delivered the opinion of the court.
These cases were argued together, involve similar questions, and may be disposed of in a single opinion. They were actions brought in the District Court by the respective defendants in error against the United States under
In No. 84 the findings of the District Court are, in substance, that at the time of the erection of Lock and Dam No. 21 in the Cumberland River, the plaintiff was the owner of 189 acres of land on Whiteoak Creek, a tributary of the Cumberland, not far distant from the river; that by reason of the erection of the lock and dam six and six-tenths acres of this land are subject to frequent overflows of water from the river, so as to depreciate it one-half of its value, and a ford across Whiteoak Creek and a part of a pass-way are destroyed; that the six and six-tenths acres were worth $990, and the damage thereto was $495; that the damage to the land by the destruction of the ford was $500; and that plaintiff was entitled to recover the sum of $995. It may be supposed that Whiteoak Creek was not a navigable stream, but there is no finding on the subject.
In No. 718 the findings are to the effect that at the time of the erection by the Government of Lock and Dam No. 12 in the Kentucky River the plaintiffs, together with another person who was joined as a defendant, were the owners and in possession of a tract of land situate on Miller’s Creek, a branch of the Kentucky, containing five and one-half acres, upon which there were a mill and a mill seat; that by reason of the erection of the lock and dam the mill no longer can be driven by water power; that the water above the lock and dam, when it is at pool stage, is about one foot below the crest of the mill dam, and this prevents the drop in the current that is necessary to run
Judgments were entered in favor of the respective land ownérs for the sums mentioned in the findings, together with interest and the costs of the suits, and the United States appealed to this court.
(1.) A fundamental contention made in behalf of the Government, and one that applies to both cases, is that the control by Congress, and the Secretary of War acting for it, over the navigation of the Cumberland and Kentucky Rivers, must also include control of their tributaries, and that in order to improve navigation at the places mentioned in the findings it was necessary to erect dams and back up the water, and the right to do this must include also the right to raise the-water in the tributary streams.
In passing upon this contention we may assume, without however deciding, that the rights of defendants in error are no greater than if they had been riparian owners upon the rivers, instead of upon the tributary creeks.
The States have authority to establish for themselves such rules of property as they may deem expedient with respect to the streams of water within their borders both navigable and non-navigable, and the ownership of the lands forming their beds and banks
(Barney
v.
Keokuk,
The State of Kentucky, like most of the States of the Union, determines the navigability of her streams, so far as the public right is concerned, not by the common-law test of the ebb and. flow of the tide- — manifestly inapplicable in a State so wholly remote from the sea — but by the test of navigability in fact (Thurman v. Morrison, 53 Kentucky, [14 B. Mon.] 367 [2d ed. p. 296]; Morrison v. Thurman, 56 Kentucky, [17 B. Mon.] 249; Goodin’s Executors v. Kentucky Lumber Co., 90 Kentucky, 625; Murray v. Preston, 106 Kentucky, 561, 564; Banks v. Frazier, 111 Kentucky, 909, 912; Ireland v. Bowman & Cockrell, 130 Kentucky, 153, 161), while sustaining private ownership of the beds of her streams, both navigable and non-navigable, according to the common-law rule (Berry v. Snyder, 66 Kentucky, [3 Bush] 266, 273, 277; Miller v. Hepburn, 71 Kentucky, [8 Bush] 326, 331; Williamsburg Boom Co. v. Smith, 84 Kentucky, 372, 374; Wilson v. Watson, 141 Kentucky, 324, 327; Robinson v. Wells, 142 Kentucky, 800, 804), with incidental rights to the flow of the stream in its natural state (Anderson v. Cincinnati Southern Railway, 86 Kentucky, 44, 48).
The general rule that private ownership of property in the beds and waters of navigable streams is subject to the exercise of the public right of navigation, and the governmental control and regulation necessary to give effect to that right, is so fully established, and is so amply illustrated by recent decisions of this court, that a mere reference to the cases will suffice.
Scranton
v.
Wheeler,
But this rule, like every other, has its limits, and in the present cases, which require us to ascertain the dividing line between public and private right, it is important to inquire what are “navigable streams” within the meaning of the rule.
In Kentucky, and in other States that have rejected the common-law test of tidal flow and adopted the test of navigability in fact, while recognizing private ownership of the beds of navigable streams, numerous cases have arisen where it has been necessary to draw the line between public and private right in waters alleged to be navigable; and by an unbroken current of authorities it has become well established that -the test of navigability in fact is to be applied to the stream in its natural condition, not as artificially raised by dams or similar structures; that the public right is to be measured by the capacity of the stream for valuable public use in its natural condition; that riparian owners have a right to the enjoyment of the natural flow without burden or hindrance imposed by artificial means, and no public easement beyond the natural one can arise without grant or dedication save by condemnation with appropriate compensation for the private right. Cases exemphfying these propositions are' cited in a marginal note.
1
We have found no case to the
Many state, courts, including, the Court of Appeals of Kentucky, have, held, also, that 'the legislature cannot, by simple declaration that a stream shall be a public highway, if in fact it be not navigable in its natural state, appropriate to public use the private rights therein without compensation.
Morgan
v.
King,
This court has followed' the same line of distinction.
Pumpelly
v.
Green Bay Company,
In
United States
v.
Lynah,
In several other cases, the limitation of the public right to the natural state of the stream has been recognized.
Packer
v.
Bird,
It follows from what we have said that the servitude of privately-owned lands forming the banks and bed of a stream to the interests of navigation is a natural servitude, confined to such streams as in their ordinary and natural
But the authority to make Such improvements is only a branóh of the power to regulate interstate and foreign commerce, and, as already stated, this power, like others, must be exercised, when private property is taken, in subordination to the Fifth Amendment.
Monongahela Navigation Co.
v.
United States,
These cases have no proper relation to cases such as
Gibson
v.
United States,
(2.) It is contended, in No. 84, that the damage to Cress’ land by the overflow of six and six-tenths acres, because it depreciated its value only to the extent of onehálf, does not measure up to a taking, but is only a “partial injury,” for which the Government is not liable. The findings, however, render it plain that this is not a case of temporary flooding or of consequential injury,- but a permanent condition, resulting from the erection of the lock and dam, by which the land is “subject to frequent overflows of water from the river.” That overflowing
(3.) In No. 84 some question is made about the allowance for the damage to the land by the destruction of the ford across Whiteoak Creek and the pass-way, but we deem the objection unsubstantial. It is said there is nothing to show how Cress acquired ownership of the ford, and that it does not appear that he had a right to pass over the adjoining land of one Brown. It seems to us, however, that the findings, while meager, sufficiently import that Cress had a right to a, private way and ford as appurtenant to his land, and that the damage to the land by the destruction of-the ford was $500. This brings the case squarely within
United States
v.
Welch,
(4.) In No. 718 there is a contention that, because the back-water is confined to Miller’s Creek, it does not
(5.) In both cases it is urged that' there was error in allowing costs against the Government. Section 24. (20) of the Judicial Code, under which the suits were brought, originated in the provisions of the so-called Tucker Act
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
Wadsworth v. Smith,
