156 N.W. 792 | S.D. | 1916
This suit was instituted to determine adverse right and possession and to q,uidt title to certain lands claimed to be owned iby both plaintiff and defendant, now situated in Union county, S. D. The plaintiff is in possession and claims title by and through patents from the United States and other mesne conveyances. The defendant claims tilble by and as accretion to riparian lands owned by him in the state of Nebraska. These lands in dispute are what are sometimes termed “bottom lands,” and at different times within the last 60 years have been on both sides o-f the main channel of the Missouri river, a part of /the time being in the territory and state of South Dakota, and a part of the time in the state of Nebraska, due1 to the shifting and chang-, ing of the bed and main channel of’ the river. A noted humoro-lrs author, .in relation to the habits and eccentricities- of the Missouri river, among other things-, has most aptly written:
“It is a perpetual dissatisfaction with its bed that is the greatest peculiarity of the Missouri. It is harder to suit in the matter of beds- than a traveling man. Time after time -it has gotten oulb of its bed in the middle of the night, with no apparent provocation-, and has hunted up a new 'bed, all litered with forests, cornfield’s, brick houses, railroad ties, and telegraph -poles. * * * Then it has suddenly taken a fancy to its old bed, which by this time has been filled with suburban architecture, and back it has gone with -a whoop and a rush-, as 'happy as if it had really found something worth while.
“Quite -naturally this makes -life along the Missouri a little bit uncertain. Ask the citizen of a Missouri river town on which side of 'the river he lives, and (he will look worried, and will say: 'Chi the -east side when I came away.’ Then he will go home to look the matter up, and; like as not, will find' the river on the*78 other sildte of his humble home, and a government steamboat pulling snags out of his erstwhile cabbage paitch.
“It makes fanning as fascinating as gambling, too: You never know whether you are going ¡to harvest corn or catfish. The farmer may go blithely forth of a morning with a twine binder to cut bis wheat ¡only to come back at noon for a trout-line; his wheat having gone down Ithe river the night before.
“These facts lead us naturally to the subject of the Missouri’s appetite. It is the hungriest river ever created. It is eating all •the time, eating yellow clay banks and cornfields, 80 acres at a mouthful, winding up its banquet with a truck garden, and picking its teeth with the timbers of a big red barn. Its yearly menu is 10,000 acres of good, rich, farming land, several miles of railroad, a few hundred- houses, a forest or two, and uncounted miles of sand -bars.
“This sort of thing makes the Missouri valley farmer philosophical in the extreme. The river may take away half his farm this year, but he feds sure tihialt next year it will give him 'the whole -farm of the fellow above him. But he must not be too certain. At this point the law steps in and does a more remarkable thing than the river itself may hope to- accomplish. It decrees that so long as there is a single yard of an owner’s land left —nay, even bo long as there is a strip wide enough to' balance'a calf upon — he is entitled to all the land that the river may deposit in front of it. But,, when that last yard is easten up, even though ithe river may repent and replace the farm in as good order as when it took it, the land 'belongs to the owner of the land behind it.”
We have quoted the foregoing for the sole purpose of illustrating the. natural and well-known changing and varying conditions of the Missouri, and not for the purpose of approving the legal proposition therein referred to-, as we find some considerable diversity of judicial opinion to -exist regarding the legal status where one’s surface soil has been completely eroded- and washed away, and' then, by accretions, having been replaced with other surface -s-oil so as to restore such land to- substantially its- former condition. Wells v. Bailey, 55 Conn. 292, 10 Atl. 565, 3 Am. St. Rep. 48; Peuker v. Canter, 62 Kan. 363, 63 Pac. 617; Association v. Shriver, 64 N. J. Law, 550, 46 Atl. 690, 51 L. R. A.
The foregoing plat will be referred to for convenience in showing the approximate locations of lands and niver. The parcels of land in dispute are marked with “X,” and are all situated in section 1, noiv situated in the state of South Dakota. The defendant owns riparian lands formerly in the stalte of Nebraska on the opposite side of the original main channel of ithe Missouri as located prior to 1869, but which lands since the year 1900 have
The learned trial court found in favor of defendant on this
The oral testimony, in relation to whether or not there ever was an island or towhead in the river occupying a portion of said lots 1, 2, and 3 in section 1 was conflicting and attended with muoh uncertainty. This conflict and uncertainty in the oral testimony was naturally and necessarily ¡due to the length of time that
If said portion of said lots 1, 2, and 3 always remained intact, and ¡it never became an accretion to defendant’s riparian lands, then plaintiff’s predecessors in interest never lost title thereto, and this would be true no matter if, for a time, the situs of said lots was located in the state of Nebraska. If all portions of section I had been entirely and completely eroded and washed away, and the eiltus thereof had thereafter been rebuilded with a new surface soil by means of deposits of sand and soil, then we would have 'before us for consideration the proposition about which there seems to be -much diversity of judicial opinion hereinbefore referred to, but which proposition is not necessary to be decided in this cause when we conclude that a portion of said lots 1, 2, and 3 was never eroded or washed away, but remained intact. Farn-ham on Waters, vol. 1, pp. 331, 332, and vol. 3, pp. 2484 to 2490.
The judgment and order appealed from are reversed, and the cause remanded for further procedure consistent with this decision.