Court Opinion

ID: 3385005
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 18:38:22.245213+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:06:14.204113
License: Public Domain

The appeal in this case is from a final decree quieting title to a tract of land in Manatee County, which the evidence showed bordered upon the waters of Sarasota Bay. The decree found that the appellees were the owners in fee simple of the lands described in their bill, with all the rights of riparian owners and proprietors, *Page 32 
and that said lands extended to and were bounded on the West by the waters of Sarasota Bay, a navigable body of water, and quieted the title thereto as against all claims and demands asserted by the defendants or either of them, and removed and annulled the same as clouds upon the title of the complainants.
The decree also held that the deed from the Trustees of Internal Improvement Fund to the defendant, Ellen F. Caples, one of the appellants here, was of no force or effect and canceled and annulled the same as clouds upon the rights of the complainant, and enjoined the defendants from asserting any right, title or interest in and to the lands described in the decree.
The appellees derived their title through the foreclosure of a mortgage given by R.C. Caples and Ellen F. Caples on May 12, 1927, to T.C. Taliaferro, since deceased, and the subsequent foreclosure of said mortgage. It is alleged by appellees that at the time said mortgage was executed the Caples were the owners of said property and that on said date and at the present time the lands described were actually bounded on the West by and extended to the waters of Sarasota Bay, a navigable body of water. But it appears that subsequent to said mortgage, the Caples reconveyed the property to the I.I. Trustees, who in 1933 sold it under contract to Mrs. Ellen F. Caples. Appellees further contend that said mortgage deed conveyed to said T.C. Taliaferro, his heirs, administrators and assigns the said property (together with certain other property in Sarasota County, Florida), and together with all and singular the tenements, hereditaments and appurtenances thereunto belonging, or in any wise appertaining. The property was described in said mortgage deed as follows:
"Begin at Southwest corner of Lot three (3), Section *Page 33 
35, Township 35 South; Range 17 East, thence Fast along South line of said Lot three (3) 80 rods (said 80 rods extending 30 rods more or less into the West half [W 1/2] of the Southwest Quarter [SW 1/4] of Section Thirty-six [36], Township 35 South, Range East), thence North 20 rods — thence West 80 rods, to Sarasota Bay; — thence South 20 rods to place of beginning — seven acres more or less, in said Lot three (3) and three acres more or less, in West half (W 1/2) of Southwest quarter (SW 1/4) of Section 36, Township 35 South Range 17 East."
It will be observed that the above and foregoing description does not expressly convey riparian rights but the rule at common law, and which has been recognized in this jurisdiction, is that a conveyance or grant of land actually extending to and bounded by navigable water carries the riparian rights unless expressly reserved. See Thiesen v. G. F. F.  A. Ry. Co.,75 Fla. 28, 78 So. 491; Broward v. Mabry, 58 Fla. 398, 50 So. 826. And in the case of Panama Ice  Fish Company v. St. Andrews Bay R. R. Co., 71 Fla. 419, 71 So. 608, it was held that:
"A conveyance of land to which riparian rights to submerged lands are attached under the statute may carry riparian rights unless such rights are reserved or a contrary intent appears from the conveyance."
In the case of Thiesen v. G. F.  A. Ry. Co., supra, this court used this language:
"Taken alone, the words 'fronting on the Bay' certainly cannot be held to be sufficient to show that the land was actually bounded by and extended to the waters of a navigable bay."
This being so it was incumbent upon the plaintiff to show by evidence that the described land was actually bounded *Page 34 
by and extended to the waters of a navigable stream or bay of the sea or harbor.
The seventh headnote of the case of Brickell v. Trammell,77 Fla. 544, 82 So. 221, reads as follows:
"At common law those who own land extending to ordinary high water mark of navigable waters are riparian holders who, by implication of law, and in addition to the rights of navigation, commerce, fishing, boating, etc., common to the public, have in general certain special rights in the use of the waters opposite their holdings, among them being the right of access from the water to the riparian land and such other rights as are allowed by law."
And Trumbull v. McIntosh, 103 Fla. 708, 138 So. 34, also holds that the riparian rights of the owner of such lands abutting to navigable tide waters, including statutory riparian rights, pass with the conveyance of the up-lands.
Appellants contend, however, that at the time the mortgage was made in 1927 the Caples not only owned the uplands in question but also owned the submerged lands in front of said uplands under deed from the Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund, and that therefore the appellants Caples could not have intended to convey the riparian rights incident to the lands described, as above set forth.
Whatever may have been the undisclosed intention of the mortgagors, the fact remains that there is ample evidence in this case to show that the land described in the mortgage was and is actually bounded by and extended to the waters of Sarasota Bay, and that no land whatsoever intervenes between the uplands and said water. Furthermore, there is nothing in the mortgage to show any intention to reserve the riparian rights incident to said uplands property.
The common law riparian rights, at least, were therefore *Page 35 
conveyed by this deed of the upland property under the above and foregoing decisions. There is a distinction between the title to the soil under navigable waters and the riparian rights incident to the ownership of upland property abutting said water. This distinction is clear from a reading of our decisions and those in other jurisdictions. In this connection see Mobile Docks Co. v. City of Mobile (Ala.) 40 So. 205, 3 L.R.A. (NS) 822. But if the claim of title of the mortgagors to the submerged lands adjacent to the uplands described in the mortgage falls, as it must here, ab initio, I think it is beyond question that the riparian rights of the appellees remain in full force and effect.
In his final decree the chancellor held that the deed from the Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund to the appellant was of no force, virtue or effect and the same was by him canceled and annulled, and the court expressly found that the property in controversy was bounded on the West by the waters of Sarasota Bay, that the owners were riparian proprietors with the riparian rights and special property rights incident to such ownership, and that the property lying adjacent to and westwardly of the property above referred to, which was attempted to be sold and conveyed by the Trustees (first to both appellants Caples) and later to one of said appellants, was not within the classification included in the statutes of Florida authorizing sales by said Trustees and is not such property as the Trustees were and are authorized and vested with the power under the statute, to sell; and that the deed and subsequent contract from the said Trustees embraces and describes all of the shore land, as well as the submerged lands to the west. I am of the opinion that these conclusions of the Chancellor are sustained by ample evidence in the record. *Page 36 
My conclusion is that the decree appealed from should be affirmed on the authority of the above cited cases.
THOMAS. J., concurs.
                          ON REHEARING                              ORDER