Curry v. Port Lavaca Channel & Dock Co.

25 S.W.2d 987
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 26, 1930
DocketNo. 8364.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 25 S.W.2d 987 (Curry v. Port Lavaca Channel & Dock Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Curry v. Port Lavaca Channel & Dock Co., 25 S.W.2d 987 (Tex. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

COBBS, J.

In this suit appellee recovered possession of property against appellants in Port Lavaca Bay in Calhoun county, running out from the bay shore opposite the town of Port Lavaca, the property being described as partly fast land, and partly of tidal waters, and partly of submerged land, and partly of an island m the bay. The suit was not for the recovery of the title to the land, but for the exclusive right to the user- of all said property for the enjoyment and maintenance of the corporate rights and franchises conferred upon appel-lee by its charter as a “dock and channel corporation.” The appellants were enjoined by this judgment from conducting any business whatever within the bounds of said area, and from at any time erecting any structure, or maintaining any structure now erected, upon any of said area.

Appellants answered with general and special exception, and disclaimed as to all of the area described in plaintiff’s petition, except a particular portion which was described by metes and bounds, and, as to that, pleaded general denial and not guilty, and further asserted title by peaceable, adverse possession, under the five, ten, and twenty-five years statutes of limitation; alleged improvements in good faith of the value of $4,250; prayed that plaintiff take nothing as to the property claimed by appellants, and as to the property embraced in the prolongation of Live Oak street of the town of Port Lavaca, and in the alternative, prayed for judgment for the value of said improvements, and for general relief.

There were no findings of fact or conclusions of law made and filed by the court, but there was filed a statement of all the facts. Judgment was rendered by the court for the appellee, from which appellants perfected an appeal to this court.

The questions raised are the rights asserted by the parties to the property known as the “Young Shell Pile” in Lavaca Bay; and particularly whether appellee, by virtue of its charter as a dock and channel corporation, and work done pursuant to the charter, has the right to oust appellants, prior, peaceable possessors, claiming legal title, from the ground occupied and claimed by them, and in the possession of their predecessors in title when appellee filed its charter in the office of the Secretary of State.

An examination of the testimony, not necessary to discuss because of its length, fully supports the judgment of the court.

The Sanchez League was titled at Civil Law in 1835, and its bay shore line was the line of highest tide. Beyond this line, ownership was in the state. The point of land called for “forms the mouth of Chocolate Bayou with the principal bay,” and known as “Gali-nipper Point,” a peninsula running out into the bay between Lavaca and Matagorda Bays, and is -about four miles distant, at its nearest point, from the premises in controversy in this suit. No promontory is called for, along bay shore anywhere near the area shown in the charter, since the call is for the bay shore.

*988 The land on the island, and that which forms shoreward from the island, and all flats between the bluff and the island, could not be accretions, because not made up by gradual imperceptible process of nature, but both island and flats were really man made, and for such reason alone were not an accretion.

As the island was first built up by the state, it was the property of the state, not an accretion, even if fast land formed between the island and the shore. Nothing could be an accretion which did not become fast land, and nothing could become an accretion to this particular league unless it was connected with the league aboye highest tide.

The bay boundary of the Maximo Sanchez League was the line of highest tide, and nothing which extended out in the bay could ever become a part of this grant, by any process, unless it was like the main land, above highest tide. The evidence shows that these flats between the island and the shore were not above highest tide, and that highest tide rolled two or three feet over them.

Appellants claimed the connecting link between the island and the shore was the prolongation of Live Oak street, which contention is not supported by the evidence. That street, for 400 feet, constituted the outer boundary of the area described in the charter, and then the northeastern line of the chartered area turned away towards the east, and did not meet the description in appellants’ pleading. The map showed a street called Water street, which constituted the bay boundary of the town, running all along the bay shore and cutting off all' private riparian rights from any property owners in Port Lavaca.

Calhoun county was organized in 1846, the same year as the date of the map.

The original act incorporating Lavaca was in 1848, and same shows that there was then an existent town, the boundaries of which were identical with the John M. Smith tract, of the Sanchez League, and that the town had been laid out by Thomas McConnell, the immediate predecessor in title of Smith.

The Amended Charter of Lavaca, September 1,1856, by recitals in section 9, shows that the name of Lavaca had been also Port La-vaca, and provides that the subdivisions of said city “originally Port Lavaca, into lots, squares and streets, as made by the proprietors and others, as now recognized and established, and is recognized and established, as the Plan and Subdivision of said city.”

Another Act of October 27, 1866, again an amendment to the charter of said city, contains the same identical recitals, as those in the preceding paragraph.

Therefore, there can be no doubt but that this map, as to which Bickford testifies to contents, was the original map of Lavaca or Port Lavaca. Both of these acts prohibit the city authorities from changing any of these lots, streets, and blocks on said map.. This map showed Water street running down, inside of the east boundary of the town, and cutting off: the bluff lots from the bay. Thus, same cuts off all lots or subdivision from the bay, and destroyed all riparian rights. As-a matter of fact, however, Smith owned the only lots on the bluff, which abutted on Water street opposite the chartered area. See Gibson v. Carroll (Tex. Civ. App.) 180 S. W. 630.

Appellee’s claim was not to the fee-simple-title, but was merely the right to use the-property described in the charter for channel and dock purposes for the term of the-charter, namely, 50 years from April 20, 1917, West End Dock Company v. State (Tex. Civ. App.) 173 S. W. 285.

The grant of an easement, such as is-here claimed, for special purposes, by virtue of the charter was only the right to use of the described property for channel and dock purposes, for the expressed term, and subject to. regulations, and is not such estate against which limitation could run, at all, for it cannot be acquired by the operation of limitation or prescription, and would merge-the public use into a private one. Northern Pacific Railway Co. v. Townsend, 190 U. S. 267, 23 S. Ct. 671, 47 L. Ed. 1044; Ency. U. S. Sup. Ct. Reports, Vol. 7, 968; Northern Pacific Ry. Co. v. Ely, 197 U. S. 1, 25 S. Ct. 302, 49 L. Ed. 639; Northern Pacific Ry. Co. v.

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25 S.W.2d 987, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curry-v-port-lavaca-channel-dock-co-texapp-1930.