State v. Erwin
Decision Date | 30 November 1931 |
Docket Number | 30695 |
Citation | 173 La. 507,138 So. 84 |
Court | Louisiana Supreme Court |
Parties | STATE et al. v. ERWIN et al |
Original Opinion of March 30, 1931. Reported at: 173 La. 507.
OPINION
The pertinent facts and questions of law involved in this suit are set forth in full in our original opinion and also in the dissenting opinion of Justice Rogers, and it is unnecessary to restate them here.
The members of the court have from the beginning concurred in the view that the body of water lying in Calcasieu and Cameron parishes, referred to as Calcasieu Lake, should be regarded as a lake and not as a river. But some of the members of the court did not subscribe to the view expressed in the majority opinion that articles 509 and 510 of the Civil Code with reference to accretion and dereliction do not apply to lakes but only to navigable rivers or bodies of running water. In the majority opinion we said: "Our conclusion is that these articles do not apply to lakes." Three of the justices dissented from that holding; the rehearing was granted, not because of any doubt in the minds of those who subscribed to the majority opinion that such holding is correct, but in order to reconsider the question whether Calcasieu Lake is an arm or part of the sea.
If in fact it is, the lands involved are not susceptible of private ownership; they belong to nobody in particular; they fall into the class of public things, "the property of which is vested in a whole nation, and the use of which is allowed to all the members of the nation." Civ. Code, arts. 450, 453.
We have with care and great interest read the most able and exhaustive briefs submitted by counsel for the state and other appellants. We have read the decisions of our own court and those of other jurisdictions cited in support of the contention made and those cited in support of the contrary view, and, after reading them, are thoroughly convinced that under the facts and conditions shown to exist in this case Calcasieu Lake is not an arm or part of the sea. So convinced, and adhering to our previous holding that articles 509 and 510 of the Code do not apply to lakes, it follows that our former decree must be reinstated.
We said in our former opinion:
Counsel say that, these being the admitted facts, it follows that this lake is an arm or part of the sea. Not so under our holding in the cases of Buras v. Salinovich, 154 La. 495, 97 So. 748, 750, and Morgan v. Nagodish, 40 La.Ann. 246, 3 So. 636, 640.
In the Buras Case it was held that the fact that land ...
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