State ex rel. Ellis v. Gerbing

56 Fla. 603
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by68 cases

This text of 56 Fla. 603 (State ex rel. Ellis v. Gerbing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Ellis v. Gerbing, 56 Fla. 603 (Fla. 1908).

Opinion

Whitfield, J.

Stated briefly this is a quo warranto proceeding brought in the Circuit Court for Nassau County by the Attorney General to ascertain by what warrant or authority Gustav Gerbing has marked and [606]*606staked off certain portions of the bed of Amelia river, a navigable stream in Nassau county, Florida, and claims and usurps the exclusive right to the use, benefit and enjoyment of, natural or maternal oyster beds upon the designated land below high water mark and extending to the channel of said navigable river.

By answer the respondent denies that he has staked off a portion of the bed of Amelia River below high water mark; avers that the only lands marked and staked off by respondent are certain salt marsh lands known and designated as lots and parts of sections; that the salt marsh lands near the rivers, inlets and bays in the State of Florida were never -treated and considered by the United States or the State of Florida as a part of the beds of the navigable streams, inlets and bays in said State, which vested in the State by virtue of its sovereignty, -but were treated and -considered by -the State and the United States as part of the swamp and overflowed lands which belonged to the United States and were granted to the State by Act of Congress in 1850; that the lands marked and staked by respondent and planted by him with oysters are owned by him in fee- simple by virtue of a chain of title, to-wit: (1) the Act of Congress -of 1850, granting to the State the swamp and overflowed lands; (2) a selection by the State o-f these lands as part o-f the lands inuring -to the State under said Act o-f Congress; (3) a patent from the United States to the State o-f Florida; (4) a deed from the State by the Trustees 'of the Internal Improvement Fund to- Samuel A. Swann, and a deed from said Swann to- respondent; -that the lands 'being marsh were not surveyed in'the original survey made by the United States, but by request of the State the lines of surveys were by the United States authorities protracted over said lands as marsh [607]*607lands, and said marsh lands were patented to the State as swamp and overflowed land; .that the lands staked by respondent do not extend to the channel of Amelia river; that respondent has not without authority or warrant of law claimed and usurped the exclusive right to- the use, benefit and enjoyment of any natural and maternal oyster beds within the bed of Amelia river, but has only claimed the exclusive right to the use and benefit of the oyster beds planted by him on lands owned by him as aforesaid; that respondent received from the County Commissioners under the statute the exclusive right to plant oysters in such places along the Amelia river where the lands of respondent border on said river, but the lands so marked, staked and planted by respondent were upon the lands owned by respondent as before stated.

The court sustained a demurrer to a replication, and the relator joined issue on the respondent’s answer.

The cause was by agreement tried by Honorable D. U. Fletcher, a practicing attorney, as referee, who found that the respondent claims to own the lands described, or at least that portion thereof not in the channel of Amelia river, and has run a line of stakes along- the easterly edge of the navigable portion of Amelia river within the lines protracted over the lands; that most of the stakes are set below low water mark but are not in the channel of Amelia river; that there are natural or maternal oyster beds along the edge of the navigable portion of Amelia river where some of the stakes extend below low water mark and some such oyster beds are between the stakes and high water mark; that the land is marsh or mud flats extending between the channel and shore of Amelia river, all of which is usually covered with water at high tide, and exposed or not covered, except to a limited extent, at low tide; that the respondent [608]*608has planted oysters above the stakes, and has forbidden any one to go upon or get oysters from the beds above the stakes on land below high water mark, and insists that he owns exclusively as his private property as stated in the answer, the said land and everything On it including the oysters. The conclusion of the referee was that the locus in quo is swamp' and overflowed land, and flats, not a part of the bed of the Amelia river, and the proceedings were dismissed.

The original thirteen States that formed the Federal Union as the United States of America, were distinct and independent sovereignties, and as such severally owned and held in trust for the whole people within their respective borders, the navigable waters in the States and the lands thereunder including the shore or land between high and low water marks. Proprietary rights in the lands of this character within the States, were not passed to the United States by the Federal Constitution under which the Union was founded, and no power to dispose of such lands was delegated to the United States, therefore all proprietary rights in and power to- dispose of lands under navigable waters in the States including the shore between high and low water marks were reserved to the States severally or to the people thereof. The powers of the United States as to matters of navigation, interstate and foreign commerce, post roads and eminent domain are not pertinent here.

The navigable waters in the States and the lands under such waters including the shore or lands between ordinary high and low water marks, are the property of the States or of the people of the States in their united or sovereign capacity, and are held not for the purposes of sale or conversion into other values, or reduction into several or individual ownership, but for the úse of all the people of [609]*609the States respectively, for purposes of navigation, commerce, fishing and other useful purposes afforded by the waters in common to and for the people of the States. The title to the lands of this character were withheld by the original States of this Union as essential to the sovereignty of the States, to the welfare of the people of the States, and to the proper exercise of the police powers of the States. A State may make limited- disposition of portions of such lands or of the use thereof in the interest of the -public welfare, where the rights of the whole people of the State as to navigation and other uses of the waters are not materially impaired. The States cannot abdicate general control over such lands and the waters thereon, since such abdication would be inconsistent with the implied legal duty of the States to> preserve and control such lands and the waters thereop and the use of them for the public'good.

By treaty of February 22, 1819, the Kingdom of Spain ceded “to the United States, in full property and sovereignty, all the territories * * * known by the name of East and West Florida,” with an expressed provision that all the grants of land made by Spain before January 24, 1818, in said territories shall be ratified and confirmed to the persons in possession of the lands. Articles 2 and 8 of Treaty to be found in Fuller’s Purchase of Florida, pages 372-374-

The lands in controversy are within the ceded territory, but it is not claimed that they had been granted to any one by Spain.

After the United States acquired by treaty of cession from Spain the territory known as East and West Florida, such territory was held subject to the constitution and laws of the United States. The lands under navigable waters including the shores were held by the Uni

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Bluebook (online)
56 Fla. 603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-ellis-v-gerbing-fla-1908.