Lakeside Park Co. v. Forsmark

153 A.2d 486, 396 Pa. 389, 1959 Pa. LEXIS 564
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 2, 1959
DocketAppeal, 232
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 153 A.2d 486 (Lakeside Park Co. v. Forsmark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lakeside Park Co. v. Forsmark, 153 A.2d 486, 396 Pa. 389, 1959 Pa. LEXIS 564 (Pa. 1959).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Bok,

The single question is whether or not Sandy Lake, in Mercer County, is navigable. The court below held that it was. We think this was error.

What depends is that defendant wants to make commercial use of his shore-front property, which he may do if the lake is navigable and public, but which he may not do if it is non-navigable and private.

The lake is 27th in size among the State’s 254. It is 5070 feet long and 1930 feet at its widest point. It has *391 a prevailing depth of 25 feet and a maximum of 40 to 50 feet, and has no well defined outlet. It is fed by springs and covers 149.7 acres. It is described in the Commonwealth’s Water- Resources Inventory Report, published in 1917, which contains these items, among others: “Utilization — ice harvesting, summer resort, and water supply for a magnesia manufacturing plant. Navigation — motor boats and rowboats. Ownership— private and corporate: not limited to shore line.”

Such commercial glory as the lake had occurred between 1890 and 1920, but mainly around the turn of the century. Railhead on both north and south sides brought many excursionists, and a steamer and barge made irregular trips across the lake. There was a dock, a pier, a ticket office, a hotel and some organized amusement. People came to swim, fish, boat, and drink. Finally, the crowd so increased that the steamer was unable to handle them and the railroad ran its tracks around the lake, which solved the problem.

The present use of the lake by the plaintiff, which owns most of the bed, is the operation of summer cottages and facilities for bathing, fishing, and boating on its oavu property. Sporadic fishing in boats hired from others is objected to.

Defendant’s whole case for navigability depends on these past uses, now forty to sixty-five years agone. His argument is that the lake is susceptible of navigation in fact and hence that it is navigable in law. This is good law for rivers but must be accepted with caution for lakes.

The State’s rule for rivers is well stated in Cleveland & Pittsburgh Railroad Co. v. Pittsburgh Coal Co., 317 Pa. 395, 176 A. 7 (1935), as follows: “ ‘Those rivers must be regarded as public navigable rivers in law which are navigable in fact. And they are navigable in fact when they are used, or are susceptible of being *392 used, in their ordinary condition, as highways for commerce, over which trade and travel are or may be conducted in the customary modes of trade and travel on water’: The Daniel Ball, 10 Wall. 557, 563; The Montello, 20 Wall. 430, 439; U. S. v. Holt State Bank, 270 U. S. 49; U. S. v. Utah, 283 U. S. 64; Flanagan v. Philadelphia, 42 Pa. 219.”

The difference in modes of trade and travel upon a long thin roadway of water joining regions and communities, which a river is, and upon a small lake, is obvious. Commerce may exist on both and it may move on both, but such movement on a 150-acre lake, unless it is an adequate link in a chain of commercial intercourse, remains local and insignificant in comparison with the argosies of transport that move along the great rivers of the Commonwealth.

Defendant tries to make a commercial highway of Sandy Lake, out of the long-vanished steamer, with its two-foot draft and its capacity of thirty-five persons, that hurried back and forth across the mile of water, or its barge that might hold a hundred people for dancing. This falls far short of qualifying as a highway for commerce or a link of a chain, within the reasonable intendment of that phrase. People came to stay and enjoy the lake as an end in itself, not as an incident in a journey along a trade-route.

There is a definite body of lake law in Pennsylvania. It consists, with one exception to be mentioned later, of thirteen cases involving eight lakes of generally comparable size with Sandy Lake, some smaller and some a bit larger. They follow:

1. Baylor Lake, in Lackawanna County, 4000 feet long and 1600 feet wide and containing 125 acres, has been before this court four times: Reynolds v. Common wealth, 93 Pa. 458 (1880) ; Baylor v. Decker, 133 Pa. 168, 19 A. 351 (1890) ; Loughran v. Matylewics, 367 *393 Pa. 593, 81 A. 2d 879 (1951) ; and Shaffer v. Baylor's Lake Association, 392 Pa. 493, 141 A. 2d 583 (1958). It has been used commercially for fishing, boating, ice harvesting, winter skating, sleighing, watering cattle, and logging.

2. Naomi Lake, in Monroe County, is a mile long and a third of a mile wide, and covers 210 acres. It has been here three times: Miller v. Lutheran Association, 331 Pa. 241, 200 A. 646 (1938) ; Miller v. Miller, 331 Pa. 252, 200 A. 652 (1938); and Miller v. Miller, 118 Pa. Superior Ct. 38, 179 A. 248 (1935). Its commercial uses include bathing, boating, and fishing.

3. Lily Pond (Long or Beach Pond), in Luzerne County, is a mile long by half a mile wide, and consists of approximately 250 acres. It was here in Smoulter v. Boyd, 209 Pa. 146, 58 A. 144 (1904), and its uses were boat hire, vacationing, fishing, and lily gathering. Its owner owned the bed under its waters.

4. Echo Lake, in Monroe County, is a small lake half a mile long by a sixth wide, and covering 40 acres. It was used for boating, bathing, and fishing, and was in litigation in Shinn v. Rosenberger, 347 Pa. 504, 32 A. 2d 747 (1943).

5. Bassett Pond, in Lackawanna County covers 50 acres and has been used for fishing. It appears in Gibbs v. Sweet, 20 Pa. Superior Ct. 275 (1902), and it provided water power for its owner’s mill.

6. Lily Lake (Wall Pond) in Lackawanna County, covers 84 acres and was used commercially for ice harvesting and fishing. It is the subject of Fuller v. Cole, 33 Pa. Superior Ct. 563 (1907).

7. Sawkill Pond, in Pike County, covers 80 acres, was used for boating, and had a dock for row boats and a raft for swimming. It is discussed in Cryer v. Sawkill Camp, 88 Pa. Superior Ct. 71 (1926), and was called “commercially non-navigable.”

*394 8. Finally, Lake Quinsigmond, or Bronson’s Pond, in Wayne County, covers 150 to 200 acres and has been used since 1905 for fishing, boating, swimming, and cutting ice: later it became a reservoir. It appears at Matthews v. Bagnik, 157 Pa. Superior Ct. 115, 41 A. 2d 875 (1945).

In all of these cases the lakes were called “non-navigable” or “unnavigable and private”. The point of decision was not their non-navigability, which was assumed as a fact in each case. The significant thing is that the lakes were accepted as non-navigable despite the commercial uses to which they were put.

The remaining and exceptional case, relied on by appellee and by the court below, is Conneaut Lake Ice Co. v. Quigley, 225 Pa. 605, 74 A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 A.2d 486, 396 Pa. 389, 1959 Pa. LEXIS 564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lakeside-park-co-v-forsmark-pa-1959.