Rondesvedt v. Running

121 N.W.2d 1, 19 Wis. 2d 614
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedApril 12, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 121 N.W.2d 1 (Rondesvedt v. Running) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rondesvedt v. Running, 121 N.W.2d 1, 19 Wis. 2d 614 (Wis. 1963).

Opinion

Fairchild, J.

The point has grown imperceptibly, extending into the water from deposits which were made on and against lots 8 and 9. It does not abut any dry land owned by defendant. Plaintiff, as owner of lots 8 and 9, claims the entire point (hereinafter referred to as “alluvion”) as having been added, by accretion, to his lots. 1

Defendant does not challenge the general rule relied on, but advances two theories under which it ought not to be ap *617 plied to the portion of the alluvion which lies southeasterly of the line (or extension thereof) between lot 7, which she owns, and lot 8. (1) She argues that the parcel in dispute has been deposited upon a portion of the bed of the lagoon which is overflowed land, and owned by her. (2) She claims that because the alluvion now impairs, and eventually will destroy, the access from lot 7 to the deep water, plaintiff’s right to appropriate the alluvion stops at the boundary line, extended, between lots 7 and 8.

1. Title to the land under the lagoon. Defendant cites authority for the proposition that the owner of submerged land is the owner of dry land which subsequently may be formed thereon. 2

The present water level is at least 3.5 feet above the level which would exist, subject to seasonal variations, but for the dam. The lagoon is less than 2 feet deep and trees used to grow in the area it now occupies. It seems probable that the bed of the lagoon is privately owned, but overflowed, land rather than state-owned lake bed. The natural shore may have been as far out as the line from the point to the island (considered by the court as the “new shoreline”), although the location of the original shore cannot be determined with any certainty from the record before us. If lot 7, as platted, extends to the natural shore, and thus includes the submerged land under the lagoon, the record does not clearly so show. The parties, however, seem to have assumed that no other person had title to any area between lot 7 and the natural shore, although the lumber company had flowage rights. We proceed upon the same assumption, but conclude that because of the other uncertainties just mentioned, the decision should not be based upon the proposition that the disputed parcel rests on a submerged portion of lot 7.

*618 2. The apportionment made by the circuit court. The circuit court drew the inference (which we deem reasonable under the circumstances) that the process of accretion would continue along the sandbar between the point and the island, and considered that the new shoreline runs from the point to the island, along the bar. That line is approximately perpendicular to the boundary between lots 7 and 8, extended, and the court deemed it equitable to apportion the alluvion by extending that boundary.

If the alluvion were contiguous to lot 7 as well as lots 8 and 9, defendant, as owner of lot 7, was entitled to apportionment, even though the accretion may have begun on lot 8 or 9. 3 The method followed by the circuit court, based upon its determination of the course of the new shoreline, was in accord with a rule approved by this court.

“Thus, there was applied, substantially, the rule that, in apportioning an accretion or reliction, the new division lines must be drawn in a straight line, at a right angle to the present shoreline, from the points at which the division lines of coterminous owners intersected the original shoreline.” 4

Although different rules may apply to situations falling into substantially different types, and in any situation a given rule is not to be strictly applied so as to produce an inequitable result because of particular circumstances, 5 we find no reason to differ with the determination of the circuit court that the apportionment it has made is equitable.

*619 The alluvion is not contiguous to the dry portion of lot 7 and plaintiff does not concede that it is contiguous to any submerged portion. The record would not fully support a finding that the alluvion either rests upon or is contiguous to the submerged portion of lot 7, and we therefore assume that it is not. Plaintiff contends that none of the alluvion may be apportioned to defendant as owner of lot 7, because of the lack of contiguity.

Defendant cites authority for the proposition that where accretion begins on the shore of one owner and extends laterally, along and in front of. the shore of another owner, cutting off the latter’s access to deep water, the right of the first to appropriate the alluvion stops at the extended boundary line of the second.

“The right of accretion to an island in the river cannot be so extended lengthwise of the river as to exclude riparian proprietors above or below such island from access to the river, as such riparian proprietors. Mulry v. Norton, 100 N. Y. 424, 436, 437.” 6
“We are also of the opinion that the principles applicable to the apportionment of lands formed by accretion among the owners of contiguous uplands is quite controlling as to the rights of the respective parties in this case. Such owners are entitled to lands made by accretion or reliction in front of their property and contiguous thereto in certain proportions, according to the formation of their respective shorelines. Houck, Rivers, sec. 162; 3 Washburn, Real Prop. 58; Angell, Tidewaters, 171. However such accretions may be commenced or continued, the right of one owner of uplands to follow and appropriate them ceases when the formation passes laterally the line of his coterminous neighbors. ‘A littoral proprietor, like a riparian proprietor, has a right to the water frontage belonging by nature to his land, although the only practical advantage of it may consist in the access thereby afforded him to the water for the purposes of using *620 the right of navigation. This right is his only and exists by virtue and in respect of his riparian proprietorship.’ Gould, Waters, sec. 149; Buccleuch v. Metropolitan Board of Works, L. R. 5 H. L. 418.” 7

Some of these cases involved rivers. Where this problem arises in a river in Wisconsin, it may be resolved upon the proposition that alluvion deposited upon the riverbed between the bank and the thread of the stream belongs to the owner of the bank because he owns the riverbed. 8 Although our present problem involves a deposit on a lake bed, we find persuasive the reasoning of the authorities cited, that accretion extending laterally is not to increase the amount of access of one owner to navigable water at the expense of other owners.

The owner of lot 7, before the accretion occurred, had access to the open water of the lake by traversing the shallows in a direct line from any portion of her shore.

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Bluebook (online)
121 N.W.2d 1, 19 Wis. 2d 614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rondesvedt-v-running-wis-1963.