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A Usenet persona calling itself BCITORGB wrote:
Scotts finds: ============= I couldn't find one either. Evidently Canada is radically different. Oh well, it is Canada after all. ============== But, Canada's (British Columbia's, anyway) approach makes everything so much simpler: no requirement to determine navigable or not... although it does beg the question as to when a trickle actually becomes a creek or a stream... It seems to stem from the Monarchy approach of government, as the lands are defined as "Crown Lands," which don't belong to the people, they belong to the sovereign. This simple expedient says that "everything belongs to the King except what the King chooses to grant to an individual." Thus, it seems, the King, to whom all lands belong as his private property, has chosen not to grant title to lands underlying waters. I suppose that's why it's good to be the King. The US situation is different in that we don't have a King, and the lands belong to the people, to be disposed of by the Congress. And Congress clearly recognizes a distinction between navigable and non navigable waters, and uses that distinction to determine in whom the bed title rests. The intent of the reservation of navigational rights, and indeed bed title in navigable waterways was to preserve public access to the "important water highway" of the nation. Congress recognized that at some point a stream was no longer an important highway for commerce and thus could become private by grant of Congress. That's the case in Colorado, as applied to *every* natural river or stream under a line of cases explicitly recognizing the non navigability of Colorado's waterways. The "navigable in law because a kayak can float on it" "test" would entirely erase the distinction between truly navigable "public highways" of useful, substantial and permanent commerce (think Mississippi) and creeks like Boulder Creek which have no actual potential for "interstate commerce of a substantial and permanent nature, useful to some purpose of trade or agriculture." You can factually "navigate" a kayak across a flooded parking lot after a heavy rain. That doesn't make the parking lot a "navigable water of the United States." I don't see the erasing of the distinction between navigable public highways on water and commercially useless, though recreationally attractive streams as being something the Congress intended or intends. Certainly Congress and the Court were aware of this distinction, which is why in one early case (Cress, as I recall) the Justices made specific reference to "gunning canoes or fishing skiffs" and declined to hold that the fact that one could physically float such a craft down a stream during times of high water constituted federal commerce clause navigability. -- Regards, Scott Weiser "I love the Internet, I no longer have to depend on friends, family and co-workers, I can annoy people WORLDWIDE!" TM © 2005 Scott Weiser |
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