Sharp v. Learned

188 So. 302, 185 Miss. 872, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 162
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1939
DocketNo. 33682.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 188 So. 302 (Sharp v. Learned) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sharp v. Learned, 188 So. 302, 185 Miss. 872, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 162 (Mich. 1939).

Opinion

Anderson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case is here on appellee’s amended bill, demurrers thereto by appellants, a decree overruling the demurrers, and an appeal therefrom to settle the principles of the cause. This is the second appeal of this cause (181 So. 142, and on suggestion of error, 182 So. 122).

The original and amended bills are in all substantial respects the same except one. In the amended bill, the appellee sets out the facts relied on as constituting Dia *885 mond Island Towhead, as . a part of the territory of this state, instead of that of Louisiana. The amended bill in that respect alleges:

“That because of changes in the course of the navigable stream of the Mississippi River, said Diamond Island or Diamond Island Towhead, is now situated to the Westerly side of the present navigable stream of the Mississippi River and is joined in part to the Louisiana shore, but despite said fact the same has ever been and is now within the territorial limits of the County of Warren and State of Mississippi; and, in support of the allegation of fact, Complainant charges and shows with reference to the formation of said Diamond Island, the following, to-wit:
‘ ‘ That at the time when the State of Louisiana was admitted to the Union as a State by Act of Congress, found at Chapter 50- of the United States Statutes at Large, Yol. 2, page 701, approved April 8th, 1812, the boundary of the State of Louisiana at this point (the same being South of the 33 degrees of North latitude and North of the River Iberville) was designated as being down the Mississippi River, — the thread or center of said River forming said boundary'originally; and by Act of Congress of the United States of March 1st, 1817, 3 Stat. 348 entitled ‘An Act to enable the people of the western part of Mississippi territory to form a constitution and state government, and for the admission of such state into the union, on an equal footing with the original states,’— pursuant to which the State of Mississippi was formed and admitted to the union as a state, the Western boundary of the territory to be included within said State North of the 31st degree of North latitude and South of the Southern boundary of the State of Tennessee was designated as being up the Mississippi River, and that the thread or center of said River formed said boundary originally.
“That the County of Warren, State of Mississippi, is on the Mississippi River, North of said 31 degrees of *886 North, latitude and North of said River Iberville and South of said 33 degrees of North latitude and South of the Southern boundary of the State of Tennessee.
“That thereafter at the place where said Diamond Island is now located and opposite said Warren County, Mississippi, the land on the Mississippi River in the State of Louisiana gradually wore off by erosion and caved into the Mississippi River and disappeared, while at or near said point the shore or bank of the Mississippi River on the Mississippi side was gradually extended in a Westerly direction by accretions formed successively and imperceptibly to the soil of said shore until it extended westerly as a point of land projecting Westwardly to the place where said Diamond Island or Diamond Island Towhead is now located; that as the Mississippi shore or bank along the Mississippi River was thus extended in a westerly direction by alluvion formed by accretion, the thalweg or thread of the channel of the Mississippi River was likewise extended in a Westerly direction; that as the thread of said channel was thus extended westerly, the boundary line between the States of Louisiana and Mississippi was also extended westerly in like manner and in like distances, remaining at all times to the North, West, and South of the point or projection of land thus formed and attached to the Mississippi shore.
‘ ‘ That after the boundary line between the said States had been thus extended Westwardly so as to include within the territorial limits of the State of Mississippi the land which is presently known and designated as Diamond Island or Diamond Island Towhead, and which was formed as a point of land formed by accretion to the Mississippi shore and a part of the territorial limits of the State of Mississippi, the Mississippi River cut across said point of land, forming a new but minor channel across said point of land, thereby cutting off a portion thereof from the Mississippi mainland and forming an island which was thereafter known and designated as Diamond Island or Diamond Island Towhead; but yet in so doing *887 the Mississippi Eiver yet flowed in a main channel aronnd to the North, West, and South of said Diamond Island, leaving the same yet upon the Mississippi side of the then main channel of the Mississippi Eiver; and said Island when so formed was, continued to he, and now is within and a part of the territorial limits of the County of Warren and State of Mississippi.
“That thereafter the new channel which was thus formed by the action of the Mississippi Eiver in cutting across said point of land over a period of years gradually widened and deepened, and the old or original channel which lay to the North, West, and South of said Diamond Island or Diamond Island Towhead was gradually filled by accretion in most part formed to said Island and in small part formed to the Louisiana mainland, until finally the new channel thus formed as above alleged became the principal or main channel of the Mississippi Eiver, and the old Channel gradually filled by accretion, until finally the said accretions formed to said Island in most part and that formed in small part to the Louisiana mainland met at certain places, and the water of the Mississippi Eiver ceased to flow at low stages therein and between Diamond Island or Diamond Island Towhead Mississippi shore and the Louisiana mainland shore.
“That said Diamond Island or Diamond Island Towhead never washed away and at the time said new channel of the Mississippi Eiver was formed by the action of that river in cutting across said point of land and forming an island the line between the States of Louisiana and Mississippi was in and remained in the center of the old channel which flowed to the North, West, and South of said point of land and of the land thus formed into an island designated as Diamond Island or Diamond Island Towhead, and which old channel was and is to the West of the new channel made by said action of the river in cutting across said point of land. That when the water thus ceased to flow through said old channel as above described and became stagnant, the boundary line be *888

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Related

Anderson-Tully Company v. Walls
266 F. Supp. 804 (N.D. Mississippi, 1967)
Sharp v. Learned
14 So. 2d 218 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1943)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 So. 302, 185 Miss. 872, 1939 Miss. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharp-v-learned-miss-1939.