Hill City Compress Co. v. West Kentucky Coal Co.

122 So. 747, 155 Miss. 55, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 259
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1929
DocketNo. 27845.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 122 So. 747 (Hill City Compress Co. v. West Kentucky Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hill City Compress Co. v. West Kentucky Coal Co., 122 So. 747, 155 Miss. 55, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 259 (Mich. 1929).

Opinion

Ethridge, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Hill City Compress Company, -claiming to be the owner of the west bank of the canal where the appellee, the West Kentucky Coal Company, had barges moored and tied to the west bank of the said canal in front of *58 the city of Vicksburg, sued out an attachment in chancery against the West Kentucky Coal Company for rent for the tying up of said barges to the said west bank of the canal. The Royal Route was garnished in that proceeding, and answered admitting an indebtedness. The answer of appellees, the defendants below, denied the ownership of the Hill City Compress Company, contending that the land was not in Mississippi, but was in Louisiana, and that Mrs. Anna B. Long, afterwards made a party defendant, had been in adverse possession of the said land for more than the ten years required by statute to confer title in such cases. Mrs. Long had leased the right to the coal company to tie its barges to the west bank of the canal where the barges were located.

In 1876 the Mississippi river, by avulsion, changed its channel, and the boundaries of the Mississippi river as they existed prior to the said avulsion became a fixed boundary line between the states of Louisiana and Mississippi. The appellants claim title to the center of the river as it existed in 1876' prior to the avulsion. It is the contention of the appellant that the center of the river, within the meaning of the law defining boundaries of the state, is the center of the stream between banks and not the center according to the thread or thalweg of the stream. The chancellor found as a fact that the thalweg’ of the Mississippi river as it existed at the time of the avulsion lay east of the land where the barges were tied up, and that the land involved was in the state of Louisiana, and belonged to the defendants in the suit, and dismissed the bill.

There was ample evidence to show that the thalweg of the stream lay east of the land (over which the barges floated, and to which the barges were tied), at the time of the avulsion of 1876. There was a conflict as to this, perhaps, but we think there was ample evidence to show *59 that the deep channel of the river, as it existed in 1876, and prior thereto, lay east of the point where the barges were tied, and consequently the chancellor had facts upon which to base his decision. There was also a contention by the defendants that, regardless of where the land lay with reference to the said' boundaries, they and their predecessors had been in open, adverse, and hostile possession of the land for more than the statutory period, and there is a conflict of evidence with reference to this proposition. The ownership of the complainant on the east bank of the old Mississippi river, now the Yazoo Canal, originally extended to the thalweg of the river; in other words, the plaintiff’s land extended to the center or thread of the stream, or whatever point was the boundary between the state of Louisiana and the state of Mississippi at the time of the avulsion of 1876. It is argued by the appellant that the decisions of this court have established the proposition that the center of the stream in such cases is the line middleway between the banks of the stream. We think the decisions of the United States supreme court is final authority upon this proposition, that court having original jurisdiction to settle disputed boundaries between the states, and whatever rule the state may have adopted is not final authority upon the question of boundaries, but would be subject to the control of the decisions of the United States supreme court upon such questions. That court has had occasion to deal with the subject in a number of eases, and in the case of Iowa v. Illinois, 147 U. S. 1, 13 S. Ct. 239, 37 L. Ed. 55, fully considered and elaborately discussed the question, and reached the conclusion that the true boundary is the middle of the main channel of navigation of the Mississippi river, where that river constitutes the boundary line. In that case, after discussing the law of nations and quoting from authorities, the court, at page 243 of 13 S. Ct. (147 U. S. 10) said:

*60 ‘ < reaS011 and necessity of the rule of international law as to the mid-channel being the true boundary line of a navigable river separating independent states may not be as cogent in this country, where neighboring states are under the same general government, as in Europe, yet the same rule will be held to obtain unless changed by statute or usage of so great a length of time as to have acquired the force of law.
“As we have stated, in international law and by the usage of European nations, the terms ‘middle of the stream’ and ‘mid-channel’ of a navigable river are synonymous and interchangeably used. The enabling act of April 18, 1818-, (3 St. chapter 67, p. 428,) under which Illinois adopted a constitution and became a state and was admitted into the Union, made the middle of the Mississippi river the western boundary of the state. The enabling’ act of March 6, 1820, (3 St. chapter 22, section 2, p. 545,) under which Missouri became a state and was admitted into the Union, made the middle of the main channel of the Mississippi river the eastern boundary, so far as its boundary was coterminous with the western boundary of Illinois. The enabling act of August 6, 1846, (9 St., p. 56,) under which "Wisconsin adopted a constitution and became a state and was admitted into the Union, gives the western boundary of that state, after reaching the river St. Croix, as follows: ‘ Thence down the main channel of said river to the Mississippi, thence clown the center of the main channel of that (Mississippi) river to the northwest corner of the state of Illinois.’ The northwest corner of the state of Illinois must therefore be in the middle of the main channel of the river which forms a portion of its western boundary. It is very evident that these terms, ‘middle of the Mississippi river,’ and ‘middle of the main channel of the Mississippi river,’ and ‘the center of the main channel of that river,’ as thus used, are synony *61 moiis. It is not at all likely that the congress of the United States intended that those terms, as applied to the Mississippi river separating Illinois and Iowa, should have a different meaning when applied to the Mississippi river separating -Illinois from Missouri, or a different meaning when used as descriptive of a portion of the western boundary of Wisconsin. They were evidently used as signifying the same thing.
“The question involved in this case has been elaborately considered, both by the supreme court of Iowa and the supreme court of Illinois, in cases relating to the assessment and taxation of bridges crossing the Mississippi river, as to the point to which the jurisdiction of each state for taxation extends, and they differed in their conclusions. In Dunlieth & D. B. Co. v. County of Dubuque, 55 Iowa, 558, 564, 8 N. W.

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Bluebook (online)
122 So. 747, 155 Miss. 55, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-city-compress-co-v-west-kentucky-coal-co-miss-1929.