Head v. Chesbrough

4 Ohio N.P. 73, 6 Ohio Dec. 494, 1896 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 293
CourtLucas County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedNovember 20, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio N.P. 73 (Head v. Chesbrough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Head v. Chesbrough, 4 Ohio N.P. 73, 6 Ohio Dec. 494, 1896 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 293 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

PUGSLEY, J.

The plaintiff claims to be the owner of all that part of original lot thirteen in the sub-division of Wausayon tract, which lies northerly of lots eleven and twelve on the plat of Ironville, Ike same being the bed of the Maumee river extending from said Ironville lots -eleven and twelve to the center of the channel, and . she asks in this action to have her title quieted to these premises against the defendant.

The material facts are as follows: Prior to January 12, 1870, one David Weaver was the owner of said original lot thirteen (13), which was bounded on the northerly end by the Maumee river, a navigable stream. On said January 12th, 1870, Weaver duly platted a part of said original lot thirteen into town lots, with streets and alleys, and designated ■the plat as a map of the village of Ironville. On the northerly' end of ■said plat is a tier of lots running from west to east, and numbered consecutively from eleven to sixteen, both inclusive. Between the northerly line of said tier of lots and the southerly line of the river as drawn on the plat, there is a narrow stnp or space which was left unplatted. The dimensions of this strip are not given, but according to the ■scale it is estimated to be five or six feet in width. No part of the bed of the river in front of this narrow strip was platted into lots. In the year 1884, the plaintiff became the owner of said lots eleven and twelve, on the plat of Ironville, and also of all the interest of said Weaver in and to that part of said original lot thirteen lying in front of said platted lots. On the 20th of June, 1885, the plaintiff conveyed to one Bridge, said lots eleven and twelve of the plat of Ironville, together with the privileges and appurtenances to the same belonging, without making any reservation or exception of the riparian or other rights in front of said lots. Thereafter, on August 28, 1895, said Bridge conveyed said lots eleven and twelve to the defendant. The evidence shows that after said plat of Ironville was made and before said lots eleven and twelve were conveyed by the plaintiff to Bridge, said narrow strip of land and some part of the front of said lots eleven and twelve were washed away by the action of the water in the river, and that on June 20th, 1885 the date of the conveyance, the water of the river stood to a greater or less extent upon the entire front of said lots. This is a brief statement of the material facts necessary to be considered in determining the question involved.

The claim on the part of the plaintiff is, that by the plat of Iron-ville, lots eleven and twelve, did not extend to the river, but that the narrow strip and the submerged land in front of said lots to the center of the river were reserved, and that the conveyance by the plaintiff to Bridge of lots eleven and twelve did not pass the title to the narrow' strip and submerged land in front, although prior to the conveyance the narrow strip and a part of the lots had been washed away by the action of the water, and become submerged. On the other hand, it is ■contended by the defendant, first, that according to the plat of Ironville, [74]*74lobs eleven and twelve were bounded by the river, and that the oonveyanoe of said plats transferred all the riparian rights of the grantor in front of said lots; and second, that the deed from plaintiff to Bridge of lots eleven and twelve, made June 20th, 1885, after the plaintiff had acquired all the riparian rights which she now claims, and when in fact the Jots ran into the water, transferred all the riparian rights of the plaintiff in front of said lots to the center of the river.

The question to be decided is the same as would arise if Weaver had retained the ownership of the entire property, and had made a conveyance to Bridge of lots eleven and twelve, in June, 1885, and under the same circumstances which surrounded the making of the conveyance by the plaintiff. -

Assuming, but without deciding, that it was the intention of Weaver in making the plat of Ironville, to separate the upland from the bank of the river and the submerged land in front of the bank, and that a conveyance by him of lots eleven and twelve while the land remained in the same condition as when platted, would extend only to the bank, I am of opinion, after an examination of all the authorities that were cited, that under the facts of this case, the second proposition contended for by the defendant is correct, and that the conveyance made by the plaintiff to Bridge passed to the grantee all the riparian rights of the grantor in front of said lots to the center of the river.

I will not undertake to review all the Ohio decisions in which the subject- of grants of land on the shore of navigable streams has been considered, but I will refer only to those which seem to be more nearly analogous to the case at bar. In the case of Day v. Railroad Co., 44 Ohio St. 406, the first paragraph of the syllabus is as follows:

“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.”

The material facts in this case were these: The Pennsylvania & Ohio Canal Co., under due authority, constructed a canal in the bed of the Cuyahoga river between the east bank and the middle of the river. Thereafter the deed was made to the plaintiffs, the construction of which was the question to; be decided. The land conveyed by the deed was situated upon the east bank of the river, and was described by metes and bounds. After giving the courses and distances from the point of beginning, the description proceeds as follows:

“Thence north 72° 80' four chains and twenty-one links to the Pennsylvania and Ohio canal (the east bank of which is hereby understood to be what was formerly the east bank of the Cuyahoga river); thence northerly along the east bank of the Pennsylvania & Ohio canal to a certain point; thence north 69° 45' east one chain and fifty-eight links to the place of beginning.”

The east bank of the canal was thus in express terms made the west boundary of the land conveyed; and it was held that all the grantor’s rights to the center of the river were conveyed.

The judge delivering the opinion of the court, says, on page 419:

“By the terms of the deed, Kent conveyed to the plaintiffs all the rights he had in this property al mg the east hank of the river and up “to the Pennsylvania and Ohio canal”, and then adds in parenthesis, ‘the east bank of which is hereby understood to be what was formerly the east bank of the Cuyahoga river,and he made no reservation of any part of the-bed of the river or of any water privileges.”

[75]*75Then, after reviewing several Ohio decisions, the judge says, on page 420: _ .

_ “If the grantor does not intend to convey the bed of the river in the water-course bounding the land conveyed, he must insert in the instrument of conveyance proper words for the purpose of reservation or exclusion; ‘but in the absence of such words, the bed, and consequently the stream itself, passes by the conveyance.’ ”

In the case of Railroad Co. v. Platt, 53 Ohio St. 254, the syllabus is as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio N.P. 73, 6 Ohio Dec. 494, 1896 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/head-v-chesbrough-ohctcompllucas-1896.