to S.C.Code Ann.
The master held a trial on May 10,1999 on partly-stipulated facts, including the following:
LOLT is record owner of a 448.40 acre tract of marshland (“the 448 acre tract”) located on the Ashley River in Charleston County.... By stipulating that LOLT is the record owner of the 448 acre tract, the State of South Carolina does not concede that LOLT owns the tidelands. Purported title to the tract derives from that certain Grant of the State of South Carolina dated March 7th, 1836, pursuant to an Act of the Legislature entitled “An Act for Establishing the Mode of Granting the Lands Now Vacant in This State, and for Allowing a Commutation to be Received for Some Lands That Have Been Granted” passed the 19th day of February, 1791, said Grant being executed by George McDuffie, Governor and Commander-in-Chief in and over the State of South Carolina, to Edward C. Peronneau, filed in the South Carolina Department of Archives and History in State Grants Volume 0-6, Page 125 (Control No. 98), together with plat showing and depicting eleven hundred two (1,102) acres surveyed on January 14, 1836, said plat being annexed to the foregoing Grant and beingfiled in State Plat Volume 41(1), Pages 99-100, South Carolina Department of Archives and History.
Exhibit B is a true and correct copy of that certain grant of the State of South Carolina dated March 7,1836....
Exhibit C is a true and correct copy of the plat annexed to and made a part of Exhibit B, said plat showing and depicting 1102 acres of marsh situate on the west side of the Ashley River, said plat being certified by James Kingman, Deputy Surveyor General, on February 10,1836.
The 448 acre tract is a portion of the marshlands shown on the plat attached hereto as Exhibit C.
Such private title, if any, which exists in the intertidal marshes located on the 448 acre tract extends in an unbroken chain from the grant of the State of South Carolina____
On September 28, 1999, the master issued an order confirming fee simple title in LOLT and finding Atkins could not build the dock without LOLT’s permission. Both the State and Atkins filed motions to alter or amend the judgment; the master denied Atkins’ motion, but granted the State’s in part on an issue not relevant here. This appeal followed.
LAW/ANALYSIS
Standard of Review
A suit for declaratory judgment may be legal or equitable, and is characterized as such by the nature of the underlying issue outlined in the complaint.
See Felts v. Richland County,
A determination of title is legal in nature.
Wigfall v. Fobbs,
I. Tidelands Ownership
Atkins first argues the master erred in concluding the State granted the tidelands at issue to LOLT. We find no error.
The State of South Carolina holds presumptive title to all tidelands within its borders, which are held in trust for the benefit of the public.
See Coburg Dairy, Inc. v. Lesser,
Traditionally, South Carolina has granted private rights to tidelands through acts of the Legislature.
See State v. Pacific Guano Co.,
A grant from the State purporting to vest title to tidelands in a private party is construed strictly in favor of the government and against the grantee.
See Pacific Guano,
To establish fee simple ownership of the marshland tract, therefore, LOLT must show (1) its predecessors in title possessed a valid grant, and (2) the grant’s language was sufficient to convey the land below the high water mark to Peronneau.
Holston,
Eleven Hundred and Two Acres Surveyed for him this 14th day of January 1836, Situate in Charleston District, on the West side of Ashley River, Branch Waters of Charleston Harbour—
In addition, the certification of James Kingman, who surveyed the property and prepared the plat on February 10, 1836, states:
I do hereby Certify for Edward C. Peronneau a Tract of Marsh Land containing One Thousand One Hundred and Two Acres, Surveyed for him the 14th day of January 1836 Situate in Charleston District on the West Side of Ashley River, Branch Waters of Charleston Harbour, Bounded South Easterly by Lucas and Said Edward C. Peronneau and on all other Sides by Ashley River — And hath such form and Marks as the above Plat Represents—
Finally, the plat, incorporated into the grant, clearly depicts an area delineated as “1102 acres,” bounded on one side by the land of Lucas and Edward C. Peronneau and on all other sides by the Ashley River, with “Marsh” appearing twice on its face.
5
These facts convince us the master correctly ruled the grant from the State of South Carolina intended to convey fee simple title of the tidelands to Peronneau.
See, e.g., id.
at 67-68,
Furthermore, expert trial testimony sustains this conclusion. Mark Busey, crew supervisor for Southeastern Surveying, testified as an expert in the field of surveying, including the preparation and interpretation of plats. Prior to trial, Busey produced a computer-generated overlay of the original survey plat by James Kingman. During his testimony Busey used the overlay in conjunction with modern-day aerial photographs and tax maps of the area. The resulting comparison enabled Busey to identify the Ashley River, inlets, creeks, islands, and marshland on both the 1836 plat and the aerial photos. Busey ultimately concluded the 448-acre tract owned by LOLT is a portion of the marsh as set forth on the 1836 plat.
We therefore agree with the master, whose order stated:
Given the limitations of surveying in 1836, the results of placing the 1836 overlay on top of the modern photo map[s] are remarkable. It is possible to identify numerous geographic features, including many inlets that still remain visible.
There is simply no question the 448.40 acres in question comes out of the 1,102 acres granted by the State to Edward Peronneau in 1836.
See Hobonny,
Atkins further asserts that even if LOLT owns the tidelands in fee, he retains an upland owner’s riparian right to
We first note that because Atkins’ property adjoins a saltwater marsh, he has no truly “riparian” rights at all. A riparian owner is one whose land is traversed or bounded by a natural watercourse. Black’s Law Dictionary 1327 (6th ed.1990); 78 Am.Jur.2d Waters § 260 (1975). A “watercourse” is defined as running water flowing in a definite channel having a bed or banks, and includes streams, rivers, creeks, etc. Black’s Law Dictionary 1592 (6th ed.1990). Modern usage, however, occasionally expands the definition to include lakes. See Black’s Law Dictionary 1328 (7th ed.1999); 78 Am.Jur.2d § 260 (“[Cjurrent usage ... has been said to have made the term ‘riparian’ an acceptable term as to land abutting upon either rivers or lakes.”).
Owners of riparian land possess rights “relating to the water, its use, [and the] ownership of soil under the [water]....”
Black’s Law Dictionary
1327 (6th ed.1990);
Horry County v. Tilghman,
Each state, however, is authorized to delineate the extent of riparian rights appurtenant to property within its borders.
Id.
at 418,
Separate and apart from riparian rights, interests attached to property abutting an ocean, sea or lake are termed “littoral.” See Black’s Law Dictionary 1327 (6th ed. 1990) (“[Riparian] is sometimes used as relating to the shore of the sea or other tidal water, or of a lake or other considerable body of water not having the character of a watercourse. But this is not accurate. The proper word to be employed in such connections is ‘littoral.’ ”); 78 Am.Jur.2d § 260 (“Strictly speaking, a riparian owner is one whose land abuts upon a river and a littoral owner is one whose land abuts upon a lake or sea.”). Consequently, if Atkins possesses any rights inherent in his upland property, they would be littoral rights, not riparian.
As with riparian rights, littoral rights are governed by the individual states.
See Oregon ex rel. State Land Bd. v. Corvallis Sand & Gravel Co.,
While the common law of England afforded an owner of land fronting a navigable tidal river
access
from his land to the water, this right was “not a title in the soil below high-water mark,
nor a right to build thereon,
but a right of access only, analogous to that of an abutter upon a highway.”
Id.
(emphasis added). Consequently, the crown as tidelands owner was empowered to deem any structure erected without license below high-water mark a purpresture that could be destroyed or seized and rented for the crown’s benefit.
8
Id.
at 13,
The extent of littoral rights in this jurisdiction is an unanswered question.
9
Atkins presents no authority, and
Where wharfing out is not a littoral right and title to marshlands rests in the state, the requisite permission to erect a dock or similar structure by one not owning the underlying land usually is obtained through a regulatory licensing procedure.
11
See Shively,
Because we agree with the master that LOLT owns the tidelands in fee, and find that in South Carolina the owner of adjacent upland property must gain permission from the fee owner to wharf across privately-owned tidelands to a navigable body of water, the decision of the master is
AFFIRMED. 12
Notes
. LOLT is a non-profit, charitable corporation formed to preserve and protect coastal areas in South Carolina by obtaining title to real property and conservation easements.
. This section provides for a legal action against the State to determine an interest in tidelands, defined as "all lands except beaches in the Coastal zone between the mean high-water mark and the mean low-water mark of navigable waters without regard to the degree of salinity of such waters.” S.C.Code Ann. § 48-39-220(A) (1987). As will we, the master used the technically distinct terms “tidelands” and "marshlands” interchangeably.
See
S.C.Code § 48-39-10(G) (1987) (" 'Tidelands’ means all areas which are at or below mean high tide and coastal wetlands, mudflats, and similar areas.... Coastal wetlands include marshes, mudflats, and shallows and means those areas periodically inundated by saline waters.... ”);
Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Mississippi,
. LOLT has appealed the dock construction permit and DHEC has withheld final approval pending resolution of this action.
. We note the parties’ stipulation that LOLT’s "448 acre tract is a portion of the
marshlands
shown on the plat,” generally is sufficient to prove LOLT’s good title without further inquiry.
See, e.g., Conch Creek Corp.
v.
Guess,
. Indeed, the parties stipulated the plat rendered in 1836 and annexed to Peronneau's' grant depicts "1102 acres of marsh situate on the west side of the Ashley River.”
. The master found LOLT was the “sole owner in fee simple” of the 448-acre tract, "subject only to the public trust as administered by the
However, because LOLT does not appeal the master's finding in this regard, and furthermore argues that a tidelands grant from the State of South Carolina conveys only the
jus privatum
interest in such property, we decline to address the question of whether the grant in this case conveyed solely that interest subject to the public trust.
See, e.g., Charleston Lumber Co., v. Miller Housing Corp.,
. An "upland” owner is one holding title to land bordering a body of water. Black’s Law Dictionary 1540 (6th ed.1990). "Wharfing out” describes the “[e]xercise of [an upland owner’s] right to construct or maintain a wharf,” including "a pier, a dock, or a related structure^] to permit effective access to and from the water.” Waters and Water Rights, § 6.01(a)(2) (Robert E. Beck ed., 1991).
. A purpresture is an encroachment by private use upon public rights and easements. See Black's Law Dictionary 1236 (6th ed.1990).
. Although the extent of these rights heretofore has not been defined, our state clearly treats land bordering tidal water differently- from riparian land.
See, e.g., State ex rel. McLeod v. Sloan Constr. Co.,
. We further note that, even in states where the scope of littoral rights includes the prerogative to wharf out to a tidal navigable stream, the general rule is that such rights reside solely in the tidelands owner. 78 Am.Jur.2d
Waters
§ 277 (1975) ("When the state has conveyed or leased tidelands bordering on tidal waters, the [littoral] rights are lodged in the tidelands’ owner or lessee.”);
see, e.g., Hoboken v. Penn. R. Co.,
. In South Carolina, regulatory authority is vested in DHEC’s Office of Coastal Resource Management.
See Sierra Club v. Kiawah Resort Assocs.,
. We note in passing that Atkins’ argument regarding severance, and the master’s reliance upon it, are misplaced. Because an upland owner possesses no littoral right to wharf out over adjacent tidelands in the first instance, any question of whether such a right was severed is irrelevant. Furthermore, although Atkins asserts, correctly, that his "riparian rights” argument is not based on the public trust doctrine, he does claim at several points in his final and reply briefs that he should be allowed to build the dock because, under the doctrine, LOLT can exclude neither the public nor him from utilizing the tidelands. This assertion, however, is erroneous.
Under the common law, the public trust doctrine secured the right of the public to navigate and fish upon otherwise private properly.
See Shively
v.
Bowlby,
