The doctrine that, in the absence of legislation by Congress, a
state may authorize a navigable stream within its limits to be
obstructed by a bridge or highway reasserted, and the former cases
to that effect referred to.
The provision in the act admitting California
"That all the navigable waters within the said state shall be
common highways and forever free, as well to the inhabitants of
said state as to the citizens of the United States, without any
tax, impost, or duty therefor"
does not deprive the state of the power possessed by other
states, in the absence of legislation by Congress, to authorize the
erection of bridges over navigable waters within the state. That
provision aims to prevent the use of the navigable streams by
private parties to the exclusion of the public and the exaction of
tolls for their navigation.
Bill in equity, for the removal of a bridge erected by the
defendant in error over the American River in California, below the
lands of the plaintiff in error situate on that river.
The American River is a branch of the Sacramento River in
California. It is entirely within the state, and navigable for
small steamboats and barges from its mouth to the Town of Folsom, a
distance of thirty miles. By its junction with the Sacramento
River, vessels starting upon it can proceed to the Bay of San
Francisco and thence to adjoining states and foreign countries. It
is therefore a navigable water of the United States and, as such,
is under the control of the general government in the exercise of
its power to regulate foreign and interstate commerce so far as may
be necessary to insure its free navigation.
The defendant is a corporation organized under the laws of
California and, pursuant to the authority conferred by an act of
its legislature, has constructed a bridge over the American River,
of twenty feet in width and three hundred feet in length, which is
used as a roadway across the stream. Its floor is about fourteen
feet above extreme low water and about five feet above extreme high
water, and the bridge is
Page 113 U. S. 206
without a draw or opening for the passage of vessels. Steamboats
and other craft are therefore obstructed by it in the navigation of
the river.
The complainant alleges that he is the owner of a large tract of
land, bordering on the river below Folsom, and raises many tons of
grain each year; that he is also the owner of a steamboat and other
vessels by which he could ship his grain down the river but for the
obstruction caused by the bridge; that there are also large
quarries of granite on his land sufficient to supply the markets of
Sacramento and San Francisco for years, and also large deposits of
cobblestone which have a value for paving, and, but for the
obstruction, he could ship the granite and cobblestone by his
vessels and sell them at a profit, whereas the expense of sending
them by rail or other means open to him are such as to deprive him
of all profit on them. He therefore files his bill against the
company and prays that it may be enjoined from maintaining the
bridge across the river until a draw shall have been placed in it
sufficient to allow steamboats, vessels, and watercraft capable of
navigating the stream to pass and repass freely and safely. A
demurrer to the bill was sustained and the bill dismissed, and the
case is brought here on appeal.
Page 113 U. S. 208
MR. JUSTICE FIELD delivered the opinion of the Court. He recited
the facts as stated above and continued:
The questions thus presented are neither new nor difficult of
solution. Except in one particular, they have been considered and
determined in many cases, of which the most important are
Willson v. Blackbird Creek
Marsh Co., 2 Pet. 245;
The
Wheeling Bridge Case, 13 How. 518,
54 U. S. 564;
Gilman v.
Philadelphia, 3 Wall. 713;
Pound v. Turck,
95 U. S. 459;
Escanaba Co. v. Chicago, 107 U. S. 678, and
Miller v. Mayor of New York, 109 U.
S. 385. In these cases, the control of Congress over
navigable waters within the states so as to preserve their free
navigation under the commercial clause of the Constitution, the
power of the states within which they lie to authorize the
construction of bridges over them until Congress intervenes and
supersedes their authority, and the right of private parties to
interfere with their construction or continuance have been fully
considered, and we are entirely satisfied with the soundness of the
conclusions reached. They recognize the full power of the states to
regulate within their limits matters of internal police, which
embraces, among other things, the construction, repair, and
maintenance of roads and bridges and the establishment of ferries;
that the states are more likely to appreciate the importance of
these means of internal communication and to provide for their
proper management than a government at a distance, and that, as to
bridges over navigable streams, their power is subordinate to that
of Congress, as
Page 113 U. S. 209
an act of the latter body is, by the Constitution, made the
supreme law of the land, but that until Congress acts on the
subject, their power is plenary. When Congress acts directly with
reference to the bridges authorized by the state, its will must
control so far as may be necessary to secure the free navigation of
the streams.
In
Willson v. Blackbird Creek Marsh Co., a dam had been
constructed across a small navigable river in the State of Delaware
by authority of its legislature, and this Court held that the
obstruction which it caused to the navigation of the stream was an
affair between the government of the state and its citizens in the
absence of any law of Congress on the subject. In the case of
Gilman v. Philadelphia, a bridge across the Schuylkill
River connecting East and West Philadelphia had been constructed by
authority of the Legislature of Pennsylvania. It was without a
draw, and prevented the passage of vessels to wharves above it,
although the river was tidewater and navigable to them and commerce
had been carried on to them for years in all kinds of vessels. The
owner of the wharves filed a bill to prevent the erection of the
bridge, alleging that it would be an unlawful obstruction to the
navigation of the river and an illegal interference with his
rights, and claimed that he was entitled to be protected by an
injunction against the progress of the work and to a decree for its
abatement should it be proceeded with to completion. But the Court
held that the state had not exceeded the bounds of her authority in
permitting its construction, and until the power of the
Constitution was made effective by appropriate legislation, the
power of the state was plenary, and its exercise in good faith
could not be made the subject of review here. The Court observed
that it was not to be forgotten that bridges, which are connecting
parts of turnpikes, streets, and railroads, were means of
commercial transportation as well as navigable waters, that the
commerce which passed over a bridge might be much greater than
would be transported on the water obstructed, and that it was for
the municipal power to weigh the considerations that applied to the
subject, and to decide
Page 113 U. S. 210
which should be preferred and how far either should be made
subservient to the other.
These cases illustrate the general doctrine, now fully
recognized, that the commercial power of Congress is exclusive of
state authority only when the subjects upon which it is exerted are
national in their character and admit and require uniformity of
regulations affecting alike all the states, and that when the
subjects within that power are local in their nature or operation
or constitute mere aids to commerce, the states may provide for
their regulation and management until Congress intervenes and
supersedes their action.
The complainant, however, contends that Congress has intervened
and expressed its will on this subject by a clause in the Act of
September 9, 1850, admitting California as a state into the Union,
which declares
"That all the navigable waters within the said state shall be
common highways and forever free as well to the inhabitants of said
state as to the citizens of the United States, without any tax,
impost, or duty therefor."
9 Stat. 454. This declaration is similar to that contained in
the Ordinance of 1787 for the government of the territory of the
United States northwest of the Ohio River so far as the latter
relates to the navigable waters flowing into the Mississippi and
the St. Lawrence. And in
Escanaba Co. v. Chicago, we held
with respect to the State of Illinois that the clause was
superseded by her admission into the Union, for she then became
entitled to and possessed of all the rights of domain and
sovereignty which belonged to the original states. The language of
the resolution admitting her declared that it was on "an equal
footing with the original states in all respects whatever," so
that, after her admission, she possessed the same power over rivers
within her limits that Delaware exercised over Blackbird Creek and
Pennsylvania over Schuylkill River.
The act enabling the people of Wisconsin Territory to form a
constitution and state government and for admission into the Union
contains a similar clause. And yet, in
Pound v. Turck,
which was before this Court at October term, 1877, it was held that
a statute of that state which authorized the
Page 113 U. S. 211
erection of a dam across a navigable river within her limits was
not unconstitutional in the absence of other legislation by
Congress bearing on the case. The Court does not seem to have
considered the question as affected by the clause in the enabling
act. That clause is not, it true, commented on in the opinion, but
the section containing it is referred to, and the declaration that
navigable streams within the state are to be common highways must
have been in the mind of the Court. It held, however, that the case
was governed by the decisions in the Delaware and Pennsylvania
cases, observing that there were in the State of Wisconsin and
other states many small streams navigable for short distances from
their mouths in one of the great rivers of the country by
steamboats, but whose greatest value in water carriage was as
outlets to saw-logs and lumber, coal, and salt, and that in order
to develop their greatest utility in that regard, it was often
essential that dams, booms, and piers should be used which are
substantial obstructions to general navigation, and more or less so
to rafts and barges, but that to the legislature of the state the
authority is most properly confided to authorize these structures
where their use will do more good than harm and to impose such
regulations and limitations in their construction and use as will
best reconcile and accommodate the interests of all of all
concerned. And the Court added that the exercise of this limited
power may all the more safely be confided to the local legislatures
as the right of Congress is recognized to interfere and control the
matter whenever deemed necessary.
The clause, therefore, in the act admitting California, quoted
above, upon which the complainant relies must be considered,
according to these decisions, as in no way impairing the power
which the state could exercise over the subject if the clause had
no existence. But independently of this consideration, we do not
think the clause itself requires the construction which the court
below placed upon it and which counsel urges so earnestly for our
consideration. That court held that the clause contains two
provisions: one that the navigable waters shall be a common highway
to the inhabitants of the state, as well as to citizens of the
United States, and the other that
Page 113 U. S. 212
they shall be forever free from any tax, impost, or duty
therefor; that these provisions are separate and distinct, and that
one is not an adjunct or amplification of the other. Possibly some
support is given to that view by language used in the opinion in
Escanaba Co. v. Chicago. In that case, all the bridges
over the Chicago River had draws for the passage of vessels, and we
there held that a bridge constructed with a draw could not be
regarded, within the ordinance of 1787, as an obstruction to the
navigation of the stream. We were not required to express any
further opinion as to the meaning of the ordinance. But, upon the
mature and careful consideration which we have given in this case
to the language of the clause in the act admitting California, we
are of opinion that if we treat the clause as divisible into two
provisions, they must be construed together as having but one
object -- namely to insure a highway equally open to all without
preference to any, and unobstructed by duties or tolls, and thus
prevent the use of the navigable streams by private parties to the
exclusion of the public and the exaction of any toll for their
navigation, and that the clause contemplated no other restriction
upon the power of the state in authorizing the construction of
bridges over them whenever such construction would promote
convenience of the public. The act admitting California declares
that she is "admitted into the Union on an equal footing with the
original states in
all respects whatever." She was not,
therefore, shorn by the clause as to the navigable waters within
her limits of any of the powers which the original states possessed
over such waters within their limits.
Decree affirmed.