Rasmussen v. Walker Warehouse Co.

136 P. 661, 68 Or. 316, 1913 Ore. LEXIS 121
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 136 P. 661 (Rasmussen v. Walker Warehouse Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rasmussen v. Walker Warehouse Co., 136 P. 661, 68 Or. 316, 1913 Ore. LEXIS 121 (Or. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bean

delivered the opinion of the court.

It appears from the record that the plat of Woodland addition was filed December 15, 1890. There are seventeen lots in the four blocks bordering on the Coquille Biver. These lots do not extend to any highway on the north except the river, and nine of them have no means of ingress or egress except by way of the river. Little Street, Salmon Street, Lower Main Street, and Lumber Street, running north and south adjacent to these blocks, are not indicated as terminating with the north line of said blocks by any line across the north end thereof; but the appearance of the plat leaves such streets open at the north end as though extending to the river. Coquille Biver is navigable at this point, and the land in dispute is tide'land title to which was obtained from the state. The east line of Woodland addition extends about 500 feet farther north than the west line, making the distance from the navigable channel at these points about the same, as the river flows southwesterly. The north lots extend north and south as though facing on the river, while the other lots in these blocks extend east and west facing on the streets. The north part of lot 2 is covered by about 2 feet of water at low tide, by 6 or 7 feet of water at high tide, and the land is uncovered for 50 or 60 feet north of the lot at the extreme low tide. There is a difference of 2 feet between the water gauge, established by the United States engineer at work on the river, and the local gauge, causing some confusion [324]*324in the evidence as to the mean low-tide line. It is approximately 150 feet from lot 2 to the wharf line as established by the city of Bandon. There is a reef of low rocks next to the navigable channel. At zero or low tide about 15 feet square of this rock is about a foot above water. It appears that during the lifetime of Robert Walker the strip of land in front of the blocks in Woodland addition was never assessed nor taxed to him. Robert Walker died March 31, 1909. His heirs executed a quitclaim deed of the strip of unplatted land north of these blocks, 40 feet wide at the easterly end, and 105 feet in width at the westerly end, to the defendant Walker Warehouse Company. This strip is called a “mud flat.” This defendant company obtained a permit from the Secretary of War of the United States on November 16, 1911, to construct a wharf in front of blocks 1, 2, and 3. Plaintiff resists an attempt by said defendant so to do.

It also appears that during the lifetime of Robert Walker there was a building used as a creamery erected in front of lot 3, block 3, and a woolen-mill in front of lot 1, block 4, and a large warehouse in front of lot 2, block 4 — A; that wharves have been extended to the channel; that none of the original owners made any objections to the erection of these structures, or to the use of such property, although Walker lived near the same for 19 years after the plat was filed.

The question is to be determined by ascertaining what was the intention of the dedicators of Woodland addition. Did they intend to leave a space between the north end of the addition and the Coquille River, or did they intend that the lots in the north row of blocks of the addition should be waterfront lots and entitled to the usual waterfront privileges? We have stated the allegations of the pleadings somewhat at length, not so much to show the issues in the case as to indicate the claims of the respective parties or their conclusions [325]*325and deductions from the facts of the case, which are disputed only as to the minor details, having a slight hearing upon the main points. For these reasons we have not referred to all the testimony, hut to a sufficient amount to indicate the trend thereof.

The main contention of the defendants is that the riparian rights were severed from the lot hy the plat and dedication; that the ownership of plaintiff, shown to be dependent upon the common grantor, Bobert "Walker, is by the terms of the plaintiff’s deed clearly limited to the platted lot described in his chain of title; that he bought in reliance upon the plat, which gives him a certain tract of land and clearly expresses an intention to divest the riparian rights from the platted lot; that, under the authorities, such riparian rights are attached to the tract indicated on the plat as lying between the platted lines of the lot and the river. Plaintiff claims the right of ingress and egress from the lot to the river, and the right to wharf out to the navigable water of the Coquille Biver as appurtenant to his lot.

1. As a general proposition, it may be stated that the upland and the land under the water forming, as they do, different parts of one entire estate, there is nothing to prevent the separation of the estate at the water line so as to permit the bed of the water to be owned by one person and the upland by another.

2. Such a separation results in conferring the ownership of the water, so far as it can rest in an individual, upon the one who owns the bed of the stream, and such ownership carries certain of the rights which are known as riparian rights. It gives the right to make use of the bed of a stream and of the power furnished by the bed of the water. This rule applies to land bordering on tide water and that bordering on fresh streams and rivers.

[326]*3263. In order to accomplish a separation, the intention to effect it must be made distinctly to appear. If the grant is in the ordinary form bounded only by the water, the land below, as well as that above the water, will pass.

4. But the land under the water may be reserved by the reservation of'a strip along the shore., so as to prevent the grant from carrying title to the water’s edge and making the grantee a riparian owner: 3 Farnham, Waters and Water Bights, § 724. Where land situated on a navigable lake or river is platted into lots, blocks and streets, and one acquires title to lots situated so as to be separated from such lake or river by a street, it has been held that the owner of such lots so situated did not acquire any riparian rights; that the street was a barrier separating such lots from the river: Potomac S. Co. v. Upper Potomac S. Co., 109 U. S. 672 (27 L. Ed. 1070, 3 Sup. Ct. Rep. 445, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 15); Oliver v. Klamath Lake Nav. Co., 54 Or. 95 (102 Pac. 786). The facts in the case at bar differ from those in the above-mentioned cases, in that the controlling feature, namely, the intervening street, is wanting in the case under consideration.

5. A riparian right is defined to be “a form of enjoyment of the land and of the river in connection with the land”: Lord Cairns in Lyon v. Fishmonger’s Co., 1 App. Cas. 662, 672, quoted in Potomac S. Co. v. Upper Potomac S. Co., 109 U. S. 683 (27 L. Ed. 1070, 3 Sup. Ct. Rep. 445, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 15). In many states lands totally or partially submerged are made the subject of grant by the sovereign in order that they may be reclaimed for useful purposes: Fowler v. Wood, 73 Kan. 511, 549 (85 Pac. 763, 117 Am. St. Rep. 534, 6 L. R. A. (N. S.) 162); Taylor Sands Fishing Co. v. State Land Board, 56 Or. 157, 161 (108 Pac. 126).

6. In Grant v. Oregon Nav. Co., 49 Or.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Coussens v. Stevens
113 P.3d 952 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2005)
Smith Tug & Barge Co. v. Columbia-Pacific Towing Corp.
443 P.2d 205 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1968)
McADAM ET UX v. SMITH
350 P.2d 689 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1960)
Darling v. Christensen
109 P.2d 585 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1940)
Caples v. Taliaferro
197 So. 861 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1940)
Treadgold v. Willard
160 P. 803 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1916)
Kronenberg v. Walker Warehouse Co.
136 P. 666 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 P. 661, 68 Or. 316, 1913 Ore. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rasmussen-v-walker-warehouse-co-or-1913.