Benner's Lessee v. Platter
Benner's Lessee v. Platter
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court:
If, in legal contemplation, the main branch of Paint creek to its center or channel is the boundary of Taylor’s survey, the plaintiff has no title; but if the creek described was the ravine, or the inner side of what is called the island, 'then the plaintiff has a legal title to the island.
As we understand Taylor’s survey, the creek is its boundary, It begins on the upper side of the mouth of' a branch, thence up the creek bounding thereon. It is difficult for us to understand how any one can dispute the proposition that such description makes the creek the boundary. We entertain no doubt it is the legal boundary in this case. A boundary on a stream like Paint creek, not navigable, is a call for the channel or middle of the creek. A call for Paint creek is a call for the main stream, not a mere branch of the creek. Whether the *tract claimed as [508 an island be one, that is, land permanently surrounded by water, or a peninsula, sometimes insulated by water flowing through a ravine, or into a bayou, makes no difference. The boundary being-the main channel or center of the creek, islands, properly so called, will belong to the proprietor of- that side of the channel where the island is found. This disembarrasses the case of the inquiry, whether the creek is an island or not. The main branch of Paint creek is between the ground called an island and King’s survey, not between the island and the main land of Taylor’s survey.
King’s survey covered the land on the upper side of the creek to its channel. Taylor took the other aide to the same channel. As the same line bounded the opposite proprietors, there could be no unappropriated land which Benner .had a right to survey and appropriate to himself; therefore the survey and patent to-him convey nothing.
The case of McCulloch’s Lessee v. Aten, 2 Ohio, 309, has been
We are strengthened in this bolief by a later case decided in bank, Gavit v. Chambers and Coates, 3 Ohio, 496, where the rights •of a grantee bounded on the Sandusky river, a stream by the court regarded as navigable, were settled. The opinion of the eourt in that case examined the doctrine of boundaries upon such streams. The court holds all grants by the United States upon such waters to be subject to the rule pf the common law, which, in such cases, is the plain rule of common sense. It is, say the
Section 9 of the act of Congress for the disposition of the United States lands in the Northwest territory is pressed upon our consideration as settling the question in this case, and making the bed of the river common to proprietors bounding on the river. In the case of Gavit v. Chambers and Coates, the court held that provision “ confined to reserving the use of navigable rivers, and to declaring the existence of the common law doctrine in respect to streams not navigable,” making the right to the soil in unnavigable rivers individual property to the middle of the stream, and the use of the stream common to them. But the act is not supposed to bear upon the case before the court, because by its express terms its provisions are limited to lands to be disposed of by the act. The lands lying between the Scioto and Little Miami rivers are not disposed of by *the law, but were reserved [510 before its passage to satisfy Virginia military warrants.
I have examined with some care a number of authorities pressed upon the court by the counsel for the defendant with unusual earnestness and pertinacity. I am unable to elicit from the decisions any principle at all conflicting with any point decided by this court at the trial or maintained now. There are many things connected with the adjustment of settlement, rights, and entries, connected with the improvements of the locator, the figure, the surveys, and the general convenience of the country that have no application, except to countries and rights similarly situated. There, as here, however, where there are several' calls in the deed or survey which conflict with each other, that one yields to the others which is least essentially to affect the general object of the survey, the certain description of a tract of land. Upon that principle it was decided, in 3 Bibb, 205, that when it is apparent that the description binding on the creek forms no part of the boundary, as particularly described in the deed, and can
The law on the point reserved is with the defendant, and the Verdict and judgment will be entered accordingly
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Benner's Lessee v. Platter and others
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published