The People of the State, on the relation of A.V. Smith, State's attorney of Lake county, filed a bill in the circuit court of that county against Marguerite Pearce, George W. Pearce, August Froelich and forty-five other defendants. The prayer of the bill was that the defendants be restrained from interfering with the free use of Lake Zurich by the public for all lawful purposes and that the title to the land constituting the bed of the lake be quieted in the State in trust for the use of the people. Answers were filed by certain defendants while the bill was taken as confessed by the other defendants. A decree in conformity with the prayer of the bill was entered and Marguerite Pearce, George W. Pearce and August Froelich prosecute this appeal.
By the stipulation of the parties the record in the case ofLeonard v. Pearce,
The evidence in the case of Leonard v. Pearce, supra, further discloses acts of ownership, increasing in number, character and extent with the passing of the years, by various persons holding title of record to portions of the bed of the lake. Among such acts were conveyances of parcels of land underlying the waters of the lake, the execution of leases of such parcels, the prevention of the use of the lake over the land owned or claimed, and the payment of the taxes levied thereon annually. The court, by its decree in that case, found, among other things, that the defendants, who are the appellants in this case, owned in fee simple a considerable portion of the bed of Lake Zurich; that their titles were based upon patents from the United States; that the lake had neither outlet nor inlet; that it *Page 583 had never been meandered and was non-navigable; that the defendants had good title to the land underlying the waters of the lake and the land had never been dedicated to the public; that the public had no right to those waters or to the use thereof, and that the use made of the lake by the public had been merely permissive and had not affected the rights of the defendants to the control of such portions of the lake as they respectively owned.
The appellee argues that the bill of complaint inLeonard v. Pearce, supra, was dismissed because the decision of the Department of the Interior that the land in question constituted swamp land was not subject to collateral attack; that Lake Zurich is navigable in fact, and being so, the United States never had title to the submerged land and the Department of the Interior had no jurisdiction over it; that, wanting jurisdiction, the department's decision that the land in question constituted swamp land is void; that, instead of a collateral attack by individuals, the State, in the present suit, asserts title to the land in its sovereign capacity as trustee, and that therefore the relief sought may be obtained in this suit. The appellants answer that the land underlying Lake Zurich was selected as swamp land; that this selection was a conclusive determination of a question of fact by the Federal government and that the non-navigability of the lake was thereby established and may not be inquired into in this suit.
The judgment of the land department upon questions of fact, properly determinable by it, is final. (Heath v. Wallace,
The decree of the circuit court is reversed.
Decree reversed.
