116 Iowa 352 | Iowa | 1902
Plaintiff alleges that he is the owner of a large tract of land constituting the bed or’ area of what is known as “Sand Hill Lake,” in Woodbury county of this state. The basis of this claim is that this land was “swamp and overflowed,” within the meaning of the swamp-land grant of 1850; that the title thereto passed, by the terms of said grant, to the state of Iowa, and by act of the legislature of Iowa to Woodbury county, from which, through several mesne conveyances, it is now vested in plaintiff. The defendants deny that plaintiff has any title to the property, and allege that Sand Hill Lake was at the date of the swampland grant a lake in fact; that it was so found and recognized in making the original government survey; that it was by said survey meandered and segregated from lands capable of cultivation and reclamation; that they purchased and became, and now are, the owners of lands lying and bordering upon said lake; that by gradual and imperceptible reliction of the waters of said lake the bed has been to a great extent uncovered, and that thereby they have become and are the owners of such uncovered lands as accessions to the tracts so purchased by them. The district court, having heard the evidence, entered a decree to the effect that neither plaintiff nor the defendants had any title to the land, the real ownership being in the state, and from this finding plaintiff alone appeals.
It is said by appellant — and he is sustained by many authorities — that the swamp-land grant operated in praesenti, and of itself vested in the state a right to all the public lands which were “swamp or overflowed” within its borders. Counsel fails to distinguish between the right to obtain title and title in fact, and the same oversight characterizes some of the cases upon which he relies. The authoritative and controlling interpretation of the act of congress rests with the supreme court of the United States, and when duly announced, we are required to follow it, without regard to prior holdings of state courts. That interpretation, as applied to this case, we find in Rogers Locomotive Mach. Works v. American Emigrant Co., 164 U. S. 559 (17 Sup. Ct. Rep.
II. It is conceded by counsel that the character of the land, if it be competent to consider that question at all, must
III. The holding of the district court that the state is the real holder of the title to these lands we need not review. The plaintiff not being entitled to recover, it is immaterial, under the record as presented, whether the state has any just claim in the premises, or whether defendants have obtained title by reliction of the waters of the lake. We do not attempt to pass upon either proposition.
The decree of the court below is aketrmed.