after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellants are citizens of the State of Washington; and rely, therefore, upon the existence of Federal questions to sustain the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court. These questions are asserted to be (and we give the language of counsel): “ (1) the validity and effect of the several patents of the United States in respect to the claim of ownership thereunder, as set forth in the bill of complaint; (2) the invocation of the protection of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Federal Constitution by these plaintiffs against the threatened taking of their property” by “the several acts of the legislature of the State of Washington and the procedure directed thereunder.”
It is manifest that the first is the primary, question. . If the appellants did not derive the rights contended for by the patents, they have no rights to be impaired, even assuming, as we have assumed in this discussion, that the action of the State has proceeded far enough to be a trespass upon'or an impairment of them. But whether such rights .passed involves the construction of the acts of Congress under which the patents issued and necessarily of the effect of the patents,, and presents a Federal question, if prior decisions have not de
*77
fined, such rights and removed them from controversy. This is contended by appellees, and
Shively
v.
Bowlby,
' The argument to sustain the contention is not confined to an analysis of the case, but goes beyond, and by the citation of many cases seeks to determine the riparian rights of appellants by the common law test Df navigability,' to wit, the ebb and flow "of. the tide. The contention is that'when the patents were issued to the respective appellants “the common law Of Eng
*78
land in relation to riparian ownership was in fulL force in the Territory of Washington, arid, in the absence of statutes passed by the United States, changing, modifying or varying the common law in regard to grants of land,” such grants carried, unless there was an express reservation, as “appurtenances thereunto belonging” such riparian ownership, and from this it is contended that appellants “received with their several patents a grant in fee to the waters ’
’
of Lakes Union and Washington, respectively, “ in front of the several- tracts of land to the middle of said lakes.” We will not review the reasoning by which this contention is attempted to be supported. It is enough to say that the test of navigability of waters insisted on has had no place in.American jurisprudence since the decision in the case of
The Propeller Genesee Chief
v.
Fitzhugh,
Joy
v.
St. Louis,
It follows from these views that the Circuit Court of Appeals rightly decided that the qúestions presented by the bill are no longer open to discussion, and that the Circuit Court was without jurisdiction. But the Circúit Court of Appeals, overlooking the fact that the decree was not of dismissal simply, but on the merits, affirmed it. To correct this inadvertence-the decree of the Circuit Court of Appeals must be reversed and the cause remanded to the Circuit Court with directions to set aside the decree on the merits and sustain the demurrer for want of jurisdiction, and on that ground dismiss the suits. This will enable appellants to litigate in the state courts whatever riparian rights they may have under the laws of the State and the constitutional provisions hereinbefore set out.
So ordered.
