Perry and Sadler entered into a written contract on November 11, 1890, containing, among many other clauses, this one: “Said Perry to deed, unincumbered, to said Sadler the Keywoód place, say about 68 acres, more or less, and 32 acres off lower side of Brown place, along the upper side of Key-wood place.” Pursuant to this contract two deeds were executed, one to R. C. Sadler, and one to R. C. Sadler and Elizabeth C. Sadler, his mother, to different tracts. In the deed to R. C. Sadler “all of north half of the southeast quarter except the 32 acres off the south side in section 15, township 6 north, range 20,” etc., is conveyed. In the deed to Sadler and his mother the following description is found: “The south half of the southeast fractional quarter, containing 68 acres more or less, and 32 acres off of the south side of the north half of southeast fractional quarter, all in section 15, township 6 north of the base line, and range 20 west fifth principal meridian,” etc.
. The Keywood place was conveyed to Perry in 1883 as “the south half of the southeast quarter of section 15, in township 6 north and range 20 west, containing 66 acres more or less.” This action is brought by appellants, claiming a small tract of .62 of an acre, being described in the governmental survey as southwest fractional quarter of section 14, township 6 north, range 20 west, and its accretions and the accretions to said 68-acre and 32-acre tracts. It is undisputably shown that it was an unintentional oversight in the conveyance to Perry and from Perry to Sadler that said fractional quarter section of section 14 was not included. It was a small wedge-shaped tract running almost to the dwelling house on the Keywood place, including part of the yard and garden. This part of it was inclosed with other land, and all of it under control of the owner of the Keywood place. The parties did not know that this fraction did not pass under the deeds, as they supposed all of this land was in section 15, and it was clearly shown that it was intended to be conveyed. The chancellor held that it and its accretion passed to Sadler, and in this the decree is right.
The Keywood place fronts the Arkansas river, and there is a large accretion there formed by alluvium. Appellants contend that the contract and conveyance were to convey to Sadler 100 acres, no more nor less, and that the 32 acres were to be conveyed from the Brown tract, in order to add to the Keywood tract of 68 acres, to constitute the-100 acres, and that the accretions did not go with the conveyances, as the xoo acres were conveyed without them. The -contract to convey the Keywood place shows that the tract going under that name, containing approximately 68 acres, was to be conveyed, and the conveyance of it contained the words “more or less,” indicating that the acreage was an approximation, and not a fixed quantity. This court has adopted the rule of the Supreme Court of the United States in regard to conveyances affecting accretions. This is the principle which governs here: “Where a waterline is the boundary of a named lot, that line remains the boundary, no matter how it shifts, and a ■deed describing the lot by number or name conveys the land up to that shifting line, exactly as it does up to the fixed side lines.” Towell v. Etter, 69 Ark. 34. The conveyance of the Keywood place by name in the contract, and the conveyance of what was supposed to be the Keywood place by the Governmental survey numbers (and which was in fqct all of it except this small tract which the chancellor reformed the deed to convey), carried the line to the river, and included the accretions. The chancellor so held, and his holding is affirmed.
The chancellor held that the accretions fronting the 32-acre tract did not pass to Sadler and his mother, and that, as the appellant, Mrs. M. C. Perry (wife of the other appellant) had acquired title to all of that tract except the 32 acres conveyed to Sadler and his mother, she was entitled to the accretions between it and the river. The appellees, Sadler and mother, cross appeal from this part of the decree.
The contract and deed designated a certain number of acres to be taken from a certain part of the Brown place. It was appropriately described, so that the lines could be, and they were, laid out in accordance therewith. When located, there was an accretion between the lines thus located and the river. This tract was not described by name or number, like the Keywood place, thereby carrying the boundary to the shifting water line; but this boundary was fixed, and the acreage determined by the contract and deed.
The chancellor was right, and the cross appeal sustained, and the decree is in all things affirmed. is not