Fuller v. Shedd

33 L.R.A. 146, 161 Ill. 462
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 17, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 33 L.R.A. 146 (Fuller v. Shedd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fuller v. Shedd, 33 L.R.A. 146, 161 Ill. 462 (Ill. 1896).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Phillips

delivered the opinion of the court:

The main question presented on the pleadings and facts appearing in this record is, whether the title of the riparian owner on a lake meandered in the original survey by officers employed by the United States for surveying public lands, extends to the center of the lake or stops at the water’s edge. The question is of much consequence and deserving of careful consideration. In States bordering on the great lakes of the north it is of paramount importance, and the adjudications of the courts of such States are not harmonious. Where lakes are of such size that in making the original survey they are meandered, we know of no principle of construction by which one rule should be applied to small lakes and another to large ones. (Bradley v. Rice, 13 Me. 201.) . The impossibility of establishing a reasonable rule that a right should be determined by the extent of a lake, would, in the absence of legislation determining that question, lead to conflicting and absurd conclusions, based on no rule regarding the effect of a survey of lands bordering on a lake. The real question must be resolved by determining whether the riparian owner of lands meandered on a lake by the original survey takes to the water’s edge as meandered, or takes to the center of the lake.

The body of water marked “Navigable Lake” in the original survey is a lake two or three miles long from east to west and about the same north and south, the greater part being in the State of Indiana. That part in Illinois at the time of the original survey covered about 1300 acres of land. This lake is situated three or four miles south of Lake Michigan and in the State of Indiana, and has a natural outlet towards the north-east into the latter lake, which outlet is frequently subject to interruption by the formation of a sand-bar upon the shore of Lake Michigan. There was also an outlet at the west side of the lake into Calumet river. The effect of winds and storms on Lake Michigan which would raise its water at the south would also operate to change the level of the water in this small lake and cause it to be higher. Its level was also affected by rains and evaporations. From the north-east corner of the south-west quarter of fractional section 20, township 37, north, range 15, east of the third principal meridian, there extended in a southerly direction a ridge. From the south-east corner of fractional south-east quarter of section 30 and the southwest corner of fractional section 29 a ridge extended in a northerly direction. The extent to which this ridge projected from the north was about 220 rods and the extent of the projection from the south was about 160 rods. The width of these ridges varied, at some places being 28 rods wide and at others wider, and they were dry land at ordinary stages of water. At other places they were still narrower. This was the case at the time of the original survey. Along these ridges, in their projections from the north and south, trees of different varieties grew, some of which were three feet in circumference. These points, at their extremities, were about 80 or 90 rods apart, and between them, and along the sides of the ridge and around the margin of the lake within its meandered line, reeds and coarse grass grew in the water. In the marshy depressions between these points were two islands, one a mere knoll, the other containing about one or two acres, on which trees and bushes grew. This was substantially the physical condition, in ordinary stages of water, at the time of the 1834 and 1835 survey. The level of the waters of Lake Michigan at a certain stage was adopted as the starting point of levels in Cook county. The extreme rise and fall of that lake is from five feet above datum to one foot below datum.. The level of the waters of Wolf lake, when the same reach about the meandered line of the original survey, would be about 2.2 feet above datum. Whilst in the original survey this Wolf lake was by the field notes designated a navigable lake, it was not navigable in fact. Such being the surrounding conditions at the time of the original survey, the changes from that time to the survey of 1874 were not great, such as existed resulting from the slow filling of the lake bed and from other natural causes. Since the survey of 1874, by reason of the improvement of Calumet river and the wearing out of deeper natural channels from the lake and an increased flow therefrom, and the same natural causes continuing to raise the bed of the lake, there has been a recession of the waters, causing dry land on both sides of the ridge, and around the borders of the lake the recession was such that between the meandered lines and the water there was uncovered, and the greater part of the year was dry land around the lake, a strip 20 to 25 rods wide.

In this condition of the lake a survey of the lands and lake bed within the meandered line was made in 1874, and the lands thus surveyed offered for sale and sold, and patented by the United States to various parties, and the greater part of said lands so patented by mesne conveyances came to appellants, as alleged in their respective cross-bills. At the time this survey was made the evidence showed the waters were waded by the chain-men, though differing in depth from a few inches to about five feet, and almost all the land surveyed was then covered by water. The lands in the original survey, as made in 1834 and 1835, bordering on the lake, were meandered, and these fractional tracts so sold were patented by the United States to the purchasers thereof. So far as we have occasion to decide the questions in this record we need refer to none but the entries of Holbrook, DeWitt, Egan and Stephen A. Douglas. Douglas had entered fractional section 29, 7.37 acres, and DeWitt had entered the fractional south-west quarter of section 20, 4.53 acres. These lands, by mesne conveyances, became vested in Shedd. Holbrook entered the south-east fractional quarter of section 19, 79.11 acres, the north-east fractional quarter of section 30, 28.71 acres, and the east part of the south-east fractional quarter of section 30, 2.04 acres, and the title to the same passed by descent to Gertrude H. Hardin, who also acquired the title to the west fraction of the south-east fractional quarter of section 30, 25.09 acres, which had been entered by William E. Egan. Shedd filed his petition to have his record title established in the lands so acquired by him, and Mrs. Hardin by her cross-petition sought to have record title established to the lands in her cross-petition described, which she had acquired as above stated. The numerous purchasers of lands within the meandered lines under the survey of 1874 having acquired and set up their titles, by cross-petition asked relief in the same manner as to the confirmation of their titles. By the decree of the circuit court of Cook county all the cross-petitions were dismissed except that of Mrs. Hardin, and the court established title in Shedd and Hardin, and held they, by riparian rights, acquired title to the bed of the lake and took to its center. By this decree purchasers of not exceeding 153 acres of land from the government acquired title, eo instanti, to the bed of the lake and to more than 1100 acres of land in addition to that for which they paid.

The chief argument of appellants is, the meander line in this case constitutes the boundary. At common law the title of a riparian proprietor bounded by a navigable stream extends only to high-water mark, and in streams not navigable the rights of the riparian proprietor extended to the middle thread of the current.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 L.R.A. 146, 161 Ill. 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fuller-v-shedd-ill-1896.