Diversion Lake Club
v.
Heath
86 S.W.2d 441
TEX. 1935.
Oct. 2, 1935
Error to Court of Civil Appeals of Third Supreme Judicial District.
Suit by the Diversion Lake Club against R. W. Heath and others, in which
defendants filed a cross-action. The judgment, partly adverse to plaintiff was
affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals 58 S.W. 2d 566), and plaintiff brings
error.
Judgments of the trial court and the Court of Civil Appeals affirmed.
{1} Navigable Waters 270
Lands Under Water
Ownership and Control in General
Ownership by State.
Where surveys pursuant to which land was granted on both sides of river fronted
on river but did not cross it, title to bed of river was reserved in state.
{2} Fish 176
Fish in Public Waters.
English common-law rule giving to riparian owners along navigable streams above
tidewater the exclusive right to fish therein because of their ownership of
stream beds held not applicable in determining right to fish in navigable
streams in Texas, beds of which are owned by state for benefit of public.
Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. art. 1.
{3} Navigable Waters 270
Rights of Public
Navigation
In General.
Rivers navigable in fact are navigable in law and are public rivers and may be
used by public for navigation and other lawful purposes.
{4} Common Law 85
Adoption and Repeal
Constitutions and Statutes of Particular States. Texas, only so much of
common-law of England has been adopted as is not inappropriate to conditions and
circumstances of the people and as is not in conflict with Constitution and laws
of Texas. Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. art. 1.
{5} Navigable Waters 270
Lands Under Water
Ownership and Control in General
Ownership by State.
Statute of 1837 held intended and effective to make all streams navigable in law
and public which have an average width of 30 feet, whether they are actually
navigable or not, and by such statute the beds of all such streams were reserved
to the state Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. art. 1.
{6} Navigable Waters 270
Rights of Public
Navigation
In General.
Statutory navigable streams in Texas are public and their beds and waters are
owned by state in trust for benefit of people and subject to use by public for
navigation, and other lawful purposes to same extent as streams navigable in
fact. Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. art. 5302.
{7} Fish 176
Fish in Public Waters.
Right to fish in public water does not carry with it right to cross or trespass
upon privately owned land to reach the water.
{8} Fish 176
Fish in Public Waters.
Where predecessor of riparian owner on both sides of statutory navigable stream
created authorized artificial diversion lake, flooding part of riparian lands,
injunction restraining defendants from trespassing on lands surrounding waters
of lake while permitting defendants to go upon the lake from public road which
crossed upper end of lake on a low bridge held proper. Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St.
art.4026, 5302.
{9} Fish 176
Fish in Public Waters.
Where predecessor of riparian owner on both sides of statutory navigable stream
created artificial diversion lake, flooding part of riparian lands, public held
to have right to fish not only in the part of the water above the original river
bed but in that part of water above the diversion lake bed owned by riparian
owner, since the water remained public water. Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. art. 4026,
5302.
{10} Fish 176
Fish in Public Waters.
Permit to riparian owner on statutory navigable stream to impound and divert
water for irrigation, under which permittee constructed dam and created
diversion lake, gave no title to water or fish in water of lake and no exclusive
right to take fish from lake and conferred no right to interfere unnecessarily
with public in public's use of river and its water for navigation, fishing, and
other lawful purposes. Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. art. 4026, 5302, 7467, 7468, 7473,
7476, 7492, 7515, 7543.
{11} Fish 176
Fish in Public Waters.
Where predecessor of riparian owner on both sides of statutory navigable stream
created artificial diversion lake, flooding part of riparian lands, the public,
though having right to fish in diversion lake, had no right to use banks of lake
for fishing without owner's consent, especially where the land was enclosed
partly by fence and partly by water of lake. Vernon's Ann. art. 1377; Vernon’s
Ann. Civ. St. art. 4026, 5302.
{12} Navigable Waters
Lands Under Water
Ownership and Control in General
Ownership by State.
Boundary line between public and private ownership along streams declared by
statute to be navigable is a gradient of the flowing water in the stream and is
located midway between the lower level of the flowing water that just reaches
the cut bank and the higher level of it that just does not overtop the cut bank.
{13} Fish 176
Fish in Public Waters.
Statute authorizing appropriation of state's waters for purpose of game
preserves and recreation and pleasure resorts, and permit authorizing such
appropriation by riparian owner which had created lawful diversion lake by
damming statutory navigable stream held not to grant permittee right to fish in
lake to exclusion of public. Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. arts. 4026, 7470a.
Fish
Fish in Public Waters.
Rivers navigable in fact are navigable in law and are public rivers and may be
used by public for fishing.
Fish
Fish in Public Waters.
Statutory navigable streams in Texas are public, and their beds and waters are
owned by state in trust for benefit of people and subject to use by public for
fishing to same extent as streams navigable in fact. Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. art.
5302.
Navigable Waters
Rights of Public
Navigability in General
In General.
Rivers navigable in fact are navigable in law and are public rivers.
Navigable Waters
Rights of Public
Navigability in General
Statutory Declaration as to Navigability.
Statute of 1837, held intended and effective to make all streams navigable in
law and public which have an average width of 30 feet, whether they are actually
navigable or not. Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. art. 5302.
Navigable Waters
Rights of Public
Navigability in General
Statutory Declaration as to Navigability.
Statutory navigable streams in Texas are public and their beds and waters are
owned by state in trust for benefit of people and subject to use by public for
lawful purposes to same extent as streams navigable in fact. Vernon’s Ann. Civ.
St. art 5302.
Templeton, Brooks, Napier & Brown, W. L. Matthews, and Hertzberg &
Kercheville, all of San Antonio, for plaintiff in error.
Ocie Speer, of Austin, and Ben H. Kelly and Marcus W. Davis, both of San
Antonio, for defendants in error.
SMEDLEY, Commissioner.
This case presents the interesting and important question: Do the public have
the right to fish in a lake created by the lawful construction of a dam across a
river not navigable in fact, but declared to be navigable by statute, or does
the exclusive right to fish in such lake belong to one who owns both the bed of
the lake, except that part of same which was originally the bed of the river,
and the land bordering the lake on both sides?
{1} In the years 1911 and 1912, as part of an irrigation project, and under
authority given by the statutes pertaining to the appropriation of water for
irrigation and other purposes, two dams were built across the Medina river and
two lakes formed, the upper lake covering 5,800 acres and the lower lake, known
as Diversion Lake, covering about 150 acres when full. Prior to the construction
of the dam, Medina river, which is described as being as old as the watershed
and as draining about 700 square miles, was not navigable in fact, but it was,
according to the verdict of the jury, which is not questioned here, a navigable
stream as defined by article 5302 of the Revised Civil Statues of 1925 (the act
of 1837), in that it retained an average width of more than 30 feet from its
mouth up to the upper dam. The surveys pursuant to which the land in the
vicinity of the two lakes was granted by the state, in accordance with the
mandate of the statute, front on the river and do not cross it. Thus the title
to the bed of the river was reserved to the state.
Plaintiff in error, Diversion Lake Club, a corporation formed about the year
1926, became the owner of two strips of land, each about 1,500 feet in width and
4 miles in length, fronting on what were originally the two banks of the river,
and extending from the dam forming Diversion Lake up to the dam forming the main
or upper lake, but not including either the bed of the river or a public road
which crosses Diversion Lake near its upper end.
Plaintiff in error constructed a deer proof fence around the land which it
acquired, stocked the lake with fish procured from the United States government,
and improved the property for the use of its members for fishing, hunting,
boating, and bathing.
Defendants in error, citizens of the state and residents of Bexar and Medina
counties, entered the waters of Diversion Lake and fished in it by placing their
boats into the water from the low bridge on which the public road crosses the
river and the lake near the upper end of the lake. Thus they were able to obtain
access to the waters of the lake without trespassing upon the property of
plaintiff in error unless they became trespassers when they fished in the water
above that part of the bed of the lake to which plaintiff in error has title.
This suit was filed by plaintiff in error to enjoin defendants in error from
fishing in the waters of the lake or taking fish therefrom or trespassing upon
the land owned by plaintiff in error under and surrounding the lake. Defendants
in error Heath, Matthews, and Self by their answers asserted rights as members
of the public to use the waters of the lake for fishing as part of the water of
a navigable stream belonging to the state for the benefit of the public in
general. They asserted also the right to use the banks of the lake for fishing,
and sought by cross-action to enjoin plaintiff in error from interfering with
them in the exercising and enjoyment of their rights so to use the water and
banks of the lake.
The trial court rendered judgment granting plaintiff in error a permanent
injunction restraining defendants in error from going on or over, or trespassing
upon, or using for fishing, any of the land owned by plaintiff in error
surrounding the waters of Diversion Lake, and granted defendants in error a
permanent injunction restraining plaintiff in error from interfering with them
in their right to fish in the waters of the lake, and directed that the fences
of plaintiff in error across the river and lake be so maintained as not to
prevent defendants in error from going up and down the lake in boats and fishing
in its waters. This judgment was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals. 58 S.W.
2d 566.
The first contention made by plaintiff in error is that, because it is the owner
of all the land on both sides of Diversion Lake and the Medina river where the
lake was formed, it has the exclusive right to fish in the waters of the lake
and the river adjoining its land. The contention is based upon the rule of the
common law that the owner of land upon both sides of a navigable river above the
ebb and flow of the tide has the exclusive right of fishing in the stream to the
extent that it flows through his land, and upon the adoption by the state of
Texas in 1840 of the rules of the common law.
The authorities do indicate that the common law of England gave to the owners of
land along navigable rivers above the ebb and flow of the tide the exclusive
right to fish in such rivers. Hartman v. Tresise, 36 Colo. 146, 84 P. 685, 4
L.R.A. (N.S.) 872; Schulte v. Warren, 218 Ill. 108, 75 N.E. 783; Willow River
Club v. Wade, 100 Wis. 86, 76 N.W. 273, 42 L.R.A. 305; Kinney on Irrigation and
Water Rights (2d Ed.) vol. 1, p. 605; Farnham's Water and Water rights, vol. 2,
p. 1364; 26 C. J. p. 598; Kent's Commentaries (11th Ed.) vol. 4, p. 525.
This exclusive right to fish, however, was given to the adjoining landowners by
the common law of England by reason of the fact that they were the owners of the
beds of the rivers above tidewater. Farnham, in discussing the right to fish in
nontidal water in England, says: 'In England the King's title to the water
depends upon its tidal character, and, since the right to fish follows the title
to the water, his right, and therefore the right of the public, to fish went no
farther than the flow of the tide.' Farnham's Water and Water Rights, vol. 2, p.
1364.
Similarly, Kinney, in discussing the rule of the common law, says: 'The right to
fish in, or to hunt on certain waters, in the absence of grants or prescription,
is in harmony with the ownership of the soil under those waters; if the title to
the soil is in the State, the right to fish or hunt is in the public; but upon
the other hand, if the title to the soil is in the riparian owner, he has this
right.' Kinney on Irrigation and Water Rights (2d Ed.) vol. 1, p. 605.
The general rule is well established by the authorities that the right to fish
in a stream, whether belonging to the public in common or exclusively to the
owners of the land bordering the stream is determined by the ownership of the
bed. The Supreme Court of Illinois so held in Schulte v. Warren, 218 Ill. 108,
75 N.E. 783. Similarly, it was held by the Supreme Court of Colorado, in Hartman
v. Tresise, 36 Colo. 146, 84 P. 685, 4 L.R. A. (N.S.) 872, that at common law
the exclusive right to fish in a stream above the ebb and flow of the tide
belongs to the adjoining landowner as an incident of his ownership of the bed of
the stream. People v. Truckee Lumber Co., 116 Cal. 397, 48 P. 374, 39 L. R. A.
581, 58 Am. St. Rep. 183, holds that the common right to take fish extends to
all waters the lands underlying which are not in private ownership, whether the
water is navigable or not. The court announced the rule in Herrin v. Sutherland,
74 Mont. 587, 241 P. 328, 331, 42 A.L.R. 937, with citation of cases from
several states, that in this country the right of fishing in all waters, the
title to which is in the public, belongs to all the public in common. It then,
after pointing out that the state of Montana is the owner of all land below the
water of a navigable stream, concluded: 'Perforce, then, the waters above the
bed or channel of a navigable stream at low water mark are public waters, and in
this the public have a right to fish.'
See, also, note, 11 A. L. R. 241, and following; note, 60 L.R.A. 481, pp. 486,
487. State ex rel. Thompson v. Parker, 132 Ark 316, 200 S.W. 1014, Gratz v.
McKee (U.S.C.C.A.) 270 F. 713, 23 A.L.R. 1393;
{2} {3} {4} A rule of the common law of England which gave to owners of land
along navigable streams above tidewater the exclusive right to fish in such
streams because of their ownership of the beds of the streams can have neither
application nor value in determining the right to fish in navigable streams in
Texas, the beds of which are owned by the state for the benefit of the public.
The doctrine of the common law of England that the title of the owner of land
bordering on a river above the ebb and flow of the tide extends to the middle of
the stream, while adopted in some of the states, has been rejected by many of
them, particularly by those which, like Texas, have been touched by the civil
law, as inappropriate and inapplicable to the waters of this country; and the
rule of many of the states, often referred to as the better rule of the civil
law, is that rivers which are navigable in fact are public, and that the beds of
such rivers belong to the state. Manry v. Robison, 122 Tex. 213, 232, 56 S.W. 2d
438, Packer v. Bird, 137 U.W. 661, 11 S. Ct. 210, 34 L. Ed. 819; 27 R. C. L. pp.
1360, 1361; Gould's The Law of Waters, s 67, pp. 135, 136; Farnham's Water and
Water Rights, vol. 1, pp. 253-256.
In general it is held that all members of the public have a common right of
fishing in navigable streams and all other public waters. The rule is thus
stated by Kinney: 'The general rule in this country is that the right of hunting
and fishing by all the members of the public is not confined to tidal waters,
but has been extended to all of the public waters of the country which, as we
have seen, are those waters that are navigable in fact.' Kinney on Irrigation
and Water Rights (2d Ed.) vol. 1, p. 606. Farnham says: 'The right of fishing in
all waters, the title to which is in the public, belongs to all the people in
common.' Farnham's Water and Water Rights, vol. 2, p. 1363. See, also, Herrin v.
Sutherland, 74 Mont. 587, 241 P. 328, 42 A.L.R. 937; Hume v. Rogue River Packing
Co., 51 Or. 237, 83 P. 391, 92 P. 1065, 96 P. 865, 31 L.R.A. (N.S.) 396, 131 Am.
St. Rep. 732; 26. C. J. p. 602; 11 R. C. L. p. 1029.
In the states which reject the tidal test of navigability and public ownership,
rivers navigable in fact are navigable in law, they are public rivers, and their
beds as a rule are owned by the state, and, both because of their navigability
and because of the state's ownership of their beds, they may be used by the
public for navigation, fishing, and other lawful purposes.
But it is said that Texas adopted the common law and with it the rule giving to
landowners the exclusive right to fish in all nontidal rivers. As has been
shown, the rule has no proper application, because of the absence here of the
reason for the rule; namely, private ownership of the beds of navigable nontidal
rivers. However, even if the reason for the rule is disregarded, still it has
not been adopted in Texas, because only so much of the common law of England has
been adopted as is not inappropriate to the conditions and circumstances of the
people and not in conflict with our Constitution and laws. Article 1, R. S.
1925; Act approved January 20, 1840, 2 Gammel's Laws, p. 177; Grigsby v. Reib,
105 Tex 597, 601, 153 S.W. 1124, L.R.A. 1915E, 1, Ann. Cas. 1915C, 1011; Swayne
v. Lone Acre Oil Co., 98 Tex. 597, 605, 86 S.W. 740, 69 L.R.A. 986, 8 Ann. Cas.
1117, Carendon Land I.A. Co. v. McClelland Bros., 86 Tex. 179, 185, 23 S.W. 576,
1100, 22 L.R.A. 105; Davis v. Davis, 70 Tex. 123, 7 S.W. 826; Motl v. Boyd, 116
Tex 82, 115, 286 S.W. 458.
Chief Justice Cureton in Manry v. Robison, 122 Tex. 213, 232, 233, 56 S.W. 2d
438, 447, cited numerous instances in which the courts of this state, when
deciding questions of navigability of waters and of title to their beds, have
departed from the common law and adopted or followed the rules of the civil law,
and expressed the conclusion that: 'These illustrations suffice to show that as
to the law of streams we have only adopted such rules of the common law as are
suitable to our conditions and as are in harmony with the basic principles of
our jurisprudence with reference to the law of waters.' It is apparent that a
rule of the common law giving to landowners the exclusive right to fish in
navigable rivers is out of harmony with the basic principles of the
jurisprudence of a state which, pursuant to a statute in effect prior to the
adoption of the common law and held to be but an adaptation of the previous laws
of Mexico (State v. Grubstake Inv. Ass’n, 117 Tex. 53, 62, 63, 297 S.W. 202),
has jealously reserved for the benefit of its citizens the title to the beds of
even very small streams.
(5} {6} The common-law rule as to the right of fishing in navigable nontidal
streams was not adopted by the act of 1840, for the additional reason that such
rule was clearly inconsistent with article 5302, Revised Civil Statues of 1925,
in effect since 1837, which was intended and was effective to make all streams
navigable in law and public which have an average width of 30 feet, whether they
are actually navigable or not, and which reserved the beds of all such streams
to the state. City of Austin v. Hall, 93 Tex. 591, 57 S.W. 563.
That statute, it is to be observed, does not undertake to accomplish the
impossible and convert nonnavigable streams actually into navigable waters. It
states that streams of the average width of 30 feet 'shall be considered'
navigable streams, thus placing them by the force of the statute in the same
class as streams navigable in fact, and giving them the same quality and
character as streams actually navigable, in respect to the title to their beds
and their enjoyment and use by the public. The statute was so construed in City
of Austin v. Hall, supra, and that decision has been consistently approved and
followed by the Supreme Court.
In State of Texas v. Bradford, 121 Tex. 515, 528, 530, 50 S.W. 2d 1065, 1069,
where the subject-matter of the cause was a stream navigable by virtue of the
statute, Associate Justice Sharp, writing as commissioner the opinion of the
court, said, after quoting article 5302, and with citation of Austin v. Hall,
supra, and many other decisions: 'The rule long has been established in this
state that the state is the owner of the soil underlying the navigable waters,
such as navigable streams, as defined by statute, lakes, bays, inlets, and other
areas within tide water limits within its borders. If that section of the river
where these surveys in controversy were made be navigable, its bed undoubtedly
is the property of the state under that rule. In a long line of decisions the
courts of this state have consistently held that the public policy and laws of
this state prohibit surveys to be made across navigable streams so as to include
the soil under the bed thereof.' (Our italics.)
He further said, citing authorities: 'From its earliest history this state has
announced its public policy that lands underlying navigable waters are held in
trust by the state for the use and benefit of all the people.'
In Chicago, Rock Island, etc., Ry. Co. v. Tarrant County Water Control &
Improvement District No. 1, 123 Tex. 432, 446, 73 S.W. 2d 55, 63, it was held
that a franchise given by statute to a railway corporation to construct its road
across certain streams navigable by force of the statute was subordinate to the
power of the state to preserve the rights of the public in such streams and to
enact laws for the conservation and use of their waters by its citizens. Chief
Justice Cureton, in writing the opinion, carefully noted the fact that the
streams involved were 'navigable in law,' and in that connection said: 'Their
beds were owned by the state; their riparian waters held in trust by the state
for the benefit of its grantees whose lands touched their banks; and their flood
waters were the property of the state, 'to be controlled and disposed of by the
state for the best interests of all the people.''''
Thus it is apparent that statutory navigable streams in Texas are public
streams, and that their beds and waters are owned by the state in trust for the
benefit and best interests of all the people, and subject to use by the public
for navigation, fishing, and other lawful purposes, as fully and to the same
extent that the beds and waters of streams navigable in fact are so owned and so
held in trust and subject to such use.
{7} right to fish in public water does not carry with it a right to cross or
trespass upon privately owned land in order to reach the water. Herrin v.
Sutherland, 74 Mont. 587, 241 P. 328, 42 A.L.R. 937; Douglas v. Bergland, 216
Mich. 380, 185 N.W. 819, 20 A.L.R. 197; Farnham's Water and Water Rights, vol.
1, pp. 661, 662; 11 R. C. L. pp. 1033, 1034. This conclusion is in principle
supported by State v. Black Bros., 116 Tex. 615, 297 S.W. 213, 53 A.L.R. 1181,
where it was held that the state was not entitled to a way of necessity across
land privately owned to afford it and its oil and gas lessees a means of
entering upon and developing a river bed owned by the state. It was contended
that a reservation of a way of necessity should be implied on account of the
unity of title in the sovereign when the grants of the land bordering the stream
were made and because without such way of necessity there could be no complete
use and enjoyment of the river bed retained by the state. The existence of such
way of necessity was denied for the reason, among others, that it would be
contrary to the general theory of the rights acquired by patentees of lands and
guaranteed to private owners by the Constitution and would materially impair the
value and usefulness of the lands to the owners without compensation.
{8} Trial court correctly enjoined defendants in error from trespassing upon
any of the land owned by plaintiff in error surrounding the waters of the lake
while permitting them to go upon the lake from the public road which crosses the
upper end of the lake on a low bridge.
{9} {10} Plaintiff in error insists that, even if defendants in error should
be accorded the right to fish in the waters of the lake above what was the bed
of the river, they would in no event be entitled to fish in that part of the
water above so much of the bed of the lake as is owned by plaintiff in error.
This position is untenable, because the water of the lake, notwithstanding the
fact that most of its bed is privately owned, is still public water. It is a
part of the floodwater of Medina River which the irrigation company has the
right to impound and divert for irrigation. The permit acquired by the
irrigation company carried with it the incidental right to construct and
maintain the dam and the lake. It gave no title to the water, but only the right
to divert and use so much of the water appropriated as might be necessarily
required when beneficially used for the purpose for which it was appropriated.
R. S. 1925, arts. 7467, 7468, 7473, 7476, 7492, 7515, and 7543; Motl v. Boyd,
116 Tex. 82, 125, 126, 286 S.W. 458. It gave no title to the fish in the water
of the lake, no exclusive right to take the fish from the lake, and no right to
interfere with the public in their use of the river and its water for
navigation, fishing, and other lawful purposes further than interference
necessarily resulted from the construction and maintenance of the dams and lakes
in such manner as reasonably to accomplish the purpose of the appropriation.
When the irrigation company, plaintiff in error's predecessor in title,
constructed the dam across the river, it caused by its voluntary act the flood
waters of the river, public waters, to spread over the land which it had
acquired, submerging and in effect destroying a portion of the river bed, and
giving to the public waters a new bed. This artificial change in the river and
its bed did not affect the public nature of the waters and did not take away the
right of the public to use them for fishing Douglas v. Bergland, 216 Mich. 380,
185 N.W. 819, 20 A.L.R. 197; Mendota Club v. Anderson, 101 Wis. 479, 78 N.W.
185; Pewaukee v. Savoy, 103 Wis. 271, 79 N.W. 436, 50 L.R.A. 836, 74 Am. St.
Rep. 859; 27 R. C. L. p. 1205, s 122.
{11} Defendants in error Heath, Matthews, and Self have assigned error to the
action of the trial court and the Court of Civil Appeals in refusing to permit
them 'the right of reasonable use of the banks of the Medina River (and lake) in
the exercise of their right of fishery in the waters thereof.' They state that
the solution of the question presented by their assignment of error depends upon
the meaning of the word 'streams' as used in article 5302, arguing that the
statute had the effect of reserving to the state the entire stream, including
the banks as indispensable parts of the stream.
The statute does not in terms reserve to the state streams having a width of
more than 30 feet. It simply declares such streams to be navigable, and
prohibits surveys from crossing them, with the result that such streams are made
public and their beds are reserved to the state. The court, in City of Austin v.
Hall, 93 Tex. 591, 597, 57 S.W. 563, 564, 565, when construing the state and
stating the result of the making of surveys and grants in accordance with its
requirements, said: 'The grant of a tract of land upon the margin of a stream
which retains an average width of 30 feet gives title to the grantee only to the
water line of such stream; the title to the bed of the stream being reserved to
the state.'
Nothing is said in the opinion as to a reservation of the banks to the state,
and nothing is said to define the line between public and private ownership
along such streams except that it is at the water line.
In Motl v. Boyd, 116 Tex. 82, 109, 286 S.W. 458, however, the court deliberately
adopted the same method for defining and marking the line between public and
private ownership along the banks of a stream navigable according to the
definition of the statute as was used by the Supreme Court of the United States
in defining and marking the boundary line between Texas and Oklahoma. State of
Oklahoma v. State of Texas, 260 U.S. 606, 43 S. Ct. 221, 67 L. Ed. 428; Id., 261
U.S. 340, 43 S. Ct. 376, 67 L.Ed. 687. The Supreme Court of the United States,
in its decree defining the boundary line between the two states and appointing
commissioners to mark the line on the ground, thus described the south bank of
the river and the boundary between the states:
'The south bank of the river is the water-washed and relatively permanent
elevation or acclivity, commonly called a cut bank, along the southerly side of
the river which separates its bed from the adjacent upland, whether valley or
hill, and usually serves to confine the waters within the bed and to preserve
the course of the river.
'The boundary between the two states is on and along that bank at the mean level
attained by the waters of the river when they reach and wash the bank without
overflowing it.' State of Oklahoma v. State of Texas, 261 U.S. 340, 341, 342, 43
S. Ct. 376, 67 L. Ed.687, 688.
{12} The line was still more definitely and practically described in the
report of the commissioners, which was approved by the court, in the following
language: 'The boundary line is a gradient of the flowing water in the river. It
is located midway between the lower level of the flowing water that just reaches
the cut bank, and the higher level of it that just does not overtop the cut
bank.' State of Oklahoma v. State of Texas, 265 U.S. 500, 501, 44 S. Ct. 573,
576, 68 L.Ed. 1121.
Because of the state's ownership of the beds of statutory navigable streams and
of their banks up to the line as above defined, the public may use their beds
and their banks up to such line for fishing. Beyond that line, unless the rule
of the civil law is applied, they have no right to go without the consent of the
riparian landowner. Herrin v. Sutherland, 74 Mont. 587, 241 P. 328, 42 A.L.R.
937; Farnham on Water and Water Rights, vol. 1, p. 659, 661, 662; 11 R. C. L. p.
1033.
With reference to the civil law, Farnham says: 'By the civil law the public use
of the banks of a river was part of the law of nations, just as that of the
river itself.' Farnham's Water and Water Rights, vol. 1, p. 662. One of the laws
of the Partidas provides: 'And although the banks of rivers are, so far as their
ownership is concerned, the property of those whose lands include them,
nevertheless, every man has a right to use them, by mooring his vessels to the
trees, by repairing his ships and his sails upon them, and by landing his
merchandise there; and fishermen have the right to deposit their fish and sell
them, and dry their nets there, and to use said banks for every other purpose
like those which appertain to the calling and the trade by which they live.' Las
Siete Partidas (C. C. H. 1931), part III, title XXVIII, law VI, p. 821.
The civil law rule is, we think, more favorable to public ownership than is
appropriate to our conditions, and there is no necessity for its application, in
view of article 5302and the construction which has been given to that article.
The question under consideration is controlled, by article 1377 of the Penal
Code (as by article 1344 of the Penal Code (as amended by Acts of the 41st Leg.,
1st Called Sess. p. 242, c. 100, and 2d Called Sess. p. 41, c. 26 (Vernon's Ann.
P. C. art. 1377)), which prohibits hunting or fishing upon the enclosed land of
another without his consent and defines enclosed land as land which is enclosed
by fence or partly by fence and partly by water or stream. This statute
prohibits the public from using for fishing the banks of a stream above the line
between public and private ownership where the banks are within enclosed
premises as by it defined.
What has been said about the right of the public to use the banks of streams for
fishing has, of course, no practical application to the banks of the Medina
River, so long as they are submerged by the water of Diversion Lake. We find no
authority for holding that the public have as an incident to the right to fish
in Diversion Lake a right to use the banks of the lake, and it is our opinion
that they have no such right. There are no banks of the lake, either
superficially or geologically, comparable to the banks of a river. The water of
the lake merely reaches land owned by plaintiff in error at an elevation varying
with the quantity of water held in the reservoir. If it be said that the land
bordering the water of the lake constitutes the banks of the lake, then where is
the top of the banks, and what would mark the outer boundary of the land that
the public could use as banks for fishing? Furthermore, the use of plaintiff in
error's fast land (that is, the land adjoining but not below the water of the
lake) for fishing, without its consent, is prohibited by article 1377 of the
Penal Code above discussed, as that land is enclosed partly by fence and partly
by the water of the lake.
It is not necessary in this cause to decide, and we do not decide, whether the
rights of the public to use the banks of streams in this state where they are
bordered by grants made under Spanish or Mexican sovereignty are in any respect
different from the rights of the public herein determined. (The grants which
Diversion Lake touches were made by the state subsequent to 1840.) And no
opinion is intended to be expressed as to what use may be made in emergency, or
in other circumstances, of the banks of navigable streams by persons engaged in
commercial navigation.
{13} While the cause was pending in the Court of Civil Appeals, plaintiff in
error made application for, and procured the issuance by the board of water
engineers of, a permit to appropriate and use the water impounded in Diversion
Lake 'for the purpose of game preserve, recreation and pleasure resort.' This
permit was issued pursuant to article 7470a, Vernon's Ann. Civil Statutes (Acts
Reg. Sess. 39th Leg., c. 136, p. 341, s 1), which provides that: 'The waters of
the State may be appropriated as provided by law in addition to the purposes and
uses now provided by law, for the following purposes: Public parks, game
preserves, recreation and pleasure resorts, power and water supply for
industrial purposes and plants and for domestic use.'
These facts were brought to the attention of the court by written suggestion
signed by defendants in error, to which was attached a certified copy of the
permit issued by the board of water engineers, and in which suggestion it was
stated that plaintiff in error was claiming that the legal effect of the
issuance and its ownership of such permit was to confer upon it the exclusive
right to fish in Diversion Lake and to deprive defendants in error and other
members of the public of their rights to fish therein, notwithstanding the
judgments of the trial court and the Court of Civil Appeals. Counsel for
plaintiff in error upon the oral argument of the cause stated in open court
that, should it be decided herein that plaintiff in error did not have the
exclusive right to fish in Diversion Lake, it would thereafter assert and insist
upon its ownership of such right under the permit issued by the board of water
engineers. It becomes necessary to determine whether the issuance of the permit
had the legal effect claimed by plaintiff in error, as it is apparent that, if
it did, the questions involved herein and the cause are moot.
We do not find it necessary to decide whether an act of the Legislature
authorizing the granting to an individual or a corporation of an exclusive right
to fish in a part of the water of a public stream belonging to the state for the
use of all of its citizens would be violative of section 3 of article 1 of the
Constitution of Texas, which guarantees equal rights and prohibits exclusive
privileges, or of section 26 of the same article, which forbids monopolies, for
in our opinion neither the act of the Legislature nor the permit issued by the
board of water engineers undertakes to confer such exclusive right upon the
appropriator.
Article 7470a does nothing but name additional purposes for which the waters of
the state may be appropriated, among such additional purposes being public
parks, game preserves, recreation and pleasure resorts. The article is made a
part of the chapter entitled 'Use of State Water,' by which the board of water
engineers is created, and rules and regulations are prescribed for the
appropriation and use of the waters of the state. Article 7467 provides that the
waters of every flowing river or natural stream of the state 'are hereby
declared to be the property of the State, and the right to the use thereof may
be acquired by appropriation in the manner and for the uses and purposes
hereinafter provided, and may be taken or diverted from its natural channel for
any of the purposes expressed in this chapter.' Thus, upon compliance with the
terms of the statute, the water of a public stream may be used, taken, or
diverted for game preserves and recreation and pleasure resorts. Authority is
given by article 7468 to hold and store the waters in lakes or reservoirs for
the purposes for which they are appropriated, and by implication authority is
given to create reservoirs by building dams across public streams. The chapter
does not undertake to permit or prohibit or regulate the taking of fish from
public streams or from reservoirs made by damming such streams.
If the exclusive right claimed by plaintiff in error in virtue of the permit
exists, it must arise by implication from the mere granting of the right to
appropriate and use the water of the river for game preserve, recreation or
pleasure resort. An intention on the part of the Legislature to authorize the
taking from the public of the right to use public waters for fishing and the
conferring of the exclusive right to use such waters for that purpose upon one
person or corporation is not to be inferred from the general language used in
article 7470a.
In Landry v. Robison, 110 Tex. 295, 298, 219 S.W. 819, 820, the court held that
such general language as 'other public lands,' in the act of 1913 giving the
Commissioner of the General Land Office authority to issue permits to prospect
for oil and gas in lands owned by the state, did not include the soil beneath
navigable waters (San Jacinto river, navigable within the meaning of article
5302, and in so holding said: 'For our decisions are unanimous in the
declaration that by the principles of the civil and common law soil under
navigable waters was treated as held by the state or nation in trust for the
whole people. The trust impressed thereon withdraws such soil from the operation
of general provisions like those of the act of April 9, 1913, for the reason
that nothing short of express and positive language can suffice to evidence the
intention to grant exclusive private privileges or rights in that held for the
common use and benefit.'
A carefully considered opinion of the Supreme Court of Oregon ((Hume v. Rogue
River Packing Company, 51 Or. 237, 83 P. 391, 92 P. 1065, 1068, 96 P. 865, 31
L.R.A. (N.S.) 396, 131 Am. St. Rep. 732) discusses in detail the respective
rights of the public and riparian owners to fish in the navigable rivers of that
state, and holds void as in violation of a constitutional guaranty of equal
privileges and immunities a statute undertaking to grant to riparian owners
along navigable rivers the exclusive right to fish. In its consideration of the
proper construction to be given to grants of rights of fishery, the court said:
'Even where a mere right of fishery in public water has been conferred by the
sovereign, it will not be regarded as exclusive, in the absence of anything to
indicate an intention to make it exclusive, although the title to the soil is
also in the grantor.'
See, also, City of Galveston v. Menard, 23 Tex. 349, 397, Galveston City Surf
Bathing Company v. Heidenheimer, 63 Tex. 559, 563; Gustafson v. State, 40 Tex.
Cr. R. 67, 45 S. W. 717, 48 S.W. 518, 43 L.R.A. 615; Humphreys-Mexia Company v.
Arseneaux, 116 Tex. 603, 297 S.W. 225, 53 A.L.R. 1147; State v. Bradford, 121
Tex. 515, 530, 50 S.W. 2d 1065; Illinois Central R. Co. v. Illinois, 146 U.S.
387, 13 S. Ct. 110, 36 L.Ed. 1018, 1042.
The argument is made that an appropriation of water for a game preserve or
pleasure resort would be an idle ceremony, and that private persons or
corporations could not be expected to spend large sums of money to impound storm
waters in rivers and create large reservoirs or lakes if the public, on the
completion of such works, would have the same rights on the reservoirs as those
who had spent their money to create them. This argument is relevant to the
wisdom or value of a law authorizing the impounding of public waters in that
method and for such purposes, it does not justify reading into the statute the
granting of an exclusive right. Furthermore, it cannot be said that so much of
the statute which authorizes the appropriation of public waters for game
preserves and pleasure resorts is wholly inoperative if an exclusive right of
the character here claimed is not granted, for one may appropriate public water
for such purposes and divert it to his land and impound and use it there to the
exclusion of the public.
The construction sought to be given by plaintiff in error to article 7470a and
the legal effect claimed for the permit issued would be inconsistent and out of
harmony with article 4026, Revised Civil Statues of 1925 (Acts Reg. Sess. 39th
Leg., c. 178, s 1, art. 7, p. 438), which was enacted by the same Legislature
that enacted article 7470a, and which deals particularly with fish in public
waters, the title to the beds of such waters, and the use of the waters and
their beds for the taking and conservation of fish. It declares that the fish
and the other aquatic animal life contained in the fresh waters, rivers, creeks,
etc., of the state are the property of the people of the state, that all of the
public rivers, bayous, lakes, etc., in the state, together with their beds, and
all the products thereof shall continue and remain the property of the state of
Texas, and that, in so far as the use of such waters and beds shall relate to
the taking or conservation of fish, oysters, etc., they shall be under the
control of the game, fish, and oyster commissioner.
Since the permit issued to plaintiff in error by the board of water engineers
does not have the effect of giving it the exclusive right to fish in Diversion
Lake, or of depriving the public of their right to fish therein, the cause is
not moot.
The judgments of the trial court and the Court of Civil Appeals are affirmed.
Opinion adopted by the Supreme Court.