82 Ala. 163 | Ala. | 1886
—The appellant, who files the bill, seeks to enjoin appellee from interfering with a boom, which he had erected across the mouth of Hog Bayou, whereby its passage is obstructed. Whether or not the bayou is public and navigable water, involves the determination of the right of complainant to the injunction, and is the main contention of the parties.
The appellant insists, that its navigableness should be determined by the tests deduced and stated in Rhodes v. Otis, 33 Ala. 578, and approvingly quoted in subsequent cases, in which this court considered what constitutes a navigable stream. The points, as to which it is declared in those eases inquiry should be made, relate to the fitness of the stream, and the period of its capacity for valuable floatage ; the number of individuals interested, and the public interests involved, in its use of transportation ; the length of time previously used; the character of the government surveys, whether following the meanderings of the stream, or including it in the surveys ; and the prospective public use. Such practical tests become necessary and appropriate, when the stream is suitable for transportation only during certain periods of varying duration, recurring from year to year, and for limited purposes; where the navigability may be said to be relative, being dependent oh the sufficiency and periodicity of the stages of water, produced by natural causes, and the time of their usual continuance. The stream in question, in the case above cited, was of this nature ; and the points of inquiry were deduced from a review of the authorities in the ascertainment of the principles on which the fact of the navigability of fresh-water streams should be decided. They were not intended to apply, and are inapplicable to tidal waters, or to rivers above tide-water, which are in fact navigable the entire year, without reference to the manner or degree in which they are affected by the seasons. If a stream above tide-water has not been treated as navigable, and the bed reserved from grant or sale, in the survey of the public lands, it is prima facie- private, and such survey casts the burden of proof on the party asserting that it had the character of being private and navigable. In such case, previous use, the distance
In Walker v. Allen, 72 Ala. 456, it is said : “ The test is the adaptability of the waters to the purposes of navigation, whether they are, or in fact have been used by the public, or are capable of being used, in their natural condition, as highways for commerce ; for trade and travel; for the transportation of the products of the country, of its industries, of its fields, forests, or mines, in the customary modes of such transportation.” Extraordinary high tides, if tidal waters, or sudden freshets of brief continuance, if fresh — a mere possibility of being used under unusual and occasional circumstances — will not suffice to constitute a navigable stream. In State v. Bell, 5 Por 365, Goldthwaite, J., says: “ To make a navigable stream, three circumstances must concur : 1st, the stream must have sufficient width; 2d, sufficient depth; and 3d, a freedom from insurmountable obstructions.” It is true that the flow and ebb of the tide is not regarded, in this country, as the usual, or any real test of navigability; and it only operates to impress, prima facie, the character of being public and navigable, and to place the onus of proof on the party affirming the contrary. But the navigability of tidal waters does not materially depend upon past or present actual public use. Such use may establish navigability, but it is not essential to give the character. Otherwise, streams in new and unsettled sections of the country, or where the increase, growth, and development have not been sufficient to call them into public use, would be excluded, though navigable in fact — thus making the character of being a navigable stream dependent on the occurrence of the necessity of public use. Capability of being used for useful purposes of navigation, of trade and travel, in the usual and ordinary modes, and not the extent and manner of the use, is the measure of navigability, in the sense in which the term “navigable waters” is employed in the act of -Congress for the admission of Alabama into the Union, and in the constitution and statutes of this State ; waters, which at that time were navigable in fact, though in unsettled or sparsely inhabited portions of the State. The distinguishing test is, whether the stream is “ susceptible or not of use as a common passage for the public.” Waters navigable in fact, it has been said, are regarded as public navigable waters in law; and a stream is navigable in fact, when it is capable in
It will serve no useful purpose to consider in detail, or to sum up the evidence. The general conclusions drawn therefrom will suffice.' It will be conceded, that the riparian owners are few, and that but few individuals are engaged in the use of the bayou for active transportation. But the public use is not limited to the number of persons actively engaged in using it for such purpose. The public interests involved, so far as considered, must be determined by the extent of the contributions to the trade and commercial interests of the markets and places of business, where the products transported are used or sold, by means of suitable and available connections. The bayou is within tide-water, about four and a half miles above Mobile. It is a recess of the Chickasabogue creek, which is admitted to be a navigable water, and empties into Mobile river, whereby the bayou has navigable water communication with the river, bay, and harbor of Mobile. The timber trade and interests of Mobile have largely increased during the past few years, and are still increasing; and in consequence thereof, the value, demand, and use of bayous, such as the one in question, which afford safe and convenient room for booming and storage, have correspondingly increased. These facts have caused the bayou to be more largely used than formerly, for booming and floating logs and timber. The evidence is in conflict as to the quantity aud quality of the timber on adjacent' lands; and the weight of evidence is, that the greater portion is brought from Chickasabogue creek into the'bayou, where it is stored to wait subsequent transportation to market. This fact, however, does not disprove, but rather establishes its capability of being used for valuable floatage, and does not affect its character of being a navigable stream.
The witnesses for the defendant appear to have had larger and more familiar knowledge of the capacity of the bayou, than those for complainant. Their evidence, one of whom speaks from actual measurements and soundings, shows tliat, in its natural state and ordinary capacity, it has suffi
It is further insisted, that complainant is entitled to the injunction, on the ground, that defendant is estopped to deny his right to erect a boom across the entire bayou. The estoppel is founded on the facts, that defendant, having leased from Meaher “ the water front and booming facilities of the bayou from its forks to its mouth,” for a term of fifteen years from June 26, 1882, transferred, sold, and conveyed the unexpired term to Chase Spotswood, who sold, transferred, and conveyed it to complainant. We shall not inquire whether a court of equity will exercise its extraordinary power, under any circumstances, to prevent a party from abating or removing an indictable nuisance, — obstructing a navigable water-course being declared by statute a misdemeanor. — Code, 1876, § 4254. We do not construe the leases to convey, or to purport to convey, the bed or soil under the water, but the booming facilities as distinguished from the bed. The lease of the booming facilities, in connection with the water front, is a lease of the right of the owner, which appertains to the riparian title, to erect booms to aid in storing and floating logs to market. The booms may be extended far enough to reach navigable water, but at the peril of obstructing navigation. They should
Affirmed.