Schulte v. Warren

75 N.E. 783, 218 Ill. 108
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 24, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 75 N.E. 783 (Schulte v. Warren) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schulte v. Warren, 75 N.E. 783, 218 Ill. 108 (Ill. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellant filed his bill in this case in the circuit court of Mason county alleging that he was the owner in fee simple and was in possession of the lands therein described, amounting to about twenty-eight hundred acres, situated in the Illinois river bottom, bounded on the west by said river and on the north by the north line of Mason county; that they were swamp and overflowed lands, which were subject to overflow from the Illinois river in times of high water from natural causes; that prior to the construction "of a certain lock and dam in said river and the opening of the canal of the Chicago Sanitary District the lands were valuable for pasture during the larger part of late summer and early fall, when the high waters had subsided, and a small part of the lands had been in cultivation; that by the construction of said dam and lock and canal the water in said river had been raised so as to overflow the said lands and render them practically worthless for pasturing stock; that large flocks of wild fowl frequented the land, and the only remaining value of the lands consisted of the right and privilege of hunting thereon; that such right gave the lands their only market value, and that the appellees, who were insolvent, had repeatedly trespassed upon the lands and hunted over the same and threatened to continue hunting thereon. The bill prayed for an injunction restraining appellees from hunting over the lands of appellant, and a temporary injunction was granted. Appellees answered, alleging that by reason of the construction of the dam and lock in the river and the canal from Lake Michigan to said river the waters had been raised and covered the lands to a depth sufficient for navigation, and that thereby they and the public at large had acquired the right of navigation and the right of hunting and fishing in said navigable waters. The cause was heard upon evidence taken before the master in chancery, the injunction was dissolved and a decree was entered dismissing the bill for want of equity.

The following facts were proved: The lands border upon the Illinois river, and within their limits, lying near the river, there is a lake with two long, narrow branches, called Clear lake, one branch of which is sometimes called Mud lake. Clear lake is connected at its southerly end with the Illinois river, and extends, with its two branches, northerly and westerly about two miles and a half. There is a large tract of land between the two branches called the “middle grounds.” In surveying the lands, Clear lake, with both its branches, was meandered by the government, and the lands were sold and are now owned in fee by appellant, who has paid the taxes and been in possession of them. In a natural state the lands were generally overflowed in the spring, and occasionally at other times during high freshets, to a depth of from six to twelve feet. The high water generally subsided in the late spring and the land would then be good for pasture, and about fifteen or twenty acres of it was in cultivation. About twelve or thirteen hundred acres was in timber, and the remainder was in willows and buck-brush, with large open spaces. Connected with Clear lake there were sloughs and low places, and in times of high water canal boats or barges pushed by steam tugs passed up such sloughs to Haven’s landing and Elm landing, a considerable distance above. These landings had no wharves or warehouses, but were merely points where grain was hauled by farmers to be loaded on the canal boats or barges and taken away. Some years ago a lock and dam was built at La-Grange, below the lands, which raised the water of the lake about eighteen inches, and afterward the sanitary district canal was opened, raising the water three or four feet more, so that the natural stage of the water in the river is about five feet higher than in its natural condition. The lands have been overflowed and rendered practically worthless for any purpose except hunting and fishing. Upon the lands there is wild rice, celery, nut grass, smart weed, lotus, and the like, furnishing abundant food for wild ducks. Appellant has sowed wild grass on the premises for food to attract the ducks, and it is a favorite resort for ducks and wild fowl and the lands are valuable for a hunting preserve.

It is not claimed that appellant owns any of the lands underlying Clear lake or Mud lake, both of which were navigable in a natural state and were meandered in the government survey. The claim of appellant is that he has the exclusive right to hunt upon the premises, of which he has the record title, by reason of his ownership of the soil; that the public generally, having no right, title or ownership in the lands, have no such right, and that to admit the public to the lands would result in frightening and driving away the game and destroy the only remaining value of the lands. Appellees do not deny that the appellant is the owner in fee simple of the premises and in the lawful possession of them, nor that they are subject to the burden of taxation, but they claim that the public have acquired the right to use the lands for the only purpose for which they have any value. Their position is, that by the inundation, resulting mainly from the drainage canal, the waters upon the land have become navigable in fact; that thereby the public have acquired not only an easement of navigation, but a right to hunt and fish thereon, and that appellant has lost his title as against such rights so long as the submergence continues. Acknowledging appellant’s ownership, the claim of appellees is stated as follows: “It is contended by appellees that by the permanent flooding of the lands in controversy that title was suspended or lost by the original proprietor, so far as excluding the public therefrom in the rights of navigation, hunting and fishery.” That is the question to be determined on this appeal, and although the bill relates only to the right to hunt over the lands, counsel on both sides have treated the question as though it included the right to fish. They are agreed that if one right exists the other does also, and that they may be considered as concomitant rights if they exist at all. Counsel for the appellees have also discussed the question whether the appellant has the right to fish and hunt on the waters of the Illinois river within his ownership, but that question is not involved in this case in any manner and will not be decided. Whether prescriptive rights or usage could or do have any influence in determining the right to hunt or fish on the waters of the river will not be considered.

Both branches of Clear lake, one of which is frequently called Mud lake, having been meandered by the government, the title of the complainant before the inundation of his lands extended to the waters of the lake in their natural condition free from disturbing causes, and this would be so whether they were navigable or not. Where land is conveyed extending to a river and bounding upon it, the center of the stream is the line of the boundary; but in case of a natural lake or bed of water meandered by the government the grant extends to the water’s edge, while the ownership of the bed of the lake is in the State in trust for all the people for the purpose of fishing, boating, and the like. (Seaman v. Smith, 24 Ill. 521; Trustees of Schools v. Schroll, 120 id. 509; Fuller v. Shedd, 161 id. 462; People v. Kirk, 162 id. 138; Hammond v. Shepard, 186 id.

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Bluebook (online)
75 N.E. 783, 218 Ill. 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schulte-v-warren-ill-1905.