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The art of bottomlands distribution by the                                                                Professional Surveyor is at best subjective by                                                      nature, and can, at its worst, create a product                                                            wrought with controversy. The goal of the                                                              prudent surveyor attempting to prepare a                                                            bottomlands apportionment scheme is to be                                                        equitable to all of the upland owners. The                                                  surveyor should  prepared to explain and, if                                                                        necessary, defend in court his presentation.                                                         Further, all computations and mapping be                                                                prepared should represent the surveyor’s best                                                       professional opinion of a “fair and equitable”                                                        distribution of that particular bottomlands                                                 apportionment.
One of the more perceptive comments made regarding ownership of subaqueous lands was made almost one hundred years ago by a member of the Michigan Supreme Court. In a concurring opinion, Justice Campbell reflected as follows: “In carrying out lines of ownership in narrow streams, it is easy to find the general course of the stream, and to draw lines perpendicular to that course from the terminal shorelines. But on lakes all lines from the shore tend to converge in some central part of the lake, and while irregularity of shape prevents drawing them to a common center, they must all, if protracted, cross each other in a perplexing way. The rule adopted in such waters, where the whole surface could be appropriated, has always been to divide the water area in proportion to the shore frontage, and never to attempt any division by lines run from the shore, except over such parts of the lake as are substantially adjacent to the shore. In some cases by a fair partition, a shore owner would, by his extent of shoreline, obtain a share beyond the center. But it seems impossible, a division without some proceeding in the nature of a partition, which will fix the various possessions."

 
 
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Corey J. Hughes, P.S.

Riparian Bottomlands Apportionment & Boundary Consulting