Bass Lake Co. v. Hollenbeck

5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 242, 11 Ohio C.C. 508
CourtGeauga Circuit Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 242 (Bass Lake Co. v. Hollenbeck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Geauga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bass Lake Co. v. Hollenbeck, 5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 242, 11 Ohio C.C. 508 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

lyAUBlL, J.

This is an action brought to enjoin the defendants, twenty or more in number, from entering upon the waters of Bass lake, (formerly called Munson’s pond) to boat, fish or hunt, or to use the lake in any way for recreation and pleasure!

The plaintiff claims to be the owner of all the lands underlying the waters of the lake, and bordering thereon, either in fee or by leasehold.

The lake is in extent about a mile long, and in width varying from one-third to half a mile. It has an inlet stream at the extreme northern end, and an outlet stream near its southern end. There is a tongue of land, which is owned by the plaintiff, in fee, called the island, on the eastern end of the lake, and near its southern end. It is really a peninsula, and is called an island because in times of high water, this peninsula is cut off from the mainland.

The plaintiff alleges that the defendants are interfering with its rights in the lake; that the plaintiff has stocked the lake with fish ; that it bought a hotel and a summer resort on this island, and built at a great expense additional houses and buildings for the accommodation of the members of the company, their families and friends, who are using the lake for boating, fishing and hunting purposes, and for recreation and pleasure; that the defendants, especially in the inlet, keep and maintain a number of boats and use the same for the purpose of entering upon the lake with their friends and others,to boat, fish and hunt thereon,and have been doing so continuously for a long time and that they take and destroy the plaintiff’s fish, and threaten to continue to do so, and will unless restrained by the action of the court.

The defendants admit the ownership of a part of the land by the plaintiff; they admit that they are boating and fishing upon the lake, as charged, and that they intend to continue to do so, claiming they have that right; they deny that the plaintiff owns all the lands covered by the waters of the lake, and allege that they own but a small part of it.

They allege that this lake belongs to the public; that it was dedicated to the public by the owners of the lake, about the year 1840, and that the public have continuously, notoriously and adversely used and occupied it ever since, for the purposes of pleasure and recreation, fishing and hunting upon its waters, and on the adjoining shores; and therefore they claim the right to enter upon the lake, and to boat and fish over all parts thereof, and to use it for all purposes of recreation and pleasure.

They further allege that they are the owners in fee of a portion of the land covered by the waters of the lake, and bordering thereon, and have acquired and own fishery rights therein, and have therefore the right to enter upon its waters, for the purposes aforesaid; that these rights are superior to any that the plaintiff owns, and therefore they deny that the plaintiff is entitled to the relief asked..

This lake is a non-navigable inland lake, and is therefore the subject of private property, and what ever fishing or other rights may .exist in the waters covering the land belongs to the owners of the lands. That a non-navigable inland lake is the subject of private ownership is settled in this state, in the case of Lembeck v. Nye, 47 Ohio St.; 336. The right or rights that may be acquired in the waters of such a lake by the owners of the soil and of the riparian proprietors, and when and how they may be acquired, are there treated and defined, and cover many of the legal points raised in this case.

[244]*244In the disposition of the case, as a mattter of convenience, I take up first, the question of dedication.

So far as the law is concerned, there perhaps can be but little doubt that such a body of water is the subject of dedication to the public. At least we so treat it, that it is a subject of dedication at common law. A statutory dedication is not claimed.

In order to make sucha dedication, the intention must be clear andsatisfactoryupon the part of the owner s to dedicate it to public purposes, andan acceptance thereof by the public, for su :h purposes, must be shown. As this is purely a question of fact, it is sufficient in a published opinion to say that we find that the claim of the defendants in this respect is not true, andthat the lake never was dedicated by the owners for any public use.

Passing that, therefore, and coming to the other questions in the case; there was substantially no dispute between the parties as to the conveyances made to them respectively, the questions being as to their construction and effect. These questions reláte to, and grow out of conveyances from F. B. Hazen and the Kelloggs, and as to those parties, they are the source of title of all of the parties to this case, and there is therefore no dispute as to the title in the Kelloggs and Hazen.

It seems, from the evidence, that in 1877, Downing & Smith established a summer resort on this inland lake, for boating, fishing, and hunting. They built a hotel on the island near the southeastern corner of the lake, as I have already described, and for that purpose they bought the island and contiguous lands, with rights of fishing, trapping, hunting and boating in parts of the lake adjacent, and they leased other lands in the lake and on the margin to secure all the rights of fishery in, and control of the lake. These lands, rights and interest were subsequently conveyed to the plaintiff, The Bass Take Company, who is the successor in the rights and interests of Downing & Smith; and ■ plaintiff obtained other leases of parts of the lake and- its margin, and expended a large amount of money in additional buildings and improvements in and about the lake, and established a private club house for members of the company, their families and friends.

In the orally delivered opinion I recited at length all the conveyances, by deed and lease, with a description of the lands and rights acquired thereby by plyintift and the defendants, which it is not necessary to here insert.

From this statement, as to titles of the parties, and the plaintiff’s rights, it is apparent that the plaintiff has exclusive right as against the defendants, to all of the lake, and its borders, except such portions of the lake as are comprised within the Miller and Tracy tracts (as to which neither of the parties have any right), and except as such right is modified by the reservations in the Kellogg and F. B. Hazen leases.

As to said Hazen lease, it being for a longer period than three years, and not being acknowledged, it is not a perfect lease; but in law is a good contract for a lease, binding upon Hazen and all parties with notice.

The defendants admit they had knowledge of it when they acquired title from Hazen, and claim that they purchased from Hazen, for the express purpose of testing the plaintiff’s rights. Therefore they had knowledge of this lease, or contract for a lease, and the possession by the plaintiff when they purchased from Hazen, and they are bound by it. They acquired no title as against that lease. Hazens’ land included a small narrow strip covered by the waters of the lake. There is in this [245]*245Hazen lease an exception that needs to be considered in this case to ascertain whether or not the defendants obtained any rights in the waters of the lake from Hazen, by reason of this reservation, as against plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 242, 11 Ohio C.C. 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bass-lake-co-v-hollenbeck-ohcirctgeauga-1896.