It will be premised, that the property In controversy, is situated directly east of the site on which Fort Charlotte stood, in the city of Mobile. The lots laid off on the area covered by the fort, at the time of their survey and sale, extended east, to the margin of the shore, and at some points, even included a part of the shore, while still farther east, and immediately adjoining, was laid down on the plat, “ water street,” then almost, if not entirely unreclaimed* East of Water street, and west of the channel of the river, is situated the premises, the title to which is now controverted.
The plaintiffs insist upon their right to recover, because of a dedication by the United States, to the use of the city. And the plaintiffs and defendant respectively contend, that the title,of each is complete, under an act of Congress passed on the twenty-sixth of May, eighteen hundred and twenty-four, “granting certain lots of ground to the corporation of the city of Mobile, and to certain individuals of said city.”
By an act of Congress, of the twentieth of April, eighteen hundred and eighteen, the President of the United States was authorised, whenever, in his opinion, it should be consistent with the public interest to abandon the use of Fort Charlotte, at Mobile, and to cause the lot of *587ground whereon it then stood, to be surveyed, and laid off into lots, with suitable streets and avenues, conforming, as near as practicable, to the original plan of the town. The act further directs, when the survey is completed, one plat thereof shall be returned to the Secretary of the Treasury, and another to such officer or agent as the President shall have authorised to dispose of the lots; and the lots shall be offered at public sale at Mobile, on such day as the President, by his proclamation, shall designate, in the same manner, and on the same conditions and terms of credit, as is provided by law, for the sale of the public lands by the United States — (6 vol. Laws of the U. S.; 1 vol. Land Laws, (ed. 18J8,) 303.)
In obedience to this law, a survey was made of the site of Fort Charlotte, and the lots there laid off, were sold in eighteen hundred and twenty, and the landlord of the defendant became the proprietor, under a conveyance from the purchasers at that sale, of the lots lying west of the property now sought to be recovered.
The defendant does not rely upon his riparian proprietorship, as entitling him to the land east of Water street, nor indeed could he insist on it with success, as the Fort Charlotte lots were not bounded by the river, but had other fixed metes and bounds.
The act of Congress of eighteen hundred and twenty-four, on which the parties mainly rest their pretensions, enacts, 1. « that all the right and claim of the United States, to the lots known as the hospital and bake-house lots, containing about three-fourths of an acre of land, in the city of Mobile, in the State of Alabama; and also all the right and claim of the United States, to all the lots *588not sold of confirmed to individuals, either by this or any former act, and to which no equitable title exists in favor of any individual, under this or any former act, between high water mark and the channel of th.e fiver, and between Church street and North Boundary street, in front of the said city, be, and the same are hereby yested in the mayor and aldermen of the said city of Mobile, for the time being, and their successors in office, for the sole use and benefit of the said city forever.
2 “ That ail the right and claim of the United States, to so many of the lots of ground east of Water street, and between Church street and North Boundary street, (now known as water lots,) as are situate between the channel of the river, and the front of the lots, known under the Spanish government, as water lots, in the said city of Mobile, whereon improvements have been made, — be, and the same are hereby vested in the several proprietors and occupants of each of the lots heretofore fronting on the river Mobile, except in cases where such proprietor pr occupant lias alienated his right to any such lot now designated as a water lot, or the Spanish government has made a new grant or order of survey for the same, during the time at which they had the power to grant the same; in which case,'the right and claim of the United States shall be, and is hereby vested in the person to whom such alienation, grant, or order of survey was made, or in his legal representative: Provided, that nothing in this act contained, shall be construed to affect the claim or claims, if any such there be, of any individual or individuals, or of any body politic or corporate”— (7 vol. Laws of the U, S. 318; J vol. Land Laws, (ed, 1838,) 398.)
*589Though the city of Mobile existed as a town long an-> terior to the treaties of St. Ildefonso and Paris, yet even since the latter period, extensive reclamations have beep made of the shore of the river which bounds it on the east, as well by alluvion, as by'the employment of artificial agents. In this way, several streets have been ad-r ded in the eastern part of the city, running north and south,-so that at this time, the principal seat of commercial business is on ground rescued from a bed of water, since the Spanish authorities yielded the possession to the United States. Among these new streets, is Water street — in eighteen hundred and twenty-four, it was probably the most eastern street throughout the entire front of the city, — at any rate, there was none east of it in front of Fort Charlotte.
Waiving a particular examination of the act of eighteen hundred and twenty four, we proceed to consider an argument made for the defendant, which, if well founded, will render unnecessary an analysis of the act. It was argued for the defendant, that even if the act of eighteen hundred and twenty-four, according to a just interpretation of its terms, conferred upon the plaintiffs the interest of the United States in the property in question, yet the act was wholly inoperative, because no title was vested in the'United States, which could be granted by Congress — That the act of eighteen hundred arid nineteen, to enable the people of the Alabama Territory, to form a constitution, for the purpose of admission into the Union, on an equal footing with the original States, dedicated, in express terms, to the free use of the citizens of this State and the United States, the navigable waters *590within the limits of the former. That this dedication embraced so much of the soil as was covered by water, not only at low, but at high tide, so as to place it beyond the just powers of the Federal government to grant the same — (1 vol. Land Laws, (ed. of 1838,) 310; Toulmin’s Ala. Dig. 913.) And further — that as the sovereign power of the State, is the proprietor of the tide-waters, intrust, for a public, it is incompetent, even by an act of legislation, to grant the space intervening between high and low water marks.
One of the learned counsel for the defendant, supposing the case of Hagan et al. vs. Campbell et al. (8 Porte,r’s Rep. 9,) to be a decision adverse to the latter argument, has insisted that it is opposed by the best authority, and should be overruled by the court. Before we consider the first argument, we will briefly review the case of Hagan et al. vs. Campbell et al., so far as it has been drawn in question. We do not propose to consider the general power of the sovereign over the tide waters, because such an enquiry is wholly unnecessary; but we will undertake to show, that the conclusion of the court in the case referred to, is defensible both in principle and upon authority, whether the rule of decision is. drawn from -the English common law, or the laws and usages of Spain.
According to the common law, not only the dominion over the sea adjoining the coasts, and over arms of the sea and navigable rivers, but the right of property in the soil thereof, is also vested in the King. This proceeds from the policy of the common law, to assign to every thing capable of occupancy, or susceptible of ownership, *591a legal and certain proprietor. Notwithstanding the property in the tidewaters, is vested in the sovereign to high water mark, yet the people are entitled to their use, for the purpose of navigation and fishing. Thus far, the King may be regarded as a trustee for the public, and, upon principle, it would seem, might make such disposition of the soil, as would not impair or destroy the public right.
The King may grant the soil of tide waters to an individual, yet the grantee cannot so exercise his right of property, as to injure the paramount right of navigation. The interest of the grantee,' has been aptly compared to that of a person who owns the fee simple of a road, who, when the road is discontinued, may appropriate the ground to his own purposes, but until then, he cannot obstruct its passage. Lord Hale says, that the jus priva-tum of the proprietor, is subject to the jus publicum of the community. How far the grantee of the soil may make reclamations, so that he does not disturb navigation, is an interesting question, about which there is a want of entire harmony in the dicta and decisions on this branch of the law. All, however, agree, that as the shore becomes derelict by the receding of the waters, /he may ap'-propiate it to private purposes — (Angell on Tide Waters, 29, 33, 34, 135 to 143; Rex vs. Lord Grosvenor et al. 2 Starkie’s R. 511; Blundell vs. Catterall, 5 Barn. & Ald. R. 268; Harg. Tracts, 32; The Attorney General vs. Richards, 1 Anstruther’s R. 603.)
In Hagan et al. vs. Campbell et al. the confirmatory grant made by the authorities of Spain, extended the title of the grantees, across the shore to the channel of the *592river. According' to the common law, such grant was Unobjectionable — it neither expressly or impliedly au-thorised any interference with the public right of navigation, nor did it appear that it had produced such a result. But if it had been attempted to be made the instrument of injury to the public, the grant would not thereby have been rendered void — the preventive power Uf the iaw, by its interposition, might have restrained it to a legitimate purpose. For any thing disclosed by the record in that case, it may have been the intention to convey a title to the soil, without conferring an authority to occupy it, until it had ceased to be covered by the water, nor did it appear that it was occupied at an earlier period. It is, then, clear, that the grant, on its face, -if tested by the rules of the common law, is valid.
We will now consider the grant in reference to the laws and usages of Spain, touching her colonial possessions. The power of Spain, at the time its'earliest establishments in America were made, had perhaps far outstripped any kingdom in Europe. Itsmonarchs having extended their powers far beyond the limits which Unce circumscribed the regal authority, were hardly subject to control in concerting or executing their measures. They acknowledged no constitutional restraint, but as independent masters of their own resolves, they issued the 'edicts requisite for modelling the government of the new colonies, by a mere act of prerogative.
The early interposition of the Spanish crown, in order to regulate the policy and trade of its colonies, is a peculiarity which distinguishes their progress from that of the colonies of any other European nation. The Portu*593guese, the English, and French, considered the advantages promised by the regions occupied by them in America, as so remote' and uncertain, that their colonies were suffered to struggle through a hard infancy,- almost without aid or protection from the parent state.- But gold and silver, the first productions of the Spanish settlements in the New World, were more alluring, and immediately attracted the attention of their monarch.- Though they had contributed little to the discovery, and almost nothing to the conquest, of the New World, they instantly assumed the function of its legislators; and having' acquired- a species of dominion formerly unknown, formed-a plan for exercising it, to which nothing similar occürs; in the history of human affairs.-
It was a fundamental maxim of Spanish jurisprudence,with respect to'America, to consider its acquisitions there,as vested in- the crown, rather than the state.- By the-bulls- of Alexander VI, on which, as its magna charta,-Spain founded its right; all the regions which had been,- or should be discovered, were bestowed as a free' giff upon Ferdinand and Isabella. They, and their successors, were uniformly held to be the universal proprietors of the vast territories acquired by conquest in the NeW World. From them, all grants of land flowed. It is-true, that when towns were built, and formed into bodies corporate, the citizens were allowed to elect their own magistrates, who were authorised to adopt measures-for the regulation of their own interior commerce and police. But no political power originated from the people — all centred in the crown, and the officers of its nomination.- The Viceroys, who represented the person of *594their sovereign, possessed his regal prerogátives within the precincts of their own governments, in their utmost extent. Like'him, they exercised supreme authority in every department of government, civil, military and criminal. And, as their dominions were too extensive for their personal supervision, they, in turn, were represented by various orders of magistrates, — some appointed by the King, others by the Viceroys, — all of whom were amenable to the jurisdiction of the latter; unless they Were required to execute their duties, without the limits of eith'eir of the viceroyalties — (Robinson’s Am. 350, 351, 352; 2 vol. Prescott’s Ferdinand and Isabella, 172, 173, 174, 486, 493, 494, 495.)
Thus we discover, that the Spanish monarch possessed an unlimited control over his American colonies, and that his viceroys, and other subordinate officers, exercised an extensive power — that he, and not the state, was .the proprietor of the territories there acquired. Being vested with the property, surely it was competent for him to make such disposition of his foreign possessions, as caprice, or a sense of justice might dictate. The canons of the civil law, or the legislative regulations of Spain, were not recognised by its monarch, as operating to. restrain him in making grants of land in the New World. And it must therefore be immaterial, whether, according to the civil law, rivers, the sea, and its shores, are destined by nature to the common use of man, and thus withdrawn from commerce.
The territory which had, or should be discovered in America, being vested in the Spanish monarchs, it followed, that they might create a political power there, or *595retain the reins of government in their own hands, and parcel out the lands to such individuals as they might, from time to time, select: and the power created, might be invested with all the incidents of property in the tide waters, of which the subject was susceptible; or the King might confer upon his grantee, a proprietorship quite as ample.
It is no answer to this conclusion, to say, that the right to the acquisitions of Spain, whether by conquest or discovery, vested in the State, and not in the King; and that the bulls of Alexander TI, could not give to the title a different destination. Soon after the return of Columbus to Spain, Ferdinand and Isabella applied to the Court of Rome, to confirm them in the possession of their recent discoveries, and invest them with an extent of jurisdiction, similar to that previously conferred on the Kings of Portugal. It was an opinion, perhaps as ancient as the crusades, that the Pope, as the head of the church on earth, had competent authority to dispose of all countries inhabited by heathen nations, in favor of Christian potentates. Although Ferdinand and Isabella do not seem to have been fully satisfied of this right, yet they were willing to acquiesce in its assumption, from the conviction, that the papal sanction would most effectually exclude the- pretensions of all others, and especially, their Portuguese rivals — -(2 vol. Prescott’s Ferdinand and Isabella, 172.) This high power being accorded to the Pope, by the catholic states of Europe, and especially, by Spain, titles acquired upon the supposition that it was rightful, cannot now be disturbed — and acquiescence, for centuries, in its legitimacy, must be held to operate as an estoppel.
*596Again: it has been held to be a legal presumption, !! that public and responsible officers, claiming and exercising the right of disposing of the public domain, did it by the order and consent of the government, in whose name the acts were done.” And consequently, grants by them of the public lands, “ by color or claim of public authority, are evidence thereof, until the contrary appears by the showing of those who oppose the title set up under it, and deny the power by which it is professed to be granted.” True, “ a grant is void, unless the grantor has the power to make it — but it is not void, because the grantee does not prove or produce it. The law supplies this proof by legal presumption, arising from the full, legal and complete execution of the official grant, under all the solemnities known or proved to exist, or to be required by the law of the country where it is made, and the land is situated” — (United States vs. Arredondo and others, 6 Peters’ Rep. 727, 728; New Orleans vs. The U. States, 10 Peters’ Rep. 727; see also 9 Cranch’s Rep. 99, and 5 Wheaton’s Rep. 303.) As, then, in the absence of all proof, every proper intendment is to be made in favor of a grant, bearing on its face the evidences of regularity and authenticity, we must suppose that the officer making it, was duly accredited by his government; and that he undertook to dispose of no more of the property of his sovereign, than the laws of Spain authorised.
We are now brought to consider, whether the act of eighteen hundred and twenty-four, vested a title to the premises in dispute in the plaintiffs; and in entering upon the examination of this question, it may be well to premise, that the act of Congress cannot be held to assert a *597title on the part of the United States, but is nothing more than a renunciation of whatever title the government may have, or be supposed to have had, to so much of the shore, as is described in it.
The shore of the sea, and its arms, is that space of land, which is alternately covered and left dry by the rising and falling of the tide; or, in other words, that space of land which is between high and low water marks. It is this space, to which the United States quit claim, by the act of eighteen hundred and twenty-four.
By the act of Congress, of March, eighteen hundred and three, “ regulating the grants of land, and providing for the disposal of the lands of the United States, south of the State of Tennessee,” it is enacted, “ that all navigable rivers, within the territory of the United States, south of the State of Tennessee, shall be deemed to be, and remain public highways” — (1 vol. Land Laws, (ed. 1838,) p. 98, sec. 17.) And all the laws in regard to the establishment of territorial governments by Congress, and the survey and disposal of the public lands, whether of an earlier or later date, contain similar provisions — (Ibid. pp. 23, 56, 107, 195, 216, 365.)
The several acts of Congress, regulating the survey of the public lands, all provide for surveys which border on navigable streams, to be so made, as not to include within its lines, any part of the shore — (1 vol. Land Laws, (ed. 1838,) pp. 50, 96, 104, 191.)
In the Iasi proviso of the 6th section of the act of eighteen hundred and nineteen, “ to enable the people of the Alabama territory to form a constitution and State government, and for the admission of such State into the *598Union, on an equal footing with the original States,”— among the propositions submitted by Congress to the convention, for their acceptance or rejection, it is declared, that “ all navigable waters within the said State, shall forever remain public highways, free to the citizens of said State, and of the United States, without any tax, duty, impost or toll therefor, imposed by the State” — (1 vol. Land Laws, (ed. 1838,) 310.) By the ordinance which make's a part of the constitution of Alabama, the “convention for, and in behalf of the people inhabiting this State, do accept the propositions offered by the act of Congress, under which they are assembled.”
The act of Congress of eighteen hundred and nineteen, seems to suppose, that by the admission of Alabama into the Union, the jurisdiction of the State over its navigable waters, might have been exercised, so as to exclude from their navigation, the citizens of the United States; or else the proposition we are considering, was inserted ex majore cautela, that collision between state and federal jurisdiction might be avoided ; — but it is perhaps needless to enquire, under what influence it may have been made a matter of stipulation.
We And it also enacted, in the territorial ordinance, and the laws regulating the survey and sale of lands, in Mississippi and Alabama, that the “ navigable waters ” shall be and remain public highways. Here were express avowals by Congress, that they should not be surveyed and sold, but should be withdrawn from commerce. For what purpose were such avowals made? was it, in the first instance, to prevent the local legislature from authorising an obstruction of the navigation *599of the waters within the territory — or was it intended, in the last instance, to furnish a pledge to those who might purchase l$nds of the United States, that the navigable waters should remain common property,-free to the use of all ? If the latter was the object proposed, it would not have been consistent with good faith, for Congress to make a grant of the navigable waters, by making that private property, which before was dedicated to the common use of all men. Without speculating further upon the intention of Congress, to be' gathered from its enactments previous to eighteen hundred and nineteen, we think it sufficiently appears from the act of that year* authorising the formation of a State constitution, that the United States proposed to relinquish its right to the “navigable waters ” within this State, upon an agreement .by the convention, that they should “ forever remain public highways, free to the citizens of said State, and of the United States-, without any tax, duty, impost or toll therefor, imposed by the said State.” The proposition for that purpose, is thus introduced by Congress: “ See. 6. That the following be, and the same are hereby offered to the convention of the said Territory of Alabama, when formed, for their free acceptance or rejection, which, if accepted by the convention, shall be obligatory upon the United States”
The convention, we have already .shown, accepted all the propositions submitted to it, and thus perfected the stipulation between the state and federal governments.
It is, then, considered clear, that the “ navigable waters” of this State have been dedicated to the common use of the people of the United States; but perhaps it *600may be considered as questionable, what extent of soil is embraced by the dedication. We think it must be so much ground as is covered with the water, rjot only at low. but at high tide. The government surveys extend thus far, and the shore is regarded rather as a part of the water, than as land. It is believed, that there is no instance in which the United States, after having sold •the land to high water, has afterwards asserted a right to dispose of the space intervening between that and low water mark.
There is another view which may be taken of the act of eighteen hundred and twenty-four, going very satisfactorily to show that, that act does not vest in the plaintiffs the title they assert. By the first section of the act “to enable the people of Alabama Territory to form a constitution,” &c. it is enacted, “ that the inhabitants of the Territory of Alabama be, and they are hereby au-thorised to form for themselves a constitution and State government, and to assume such name as they may deem proper; and that the said territory, when formed into a State, shall be admitted into the Union, upon the same footing with the original States, in all respects whatever” — (Introduction to Aik. Dig. xxv.) There is no reservation by the United States, of a property in the navigable waters of this State, or of the soil covered by them, further than we have already seen; and in order to ascertain their rights over the subject, it may be well to enquire what rights are conceded to them in the “ original States.” The original States, we are to understand to be those which united in forming the Federal constitution. These States held their territorial rights from *601the British crown. The King, in virtue of his prerogative, was authorised to create a political power in all the' countries newly discovered and possessed by his subjects —(Campbell vs. Hall, 1 Cowp. Rep. 204. The royal charters invested the colonies with a political character,by which they succeeded to all the territorial interests Which had previously belonged to the sovereign power of the parent country. These charters created government^’ and were not construed as other grants from the crown Were — that is, they did not exclude,- but actually included arms of the sea, «fee. The colonial governments thus had ample authority to alter the established law, with regard to their tide waters; so that the exclusive control of the-subject, was vested in them — (Commonwealth vs. The Inhabitants of Charlestown, 1 Pick. Rep. 180; Angell on Tide Waters, 37 to 60.)
The' right of property in the navigable waters, conferred upon the colonies by the royal charters, have never been1 .relinquished to the United States.- True, the power “to regulate' commerce with foreign nations', and among the .several States, and with the Indian tribes,” invests Congress with the right of empire and jurisdiction over the-navigable waters of the country, so far as the exercise of this constitutional power may render it necessary. But-the right of property, which was given to the “ original States,”' by the King of Great Britain, when they were his colonies, is still retained, and can only be interfered with by the Federal government, to preserve a free navigation. The United States, then, may be said to claim for the public an easement for the transportation of mer*602chandise, &c. in the “ navigable waters” of the “ original States,” while the right of property remains in the States.
The “ original States ” possessing this interest in the waters within their jurisdictional limits, the new States cannot stand upon an equal footing with them as members of the Union, if the United States still retain over their navigable waters, any other right than is necessary to -the exercise of its constitutional powers.
In New Orleans vs. The United States, (10 Peters’ R. 736,) the court were of opinion, that though the property in dispute was dedicated to the public use, so that the King had not the power rightfully to alien it; yet he had a limited power over it for certain purposes. But they say the treaty by which Louisiana was ceded to the United States could not, and the constitution did not, transfer to the Federal government the'right to exercise the power which, previous to the treaty, was vested in the King.
“Special provision,” say the court, “is made in the constitution, for the cession of jurisdiction from the States, over places where the Federal government shall establish forts, or other military works. And it is only in these places, or in the territories of the United States, where it can exercise a general jurisdiction.
“ The State of Louisiana was admitted into the Union, on the same footing as the original States. Her rights of sovereignty are the same — and, by consequence, no jurisdiction of the Federal government, either for purposes of police or otherwise, can be exercised over this public ground, which is not common to the United States. It belongs to the local authority to enforce the trust, and *603prevent .what they shall deem' a violation of it by the city authorities.
“All powers which properly appertain to sovereignty, which have not been delegated to the Federal government, belong to the people.”
Here, we think, is a clear concession, that the rights o.f sovereignty of the new, are quite as extensive as those possessed by the original States — and that the powers pertaining to sovereignty, which have not been delegated, belong to the States, or the people. The constitution does not, in express terms, delegate an interest in the navigable waters of the States, to the Federal government; and as the power to regulate commerce, by implication, gives only an easement, — it will follow, that the right of property belongs to the States.
Further: the act of eighteen hundred and nineteen, submits to the convention several propositions for their acceptance or rejection, which are intended to operate when .accepted, as reservations in favor of the Federal government. None of these propositions reserve a right of property in the navigable waters; this right must, then, be understood to have been yielded to the State, upon the maxim of expressio unius est exclusio alter ins, \
To recapitulate, we are of opinion—
1. That the “ navigable waters ” within this State,
have been' dedicated to the use of the citizens of the United'States, so that it is not competent for’Congress to grant a right of property in the same. .1
2. The navigable waters extend not only to low water, but embrace all the soil that is within the limits of high water mark.
*6043. By the acts o.f Congress regulating the survey and disposal of the public lands, the Federal government has renounced the title to the navigable waters, and the soil covered by them; consequently, the plaintiffs cannot recover on the ground of a dedication to the uses of the city, under the act of eighteen hundred and eighteen, which is an enactment of a later date.
4, The original States, in virtue of their royal charters, are entitled to the right of property in the navigable waters within their territory, while the public are only entitled to an easement, to be provided for under that provision of the Federal constitution, which authorises Congress, to regulate commerce, <fcc. Alabama is admittéd into the Union, on an equal footing with the original States,” and of consequence, is entitled to the right of property in the tide waters within its limits.
5.. By the admission of Alabama into the Union, without a reservation of the right of property in the navigable waters, the State succeeded to all the right of the United States, except so far as it was reserved by the Federal constitution in some of its grants, or its retention was necessary to enable the Federal government to exercise its delegated powers.
Having attained these conclusions, it will follow, that the act Qf eighteen hundred and twenty-four is inoperative, and confers no title upon the plaintiffs. It is, then, unnecessary to examine the questions of law raised upon th.e bill of exceptions; inasmuch as the plaintiffs showed no right to recover, it is clear, that they wer,e not prejudiced by the several decisions of the Circuit judge, adverse to their pretensions.
*605Many other interesting questions were discussed at the bar, which (as they are not material to a decision of the case,) we will decline considering.
The judgment of the Circuit court is affirmed.