Taylor v. Commonwealth

47 S.E. 875, 102 Va. 759, 1904 Va. LEXIS 123
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 16, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 47 S.E. 875 (Taylor v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Commonwealth, 47 S.E. 875, 102 Va. 759, 1904 Va. LEXIS 123 (Va. 1904).

Opinion

Keith, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant filed her bill in the Circuit Court of the city of Richmond, in which she states that she is the owner in fee simple of a tract of land in Gloucester county, known as “Rosewell,” containing two hundred and fifty acres, fronting on York river, being a portion of a tract which was the property of her father, now deceased, allotted to her by a decree of the Circuit Court of Gloucester county; that as riparian proprietor her rights in the soil under the waters of York river extend to the channel or navigable portion of the river, and that from the original grant from the English Crown of this land down to and including the lifetime of complainant’s father, the proprietors of “Rosewell” had been in the habit of leasing the oyster lands upon their water front; that the last person who held such a lease from the proprietor of “Rosewell,” while still occupying the relation of tenant to complainant, accepted from the Commonwealth a subsequent lease of the flats, or oyster planting grounds, in front of “Rosewell”; that about the year 1892, while said lessee was occupying the “Rosewell” flats, under the circumstances above set out, an artesian well was sunk between low watermark and the channel or navigable portion of York [761]*761river, and on the land of which complainant claims she is the owner and riparian proprietor; that the water from this •well has mineral properties of great value, and that the lessee and others united in the formation of a company for the purpose of selling the water, which company was granted a charter by the Circuit Court of the city of Richmond in March, 1896, under the style of the Colonial Water Company, since which time it has sold great quantities of water without the consent of complainant; that the Colonial Water Company occupies and claims to hold the ground on which the well is located by virtue of the oyster lease above set forth, but that said lease conveys to the water company no title to the ground. The bill further shows that at the session of 1899-1900 the General Assembly passed “An Act to lease for a term of years ten acres of land lying under the waters of York river, below low watermark, in the county of Gloucester, including an artesian well thereon, and to provide for a survey of same, and for fixing the price to be paid therefor per annum; and to permit said company to erect buildings and make improvements thereon, and to provide for the determination of all proper questions which may arise between the parties to any suit brought under this act” (Acts 1899-1900, p. 797); that, acting under the provisions of this statute, the Colonial Water Company has caused a survey and plat to be made by the county surveyor of Gloucester county of ten acres of the land of complainant, including the well—that is to say, the land of which complainant is the owner and riparian proprietor—and that the company has caused that survey ¿nd plat to be returned to the clerk’s office of Gloucester county, and posted a notice at the front door of the court-house on the 1th of May, 1900, to the effect that said survey and plat had been filed in compliance with the provisions of the Act of Assembly aforesaid, but that in fact the survey, plat and notice are erroneous, and do not comply with the requirements of said act; that complainant is advised that the act aforesaid authorizes [762]*762the lease of ten acres of land, including the artesian well, only on the condition that it shall be determined by the court that the Commonwealth is the owner of the land, and that the private rights of no person shall be infringed upon; that it in plain terms declares it to be the purpose of the sovereign power of the State that the private rights of complainant shall not be interfered with or infringed upon, whether the Commonwealth be or be not the owner of said land; that even though the Commonwealth be the owner it by no means follows from the act that a lease may be made to the Colonial Water Company, because it is expressly provided by its terms—First, That no natural oyster bed, rock or shoal shall be included in said ten acres of land; second, that the private rights of no person shall be infringed upon; and, third, that navigation in York river shall in no manner be obstructed or impeded; that it further declares that complainant’s rights of every character, existing at the time of its passage, whether as owner of the land, riparian proprietor, or otherwise, shall be respected, and shall be paramount and superior to any rights which can by any possibility be acquired by the Colonial Water Company by virtue of said act; that the Commonwealth is not the owner of the land in controversy, but that, on the contrary, complainant is its sole owner, including said artesian well, and further that even though the Commonwealth were such owner, the private rights of complainant would be grossly interfered with and infringed upon by any lease made under said Act of March 5, 1900; that, without waiving any of her said rights, attention is called to the fact that at the time of the passage of the Act of March 5, 1900, and for a long time previous thereto, complainant had and still has the statutory right to select any portion of the oyster planting ground fronting on “Kosewell,” whether occupied by another person or not, and have same assigned to her exclusive use, provided only that said assignment does not exceed half an acre (see sec. 2137 of the Code, as amended by Acts of [763]*7631893-J4, p. 842) ; that complainant has never relinquished and now claims the right to have assigned to her under said statute one-half an acre of said ground, including the Colonial well, and further claims that the lease of ten acres of land, as provided by the Act of March 5, 1900, cannot be granted without infringing upon this and other rights of complainant, none of which she relinquishes, but all of which she claims and insists upon.

The prayer of the bill is that the well and the water therefrom be declared the property of complainant; that it be decreed that no lease can be made under the provisions of the Act of March 5, 1900, that the lease under which the Colonial Water Company claims to hold said well conveys no title to it whatsoever; and that said company may be compelled to surrender the possession thereof to complainant, and for general relief.

To this bill the Commonwealth of Virginia and the Colonial Water Company were made parties defendant, and filed their demurrer upon the following grounds:

First. The bill alleges that the plaintiff is the owner in fee simple of the soil of the bed of York river, between low water mark and the channel or navigable part of said stream, while the “demurrants insist that the right of plaintiff extends only to low watermark, and that she has no interest in the soil of the bed of said river, but that the soil of said bed is the property of the State of Virginia, so declared by statute, and the State, through the Legislature, has the authority to rent portions of the said bed to the demurrant, or any one else.”

Second. That if plaintiff has any right whatever in the soil of said river between low watermark and the channel or navigable portion of said river, it is only the, right to pass over the surface of the water in boats, vessels or river craft, or to erect wharves, piers or bulkheads opposite her said land; provided the navigation be not obstructed, nor the private rights of any person be otherwise injured thereby; and that should the plain[764]

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Bluebook (online)
47 S.E. 875, 102 Va. 759, 1904 Va. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-commonwealth-va-1904.