Arkansas v. Tennessee, 310 U.S. 563 (1940)
Arkansas v. Tennessee, 310 U.S. 563 (1940)
563
60 S.Ct. 1026
84 L.Ed. 1362
STATE OF ARKANSAS
v.
STATE OF TENNESSEE.
No. 9, Original.
The State of Arkansas brought this suit against the State of Tennessee seeking a
decree determining the true boundary between the States at certain points and
confirming the jurisdiction and sovereignty of the State of Arkansas over the
described territory.
The bill of complaint set forth two counts. The first count presented the
contentions of Arkansas as to the boundary in relation to an area known as
'Needham's Island', later as 'Cutoff Island' or 'Moss Island', and to a contiguous
formation known as 'Blue Grass Towhead'. This is the only area which remains
in controversy, as the parties have agreed by stipulation upon the boundary line
to be fixed in relation to the land described in the second count.
Tennessee answered, contesting the claims of Arkansas and asserting by crossbill its jurisdiction and sovereignty over the territory in question.
The issues were referred to Monte M. Lemann as Special Master. 301 U.S. 666,
57 S.Ct. 920, 81 L.Ed. 1332. The Master has filed a careful and comprehensive
report recommending a decree in favor of Tennessee as to the area described in
count one, and in accordance with the stipulation as to that described in count
two. The case has been heard upon that report and the exceptions filed by
Arkansas.
5
The Master set forth the following facts as agreed upon by the parties:
'Prior to 1821, the land in controversy in this suit was on the west bank of the
Mississippi River and the main channel of the river flowed to the east thereof.
At the location involved in this suit, the river at that time flowed around a
twelve mile bend caused by the extension of a peninsula into the river from the
western shore. In 1821 an avulsion took place in the course of the river
occasioned by the waters cutting across the neck of this peninsula at a point
where it had become only half a mile wide due to caving of the river banks. At
the present time the main channel of the Mississippi River flows to the west of
the lands in controversy and has so flowed for many years prior to the present.
The original channel of the river is now, and has for many years been, filled up
so that the island originally created by the avulsion is now, and has for many
years been, physically connected to, and a part of, the eastern shore of the
river'.
After a review of the evidence upon points in dispute, the Master made a
summary of his findings and conclusions as follows:
'(1) The Territory of Arkansas was organized by Act of March 2, 1819, 3 Stat.
493, being carved out of the Territory of Missouri, which was a part of the
Louisiana Purchase, and the eastern boundary of the Territory was the middle
of the main channel of the Mississippi River.
'(2) In 1819 the lands in controversy were on the west side of the main channel
of the river and were part of the Territory of Arkansas.
10
11
'(4) The main channel of the river flowed through the cutoff prior to 1836.
12
'(5) Arkansas was admitted into the Union on June 15, 1836, 5 Stat. 50, and its
eastern boundary was fixed at the middle of the main channel of the Mississippi
River.
13
'(6) On June 15, 1836, when Arkansas was admitted into the Union, the lands
in controversy were on the east side of the main channel of the Mississippi
River.
14
'(7) The avulsion did not change the boundary line theretofore existing between
Tennessee and the Territory of Arkansas.
15
'(8) The Act of Congress of June 15, 1836, admitting Arkansas into the Union,
did not have the effect of excluding from the boundaries of the State of
Arkansas lands which immediately prior to the adoption of the Act were within
the Territory of Arkansas.
16
'(9) Tennessee was admitted into the Union on June 1, 1796, 1 Stat. 491, c. 47.
Its western boundary was the middle of the main channel of the Mississippi
River. The lands in controversy were in 1796 on the west of the main channel
of the river.
17
'(10) The Act of June 15, 1836, 5 Stat. 50, admitting Arkansas into the Union,
did not have the effect of enlarging the boundaries of Tennessee.
18
'(11) From 1826 to the date of the filing of this suit, Tennessee has
continuously exercised dominion and jurisdiction over the lands in controversy.
19
20
'(13) The lands described in Count One of the complaint are now within the
boundaries of Tennessee as a result of prescription. Bluegrass Towhead, which
has been formed by gradual processes and is attached to Moss Island, is
likewise now within the boundaries of Tennessee'.
21
The exceptions of Arkansas to the Master's report present for the most part
questions of law. Arkansas contends that its true eastern boundary at the place
in controversy was determined by the rule of the thalweg, being the middle of
the main channel of navigation of the Mississippi River as it existed when the
Treaty of Peace between the United States and Great Britain was concluded in
1783, subject to such subsequent changes as occurred through natural and
gradual processes. Arkansas v. Tennessee, 246 U.S. 158, 38 S.Ct. 301, 62 L.Ed.
638, L.R.A.1918D, 258; Arkansas v. Mississippi, 250 U.S. 39, 39 S.Ct. 422, 63
L.Ed. 832; Arkansas v. Mississippi, 252 U.S. 344, 40 S.Ct. 333, 64 L.Ed. 605.
The Master supports that contention with respect to the original boundary of the
Territory of Arkansas, and also the contention that the avulsion of 1821 did not
change the boundary line theretofore existing between Tennessee and the
Territory of Arkansas; and, further, the Master holds that the Act of 1836
admitting Arkansas into the Union did not operate to exclude from its
boundaries the lands which immediately before were within the Territory of
Arkansas or to enlarge the boundaries of Tennessee.
22
Despite these conclusions, the Master is of the opinion that the area in question
should now be deemed to be within the boundaries of Tennessee by virtue of
prescription and the acquiescence on the part of Arkansas in the exercise by
Tennessee of dominion and jurisdiction over that area. Upon that question of
fact, the Master found that Tennessee had continuously exercised that dominion
and jurisdiction from the year 1826 to the time of the bringing of the present
suit. In support of this finding, the Master thus summarized the evidence:
23
'The contemporary evidence shows that as early as 1823 entries of the land
were being made under the authority of Tennessee and surveys were made
under authority of Tennessee as early as 1824. Witnesses sixty-five, seventyeight and eighty-four years old testified before me that the inhabitants of the
island always voted in Tennessee elections; were taxed by Tennessee, married
by Tennessee Justices of the Peace, required to do road work under Tennessee
authority, educated upon the island in a school operated by Tennessee. The
records of Dyer County, Tennessee, showed that assessments on the lands in
controversy for local taxes were made by Tennessee authorities and land taxes
paid to Tennessee as far back a 1870, prior to which records are missing.
Tennessee Exhibit 42 shows a tax sale by a Tennessee sheriff in 1848 covering
lands on the island. The bill of exceptions in the case of Moss v. Gibbs, shows
testimony in that case that as far back as 1826 Tennessee assessed the lands on
the cutoff island, collected the taxes on them and served process there. The
opinion of the Supreme Court of Tennessee in Moss v. Gibbs (1872) 10 Heisk.
283, 57 Tenn. 283, recites these facts as proven therein'.
24
The Master added that if he was mistaken in thinking it proper to consider the
depositions and opinion in Moss v. Gibbs, supra, as affording evidence in this
case, 'the testimony taken before me and the other documentary evidence,
consisting of certified copies of entries, surveys and patents, is, in my judgment,
sufficient to prove Tennessee's long and uninterrupted exercise of dominion and
jurisdiction over the lands in controversy'.
25
The Master was equally explicit in finding that the record showed the
acquiescence of Arkansas in this assertion of dominion by Tennessee. On this
point his report states:
26
'There is no showing that Arkansas ever asserted any claim to the land in
controversy prior to the institution of this suit. The lands were never surveyed
or granted by Arkansas. In 1848 the United States Surveyor of Public Lands in
Arkansas wrote to the General Land Office in Washington that he had been
called upon to survey the lands on the cutoff island. He received a reply
authorizing him to proceed with the survey of the island 'more especially if it is
not claimed by the State of Tennessee'. But no survey was ever made. On
October 10th, 1935, application was filed with the Commissioner of State
Lands of Arkansas for the purchase of Blue Grass Towhead, but no action was
taken thereon. The opinion of the Supreme Court of Tennessee in Moss v.
Gibbs, 10 Heisk. 283, 57 Tenn. 283, was published in the year 1872 and made
the claims of Tennessee a matter of public notoriety'.
27
There was slight, if any, controversy as to the facts upon the hearing at this bar.
The findings of the Master with respect to the exercise of dominion and
jurisdiction by Tennessee and as to the acquiescence therein of Arkansas are
fully supported by the record, and we must determine the cause upon that basis.
28
13 S.Ct. 728, 736, 37 L.Ed. 537; Maryland v. West Virginia, 217 U.S. 1, 41-44,
30 S.Ct. 268, 277-279, 54 L.Ed. 645; Vermont v. New Hampshire, 289 U.S.
593, 613, 53 S.Ct. 708, 715, 77 L.Ed. 1392.
29
In Michigan v. Wisconsin, 270 U.S. 295, 308, 46 S.Ct. 290, 294, 70 L.Ed. 595,
the Court thus referred to the recognition of this principle in international law,
saying: 'That rights of the character here claimed may be acquired on the one
hand, and lost on the other, by open, long-continued, and uninterrupted
possession of territory, is a doctrine not confined to individuals, but applicable
to sovereign nations as well, Direct United States Cable Co. v. Anglo-American
Telegraph Co. (1877) L.R. 2 A.C. 394, 421; Wheaton, International Law (5th
Eng.Ed.) 268, 269; 1 Moore, International Law Digest, 294 et seq.; amd, a
fortiori, to the quasi sovereign states of the Union'. Prescription in international
law, says Oppenheim, may be defined as 'the acquisition of sovereignty over a
territory through continuous and undisturbed exercise of sovereignty over it
during such a period as is necessary to create under the influence of historical
development the general conviction that the present condition of things is in
conformity with international order'. And thus he finds that prescription in
international law 'has the same rational basis as prescription in municipal law
namely, the creation of stability of order'. Oppenheim, International Law, 5th
Ed., pp. 455, 456. See, also, Hall, International Law, 8th Ed., pp. 143, 144;
Hyde, International Law, Sec. 116.
30
31
prescription, the boundary no longer follows the thalweg but remains at the
original line although now on dry land because the old channel has filled up.
Nebraska v. Iowa, 143 U.S. 359, 367, 12 S.Ct. 396, 398, 36 L.Ed. 186;
Missouri v. Nebraska, 196 U.S. 23, 36, 25 S.Ct. 155, 157, 49 L.Ed. 372;
Arkansas v. Tennessee, supra, 246 U.S. pages 173, 174, 38 S.Ct. 304, 305, 62
L.Ed. 638, L.R.A.1918D, 258. And, in turn, the doctrine as to the effect of an
avulsion may become inapplicable when it is established that there has been
acquiescence in a long-continued and uninterrupted assertion of dominion and
jurisdiction over a given area. Here that fact has been established and the
original rule of the thalweg no longer applies.
32
33
34
'Bule Grass Towhead is a formation adjoining Moss Island (the cutoff island)
on the west thereof, which has been formed since the year 1916 by the gradual
processes of the river and is now attached physically to the eastern shore of the
river. In-so-far as this formation is in controversy in the present litigation, I am
of the opinion that it also is subject to the jurisdiction of Tennessee, as it was
formed by gradual processes and is attached to Moss Island; see Arkansas v.
Tennessee, 246 U.S. 158, 173, 38 S.Ct. 301, 304, 62 L.Ed. 638, L.R.A.1918D,
258'.
35
36
The exceptions of Arkansas to the Master's report are overruled and the report
is in all respects confirmed. Decree will be entered accordingly providing:
37
(1) That the claims of Arkansas to the lands described in count one be rejected
and the claims of Tennessee thereto be maintained, and that the boundary line
between the States at the point to which count one refers be fixed at the middle
of the main channel of navigation in the Mississippi River as it existed at the
date of the filing of the bill of complaint herein.
38
(2) That the boundary between Arkansas and Tennessee at the point described
in count two of the bill of complaint be fixed in accordance with the stipulation
entered into by the parties, and that a commissioner be appointed to mark the
boundary line as set out in the stipulation by placing three suitable markers
along the line and a fourth one on sufficiently high ground to be used in
locating the other three in the event that they should be covered by water,
moved or destroyed.
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40
41
It is so ordered.