Smith v. St. Louis Public Schools

30 Mo. 290
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 30 Mo. 290 (Smith v. St. Louis Public Schools) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. St. Louis Public Schools, 30 Mo. 290 (Mo. 1860).

Opinion

Napton, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The facts of this case are essentially the same as in the case of Smith and others v. The City of St. Louis, 21 Mo. 36.

Upon the trial, however, in the present case, the plaintiffs confined the documentary proofs on their side to the confirmation to Auguste Chouteau under the act of Congress of 13th June, 1812 — relying on parol proof of possession and inhab-itation to show the extent and boundaries of the lot, without introducing the official survey of 1850 — the original grant to DeVolsey, made by St. Ange in 1766, three years after the town of St. Louis was founded, and the confirmation of this grant by the act of Congress of the 29th April, 1816. The [299]*299survey of Brown, under the three confirmations — of the old board of commissioners and of the two recorders, Bates and Hunt — was introduced in evidence by the defendants.

It is not by any means clear that the introduction or omission of the survey could materially affect the question of riparian rights. In either case, the lot is bounded on all sides by streets. The original concession, in addition to giving a boundary on all sides by streets, makes its eastern side “/ace au fieme” or front towards the Mississippi; and the only question not discussed or determined in the former case, is whether this expression in the original concession constitutes the lot a riparian one, taken in connection with the other descriptive words of the grant.

The DeVolsey grant was of a lot 240 feet front, on the side of or towards the Mississippi river (du cdté du), and fronting thereto (et y faisant face), by 800 in depth on the side towards the woods (du cdté du hois), having on its front the grand or main street (tenant la dite face et pardevant la grande rue), on its rear another great street, <&c.

Confining ourselves, then, to this concession, we -find that the lot conceded was bounded on the east by Main street (le grande rue), on the west by another great street, not named, and on the north and south by streets running at right angles to the streets first named. The terms of the grant also describe the east front to face the river (y faisant face). The question is, do the words “faisant face au fieme” make this lot a riparian one, notwithstanding the particular designation of the streets on all its sides ?

The law of alluvion is understood to be a part of the jus gentium, that code which natural reason has established among all men. As the Romans, more than any other ancient nation, had investigated with great care and ability the principles which natural reason dictated as the rule of action among men, and had, at all events, so far advanced beyond their predecessors in civilization, the Greeks, as to reduce these principles to a code, it is to the civil law, and the codes of modern Europe based upon it, that we must resort to [300]*300ascertain the true extent and limits of this doctrine of allu-vion. It will be found, indeed, that upon this subject the Roman law, and the French and Spanish law which sprung from it, are essentially alike, if we except mere provincial modifications; and it is believed that the English common law does not materially vary from them. This uniformity necessarily results from the fact that the foundation of the doctrine is laid in natural equity. That which common sense or natural reason has established among enlightened people must be essentially the same everywhere, and as all the various codes are drawn from this common source, their main features must be also the same.

The plain and simple principle upon which the right of alluvion is placed in the civil law is, that he who bears the incidental burdens of an acquisition is entitled to its incidental advantages; consequently that the proprietor of a field bounded by a river, being exposed to the danger of loss from its floods, is entitled to the increment which from the same cause may be gradually annexed to it. This rule, however, did not apply to fields which the Romans termed limited, or agri limitali. “ In agris limitatis jus alluvionis locum non habere constat.”

The difficulty has been to determine the true meaning of this exception. So far as the question has arisen frequently in Louisiana, in reference to Spanish grants, and so far as the question in this ease is concerned, the point has been there, and arises again here, whether a lot in a town surrounded by streets is properly riparian, or is ager limitaius, and therefore not entitled to riparian rights. We have also to consider the further question, whether the description in DeYolsey’s grant, and the use of the words “ face au fleuve,” qualify or limit or destroy the effect of the particular designation of the limits by streets.

There was undoubtedly a distinction in Lower Louisiana between the Spanish grants of rural lands lying on the Mississippi, and the lots laid out in the city of New Orleans as authoritatively established by the Mississippi Company. In [301]*301all grants of lands on the river, there was a reservation, implied or express, of a road or highway on the river bank. This grew out of a peculiarity in the physical conformation of the country, where dykes or levees were essential to the protection of the river low grounds from inundation, and where custom or law had located the public road on the river bank, either adjoining to or on the levee. There is no doubt that, according to well settled and perfectly harmonious decisions of the courts in Louisiana, a grant of rural lands with a river front, or by the unqualified expression “ face au fleuve,” would take the proprietor to the river, notwithstanding this easement of a road on the levee, or adjoining, to which the public were held entitled. The intervention of the road in such cases does not prevent the right of .alluvion. The grant is considered a riparian one, and attended with all the incidents of such grants. It has been equally well established that the lots in the original city of New Orleans, as authoritatively laid otrt by the Mississippi Company, adjoining the river, are not entitled to alluvion. We do not, however, from this circumstance, infer that there was an essential distinction between urban and rural property, based solely on this single peculiarity. The decisions in Louisiana are not understood to declare that urban property may not have riparian rights; that a town proprietor, whether sovereign or a private individual, may not so lay off lots in a town or city as to be strictly riparian and entitled to the benefit of allu-vion. No reason is perceived why this riparian privilege should be confined to lots of a particular size or in a particular locality. These are not the circumstances which seem to us to determine the question. If the river is the boundary of a town lot, it may be riparian just as much as a tract of land would be in the country. But the question is, whether a lot of ground, which is bounded or limited by streets, can with any propriety be said to be bounded by a river. Is it not ager limitatus, within the definition of that term as understood by the civilians ?

In the French Encyclopedia — a work of high authority, [302]

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Bluebook (online)
30 Mo. 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-st-louis-public-schools-mo-1860.