40 So. 205 | Ala. | 1906
These suits are statutory actions in the nature of ejectment, brought by the city of Mobile to recover possession of the land particularly described in the several complaints, the same being the shore and the soil under the water of the Mobile river extending to the channel line of the river, or, in other words, land lying between the channel line and high water mark of the Mobile river. In each of the said causes, the general issue of “not guilty” was pleaded, and, on this issue the cause was tried.
It was not and is not denied, but on the contrary, admitted, that originally the title to the land sued for was in the state of Alabama and held by the state in trust for the public good under the compact by which the state of Alabama was admitted as a state into the union. The alleged title of the city of Mobile and upon which it bases its claim and right to a, recovery of the land in question, is based upon an act of the legislature of the state of Alabama, by, and under which, it is asserted that the said land was granted by the state to the city of Mobile.
The rule of law is elementary and is nowhere more
The first question that is presented for our consideration is, whether the act of the legislature on which the city of Mobile bases its title and right of recovery is a vaiid act. The act, the validity of which is assailed on constitutional grounds, was approved January 31, 1867, and which we here set out in full including the title to said act. The titlb reads as follows: “An act granting to the city of Mobile the riparian rights to t'he river front.” The body of the act is as follows: “Sec. 1. Be it enacted by the senate and house of representatives of the state of Alabama in general assembly convened that the shore and the soil under the Mobile river, situated within the boundary line of the city of Mobile, as defined and set forth in Sec. 2 of ‘an act to incorporate the city of Mobile,’ approved February 2, 1866, be and the same is hereby granted and delivered to the city of Mobile.
“Sec. 2. Be it further enacted that the mayor, aldermen, and common council of the city of Mobile be, and are hereby created and declared trustees to hold, possess, direct and control and manage the shore and soil herein granted in such manner as they may deem best for the public good. Approved Jan. 31, 1867.”
The contention is that the act in question is void because offensive to and violative of See. 2, Art. IV of the constitution of 1865, which was of force at the date of said enactment and which piovidecl that “each law shall embrace but one subject which shall be described in the title.”
In entering upon the consideration and discussion of this question, we fully recognize the rule of construction that an act of the legislature should not be declared unconstitutional by the. courts unless relieved of all doubt as to its unconstituionality, and that, whenever a doubt
In the case of the City of Mobile v. L. & N. R. R. Co. 124 Ala. 132, tbe above provision of the constitution of 1865 was declared to be mandatory, and it ivas there decided that the act of the legislature there under consideration, which contained in its body a subject not described in the title, was void.
The Adtal and material question here is, whether the subject contained in tlie body of the act in question is described in the title.
The subject of the grant to the city of Mobile, described in the title of the act, is “riparian rights in the river front.” The subject of the grant to the city of Mobile, contained in the body of the act is, “the shore and soil under the Mobile river, situated Avithin the boundary lines of the city of Mobile.” It is admitted that the Mobile riA-er, Avithin the boundary limits of the city of Mobile, is a tidal stream and the land in question is coA'ered by tide-Avater. MoreoATer, of this, the court Avould take judicial notice.
“Riparian” is defined in the Century Dictionary as from the Latin Avord ripccrim of or belonging to the bank of a river, in turn derived from rip a, a bank and defined thus: “pertaining to or situated on the bank of a river.”
In the Standard Dictionary a “riparian proprietor” is defined as, “one who owns land bounded by a stream or other water.”
In Webster's International Dictionary of 1905, p. 1244, the word “riparian” is defined: “of or pertaining to the band of a river, as riparian rights.”
In the Encyclopedia Americana of 1904, vol. XIII Ave find, “riparian rights are those of one aaIio oaviis the land bounding upon a Ayater course.”
Such are some of the definitions of “riparian” given by the lexicographers.
In Gough v. Bell, 22 N. J. Law, pp. 441, 464, a riparian owner is said to mean in its common laAV sense, the OAAmer of the ripa, or bank of streams not navigable, though it is frequently used in the books to indicate tlie owner of the land adjoining the shore of tide water above the ordinary Aoav of the tide.
In Potomac Steamboat Co. v. Upper Potomac Steamboat Co., 109 U. S. 672, it was said: “A riparian proprietor is one whose land is bounded by a navigable stream and among the rights he is entitled to as such are, access to the navigable part of the river from, the front of his lot, the right to make a landing, wharf or pier for his own use, or for the use of the public, subject to such general rules and regulations as the legislature may impose.”
In Commonwealth v. City of Roxbury, 75 Mass. (9 Gray) pp. 451, 421, it is said: “The words hiparían proprietor’ have been heedlessly extended from rivers and streams to the shores of the sea. If it is necessary to express it by a single adjective, the term littoral proprietor’ a.s used by the supreme court of the United States, in the City of Boston v. Lecraw, 58 U. S. (17 Howard) 426, 432, is more accurate.”
In Potomac Steamboat Co., supra, it was said, “A riparian right is the result of that full dominion which every one has over his own land, by which he is authorized to keep all others from coming upon it except upon his own terms. It is defined as the right of the owner of lands upon tide water to maintain his adjacency to it, and to profit by this advantage and otherwise as a right in the riparian owner to preserve and improve the connection of his property with the navigable water. The rights which a riparian. proprietor has, with respect to the water, are entirely derived from his possession of the land abutting thereon.” Italics ours.
In Yates v. Milwaukee, (10 Wal.) 497, it was said: “The riparian rights of persons owning land, fronting on navigable waters are defined to be, access to the navigable river in front of his lot, the right to make a landing, wharf or pier for his own use or the use of the public, subject to the general rules imposed by the legislature for the rights of the public.”
In McCarthy v. Murphy, 96 N. W. 531, (119 Wis. 159) it was said: “Riparian rights are not common to the
In Diedrich v. N. W. Ry. Co., 42 Wis. 248, on page 262, it was said, “Riparian rights are held to rest upon the title to the bank of the water, and not upon the title to the soil under the water; riparian rights proper being the same, whether the riparian owner owns the soil under the water or not.” And again on page 264, same case, it was said, “The rule that riparian rights rest upon the title to the banks and not to the bed of the water, is also discussed in the same opinion of Cole, J., in which it enters into tire judgment of the court more distinctly than it does in this case, and need not be noticed here at length. We take it to rest on sound principles, and to be affirmed or implied in a great majority of adjudged cases involving the point. It is distinctly recognized in Chapman v. O. & M. River R. R. Co., 33 Wis. 629. The authority of the latter case was assailed at the bar in Delaplaine v. Railway Co., (42 Wis. 214). The criticism however, failed to disclose to ns any error in the principle of the decision or in the reasoning of the opinion. We think it amply sustained by the authorities cited in it; and fully supported if need were, by tire later and very able ease in the English House of Lords, of Lyons v. Fishmonger’s Company, L. R. I. App. Cases, 622 which is a direct and most satisfactory authority in support of the rule under consideration.”
In Lyons v. Fishmonger’s Company, supra, on pages 682-683, it Avas said by Lord Selborne: “But the rights of a riparian proprietor, so far -as they relate to any natural stream, exist jure naturae, because his land has, by nature, the advantage of being washed by the stream; and if the facts of nature constitute the foundation of the right, I ani unable to see why the Iuav should not recognize and follow the course of nature in every part of the same stream. * * * * * With respect to the OAvnership of the bed of the river, this cannot be natural foundation of riparian rights properly so called, because the word ‘riparian’ is relative to the banh, and not the bed of the
In Stevens Point Boom Co. v. Petty, 44 Wis. 295, it was said on page 305, “Such being the riparian right of the appellants, they may lawfully, until prohibited by statute, construct, in front of their land, proper booms to aid in floating logs, so as not to violate any public law or obstruct the navigation of the river by any method in which it may be used, on infringe upon the rights of other riparian owners.’ Although this .right appertains properly to tlúeir riparian title and not to their title to the soil under the water,” etc. Italics ours.
In Gould on Waters, (3rd Ed.) § 148, on page 298, it is said: All riparian rights depend upon the ownership of the land which is contiguous to and touches upon the water; and, in the case of tide waters, at common law, upon the ownership of the land above and adjoining the edge of the water at ordinary high-water mark. They attach to the land, and an express mention in the deed that they are sold with it is surplusage.
In Earnham- on Waters, Yol. 1, page 548, it is said, “Ownership of dry land is a necessary incident to the erection of a wharf, because attachment to the land above high-water mark is absolutely necessary, and the only one having a right to make such attachment is the owner of the land.”
From the foregoing authorities it is quite clear that the words “riparian rights” have a well defined legal meaning, and riparian rights in the nature of an easement have their origin in, and are dependent upon, the ownership of the upland, contiguous to and attingent on the water, and attached to and are appurtenant to the upland, and not to the soil under the water.
“A ‘shore’ is defined to be land on the margin of the sea or lake or river; that space of land which is alternately covered and left dry by-the rising and falling of the tide; the space between high, and low water marks. It is synonymous with ‘beach.’ — Elliott v. Stewart, 14 Pac. (15 Oregon 259) 416-417.
By the common law, a shore of the sea and, of course, all arms of the sea, is the land between the ordinary high and low water-marks; the land over which the daily tide ebbs and flows. — United Staes v. Pachico, 69 U. S. (2 Wallace) 587-590.
In the case of Mobile v. Eslava, 9 Porter, 597, it was said by this court: “The shore of the sea, and its arms, is that space of land, which is alternately covered and left dry by the rising and falling of the tide; in other Avords, that space of land Avhich is betAveen high and Ioav water mark.”
To the same effect as to the definition and meaning of the word “shore,” Ave cite the folloAving cases: Shively v. Bowlby, 152 U. S. 1; Andrus v. Knott, 12 Or. 501; Dana v. Jackson, St. Wharf Co., 31 Cal. 118; Mather v. Chapman, 40 Conn. 382; Littlefield v. Littlefield, 28 Me. 180; Montgomery v. Reed, 69 Me. 510; Garrish v. Proprietors of Union Wharf, 26 Me. 284; s. c. 46 Am. Dec. 568; Sullivan Timber Co. v. City of Mobile, 110 Fed. Rep. 186; Morris Canal & Banking Co. v. Brown, 27 N. J. Lew, 13; Doane v. Willcut, 66 Am. Dec. 369; Bell v.
It will be seen from the above authorities that there can exist no doubt that the word “shore” has a well defined legal meaning. So we have from lexicographers, law text writers, and the adjudications of the courts, what is understood and meant by the terms “riparian rights” and “shore.”
The “shore” and soil under the water, and “riparian rights” are entirely distinct and separate subjects, and neither includes the other. They are as separate and distinct as “timber rights” conveyed in a deed, are from the fee in the soil on which the timber stands, or a “right of way” granted in a deed from the fee in the soil over which the “right of way” is granted.
Suppose the state of Alabama had owned the fee in the uplands along the river front within the incorporated limits of the city of Mobile, would a grant by the state to the city of Mobile of the “riparian rights” along the river front have passed the fee in the uplands? There can be but one answer to this question and that is, the fee would not pass by such grant, and, for the reason, that the two subjects are wholly separate and distinct. If this be true, in such a case, could it be said that the title of an act, which described the subject of the grant as “riparian rights” would give any notice of an intention in the body of the act to- grant the absolute fee in the soil of the upland? We thinlc not.
“The words of a statute, if nothing appears to the contrary, should be so construed and understood as to give them their popular signification.” — Favor v. Glass, 22 Ala. 621; Wetumpka v. Winter, 29 Ala. 660.
Primarily — that is, in the absence of anything in the context to the contrary — common or popular words are to- be understood in a popular sense; common law words according to their sense in the common law; and technical words pertaining to any science, art or trade, in a technical sense.- — Lew-is Sutherland on Statutory Constructions, § 389. And in the same wmrk § 390, “As a general rule the words of a statute are to be taken in their ordinary and popular .sense, unless it plainly appears from the context or otherwise that they were used
In arriving at the intention and meaning of the legislature in the employment of the phrase “riparian rights” in the title of the act, by no rule of construction are we authorized to separate the two words in order to give tlie word “rights” a more comprehensive and extended meaning than when taken in conjunction with the qualifying word “riparian” as it occurs in the title, even for the purpose of upholding the statute by generalizing the title in a way to embrace the subject contained in tbe body of tbe act. For to do this would be. nothing less than to substitute a title for the act different from the one given it by the law-makers. Nothing can be (dearer than that the word “riparian.” was used to characterize, limit and define the “rights” — the subject of the law to be dealt with in the body of the act. No one upon reading tbe title, or bearing it read, rvould for a moment conceive, the idea that any other rights than “riparian rights” was the subject to be legislated upon. In the body of the act the subject is the “shore and soil under the Mobile river to the channel line,” no reference is made to “riparian rights.” If tbe title of the act bad been to grant the “shore and soil under the Mobile river,” and the body of the act with such title had contained a grant of “riparian rights” to the river front, in tbe face of the law that “riparian rights” are appurtenant to the upland, and not to the shore and bed of the river, would any court hesitate in declaring that the subject in the body of tbe act was not described in the title? We think not.
In the case of Transportation Co. v. The City of Mobile, 128 Ala. 335, which was appealed from this court to the supreme court of the United States, 187 U. S. p.
In the case of Watson v. State, 87 So. Rep. on page 226, Ave had under consideration an act, the title of which was: “An act to prohibit the sale or dispensing of spirituous, vinous or malt liquors, or other intoxicating beverage? in the county of Wilcox, on and after the 1st day of April, 1898.” The body of the act included as one of the subjects thereof, the “keeping of such compounds for sale.” It Avas there ruled that the body of the act, in so far as it purported to make such “keeping” an offense, included a subject of legislation not expressed in the title, and Avas violative of section 2, arricie 4 of the constitution of 1875, which provision was similar 10 that of the Constitution of 1865.
In the case of the City of Mobile v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 124 Ala. 182, where an act described in the title certain sections of an act to be amended, and contained in the body of the act an independent section not expressed in the title, it Avas jaded that the body contained a subject not expressed in the title, and was. therefore violative of the const ituiion.
In Dorsey’s Appeal, 72 Penn. St. 192, the contention arose betAveen mechanics claim-creditors, and judgment creditors. The lands Avere free-bold. The title of the act under Avhich the mechanics claimed was “An act relating
Ro, avo may say here, the subject “described” in the title of the act, “riparian rights,” ex vi termini, “excludes (states of a higher grade,” — the fee in the shore and soil under the river.
The foregoing authorities, Ave think, demonstrate beyond question that the term “riparian rights” has a well defined common laAv meaning, and whether employed in a deed by an individual, or in a grant by the sovereignty can be understood to mean but one thing and that— rights appurtenant to upland ownership. And these authorities likewise demonstrate that “riparian rights” do not originate or proceed from the ovvnership of the shore or soil under the Avater.
It logically folloAvs that the subject contained in the body of the act in question is not described In the title and, thus violative; of the constitution. This conclusion is opposed to that reached in the case of Mobile Transportation Co. v. City of Mobile, 128 Ala. 335, and the latter case must, therefore, be overruled.
It is insisted in the argument by counsel for appellee that the decision in the case of Mobile Transportation
Query: Had the legislature the power to do more than to transfer or delegate this trust?
This brings us to a consideration of the act of February 18th, 1895, entitled “An act to fix the rights of the city of Mobile to certain real estate,” and, the act amendatory thereof, approved December 5th, 1896, and which are relied upon by the appellee as the basis of title to the land in question. Apart from any consideration of the question as to- the constitutionality of the acts, we think they can avail the appellee nothing.
The act approved February 18, 1895, (Acts 1894-5 p. 815) the title of which is, “To fix the rights of the city of Mobile to certain real estate,” in section 1 provides as follows: “That the absolute and unconditional title and right to all real estate, rights and- easements pertaining or incidental to any real estate, or any right therein or thereto heretofore vested in the board of aldermen and common council of the city of Mobile, or in the port of Mobile, or in the present city of Mobile, whether held in trust or otherwise, except such as heretofore vested in the trustee for the holders of the bonds of the city of Mobile, is hereby vested absolutely and unconditionally in the city of Mobile to be by it held, managed, controlled, and disposed of as to it may seem best.”
It is to be observed that no real estate is particularly described and by the very terms of the act, it operated, and purports only to operate upon-real estate “her-etofore” vested in the city of Mobile, etc.
The questions which we have considered are alike common to all the above cases, and, since the conclusion reached fully determines the rights of the parties in this litigation, we deem it unnecessary to consider other questions raised in the record which are applicable to some but not all the cases before us.
It follows from what we have said that the act of January 31, 1867, must be declared unconstitutional and void, and this conclusion leaves the appellee without any title upon -which to base a right of recovery in ejectment.
In each of the causes 1he judgment of the circuit- court appealed from must be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.