Wemple v. Eastham

90 So. 637, 150 La. 247, 1922 La. LEXIS 2915
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 2, 1922
DocketNo. 24297
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 90 So. 637 (Wemple v. Eastham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wemple v. Eastham, 90 So. 637, 150 La. 247, 1922 La. LEXIS 2915 (La. 1922).

Opinion

O’NIELL, J.

Pursuant to Act 30 of 1915, authorizing the leasing of state lands, in-[249]*249eluding river and lake beds and bottoms, for the production of oil, gas, and other minerals, the Governor leased to Mally Eastham, on the 4th of November, 1918, all of the land that the state then owned “within the meandering lines of Bayou Pierre river, and Dolet bayou, in sections 14, 15, 22, 23, 25, 2d, 27, 35, and 36, in T. 12 N.,-R. 11 W., La. Mer.” Eastham transferred two-thirds interest in the lease to W. E. Reynolds, and he transferred the same interest, in so far as it affected a part of the lands, to the trustees of the Bayou Pierre Petroleum Company.

Plaintiif owns lands bordering on one side of Bayou Pierre and lands through whieh Bayou Dolet runs, in sections 14, 15, 22, 23.

Defendants commenced operations for the drilling of a well on the bank of Bayou Pierre, that is, between the ordinary high-water mark and the ordinary low-water mark, and between the upper and lower boundary lines of plaintiff’s land. Thereupon plaintiff, averring that the recording of the contract of lease was a slander of his title to the lands forming the banks and beds of the two bayous within his property lines, brought this suit to cancel the lease and to enjoin defendants from drilling wells on the land. Plaintiff contends that the two bayous are not and never have been navigable streams, and that therefore he owns the bed or bottom of the bayou that crosses Ms land and owns to the thread or middle of the bayou on which his land borders. In any event —that is, even if either bayou should be held to be a navigable stream — he claims the bayou banks, or land between the ordinary high-water márk and the ordinary low-water mark.

Defendants admit that Dolet bayou is not, and never has been, a navigable stream, and that the state therefore had no right to lease the bed or bottom of that bayou, within the boundary lines of plaintiff’s land. Defendants contend that Bayou Pierre was once a navigable stream, and has ceased to be such, and that therefore the state had authority to lease the bed or bottom of that stream, and the banks. or land between what was once the ordinary high-water mark and what was once the ordinary low-water mark. Defendants asserted a reconventional demand for damages alleged to have been caused by plaintiff’s interference with their alleged right of possession of the land once forming the bed of Bayou Pierre, and a demand for a right of passage over plaintiff’s adjacent land to the public road.

There was judgment in favor of plaintiff, recognizing his title to the bed -and banks of Dolet bayou within the boundaries of his adjacent land, and recognizing his title to the bank of Bayou Pierre, being the land between the ordinary high-water mark and the ordinary low-water mark, between the upper and lower boundary lines of plaintiff’s land. Defendants were therefore forbidden to go upon the lands thus recognized as plaintiff's property. The lease to the defendants was recognized as affecting the bed of Bayou Pierre, being the land covered by the waters of the bayou at its ordinary low stage; and they were decreed to have a right of passage over plaintiff’s adjoining land to the public road, reserving to plaintiff the- right to she for such damages as he might suffer by reason of defendants’ right of passage. The demands of both the plaintiff and the defendants for damages were otherwise rejected. '

Defendants have appealed from the judgment, and plaintiff, answering the appeal, prays that the judgment be amended so as to declare him the owner of the bed of Bayou Pierre to the middle or thread of the stream, and to reject defendants’ demand for a right of passage to the public road.

Appellant assigns as error that the district court erred in holding that the bed of Bayou Pierre was the land covered by water at its ordinary low stage, instead of holding that the bed of the bayou was the land between [251]*251tlie banks covered by water at its ordinary high stage, and that the court therefore erred in holding that the well which defendants had commenced drilling was on the land of plaintiff. On the original hearing of the appeal, a majority of the members of the court, taking that view of the case, rejected plaintiff’s demand, except as to the bed of Bolet bayou, and ordered the case remanded for trial of the question of location of defendants’ right of passage to the public road and the amount of compensation to be paid for the right. A rehearing was granted on the application of plaintiff, appellee.

[1] The evidence sustains the conclusion of the district judge that Bayou Pierre was once a navigable stream, but that for many years it has not been navigable. When the bayou had ceased to be navigable, the state, having been theretofore the owner of the bed of the bayou, subject to the right of the public to navigate the bayou and to use the banks, which belonged to the owners of the adjacent lands, had the right to lease the bed of the bayou. Board of Commissioners v. Glassel, 120 La. 400, 45 South. 370; State v. Bayou Johnson Oyster Co., 130 La. 604, 58 South. 405; Perry v. Board of Commissioners, 132 La. 415, 61 South. 511; State ex rel. Board of Commissioners v. Capdeville, Auditor, 146 La. 94, 83 South. 421.

[2] The bed of a navigable river — that is, the land which the state holds in her sovereign capacity — is only the land that is covered by the water at its ordinary low stage. The land lying between the edge of the water at its ordinary low stage and the line which the edge of the water reaches at its ordinary high stage — that is, the highest stage that it usually reaches at any season of the year — is called the bank of the stream, and belongs to the owner of the adjacent land, subject to the right of the public to use the bank, to land and unload boats, to dry nets, etc. Rev. Civ. Code, arts. 455 and 457; Morgan v. Livingston, 6 Mart. (O. S.) 19; De Ben v. Gerard, 4 La. Ann. 30; Lyons v. Hinckley, 12 La. Ann. 655; Heirs of Leonard v. City of Baton Rouge, 39 La. Ann. 275, 4 South. 241; Heirs of La Branch v. Montegut, 47 La. Ann. 674, 17 South. 247; State v. Richardson, 140 La. 330, 72 South. 984; Howard v. Ingersoll, 13 How. 381, 14 L. Ed. 189; 6 Corpus Juris, 1178.

There is nothing in the opinion in Minor’s Heirs v. City of New Orleans, 115 La. 301, 38 South. 999, contrary to articles 455 and 457 of the Code, or the decisions cited above. It is true, it was said, in Minor’s Heirs v. City of New Orleans:

“In speaking of a river as a boundary, the stream in its ordinary state of high water is intended.”

But that was not intended as a denial that, under article 455 of the Civil Code, the ownership of the banks of navigable streams is vested in the owners- of the adjacent lands, as an inherent right. And the banks of a stream are defined in article 457 as “that which contains it in its ordinary state of high water.”

The expression in Perry v. Board of Commissioners, 132 La. 415, 61 South. 511, “the state owns the land below high-water mark and that constituting the bed of the stream,” must be read and construed with reference to the context. The expression in full was:

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Bluebook (online)
90 So. 637, 150 La. 247, 1922 La. LEXIS 2915, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wemple-v-eastham-la-1922.