State v. Black River Phosphate Co.

32 Fla. 82
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 32 Fla. 82 (State v. Black River Phosphate Co.) 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 v. Black River Phosphate Co., 32 Fla. 82 (Fla. 1893).

Opinion

Raxky, C. J. :

The appellee, the Black River Phosphate Company, a body corporate under our laws, has been taking-phosphate from the bed of Black creek, or, as it is also called, Black river,. The company claims to be the owner of lands extending .to the water of that stream, which is both tidal and navigable in fact, and founds its claim of title to, or right of property in, such phosphate, as against the State, upon such riparian ownership and the act of December 27th, 1856, entitled, “An act to benefit commerce,” and commonly known as “The riparian act of 1856” (Sections 454, 455 Revised Statutes). The first section of this statute after reciting: “Whereas it is for the benefit of commerce, that wharves be built and warehouses erected for facilitating the landing and storage of goods; and -whereas, the State being the proprietor of all submerged lands and water privileges, within its boundaries, which prevents the riparian owners from improving their water lots: therefore,” enacts, “thatthe State of Florida for the considerations above mentioned, divest themselves of all right, title and interest to all lands covered by water lying in front of any tract of land, owned by a citizen of the United States or by the United States, for public purposes, lying upon any navigable stream, or bay of the sea, or harbor, as far as the edge of the channel, and hereby vest the full title to the same in and unto the riparian proprietors, giving them full right and privilege, to build wharves into streams or waters of the bay ' or harbor as far as [84]*84may be necessary to effect the purposes described, and to fill up, from the shore, bank or beach, as far as may be desired, not obstructing the channel, but leaving full space for the requirements of commerce-, and upon the lands so filled in to erect warehouses, or other buildings, and also the right to prevent encroachments of any other person upon all such submerged land in the direction of their lines continued to the channel, by bill in chancery or at law, and to have and maintain action of trespass in any court of competent jurisdiction in the State for any interference with such property; also, confirming to the riparian proprietors all improvements which may have heretofore been made upon submerged lands for the purposes within mentioned.” The second, or remaining, section enacts: “That nothing in this act contained shall be so construed, as to release the title of the State of Florida, or any of its grantees, to any of the swamp or overflowed lands, within the limits of the same; but the grant herein contained shall be limited to those persons and body corporate, owning lands actually bounded by, and extending to low water mark, on such navigable streams, bays and harbors.”

The cases in which the act has come before this court for consideration are, Geiger et al. vs. Filor et al., 8 Fla., 325; Alden et ux. vs. Pinney, 12 Fla., 348; Rivas and Koopman vs. Solary, 18 Fla., 122; Sullivan vs. Moreno, 19 Fla., 200; Ruge vs. Apalachicola O. C. & E. Co., 25 Fla., 656, 6 South. Rep., 480.

In Geiger vs. Filor, decided in 1859, the court having stated that by the laws of Spain, andEngland, the sovereign of neither country could have alienated the land covered by the water, then observes that the question is not raised “as to the power of the State to alienate, but whether the State has actually transfer[85]*85red to complainants or to the proprietor from whom they derive title;” and afterwards remarking that .the avowed object of the law is to give to the riparian an owners “the right and interest of the State in and to the land covered by water as far as the edge of the channel, and to owners who were prevented by the State’s title from improving lots so situated between them and the water,” it says that “If complainants are such owners in contemplation of law their case is made out; but it finds that they, as assignees of the reserved fee of the original proprietors or dedicators of the streets, are not riparian owners within the meaning of the statute. * * .There areno water lots at the ends of the streets held by them and they are not the riparian proprietors prevented from improving any lots there claimed by them; * * neither the complainants, nor the original proprietor of the lots derived title to the land between high and low water mark at the end of- the streets, from this law, and their claim on this ground is unsustainable.” We also understand the view of the court to have been that as between the city and riparian owners of lots which also abut on a street, the city would be entitled to the benefits of the act as to land opposite the end of the street, as long as the street continued to exist as such, and such lot owners afterwards; and further, that the city was authorized by statute, apart from the riparian act, to •construct and maintain wharves at the foot of its streets.

In Alden et ux. vs. Pinney (decided in 1869), it was found that a street intervened between the land of complainants and high water mark, and consequently that the complainants were not riparian proprietors, and that any full discussion of the effect of the statute was improper. It is, however, observed in connection with [86]*86the subject of the equitable jurisdiction invoked, that riparian proprietors, too, under the act of 1856, ‘ ‘have a title coupled with a trust for the benefit of the public;” and it is said in another connection that where-ever the title to this soil — that from the street to the channel — ‘‘is, whether in the city, or the heirs of Pin-tado, or in the State, it cannot under existing laws be used in any .event to obstruct navigation or commerce. If the grantees of the State hold it, it is coupled with this trust, and if it is put to such use, or such use is threatened, there are circumstances under which complainants'can properly seek a court of law or equity to redress injuries. If this ice house, or anv other structure which defendants intend to construct, will be an obstruction to navigation, a hindrance to commerce, or impede or transgress the rights of the public in this respect, the remedy to correct this public evil while it exists in the State courts, is not at the suit of an individual citizen, except in case of special damage to himself.”

In Rivas and Koopman vs. Solary (A. D. 1881), the opinion, after stating that ‘‘the question presented is, who has the better right to the wharf and to the submerged land beneath it,” asserts that Williams (under whom both parties claimed), as owner of lot 19, had all the interest which followed from the act of 1856, “which was all the right, title and interest of the State to the land covered by the water lying in front of his lot, subject to the trust that it was to be used for the purposes of commerce, as stated in the statute;” that this title was,attended with no other restrictions than those contained in the act, and that there was nothing in the act prohibiting his transfer subject to the same conditions that he held it on. That the effect of deeds to plaintiffs could not be extended so as to make them [87]*87convey land not embraced witliin the boundaries or descriptions given by them. That what was granted by the State through the riparian act was in terms something more than the ordinary right -which the proprietor of lands on a navigable stream had to its use; and the right to use for commercial purposes, after the act, was an incident to the ownership of the land, which the State gave to the riparian proprietor.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Fla. 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-black-river-phosphate-co-fla-1893.