Jones v. Oemler

110 Ga. 202
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 8, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 110 Ga. 202 (Jones v. Oemler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Oemler, 110 Ga. 202 (Ga. 1900).

Opinion

Lewis, J.

Augustus Oemler brought suit in Chatham superior court against William Jones and others, about forty in number, for damages growing out of an alleged trespass by defendants on certain territory covered by Oyster creek and Shad river in the county of Chatham, which petitioner alleges he holds by virtue of certain leases made by the State of Georgia; and also for the purpose of enjoining defendants from further trespass upon the property. The petition alleged that these leases were made under several acts of the legislature, including the act approved August 22, 1891, which acts were made a part of said leases, and conveyed to petitioner the exclusive privilege of bedding or planting oysters on the territory in question; that these leases were duly accepted, and large sums of money expended in planting oysters and cultivating the same, amounting to $10,000. The lease contracts were made in the year 1892, and petitioner alleges that the lessees from the State, including petitioner, have, for over seven years, had possession, planted and cultivated these lands without molestation by any one, except occasional parties who had infringed the criminal laws in order to procure oysters at these points. The effect of the cultivation and planting was to increase very largely the number of oysters in such territory; and the parties who failed to take out leases, or, having taken out leases, failed to cultivate them, have procured oysters wherever they could find them, and have so depleted the oyster-beds along the coast that the sources of supply have been reduced and limited practically to private beds planted by private parties. This condition of affairs made it necessary for parties who had no such territory to take desperate measures in order to procure oysters for consumption and sale, and hence it was they would trespass from time to time on private beds; but finding the number secured in this way too small for their purpose, a combination was formed under color of the laws of the State leaving certain territory open to the citizens of the State. To this end they combined and confederated together, and filed a bill against petitioner and others on September 25, 1899-, asking for injunction and relief, and secured an order restraining petitioner from unlawfully interfering with the gathering by such conspirators of oys[205]*205ters in the natural beds in the public streams, or upon the banks -of public marshes in Chatham county. The parties exercised the greatest haste, after procuring such a restraining order, in getting oysters from petitioner’s leased beds, and were engaged ■ night and day in depleting these beds. They will continue these depredations, and petitioner will be unable to protect his rights accorded him by the State, and will be compelled to institute many prosecutions and civil suits to maintain his rights, and possibly forced to use violent measures to protect his rights, his property and his person, unless a court of equity affords some immediate and substantial relief. Petitioner further alleged, that the defendants had already taken over four thousand bushels of oysters from his beds; that they were thoroughly and hopelessly insolvent, and had already damaged his property in the sum of $2,000; and would inflict infinitely more damage if • permitted to continue their depredations. Petitioner prayed, among other things, that an injunction issue restraining the defendants from coming upon and into said territory, taking-oysters therefrom, or in any maimer interfering with said territory leased by petitioner. Judgment was also prayed for the sum of $5,000 damages inflicted by the defendants; and there; was a prayer for general relief.

Upon this petition a temporary restraining order was granted, and at the June term, 1899, to wit, November 11, 1899, a hearing was had on said application. To the petition a demurrer was filed upon several grounds of a special nature, to the effect that the petition was insufficient in law, in that it did not set up sufficient facts to show that the oyster leases, if they ever existed, were still in force; it did not show that the lands covered by the waters of Oyster creek and Shad river did not contain natural oyster-beds; and did not show any lawful transfer of the leases covering said grounds, etc. This demurrer was met by an amendment to the petition, which amendment set forth particularly the acts of the legislature under which petitioner was claiming a lease to the land; that these leases were duly executed and delivered by the commissioners of Chatham county, in accordance with the act; that the leases made to Kayton and others were by them duly transferred to the Oemler Oyster Company, [206]*206a corporation under the laws of this State; that this company ■executed to Iiarow and Gordon a deed of trust covering all its property; that the company and these trustees conveyed to the Merchants National Bank and the Savannah Bank & Trust Go. .all of the property of the Oemler Oyster Company, including the territory in said county leased from the State in Oyster creek and Shad river, and the oysters planted thereon; and on Mayl, 1899, the Merchants National Bank and the Savannah Bank & Trust Go. conveyed by deed to petitioner, Augustus Oemler, the property in question held under the oyster leases. Petitioner further alleged, that more than 100 bushels of dead shells per acre were deposited upon each of the five-acre tracts that were originally leased within the first year; and in addition there had been planted over 100 bushels of oysters to every acre of planting-ground, at the rate of one acre or more each year, until each lot of five acres was planted. The amendment further alleged in detail that the conditions of the leases had been •strictly conformed to by him and his predecessors in title. To the petition defendants filed an answer, alleging, in substance, that the plaintiff had no rights to the oyster-beds in question; that all the beds in Oyster creek and Shad river which are now there were there at the time of taking out the oyster leases, and have since remained, and still are natural oyster-beds, and, as such, free and open to all citizens of the State. They further denied that the leases were taken out under any act of the legislature, because the acts especially excepted from their operation the natural oyster-beds within the waters of this State. In short, the answer contained a specific denial of plaintiff’s right to the oyster-beds in question, and asserted the right of defendants, in common with the public generally, to get oysters from the beds. After hearing the evidence, his honor Robert Falligant, judge of the court below, on December 2, 1899, filed his judgment granting a temporary injunction against the ■defendants as prayed for. To this judgment they except.

1. There can be no question that a State owns the beds of all . tide-waters within its jurisdiction. It has as absolute jurisdiction and control over such territory as it has over any other property it may own. It has the same power to grant, sell, or lease [207]*207such beds, or any portion thereof, to any of its citizens, upon any terms or conditions which its legislature might prescribe, to the same extent that it would have the right to dispose of its wild or other lands which it owns. This fundamental principle, inherent in a sovereign power, we may say has been universally recognized by the learned law-writers and the courts, State and 'Federal, of this country. We deem it, in this connection, important only to cite a few of these numerous authorities on the subject. In the case of McOready v. Virginia, 94 U. S.

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Bluebook (online)
110 Ga. 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-oemler-ga-1900.