Filipos v. Chouke

40 S.W.2d 38, 120 Tex. 508, 1931 Tex. LEXIS 186
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1931
DocketNo. 5346.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 40 S.W.2d 38 (Filipos v. Chouke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Filipos v. Chouke, 40 S.W.2d 38, 120 Tex. 508, 1931 Tex. LEXIS 186 (Tex. 1931).

Opinion

Mr. Commissioner CRITZ

delivered the opinion of the court.

The record in this case discloses the following: Chris Chouke is the owner of certain land on Galveston Island. This title is held by Chouke by mesne conveyances from Jones and Hall, to whom it was originally *511 patented on November 28, 1840. This patent was validated by act of the Legislature of Texas passed February 8, 1854. Gammel’s Laws of Texas, vol. 4, p. 125. The validating act in question reads as follows:

“An Act to confirm the patent issued by the Commissioner of the General Land Office to Levi Jones and Edward Hall, on the twenty-eighth day of November, eighteen hundred and forty.

“Section . . Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Texas, That the patent issued by the Commissioner of the General Land Office, on the twenty-eighth day of November, eighteen hundred and forty, to Levi Jones and Edward Hall, for lands on Galveston Island, be, and the same is hereby confirmed, and the State of Texas disclaims any title in and to the lands described in said patent, in favor of the grantees and those claiming under them. ,

“Passed, February 8, 1854.”

The original survey lines of the Jones and Hall survey, and also Chouke’s field notes, include the land in the bayou where Chouke has the oyster bed involved in this suit. Also the land owned by Chouke lies on both sides of said bayou and the oyster bed is located between the two banks. In other words if the patent is valid to the extent of including therein the part of the bayou covered by its lines Chouke is the owner of the land where his oyster bed is situated. At the time this suit was instituted, and for many years prior thereto, Chouke had growing at the bottom of the bayou at the place above mentioned a valuable oyster bed. This bed was worth about $20,000, and produced an annual income of from $2,000 to $3,000.

Joe Filipos et al. owned land abutting on the same bayou, and owned an oyster bed at the bottom of such bayou opposite their land. The oyster bed of Chouke is located between that of Filipos et al. and the open bay. Filipos et al. had for some time before this controversy arose, been transporting seed oysters from the open bay to their oyster bed by boat, and in doing so they must and did cross the oyster bed of Chouke. It is shown that at first Filipos et al. navigated the waters over Chouke’s bed with a boat or oyster barge of shallow draft, propelled by poles, and that this method of navigation did little, if any, damage to Chouke’s bed. It seems to have required about forty minutes to navigate the barge with poles from the mouth of the bayou to the bed of Filipos et al.

About 1928 Filipos et al. constructed a large barge. This barge is 11 by 26 feet and draws about a foot of water when loaded. It is self-propelled ; being equipped with a gasoline engine and a wheel or propeller measuring 12 or 14 inches. This propelled works in what is called a tunnel so that its lower part is about on a line with the bottom of the barge. This barge thus propelled is capable of making about three and a half or four miles an hour up the bayou when loaded. There are times, due to low tide, that such barge canot navigate the bayou, while *512 at other times the depth of the water is such ‘that it can be navigated up the bayou without damaging Chouke’s oyster bed. Usually the depth of the water over Chouke’s oyster bed is such that this self-propelled barge drags the bottom and the wheel thereof stirs up mud and sediment at the bottom of the bayou. When this barge drags the bottom over Chouke’s oyster bed, stirring up the mud and the sediment as above stated, the effect thereof is to greatly damage Chouke’s bed, and to kill many of his growing oysters. This damage will always result when the bayou is navigated by a boat of sufficient draft to drag the bottom, or whose wheel is of sufficient size and depth to stir up the mud and sediment. There is no way that the bayou over Chouke’s oyster bed can be safely navigated with this power barge without greatly damaging the same. However, the same can be navigated by using a barge or boat of sufficiently shallow draft not to drag the bottom, and which is propelled by shoving the same with poles.

In this state of affairs Chouke fenced the bayou where his oyster bed is located in order to prevent Filipos et al. from injuring and killing his oysters with the motor barge above described. Filipos et al. then filed suit in the district court of Galveston county, Texas, to restrain Chouke from maintaining this fence. Chouke answered and admitted the construction of the fence and pleaded that it was necessary to protect his oyster bed from irreparable injury and destruction by reason of the operation of the motor barge by Filipos et al. in the way and manner above set out. Chouke further pleaded that he had no desire to interfere with Filipos et al., or anyone else in the navigation of the waters of the bayou over his bed, provided such navigation was done in such a manner as not to destroy or damage his oyster bed. Chouke pleaded title to the land under the bayou where his own oyster bed was located, and also pleaded his rights under article 4028, R. C. S. of Texas, 1925. It appears from the record that Chouke removed the fence before the case was tried in the district court.

Chouke also filed a cross bill in which he set up the facts hereinabove set out and prayed for an injunction against Filipos et al. and each of them and their agents, servants, employees and representatives restraining them from navigating the waters over his oyster bed in such a manner as to damage or destroy the same.

Trial in the district court before the court without a jury resulted in a judgment for Filipos et al. In his conclusions of law the trial judge held that the bayou in question was a navigable stream, and that the right of Filipos et al., and the general public to navigate said stream is superior and paramount to Chouke’s property right in the oyster bed growing at the bottom thereof, and that Chouke therefore had no right to prevent Filipos et al. from navigating the bayou over his oyster bed with the

*513 power boat or barge, even though such navigation injured or destroyed his property.

On appeal the Court of Civil Appeals at Galveston [10 S. W. (2d) 807] reversed and rendered this judgment, holding that Chouke was the owner of the land at the bottom of the bayou and had the right to prevent navigation thereon by Filipos et al. The Court of Civil Appeals further held if Chouke was not the owner of said land that he had the right to grow oysters at the point where said bed is located under the provisions of article 4028, R. C. S. of Texas, 1925, and should be protected in such rights as against Filipos et al. In other words, the Court of Civil Appeals held that under the provisions of article 4028, supra, Chouke has the right to grow oysters at the point where his oyster bed is located, and that such right is paramount to the right of Filipos to navigate the bayou so as to damage or destroy such oyster bed. The Court of Civil Appeals bases this holding on the further holding that the land at the bottom of the bayou, if not the property of Chouke, is the property of the state, and that the state has the power to grant the rights conferred by article 4028, supra, in the absence of any federal act to the contrary.

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Bluebook (online)
40 S.W.2d 38, 120 Tex. 508, 1931 Tex. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/filipos-v-chouke-tex-1931.