Case ID: f_76/html/0476-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "DELANEY, District Judge.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

LEWIS et al. v. JOHNSON.
    (District Court, D. Alaska.
    September 23, 1896.)
    1. Littoral Bights.
    Citizens of the United States claiming, in good faitli, uplands in Alaska, and in actual occupation and possession thereof, take the same littoral rights as are incident to ownership in fee.
    2. Bight of Access to Deep Water.
    Among these is the right of access over and across abutting tidelands to deep water.
    3. Ihjunotioh.
    Equity will interfere by injunction to prevent the impairment or destruction of such right.
    (Syllabus by the Court.)
    
      Bill in equity to restrain erection of structures on tidelands, in front of upland lots owned by the plaintiffs.
    Demurrer by defendant.
    Johnson & Heid (R. F.. Lewis, on brief), for plaintiffs.
    J. F. Maloney (John Trumbull, on brief), for defendant.
   DELANEY, District Judge.

The plaintiffs allege that they are the owners, by claim, possession, and occupation, of a certain lot of ground at Juneau, abutting on the tide waters of Gastineaux Channel, an arm of the North Pacific Ocean, and that defendant has commenced the erection of certain structures on tin; abutting tidelands in front of such lot, which, if completed, will destroy or impair the littoral rights of the plaintiffs incident to said lot-of ground, and pray relief by injunction. It is contended by the defendant upon the demurrer (1) that the upland owner, even in fee simple, has no rights in abutting tidelands by virtue of such ownership; (2) that, granting such rights to exist as incident to ownership in fee, the plaintiffs have no such title to the uplands described in the bill as will vest them with any littoral or riparian rights; and (2) that the proper remedy is at law, and equity ought not to interfere.

The court feels obliged to dissent from all of these propositions. Whatever conflict of authoriiy may heretofore have existed in regard to littoral rights of upland owners in adjoining tidelands, the law may now be considered as finally settled by the courts of last resort both in England and this country. Under comparatively recent decisions of the house of lords, the law in England now is that the owner of land fronting on a navigable river, in which the tide ebbs and flows, has a right of access from his land to the river, and may recover compensation for the cutting off of that access by the construction of public works authorized by parliament by an act which provides for compensation for injuries affecting lands, “including easements, interests, rights, and privileges in, over, or affecting lands.’’ 25 & 26 Viet. c. 93, § 4. The right thus recognized, however. is not a title in the soil below high-water mark, nor a right to build thereon, but a right of access only, analogous to that of an abutter upon a highway. Buccleuch v. Board, L. R. 5 H. L. 418; Lyon v. Fishmongers' Co., 1 App. Cas. 662. It has been further held that the rales here laid down must apply to every country where the same general law of riparian rights prevails, unless excluded by some positive rule or binding authority of the lex loci. Railway Co. v. Pion, 14 App. Cas. 612, 620, affirming 14 Can. Sup. Ct. 677. The same rules undoubtedly apply to navigable arms of the sea. The law laid down in these cases has been quite recently affirmed by the supreme court of the United States in a most exceptionally learned and exbanstive opinion covering the entire field of the law of littoral and riparian lights in this country. Shively v. Bowlby, 152 U. S. 1, 14 Sup. Ct. 548. The rules laid down in these decisions are therefore the law of this court.

After a mature consideration of the subject, the court is not prepared to hold that a bona fide claimant, in actual possession and occupation of a lot of ground on the public lands, -which abuts on tide water, does not take all the littoral or riparian, rights of an owner in fee. Reason and equity are on the other side of the question. For a long period o| years the federal government has not only conceded to American citizens the right to enter upon, possess, and improve public lands, but it has encouraged them so to do, by reserving to the bona fide settler the first right to a patent to the land so possessed and improved by him. This policy has obtained in both the legislative and executive branches of the government, and has met the approval of the courts. Clements v. Warner, 24 How. 394; Shepley v. Cowan, 91 U. S. 330; Ard v. Brandon, 156 U. S. 537, 15 Sup. Ct. 406. It therefore partakes of the nature of a guaranty on the part of the United States that the actual settler and bona fide occupant, within reasonable limits, may perfect his title in fee against all comers, whenever the lands are opened by congress for entry at the land offices. Lands are valuable only for the uses that may' be made of them. They may be valuable for residential purposes, for the erection of business blocks, as sites for manufacturing plants, for the water powers afforded by streams running through them, for the timber growing thereon, for parks and places of summer resort or recreative outings, for agricultural and grazing purposes, and for the littoral and riparian privileges appurtenant or incident to them. The proposition that the courts are not open to the owner in fee for the preservation of any of the rights incident to landed property above mentioned would be dismissed by every court in the civilized world, without the grace of a moment’s consideration. What tenable ground is there from which to assert that the bona fide settler on and in actual possession of a piece of public land has not an equal right in the forum of the court? And, if he may maintain any one of the rights incident to ownership in fee, why not all? The soil is his against all the world except the United States. The neighbor of the owner in fee may not convert the front yard of the latter’s residence into a cesspool, nor flood his business house with water, nor undermine the foundation of his manufacturing establishment, nor divert the water flowing through his land so as to destroy the water power it affords* nor cut his growing timber, nor convert his park into a stock yard, nor cover his wheat field, pasture, or meadow with the débris of an hydraulic mining camp, nor cut off his access to deep water over an abutting tide flat. Can it be-said that the law affords the owner in fee remedies against all these things, but the bona fide settler on and in actual posséssion of public lands, upon which he may have passed the best years of his life in honest labor to improve and beautify, must sit by and see his lot of ground permanently injured or destroyed, because the law gives him np remedy for want of letters patent which he may certainly obtain whenever congress opens the land for purchase? If the courts must fold their hands while the settler on public lands is being thus deprived of all that is valuable in the land he occupies, the liberal policy the government has extended to him will be defeated; and, when the time comes that he may acquire his title, his patent may bring to him but a barren estate, stripped of all that may give it value. The court cannot persuade itself that this is the law. On the contrary, in furtherance of the general policy of the government, and within the purview of the act providing a civil government for Alaska (23 Stat. 24, § 8; Supp. Rev. St. p. 433), and the act of March 3, 1891 (26 Stat. 1095, § 12; Supp. Rev. St. p. 944), the court will maintain a.nd enforce, in behalf of the bona ñde settler in actual possession of lands in Alaska, all the rights appurtenant or incident to such lands which a title in fee would vest in him, saving only the paramount rights of the United States as the sovereign owner of the soil. Included within these rights of the settler who holds lands abutting on tide water is the right of access over and across fronting tidelands to deep water, as now determined by the highest courts of England and this country. The right certainly brings with it the remedy, and where the law side of the court affords no plain, speedy, and adequate remedy, as in the case of the erection of structures which impair or destroy this right of access, equity will interfere. The demurrer is overruled, with 30 days to answer.