Wisconsin v. Duluth

96 U.S. 379, 24 L. Ed. 668, 1877 U.S. LEXIS 1676
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 11, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 96 U.S. 379 (Wisconsin v. Duluth) 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
Wisconsin v. Duluth, 96 U.S. 379, 24 L. Ed. 668, 1877 U.S. LEXIS 1676 (1878).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Miller

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a bill in chancery, filed in this court by the State of Wisconsin, by virtue of the constitutional provision which confers upon the court jurisdiction of suits between the States and between a State and citizens of other States. To the bill as originally brought the city of Duluth, as a corporation of the State of Minnesota, and,.therefore, a citizen of that State, and the Northern Pacific Railroad. Company, a corporation organized under an act of Congress, were made defendants. Whether the jurisdiction of the 'court could haVc been sustained in regard to the latter corporation, it is not necessary to inquire; for the plaintiff, before the final hearing, dismissed the bill as to the .railroad company : and we are now,- after answer, replication, and a lárge amount of. evidence, to render, our decree as between the State' of Wisconsin and the city of Duluth.

This .city is situated on the northern shore of Lake Superior, near.its western extremity; and about seven or eight miles 'south-east of it, on the Wisconsin shore, is Superior City. A narrow strip of land, vailing from three to eight hundred feet in width, projects itself from the shore at Duluth into the' waters of the lake about seven miles, terhiinating just opposite Superior City, and opposite another point coming from the Wisconsin shore. The strip of land first, mentioned is- a part of the State of Minnesota, and is called Minnesota Point. West of Minnesota Point is a body of. water lying parallel to it, and averaging a mile and a half or two miles in width, called Superior Bay, and still west of that a similar body, called St. Louis *380 Bay; Into this latter empties the St. Louis River, draining a. large área of country west of the lake, and discharging the'water thus collected into the lake.

St. Louis Bay and Superior Bay are spoken of as parts of St. Louis River, as enlargepaents of that stream; and testimony is taken to show that the water does not flow from • the lake east of Minnesota Point into these bays, and other testimony to show, that it does. Whether these bays are considered as parts of Lake Superior, or ^s mere expansions of the river, is in our view immaterial; for.it is a fact not denied that there is a current due to the river through both these bays, which, in the natural condition of the points of land we have mentioned, discharged1 itself into the main body of the lake at the southern end of Minnesota .Point; and that this point' was the natural entrance and exit of vessels from the lake into the bays, and from the bays into the lake.' And previous to the act of the city of Duluth', presently' to be mentioned as the foundation of this suit, it was the only passage for vessels into and out of the bay. There was here" in this b.ay a natural harbor where vessels could anchor in safety, and it was the only one on Lake Superior within fifty or sixty miles of its. western limit. Here grew up.Superior City, at which all vessels landed which came . by the great lake system so far west. Outside of - the bay and' east of Minnesota Point the lake was rough, an'd there was no protection for .vessels from the winds and .waves.

The passage or channel at .this narrow entrance, which by. complainant • is called the mouth of the. St. Louis River, was never very deep, and the bar, if it may be so called, gave great' trouble on this account. For several years prior to 1871, the United States had made appropriations to remedy this difficulty ;• and a plan had been adopted and money expended in the construction of piers on each side' of the channel, which, by confining the flow of the water- within narrow limits; would, by the process of scouring, keep the channel from filling up, and it was hoped would also deepen it.

By the spring of 1871,'the city of Duluth,.stimulated by the, construction of the Northern Pacific Railroad westward from that city, which was its terminus.on the lake, began to feel the need of a safe harbor of its own. A breakwater or pier built *381 into the lake was started by an appropriation by Oohgress,. but was found to be unsatisfactory.- The .city of Duluth con-, ceived and executed in a very-short time the .project of a canal’ across the narrow neck of Minnesota Point, near its connection, with the main shore. By this means, vessels could enter Superior Bay, where it washed the shores of Duluth, as well as by the channel which let.them into the same bay at Superior City. The railroad -company and the city expended large sums of money to dredge out and make this harbor 'fit for the purposes of the large commerce which was expected to Sé brought there by the railroad. The canal across Minnesota- Point was made about two hundred and fifty feet wide and from fifteen to eigh- ' teen feet deep ; while the greatest depth at the mouth of the St. Louis River was ten arid twelve feet.'

The citizens of Superior City began to resist this action of. the people of Duluth and the railroad company as soon as they comprehended the magnitude of the project. The contest has, from that time to the present, been urged before the State legislatures, before Congress, before the War Department (as having-charge of appropriations to be spent in the improvement of navigation at these points), and in the courts, where there have been several suits before the one we are now. about to decide.

The -present suit Was brought by State of Wisconsin,' on the ground that the channel of .the St. Louis River, as it flowed in a state of nature, w;as the common boundary between that State and the State, of Minnesota, and that she has an interest, in the-continuance of the channel as an important highway for navigation and commerce in its natural' and usual course; That the ' canal cut by Duluth across Minnesota Point,-deeper " than,, the natural outlet of the S.t. Louis River at its mouth, has diverted, . and will continue to divert, the current- of that river through Superior Bay into the lake'by "way of that canal. That the result of this is, that while the current cuts that canal deeper, .and gives an. outlet for the water there at a lower level, it at ■the. same time, by diverting this current -from the old outlet, causes it to fill up, and thus destroys the usefulness of the river; ancj bay as an aid of commerce, on which the- State had a right to rely. The bill,-after recitirig the facts which we have already ' detailed, insists that the-city of Duluth .cannot, by any right of *382 her own por by any authority conferred on. her by the State .' •of Minnesota, thus, 'divert the waters; of the stream.— the St. Louis E.iv°^ - from their natural'course, to the prejudice of the rights of the\ State of Wisconsin or of' her citizens. It declares, that',/this caxiai at Duluth does this in violation of law; and it ' pj/áys of this court to enjoin1 Duluth from protecting or maintaining it, and by, way of mandatory injunction to compel that city to fill up the canal and. restore things in that regard to the condition of .nature in which they were before the -.canal was made. '

The answfer, while admitting the construction of the canal, denies almost every other, material allegation of the'bill.- It’ denies esp‡cially that the canal has .the effect of changing the course of the current of the river, or does any injury to the southern entrance tó Superior Bay or diminishes the flow of ' Water at that point.

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Bluebook (online)
96 U.S. 379, 24 L. Ed. 668, 1877 U.S. LEXIS 1676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wisconsin-v-duluth-scotus-1878.