Avery v. Fox

2 F. Cas. 245
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 F. Cas. 245 (Avery v. Fox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Avery v. Fox, 2 F. Cas. 245 (6th Cir. 1868).

Opinion

WITHE'S', District Judge.

The bill in this case is for an injunction against defendants, contractors and employes in constructing a new channel from White lake into Lake Michigan. Based on bill and affidavit, a motion is made for a temporary injunction to restrain defendants from proceeding with the work. It appears from the bill that White lake is four miles long and one mile wide; that with a commodious channel for entrance, this lake would afford one of the best harbors on Lake Michigan. White lake is separated from Lake Michigan by a strip of land about 50 rods in width. White river empties into White lake, is for a distance of about 5 miles, immediately above the lake, a stream from 100 to 200 feet wide, from 3 to 8 feet deep, and running from 2 to 3 miles per hour. The outlet of White lake is also called White river, is from 75 to 200 feet in width, and in the channel, generally, from 4 to 10 feet deep, and runs from the western part of the lake northwesterly, parallel with the strip of land between the two lakes, about three quarters of a mile. It then turns west and runs 40 to 50 rods to Lake Michigan. Westerly winds blow sand from said strip of land into the outlet, so that the channel is kept in a navigable condition only by the action of the current, and by large expenditure annually of money in removing such deposited sand.

Complainants own 70 acres of land lying on the outlet, on which is a steam sawmill and other buildings and improvements, the value of which is not less than $50,000. They also own lumber lands up the White river, and are accustomed to supply their mill with logs through White river, White lake, and the outlet. There is a bayou near their mill, wherein logs are stored—logs are taken from the bayou through an opening into the outlet to the sawmill as wanted. Complainants have a steam tug which runs between said lakes, aiding in the transportation of logs and lumber. All vessels passing from one lake into the other must go by complainants’ property through the outlet. They also have a pier extending from the mouth of the outlet into Lake Michigan. Their lumber, when sawed, is received by vessels coming from Lake Michigan, at a dock near the mouth of the outlet.

The congress of the United States has appropriated $57,000 for the improvement of the harbor at White River, to be expended under the directions of the war department. The war department, through its agents, has caused examinations and surveys to be made with reference to the work of improvement, and regards the improvement of the present outlet as impracticable, and has commenced the work of cutting a new channel through the sand bank or strip of land lying between the two lakes, making a straight cut of 200 feet in width and 12 feet deep, from deep water in Lake Michigan to deep water in White lake.

Complainants claim that the opening of this new channel must result in the rapid closing of the old outlet, because the new channel will be very much wider, deeper, and shorter than the old. As a natural and necessary consequence, they say, the water of the inner lake must seek the level of Lake Michigan through the new channel; the descent must be more rapid, as the distance is less; its greater depth and width will contribute materially to make the water prefer it to the old channel.

Several legal questions have been presented, involving the rights of riparian proprietors upon the navigable waters of the state; the rights of the public in, and particularly as to the power of the general government to divert or obstruct such streams in making harbors for the convenience and protection of commerce and navigation, and other questions which I shall have occasion hereafter to refer to. Without reference to the other facts of the case as presented by complainants and defendants, as to whether complainants will, by the opening of the proposed new channel, be deprived of enjoyed vested rights to such an extent as to justify the exercise of the restraining power of the court for their protection—I will first pass upon the legal questions that have been urged upon my consideration.

1. The outlet of White lake is a navigable stream, and the law is too firmly settled to allow of discussion at this day, that the owner of land bordering on a navigable stream, in which the tide does not ebb and flow, owns the land beneath the water to the center thereof. Neither the nation nor state owns [247]*247the beds of navigable streams within the state, but the riparian proprietor is owner thereof. It is equally well settled as law, that a riparian proprietor has a property in the use of water flowing by his premises; that is, a right to use it in its flow, in any manner not inconsistent with the rights of others to its use. If, then, the law recognizes such individual property, or, which is the same thing, individual right, in the use of water flowing past or through the land of a person, can such stream be so far obstructed or diverted as to deprive such owner of the use of the water? Clearly not. If the owner of land adjoining such stream has a mill which obtains its motive power therefrom, the water of such stream cannot be so far obstructed or diverted as to deprive his mill of its motive power, nor so as seriously to diminish the needed power. If the stream be navigable for crafts of any sort, for logs and lumber, and be used for any or all these purposes, any diversion or obstruction of the water accustomed to flow there, which should render navigation either impossible or difficult and more expensive, would be unlawful, and in either case, on a proper showing, should be prevented by injunction.

This right of private persons to the use of water as it flows by or through their lands, in any manner not inconsistent with the public lasement, is as sacred as is the right of a person to his land, his house, or bis- personal property. The public, however, have the right to use such streams as are navigable as highways, and the owner of a bed of a stream has no rights in the water thereof which will permit him to use it to the injury of the public. He cannot so far divert the water to his private use as to render navigation impossible or difficult, nor can he place obstructions in the stream in a manner to produce such results. His right and the right of the public to the use of the water of such streams are to remain unimpaired as far as possible, but the right of the public for purposes of navigation is paramount, and there can be no use of the water by a riparian proprietor inconsistent with the public easement. The law, as thus understood, does not deprive a state of the right to improve its navigable rivers, nor indeed to permit the damming or bridging of such streams, providing navigation is not thereby obstructed, as when suitable locks or draws are provided through which navigation is secured to the public. And so, too. a state, which by its constitution is not prohibited from entering upon works of internal improvement, may cut channels around rapids or carrying places to afford greater facilities for navigation, so as to enable crafts to pass such carrying places which could not be done without, or only in times of high water. In doing so, the state as well as individuals must respect the right of riparian proprietors, and not deprive them of such enjoyed use as they are entitled to have continued in the water, to an extent to produce irreparable injury. Here inconvenience to the private citizen resulting from any such public improvement may well be ignored for the greater benefit to the public, and be made to give way from principles of public policy.

2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 F. Cas. 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/avery-v-fox-ca6-1868.