Chesbrough v. Head

13 Ohio C.C. Dec. 427, 3 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 516, 1902 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 204
CourtLucas Circuit Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 1902
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Ohio C.C. Dec. 427 (Chesbrough v. Head) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chesbrough v. Head, 13 Ohio C.C. Dec. 427, 3 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 516, 1902 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 204 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1902).

Opinion

HULL, J.

This case was tried in this court on appeal from the common pleas court and is an action to quiet title; the plaintiff claiming to be the owner and in actual possession of “ All that part of the bed of the Mau-mee river lying between the surveyed portion of lots thirteen (18), fourteen (14), fifteen (15), and sixteen (16), of Ironville on the southeast and the center of the channel of the Maumee river on the northwest, and being a part of the Wasayon tract, in town nine (9), south, range eight (8) east, Michigan meridian in Lucas county, Ohio.”

As appears from this description, the land in question is a portion of the bed of the Maumee river, and the whole of it is usually covered by water and lies opposite the surveyed portions of the lots mentioned.

The question in the case is, whether the deed which conveyed to the plaintiff said lots 13, 14, 15 and 16 of Ironville, conveyed with it the right and title to the land under the water, subject to the public right of navigation, or whether the deed only conveyed the surveyed portions of those lots as described and indicated by the lines on the plat of the village of Ironville, which plat was made and recorded by the proprietor, David Weaver, in January, 1870.

Weaver mortgaged these lots to Valentine Ketcham ; they were sold on foreclosure and bid in by Mr. Ketcham and he afterwards made a conveyance to plaintiff of those lots, describing them by numbers, according to the plat. This occurred during the lifetime of Weaver. ' Subsequent to this deed by Ketcham to Chesbrough, Weaver made a deed of the bed of the river, opposite these lots, to the defendant. After Weaver’s death his heirs made a deed to the plaintiff of this property; but that was subsequent to this deed, so that, after all, it comes back to the question of whether by the deed from Ketcham to plaintiff of these lots, by number, the title to this land under the water, so far as it is susceptible of private ownership, was conveyed to the plaintiff; whether the whole riparian rights appurtenant to and incident to the land bounding and abutting upon the river at the foot of these lots was conveyed by that deed, or not.

A case involving a similar question, Annie M. Head v. Abram Chesbrough, the same parties, some years ago went to the Supreme [429]*429Court from this county. The land in that case was that lying in front of the surveyed portions of lots 11 and 12, immediately adjoining the lots in question here. That case was decided in favor of Chesbrough in the circuit court and affirmed by the Supreme Court without report. The case below was fully reported and the decision of Judge Pugsley of the common pleas court is found in Head v. Chesbrough 6 Dec. 494 (4 N. P. 73), and the decision of the circuit court in Head v. Chesbrough, 7 Cirt. Dec. 176 (18 R. 354). It is claimed that the facts in this case are somewhat different from those in that case.

The principle of law that a conveyance ot lots bounding and abut" ting upon a navigable stream carries with it the riparian rights and the title to the land under the water, unless there are express words in the conveyance excluding from the conveyance such rights, seems to be well established by all the authorities in this state.

It is not my purpose in this opinion to. review these authorities at great length. They were fully discussed in the other case, in the briefs of counsel and in the opinion of Judge Pugsley.

The case where this doctrine was first clearly announced1 in this state is that of Gavit v. Chambers, 3 Ohio 495, 496, where the syllabus says:

“ In Ohio, owners of lands situate on the banks of navigable streams running through the state, are also owners of the beds of the rivers to the middle of the stream, as at common law.”

This was a case that went up from Sandusky county and involved the rights of abutting owners in the land under the waters of Sandusky river. The court say, at page 498 of the opinion:

“ We do not believe that it was the intention of the United States to reserve an interest in the bed, banks, or water of the rivers in the state, other than the use for navigation to the public, which is distinctly in the nature of an easement, and all grants of land upon such waters, we hold to have been made subject to the rule of the common law, which, in this case, is the plain rule of common sense. And it is this: He who owns the lands upon both banks, owns the entire river, subject only to the easement of navigation, and he who owns the land upon one bank, only, owns to the middle of the river, subject to the same easement. This is the rule recognized not only in England, but in our sister states.”

This case has never been overruled or criticised, but has been cited with approval by the Supreme Court in two or three subsequent decisions.

Day v. Railroad Co., 44 Ohio St. 406 [7 N. E. Rep. 528], is in point and cites with approval the case of Gavit v. Chambers, supra. The first paragraph of the syllabus is:

[430]*430“ A general deed of premises lying upon the bank of a river, in which is constructed a canal, conveys the grantor’s rights to the center of the stream bounding the property. And to reserve or exclude from the grant any such rights, the conveyance should contain proper words of such reservation or exclusion.”

On pages 419 and 420 of the opinion several of the Ohio cases are considered and quoted from, and among them Gavit v. Chambers, supra, and quoting from Lamb v. Rickets, 11 Ohio 311, as follows:

“ Where the owner of land is bounded by a stream, he owns to the center of the stream, subject to the easement of navigation.”

In the comparatively recent case of Railroad Co. v. Platt, 53 Ohio St. 254 [41 N. E. Rep. 243], this question was considered by the Supreme Court. The facts in that case were somewhat different from the case here, that being an action in ejectment. The law, as laid down by the syllabus of the case, is this:

“ A conveyance of lands situated upon a navigable stream, the description being by courses and distances from a fixed monument and establishing a boundary line coincident with the line of navigation, conveys the grantor’s title as far as the central thread of the stream.”

And on page 266 of the opinion, the court, through Judge Shauck, . say:

“ These considerations would seem to justify the presumption that a grant of this character is to the central thread of the stream unless apt terms are employed to limit it.
“And such appears to be the settled view of the courts of the country.
“ To the application of this doctrine it is quite immaterial whether the stream be named as a boundary of the lands granted or there be a description by courses and distances from a fixed monument whereby a line is established coincident with the stream. The doctrine regards the substance of the grant and not its form.”

Counsel for defendant cite as an authority in.this case and rely upon Lembeck v. Nye, 47 Ohio St. 336 [24 N. E. Rep. 686 ; 8 L. R. A. 578 ; 21 Am. St. Rep. 828]. In our judgment, however, this case is not applicable to the case at bar. The water in question in that case was the water of a small non-navigable lake in Medina county, and the rule as to such waters is different from that in the case of a navigable stream like the Maumee river.

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Related

Watson v. Peters
26 Mich. 508 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1873)
Administrators of Gavit v. Chambers & Coats
3 Ohio 495 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1828)

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Bluebook (online)
13 Ohio C.C. Dec. 427, 3 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 516, 1902 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chesbrough-v-head-ohcirctlucas-1902.