James River & Kanawha Power Co v. Old Dominion Iron & Steel Corp.

122 S.E. 344, 138 Va. 461, 1924 Va. LEXIS 39
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 20, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 122 S.E. 344 (James River & Kanawha Power Co v. Old Dominion Iron & Steel Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James River & Kanawha Power Co v. Old Dominion Iron & Steel Corp., 122 S.E. 344, 138 Va. 461, 1924 Va. LEXIS 39 (Va. 1924).

Opinion

Burks, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

[465]*465This is a proceeding under section 5490 of the Code by the plaintiff in error against the defendant in error to establish the boundary line between them as coterminous owners. The parties waived a jury and submitted all matters of law and fact to the determination of the trial court which rendered judgment in favor of the defendant. To that judgment the plaintiff in error, which was the plaintiff in the trial court, assigns error. The land claimed by the plaintiff in its notice of motion is said to contain one hundred and thirty-one and three-fourths acres, the most of which certainly lies under the bed of James river at Richmond. The trial court held that, as to so much of the land'claimed by the plaintiff as constitutes the bed of the river, it was controlled by the decisions of this court in Old Dominion Iron and Nail Works v. Ches. & Ohio R. R. Co., 116 Va. 166, 81 S. E. 108, and Grant v. C. & O. R. Co., 117 Va. 46, 84 S. E. 9, and that under these decisions the bed of James river at Richmond constitutes a part of the public domain of the State and “incapable now, and ever since the establishment of the Commonwealth, incapable of private ownership.” The plaintiff in error insists that the ownership of the. bed of the river was not involved in those cases, and that whatever was said on that subject in those opinions was obiter and not binding on it. The plaintiff in error further insists that the river is not navigable in law or in fact at the point where the lands of the plaintiff adjoin those of the defendant, and that the right of navigation secured by the statutes referred to in the foregoing opinions was a mere right to navigate; that it did not affect the ownership of the bed of the stream; and that as the tide did not ebb and flow at the locus in quo, the common law rule prevailed and a grant of land bounded by the river extended to the center of the stream.

[466]*466While some of the statements in the opinion in Old Dominion I. & N. Works v. Ches. & Ohio R. Co., supra, were not necessary to the decision of the case, the rights of the Old Dominion Company as a riparian owner, were at issue. It was the owner of an island in the middle of the river called Belle Isle, containing forty-six acres, which had been granted to it by the Crown, and claimed that, by virtue of its ownership of the island, it owned to the thread of the stream on each side of it. This claim was rejected by the court, and what was said by the court had direct relation to this claim.

There is great conflict of authority in the States as to the ownership of the bed of nontidal navigable waters. The authorities are nearly evenly divided. The opposing views are well stated in 27 R. C. L. pp. 1360, 1362, sections 270 and 272, and there is a full citation of authority in the notes. These sections are as follows:

“The great size of many of the fresh water rivers of this country, and their capability of navigation, have induced some of the highest courts of several of the States to attach to them the common law consequences of navigability, thereby abrogating the common law distinction between them and those in which the tide ebbs and flows, so that grants bounded on such rivers stop at their margin. Thus in many States the same rule as to the ownership of and sovereignty over lands under the navigable fresh water rivers has been applied which obtains at common law as to the ownership of and sovereignty over lands under tide waters, and such lands are regarded as held by the same rights in the one case as the other, and subject to the same trusts and limitations.
“According to this view, in the case of large fresh water rivers which are navigable in fact, the riparian [467]*467owners do not take to the middle of the river, but the State is the owner of the subjacent soil, and the public have an easement in the river. So it has been decided that the owner of premises bounded on one of the Great Lakes takes no title to any submerged land under the waters of the lake. The wrongful diversion of the waters of a navigable river from its bed does not extinguish the title of the State thereto, or add to that of riparian owners.”

Section 272: “The view that the State has title to the bed of navigable fresh water courses is not uniformly followed by all the States, but there is a strong array of authorities opposed thereto, which do not regard the greater size of rivers in the United States as furnishing a sufficient reason for departing from the rule at common law. They have, therefore, held to the strict application of the common law rule that only those rivers in which the tide ebbs and flows limit grants of lands adjoining to high water mark, and that in all others, without regard to size or capabilities for transportation and commercial intercourse, the middle of the river is the boundary of lands on either side, except in some cases where a different rule has been applied'owing to the terms of the original grant, and is subject only to the public right of navigation. According to this view, where, by the law of a State, an owner of land on a river takes to the thread of the stream, a raparían owner whose land is bordered by a State boundary river takes title to the boundary between the two States regardless of whether that is nearer to or farther from the shore than the filum aquae of the stream. And where the lines of a grant of land from the State include a navigable river, the soil covered by the river passes with the grant, subject to the public easement of fishery and navigation, unless clearly confined within less limits by the grant, [468]*468and will also pass by a conveyance by such, person. So a conveyance of land abutting on a navigable stream vests title in the grantee to the thread of the stream, including any islands which lie between the thread of the stream and the land so conveyed, and where land on a navigable river, deeded by metes and bounds, includes the bank of the river, although no reference is made to the river, it will be presumed prima facie that the bed .-of the river to the middle is conveyed. And where by gradual accretions the thread of the stream has been slowly changed, the riparian owner’s grant follows the channel and still goes to the thread of the stream.”

In our view of the evidence in the instant case, it will not be necessary to enter into any discussion of this subject.

In Old Dominion Iron & Nail Works v. C. & O. R. R. Co., supra, the court confined its holding as to the right of raparían owners on James river, and'in the petition for the appeal in the instant case it is said that the waters and soil involved in that case are “the identical waters and soil' involved in the instant case.” Under these circumstances we shall confine what we have to say not only to James river, but to that part of the river in controversy in the instant ease.

The plaintiff in error bases its claim to so much ■of the land as lies' in the bed of the river, upon two grants from the Commonwealth; one issued to Beverly Smith in 1813 for twenty-foür acres, and the other to Hall Neilson in 1845 for 107% acres, and traces its title "to these two grants.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 S.E. 344, 138 Va. 461, 1924 Va. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-river-kanawha-power-co-v-old-dominion-iron-steel-corp-va-1924.