v.
John H. Moore and George W. Bryan v. John H. Moore
The controversy relates to portions of the bed of what was at one time known as “Iowa Lake,” claimed to have been a body of water situated in Hamilton county, and in extent about a mile and a half each way, of very irregular out-liné, with a shore line of over six [*154] miles and an area of eight hundred and eighty-five acres. When the government urvey of the .'Urrounding land was made in 1849, the so-called lake was meandered, and the two plaintiffs own lots platted by the surveyor as bordering on this meander line. The bed of the lake is now practically dry land, and plaintiffs claim portions of the bed as having been added to their adjoining lots by accretion or reliction, and ask that either the whole bed of the lake be decreed as owned in common by the adjoining proprietors in proportion to the extent of their assumed shore line, or that by lines running from the intersections of their boundaries with such assumed shore line to some point which may .be found to be the center of the lake, portions of the lake bed may be set off to them in severalty. Defendant claims title to the entire bed of the so-called lake, within the meander line, under purchase of the same by his remote grantor from Hamilton county in 1896 as swamp land. As the claims of the appellants depend on the nature of the so-called lake, and the manner in which th:a water therein has receded or disappeared, it will be necessary to set out the facts in this respect as they appear from the record. There is practically no testimony of witnesses from personal knowledge as to the condition of the lake at the time of the government survey, but there is testimony showing substantially its condition from a time within ten years subsequent to the original survey down to the present time. About ten years after the survey, although previous to that time it had contained water, the so-called lake became practically dry during one season. Subsequently it refilled with water; but around its margins, and during some seasons throughout its entire extent, with the exception of perhaps one or two places where there was considerable depth of water (at one of these deeper points there is still a so-called pond), it was grown up with rushes and grass. It was swampy in character, — the bottom composed of prairie mud and a peaty substance. It [*155] had no definite shore line, but the ground around it sloped gradually down to and under the water. When full of water, the depth over its entire extent, with the exception of the one or two deeper places above referred to, did not exceed five or six feet, and it was shallower in the central portion; its greatest depth being along its sides. It had no s .rings or other subterranean sources of water supply, nor did it have any definite inlet, the water coming into it in the wet season from the general surface drainage of the surrounding country. It had a shallow outlet, called a creek, through which water flowed from it ^dien it was filled. This remained its substantial condition, so far as observed by witnesses, for about twenty years after it had become dry, within ten years of the survey; and after this period of twenty years the water became shallower, and it was less frequently filled, until about fourteen years before the bringing of these suits, when it became practically dry. At the present time, owing to the cultivation of the surrounding country, the surface water does not drain into it. Some of the witnesses liken it to ordinary prairie sloughs or ponds, save as to its greater extent. Within the memory of witnesses, the water has never, for any length of time, at least, come out to the meander line.
It is enough to say in the present case that there is no evidence of accretion or reliction. It does not appear that the drying up of the water of the lake resulted in gradual and imperceptible increment to the lands of plaintiffs. It is perfectly clear that the water did not slowly recede to a different shore line surrounding a remoter body of water, which further subsequently disappeared, extending the titles of the surrounding owners to the center, for the testimony all shows that the lake was shallower in the center than in some of its portions near the original margin line. In short, there is a total want of such evidence as has been held sufficient in the cases on the subject to show imperceptible additions, enlarging the areas of land [*157] owned by riparian proprietors. Jefferies v. Land Co., 134 U. S. 178 (10 Sup. Ct. Rep. 518, 33 L. Ed. 872); St. Clair Co. v. Lovingston, 23 Wall. 46 (23 L. Ed. 59); Welles v. Bailey, 55 Conn. 292 (10 Atl. Rep. 565, 3 Am. St. Rep. 48); Mulry v. Norton, 100 N. Y. 424 (3 N. E. Rep. 581, 53 Am. Rep. 206); Murry v. Sermon, 8 N. C. 56. The question we are now considering is practically controlled by the conclusion of the court in Noyes v. Collins, 92 Iowa, 568, which was analogous, save in that the lake was rendered dry within a year by drainage; but the recession of the water .from the land was no more sudden during the year during which the lake there Considered was drained .than it was in this case when the lake became dry for the last time. The insuperable difficulty with plaintiffs’ claims, under the doctrine of accretion or reliction, is that there is no evidence to support them. See Hodges v. Williams, 95 N. C. 331 (59 Am. Rep. 242).
[*158]
It is true, the meander line is not a boundary riñe, in a strict sense, and that if the surveyor does meander a body of water constituting a lake, which is proper to be meandered, then the titie of the purchasers of the adjoining lots or fractional divisions extends to the actual waterline; but if there is no body of water corresponding to the meander line, to which the ownership of the holders of the adjoining subdivrs ons can extend-, then the meander [*159] line limits the extent of the land conveyed. We conclude, therefore, that the original government patents to the lots now owned by plaintiffs did not confer any ownership beyond the meander line, and that the tracts of land thus conveyed by the government have never been extended by accretion or reliction so as to include any portion of the bed of this supposed lake.
The decree of the lower court denying relief to either the plaintiffs or the defenda-o dit, and it is affirmed.