Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 1953 )


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  • Hon. W. G. Woods,     Jr.           Opinion No. S-107
    County Attorney
    Liberty County                      Re:    Fishing rfghts of
    Liberty, Texas                             the public in and
    along navigable rivers
    'bordered by Mexican
    Dear Mr. Woods:                            land grants.
    Your request for an opinioi    of this   office       con-
    tains    the following  specific questions:
    "1:  What Is the boundary line between
    state and rlparlan   ownership along the Trinity
    River where it is navlgable In fact as well as
    navigable  in flaw as defined in R.C.S. Art. 5302,
    and the land on each side of said river was
    granted during 1835 by the Supreme Government
    of Coahuila and Texas, such grants extending
    their boundaries   to the margin of said river?
    "2; What right,  if any, does the publi,c
    have to use the Trinity River and its bed and
    banks an-and   bars in the~area described  in
    the facts set out, to wit, where the river iies
    between two Mexican grants made In 1835?
    “3 : According to the facts above men-
    tioned, are those persons who reached the
    Trinity River by way of the dedicated right
    of way on either side of said river end then
    walk up and down the banks, the sand bars and
    in the bed of said river staying within the
    cut hanks and vegetation  lines,  trespassing
    within the purview of T.P.C. 13771
    -
    ‘14: Can the ripar'lan owner legally   ex-
    tend his fences down into the river water,
    place posted signs on said fences,    and pre-
    vent the public crossing   such fences,  or other-
    wise obstruct  their travel up z:nd down the hed
    and bank of said river?
    .   *
    Eon. W. G. Woods,    Jr.,   page 2 (S-107)
    "5s Can the riparlan    who owns land on the
    north and south side of the dedicated right of
    way of State Highway T-105 on the east side of
    the Trinity River legally     tie his fences ofi the
    right-of-way    lint across such right-of-way       line
    into or to abut the state bridge which crosses
    the river In such a manner as to obstruct          the
    right-of-way    down to the river,   place slgne
    reading ‘Posted,     Private Property,   1po Hunting     -
    Fishing,‘.   and prevent the public from using
    the right of way?”
    The extent and effect  of land grants made in
    Texas nrlor to the adontion of the common law must be
    determined-according   tb the rules of clvll   law. Miller
    v. Leteerich,   
    121 Tex. 248
    , 
    49 S.W.2d 404
    (1932); State
    --
    V.  Grubstake Inr. Ass’n, 
    117 Tex. 53
    297 S.W.2d 202
    
            Tlg27).  Allen  v. West Lumber Co., 
    244 S.W. 499
    (Tex.
    Comm.A;p.l922).
    The line of demarcation betweea the stream bed
    and grants bordering the stream was establfahed     by the
    Supreme Court in Mot1 v. Boyd, 
    116 Tex. 82
    , 
    286 S.W. 458
            (19.23)) where the Court “adopted the same method for de-
    fining and marking the line between public and private
    ownership along the banks of a stream navigable accord-
    ing to the definition   of the statute ,$rticle  53Og as
    was used by the Supreme Court of the United States In de-
    fining and marking the boundary line between Texas and
    Oklahoma. ” Dlverslongy       Club v. Heath, 
    126 Tex. 129
    ,
    
    86 S.W.2d 441
    , 44     1    1   In Oklahoma v. Tea,.   
    260 U.S. 606
    ,.631 (l&     , the ’Court held
    II. . . that the bank intended by the treaty
    provision   is the water-washed aad relatively
    permanent elevation    or acclivity at the outer
    line o? the river bed which separates the bed
    from the adjacent upland, whether valley or
    hill,   and serves to confine the waters within
    the bed and to preserve the course of the
    river,   and that the boundary intended Is on
    and along the bank at the average or mean level
    attained by the waters In the periods when
    they reach and wash the bank without overflow-,
    ing It.    When we speak of the bed we Include
    all of the area which is kept practically      bare
    of vegetation    by the wash of the waters of the
    Hou. W. G. Woods, Jr.,   page 3 (S-107)
    river from year to year la their onward
    course, although parts of it are left dry
    for moathe at a time; aad we exclude the
    lateral   valleys which have the characterls-
    tics of relatively     fast land and usually--
    are covered by upland grasses and vegeta-
    tion, although temporarily      overflowed in
    exceptional    Instances when the river Is at
    flood.”
    Ia Mot1 v. Boyd, su ra, the above d~fiUt;lba
    was said to be “consistent -5-i the Mexican OF Spanish
    wit
    law oa the subject .” (286 S.W. at 469.)         __
    The Texas Supreme Court In DivdrBPoii L%kh~Clbb
    v. Heath, su ra    agala quoted approvingly from Oklahoma
    -
    V. Texaa as-9 fo lows:
    “The line was still    more definitely
    aad practically   deacrlbed in the report
    of the Commlsalonera, 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 flow-
    ing water that just reaches the cut bank
    and the higher level of it that just does
    not overtop the cut bank. I”
    Other cases recognizing   and applying thla
    State’v.  Bradford,  
    121 Tex. 515
    , 50 S.W.2d
    Maufrala v. State, 
    142 Tex. 559
    , 180
    In &mtsii&rto’ your sacond questlbh;-the Supreme
    Court la Diversion Lake Club v. 
    Heath, supra
    , held that,
    “Because of the state’s    ownership of
    the beds of statutory     navigable   streama and
    of their banks up to the line aa above de-
    fined bradtent     l.in$~, the public may use
    their beds and banks up to such line for
    fishing.     Beyond that line,   unless the rule
    of civil    law la applied,  they have no right
    to go without the conseat of the riparlan
    laadowaer . ” (86 S.W.2d at 447.)
    .   -
    Hon. W. 0. Woods, Jr.,   page 4 (S-107)
    The court stated that It was not necessary la
    that case  to decide, aad the court did not decide,     ‘whether
    the rlghts  of the public to use the banks of streams In
    this state  where the;r are bordered by grants made under
    Spata$ah.or Mexican sovereignty   are in say respect dlffereat
    hts of the public herein de,termlned.”    (86 S.
    However, the court recognized  the civil   law
    to be as follows:
    “With reference    to the civil  law, Fara-
    ham says: ‘By the civil      law the public uai”
    of the banks of a river was part of the law-
    of aatlons,    just as that of the river Itself .I
    Farnham’s Water aad Water Rights,       vol. 1, p.
    662.    One of the lawa of the Partidas-prov’idis:
    ‘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 rlght to use them, by mooring
    his vessels    to the trees, by repairing    his
    ships and his sails upon them, ‘amd by larldlng
    hle merchandise there; and fishermen have. the
    rl.ght to deposit their flab and sell them,
    aad dry their nets there, and to use sald banks
    for every other purpose like those which ap-
    pertain to the calling      and the trade by which.
    they live.’      Las Slete Partldati (C .C.B. 19 l),
    part III,   title XXVIII, law VI, p. 821.
    86 S.W.2d at 447
    .)
    In State v. Grubstake IPV. Asa’n, 117 T&x: 53; 297
    s.w.2d 202, 203 (1927)   the court said- that- the 'owner 'or rl-
    parian laad granted by*Coahulla aad Texas in 1835 ‘acquired
    title  to the river bank, yet such title  was burdermed with
    certain servitudes .” The “servitudes”   are those set forth
    In the portion of the Partldas quoted In Diversion    Lake Club
    v. Heath, B.
    It is also made clear In Diversion   Lake Club v.
    h
    
    Heath, supra
    , that the persona who reac
    %ii&     set forth 1~ your third question are not trespassers
    under Article    1377 of the Penal Code.  In that case the
    fisherman “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 lake
    near the upper end of the lake.’     (86 S.W.2d at 442.) The
    court held that under such circumstances     they were not tres-
    passers.
    Hon. W. G. Woods, Jr.,    page 5 (S-107)
    The fence described      la your iifth  queetioa  is
    a trespass   upon the highway right of way and Is in the.
    exact position    relative    to the bridge aa the fence con-
    demned in Cornellson       v. State, 
    49 S.W. 384
    (Tex.Crim.App.
    1899).   That this fence and the fences described         in your
    fdurth question cannot be 80 maintained as to prevent
    the public from gaining access to the river by means of
    the highway right of way or to prevent them from going
    up and down the river in boats and fishing         in its waters
    ie likewise   settled    by Diversion Lake Club v. 
    Heath, supra
    .
    SUMMARY
    The.publlc    may use the bed and bank8 of
    the Trinity River up to the gradient boundary
    for fishing     and may make certain uses of its
    banks above that line if they are held under
    civil-law     grants.    The rlparlaa owners caeaot
    prevent the public from gaining access to the
    river by means of a highway right of way by
    erection     of a fence thereon and cannot prevent
    the public from going up and down the river
    in boats and fiahlng       In Its waters by the
    erection     of fences across the river.
    APPROVED:                         Youra very truly,
    Burnell Waldrep                   JaNBEN     SHEPPERD
    Reviewer                          Attorney   General of Texas
    Wlllls  E. Gre&am
    Reviewer
    Robert S. Trottl                     Mert Staraes
    First Aeeistaat
    Johr Ben Shepperd
    Attorney General