83 So. 421 | La. | 1919
The board of commissioners of the Atehafalaya Basin levee district seek by mandamus to compel the auditor and register of the state land office to execute in favor of plaintiff board deed or deeds to certain property situated within the boundaries of the said levee district, and claimed by it under the provisions of section 11 of Act No. 97 of 1890, by which act the said levee district was created and the said board was made a corporation or body politic, Plaintiff alleges that the property in- controversy (consisting of the beds of Little Lake Long, Lake Rond, Lake Dauterive, and Lake Fausse Pointe) was acquired by the state under the Swamp Land Acts of Congress (Act March 2, 1849, 9 U. S. Stat. at Large, p. 352, c. 87, and Act Sept. 28, 1850, 9 Stat. at
Tbe Atcbafalaya Land Company intervened in tbe proceeding, and, while joining plaintiff in tbe contention that the property bad been acquired and conveyed in the manner indicated, it alleged that' tbe same bad been, through mesne conveyance, acquired from said board, and is now owned by inter-vener, and prayed that patent be ordered issued in its favor in lieu of tbe board. In-tervener further alleged that whether acquired by congressional grant, or owned by tbe state in virtue of its sovereignty, said property, being, by nature susceptible of disposal, bad been by tbe state conveyed to plaintiff board by said act No. 97 of 1S90, and in turn sold by tbe latter to intervener. It further alleged that tbe Governor bad attempted to lease portions of said property to other persons for mineral purposes, and that it bad instituted appropriate legal proceedings to test tbe validity of said action; that tbe attempted leasing of the lands for mineral purposes by tbe Governor violates tbe Fourteenth Amendment to the federal Constitution and deprives intervener of its property without due process of law; that tbe state, through its executive, legislative, and judicial departments, has always recognized these lake bottoms as falling within tbe grants to the various levee boards, and is estopped to take a different position at this time, and which estoppel intervener specially pleaded.
Interventions were also filed by Geo. L. Eastabrook and H. Kendall, claiming to be assignees or transferees of mineral leases of said property, emanating from tbe Governor under authority of Act No. 30 of tbe Extra Session of tbe Legislature of 1915, and asking that their rights be recognized and maintained. However, it is noted in the record that, whatever may be the outcome of this litigation, tbe successful party will recognize the rights of these intereveners, and an adjudication of their claims has therefore become unnecessary.
The auditor and register appeared through the Attorney General and resisted the demands of plaintiff board, upon the grounds, first, that section 11 of Act No. 97 of 1890 violates article 58 (formerly article 56 of the Constitution of 1879) of the Constitutioof 1S98, in that it attempts to donate the property of the state to a public corporation. In the alternative, the auditor and register averred that it was the intention of the Legislature by said act No. 97 of 1890, to grant only such lands within said levee district as had been originally conveyed to the state by Congress under the Acts of 1849 and 1850, and such other lands as might thereafter be forfeited for taxes. They denied that the so-called lands involved in this litigation were included in said grants of 1849 and 1850, or were “swamp and overflowed” lands within the meaning of said acts, and further averred that the so-called lands were the beds of navigable streams and lakes, and belonged to the state by virtue of its inherent sovereignty, and were not then and are not now susceptible of private ownership. They further averred that plaintiff has never applied to them or their predecessors in office for a deed or deeds confirmatory of the so-called grant under section 11 of Act No. 97 of 1890; that no selection thereof has been made, and until such selection and application defendants cannot give and plaintiff cannot receive title to said property.
The auditor and register also answered the intervention of the Atcbafalaya Land Company with practically the same defenses
Plaintiff board answered the intervention of the Atchafalaya Land Company, admitting that it (the board) had acquired the property in dispute from the state under Act No. 97 of 1890, but denying that it had conveyed the same to intervener. It further averred that if it should be found that said property was intended to be included in the contract with intervener’s vendors the same was a mere option, and all rights thereunder had been forfeited by laches and inaction for more than 17 years, and intervener for that reason is estopped to claim the same, which estoppel plaintiff also specially pleaded.
The court below gave judgment for defendants auditor and register, and rejected the demands of plaintiff board and inter-vener, Atchafalaya Land Company, “for the reason that the court has reached the conclusion that the lands involved in said cause were acquired by the state by virtue of its sovereignty, and that the lands so acquired by the state are not covered by the grant of the state to the board of commissioners of the Atchafalaya Basin Levee District.”
The judgment of the lower court also sustains the claims of Mason James, George Hastabrook, and H. Kendall, interveners, under their mineral leases emanating from the Governor, but we are unable to find in the record any intervention on the part of Mason James.
Plaintiff, board of commissioners of the Atchafalaya Basin levee district, and inter-vener, Atchafalaya Land Company, have appealed, and the auditor and register have answered the said appeals, averring that the lower court had failed to pass upon their plea of unconstitutionality of section 11 of Act No. 97 of 1890, to the effect that the Legislature is prohibited .by article 58 of the Constitution of 1898 (formerly article 56 of the Constitution of 1879) from donating the property of the state to private or public corporations, and asking that said plea be sustained.
The evidence in this record is very indefinite on many important points affecting the nature and character of the property in dispute. We find it admitted that all of the lands surrounding Lakes Rond, Dauterive, and Fausse Pointe, and Little Lake Long, are of the “swamp and overflowed” character contemplated and embraced in the grants by Congress of 1849 and 1850, but this admission does not include, in our opinion, the bottoms of those lakes. According to “Darby’s Map” of Louisiana, made at Philadelphia, Pa., in 1816, found in the record as Exhibit D 8, what now appears to be Lake Fausse Pointe and Grand Lake, was treated as one body of water, and designated as “Lake Chetimaches,” and the Atchafalaya river was definitely outlined thereon from its present source, running in a general
We next find in the record certified copy of a map or survey, purporting to have been made by the United States Surveyor General, received in evidence under the following stipulation:
“Mr. Burke: The plaintiff and intervener have undertaken to establish the survey of the United States government surveyors in 1833-1834, or thereabouts, of all of the lands in townships 11, 12, and 13 south, range 8 and 9 east, being lands surrounding Lake Rond, Lake Dauterive, Lake Fausse Pointe, and Little Lake Long, and also that the said surveys had been approved by the Surveyor General, and that the said lands had been selected by the state of Louisiana and certified to it by the Commissioner of the General Land Office at Washington. There was tendered in lieu thereof a map, and accepted by the defendant as covering the entire project, which is marked ‘P. I. D.’; and the said map is admitted to represent the lands as surveyed, approved, and selected and certified, and the lakes in the condition which they were at the time of said survey, with the meanders of said lakes. It is further admitted that the said lands indicated on said map as surrounding the lakes indicated are all swamp lands, and that the same were included in the transfer to the state under the swamp land grants of 1849 and 1859, with the explanation further that there appears on said maps some concessions which had been made anterior to the swamp land grant.”
This map or survey is labeled “Southwestern District of Louisiana,” and is certified by the register of the state land office as a “correct extract from the records of the late United States Surveyor General’s office, now a part of the records of this office.” It purports to represent a correct survey of townships 10 south, range 8 and 9 east, 11 south, range 8 and 9 east, 12 south, range 8 and 9 east, and 13 south, range 8 and 9 east, being the lands surrounding the four lakes whose beds are in controversy in this case, as well as a portion of Lake Grand, but the body of water representing Lake Dauterive is not so labeled thereon, and appears to be treated as a part of Lake Fausse Pointe. The township and section lines are not extended across any of these lakes, but the shores are meandered, and wherever any portion of a section is shown, it bears the proper number and the amount of acreage surveyed as land. The space within the meander lines is designated as lakes, but there is nothing to show their depths, or whether or not they were at that time navigable. We take it from the admission made in connection with the offering that the survey was made by the United States Surveyor General about 1832-1834.
The intervener, Atchafalaya Land Company, has also filed in evidence a sketch on map of this same territory, made by one Walter Y. Kemper, civil engineer, marked “Intervener 1,” which, according to this witness’ testimony in the record, represents a survey made by him at the instance of the intervener shortly before the trial for the purposes of this suit, and on which he has extended the township and section lines (not by actual survey, but by triangulation) across all' of these lakes. He also made soundings of the bottoms of the lakes, which
All of these lakes form a connected system, whose upper or northern end unites, through various baj'ous and lakes, with the waters of the Atchafalaya river (the Atcha-falaya river seeming to lose its identity in the many bayous and streams some distance north of the head of these lakes) and on the south or southeast, the waters of all find their way through Grand Lake, Six-Mile Lake, and the Lower Atchafalaya river (which reappears) into the Atchafalaya Bay, and thence into the Gulf of Mexico.
In our opinion, the whole theory upon which the government conveyed these “swamp and overflowed” lands to the states was that, as the property then stood, it was susceptible of reclamation, through artificial means, or the efforts of man; and, as a condition of the transfer, it was required that the proceeds should be devoted to that end. The lands were none other than those which Congress had required the state of Louisiana to relinquish to the United States, under the terms of its admission into the Union, as “waste lands.” In other words, the purpose was to offer an inducement to the states, and through .them to their citizens, to reclaim and render productive property which otherwise was of little value to any one in its then condition. Necessarily, the scheme involved only such property as the government had title to at that time.
“Section 11. Be it further enacted, etc., that in order to provide additional means to carry out the purposes of this act, and to furnish resources to enable said board to assist in developing, establishing and completing a levee system in said district, all lands now belonging, or that may hereafter belong to the state of Louisiana, and embraced within the limits of the levee district as herein constituted, shall be, and the same are hereby given, granted, bargained, donated, conveyed and delivered unto said board of levee commissioners of the Atchafalaya Basin levee district whether said lands or parts of lands originally granted by the. Congress of the United States to this state or whether said lands have been, or may hereafter be, forfeited to, or bought in by or for, or sold to the state, at tax sales for nonpayment of taxes. * * * ”
Even granting that it was tbe intention of the Legislature to grant to tbe levee board all lands, however acquired (which is quite doubtful, in view of tbe restrictive language as to swamp lands and tax purchases or forfeitures) it can hardly be said that tbis included land that was covered by navigable waters such as tbe beds of tbe Mississippi, Red, and other rivers. Tbis view is further emifhasized by tbe very statute (No. 124 of 1861-62) which tbe appellants cite in support of their contention, and in which tbe Legislature seems to have deemed it necessary to provide by legislative enactment that the beds of any and all lakes, subsequently becoming dry or land, should be swamp lands, in order to impress them with that character. Undoubtedly the Legislature is tbe authority vested with tbe power of disposing of tbe state’s property, within constitutional limitations, but it would seem clear that that body did not consider tbe beds of lakes such as those in controversy in tbis case swamp lands, to be disposed of as such until they became dry. Suffice it to say that, in our opinion, tbe beds of these lakes, according to tbe evidence, are not susceptible of reclamation for agricultural purposes.
We have examined tbe authorities and considered tbe matters and circumstances cited by tbe appellants as tending to show a policy of tbe state, through its executive, legislative, and judicial branches, to deal with such property as falling within tbe terms of tbe swamp land grants, and as belonging to the various levee boards, but do not think that contention is sustained. We find no case where tbe state has dealt with a situation, under circumstances in any wise
We think that the property involved in this litigation, that is, the beds of Bake Rond, Lake Fausse Pointe, Lake Dauterive, and Little Lake Long, belong to the state of Louisiana by virtue of its inherent sovereignty, and have never been bargained or transferred to the plaintiff.
This conclusion precludes the necessity of passing upon the constitutional questions raised by the appellees.
Judgment affirmed at the cost of appellants.