Aqua Log, Inc. v. Lost & Abandoned Pre-Cut Logs & Rafts of Logs

584 F. Supp. 2d 1367, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84429, 2008 WL 4657877
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Georgia
DecidedOctober 21, 2008
DocketCivil Action CV207-036
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 584 F. Supp. 2d 1367 (Aqua Log, Inc. v. Lost & Abandoned Pre-Cut Logs & Rafts of Logs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aqua Log, Inc. v. Lost & Abandoned Pre-Cut Logs & Rafts of Logs, 584 F. Supp. 2d 1367, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84429, 2008 WL 4657877 (S.D. Ga. 2008).

Opinion

ORDER

LISA G. WOOD, District Judge.

PlaintifPSalvor, Aqua Log, Inc. (hereinafter “Aqua Log”), filed the above-cap *1368 tioned case against in rem defendant, “Lost and.Abandoned Pre-Cut Logs and Rafts of Logs” (hereinafter “the logs”), under the .Salvage Act, 46 U.S.C. § 721. Invoking the Court’s admiralty jurisdiction, Aqua Log seeks title to, or in the alternative a salvage award for, the logs. The State of Georgia has intervened as an interested party and asserts it is the rightful owner of the logs. Presently before the Court is the State’s, motion to dismiss Aqua Log’s complaint due to a lack of subject matter jurisdiction. ' According to the State, the Court “lacks subject matter jurisdiction over 'these proceedings by reason of the Eleventh Amendment to the United States Constitution.” State’s Motion to Dismiss, at 1. Because the Court finds that the State was not in “actual possession” of the res at the time it was seized, the State’s motion to dismiss Aqua Log’s complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction will be DENIED.

BACKGROUND

According to Aqua Log, during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, commercially harvested logs were transported to coastal markets by rafting those logs down Georgia’s rivers and streams. Plaintiffs Response to State’s Motion to Dismiss at 2. A consequence of this practice was that “approximately 5% of these logs sank to the bottom” of Georgia’s waterways. Id. These sunken logs are more valuable than modern lumber due to'their unique characteristics, such as their uniquely tight growth rings. Id. This has resulted in an increased interest in salvage, or “deadhead,” logging, a practice used to recover these “old growth logs.” Id. Salvors engaged in deadhead logging lift these logs from the waterways, and check their growth rings. Id. The logs with tight growth rings are then removed. Id.

One of the waterways containing these deadhead logs is the Altamaha River. The Altamaha River “flows more than 130 straight-line miles from its northernmost points to its entry into the Atlantic Ocean north of Brunswick.” ' Altamaha River, New Georgia Encyclopedia (Univ. Of Ga. Press), available at http://www.georgia encyclopedia.org.

The State of Georgia has claimed ownership of these deadhead logs since at least the late 1950’s. In a 1958 opinion, the Georgia Attorney General opined that “[rjiver beds and sunken timber in navigable streams are .state property.” Op. Attorney General 1958-59, p. 220. In 1985, the Georgia General Assembly enacted a statutory scheme to deal with the issue of ownership of the deadhead logs. These statutes grant title to, and control over, the deadhead logs to the State and its various agencies. Under one of these statutes, the Georgia Department of Natural Resources (hereinafter “DNR”) was named “[t]he custodian of all submerged cultural resources” and was “empowered to promulgate such rules and regulations as may be necessary to preserve, survey, protect, and recover such underwater properties.... ” Ga.Code Ann. § 12-3-81 (2008). In a separate statute, the General Assembly required that “[a]ny person desiring to conduct investigation, survey, or recovery operations, in the course of which any part of a submerged cultural resource may be endangered,. removed, displaced, or destroyed, shall first make application to [DNR] for a permit to conduct such operations.” Ga.Code Ann. § 12-3-82(a) (2008). 1

*1369 In 1998, the DNR appointed a Submerged Timber Task Force (hereinafter “STTF”) “to review issues associated with the commercial removal of submerged timber (deadhead logs) from Georgia waters.” Exhibit A to Plaintiffs Response to State’s Motion to Dismiss at 1. As part of its study of deadhead logging, “the STTF asked DNR to survey the Altamaha River and estimate how many logs were on the bottom of the river.” Id. at 5. The Wildlife Resources Division of the DNR then contracted with the United States Navy “to survey the Altamaha River using sidescan-ning sonar and interpret the results.” Id. This survey — which covered twenty-two miles of the Altamaha — was conducted in September 2000. Id. Partly as a result of this survey, which “revealed that there was a relatively low number of submerged logs and, consequently, very limited economic return,” id.', the STTF advised the DNR against removing the submerged logs. Id. at 7-8. First, the STTF opined that “[t]he removal of submerged logs may ... have an impact on the navigability of rivers.” Id. at 8. The STTF went on to state that “[t]he importance of submerged logs may play a vital role to the physical integrity of many Georgia rivers,” id. at 10, and that removal of the logs “could lead to a decline in the economic value of’ Georgia’s recreational and commercial fisheries. Id. at 11. Due, at least in part, to the STTF’s recommendations, the State of Georgia has not attempted to remove the deadhead logs from the Altamaha, but has taken other steps in an attempt to assert control and ownership over the logs.

As part of its regular business, and without applying for or receiving a permit under Georgia’s statutory scheme, Aqua Log located the logs at issue in this case, which it claims were “lying on, but not embedded in, lands beneath the navigable waters of the Altamaha River.” 2 Plaintiffs Response to State’s Motion to Dismiss at 3 (emphasis in original). Upon locating the logs, Aqua Log planned to first “determine ownership/identity of the original logger from ‘brands’ which may exist on individual logs.” Verified Complaint at ¶ 6.

According to Aquá Log, “[u]nless the Court rules that such logs were abandoned-by their owners, the logs remain the property of the original owner Or heirs, regardless of their location, embedded or not embedded.” Id. Further, Aqua Log stated that it would “not salvage individual logs embedded in the river bottom without having first received written permission from the original owner or heirs (if ownership of an embedded log can be determined).” ' Id. at ¶7. In the event that the owners or heirs are found, Aqua Log asks the Court to grant “a full and liberal salvage award” and, if the owners or heirs are not found, Aqua Log seeks title'to the logs. Id. at ¶ 9. In its complaint, Aqua Log requests the Court to “assume exclusive jurisdiction over the salvage” and to put Aqua Log “into possession of the In Rem Defendant.” Id: at 4.

*1370 Procedural History

Aqua Log filed its complaint on March 13, 2007.

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584 F. Supp. 2d 1367, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84429, 2008 WL 4657877, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aqua-log-inc-v-lost-abandoned-pre-cut-logs-rafts-of-logs-gasd-2008.