27 Wash. 490 | Wash. | 1902
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an action to remove a cloud from title to real property. The respondent, who was plaintiff below, claims title to the -property in question by virtue of a deed from the state of Washington, dated October 1, 1898, granting to it “all shore land of the second class situated in front of, adjacent to, or abutting upon that portion of the United States government meander line described according to the certified copy of the surveyor general’s field notes as follows:
“Beginning at a point on said meander line on the right bank of the Columbia [River in front of Section 17, Township 1 [North, range 4 East, W. M., where the East boundary line of the Richard Ough donation land claim No. 53 intersects same, thence along said meander line in front of Sections 17 and 18, said Township and range, as follows: n. 56 1-4 degrees W., 20.00 chains; to the meander corner*492 to fractional sections 17 and 18, which meander corner is 19.50 chains South of the corner to sections 7, 8, 17 and 18; thence 17. 65 degrees W. 11 chains; thence 17. 62 1-4 degrees W. 8 chains to a point on said meander line in front of said Richard Ough donation land claim; being a total length of 39.00 chains as measured along said meander line in front of said sections 17 and 18, Township 1 North, Range 4 East, W. M.”
The meander line mentioned is the usual meander line, which is run by the government surveyors along the banks of navigable streams to mark the sinuosities of such streams, and for the purpose of determining the areas of the fractional subdivisions of the public lands bordering thereon. The uplands bordering on this part of the Columbia river were originally conveyed by the United States to Richard Ough and wife as a donation land claim, by patent bearing date December 22, 1865. In 1880, Richard Ough and wife conveyed by warranty deed a part of this claim, a tract containing some seven acres, to Joseph E. C. Durgin and Lewis Love. The description of this tract was by metes and bounds; the south boundary of which was described as running along the right bank of the Columbia river at low-water mark. At the time of the execution of this deed, Ough and wife leased to the grantees named therein the free use of the bank of the river from a point commencing at the southeast corner of the seven-acre tract, and running thence up stream for a distance of two hundred feet. After-wards one S. Gr. Reed became the owner, by certain mesne conveyances, of the seven-acre tract, and of the rights granted by the lease, whereupon he purchased from Mrs. Ough, who succeeded' to the interests of Richard Ough in the donation land claim, a tract described as beginning at the southeast corner of the seven-acre tract above mentioned, and running from “thence up stream in said river,
At the conclusion of the evidence and arguments of counsel, the court took the case under advisement. , After-wards the court, on its own motion, made an order reopening the case for further evidence; reciting therein that the court was unable to make a finding from the evidence before it as.to the location of the meander line of the Ough donation land claim at the point in controversy; that the same was material to a determination of the case; that the court had theretofore procured two expert and competent surveyors to make a survey, whereupon he fixed a time for taking their testimony, and caused notice thereof to be given to the respective parties. Against this order the appellant filed a written protest, contending therein that the court was without power on its own motion to reopen the ease for further evidence, and that it was the court’s duty, if the plaintiff had failed to make a case, to find against it and dismiss its action. The protest was overruled, and one
The respondent throughout the trial proceeded upon the theory which the trial court seems to have finally adopted, that all of thelands lying between the meander line of the donation land claim, as originally run by the government sun veyors, and the present line of low-water mark on the river, were shore lands, and that such part of it as lay in front of the line described in the deed from the state passed to it in virtue of that deed, regardless of the question whether the land lay below the line of ordinary high-water mark or not. Manifestly this is not the rule. What title or right-passes under a grant of lands made by the United States is a federal question, and the judgment of a state supreme court thereon is within the appellate jurisdiction of the federal supreme court. Shively v. Bowlby, 152 U. S. 1 (14 Sup. Ct. 548). The judgment of that court on any question affecting the construction of such grants is, therefore, authoritative and binding upon the state courts. That court has repeatedly held that grants by congress of portions of the public lands bordering on or bounded by navigable waters convey the title to ordinary high-water mark,
“Meander-lines,” says Mr. Justice Clifford, in Railroad Company v. Schurmeir, 7 Wall. 272, “are run in surveying fractional portions of the public lands bordering upon navigable rivers, not as boundaries of the tract, but for the purpose of defining the sinuosities of the banks of the stream, and as the means of ascertaining the quantity of the land in the fraction subject to sale, and which is to be paid for by the purchaser.”
And in that case it was held, — over the contention that a tract of land granted according to the description contained in the official surveys stopped at the meander line run along the banks of a navigable stream, — ’that high-water mark on the stream itself, and not the meander line, was the boundary line. To the same effect are the following cases: Jefferis v. East Omaha Land Co., 134 U. S. 178 (10 Sup. Ct. 518) ; Hardin v. Jordan, 140 U. S. 371 (11 Sup. Ct. 808, 838); Shively v. Bowlby, 152 U. S. 1 (14 Sup. Ct. 548) ; Horne v. Smith, 159 U. S. 40 (15 Sup. Ct. 988).
But counsel seem to think this court has in its previous decisions announced a different rule. The cases chiefly relied upon to support this claim are Scurry v. Jones, 4 Wash. 468 (30 Pac. 726), and Cogswell v. Forrest, 14 Wash. 1 (43 Pac. 1098). These cases hold that the state of Washington, by the disclaimer in its constitution (§2, art. 17), waived its right to assert title to such of the tide lands as lay above the meander line run by the government surveyors as the boundary of uplands which had been conveyed by patent from the government of the United States prior to the admission of the state into the Union. But however illogical it may seemingly be to hold that the meander line marks the boundary of a government grant
Applying these principles to the case at bar, it is evident that the meander line, conceding it to be correctly relocated by the trial court, does not necessarily determine
As the meander line does not mark the shore line, the question of practice suggested is not material to the determination of the case ; and whether it was an abuse of discretion for the court to reopen the case and receive additional evidence, upon its own motion, we shall not determine. It is well to say, however, that this court would not,
The judgment appealed from is reversed, and the cause remanded with instructions to enter a judgment to the effect that the respondent take nothing by its action; the appellant to recover costs in both courts.
Reavis, C. J., and Dunbar, Anders and Mount, JJ., concur.