Vermont v. New Hampshire

289 U.S. 593, 53 S. Ct. 708, 77 L. Ed. 1392, 1933 U.S. LEXIS 195
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 29, 1933
Docket2, Original
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 289 U.S. 593 (Vermont v. New Hampshire) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vermont v. New Hampshire, 289 U.S. 593, 53 S. Ct. 708, 77 L. Ed. 1392, 1933 U.S. LEXIS 195 (1933).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an original suit, brought by the State of Vermont December 18, 1915, for the determination of the boundary line between that state and the State of New Hampshire. By the amended bill of complaint Vermont alleged that the boundary is “ the thread of the channel ” of the Connecticut River for its entire course, except for that part from the northerly limits of the town of Vernon, Vermont, south to the Massachusetts line where it is the west bank of Connecticut River at low-water mark.” In the original bill of complaint there was an alternative *596 claim that if this Court should be of the opinion that the boundary is not the thread, but is the west bank of the Connecticut River,” then, “ such line is the westerly edge of the waters of the Connecticut River at its average and mean stage during the entire year without reference to the extraordinary freshets or extreme droughts.” New Hampshire, by its amended answer, asserts that the boundary is “ at the top or westerly margin of the westerly bank of the Connecticut River and the east branch thereof.”

Vermont’s claim of a boundary' at the thread of the channel was based upon the following propositions: Township grants made by the Governor of the Province of New Hampshire, by royal authority, between 1741 and 1764, on the west side of the Connecticut River in the territory now Vermont, were bounded by the river, which was non-tidal, and carried title to its thread by virtue of the common law of England; an order of the King-in-Council of July 20, 1764, fixing* the boundary between the Province^ of New York and New Hampshire at the “ western banks of the River Connecticut,” thus including the territory now Vermont in the Province of New York, was nullified by the successful revolution of the inhabitants of the New Hampshire Grants; hence the eastern boundary of the revolutionary state of Vermont was the same as the eastern limits of the township grants, namely, the thread of the river; Vermont was admitted to the Union as a sovereign independent state with her boundaries those established by her revolution. Her eastern boundary was therefore the thread of the Connecticut River.

The Special Master sustained all these contentions except the last one. With respect to it he found that Vermont had, by resolution of her legislature of February 22, 1782, relinquished any claim to jurisdiction east of the west side of the river, at low-water mark, in conform *597 Ity to a Congressional resolution of August 20, 21, 1781 prescribing terms upon which Congress would consider the admission of Vermont to the Union. In addition to tiie findings already indicated the Special Master also concluded that the order of the King-in-Council of July 20,1764, even if not rendered ineffective by the revolution of Vermont, was not intended to recognize any rights of New Hampshire west of the west side of the river at low water; that Vermont’s claim of a boundary at the thread “of the river would be defeated by her acquiescence in New Hampshire’s exercise of dominion over the waters of the river even if it had not been relinquished by acceptance of the resolutions of Congress of August, 1781, and finally that by practical construction of the two states by long usage and acquiescence, the boundary of Vermont was fixed at the low-water mark on the west side of the river.

Accordingly the Special Master found that:

“ The eastern boundary of the State of Vermont upon her admission to the Union was that stated in the resolutions of Congress of August 20, and 21, 1781, and in the resolution of the Vermont legislature of February 22, 1782, and this I find to be the low-water mark on the west side of the Connecticut River.”

The line of low-water mark thus specified was further defined as “ the point to which the river recedes at its lowest stage without reference to extreme droughts,” and no exception has been taken to this definition.

Vermont’s claim of a boundary to the thread of the channel is no longer before us as New Hampshire alone has filed exceptions to the report of the Special Master. Those exceptions narrow the issue to the single question whether the boundary line is at low-water mark on the west side of the river as the Master found or at the top or westerly margin of the bank 'as contended by New Hampshire; in other words, whether New Hampshire acquired and retained jurisdiction of a narrow ribbon of land *598 of varying width on the west side of the Connecticut River, extending along the entire eastern boundary of Vermont, which at some stages of the river is submerged and at others left uncovered by the'water. In support of. this contention New Hampshire relies on the order of the King-in-Council of 1764, which it is argued established the eastern boundary of Vermont at the west bank of the Connecticut River, not at low-water mark, but at the top of the bank or the line upon it where vegetation ceases.

The Order-in-Council must be considered in the light of the colonial. history out of which it grew, which is elaborately reviewed in the Special Master’s report. The royal Province of New Hampshire was established on September 18,1679, by commission of Charles II, establishing the president and council of that province. On July 3, 1741, Benning Wentworth was appointed Governor by George II. His commission, like that later issued to him by George III in 1760, defined the western boundary of the province only, by the provisión that its south fine and its north line should extend westward “ till it meets with our other .governments.” The government on the west of New Hampshire was the Province of New York, originating in the grant of June 29,' 1674, by Charles II to his brother James, Duke of York, which included “ all the lands from the west side of Connecticut river to the east side of Delaware Bay.” This grant merged in the Crown when James, Duke of York, became King James II in 1685.

Despite the language of the New York grant fixing its eastern boundary as the west side of the Connecticut River, that province did not assert jurisdiction as far east as the Connecticut River at any point south of the New Hampshire line. The western boundary of the Province of Connecticut was fixed about 1684 with the acquiescence of New York as a line, approximately north and south, twenty miles east of the Hudson River, and before 1750 *599 Massachusetts had settled westerly to about the same line .and New York had made no attempt to disturb those settlements.

Governor Wentworth, construing his commission as extending the Province of New Hampshire westwardly at least to this line east of the Hudson River, acting under authority of a royal commission, made, from about 1752 to 1764, numerous grants of townships in the territory west of the Connecticut River, now a part of Vermont. Each of these grants comprised a territory six miles square and conferred on thé inhabitants authority to organize town governments-.

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Bluebook (online)
289 U.S. 593, 53 S. Ct. 708, 77 L. Ed. 1392, 1933 U.S. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vermont-v-new-hampshire-scotus-1933.