39 Miss. 109 | Miss. | 1860
delivered the opinion of the court:
These two cases are submitted to us together on writs of error to revise the judgments of the Circuit Court of Warren county upon an agreed state of facts appearing in these records. They were submitted to the court by the consent of the parties waiving a trial by jury, and judgments entered for the defendant in error.
“Yicksburg, Oct., 1858. “Vm. E. Thomas, Agt.
“P. S. — An error has been fallen into lately respecting the wharfage below, and the above notice will leave no doubt.
“ Oct. 21st.”
That said notice was published in said newspaper from the 21st October, 1858, up to the time of this agreement, and is yet in said paper in a state of publication. It is further admitted that defendant (below) is a steamer of over five hundred tons burthen; that she was running as a packet in the cotton trade between New Orleans and Yicksburg, and landed at and used said landing claimed by plaintiff below, * * for the purpose of receiving and taking in cotton at the time specified in the account filed with plaintiff’s complaint, and used the same for the space of twenty-four to thirty-six hours each trip. It is further admitted that the regular steamboat landing at Yicksburg is six or eight squares above the landing used by defendant, (below;) but the landing used by said defendant is the same that is ordinarily and almost universally used by packets in the cotton trade for receiving and taking on board their cargoes of cotton, being always charged by plaintiff for the use of the land-.
The agreed state of facts in this record are almost identical with the case of Morgan & Harrison v. Reading, 3 S. & M. 366, decided in this court. What are the rights of the riparian owners, and what the jus publicum incident to the free navigation of the Mississippi, are questions there discussed, and are the important questions here again presented.
It has been the chief end and policy of civil society to assign to every thing capable of ownership a legal and determinate owner; to secure common or public rights so far as the interest of the public require; to furnish a proper line of demarcation between these rights, common to all, and those private rights which belong to each individual as his exclusive property; and thus to promote the general peace and harmony of mankind.
Hence the general distinctions so long declared and recognized by learned judges and law writers, and deemed by them of so much excellence and importance as to be regarded as beyond all question. “ That rivers not navigable (that is, fresh-water rivers of what kind soever) do, of common right, belong to the owners of the soil adjacent. But that rivers, where the tide ebbs and flows, belong to the State or public: that this ownership of the citizens, in both the soil and the use of the water of the rivers, is absolute; subject only to the right of way or public easement therein, where the same is capable of such use. That when the
The failure properly to apprehend the true reason for this distinction, universally stated and recognized among the common law jurists to a comparatively very recent period, has led to some confusion in a few cases in this country, not reconcilable with these general principles.
Before proceeding to notice these cases, we will recur to the true reason and foundation of this distinction between tide-water and fresh-water streams. Why then should the sea and its arms be called " navigable,” while great rivers, bearing the commerce of states and nations, and navigated every day, are termed “ not navigable ?”
And, first, it is to be remarked that, when the term navigable is used by common law writers in this connection, it has reference to the right which all nations have, of navigating the ocean and its arms as common highways of mutual intercourse and commerce, over which no people or nation has exclusive control, and in which no nation has a right of property. It has no reference to capacity for navigation. While many of our rivers lying in the interior and wholly within the jurisdiction of the State, are capable of navigation, they are not “ navigable" for all the world, except by the permission of the sovereign having jurisdiction over them. Foreign nations — strangers—have no right to use them against our will.
The air, running water, the sea, and, consequently, the shores of the sea, by the laws of nature and of nations, are common to all mankind. No man is prohibited from approaching the seashore, therefore, while he abstains from damaging farms, &e., which are not in common as is the sea. Cooper’s Justinian, p. 67, sec. 1.
The ocean does not admit of property therein. It is not capable of occupancy. It has no boundaries. It is not contained in shores, for it encompasses the land, (continents and
Second, it is to be remembered that the territory of a state only includes the lakes, seas, rivers, &c., entirely enclosed within . its limits, (Wheat. International Law, p. 242, 243,) or that a state cannot grant what it does not own.
The jurisdiction possessed by one nation over sounds, straits, and other arms of the sea leading through its own territory to that of another,’or to other seas, common to all nations, does not exclude others from the right of innocent passage through these communications. Vattel’s Law of Nations, Book II. p. 180, 181; Wheaton, International Law, p. 243, sec. 12. The same principle extends to rivers flowing from one state into another. Ib. But this right of navigation for commercial purposes, intra-territorially, or the right of innocent passage, as it is called, is an imperfect right, of which each state must judge for itself. The right of navigation and the right to moor vessels to the banks, to load and unload, to land in case of distress, or for other necessary purposes, as incident to such innocent passage, are all imperfect rights in their nature, and the mutual convenience of both parties must be consulted in their exercise. Wheat. International Law, p. 243, 244, sec. 13, 14; p. 251, sec. 18; p. 255, sec. 19; Vattel’s Law of Nations, p. 129, sec. 290, 291, 292. But the case of rivers and waters, which are wholly intra-territorial, which rise and debouch altogether within the limits of the state, are not to be confounded with waters flowing through the state from other states, or discharging themselves in other states. While the right of navigation in the former case depends exclusively on the will of the local sovereign, in the latter the right of navigation is one, as we have just seen, to be exercised according to the mutual convenience of the parties. Wheat. International Law, p. 256, sec. 19. The shores of the sea belong to the adjacent nation or sovereign, subject to the public right of free navigation. They are common to all mankind, in regard to their innocent use, as for navigation in commerce, &c.
Ports and harbors are manifestly an appendage to and even a
So bays, whose entrance can be defended, may be possessed and rendered subject to the laws of the sovereign. Vattel’s Law of Nations, p. 129, sec. 290-292.
And so as between nations, where an arm of the sea or a river is the boundary between them, if the original right of jurisdiction is in neither, and there is no agreement respecting it, each holds to the middle of the stream; while the public easement or right of innocent use still remains undisturbed thereby. Angell on Tide-Water, p. 7; Vattel’s Law of Nations, B. I. ch. 22, sec. 266, 274; The Schooner Fame, 3 Mason Circt. Ct. R. 147.
It is evident, therefore, that the term “ navigable,” as used by the common law writers, was borrowed from the law of nations, and has reference to the right of free navigation of the ocean, and the arms of the sea, not metre clausum, over which no nation has exclusive ownership. It has reference to the great admitted right of navigation, with all its necessary incidents, resulting from the common property which all nations have in the sea and its great arms and shores, without hindrance therefrom by grantsr extending beyond high water mark. Beyond this, no nation has exclusive territorial property; though it has jurisdiction, civil and criminal, for the protection and preservation of the rights of its citizens, and power to establish ports and harbors and police regulations for the promotion of commerce. It has reference to the usage of civilized nations, extending this right as far as the tide ebbs and flows; subject, however, as we have already seen, in this respect, to the will of the local government within whose dominion such right may be exercised.
In obedience therefore to the laws and comity of nations, it became, at an early period in its history, the doctrine of the common law, that grants of land, by the sovereign power, bordering on tide water, extended only to high water mark; leaving the water and the shore below ordinary high water mark subject to this general use or public easement, for commercial and other purposes, as the common highway of all nations.
This was a doctrine of presumption, founded on the idea that no nation intended to interfere with the just rights of others, or
On the other hand, a doctrine wholly opposite to this, and founded upon reasons equally clear and satisfactory, was established in relation to fresh-water streams, whether having capacity for navigation or not, which were mira-territorial, and over which the government had exclusive right and dominion.
In relation to this class of rivers, the right of navigation was always wholly dependent on the will of the sovereign having the right of property in the soil; and by the laws of nations, such streams were “not navigable” for other nations, except by treaty or special permission of the local sovereign. Hence they are called “not navigable,” in contradistinction to such waters, &c., as were common to all nations.
In the construction of grants of land made to the citizen and bounded on these fresh-water streams, over which the sovereign had exclusive title and jurisdiction, there could be no question of the right of the sovereign to part with the title of the soil to the grantee. It became therefore a mere question of intention. The courts of common law applying to these deeds or grants the ordinary rules of construction, in cases of doubt, construed the grant most strongly in favor of the grantee ; and upon the further presumption that the grantor, in parting with his land on both sides of a water-course, whether capable of navigation or not, could scarcely have intended, without express clause to that effect, to reserve the water-course to himself, have held with unvarying uniformity in England, from the earliest period down to the day that such grants, bounded on, or by, or at, such watercourse, conveyed to the respective riparian grantees the right of soil and the use of the water (subject to the jus publicum) ees que adfilum aquae.
Lord Hale, in his treatise De jure mceris, (1 Harg. Tracts, inserted in 6 Cowen N. Y. R. Ex parte Jennings, p. 537,) says, “Fresh rivers of what kind soever do of common right belong to the owners of the soil adjacent.” * * * * * * “ Though fresh rivers are in point of property as before, prima facie, of a private interest; yet as well fresh rivers as salt, or such as flow and reflow, may be under these two servitudes, or
Lord Hale, in the 3d chapter of his treatise De jure maris, distinguishes these streams or rivers, first, into such as are private, not only in property or ownership, but also in use, “as little streams and rivers that are not a common passage for the king’s people.”
2. Those that are of common or public use, for boats and lighters, &c., whether fresh or salt; these are, prima facie, publici juris, common highways. “ Thus, the rivers "Wey, Severn, Thames and divers others, as well above the bridges and ports as below; as well above tbe flowings of the sea as below; and as well where they have become to be of private property, as where they are the king’s property, are public rivers, juris publici.”
■ They are called public rivers, not in reference to the property of the river, for that is in the individual who owns the soil; but in reference only to the public use. This is the true and just rule which harmonizes private right with public interest. Angell on Water Courses, p. 199, 200, and authorities there cited. 6 Cowen, 537, Ex parte Jennings, and note by the reporter, and authorities Reviewed.
A more'^erfect regulation could not be devised. It effectually secures the public interest, guards private rights, and promotes the ends of civil society, and the peace and security of individuals, by pursuing the wise maxim of assigning to every thing capable of ownership a legal and determinate owner.
According to Sir Matthew Hale, there was always jurisdiction in the crown of England “to reform and punish nuisances in all rivers, whether fresh or salt, that are a common passage not only for ships and greater vessels, but also for smaller, as barges or boats.” De jure maris, Part I. ch. 2, p. 8; 6 Cowen, p. 538.
He adds that these public rivers for public passage are called fluvii regales, not in reference to the property of the river, but to the public use; all things of public safety and convenience being in a special manner under the king’s care and protection, whether the soil be his or not. Id.
However this may have been at common law, it is certain that under the deed of cession from Georgia, as well as the several acts and ordinances in reference to the free navigation of the Mississippi river, as a common highway, no grant could have been made here, interfering with this great public right. There is therefore no inconsistency, but, on the contrary, as before suggested, perfect harmony between the jus privatum of riparian ownership in public fresh-water streams, to the middle of the river, and the jus publicum of free navigation thereof. The soil is granted to the riparian proprietor, subject to this public easement.
A review of the American decisions will show that these just maxims of the common law, founded on the law of nature and of nations, and sanctioned by reason as well as unbroken precedent, in England, for centuries, have not been seriously doubted or contravened in any well-considered case involving the rights of riparian owners in this country.
The first case in the United States, or in the world^ where the common law prevails^ that we have been enabled' to find, in which the correctness of the common law distinction between tide-water and fresh-water streams seems to have been questioned, is the case of Carson v. Blazer, 2 Binney’s Pennsylvania R. 477, decided in 1810.
The opinion was delivered by Chief Justice Tilghman, who distinctly admits the rule in England.
He says: “ The plaintiff relies principally on that rule of the common law by which rivers wherein the tide does not ebb and flow (which are not navigable) belong to the owners of the ad
“ But the common law principle concerning rivers, even if extended to America, worild not apply to such a river as the Susquehanna, which is a mile wide, and runs several hundred miles through a rich country, which is navigable, and is actually navigated by large boats. If such a river had existed in England, no such law would ever have been applied to it. Their streams in which the tide does not ebb and flow are small.”
From this citation of the opinion of the chief justice it is evident that he has wholly misconceived the reason upon which the common law distinction is founded. He seems to suppose that the rule is an arbitrary one, based upon the capacity of the stream for navigation. If navigable in fact, he thinks, the soil under the water is not the subject of grant so as .to be capable of private ownership, notwithstanding such ownership may be subject to the public easement.
He seems not to apprehend that the great principle, lying at the foundation of the rule, (“that a grant of land, bounded on the ocean or its arms, or tide water, extends only to ordinary high water mark,”) is, that a sovereign making such grant, by laws and comity of nations, has no po-wer to appropriate to private use what is not only juris publici, or common to the whole world* and therefore incapable of ownership, but what lies beyond his territorial dominion.
He seems to have confounded the right of navigation (in which sense tide waters are said to be “navigable streams”) with their capacity for navigation. And still further, he seems to have supposed that there was an irreconcilable conflict between the public right of free navigation of fresh-water rivers and the private ownership of the bed or soil of the river, subject to the
A further quotation from the opinion of Chief Justice Tilghnian will make it still mope .manifest that he wholly mistakes the common law principle itself. “ The common law principle is, in fact,” says he, "that the owners of the banks have no right to the water of navigable rivers. Now the Susquehanna is a navigable river, and therefore the owners of its banks have no such right. It is said, however, that some of the cases assert that by navigable rivers are meant rivers in which there is no (meaning a) "flow and reflow of the tide. This definition may be very proper in England, where there is no river of considerable importance, as to navigation, which has not a flow of the tide; but it would be highly unreasonable when applied to our /large rivers, such as the Ohio, Allegheny, Delaware, Schuylkill, or Susquehanna and its branches.”
A graver blunder could not have been well conceived by the chief justice than that implied in the assertion commencing this last quotation. Such a principle was never mooted or stated before, for the reason that nobody ever supposed that the owner of the banks of any public stream, whether navigable or hot, had a “right to the water" Indeed, in no case of running streams, whether capable of navigation or not, was such a principle ever heard as that the owner of the bank had a "right to the water" The thing is in its very nature impossible. The 'usufruct of running or tide water, or any natural stream, is all that in its nature is capable of enjoyment, and this right must be so used as not to prejudice the rights of others.
This general doctrine is as old as the Year-books, that, prima facie, every proprietor on each bank of a river is entitled to the land covered with water to the middle of the stream. In virtue of this ownership, he has the right to the úse of the water flowing over it in its natural current without diminution or obstruction. But,.strictly speaking, he has no property in the water itself, but a simple use of it while it passes along. Angell on
Chief Justice Tilghman was scarcely dess intelligible in that portion of his opinion in which he endeavors to account for the common law distinction between tide and fresh-water streams in England, by assuming that “ their rivers in which the tide does not ebb and flow are small,” and also that “there is no river of considerable importance as to navigation (in England) which has not a flow of the tide.” If by this is meant that there are no rivers in England capable of navigation above tide water, then the opinion is not more fortunate in its geographical and historical accuracy than in its statement of the principles of the common law in relation to riparian rights, jlt-v í|h e-n Ti
Independent, however, of all this, there is another' answer to the decision in this case, as an authority against the common law rule, and that is, that the opinion is based mainly on the ground that, by the laws and policy of Pennsylvania from her first settlement, as well as the settled policy of her founder, William Penn, the entire right of her rivers and every thing in them was retained in them in order that he might make such use of them as might be most conducive to the public interest. And both in the courts of the United States and our State courts, this decision is said to rest on this ground—-the local laws and policy of Pennsylvania. Rundle et al. v. Delaware and Raritan Canal Co., 14 How. U. S. R. 91, reviewing the cases in Pennsylvania. See, also, 1 Watts & Serg. 346; 6 Watts & Serg. 101; 8 Watts & Serg. 436; 1 Penn. R. 468; 31 Penn. St. R. 43; 33 Penn. St. R. 305.
This is made manifest by the subsequent case of Shrunk v. The President of the Schuylkill Navigation Co., in 14 Serg. & Rawle, 79, where the same judge, Chief Justice Tilghman, says: “ As for the soil over which our great rivers flow, it has never been granted to anyone, either by William J^enn^r his successors, or the State government. Care seem^-t6j]i|ygib^en taken from the beginning to preserve the wa-tei^for publ-iq’^uses, both of fishery and navigation.” | V .<.■ NU \
'In this opinion the same again Alludes, in terms of less confidence, to the 'whi^ had
North Carolina, too, has been cited as furnishing authority for the position of Chief Justice Tilghman, against the common law rule as applicable in this country. While it is true Saat, in the earlier cases, there are loose dicta from which this doctrine would seem to derive support, yet, in the later cases, their decisions are rested on statutory enactments of that State by which land covered by fresh water, navigable in fact, could not be granted, any more than land covered by tide water, at common law. Collins v. Benbury, 5 Iredell’s Law R. 126; Wilson v. Forbes, 2 Dev. 30.
The case of Bullock v. Wilson, 2 Porter’s Ala. R. 448, has also been cited as an authority against the application of the common law doctrine to the fresh-water streams of Alabama. An examination of that case will show that the opinion of the court is based upon the idea that, inasmuch as the rivers of that State, capable of navigation, whether subject to the ebb and flow of the tide or not, are made public highways by law, riparian owners can assert no right of soil in them or in their beds. A supposed inconsistency between the public easement or right of way and the ownership of the soil by the private citizen seems to have controlled the opinion. The subsequent cases in Alabama, as indeed the whole current of judicial decisions both in England and in this country, at all times show that there is no such conflict. The doctrine in relation to highways, whether on land or water, always has been that the jus publicum, or right of way, did not interfere with the title or ownership of the soil; that the private right still existed, subject to the public easement. This doctrine is recognized by Judge Collier himself in The Mayor of Mobile v. Esland, 9 Porter’s Ala. R. 590, 591, and is too well established to need remark. Hale, De jure maris, chap. 6; 1 Harg. Law Tracts, 36; Commonwealth v. Alger, 7 Cushing’s R. 90. “The jus privatum of the owner is always charged with, and subject to, the jus publicum
So, in Iowa, the common law rule is rejected, relying on the Alabama case; 4 Iowa R. 213.
In Missouri, 4 Missouri R. 346, O'Fallon, exr., &c., v. Daggett et al., although the syllabus of the case, as stated by the reporter, would seem to support the idea that the bank of the Mississippi river is a public highway, subject to the use of those navigating that river, yet the opinion, when examined, is an authority in favor of the rights of the riparian owner. It is there held, upon clear and satisfactory reasoning, that, except in public places, provided for their accommodation,-the public have no general right to seize on the private property of the riparian owner, on the bank of the river, more than elsewhere; that the right to land “is limited in cases of necessity and emergency, and is not extended to cases of mere convenience.” And in the subsequent case of Lebeaume v. Poctlington, 6 Missouri R. 40-42, this case is cited without objection; and it is said that "it is certain that the United States never made any grant of lands incumbered with the conditions annexed to grants of land on the Mississippi under the Spanish government. In the States of the Union that government (the United States) would have no such authority, as it would be a mere police regulation outside of its constitutional powers.”
In Kentucky, similar views are stated as to the rights of riparian owners, in Morrison v. Turman, 17 Ky. R. 250, and 14 Ky. R. 367, (same parties.)
In Tennessee, it is well settled that the ownership of the soil, in fresh-water rivers, though capable of navigation, and navi
In Ohio, the doctrine has been uniform in favor of the rights of riparian proprietors, and it is there held that the Legislature cannot, by declaring a stream navigable, deprive the riparian owners of their rights. See 16 Ohio R. 540, and cases cited; 11 Ohio, 307; 3 Ohio, 495; 2 Ohio, 307.
So, in Michigan and Indiana, the common law rule is recognized. Moore v. Sanborne et al., 2 Mich. R. 519; and Cox v. The State, 3 Blackfd. R. 193.
So, in Maryland. Browne v. Kennedy, 5 H. & J. 195.
So, in Maine. Berry v. Carle, 3 Greenleaf, 269; and Sprung v. Russell et al., 7 Grreenleaf, 273; Browne v. Chadbourne, 31 Maine R. 9.
In Vermont. 23 Vermont, 319.
In New Hampshire. 3 N. H. R. 321.
In Connecticut. 2 Conn. R. 481.
In Virginia. 4 Call’s R. 441. The common law rule is maintained.
And in New York, upon a full and able review of all the cases, English and American, the doctrine of the common law is established by repeated adjudications. It is true, that in one case in New York it was said the preceding decisions had been overruled; The Canal Appraisers v. The People, 17 Wend. 571. But it is by no means certain that it was so designed by a majority of the members of the court. At all events, subsequent cases have continued to affirm, and approve the common law doctrine, which seems now to be firmly established there as almost everywhere. Palmer v. Mulligan, 3 Caine’s R. 317; Hooker v. Cummings, 20 John. R. 97; Ex parte Jennings, 6 Cowen R. 518; Lansing v. Smith, 8 Cowen R. 148; Starr v. Child et al., 20 Wend. R. 149; Pearsall v. Port, 22 Wend. R. 425; Commrs. of Canal Fund v. Rumpshall, 26 Wend. R. 404.
These cases in New York have exhausted the resources which
In Delaware, Massachusetts, Maryland, New Jersey, and Illinois, the same course of decision prevails; 4 Harrington, 389; 4 Pick. 268; 5 Pick. 199; 2 Cushing, 199; 7 Cushing, 102; 5 Harris & Johnson, 195; 1 Dutcher, 527; 3 Dutcher, 13.
It will thus be seen that so far as the weight of authority is to be considered in the United States, the cases in Pennsylvania and North Carolina, founded on their peculiar policy and laws, one case in Alabama and one case in Iowa, both without reasoning or authority to sustain them, are the only cases in which the common law rule has been questioned; while in nearly all the other States, and in many of them after the most mature and thorough consideration and research, the common law rule has been fully sustained.
A much shorter, and, to my mind, more satisfactory mode of reasoning, reaching the same conclusion, may be deduced from a few well-settled general principles of the common law of almost universal application.
All grants and contracts are to be construed as having reference to the laws and policy of the State or country where the contract is made, or the property which forms its subject is situate.
At the time the title to the lands in question on the banks of the Mississippi river were granted by the government of the United States, the common law prevailed in the State of Mississippi. Indeed, the common law had probably prevailed over this territory as a part of the British grant to Oglethorpe of the colony of Georgia, long anterior to the deed of cession by Georgia to the United States; see Morgan et al. v. Reading, 3 S. & M. 366. The purchasers of these lands bounded on, or by, or at the Mississippi river, therefore, took such right, title and boundary as the language and construction of these grants imported by the rules of the common law.
We have already seen that there is not a case to be found,
On the principle that we sit jus dicere non jus dare, the common law rule must control us until changed by legislation.
What then are the rights of the riparian owner ? All public rivers, whether technically navigable or navigable in fact, must remain free and open, subject to the jus publicum; but the absolute right of approach on each side can only be by public and general ways; consequently, if an individual have land adjoining a river he may reasonably refuse permission to any person to go over it to approach the river, and demand any sum he thinks fit for the permission, unless there be a public way over it; nor have the public any right, at common law, to tow on the banks of any public river; Vattel’s Law of Nations, p. 44, n. 47; Ball v. Herbert, 3 Tenn. R. 253; Angell on Water Courses, 202.
In England such a right might have existed by custom or prescription; Pierce v. Fauconberge, 1 Burrows, 292. In the absence of such custom or prescription, no right to approach a river over private grounds exists; Parthericke v. Mason, 2 Chitty R. 658; Wyatt v. Thompson, 1 Esp. R. 252.
So, if a private individual make and repair a bridge over a river, he may insist upon any person using it paying him toll, as in the instance of Putney and Fulham Bridge. In these cases the demand of an exorbitant toll may be illiberal, but is no more illegal than a nation’s refusing to sell its superfluous produce or to admit free passage through its country.
The right to pass at a moderate toll is a moral but imperfect right; Vattel, p. 44, n. 47, and p. 38, 39, sec. 91, and preliminary secs. 5, 6, p. cxi. Angell on Water Courses, 4-7.
We derive the right to buy what we need from the law of nature, and to demand all other necessities whether as nations or individuals which our absolute wants reguire; or, in other words, which our safety and existence render needful. This principle is as well applicable, too, to highways on land as highways on water. Shelter from storm or cold, or other casualties threatening life, are incident to the right of way on land; and
“ The right of extreme necessity,” says Mr. Rutherforth, p. 4, “ sets aside property.” This, perhaps, is a little too broadly stated, for, while it may take away property, it does not deprive the owner of the right of compensation, and cannot, therefore- be said to set aside property. See Grotius, Book 2, ch. 3, secs. 6 to 11.
It is certainly unintelligible to say that one man may have an exclusive right to the soil granted to him by the nation, and yet, that another may use it when he pleases or at his convenience. To give any one besides the proprietor such a claim or right after property is introduced, some reservation must be shown, either in the grant itself, or as necessarily implied and incident thereto in its very nature.
Two exceptions to the exclusive right of property are stated and defended by Grotius with great force:
First. The right of extreme necessity, just mentioned. As in navigation, if the common stock of victuals be spent, what every particular man hath is held as common. So, in case of fire; if I cannot otherwise avoid it, I may pull down my neighbor’s house to preserve my own. And on the seas, if my ship fall foul or be entangled with another, I may cut their cables to free myself.
This right of extreme necessity is founded upon the presumption, that' no compact, either express or tacit, could so introduce property as to alienate the natural right and the necessary means of self-preservation. However therefore mankind may have consented to the introduction of private property, yet, in whatever respect- such property may become absolutely necessary for the preservation of individuals, they are still in common.
The second exception stated by Grotius is that of ‘‘innocent profit” and for this he cites Cicero and Seneca and Plutarch; as to kindle a coal at our fire, to light a torch or candle by ours, to navigate and to use rivers, &c. And he says, “ the reason is the same here as above, because it is very probable that dominion
Rutherforth, in his Institutes of Natural Law, discusses both these exceptions, their reason and limitations, .with great perspicuity.
In treating of the last, the right of innocent or “harmless profit ” as he terms it, he says: To support this right we must look back to the reason for introducing property, which was, the impossibility that the same property should at one and the same time answer the uses which all or many might have for it; and as the exclusive right to a thing extends no further than the intention of mankind extended when they introduced it — and their intention cannot be understood to have extended further than the motive or reason which engaged them to introduce it— it follows that one man’s property in the thing does not exclude another’s right of harmless profit, because this right takes place only in those instances where the owner suffers no harm, or where the thing will answer all the purposes of the proprietor, notwithstanding the use another may make of it.
The author then proceeds to show that this right of innocent or harmless use of land or water is in its nature an imperfect right, or one of imperfect obligation, and they of whom it is demanded are at liberty to judge for themselves how far it is convenient for them to allow it. Rutherforth, 41-45.
Individuals therefore have no right, under any view, to appropriate private property to their private use without the consent of the owner, except in case of extreme necessity, and the State, under our constitution, can only do it upon just compensation first made.
The plaintiff below derived his title .to the property in question under the common law. The title of Georgia to the territory which is the situs of this controversy was derived from Great Britain under' the common law, and subject to its rules. The deed of cession, executed on the 24th April, 1802, was executed under the common law by Georgia to the government of the
Whatever new doctrine, therefore, may have since originated in other States, their grants and titles, and the rights growing out of them, as understood at the time of the grants by all parties, cannot now be disturbed.
If this be not so, then by what authority, right or title does Mississippi claim jurisdiction over the east half of the Mississippi river ?
The deed of cession from Georgia to the government of the United States refers for its descriptive boundary to the Acts of Congress organizing the Mississippi Territory, and cedes to the United States “ all the right,” &c., of the State of Georgia to the jurisdiction and soil of the land situated within the boundaries of the United States south of the State of Tennessee and west of a certain line, (the western boundary of the State of Georgia.) The Mississippi Territory, organized by Act of Congress, April 7, 1798, (Hutch. Code, 54,) was bounded on the west by the Mississippi river. The Act of Congress of the 1st March, 1817, (Hutch. Code, 59,) authorizing the formation of a constitution and State government for the State of Mississippi, fixes its boundary as follows: “Beginning on the river Mississippi at the point where the southern boundary of Tennessee strikes the same; thence east, &c., &c., to the Mississippi river; thence up the same to the beginning.” It is provided through all these Acts that said river shall be a common highway and forever free, &c., without any tax, &c., imposed by the State.
The same uncertainty (if the common law rule in relation to riparian rights is to be rejected) exists in the Act of Congress of 1812, in reference to the Louisiana boundary.
If the position be true, therefore, that a grant of land on a fresh-water river navigable in fact, though not a “navigable stream” as defined by the common law, does not pass the title of the soil to the purchaser to the middle of the stream, then the United States acquired no title beyond high-water mark on the
"Where is that boundary? High-water mark on tbe Mississippi river, at some seasons, would exclude from our limits the most valuable portion of the State. To whom would this belong ? Did the government of the United States not buy it from Georgia ? Was no territorial or State government erected over it ? Are all the surveys and grants and sales of this very territory, made by order and direction of the United States government, void for want of title from Georgia ? If not, then it is by virtue of the common law doctrine, well understood and never doubted or disputed before the date of these transactions, that the government of the United States acquired the right of soil and jurisdiction over the Mississippi river to its middle under the Georgia deed of cession; and upon what principle shall we deny the same rights and the same construction, under precisely similar grants, to the citizens of Mississippi ?
The whole legislation of Mississippi in relation to her western boundary is founded upon the rule of the common law, and her jurisdiction and right of soil to the middle of the river has been again and again asserted and acted on without dispute or denial. See Rev. Code, p. 47-49 and 67, Art. 101.
The case of the Commissioners of the Homochitto river v. Withers did not involve the questions here discussed. Tbe points discussed in that case had reference to the power of the State over strea'ms capable of navigation, and the right of the State to authorize their improvement.
There is no inconsistency in the principles decided in the case of Morgan & Harrison v. Reading, 3 S. & M. 366, and the case of the Commissioners of the Homochitto river v. Withers, 29 Miss. R. 21. The first involved the rights of the riparian owner as against the individual citizen claiming to use at his pleasure and convenience the private property of the riparian owner. The latter involved the right of the State to improve the navigation of a fresh-water river for the public use and convenience,
The case now before us falls under the principles of Morgan et al. v. Reading, 3 S. & M., and is indeed the identical same case. Let the judgment be affirmed.