This is a proceeding by mandamus to compel the canal appraisers to assess and appraise the damages which the relator has sustained by the use and diversion of the waters of the Mohawk river, at Little Falls, for the purposes of the Erie canal. It is assumed, and may be taken as conceded, that the Mohawk river is one of the navigable rivers of this State, and, perhaps, the court may take judicial notice of the fact that it is so. On the 30th of March, 1792, the legislature of this State incorporated a company to be known thereafter as “ The President, Directors and Company of the Western Inland Lock Navigation in the State of New York,” for the purpose of opening a lock navigation from the then navigable part of Hudson’s river to be extended to Lake Ontario and to the Seneca lake. This act was amended by another passed on the 22d of December, 1792 (Greenl. Laws, vol. 3, p. 13), the fifth .section of which declared that all the land under the water in the Mohawk river, which may be required by the said corporation for the purpose of constructing any canal lock, dyke, embankment or dam for the improvement of the navigation thereof, shall be and hereby is vested in the said corporation and its successors, as a free gift from the people of this State, saving and reserving to the people of this State the right to all lands under the *462 water not so occupied as aforesaid, to be appropriated as the legislature shall from time to time direct.
The facts agreed upon between the parties are, that about the year 1798, the said Western Inland Lock Navigation Company constructed a canal, with locks, around the falls of the river at Little Falls, under power and fight vested in that corporation by this charter and other statutes, and continued to use the water of the river at that place for the purpose of feeding the said canal and locks until the sale to the State.
That about the year 1823, the State purchased and became the proprietors of the canal and works of the Western Inland Lock Navigation Company at Little Falls. That the State, about the year 1823, constructed an aqueduct across the river at Little Falls, and by means of it diverted the water from the canal of the Inland Lock Navigation Company into the Erie canal, and paid no damages to any other party therefor, except the appraised value of the property and franchise of the said Western Inland Lock Navigation Company; and that the Erie canal continued to be supplied with water at Little Falls drawn through that old channel unenlarged, and across the river until the period of the enlargement of the Erie canal. That about the year 1841, in the enlargement of the Erie canal, a feeder was constructed on the south side of the river at Little Falls, through which water has since been drawn to supply the enlarged canal and locks with water; that since the year 1841, the State has caused the water to be drawn from the Mohawk river through both of the said feeders, and has, by means of said last constructed feeder, greatly increased the quantity of water drawn from the river at Little Falls into the Erie canal, to wit, at the rate of about 12,000 cubit feet per minute. That all the water so diverted from the river is taken from the same level, above the head of the falls, and not returned to the river, and the owners of the lands bounded on said river, are thereby deprived of the use of the same. That the relator was the owner in fee of the land adjoining the river on the south side thereof at the time of the diversion and appropri *463 ation in 1841, aforesaid, and at the time of the service of the claim for damages claimed herein. That the relator’s title came to him by sundry mesne conveyances from a patent granted to the Herkimers and their heirs and assigns forever, in which the boundary on the river is described as follows: “ Thence north 60, degrees west to the said Mohawk river; thence down the stream thereof as it runs to the place where the tract began.” The relator acquired his title to said premises, and the water of the river flowing in the channel thereof, by deed in fee from one Bellinger, in February, 1829. Said Bellinger was in possession, claiming as owner under the patent aforesaid, for many years prior thereto, and had used the water of the Mohawk river under claim of right as riparian owner of lot Ho. 16 in said patent, of which lot the premises conveyed by him to the relator, were part and parcel, to propel a grist mill erected by him about the year 1801, which mill was still in existence, operated by said water at the time of said diversion in 1841, and the grant of part of said lot Ho. 16 to the relator was bounded by the middle of the river, and the relator had used the water of the river under claim of right as the riparian owner from a short time after said conveyance -to him, till after said diversion and claim in 1841. That the water power of the river had been used to propel one or more mins by the riparian owners on the north shore of the river, during the revolutionary war, and has so continued to be used under claim of right and title until the present time. That the value of the property of the relator,- of which the river is the boundary, consists largely in the facilities for the use of the water power of the river on his land, which water has a fall of over 20 feet thereon, and such value is greatly impaired by reason of said diversion of the water above his lands from the channel of the river into the Erie canal, by means of the feeder finished in 1841, and the appropriation thereof by the State for the Erie canal enlargement; that the above mentioned diversion and appropriation were made without the consent of the said claimant, and no compensation has been made by the State to him therefor, and his damages *464 therefor have never been appraised. That the relator had made the claim for damages, and that the canal appraisers had refused to award the same.
That the ground of such refusal to award such damages, was that the Mohawk river at Little Falls was the property of the State.
This claim is founded on the assumption that the Mohawk river is one of the navigable rivers of the State, and consequently the State is the owner of the bed thereof, and of the waters that flow therein. The Special Term awarded a writ of mandamus, but on appeal, the General Term reversed the judgment, and the relator now appeals to this court.
The title to the land or bed of the river undeniably carried with it the water that flowed over it. The relator’s claim to the water of the Mohawk river is based upon the fact, as alleged by him, that he is the owner of the bed of the river, usqum ad medvum filae, by virtue of the grant set forth, in the writ. His boundary extending to the said river, and thence down the stream thereof, would necessarily carry him to the, thread of the stream, unless the river be of that character which constitutes the State the owner of the bed thereof, and it is a significant fact, and one worthy of particular observation, that as early as the year 1192, the State thus regarded itself the owner, and granted a portion of the bed of the river to the Western Inland navigation Company, for the uses and purposes of said company, and this grant carried .with it the water flowing over the same. Such grant was made to that company “ as a free gift from the people of this State,” and the act making the same saved and reserved to the people of this State, the lands under water not so occupied, “to be appropriated as the legislature should from time to time direct.” This grant and reservation were an early and emphatic assertion of ownership on the part of the people of this State, of the land and waters of the Mohawk river. At the time of the passage of this act, the senate was composed of 24 members, among whom was Samuel Jones, an eminent lawyer of that day, and Generals Gansevoort, Schuyler and Van Rensselaer, of Albany, and the assembly of 66 *465 members, and among the latter were John Watts and Josiah Ogden Hoffman, of Hew York, James Kent, of Dutchess, and Stephen Bush, of Albany, all eminent lawyers.
The bill was objected to by the council of revision, at a meeting thereof held on the first of December, 1792, at which were present Governor George Clinton, Chancellor Livingston and Messrs. Hobart and Lansing, justices of the Supreme Court. The objections of the council are found in Street’s Hew York Council of Revision, page 299, and an examination of them will show that the council did not object to the grant or reservation contained in the fifth section of the act. Their attention must necessarily have been called to these provisions, and their silence in regard to them conveys their unqualified approval of them, notwithstanding the objections of the council, the bill received, in its reconsideration by the legislature, its almost unanimous approval, having but one negative vote in the senate, and an almost equal unanimity in the house. In alluding to these facts, a distinguished member of the Court of Errors, in his opinion in the case of
The Canal Appraisers
v.
The People
(
*466 Again, at a very early period in the history of this State, the legislature organized a board, designated and known as the commissioners of the land office, to which was'commit-' ted the care and custody of all lands owned by the State, and by which, as directed by the legislature from time to time, grants thereof have been made. This board was created by an act passed on the 5th of Hay, 1786, and the 18th section of the act declared that it should and might be lawful for the said commissioners to grant, such and so much of the lands, under the water of navigable rivers as they should deem necessary to promote the commerce of this State, provided always that no such grant should be made in pursuance of this act to any person' whatever other than the proprietor or proprietors of the adjacent lands. (1 Greenl. Laws, p. 280.) This power conferred upon the commissioners in relation to grants of land under the waters of navigable rivers, was contained in the Revision of 1813, in the same language. (1 R. L., "p. 293, § 4.) On the 14th of April, 1815, the legislature passed an act, by which the powers of the commissioners to make grants of land under water were extended “to the lands under water on navigable lakes.” (Laws of 1815, ch. 199, p. 201.) In the Revision of the Laws of 1830, the commissioners are declared “ to have power to grant so much of lands under the waters of navigable rivers or lakes as they shall deem necessary to promote the commerce of this State.” ■ (1 R. S., p. 208, § 67.) By an act passed in 1850 (Laws of 1850, ch. 283, p. 621), this section of the Revised Statutes was amended so as to read as follows: “The commissioners of the land office shall have power to grant in perpetuity or otherwise so much of the lands under the waters of navigable rivers or lakes as they shall deem necessary to promote the commerce of this State, or proper for the purpose of beneficial enjoyment of the same by the adjacent owner, but no such grant shall be made to any person other than the proprietor of the adjacent lands, and any such grant that shall be made to any other person shall be void.” And such is the.present authority on this subject vested in the commissioners of the land office. (1 R. S., 5th ed., p. 552, § 82.)-
*467 Although the commissioners of the land office are restricted in grants made by them of lands under water in navigable rivers or lakes to the proprietor of the adjacent lands, yet there is no such restraint upon the powers of the State, as exercised through the legislature. It is lawful for the State to make" the grant to others than the adjacent proprietor. (Gould v. Hudson River R. R. Co., 2 Seld., 522.)
In this connection, it is not unimportant to notice other legislation by this State, indicating its control over the waters of this State. As early as the year 1802, an act was passed declaring the waters of certain streams, therein mentioned, to be public highways, but containing permission to the owners of adjoining lands to make erections on said waters, so that the same shall not obstruct the navigation thereof. (3 Webs., 144.) ¡Numerous acts of a similar character are found in our statute books, containing restrictions upon the use of the streams declared to be public highways, and of the waters thereof.
It may be proper here to advert to the declaration of the people of this State, in the Revised Statutes, that the people thereof, in their rights of sovereignty, are deemed to possess the original and ultimate property in all lands within the jurisdiction of the State. (3 R. S., 5th ed., p. 2, § 1;
The People
v.
Denison,
Upon the separation of the colonies from the crown of Great Britain,- the people of this State succeeded to all the rights of the British crown to lands within its territorial jurisdiction, and prima facie being the owners of the lands covered by the waters of the Mohawk river, they can use those waters for any purpose. It is contended, on the part of the relator, that the patentees, under whom he claims, by " virtue of their patent, acquired the title to the center of the river, and consequently to the use of its waters. It is claimed by the relator that, by the common law, which, it is contended, is applicable in this State, under a grant of land, situate *468 upon a fresh water river, the grantee takes title to the thread of the stream, and has the right to use the land and water thereof in any way. And it is said, if the stream be fresh and navigable, the. same rights accrue and exist to the use of the land and water, in any way not inconsistent with the use of the stream for navigation.
It is undoubtedly true that such parts of the common law as were in force on the 20th day of April, 1777, were adopted by the people of this State as the laws thereof, subject to such alterations as the legislature should make concerning the same. But such declaration does not compel us blindly and slavishly to incorporate into our system of jurisprudence principles totally inapplicable to our circumstances and condition, and which would produce absurd results. L think We shall find in an investigation of this subject,- that the remarks of Judge Johnson in
Brown
v.
Scofield
(
The fountain from which all of the rules on the subject now under consideration has been drawn, is the celebrated treatise de jure maris by Lord Chief Justice Hale. Judge Cowen, in his learned note to the case of Ex parte Jennings (6 Cowen, 556), seems to think that the extravagant encomium of Mr. Wirt, in reference to this author, that “ with a mind beaming with'the effulgence of noonday he sat on the bench like a descended god,” was almost justified. Judge Cowen says of this work “ that his doctrines are so full, his distinctions so clear, and his illustrations so striking and apposite, that they seem to deserve an insertion in our books.” I desire to express no dissent from these deserved commendations, if I have correctly apprehended the doctrines advanced *469 by this eminent writer. A careful examination of his text and the authorities referred to have led my mind to the conviction that much misapprehension has existed as to what doctrine he actually promulgated.
Chapter first treats concerning the interest of fresh rivers. He says: “ Fresh rivers, of what kind soever, do of common right belong to the owners of.the soil adjacent, so that the owners of the one side have of common right the propriety of the soil, and consequently the right of fishing, usque jilum aquae; and the owners of the other side the right of soil or ownership and fishing unto the jilum aquae on their side. And if a man be owner of the land of both sides, in common presumption he is the owner of the whole river, and hath the right of fishing according to the extent of his land in length.” How it is particularly to be observed that nothing is said here about rivers navigable; but these remarks are confined to “ fresh rivers.” And chapter two is entitled, of the king’s prerogative in private or fresh rivers; and in this chapter it is said that the king hath jurisdiction to reform and punish nuisances in all rivers, whether fresh or salt; that they are a common passage, not only for ships or greater vessels, but also for smaller, as barges or boats, and hath power to reform the obstructions therein, so that these kinds of rivers, whether fresh or salt, that bear boats or barges, are highways by water, whether the soil be the king’s or not. In chapter third it is declared'that the king has the right of property in the sea, and in the shore thereof, aud in what is called an arm of the sea, where the sea flows and reflows, and so far only as the sea so flows and reflows; and that, although the water be fresh • at high water, yet the denomination of an arm of the sea continues, if it flow and reflow.
But in the celebrated and leading case of The Boyal Fishery of the Bimer Bonne, it was resolved that there are two kinds of rivers, navigable and not navigable. Every naviga-' ble river, so high as the sea flows and ebbs in it, is a royal .river, and the fishery therein a royal fishery, but in every other river not navigable, and in the fishery of such river, the tertenants on each side have an interest of common right. *470 And in the statute of 28 Henry VIII, ch. 22, the rivers Barrow, Noire and Soire are called the king’s rivers, and the weirs erected in them are called purprestures, and it was said that although the king permitted his people for their ease and commodity to have common passage over such navigable rivers, yet he hath a sole interest in the soil of such rivers. Wherefore it was resolved-in that case that the river Banne, so far as the sea flows and ebbs in it, is a royal river, and that the fishery therein belongs to the king and not to those who have the soil on each side of the water. But on the other part it was agreed that every inland river not navigable appertains to the owners of the soil whereon it hath its course, and if such river runneth between two manors, and is the boundary between them, the one moiety of the river and fishery belongeth to one lord,, and the other moiety to the other. (Sir John Davies’ Rep., 149.) This case was decided in 8 James I, about the year 1610. It should be noted that in this case but two kinds of rivers are spoken of, navigable and not navigable, and it is expressly ruled. that the soil or property in the latter belongs to the tertenants on each side, and inferentially, as to the navigable rivers, that the property therein is in the king. This is expressly ruled as to such parts of the same in which the sea flows and ebbs. And it being held that the bino; hath the soil in the Barrow, Noire and Soire, navigable rivers, it would follow that he also owned the soil in all navigable rivers, whether the sea did or not flow and ebb. For those three rivers are not tidal rivers. The Barrow, or Barragh, is a river of Ireland, which rises in the Slievebloom mountains, and, after a course of about ninety miles south, joins the Soire, to form the estuary of Waterford harbor. The Noire is an affluent of the Barrow.
In Warren v. Mathews (6 Mod., 73), Lord Holt, Ch. J,, held that every subject of common right might fish with lawful nets, &c., in a navigable river, as well as in the sea. (S. C., 1 Salk., 357.) This was held of the River Exe, a river of England, which rises in Exmoor, Somerset county, and after a course of 45 miles flows into the English channel at-Exemouth. It is thus seen that a navigable river is placed *471 on the same footing as the sea.- In Carter v. Murcott (4 Burr., 2162), Lord Mansfield said, in rivers not navigable, the proprietors of the land have the right of fishery on their respective sides, and it generally extends ad filum medium aquae. But in navigable rivers, the proprietors of the land on each side have it not, the fishery is common; it is prima facie in the king, and is public. Justice Tates says, the cases cited prove only this distinction, “that navigable rivers or arms of the sea, belong to the crown, and not, like private rivers, to the land owners on each side.” He says the case of The Fishery in the Bamne is agreeable to this, and ’tis a very good case. Lord Mansfield, afterwards, in 1774, keeping ip mind this same distinction, repeats the same doctrine. In The Mayor of Lynn v. Turner (Cowp., 86), he says, “Exfacto oritur jus. How does it appear that this is a navigable river ? The flowing and reflowing of the tide does not make it so; for there are many places into which the tide flows that are not navigable rivers.” The case of Warren v. Mathews was approved of by "Willes, Oh. J., in Willes’ Bep., 265, 268.
In The King v. Smith (Doug., 441), the question submitted to the court was, “ whether (this being a navigable river) the right to the soil in the bed of the river usque ad filum aquae, is in the owners of the ground adjoining to the river?” On the part of the defense, it was urged that the fight of the crown to the soil was only in navigable rivers as far aa the sea ebbs and flows, and that in the Thames, the sea did not properly flow above London bridge. Judgment waa given on the verdict against the defendants. Lord Mansfield said the case did not state whether the water, when the tide rises at Bichmond, is fresh or salt, but that it rather took it for granted that it is salt, describing the Thames generally as a navigable river. In Miles v. Rose (5 Term, 705), Geose, Ch. J., said, the flowing of the tide, though not absolutely inconsistent with a right of private property in the creek, is strong prima facie evidence of its being a public navigable river; and Heath, J., observed that the flux and reflux of the tide is strong prima fade evidence that this. *472 was a navigable river. While it must be conceded that Hale, in his treatise, regards it as essential to a navigable river that it should have the ebb and flow of the tide, and ceases to be navigable, in this sense, when or at. the. point when it is uninfluenced by the tide, yet it cannot be denied that such has not been the opinion of all the English judges in all cases. Lord Mansfield correctly said “ Ex facto oritur jus,” and it seems more rational to determine the question of navigability or unnavigability from the fact of -navigation, or otherwise, than from a circumstance which may or may not be conclusive evidence of its navigability. The flow and reflow of the tide is prima facie evidence, as has been said, of the fact that the river is navigable, but the real and substantial inquiry must always be to ascertain whether the river is navigable or not. When this main and controlling fact is established, then. we have means of determining whether the al/oeus or bed of the river, is the property of the adjoining owners or belongs to the State, or the people represented by it. That is the substantial question in controversy in this action, and to its proper settlement, we must ascertain what is the law of this State applicable to its solution.
It will now be convenient to examine the decisions of . and the discussions in the courts of this State upon this topic. The action of the legislature of 1792, in appropriating to the uses of corporations the bed of the Mohawk river, and that of the Hudson, above tidal influences, seems not to have attracted attention until a late day. Such legislation could only be defended and justified on the theory that the State was the ' owner of the
alveus
or bed of those streams, and such was undoubtedly assumed to be the fact, and it was based on the ground that they were navigable rivers.
Palmer
v.
Mulligan
(
In the case of
Hooker
v.
Cummings
(
It is apparent that
Hooker
v.
Cummings
was decided mainly on the authority of
Adams
v.
Pease
(
But to resume the history of the decisions in this State. The next case in point of time is that of Ex parte Jennings (6 Cowen, 518). The canal appraisers had refused to award damages to the owners of the lands bordering on the Chittenango creek, the waters of which were taken into the Erie canal for a feeder. Jennings claimed to be the owner of the bed of the creek, and, consequently, of its waters, and the Supreme Court held that the Chittenango was not a navigable river, because the tide did not "ebb and flow therein, and that consequently the proprietor of the adjacent land had the right to use the land and water of the river in any way not inconsistent with the public right of passage over it. The court said, an opposite rule prevails in the construction of grants, *478 bounded on the margin of navigable rivers. By the term navigable river, the law does not mean such as are navigable in common parlance. The smallest creek may be so to a certain extent, as well as the largest river, without being legally a navigable stream. The term has in law a technical meaning, and applies to all streams, rivers, or arms of the sea, where the tide ebbs and flows. A public grant, bounded on the margin of such waters, extends by construction no farther than high water mark, and leaves as to the rest an absolute proprietary interest in the public. Above the flow of the tide the river becomes private, either absolutely so or subject to the public right of way, accordingly as it is a small or large stream. At the same time, the same court granted a mandamus in the case of Ex parte Tibbetts. This latter case was taken tó the Court of Errors, and is reported in 5th Wend., 423. Nothing was definitely decided in that court, at that time, as the case was disposed of wholly on the ground that the relator had failed to show title to the premises injured. Chancellor Walwoeti-i and Senator Allen maintained, how-, ever, that the rule of the common law prevails here; that grants of land bounded on rivers and streams, above tide water, extend usque filum aquae, and that not only the banks but the beds of the rivers, and the islands therein, and the exclusive right of fishing, pass to the grantee, unless expressly reserved. Chancellor Walwoeth also held that the principle of the common law extending grants usque filum aquae, is not sufficiently broad to embrace our large fresh water lakes; as to these our local law assigns the shores down to the ordinary low water mark to the riparian owners, and the beds of the lakes, with the islands therein, to the public.
Senator Beakdslev held that the rule of the common law extending grants, on' the shores of rivers above the flow and reflow of the tide,
usque filum
aquae, does not apply to our large fresh water rivers; at all events, a patent bounded on a river navigable above tide water passes no interest to the patentee in the bed of the river as against the State. In his ' opinion he very pertinently observes: “ Buies of law should be adapted not only to. the moral, but the physical condition
*479
of the country. Had the common law originated on this continent, we "should never have heard of the 'doctrine that fresh water rivers are not navigable above the flow of the tide; nor would our courts have been called upon to compromise the interests of the community by sacrificing truth to technicality and substance to form.” In 1835, the case of
Varick
v.
Smith
(
Senator Beardsley, who delivered an opinion for reversing the judgment of the Supreme Court, held that the common law rule, which authorizes the owners of shores of rivers, in which the tide'does not ebb or flow, to hold ad filum aquae, is not applicable to the condition of this State in respect to its large navigable rivers, in which no tide ebbs or flows; that from the acts of the government of New York, as well before as since the revolution, in asserting the title of the public to islands and the beds of rivers after granting the lands upon the shores of navigable rivers, in which the tide does not ebb or flow, a strong presumption is raised that the common law in this respect has never been adopted here. That in respect to the Mohawk river in particular, there has been a uniform claim of right on the part of the government, and a corresponding practice for upwards of one hundred years, to dispose of the bed of the river and the islands in the same, notwithstanding previous grants of the shores; that the bed of that river belongs to the State, and such parts thereof, as are unoccupied, may be used in the construction and improvement of the public canals without liability on the part of the State to pay damages for such appropriation. That when lands in this State are granted by letters, patent, bounded on navigable fresh water rivers, and nothing appears from the terms of the grant that the government intended to , part with the beds of the rivers, the patentees cannot take, to the exclusion of the State, if the waters or beds of the rivers are wanted for public uses. That in the construction of grants of lands bounded on small and unnavigable streams, , the owner of the banks takes ad filum aquae, as decided in Ex parte Jennings ” (supra).
Senator Tracy, who delivered the other opinion for reversal, held that the great fresh water streams of this country are not subject to the principle of individual appropriation allowed by the common law of England. That the common .
*481
law doctrine that fresh rivers of what kind soever do of common right belong to the. owners of the soil adjacent, is not of universal application in this State. That the reason of the rules assigning proprietorship of the bed of a river to the owners of the adjacent shores, wholly fails in reference to the large navigable rivers of this country. That the long continued practice in this State of granting islands in rivers subsequent to patents covering the adjacent shores, contradicts the assumed application of the common law rule of riparian ownership as applied to the great rivers of this State. That the Mohawk river, having immemorially been used for the purposes of navigation, is a public • river, and the riparian owner is not entitled to recover damages for the destruction of a mill site in consequence of the waters thereof being raised by the erection of a dam for the improvement of the navigation of the Hudson river, into which the Mohawk flows. The judgment of reversal by the Court of Errors must be assumed to-have been for the reasons assigned by the senators; where they accord, and such has been the generally received opinion of the profession, and such are the views of the learned justice of the Supreme Court, who delivered the opinion now under review. It is not to be denied that this position has been conceded, and by the able and learned vice-chancellor of the fifth circuit, in the case now to be referred to, although in that case he denied the law to be as then held. In the case of
Varick
v.
Smith
(
. The next case worthy of attention is that of
Starr
v.
Child
(
It was conceded that the Genesee river was a fresh water stream, and a navigable river. Judge Cowen, in the opinion of the court, reiterates the doctrine advanced by him in the note to the case in 6 Oowen, that in all grants bounded on fresh water rivers, the soil thereof passes, unless expressly-excluded by the terms of the grant. Judge Bbonson, in-his-dissenting opinion, controverts this doctrine, and as his views are so clearly, concisely and accurately expressed, they are extracted as fully and correctly stating the results which my examinations and reflections have led to. He says:
“
Havigable.rivers belong to the public; other streams may be owned by individuals. This doctrine is founded on principles of public policy, so obviously just and wise, that it is no matter of astonishment to find it prevailing over all Europe, and, so far as I know, all over the civilized world. Indeed, it would be strange if any enlightened people had failed to perceive the importance of declaring all navigable waters public properly. In England, a rule of evidence has been adopted, which, although it recognizes the doctrine, does not always give it complete practical effect. By the common.law, the flow and reflow of the tide is the criterion for determining what rivers are public. This rule is open to the double objection, that it includes some streams which are not, in fact, navigable, and which consequently might well be the subject of individual ownership; and it excludes other streams which are, in fact, navigable, and which in every well regulated State should belong to the public. Although the ebb and flow of the tide furnishes an imperfect standard for determining what rivers are navigable, it nevertheless approximates the truth, and may answer very well in the island of Great Britain, for which the rule was made. But such a standard is quite wide of the mark when applied to the great fresh water rivers of this continent; and would never have been thought of here, if we had not found the rule ready made to our hands. How. I think no doctrine better settled than that such portions of-the law-of England as are not adapted to our condition, form-
*483
no part of the law of this State. This exception includes not only such laws as are inconsistent with the spirit of our institutions, but such as were framed with special reference to the physical condition of a country differing widely from our own. It is contrary to the spirit of the common law itself to apply a rule founded on a particular reason to a law when that reason utterly fails,
cessante rations legis, cessat ipsa lex?
The attempt would be futile to add anything to the force or appositeness of these suggestions. Much stress is laid upon the case of the
Commissioners of the Canal Fund
v.
Kempshall
(
The only reported opinion in the latter case, is that by Senator Yerplahk. The proceeding was to recover damages for the interruption, by the agents of the State, of the water of the Genesee river, which supplied the defendant’s mills on-its bank. Such interruptions were caused by the erection, by the State, of an aqueduct across.that river, and the defendant’s mills were provided with water from a raceway, supplied with water by means of a dam across the Genesee river, at the distance of thirty or forty rods above the aqueduct. About four rods below the dam commences a fall of fourteen to fifteen feet, followed by a succession of rapids extending 150 rods to a fall of 96 feet, which distance is never navigable, except that logs were occasionally floated to a saw-mill. From the last mentioned fall, there is a succession of rapids and falls for the distance of about three miles, below which the river is navigable for several miles to Lake Ontario. It is also navigable, and has been used for the navigation of boats and river craft, above the dam for the distance of upwards of forty miles.
Senator Yerplanck, in his opinion, states the rule of the common law, as he understands it, to be that as to all fresh water rivers above the tide, they are presumed to be private
*484
property, and in the absence of proof of any other right, the title thereof is always held to be in the owners of the banks, who are considered the grantees of the soil of the river beds, and of the use of the waters to the middle of the stream. Such property in small and wholly unnavigable rivers is strictly private and exclusive. lie -then proceeds to enfo'rce these views at considerable length, and regards the main question as still open, notwithstanding the decision of the same court in the
Tibbetts Case.
That he could not regard that decision as an authority beyond the peculiar case of the Mohawk river. As to that river he concedes it to be an authoritative decision, and settling a contrary doctrine. But the learned senator then proceeds to show that the defendant had a grant from the State of the
alveus
or bed of the river, and was therefore the owner of the waters flowing in the stream. He says,
“
Here, I conceive, is the evidence of a positive grant, such as would have conveyed a fee in the bed of the Hudson at Poughkeepsie, and a property in the use of its waters there, subject only to the uses of commerce and navigation.” How it is well known that the Hudson, at the point mentioned, is a navigable stream, in which the tide ebbs and flows, and to which the common law, as understood by the learned senator, was inapplicable. This point was entirely sufficient to procure an affirmance of the judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of the relator, and there is no evidence in the report of the case that a majority of the court did not affirm the judgment on that point without attacking or weakening the doctrine of the court in 17 Wend.; and at the conclusion of the opinion it is said,
“
The view I have before taken of the proprietary interests of the defendant in the Genesee river is sufficient, if correct, for all the purposes of this case.” I cannot but consider, therefore, that the learned chancellor, in his opinion in
Starr
v.
Child
(
In the case of
The People
v.
Tibbetts
(
Judge Daggett, in the case of
Chapman
v.
Kimball
(
• It will be seen that the Supreme Court of Indiana take the same views of this Case of Platt that have been already stated in this opinion; and they are now again dwelt upon, as this case has mainly given rise, and been the authority referred to in nearly all the cases, for the position, that navigable streams or rivers are only such ás have the flow and ebb of the tide. The Supreme Court of Indiana then proceed to discuss the *490 rules of the common law as laid down by Hale in his treatise, and then "say: “The doctrines of the civil law were more uniform, and the rights of all riparian proprietors were the same, as it respected the ownership of navigable streams. There was no difference made between those navigable streams where the tide did not ebb and flow, and those where it did. The exclusive right of the owner of the bank extended only to high water mark; and the bank below high water "mark, and the whole bed of the stream, belonged exclusively to the public, and no obstruction or diversion of the water was permitted. The principles of the common law have been recognized in eight or ten of the States, but in several others the principles of the civil law, to a very considerable extent, have been adopted. In this State, neither the principles of the common or civil law have as yet received any-judicial sanction.”
These are all the cases referred to by Angelí on Water Courses, as authority for the statement that this rule of the common law, namely, that rivers are navigable only when the tide ebbs and flows therein, has been -recognized as law in the States of Hew York, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Maine, Maryland, Virginia, Ohio, and Indiana. It was especially disclaimed in the latter case, the only one cited by him,
Cox
v.
The State (supra).
The learned commentator on American law (3 Kent, 548, in a note), says this subject was learnedly discussed in the case of
Middleton
v.
Pritchard
(
It is appropriate here to consider the cases in this country, where the common law rule, as understood by many judges, has been repudiated, and the rule of the- civil law recognized as more appropriate to the condition of this country. A .leading and well considered case is that of Carson v. Blazee (2 Binney, 475). In that case, the question was whether a patent bounded by the Susquehanna river conveyed to the grantee the title to the center or the thread of the stream. Chief Justice Tilghman, in his charge to the jury, said, the common law principle is, in fact, that the owners of the banks have no right to the water of navigable rivers. How, 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 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, Allegany, Delaware, Schuylkill, or Susquehanna and its branches. On a motion for a new trial on the ground of misdirection, Yeates, J., in delivering the opinion of the court, said, the qualities of fresh or salt water cannot, among us, determine whether a river shall be deemed navigable or .not. Heither can the flux or reflux of the tides ascertain its character. *492 Pursuing such a rule would, in the first case, render the Delaware an unnavigable stream throughout the coniines of the State, and in the second, would confine its navigable quality to its several courses south from Trenton. • The property of the land covered by the waters of the Susquehanna, remains in the commonwealth as other ungranted lands.
This doctrine underwent a very elaborate discussion in the case of
Shrunk
v.
The Schuylkill Navigation Company
(14 Serg.
&
Bawle, 71), and the unanimous opiniop of the Supreme Court was, that the rivers of Pennsylvania are not subject to the common law rule, that all fresh water rivers in which the tide does not ebb and flow, belong to the owners of the soil adjacent, so that the owners of one side have of common right the property of the soil, and consequently the right of fishing
usque adjllum medium aquae,
and the owners of the other side the rights of soil and fishing
ad filum aquae
on the other side, and that he who owns both sides is the owner of the whole river, and has the exclusive right of fishing according to the extent of his shores. Chief Justice Tilghman very justly said, the great rivers of America are so different from those of England, that in the opinion of many, the same definition of a navigable river cannot properly be applied to both, and that court held the English distinction, that the character of navigability depended upon the quality of the water, fresh or salt, to be wholly inapplicable to the principal rivers of that State. That the only test was, whether the river was or not actually navigable. (See also
Bird
v.
Smith,
I shall refer to but one additional case in the State court's. It is that of McManus v. Carmichael (2 Clarke’s Cases in LaAv and Equity), decided in the Supreme Court of IoAva. It contains an able and exhaustive review of all the cases, and a learned discussion of the whole subject, and may be profit *494 ably referred to by all who desire instruction on these points/ and are anxious to reconcile the contradictory dicta and deci sions which the discussion of them has called forth. I quote at some length-from Judge Woodwaed’s opinion, for the reason that his remarks are most pertinent to the point to be decided in this case. He states three propositions, which he deems are established: First. Although the ebb and flow of the tide was, at common law, the most usual test of navigability, yet it was not necessarily the only one. Second. However the truth may be upon the above proposition, that test is not applicable to the Mississippi river. Third. The common' consequences of navigability attach to the legal navigability of the Mississippi. After a full review and discussion of the authorities relating to the first point, he says: “ However the truth may be upon the first proposition, the flow and reflow of the tide is not applicable to the Mississippi, as a test of its navigability. And, third, the common law consequences of navigability attach to the legal navigability of the Mississippi river. The arguments and authorities upon these two propositions being in a great measure identical, they must be considered together. The thought has been before suggested, that, as a real and virtual test, the tide is a merely arbitrary one, and is not supported by reason; since many waters where the tide flows are not in fact navigable, and many where it does not flow are so. It is navigability in fact which forms the foundation of navigability in law; and from the fact follows the appropriation to public use, and hence its publicity and legal navigability. It is true that this legality attaches to some waters which do not possess the requisite quality in fact; but this arises from their relation to the high seas and to admiralty, and from the difficulty of making an hundred exceptions. It is impossible to bring the mind to an approval, when we attempt to apply it to the rivers of this country, stretching up to three thousand miles in extent, flowing through or between numerous independent States, and bearing a commerce which competes with that of the oceans — a test which might be applicable to an island not so large as some two of our States, and to streams whose utmost length *495 was less than three hundred miles, and whose outlet and fountain, at the same time, could be within the same State jurisdiction. In England, or in Great Britain, the chief rivers are the Severn, Thames, Kent, Humber, and Mersey; the latter of which is about fifty, and the first about three hundred miles in length, and of this (the Severn) about one hundred miles consists of the British Channel. The world-renowned Thames has the diminutive proportions of two hundred miles; and of even these lengths, not the whole is navigable. Thus it will be seen that the chief rivers of good old England range in extent with our Connecticut, Merrimac, Hudson, Allegany, Monongahela, Cedar, Iowa, and Des Moines, and bear a proportion of one to twenty when compared with the greater rivers of this continent.”
This doctrine received a careful consideration by Mr. Justice McLean, of the Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of
Bowman's Devisees
v.
Wathen
(
The discussion of a cognate question, by Chief Justice Taney, in the Supreme Court of the United States, in the
Case of the Genesee Chief
(
: Here we have a clear and satisfactory explanation for the fact that in speaking of navigable rivers writers in England defined them as tidal streams; and the fact that in the old thirteen States the far greater part of the navigable waters were tide waters, affords a sufficient reason for adopting this definition in most of those States. But we now see clearly its inappropriateness to the state of things as now existing, and that what was regarded as the undoubted evidence of a *497 navigable river in England is not a test or essential to constistnte a river navigable in America. This state of things led the courts in the United States naturally to adopt the English mode of defining a public river, and that definition, says Judge Taney, “ having found its way into our courts, became after a time the familiar mode of describing a public river, and was repeated as cases occurred without particularly examining whether it was universally as applicable in this country as it was in England. The description of a public navigable river was substituted in the place of the thing intended to be described, and under the natural influence of precedents and established forms a definition originally correct was adhered to and acted on, after it had ceased from a change in circumstances to be a true description of public waters.”
It was this adherence which led so many judges into the error of holding that there could be no public navigable rivers in this country unless subject to the flux and reflux of the tide, and to the illogical and unsatisfactory result that a river was part public and navigable and in part private and unnavigable, while in fact both portions were equally navigable, and to the naked eye no line of demarkation or change could be discerned. It was under the influence of these precedents that the Supreme Court of the United States, in the
Case of the Thomas Jefferson
(
Best, J., in Blundell v. Catterall (5 Barn. & Aid., 268), says of this passage from Bracton: “ I admit that Bracton agrees with the civil law, and, I must add, with the laws of all civilized nations,” and he also says that our books show that this passage has been adopted into our law, and adds: “ Surely such a man is no mean authority for what the common law was at the time he wrote.” But the authority of Bracton, so far as it maintained the right of the public to use the banks of navigable rivers or the shores of the seas, “ sicut ipsius jkminis” was overruled and denied in Ball v. Herbert (3 Term R., 261), and in Blundell v. Catterall (supra).
Navigable rivers, in the language of the civil law, are not merely rivers in which the tide flows and reflows, but fivers *499 capable of being navigated, that is navigable in the common sense of the term. In the words of the Digest, a navigable river is “statio iturve navigio” or, as Lord Mansfield observed, “ex facto oritur jus.” The Code ISTapoleon defines, with precision, rivers navigable and those not navigable, and the soil of the former belongs to the nation, and that of the latter, and islands which may be formed therein, to the proprietors of the shore on that side where the island is formed. (Code, §§ 559-561.)
We have now ascertained the doctrine of the common law, and that of the civil law, upon the subject now under consideration, and have traced the same to their respective sources. We have seen, in applying the principles of the common law to the-waters of this continent, how great has been the embarrassment of courts and judges and text writers; how variant have been the conclusions reached by them, and how contradictory and unsatisfactory have been the reasons for the results arrived at. We cannot fail to see that the doctrine of the civil law, as applicable to the navigable waters of this State, was early adopted by the legislature in the organization of a commission to make grants of land under the waters of the navigable rivers and lakes embraced within its teritory, and the continuous use of this power down to the present time, and in the grants of land under those waters made by the State itself. It is certainly to be regretted that this doctrine, thus solemnly recognized by the legislative authority of the State, and which has received the sanction of some of the most learned and able judges of our country, ' should have been discredited by our courts, and its applicability to our waters denied. This result was supposed inevitable by the adoption here of the common law, and with it the definition of navigable rivers, as the same was understood and applied in reference to those of the island of Great Britain. It is believed that it has been shown from principle and authority, that such definitions were wholly inappropriate to our physical condition, and to the express policy of the State as indicated by its legislation. We have examined carefully the judicial discussion of this doctrine,
*500
culminating in the decision by the court of ultimate appeal in this State, repudiating its applicability to the rivers of this State, and establishing the better doctrine of the civil law. It certainly is not too strong an expression to say, that the decision of the Court of Errors in
Tibbetts’ Case
was universally, among judges and the profession, regarded as settling the law, until the appearance of the decision of the same court in
Kempshall’s Case
in 26 Wend. That I do not place an incorrect estimate upon this decision in 1Y Wend., I quote a note of Chancellor Kent (3 Com., 549). He says: “In the case of
The Canal Appraisers
v.
The People
(
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
“ Publica verq sunt omnia ilumina et portus, Ideoque jus piscundi omnibus commune est inportu et influminibus. Eiparium etiam usus publicus est de jure .gentium, sicut ipsius fluminis. Itaque naves ad eas applicari, funes arboribus ibi natis religar!, onus aliquid in iis riponere, cuivis liberum est sicuti in ipsum fluvium navigari; sed proprietas carum est illorum quorum praediis adherunt, et, eadem causa, arbores in eisdem natae corundum sunt; et liaec intelligenda sunt, de fluminbus perennibus; quia temporalia possunt esse privata."
