In 1802, when Georgia ceded her back lands to the United States,
she had jurisdiction over the whole of the Chattahoochee River,
from its source to the thirty-first degree of north latitude.
The rule is that where a power possesses a river and cedes the
territory on the other side of it, making the river the boundary,
that power retains the river unless there is an express stipulation
for the relinquishment of the rights of soil and jurisdiction over
the bed of such river.
When Georgia ceded to the United States all the land situated on
the west of a line running along the western bank of the
Chattahoochee River, she retained the bed of the river and all the
land to the east of the line above mentioned.
The river flows in a channel, between two banks, from fifteen to
twenty feet high, between the bottom of which and the water, when
the river is at a low stage, there are shelving shores, from thirty
to sixty yards each in width.
The boundary line runs along the top of this high western bank,
leaving the bed of the river and the western shelving shore within
the jurisdiction of Georgia.
These two cases were argued and decided together. The suits
related to the same tract of land and the rights of the same
parties, although they came up from different states. The first,
which is referred to in the opinion of the court as No. 121, was an
action on the case brought by Ingersoll in the Circuit Court of
Alabama (state court) to recover damages for the wrongful
obstruction by Howard of the Chattahoochee River whereby the waters
of that stream were backed in such a manner as to overflow
Ingersoll's land and obstruct the use of his mill. This mill was
built between the high bank of the river and low water mark, as it
was called, so that when the water was high, it was overflowed; but
when the water was low, it was on dry ground. At such times, it was
worked by a race fed from the river by means of a wing dam. Howard
built a
Page 54 U. S. 382
dam below, which backed the water upon the mill and impeded its
operations. On the trial of this cause, the jury returned a verdict
in favor of Ingersoll for the sum of $4,000. The cause was carried
to the Superior Court of Alabama, where the judgment was affirmed,
whence it was brought to this Court under the 25th section of the
Judiciary Act.
"HOWARD & ECKOLLS, Plaintiffs in error"
"v. No. 131"
"INGERSOLL"
This case was brought by writ of error, from the Circuit Court
of the United States for the District of Georgia. Howard &
Eckolls, the builders of the dam, brought a suit against Ingersoll
in the Superior court of Muscogee county, Georgia, to recover
damages for an illegal entry upon their land covered with water and
fishing thereon. The jury found a verdict for the plaintiffs for
the sum of $600. A bill of exceptions brought the case up to this
Court.
After these general observations upon the two cases, let us now
take them up separately; and first of
"HOWARD, Plaintiff in error"
"v. No. 121"
"INGERSOLL"
It has been always stated that this case was brought from the
Supreme Court of Alabama. The bill of exceptions, which was taken
on the trial of the cause in Russell circuit court, was as
follows:
"
Bill of Exceptions. On the trial of this cause, the
plaintiff Ingersoll produced a patent from the United States to
himself dated in 1802 to fractional section No. 11, township 7,
range 30, and proved title in himself to lots 1, 2, 3, and 4, in
the Town of Girard, lying in Russell County, Alabama, and
specifically described in some of the counts of the declaration;
said land has for its eastern boundary the State of Georgia, and is
immediately west of the Chattahoochee River on the bank thereof.
This river has, for the most part, high bluff banks, but in some
places the banks are low and the adjacent lands on either side
where they are low are subject to inundation for nearly a mile out
of the banks. Immediately at the plaintiff's lands and lots there
are banks of the river from fifteen to twenty feet high, and very
abrupt, and are high on both sides, and above and below, for
considerable distances. The abrupt and high banks, however, do not
extend down to the water's edge at ordinary low water. The bed of
the river at this point is about two hundred yards wide from bank
to bank; and by the bed is meant the space between these abrupt and
high banks, and is composed of rocks
Page 54 U. S. 383
and slues among the rocks from one side to the other; ordinary
low water and extreme low water together prevail for about
two-thirds of the year, during which time the river is confined to
a channel about thirty yards wide, leaving the bed of the river as
above described, exposed on each side of this channel from thirty
to sixty yards. Immediately under the western abrupt and high bank,
and within the latitude of the north and south boundary line of
plaintiff's land, side lines being drawn down to the water's edge,
and in the bed of the river, as above described, east of said
western abrupt and high bank, the plaintiff erected a mill previous
to 1842, and continued the possession and use thereof until
overflowed by defendant's dam. The place on which said mill was
situated was covered with water in ordinary high water, but was
bare and dry in ordinary low water."
"To supply his mill with water, the plaintiff had erected a wing
dam, which ran in a north-east direction into the river, and
supplied his mill with water at all seasons, and diverted a portion
of the stream to the said mill, which passed again into the river
above defendant's dam, and he, plaintiff, had blown out rock to
give room to his mill wheel."
"It was further proved that in 1845 the defendant erected a dam
across the river about three hundred yards below the plaintiff's
mill and opposite the City of Columbus, Georgia. The said dam was
four to five feet high, and at ordinary low water backed the water
on plaintiff's mill, so as to prevent its working; in high water
the said dam made no difference, as the water was level above it
and on both sides of it. The plaintiff further proved the value of
his mill and the injury he sustained. The defendant introduced in
evidence the act of cession of the State of Georgia to the United
States; the Constitution of the State of Georgia; an act of the
State of Georgia granting to the City of Columbus, the right to lay
off lots on her river boundary, running across the Chattahoochee
River, to high water mark, on the western bank of said river. All
of which evidence, being printed in the public acts, are to be read
and considered in full as part of this bill of exceptions."
"The defendant also offered in evidence an authenticated deed to
him from the City of Columbus granting him said lots, running
across the river, and authority to erect the dam across the river,
which original deed and accompanying plat, it is agreed, may form a
part of this bill of exceptions and may be exhibited as such. The
plaintiff's land was situated at a point of the river where there
were falls or rapids and where it was not navigable, and that it
was far above tidewater, and a fresh water stream, and between
Miller's Bend and Cochei Creek.
Page 54 U. S. 384
The defendant's dam raised the water to a point on the western
high bank which [is] dry at ordinary low water. One witness proved
that he never knew a sheriff or constable of Georgia to come over
on the western bank to serve any writ or process or other official
act, and stated that he, the witness, had good opportunity to know
if any such thing had been attempted, as he had lived on the
western bank for ten years."
"At the place at which plaintiff's mill was erected, the summit
of the bank was never overflowed, even at the highest stages of the
river, the water of which always remained several feet below it.
The plaintiff gave in evidence to the court, which was not allowed
to go as evidence to the jury, although requested by plaintiff,
acts of the State of Georgia conveying authority to the
commissioners to negotiate the cession of territory from Georgia to
the United States and also the act of Georgia ratifying said
cession, all of which may be read from the public acts. The court
charged the jury that one passing from Georgia to Alabama, across
the Chattahoochee River, at ordinary low water, would be upon the
bank as soon as he left the water on the western side, although an
inappreciable distance from the water, and that the line described
in the treaty of cession from Georgia to the United States as
running up said river and along the western bank thereof is the
line impressed upon the land by ordinary low water, and if they
believed the plaintiff's mill was west of that line and defendant's
dam backed the water so as to obstruct the operation of said mill,
the plaintiff was entitled to recover, to which charge the
defendant excepted."
"The defendant asked the court to charge the jury that if the
bank of the river was ordinary low water mark, the plaintiff had no
right to the use of the water at that stage, which charge the court
refused, to which defendant excepted, and prays his exceptions to
be signed and sealed and made part of the record of this cause,
which is accordingly done in term time."
"J. J. WOODWARD [L.S.]"
The judgment of the circuit court was affirmed by the Supreme
Court of Alabama, and brought to this Court to be reviewed, under
the 25th section of the Judiciary Act.
"HOWARD & ECKOLLS, Plaintiffs in error"
"v. No. 131"
"INGERSOLL"
This action was brought by way of petition by Howard &
Eckolls, the owners of the dam below, against Ingersoll, the owner
of the mill above, for entering the close ground covered with water
of the petitioners and fishing. Ingersoll removed
Page 54 U. S. 385
the cause into the circuit court of the United States, where it
was tried in July, 1850. The court having refused to charge the
jury as prayed for by the plaintiffs, they brought the case to this
Court, although there was a verdict in their favor for $600
damages.
The following is the bill of exceptions:
"On the trial of this cause, the plaintiffs proved, by the
articles of cession dated on t16 June, 1802, between the United
States and Georgia, that the boundary line between Georgia and the
territory, now State of Alabama, was a line beginning on the
western bank of the Chattahoochee River and running along the
western bank thereof. And did further prove by competent testimony
of witnesses both for the plaintiffs and on the part of the
defendant that at the part of the said River Chattachoochee where
the closes in the said declaration mentioned are situated, the said
river, not being a tidewater and not being navigable, is
considerably reduced at its lowest state, especially in droughts,
being quite narrow at such state, particularly in some places where
it is confined by rocks projecting from the opposite sides of the
river, and in other places spreading out more at large. That
between the water in this state of the river and a high and
perpendicular bluff on the western or Alabama side, the distance
varies, according to one witness, from 30 to 100 yards; according
to another, the bluff banks are high and precipitous; at some
places they are 30 feet, at others 100, and again 150 feet from the
main channel; by another, at the foot of the bluff bank is a flat
space from 50 to 150 feet wide, between ordinary water mark and the
bluff bank; from very low water mark to the bluff bank is more than
50 to 150 feet. According to another witness it is from 100 to 120
feet from the bluff bank to medium water mark, and from 80 to 100
feet from medium water mark to low water mark; that this
intermediate space is a flat or bottom land, gradually descending
from the base of the bluff to the water; that in places upon this
flat there is a growth of shrubbery, and some trees, such as pines,
gums, oaks, willows, alders, poplars &c.; that the growth on
this flat would be liable to be destroyed if the flat were long or
often overflowed; that there is a road or cartway underneath this
bluff, a grist-mill, one post of which stands in the water, the
water approaching very near the bluff at that point, and there
being just room between the mill and the bluff for the above road
to pass. There is also a saw mill, but not on the closes in the
declaration mentioned, and a cotton gin factory under the bluff on
this flat, and a small portion of it has at times been cultivated.
That in the ordinary winter state of the river, the water covers
this
Page 54 U. S. 386
flat about half way to the bluff, to the base of a bank or ridge
of sand and gravel, having an inclination of about forty-five
degrees; that in very full states of the river -- that is, in
freshets -- the water covers the flats, reaching to or nearly to
the bluff, and in the freshet of 1840, known as the Harrison
freshet, it extended twelve feet up the base of the bluff; that the
extent to which this flat is covered with water varies with the
height of the freshets in said river, it being all dry land at the
lowest state of the river and a portion of it being always, except
in high freshets, uncovered with water; that it is only in the full
state of the river that the water overflows the sand bank or ridge
before mentioned."
"Whereupon the plaintiffs prayed the court to instruct the jury
that the true interpretation of the said article of cession in the
year 1802 between the United States and Georgia requires the
boundary line between the State of Georgia and the Territory, now
State, of Alabama, to be drawn on and along the western bank of the
Chattahoochee River. And that wherever the jury may find that bank
to be, the jurisdiction and limits of the State of Alabama must
terminate, and cannot pass beyond that line to the eastward of the
same, but that all east of said line, whether it be land or water,
is included within the limits and jurisdiction of Georgia, and no
grant from the United States or the State of Alabama can confer
title to any part of the same, either directly or indirectly,
either by virtue of the said grant or as an incident to the
same."
"Which instruction the said court refused to give except subject
to this modification, to-wit, that the articles of cession was an
instrument the interpretation of which belonged to the court, and
not to the jury, and gave the said instruction subject to the said
modification, and moreover instructed the jury that by the true
construction of those articles of cession, the boundary line
between the State of Georgia and Alabama was to be drawn on and
along the western bank of the Chattahoochee River at low water
mark, when the river was at its lowest state."
To which refusal and instruction the plaintiffs except, and pray
this bill of exceptions to be signed, sealed, and enrolled, which
is done this fifth day of July, 1850.
"JNO. C. NICOLL [L.S.]"
"
District Judge for the District of Georgia"
Page 54 U. S. 397
MR. JUSTICE WAYNE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The point for decision in these cases is one of boundary,
between the States of Georgia and Alabama. It is what is the line
of Georgia on the western bank of the Chattachoochee River, from
the 31st deg. north latitude,
"where the same crosses the boundary line between the United
States and Spain; running thence up the said River Chattahoochee,
and along the western bank thereof, to the great bend thereof, next
above the place where a certain creek or river called 'Uchee,'
being the first considerable stream on the western side, above the
Cussetas and Coweta Towns, empties into the said Chattahoochee
River."
It determination depends upon what were the limits of Georgia
and her ownership of the whole country within them when that state,
in compliance with the obligation imposed upon it by the
revolutionary war, conveyed to the United States her unsettled
territory, and upon the terms used to define the boundaries of that
cession.
In the case from Alabama,
"The court charged the jury that one passing from Georgia to
Alabama across the Chattachoochee River at ordinary low water would
be upon the bank as soon as he left the water on the western side,
although an inappreciable distance from the water, and that the
line described in the treaty of cession from Georgia to the United
States as running
Page 54 U. S. 398
up said river and along the western bank thereof, is the line
impressed upon the land by ordinary low water, and if they believed
the plaintiff's mill was west of that line, and the defendant's dam
backed the water so as to obstruct the operation of the mill, the
plaintiff was entitled to recover."
In the case from the Circuit Court of the United States for the
District of Georgia, the district judge presiding, the jury was
instructed
"That by the true construction of these articles of cession, the
boundary line between the State of Georgia and Alabama was to be
drawn on and along the western bank of the Chattahoochee River at
low water mark, when the river was at its lowest state."
All of us think that both of these instructions were erroneous,
though there is a difference among us as to the construction given
by the majority of the Court to the article defining the boundary
of Georgia upon the river, and the reasoning in support of it.
These differences will be seen in the opinions which our brothers
have said they meant to give in these cases.
We will not give our views of what were the limits of the State
of Georgia when it ceded its unsettled territory west of the
Chattahoochee River to the United States. that state's then
ownership of the whole of it, citing in support of our conclusions
indisputable historical facts, and the legislation of Georgia, of
South Carolina, and of the United States, upon the subject.
It is well known to all of us, when the colonies dissolved their
connection with the mother country by the Declaration of
Independence, that it was understood by all of them that each did
so with the limits which belonged to it as a colony. There was
within the limits of several of them a large extent of unsettled
territory. Other states had little or none.
The latter contended, as all of them had united in a common
declaration of independence and in a common war to secure it, which
no one colony could do for itself, that the unsettled lands within
the former ought to become a common property among all of the
states.
On the 6th of September, 1780, Congress recommended this subject
to the consideration of the states. On the 10th of October after,
it was resolved by Congress
"That the unappropriated lands that may be ceded or relinquished
to the United States by any state should be disposed of for the
common benefit of the United States, and be settled and formed into
distinct republican states, which shall become members of the
federal union and have the same rights of sovereignty, freedom, and
independence as the other states."
3 Journals of Congress 516, 535.
From these references we have the whole policy of Congress
concerning those unsettled territories, so happily since
consummated
Page 54 U. S. 399
by the states and by Congress. It was not, however, achieved
without some delays and objections from the states to which these
lands belonged. Some of the states, Maryland taking the lead,
refused to sign the Articles of Confederation until after strong
assurances had been given that such cessions would be made. And
when that state did so, it was with the declaration that she did
not relinquish or intend to relinquish the right which she had with
the other states to the "back country," as she termed the unsettled
lands within the limits of some of the states.
Early in 1781, Virginia made such a relinquishment. New York
quickly followed, and Massachusetts and Connecticut, always willing
to make any sacrifice for the common cause, relinquished their
unsettled lands after the war had been concluded.
The cause assigned by each of these four states for doing so,
and the principles upon which these cessions were accepted by the
United States, involved North and South Carolina and Georgia in the
obligation to do the same. Though not done for several years, it
was never denied by either of these states.
All of the states had been actuated by the same spirit for
independence. When the war had been happily concluded, all of them
looked to the wild territory within the United States as the first
source from which revenue could be raised to pay the war debt of
the Union. It then was $42,000,000.
It would be difficult to say which class of its creditors had
the strongest claims upon the justice and gratitude of the people
of the United States. But all felt, and it was conceded by the
other classes of creditors, that the soldiers who had patiently
borne the privations of the field and bravely met its hazards to
secure the liberties of the country ought to have their claims paid
by portions of the public lands, with certain available securities
from Congress for the residue.
From these references we learn that the states entered into the
Union with the understanding by all of them that each had an
undiminished sovereignty within its colonial limits. That there
were within the limits of some of them unsettled lands over which
Congress had no legislative control. But that it was early
recognized by these states whilst the Articles of Confederation
were in the course of ratification and immediately after they were
completed, that their unsettled territories were to be transferred
by them to the United States, to be disposed of for the common
benefit and to be formed into distinct republican states, with all
the rights and sovereignty of the other states.
We have seen that relinquishments had been made by Virginia, New
York, Massachusetts, and Connecticut. South Carolina did the same
in 1787, after the settlement of her territorial disputes with
Georgia.
Page 54 U. S. 400
We will now state what those disputes were and how they were
adjusted, in order that the jurisdiction of the State of Georgia
and that state's ownership of the whole territory ceded by it to
the United States in 1802 may be fully understood in connection
with the principles or rules by which its western boundary upon the
Chattahoochee River must be interpreted.
Georgia was originally a province formed by royal prerogative
out of a portion of that territory which was within the chartered
limits of South Carolina. It was a corporation under the title
of
"Trustees for establishing the Colony of Georgia in America,
which was to continue for twenty-one years, with power in the
trustees to form laws and regulations for its government, after
which all the rights of soil and jurisdiction were to vest in the
Crown."
It was described in the act of incorporation
"as all those lands, countries, and territories situate, lying,
and being in that part of South Carolina in America which lies from
the northern stream of a river, then commonly called the Savannah,
all along the seacoast to the southward under the most southern
stream of a certain other great water or river, called the
Alatamaha, and westward from the heads of the said rivers
respectively in direct lines to the South Seas."
It may be well here to say that the power of the King to alter,
change, enlarge, or diminish the limits of his royal governments in
America cannot be denied.
"Those governments were of two kinds, royal and proprietary. In
the former, the right of the soil and jurisdiction remained in the
Crown, and their boundaries, though described in letters patent,
were subject to alteration at its pleasure, for as it possessed the
right of soil and government, and delegated them to its governors
during pleasure, it might dispose of them in what manner and to
whom it thought fit, might alter, extend, or abridge them as its
inclination or policy might declare. In proprietary governments,
the right of soil as well as jurisdiction was vested in the
proprietors. These charters were in the nature of grants, and their
limits being fixed by these charters, could not be altered but by
their consent."
South Carolina, then, could not object either to the first
charter given to Georgia or to the subsequent extension of its
boundaries by the King, though forming a part of what had been
within the charter of that royal colony.
In 1763, Great Britain having then acquired by treaty with Spain
Florida, Pensacola, and all that Spain had held in North America,
east and southeast of the River Mississippi, all of that country
between the Alatamaha and Florida, originally within the chartered
limits of South Carolina, but which had
Page 54 U. S. 401
always been disputable territory between England and Spain, the
then Governor of South Carolina assumed to be at his disposal under
his royal commission. Within the year 1763 he granted to many
persons in Carolina large tracts of land lying between the
Alatamaha and St. Mary's Rivers. His power to do so was objected to
by Georgia, but her remonstrances were not regarded. The subject
was brought to the notice of the Board of Trade. The governor's
conduct was disapproved, declared to be unwarrantable, and orders
were given that no charters or grants should be issued for lands on
the south of the Alatamaha River, which had been surveyed under
warrants from South Carolina. But as surveys had been made under
the governor's warrants and grants issued by South Carolina for the
lands before the orders of the Board of Trade were received, they
were not formally recalled. These transactions, however, excited
much attention at the time in England from the representations
which were made concerning them by Governor Wright of Georgia. The
ultimate consequence was that the King, in January, 1764, extended
the limits of Georgia, including within them all that country which
had been within the chartered limits of South Carolina and limiting
the south boundary of that colony by the northern stream of
Savannah River as far as the head of the same. The language of the
letters patent granted to Sir James Wright is that the colony of
Georgia
"shall be bounded on the north by the most northern stream of a
river, then commonly called Savannah, as far as the head of the
said river, and from thence westward as far as our territories
extend; on the east by the seacoast, from the said River Savannah
to the most southern stream of a certain other river, called St.
Mary's, including all islands within twenty leagues of the coast
lying between the said Rivers Savannah and St. Mary's, as far as
the head thereof, and from thence westward as far as our
territories extend by the north boundary line of our provinces of
East and West Florida,"
which was "a line drawn from that part of the Mississippi which
is intersected by latitude 31, due east, to the Appalachicola."
See the King's Proclamation and letters patent to Sir
James Wright, Wat. 744.
For twenty years after this extension of Georgia, its limits
were not called in question by South Carolina, or perhaps, to speak
more properly, they had not been a subject of inquiry by that
state, though what they were was well understood by the authorities
of Georgia. Nothing had occurred between 1764 and 1776 from which
any contest concerning them could arise, and it was not until two
years after the provisional treaty of peace between England and the
United States was made that South Carolina claimed any part of the
unsettled territory of
Page 54 U. S. 402
Georgia, within the limits defined by the King's patent of
January, 1764.
The provisional treaty of peace with the King of Great Britain
was signed in November, 1782. In the 2d article will be found the
boundaries of the United States. They are repeated in the
definitive treaty concluded at Paris on the 3d September, 1783. In
less than four months after the provisional treaty was made,
Georgia declared legislatively that the southern boundary of the
state was a line drawn from the Mississippi in the latitude of 31
degrees, on a due east course to the River Chattahoochee, and in
other respects according to the southern boundary of the United
States, as that was settled by the provisional treaty between the
United States and Great Britain. The southern boundary of the
United States is described in the treaties with England
"as a line to be drawn, due east from the middle of the
Mississippi River in the latitude of 31 degrees north of the
equator to the middle of the River Appalachicola or Chattahoochee,
thence along the middle thereof to its junction with the Flint,
thence straight to the head of the St. Mary's River, and thence
down along that river to the Atlantic ocean."
Compare this boundary with that in the commission to Governor
Wright for the Colony of Georgia, and they will be found identical.
Indeed, unless the chartered limits of Georgia as they are stated
in that commission had been taken by the negotiators of the treaty
with England as their guide, they would not have had any by which
to run the southern line for the United States from the Mississippi
to the Chattahoochee, and thence as it is described to the Atlantic
Ocean.
The next action of Georgia asserting its jurisdiction over its
limits will be found in the 13th section of the Act of February,
1783, Wat.Dig. 264. It defines what those limits were. In February,
1785, Georgia passed another act for the establishment of a county
to the west of the Chattahoochee, within a line to be drawn down
the Mississippi from where it receives the Yazoo till it intersects
the 31st degree of north latitude, thence due east as far as the
lands might be found to reach which had at any time been
relinquished by the Indians, then along the line of relinquishment
to the River Yazoo and down to its mouth, calling it the County of
Bourbon.
This last act and the two which preceded it attracted the notice
of the authorities of South Carolina, and then that state, for the
first time since 1764, denied that the limits of Georgia were as
she had declared them to be and claimed for itself within them a
large extent of country.
South Carolina reasserted her claim upon the principle that her
surveys had been made in 1763, between the Rivers Alatamaha
Page 54 U. S. 403
and St. Mary's, forgetting that her then governor had been
reproved and had apologized for authorizing them to be made, and
denied that the source of the Keowee River was the head of the
Savannah River, and that the country between its source and the
source of the Tugaloo River down to the mouth of the Keowee, where
it empties into the Savannah, belonged to Georgia.
Neither state would yield, and the border excitements, growing
out of the differences, admonished both that it would be best and
safest for them to resort to that court which had been provided in
the 9th article in the confederation for "the settlement of
disputes then existing or that might arise between two or more
states concerning boundary, jurisdiction, or any other cause
whatever."
South Carolina presented a petitioner for that purpose. Georgia
was cited to appear and did so. Congress then provided for the
appointment of judges, and at this point of the proceedings
Carolina withdrew her petition, it having become the conviction of
both states, from information brought out by the controversy, that
these differences could be amicably adjusted.
Carolina had contended that as the original boundaries of
Georgia were the Rivers Savannah and Alatamaha, and lines drawn due
west from their sources to the Mississippi; that all the land lying
south of the Alatamaha, and a line drawn due west from its source
to the Mississippi, as far as the northern boundary of the
Floridas, continued to be a part of the province of South Carolina,
out of which Georgia was taken. And that when the British Crown, by
its proclamation of October, 1763, annexed to Georgia all the lands
lying between the Rivers Alatamaha and St. Mary's, it meant only
the lands between those rivers below their sources, and not such as
lay above those sources, and between lines drawn from them
respectively west to the Mississippi, which tract of country, of
course, even after the proclamation, still continued a part of
South Carolina.
Georgia, on the contrary, maintained that when the proclamation
annexed to its government all the lands lying between the Rivers
Alatamaha and St. Mary's, it meant not merely the tract of country
which lay between those rivers, below their sources, but also the
whole territory held by the British Crown between the northern
boundaries of Florida, as established by the same proclamation, and
the ancient line of Georgia.
Carolina further claimed the land lying between the North
Carolina line and the line due west from the mouth of the Tugaloo
River to the Mississippi, because the River Savannah loses that
name at the confluence of the Tugaloo and Keowee Rivers, and
consequently that spot was said to be the head of Savannah River.
Georgia contended that the source of the Keowee was the head of the
Savannah River.
Page 54 U. S. 404
At this time neither state had such original documents from the
archives of England as were sufficient to determine its right with
certainty. But Georgia had secondary proof of the letters patent
which were given by the King to Governor Wright in 1764, though
they had been taker away with him when he fled from the state
during the revolutionary war. The original commission and letters
patent were subsequently obtained from the records of the Board of
Trade in England. They fully confirmed the correctness of the
secondary proof upon which the state had acted. There was also at
the same time disclosed from those records in detail all of the
action of the Board of Trade and of the King concerning Governor
Boone's surveys in 1763 of the land between the Alatamaha and St.
Mary's, with the disapprobation of all that he had done in that
matter and the governor's apology for his conduct. Though done
already, we will introduce into this connection the boundaries of
Georgia in the letters patent to Governor Wright that the
controversy between Georgia and South Carolina, and its amicable
termination, may be better understood.
After South Carolina withdrew her petition from Congress, the
said states entered into a convention for the settlement of the
territorial differences between them. It was concluded at Beaufort,
in April, 1787. Carolina was represented by three of her most
distinguished citizens of that day, and Georgia by three of hers,
in whom the state had every confidence. It was ratified by both
states, though one of the three commissioners from Georgia, Mr.
Houston, was dissatisfied with and would not sign it.
By this convention it was agreed
"That the most northern branch or stream of the River Savannah,
from the sea or mouth of such stream to the fork or confluence of
the river now called Tugaloo and Keowee, and from thence the most
northern branch or stream of the said River Tugaloo, till it
intersects the northern boundary line of South Carolina, if the
said branch or stream of Tugaloo extends so far north, reserving
all the islands in the said River Tugaloo and Savannah to Georgia,
but if the headspring or source of any branch or stream of the said
River Tugaloo does not extend to the north boundary line of South
Carolina, then a west line to the Mississippi to be drawn from the
headspring or source of the said branch or stream of Tugaloo River,
which extends to the highest northern latitude, shall forever ever
hereafter form the separation limit and boundary between the states
of South Carolina and Georgia."
1 Art.Convention, Wat.Dig. 754.
From this article we see that South Carolina abandoned the
ground taken in her petition, and only claimed territory in
Georgia
Page 54 U. S. 405
in the event that a geographical fact should turn out
differently from what the commissioners of Georgia said it was and
accordingly with what the commissioners of South Carolina supposed
it to be. That was whether or not the headspring or source of any
branch or stream of Tugaloo extended to the north boundary line of
South Carolina. If it did not, then from wherever the headspring or
source of that river might be lower than this north boundary line,
Carolina could claim from it, by a line drawn west to the
Mississippi, all the land which was between that line and the
higher north line which Georgia had before declared to be the
boundary of this state. But if the headspring or source of the
Tugaloo did reach the north boundary line of South Carolina, then
that stream to its source was to be the boundary between the two
states, to the west of which Carolina could not then claim any
land. Georgia, on its part, by the same article, withdrew its claim
to that part of South Carolina which is between the Keowee and
Tugaloo Rivers, where the most northern branch of the Tugaloo
intersects the northern boundary line of South Carolina.
South Carolina, however, acting upon the opinion of its
commissioners that the headspring of the most northern branch of
the Tugaloo did not intersect the northern boundary line of that
state, ceded to the United States, in three months after the
convention with Georgia had been made, all the territory which it
was supposed Carolina had got by it in Georgia.
The cession is as follows:
"All the territory or tract of country included within the River
Mississippi, and a line beginning at that part of said river which
is intersected by the southern boundary line of the State of North
Carolina and continuing along the said boundary line until it
intersects the ridge or chain of mountains which divides the
eastern from the western waters, then to be continued along the top
of the said ridge of mountains until it intersects a line to be
drawn due west from the head of the southern branch of Tugaloo
River to the said mountains, and thence to run a due west course to
the River Mississippi."
The United States accepted the cession, and until by actual
exploration it had been ascertained that the headspring or branch
of the Tugaloo River was north of the line of South Carolina, it
was not known that the land actually transferred to the United
States by the South Carolina cession was only a tract of country
about twelve miles wide from north to south, extending from the top
of the main ridge of mountains which divides the eastern from the
western waters, lying between latitude 35� N., the southern
boundary of North Carolina, and the northern boundary of Georgia,
as settled by the convention between
Page 54 U. S. 406
Georgia and South Carolina in 1787, and that by that convention
it was established that South Carolina had no unsettled territory
to the west of the top of that ridge.
It was, however, a transfer of all the claim of South Carolina
to unsettled land. North Carolina afterwards ceded to the United
States its western lands. Georgia was the only remaining state
which had not done so.
The termination of her differences with South Carolina placed
Georgia, as to its limits, accordingly with that state's
declaration of them in 1783, or as they had been given by the King
in his commission to Governor Wright in 1764, and as they had been
used by the United States for the treaties of peace with England
and afterwards in its negotiations with his Catholic majesty from
1793 to 1795, which resulted in the treaty of that year with the
latter.
It may as well be mentioned here, however, that in the course of
that negotiation, Spain contended that the boundary of West Florida
was at the junction of the Yazoo with the Mississippi, in latitude
32�39', running from that point east to the Chattahoochee River.
The claim was founded upon certain proceedings of the King of Great
Britain between the years 1763 and 1767, extending the northern
boundary of West Florida from 31� north to the mouth of the Yazoo,
within two months after the commission had been given to Governor
Wright in which 31� north, or the north boundary line of our
provinces of East and West Florida
"were declared to be the southern boundary of Georgia. These
proceedings were an application to the King in 1764 by the Board of
Trade for an extension of the boundaries of West Florida, and
commissions given by the King in 1767 and 1770 to Governors Elliot
and Chester, by which they were made Captains-General and Governors
of West Florida, bounded to the southward by the Gulf of Mexico,
including all its lands within six leagues of the coast, from the
River Appalachicola to Lake Pontchartrain; to the westward by the
said lake, the Lake Maurepas, and the River Mississippi; to the
northward by a line drawn due east from the mouth of the Yazoo
River, where it unites with the Mississippi, due east to the
Appalachicola."
This pretension upon the part of Spain was considered as
altogether inadmissible by our negotiators on the ground that the
United States commissioners and those of the King of England, in
making the treaties of 1782 and 1783, had taken the boundaries of
East and West Florida as laid down in the proclamation of the King
of England dated 7 October, 1763, as the true boundaries of those
provinces when they were finally confirmed to Spain in 1783. And
further that Spain could not rightfully dispute it or
Page 54 U. S. 407
attempt to extend her boundary to the north of 31 degrees,
because she had been substantially a party to all the negotiations
which resulted in a peace between herself and England and between
England and the United States, with a full knowledge by the Spanish
negotiators that the boundaries between England and the United
States had been fixed in the line of 31 deg. from the Mississippi
to the Appalachicola or Chattahoochee. Spain conceded it.
After the treaty had been made, however, it was suggested, as
the treaties with England had been made with the United States and
not with the State of Georgia, that the former might claim the
territory between 31 deg. north and the line from the Yazoo to the
Chattahoochee upon the ground that the King had extended Florida to
the latter, or limited Georgia to that line after he had declared
the southern line of Georgia was to be the northern line of
Florida. But the United States did not at any time assert such a
claim. It could not well have been done upon principle after the
United States had rejected those papers as giving any ground of
claim to Spain and had insisted on the negotiation upon the
southern boundary of the United States as defined in the treaty of
peace with England upon the ground that it had been from 1763 the
boundary of Georgia. It may not be amiss, however, to notice as a
historical fact the objections which were made against the
availableness of these documents for the extension of the boundary
of Florida to the Yazoo when they were first produced. No patent
could be found from the King under the great seal of Great Britain
for such a purpose. There was no record of such a grant in the
Board of Trade, nor in any other of the archives of England
concerning her possessions in America. It could not be found in the
archives of Florida. Without such a patent or a proclamation in the
nature of a patent for such a purpose, no colonial claim for
territory was complete.
Such was and has been the uniform basis of colonial limits, and
it is somewhat remarkable that in no instance besides of English
colonial grant is the King's patent wanting. In this instance, the
extension is vested exclusively upon two commissions to two
governors of West Florida, one three years after the petition from
the Board of Trade, to Governor Eliott in 1767, and the other to
Governor Chester in 1770. In the first there is a recital of the
boundaries of West Florida, when Governor Johnstone received his
commission in 1763, followed by this declaration, that the King had
recited, by letters patent under the great seal of Great Britain,
his grant of boundaries for Florida as to its northern line of 31
deg. from the Mississippi to the Chattahoochee and extended them to
the Yazoo by a line drawn from
Page 54 U. S. 408
it on the Mississippi to the Appalachicola. The same boundary
was given in the commission to Governor Chester. There is no doubt
that Governors Eliott and Chester permitted settlements and gave
grants for land within the limits of these commissions from their
dates until Florida became, in 1783, by a retrocession from
England, again a part of the dominions of his Catholic majesty.
From these circumstances a patent from the King for the enlargement
of Florida was presumed. It was not unreasonable that it should be.
But it was not considered by the United States that its operation
could set aside the previous grant to the colony of Georgia of the
same territory, as the King, in his treaties with the United
States, had recognized the line of the latter as the boundary of
Florida, and that it had been accepted in that character by the
United States as its southern boundary. In fact, admitting that the
King's patent had been given, his treaty with the United States was
a revocation of it, and Spain could not claim from its treaty with
England any right to the extension, that having been a political
act of the King of England for the benefit of his own subjects,
when, by his proclamation of 1763, Florida, as it had been acquired
from Spain, was for the first time erected into the two distinct
governments of East and West Florida.
It appears from what has been said that the limits of Georgia
after the settlement of her territorial dispute with South Carolina
were not questioned -- in other words, that they had been rightly
asserted in the act of 1783, and that such portion of the state,
afterwards designated as the Mississippi Territory, was within its
acknowledged boundary. Georgia became then for the first time in a
condition to transfer to the United States its unsettled territory.
In less than a year after the last appeal from Congress to the
state to do so, her delegates in Congress were authorized to make a
cession of a part of it. The beginning of it was at the middle of
the Chattahoochee, where it is intersected by the thirty-first
degree of north latitude; thence due north one hundred and forty
British statute miles; thence due west to the middle of the River
Mississippi; thence down the middle of the river where it
intersects the thirty-first degree of north latitude; thence along
the said degree to the beginning. The quantity offered and the
conditions upon which it was to be ceded were objected to by the
United States. It was particularly unacceptable to Congress because
such a cession left a larger portion of unsettled territory within
the state undisposed of and interfered with the original obligation
and intention of Congress to establish in the unsettled territories
which might be relinquished by the states to the United States,
other states to become a part of the Union upon an entire equality
with the rest.
Page 54 U. S. 409
Congress refused to accept the cession tendered, at the same
time offering to accept from Georgia all her territorial claims
west of the River Appalachicola or west of a meridian line running
through or near the point where that river intersects the
thirty-first degree of north latitude. Georgia, in turn, refused
the proposal of the United States, and thenceforward maintained her
jurisdiction within her limits, until a cession was made of her
unsettled territory to the United States in 1802. In 1789 an act
was passed by the state reserving to certain persons and companies
preemption rights to her lands. In 1795, by another act in which
the territorial jurisdiction of the state was reasserted, Georgia
granted and transferred, for valuable considerations, to several
companies all of her territory bordering westwardly on the
Mississippi River, in distinct tracts. Among others, a tract
comprehending a part of what was subsequently declared by Congress
to be the Mississippi Territory. The prices for some of these
alienations were paid into the treasury of the state, and patents
for them were issued by the governor. At the next session, however,
of the general assembly, the act of 1795 was declared to be void on
account of the fraud, bribery, and corruption by which it had been
passed. But the companies to which Georgia had conveyed had sold
part of the land to innocent purchasers before the revoking act was
passed. They appealed to Congress to maintain them in their rights,
as well against any future claim of Georgia as against any claim
that the United States might make to the land which had been
conveyed to Georgia. Unfavorable at first as these sales by Georgia
were to a transfer of its unsettled territory to the United States
for the common benefit of all the states, they contributed to that
result afterward.
The action of the state had involved it in difficulties of a
very uncertain termination in a legal point of view. It had just
been released from an unpleasant litigation, American State Papers,
Public Lands, Vol. I. 167.
Moultrie v. State of Georgia,
not reported, growing out of an act passed by the state in 1789,
conveying lands between the Mississippi and Tombigbee Rivers to the
Virginia, South Carolina, and Tennessee Yazoo Companies, by the
11th Amendment of the Constitution, by which the states were
declared not to be suable in the courts of the United States by
citizens of another state or by citizens or subjects of a foreign
state. This, however, did not conclude the rights of the parties in
favor of the state to the lands which the state had contracted to
convey to them. The right of the state, too, to large bodies of
land within the Yazoo and its southern boundary was doubtful on
account of grants from Spain before it had ceded Florida to
England; from England also, on account of such as
Page 54 U. S. 410
had been made under the authority of the governors of West
Florida; and by Spain again after the retrocession of the territory
to it by England in 1783.
But the greatest difficulty in the way of the state continuing
to hold its unsettled territory was that the Indian title had only
been extinguished to about three millions of acres out of fifty
millions. At one time, the Indians were not inclined to sell; the
state was not in a pecuniary condition to buy them out. The Indians
were formidable in tribes and numbers. Their habitations and their
hunting grounds covered the larger part of the state. Its white
population was then small and too scattered for war-like
concentration against Indian hostilities or their casual incursions
into the white settlements for plunder. They were masters of the
forest, and intervened all over the state between the white
settlements, so that no one of them could have intercourse or give
aid to another without a license to pass through their hunting
grounds or at the risk of attempting it without permission. On the
other hand, white men in numbers, no longer under the influences of
social life or caring nothing for its restraints, hovered
constantly on the borders of the Indians, exasperating them by
depredations and misleading them into all the excesses of a corrupt
civilization, or into feuds with each other or forays against the
whites. Each day was an anticipation of attack, and when the night
came, repose was only taken with the rifle ready to repel it. In
this condition of things, and without any efficient power in the
state to make a change, it became necessary for the United States
to use its constitutional right to give relief. That was not so
much a matter of choice as it was of obligation. Constitutionally
they could alone regulate commerce with the Indian tribes.
Constitutionally they had the power to make war; their obligation
was to bear its expenses and defend the states against it in
whatever way it might happen, and constitutionally Congress was
bound to guard against war, to prepare for and prevent it from
whatever quarter it might be likely to come. The recent treaty,
too, with Spain bound that nation and the United States to restrain
the Indian tribes, in the territories of each, from war among
themselves and from such as might lead to aggressions upon the
territories of either nation. Added to such considerations, the
people who had settled to the west of the Chattahoochee, between it
and the Yazoo River, claimed from the United States the protection
which Georgia could not give, and they asked for a securer and more
definite political organization than they had had either under
English or Spanish rule, or from Georgia legislation.
Nine years had gone by since the failure of the last attempt to
obtain it, without anything having been substantially done
Page 54 U. S. 411
by Georgia to transfer to the United States its unsettled
territory in compliance with the resolution of Congress of 1780.
All the other states had done so. It was not likely at the time
that it would be done for some years yet. Under such circumstances,
Congress, still thinking that the United States had, under the
cession of South Carolina, a right to territory in Georgia, passed
the act of 7 April, 1798, for the amicable settlement of limits
with the State of Georgia, and authorizing the establishment of a
government in the Mississippi Territory. It was done with an
express recognition of Georgia's right of soil and jurisdiction in
the territory. Sec. 6 of the act. This, however, did not satisfy
that state, and she remonstrated to Congress against it. But the
political necessity under which Congress had been called upon to
act soon became obvious to all, and to none more than to the people
and the Legislature of Georgia. It is not necessary to give an
account of all that passed from that time to the transfer of the
territory to the United States. Three of Georgia's most
distinguished citizens were appointed commissioners to negotiate
with three others of national reputation upon the part of the
United States for a cession, and happily that was done in 1802
which had been so long delayed, thus consummating that great policy
of our early national existence from which so many states have been
added to the Union.
From the account which has been given of the territorial claims
of Georgia and her legislation concerning them, with that of South
Carolina denying them, and the final adjustment of the dispute
between these states and that of the United States for the cession
by Georgia of her unsettled territory, we have learned that when
Georgia did cede it to the United States, she was then in
possession and had a right to all the land, subject to the Indian
title, which that state had declared to be within her limits except
so much as there was between the Tugaloo and Keowee Rivers, which
Georgia had ceded to South Carolina by the convention of 1787. We
further learn that the adjustment with South Carolina left in
Georgia the Chattahoochee River from its source to the 31st degree
of north latitude, as Georgia had claimed her limits to be since
the King's patent to Sir James Wright in 1764.
In other words, that the Chattahoochee, from its source to that
point, was at all times after that patent within Georgia with the
right of soil and jurisdiction when its unsettled territory was
ceded to the United States. This fact being so, it gives us a key
from the laws of nations to aid us in the interpretation of its
cession as to the boundary between Georgia and Alabama, which must
prevail, as it would in all other cases
Page 54 U. S. 412
where there may be a transfer by one nation of its territory to
another, with a river for its boundary, without an express
stipulation for the relinquishment of the rights of soil and
jurisdiction over the bed of such river.
The rule
jure gentium to which we refer is not now for
the first time under the consideration of this Court. We are
relieved, then, from its discussion by citations from Vattel and
other writers upon the laws of nations to show what it is, but it
will be found in the 22d chapter of Vattel. Among the writers after
him it is not controverted by any one of them. Besides, it is
according to what had been anciently the practice of nations,
substantiated by an adherence to it down to our own times. In
Handley's Lessee v.
Anthony, 5 Wheat. 379, this Court said, by its
organ, Chief Justice Marshall,
"When a great river is the boundary between two nations or
states, if the original property is in neither, and there be no
convention about it, each holds to the middle of the stream. But
when, as in this case, one state is the original proprietor and
grants territory on the one side only, it retains the river within
its domain, and the newly created state extends to the river
only."
The river, however, is its boundary.
Georgia was certainly the original proprietor of the River
Chattahoochee to 21 degrees north when her territory west of it was
ceded to the United States, and that cession must be understood to
have been made under the rule, unless by terms in her grant to the
United States it was taken out of it with the view to give to the
new state which was to be formed out of the cession a coequality of
soil and jurisdiction in the river which was to separate them. In
the interpretation of the boundary which Georgia retained for
itself upon the Chattahoochee, it must be kept in mind that the
cession was made in contemplation of a new state to be formed with
the Chattahoochee as a part of its boundary. National
considerations then entered into the spirit of the transfer with
which its eminent negotiators on both sides were familiar.
* If we disregard
them now, and permit ourselves to view this question in the
narrower limits of verbal definitions and upon the principles upon
which private rights were adjusted on rivers between proprietors of
land on either side of them, we should do so forgetting all the
circumstances and objects for which the cession was made, the
parties to it, and the new party that was to be brought out of it
as an independent state.
But we will now examine the article in the cession for the
Page 54 U. S. 413
boundary of Georgia upon the Chattahoochee, for we think its
terms are coincident with the principle of national law under which
we have put this question.
We give the article entire, intending, after it has been done,
to use it with direct reference to the cases in hand as to the
question of boundary on the Chattahoochee River, between the States
of Georgia and Alabama, as that question was raised in the courts
below.
"The State of Georgia cedes to the United States all the right,
title, and claim which the said state has to the jurisdiction and
soil of all the lands situated within the boundaries of the United
States south of the State of Tennessee and west of a line beginning
on the western bank of the Chattahoochee River, where the same
crosses the boundary line between the United States and Spain,
running thence up the said River Chattahoochee and along the
western bank thereof to the great bend thereof next above the place
where a certain creek or river called Uchee, being the first
considerable stream on the western side above the Cussetas and
Coweta Towns, empties into the said Chattahoochee River; thence in
a direct line to Nicajack, on the Tennessee River; thence crossing
the said last-mentioned river, and thence running up the said
Tennessee River, and along the western bank thereof to the southern
boundary line of the State of Tennessee."
The plaintiff in error derives his title to the land which he
claims from the State of Georgia, and his right to construct a dam
across the Chattahoochee to the point where it terminates on the
western bank under that title and the convention by which Georgia
ceded her unsettled territory to the United States. He claims that
his land runs across, from the eastern bank of the Chattahoochee to
the bank on the western side. The defendant in error claims under a
patent from the United States to himself to fractional section 11,
township 7, range 30, and proved title to himself to lots 1, 2, 3,
4, in the Town of Gerard, in Russell County, Alabama, specifically
described, in some of said counts of his declaration as land having
for its eastern boundary the State of Georgia, and is immediately
west of the Chattahoochee River, on the bank thereof.
In the first case, No. 121, it was ruled by the court below that
the line established by the articles of cession was the line
impressed by ordinary low water. In the case from the Circuit Court
of the United States for the District of Georgia, the judge
instructed the jury that the line was to be drawn on and along the
western bank of the Chattahoochee River at low water mark when the
river was at its lowest state.
From the bill of exceptions in the first case it appears
that
Page 54 U. S. 414
"immediately at the plaintiff's lands and lots, the banks of the
river are from fifteen to twenty feet high on both sides, abrupt
above and below for considerable distances. The high banks,
however, do not extend down to the water's edge at ordinary low
water. The bed of the river at this point is about two hundred
yards wide from bank to bank -- by the bed is meant the space
between these abrupt and high banks -- and is composed of rocks and
slues among the rocks from one side to the other. Ordinary low
water and extreme low water together prevail for about two-thirds
of the year, during which time the river is confined to a channel
about thirty yards wide, leaving the bed of the river as above
described, exposed on each side of this channel from thirty to
sixty yards. Immediately under the western abrupt and high bank,
and within the latitude of the north and south boundary line of
plaintiff's land, those lines being drawn down to the water's edge,
and in the bed of the river, as above described, east of the
western abrupt and high bank, the plaintiff erected a mill previous
to 1842 and continued in the possession and use of it until
overflowed by defendant's dam. The place on which the mill is is
covered with water in ordinary high water, but is bare and dry in
ordinary low water."
"To supply his mill with water, the plaintiff had erected a
cross dam, which ran in a northeast direction into the river and
supplied his mill with water at all seasons by diverting a portion
of the stream to the mill, which passed again into the river above
the defendant's dam, and the plaintiff had blown out a rock to give
room to his mill to work."
The evidence in the case from the circuit court of Georgia in
respect to the situation of the plaintiff's mill and the
description of the river is substantially the same.
It appears from it that the mill of the plaintiff, by his own
showing, is in the bed of the river, to the east of the abrupt
bank, by the prolongation of his north and south boundary line from
the bank, which he claims a right to prolong, from his being the
owner of the land to the bank of the river, as a riparian
right.
Upon this evidence, the court in Alabama charged the jury that
one passing from Georgia to Alabama across the Chattahoochee River
at ordinary low water would be upon the bank as soon as he left the
water on the western side, although an inappreciable distance from
the water, and that the line described in the treaty of cession
from Georgia to the United States as running up said river and
along the western bank thereof is the line impressed upon the land
by ordinary low water, and if they believed plaintiff's mill was
west of that
Page 54 U. S. 415
line and defendant's dam backed the water so as to obstruct the
operation of the mill, the plaintiff was entitled to recover. The
defendant in this case excepted to the charge and asked the court
to instruct the jury, if the bank of the river was ordinary low
water mark, that the plaintiff had no right to the use of the water
at that stage, which the court refused to give. In the case from
the United States circuit court, the defendants below (plaintiffs
in error here) prayed the court to instruct the jury that the true
interpretation of the article of cession requires the boundary line
between Georgia and Alabama to be drawn on and along the western
bank of the Chattahoochee River, and that wherever the jury might
find that bank to be, the jurisdiction and limits of Alabama must
terminate, and cannot pass to the eastward of the same, but that
all east of such line, whether it be land or water, is included
within the limits and jurisdiction of Georgia, and no grant from
the United States or the State of Alabama can confer title to any
part of the same, either directly or indirectly, by virtue of such
grant or as an incident to the same. This prayer was refused, and
the court instructed the jury that the boundary line between the
States of Georgia and Alabama was to be drawn on and along the
western bank of the river at low water mark, when the river was at
its lowest stage.
In our view, the words of the cession have the same meaning in
law that they have in common parlance. They are not at all
uncertain, if taken connectively, as to the locality intended for
the western line of Georgia on the Chattahoochee. Separate the word
"bank" from "on and along the bank," and consider it only in
connection with the other words, "running up the river," and it
might be inferred that the water of the river, at some stage of it,
was to be the boundary, and that those owning the land on either
side were riparian proprietors,
usque ad filum aquae. But
not so when they are considered together, as we will presently
show.
When the commissioners used the words "bank" and "river," they
did so in the popular sense of both. When banks of rivers were
spoken of, those boundaries were meant which contain their waters
at their highest flow, and in that condition they make that is
called the bed of the river. They knew that rivers have banks,
shores, water, and a bed, and that the outer line on the bed of a
river on either side of it may be distinguished upon every stage of
its water, high or low; at its highest or lowest current. It
neither takes in overflowed land beyond the bank nor includes
swamps or low grounds liable to be overflowed but reclaimable for
meadows or agriculture, or which, being too low for reclamation,
though not always covered
Page 54 U. S. 416
with water, may be used for cattle to range upon, as natural or
unenclosed pasture. But it may include spots lower than the bluff
or bank, whether there is or is not a growth upon them, not forming
a part of that land which, whether low or high, we know to be
upland or fast lowland if such spots are within the bed of the
river. Such a line may be found upon every river, from its source
to its mouth. It requires no scientific exploration to find or mark
it out. The eye traces it in going either up or down a river, in
any stage of water. With such an understanding of what a river is,
as a whole, from its parts, there is no difficulty in fixing that
boundary line in question. Wherever that outer bed-line shall be,
from its beginning on the bank, at the 31st degree of north
latitude, to the mouth of the Uchee, on the western side, is the
western boundary of Georgia on the bank and along the bank running
up the River Chattahoochee.
If the language of the article had been, "beginning on the
western bank of the Chattahoochee and running thence up the river,"
and no more had been said, the middle thread of the river
ordinarily, and without any reference to the fact that Georgia was
the proprietor of the river, it would have been said to be the
dividing line between the two states. But there is added "running
up the said River Chattahoochee and along the western bank
thereof." This last controls any uncertainty there may be, for if
the first call or object to locate the line is the bank of the
river, it is plain that the western limit of Georgia on and along
the bank of the river must be where the bank and the water meet in
its bed within the natural channel or passage of the river. The
words "along the bank," added to the words, "on the bank,"
distinguish this case from all of those in which courts have had
the greatest difficulty where a line was to be fixed when it is on
the bank without a call for the stream or along the river, or up or
down the river. Angell 19. "Along the bank" is strong and definite
enough to exclude the idea that any part of the river or its bed
was not to be within the State of Georgia. It controls any legal
implication of a contrary character. Such a line, too, satisfies
the calls "on and along the bank" in the navigable and unnavigable
parts of the river. In the former, Alabama has all the uses of the
river, including the use of the western bank for navigation and
commerce, which the State of Georgia can claim. In that part of the
river not navigable, Georgia has both soil and jurisdiction for all
such purposes as are implied by both, and the stream or water of
the river for all such purposes as it may be used in any stage of
the water.
Such a line may be made certain on every part of the river,
whatever may be the changes on the western bank from washings,
Page 54 U. S. 417
the abrasions of extraordinary floods, or from any of those
sudden causes which in nature change the beds of rivers. In such
cases, the proprietors would continue to hold according to the
original boundaries of their grants. We repeat, "along the bank
thereof" is the controlling call in the interpretation of the
cession. It excludes the idea that a line was to be traced at the
edge of the water as that may be at one or another time or at low
water, or the lowest low water. Water is not a call in the
description of the boundary, though the river is, and that, as we
have shown, does not mean water alone, but banks, shores, water,
and the bed of the river. If water as one of the river's parts had
been meant, it would have been so expressed.
The call is for the bank, the fast land which confines the water
of the river in its channel or bed in its whole width, that is to
be the line. The bank or the slope from the bluff or perpendicular
of the bank may not be reached by the water for two-thirds of the
year, still the waterline impressed upon the bank above the slope
is the line required by the commissioners, and the shore of the
river, though left dry for any time, and but occasionally covered
by water in any stage of it to the bank, was retained by Georgia as
the river up to that line. Wherever it may be found, it is a part
of the State of Georgia, and not a part of Alabama. Both bank and
bed are to be ascertained by inspection, and the line is where the
action of the water has permanently marked itself upon the soil.
Wherever that line may be is to be determined in each trial at law
by the jury upon proofs, the jury being instructed by the court
that the bed of the river, wherever that may be, belongs to
Georgia, whether it extends at certain points to the face of the
bank where, from the perennial flow of the water there is no
margin, or to other points where there is.
We must reject altogether the attempt to trace the line by
either ordinary low water or low water. These terms are only
predicable of those parts of rivers within the ebb and flow of the
tides, to distinguish the water line at spring or neap tides. Such
a difference is uniform twice within every month of the year, and
because it is so, it is termed ordinary. In that part of a river in
which there is no ebb and flow, the changes in the current are
irregular and occasional, without fixed quantity or time of
recurrence except as they are periodical with the wet and dry
seasons of the year. And low water is the furthest receding point
of ebb tide. Nor do we think that the interpretation of this
article is aided by any cases upon the rights of riparian
proprietors. Such rights depend upon calls in grants for land
either from sovereignties having an equal right in the stream to
the thread of the river, or from grants from a state having the
entire
Page 54 U. S. 418
ownership of a river. In this instance, two sovereignties were
dealing for a cession of country from one to the other, with a
river as a boundary between them to be marked on that bank of it
from which the ceded land was to commence. Now as between them,
there were no antecedent calls upon the river to raise the question
of riparian rights. But on the contrary, the river at the time
formed a part of what was Georgia, and the commissioners negotiated
upon the footing that though the United States had formed the
Mississippi Territory, it was done with the disclaimer in terms,
that it in no way whatever should affect either the rights of
sovereignty or soil which Georgia had in the territory. Moreover,
we do not think that the commissioners could have contemplated that
the State of Georgia and the United States were to have a divided
or equal sovereignty in the river, or that the United States was to
retain any right of soil in the same, when we find the
commissioners in terms calling for the boundary line between Spain
and the United States in the middle of the Chattahoochee and then
transferring the western line of Georgia to the western bank of
it.
If the running water of the river had been intended to be the
line, and that the United States and Georgia were to have an equal
right of soil and sovereignty in the bed of the river on the
western bank, why was it that the middle of the river at latitude
31 degrees north was abandoned for the western bank? The only
answer which can be given is that Georgia meant to retain the river
to the western bank, and that the United States conceded it. Again,
the extension of the line from the middle of the river at that
point to the bank necessarily excludes that the water of the river
at any stage less than that which covers the bed of it was to be
any guide for the line.
We think that the instructions given by the courts below were
erroneous.
Our interpretation of the first article of the cession made by
Georgia to the United States is that the western line of Georgia
upon the Chattahoochee River, from its beginning in the 31st degree
of north latitude to the great bend thereof next above the place
where a certain creek or river called Uchee, being the first
considerable stream on the western side, above the Cussetas and
Coweta Towns, empties into the said Chattahoochee River is a line
to run up the river on and along its western bank, and that the
jurisdiction of Georgia in the soil extends over to the line which
is washed by the water, wherever it covers the bed of the river
within its banks. The permanent fast land bank is referred to as
governing the line. From the lower edge of that bank the bed of the
river commences, and Georgia retained the bed of the river from the
lower edge of the
Page 54 U. S. 419
bank on the west side. And where the bank is fairly marked by
the water, that water level will show at all places where the line
is.
* The commissioners on the part of the United States were Mr.
Madison, Mr. Gallatin, and Mr. Lincoln. Those on the part of
Georgia were James Jackson, Abraham Baldwin and John Milledge.
MR. JUSTICE NELSON.
This is a writ of error to the Supreme Court of the State of
Alabama.
Ingersoll, the plaintiff below, and defendant here, brought an
action against Howard for setting back the water of the River
Chattahoochee upon his lands and mill by the erection of a dam
across the said river at the City of Columbus in the State of
Georgia, by reason whereof the operations of his mill were
obstructed, and the use of his premises impaired.
The defendant pleaded the general issue.
On the trial, it appeared that the plaintiff was the owner of a
lot of land held under a patent from the United States, situate on
the west bank of the Chattahoochee River in the State of Alabama
opposite the City of Columbus, and which lot had for its eastern
boundary the State of Georgia.
This river has high bluff banks in some parts of it on both
sides, in others the banks are low and the adjacent lands subject
to inundations in high water extending for nearly a mile from the
bank. At the plaintiff's land, the banks are from fifteen to twenty
feet high on both sides, and somewhat abrupt, and above and below
for some distance. The abrupt and high banks, however, on the
plaintiff's side of the river do not extend down to the water's
edge at ordinary low water. Between the high bluff and the water at
this stage, the distance varies from fifty to one hundred and fifty
feet, and this intermediate space is flat bottomland, gradually
descending from the base of the bluff to the water, and upon which
flat grow trees such as pines, oaks, gums, poplars &c. Upon
this flat the plaintiff's grist-mill is built, and a road made
along under the bluff leading to it. There is also a saw mill and
cotton gin factory standing upon it. And a small portion of the
flat is at times put under cultivation.
In the ordinary state of the river in the winter season, the
water covers this flat about half way to the high bluff, extending
to the base of a bank or ridge of sand and gravel, and in freshets
the water covers the flats reaching to the bluff. It is only in a
full state of the river or freshets that the water overflows the
sand bank or ridge before mentioned.
I have collected these facts from the two cases before us
between these parties, each of which involves the same general
question.
The plaintiff supplies his grist mill with water by a wing dam
extended obliquely into the river.
Page 54 U. S. 420
The defendant erected a dam across the river some three hundred
yards below the plaintiff's mill and opposite the City of Columbus.
The dam is from four to five feet high, and at an ordinary stage of
the river the water is thrown back upon the plaintiff's mill so as
to prevent its use. The defendant possesses a grant of the bed of
the river upon which his dam is erected derived from the State of
Georgia and extending to high water mark on the western bank of the
river.
The court charged the jury that a person passing from the State
of Georgia across the River Chattahoochee to the State of Alabama
at ordinary low water would be upon the bank as soon as he left the
water on the western side, and that the line described in the
treaty of cession from Georgia to the United States as running up
said river and along the western bank thereof is the line impressed
upon the land by ordinary low water, to which charge the defendant
excepted.
The defendant asked the court to charge that if the bank of the
river was ordinary low water mark, the plaintiff had no right to
the use of the water at that stage, which was also refused, and an
exception taken.
This case involves a question of much higher interest and
importance than a simple decision upon the rights of these parties,
as the Court see that the decision cannot be reached without a
determination of the boundary line between two sovereign states for
a distance of someone hundred and fifty miles. The facts in the
record are few, being confined to a description of the localities
respecting this boundary at the point in dispute, and the few that
are disclosed very imperfectly and confusedly stated. It is to be
regretted that the Court is obliged to pass upon a question of this
magnitude under these embarrassments and in the absence of any
opportunity on the part of the two states interested to furnish the
necessary topographical information in respect to the River
Chattahoochee and its western banks for the whole distance within
which they constitute the boundary between them.
This information would have been useful to aid the Court in a
proper determination of the question, and would naturally have been
furnished if the controversy had been between the states
themselves.
The words of the cession of Georgia to the United States in
1802, describing the boundary line in question, and which are
material to be noticed, are as follows: Georgia cedes the
territory
"west of a line beginning on the western bank of the
Chattahoochee River, running thence up the River Chattahoochee and
along the western bank thereof and the great bend,"
and the United States cedes to Georgia all its rights
Page 54 U. S. 421
to the territory lying "east of the boundary line herein
described as the eastern boundary of the territory ceded by Georgia
to the United States."
This is the description of a line that has become the boundary
between Georgia and Alabama for a distance of one hundred and fifty
miles.
Two constructions are contended for arising out of the
description: on the part of Georgia it is claimed that her boundary
extends to high water mark on the western bank of the Chattahoochee
River for the whole length of this line, on the part of Alabama
that it stops at ordinary low water mark on the western bank of
said river.
The difference is very material, as it will be seen that upon
the former construction, Alabama can have a water or river line for
her boundary only during high water or a freshet, which is but an
occasional and temporary state of the river, and consequently the
owners of the land on the Alabama side, for the greater portion of
the year, and for all practical use of the water for agricultural
or hydraulic purposes would be deprived of a river boundary. And
this difference is the more striking when we see from the evidence
in the record, scanty and meager as it is, the strip of land
between the high bank and the river -- that is, between high and
ordinary low water mark -- would be from ten to twenty and more
rods in width, varying with the character of the bank, which would
belong to Georgia or to the owners on the Georgia side of the
river, and over which the jurisdiction and government of Georgia
would necessarily extend to the exclusion of Alabama.
We have no evidence in the record as to the distance the tide
ebbs and flows up this river. It probably does not reach the point
where the boundary in question begins, which is at the 31st degree
of north latitude. It is navigable for steamboats up to Columbus,
which is within some thirty or forty miles of its termination as a
boundary between the two states, and, as I am informed, is
navigable above the great bend, or west point, for small craft for
some one hundred miles, though interrupted by rocks and falls
between that and Columbus.
Grants of land bounded by the sea or by navigable rivers where
the tide ebbs and flows extend to high water mark -- that is, to
the margin of the periodical flow of the tide, unaffected by
extraordinary causes, and the shores below common high water mark
belong to the state in which they are situated. But grants of land
bounded on rivers above tidewater or where the tide does not ebb
and flow carry the grantee to the middle of the river unless there
are expressions in the terms of the grant or something in the terms
taken in connection with the situation
Page 54 U. S. 422
and condition of the lands granted, that clearly indicate an
intention to stop at the edge or margin of the river. There must be
a reservation or restriction, express or necessarily implied, which
controls the operation of the general presumption and makes the
particular grant an exception.
These are familiar principles of universal application,
governing the construction of grants of land bounded upon the sea
or tidewater or upon freshwater rivers, navigable or unnavigable,
and whether made by states or individuals or in large or small
tracts. And in applying them to the description of the cession
before us, we shall be enabled to determine where the boundary line
in dispute should be drawn. The words are "beginning on the western
bank of the Chattahoochee River," "running thence up the said River
Chattahoochee, and along the western bank thereof."
Where land adjoining a fresh water river or above tidewater is
described as bounded by a monument, whether natural or artificial,
such as a tree or a stake standing on the bank, and a course is
given as running from it up or down the river to another monument
standing upon the bank, these words necessarily imply as a general
rule that the line is to follow the river according to its
meanderings and turnings, and the grantee takes to the middle of
the river. Such is the uniform construction given to this
description where the common law prevails. It has been repeatedly
applied to grants abutting on the River Mississippi, the Missouri,
the Hudson, the Connecticut, and other great rivers in the United
States above tidewater. 3 Kent's Com. 427, 428, 429, and notes;
Angell on Watercourses, c. 1, ed. 1850.
Had the description in this case been limited to the first two
calls in the grant, it would have been impossible to have taken it
out of this rule of construction, and the owners on the Alabama
side would have been carried to the middle of the river. But the
third call, which is "along the western bank thereof," limits the
effect and operation of the other two and excludes the bed of the
river. It indicates an intent to reserve the river within the
boundary and jurisdiction of Georgia and to confine the grantee to
the western edge or bank. And this raises the material and
important question in the case -- namely where shall that line be
drawn? On behalf of Georgia, it is contended, it shall be drawn on
the bank or bluff, as described in the record, at high water mark;
on behalf of Alabama, at the bank or ridge of sand and gravel,
where the western margin of the river is found at ordinary low
water mark.
Now it is to be observed that the language of the cession,
"beginning on the western bank and running thence up the river and
along the bank," does not necessarily, nor, as I think,
reasonably
Page 54 U. S. 423
call for a line along the bluff or high bank such as confines
the body of water in the river at high water or when swollen with
floods. The bank enclosing the flow of water when at its ordinary
and usual stage is equally within the description, and the limit
within this bank on each side is more emphatically the bed of the
river than that embraced within the more elevated banks when the
river is at flood. These are more or less distant from the ordinary
channel, depending upon the character of the river and topography
of the adjacent lands. There are usually in rivers of this
description banks representing the point which is reached at high
water and which bound it at that stage of the river. They may be
and not infrequently are at a considerable distance from the
accustomed bed and the banks which then bound it. The flats
intermediate may comprise the most valuable portion of farms
bounded upon the river and extending back to the uplands,
notwithstanding they may be inundated by the spring and fall
freshets. The valleys of the Mohawk, and Hudson, and Connecticut
Rivers, may be referred to as illustrations, and also the
Susquehannah, both in New York and Pennsylvania. Some of the finest
alluvial bottom land in New York is found in the valley of the
Mohawk, between the banks of the river at its usual stage and the
banks at high water, which is the beginning of the uplands. If
these alluvial bottoms are found in the valley of the
Chattahoochee, and for aught I know they may be, according to the
boundary line contended for by the plaintiff in error, the
settlements within the State of Georgia would not be bounded by the
river, as most valuable possessions for sites of towns and for
hydraulic and even agricultural purposes might be found lying along
its western margin.
I cannot think that it is necessary to occupy more time in
attempting to refute the claim to this boundary line according to
the terms used in the cession by Georgia.
Then, if we leave the bank at what is called high water mark, as
not given by any reasonable interpretation of the grant, on what
principle or rule of construction is an intermediate line to be
drawn short of the ordinary and permanent bed of the river. It
would be a boundary wholly undefinable, and designated neither by
high water nor low water, nor by the usual stage, but left to
vibrate between what is called high water and the accustomed bed of
the river.
The term "high water," when applied to the sea or to a river
where the tide ebbs and flows, has a definite meaning. The line is
marked by the periodical flow of the tide, excluding the advance of
waters above this line in the one case by winds and storms and in
the other by freshets or floods.
Page 54 U. S. 424
But in respect to freshwater rivers, the term is altogether
indefinite, and the line marked uncertain. It has no fixed meaning
in the sense of high water mark when applied to a river where the
tide ebbs and flows, and should never be adopted as a boundary in
the case of freshwater rivers, by intendment or construction,
whether between states or individuals. It may mean any stage of the
water above its ordinary height, and the line will fluctuate with
every varying freshet or flood that may happen.
In our judgment, the true boundary line intended by Georgia and
the United States, and the one fairly deducible from the language
of the cession, is the line marked by the permanent bed of the
river by the flow of the water at its usual and accustomed stage,
and where the water will be found at all times in the season except
when diminished by drought or swollen by freshets. This line will
be found marked along its borders by the almost constant presence
and abrasion of the waters against the bank. It is always manifest
to the eye of any observer upon a river, and is marked in a way not
to be mistaken. The junction of bank and water at this stage of the
river satisfies the words of the cession and furnishes a line as
fixed and certain as is practicable, and is just and reasonable to
all the parties concerned. It excludes the high bluffs or banks
which the river touches but occasionally, when swollen with
freshets or floods, and also an intermediate line which can be
neither marked nor described, and adopts a boundary along the bank
and margin of the river of some permanency, and which parties
providing for a river boundary between them would naturally have in
their minds. That they intended a river boundary in this treaty of
cession I cannot doubt. That Georgia intended to reserve to herself
the bed of the river is equally clear. The line which I have
designated satisfies both intentions, and, in my humble judgment,
no other boundary line will.
There are some general considerations bearing upon the question
which should not be overlooked.
This Court observed in the case of
Handley's
Lessee v. Anthony, 5 Wheat. 374,
18 U. S. 379,
through the Chief Justice, that
"When a great river is the boundary between two nations or
states, if the original property is in neither and there be no
convention respecting it, each holds to the middle of the stream.
But when, as in this case, one state is the original proprietor and
grants the territory on one side only, it retains the river within
its own domain, and the newly created state extends to the river
only. The river, however, is the boundary."
"In case of doubt," says Vattel,
"every country lying upon a river is presumed to have no other
limits but the river, because nothing
Page 54 U. S. 425
is more natural than to take a river for a boundary when a state
is established on its borders, and wherever there is doubt, that is
always to be presumed which is most natural and probable."
Again, the Court said,
"Even when a state retains its dominion over a river which
constitutes the boundary between itself and another state, it would
be extremely inconvenient to extend its dominion over the land on
the other side which was left bare by the receding of the water.
Wherever the river is a boundary between states, it is the main,
the permanent, river which constitutes that boundary, and the mind
will find itself embarrassed with insurmountable difficulty in
attempting to draw any other line than the low water mark."
These views are sound and just, and the mind at once assents to
them. And they apply directly and with great cogency to the
question before us.
Let us now return to the case immediately under consideration.
The court instructed the jury that the boundary line described in
the treaty of cession from Georgia to the United States, as running
up the said river and along the banks thereof, was the line
impressed upon the land by ordinary low water. I am not certain but
that the line here designated, or rather intended to be designated,
is the same that we have attempted to define in this opinion.
"Ordinary low water," however, like "low water," is a relative
term, and in the abstract and without practicable application has
no definite meaning and furnishes no satisfactory guide by which to
ascertain or determine the line in question. I freely admit that if
the terms of the cession would justify the interpretation given to
that of the territory northwest of the Ohio, I should greatly
prefer the line adopted in
Handley's Lessee v. Anthony,
which was low water mark.
But the call here for the bank seems necessarily to connect that
with the river in defining the boundary, and restricts it somewhat
to a greater extent than in the description of the line in the case
mentioned.
As the general question involved is one of very great
importance, and the ruling not necessarily conveying the
instruction I think should have been given, I agree that a new
trial should be granted.
The defendant requested the court to instruct the jury that if
the bank of river was ordinary low water mark, the plaintiff had no
right to use the water at that stage, which was refused.
This instruction, we suppose, was asked for on the ground that,
admitting the boundary line to be fixed at ordinary low water mark,
inasmuch as the bed of the river within that limit
Page 54 U. S. 426
belonged to Georgia and the defendant's grant, derived from that
state, authorized the erection of his dam to the height claimed, he
had a right to set back the water up the bed within the aforesaid
limit, and the complaint, therefore, that the backwater interfered
with the supply of water to the plaintiff's mill by obstructing the
natural current of the river was unfounded, as the defendant had a
right, to this extent, to obstruct it. If this was the meaning of
the instruction prayed for, there was error in the refusal.
Undoubtedly the plaintiff has no right, under his grant from the
United States, to erect a dam in the bed of the river within the
boundary line of Georgia for the purpose of supplying his mill with
water. But I am not prepared to admit that he cannot supply it by
diverting the water upon his own land without crossing the boundary
line, as by sinking a trench or ditch, if by so doing he works no
injury to the rights of others. Every proprietor of land on the
banks of a river has naturally an equal right to the use of the
water which flows in the stream adjacent to his lands. No
proprietor has a right to use the water to the prejudice of other
proprietors above or below unless he has acquired a prior right to
divert it. He has no property in the water itself, but a simple
usufruct while it passes along. Anyone may reasonably use it who
has a right of access to it, but no one can set up a claim to an
exclusive right to the flow of all the water in its natural state,
and that what he may not wish to use himself shall flow on till
lost in the ocean.
Streams of water are intended for the use and comfort of man,
and it would be unreasonable and contrary to the universal sense of
mankind to debar a riparian proprietor from the application of the
water to domestic, agricultural, and manufacturing purposes,
provided the use works no substantial injury to others.
These principles will be found stated more at large by
Chancellor Kent in his Commentaries 3 Kent's Com. 439, 440, 441,
and also by Parke, J., in a very recent case in the Court of
Exchequer in England,
Embry v. Owen, 4 Eng.Law & Eq.
466, 476, 477
MR. JUSTICE GRIER.
I concur with my brother NELSON.
MR. JUSTICE CURTIS.
In these cases I concur with the majority of the Court in the
opinion that each of the judgments should be reversed, but I
withheld my assent from much of the reasoning contained in the
opinion. I do so because I am not entirely satisfied of its
Page 54 U. S. 427
correctness as I apprehend its extent and bearings, and because
the cases involve a question of boundary between the States of
Georgia and Alabama and highly important riparian and other rights
connected therewith or dependent thereon, in reference to which I
desire to stand committed to no opinion and to no course of
reasoning beyond what seems to me absolutely necessary for a final
decision upon the private rights now before us.
This obliges me to state my own views of what I deem necessary
to be decided and the conclusions at which I have arrived. I shall
do so very briefly, and without entering into an examination of the
principles and authorities which have brought my mind to those
conclusions.
My opinion is:
1. That the calls contained in the act of cession place the
western line of Georgia on the western bank of the Chattahoochee
River at the place in question in these cases.
2. That the act of cession is silent as to the particular part
of the bank on which the line is to be run. But inasmuch as it must
be run on some particular part of the bank, we are obliged to
resort to the presumed intentions of the commissioners and the
parties, inferable from the nature of the line as a line of
boundary of political jurisdiction as well as of proprietorship,
and according to that presumed intention, we must declare it to be
on that part of the bank which will best promote the convenience
and advantage of both parties and most fully accomplish the
apparent and leading purpose to establish a natural boundary.
3. That the banks of a river are those elevations of land which
confine the waters when they rise out of the bed, and the bed is
that soil so usually covered by water as to be distinguishable from
the banks by the character of the soil, or vegetation, or both,
produced by the common presence and action of flowing water. But
neither the line of ordinary high water mark, nor of ordinary low
water mark, nor of a middle stage of water can be assumed as the
line dividing the bed from the banks. This line is to be found by
examining the bed and banks and ascertaining where the presence and
action of water are so common and usual and so long continued in
all ordinary years as to mark upon the soil of the bed a character
distinct from that of the banks in respect to vegetation as well as
in respect to the nature of the soil itself. Whether this line
between the bed and the banks will be found above or below or at a
middle stage of water must depend upon the character of the stream.
The height of a stream during much the larger part of the year may
be above or below a middle point between its highest and least
flow.
Page 54 U. S. 428
Something must depend also upon the rapidity of the stream and
other circumstances. But in all cases, the bed of a river is a
natural object, and is to be sought for not merely by the
application of any abstract rules, but as other natural objects are
sought for and found, by the distinctive appearances they present,
the banks being fast land on which vegetation appropriate to such
land in the particular locality grows wherever the bank is not too
steep to permit such growth, and the bed being soil of a different
character and having no vegetation, or only such as exists when
commonly submerged in water.
4. Taking along with us these views respecting the bed and banks
of a river, it will be obvious that the lowest line of the bank,
being the line which separates the bank from the bed, is a natural
line, capable of being found in all parts of the river, impressed
on the soil, and this is true of no other line on the bank, for
though in some places the banks of a river may have so marked a
character that there would be no difficulty in tracing the upper
line of the bank and pronouncing with certainty that the bank there
terminates, yet it is not to be supposed that this would be true
throughout the course of a long river, and one of these cases finds
that in some places the banks of this river are low and the
adjacent lands on either side subject to occasional inundation. In
such places it would be impracticable to fix on a precise line as
the upper termination of the bank. Now it is clear that inasmuch as
this line of the act of cession was to be a line of boundary of
political jurisdiction, it must have been deemed by the
commissioners when they fixed it, and by the parties when they
assented to it, of great importance to have a natural boundary,
capable, not only of being ascertained upon inquiring, but of being
seen and recognized in the common practical affairs of life. And
therefore I am of opinion that as the calls for this line do not
expressly require it to be on any particular part of the bank, it
should be located on the bank where the leading purpose -- to have
a natural boundary between the two jurisdictions -- will be most
effectually attained. The convenience and advantage of both parties
require this. The line, therefore, is at the lowest edge of the
bank, being the same natural line which divides the bank from the
bed of the river.
The above brief statement of my views, while it exhibits all to
which I have given my assent in these cases, will show why I concur
in the opinion that the rulings brought before us by these writs of
error were erroneous.
Order in No. 121
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the
record
Page 54 U. S. 429
from the Supreme Court of the State of Alabama and was argued by
counsel. On consideration whereof it is now here ordered and
adjudged by this Court that the judgment of the said supreme court
in this cause be and the same is hereby reversed with costs, and
that this cause be and the same is hereby remanded to the said
supreme court to be proceeded with in conformity to the opinion of
this Court and as to law and justice may appertain.
Order in No. 131
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of
Georgia and was argued by counsel. On consideration whereof it is
now here ordered and adjudged by this Court that the judgment of
the said circuit court in this cause be and the same is hereby
reversed, with costs, and that this cause be and the same is hereby
remanded to the said circuit court with directions to award a
venire facias de novo and to proceed therewith in
conformity to the opinion of this Court.