                 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

                          NO. 2004-CA-01415-SCT

BAYVIEW LAND, LTD., A NEVADA CORPORATION,
AND IMPERIAL PALACE OF MISSISSIPPI, INC., A
NEVADA CORPORATION; TREASURE BAY LLC,
JUNE S. MLADINICH AND MLADINICH FAMILY
LIMITED PARTNERSHIP

v.

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI BY AND THROUGH ERIC
CLARK IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS SECRETARY
OF STATE AS TRUSTEE OF PUBLIC TIDELANDS
TRUST; TAL FLURRY, INDIVIDUALLY AND IN HIS
OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS TAX ASSESSOR OF
HARRISON COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI; DAVID V.
LAROSA, SR., IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS TAX
COLLECTOR OF HARRISON COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI;
THE BOARD OF SUPERVISORS OF HARRISON
COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI IN THEIR OFFICIAL
CAPACITY; CITY OF BILOXI, MISSISSIPPI, AND
THE BILOXI MUNICIPAL SEPARATE SCHOOL
DISTRICT


DATE OF JUDGMENT:                06/22/2004
TRIAL JUDGE:                     HON. DONALD B. PATTERSON
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:       HARRISON COUNTY CHANCERY COURT
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS:        BRITT R. SINGLETARY
                                 TINA ROSE SINGLETARY
                                 SAMUEL L. BEGLEY
                                 DEAN HOLLEMAN
                                 MICHAEL B. HOLLEMAN
                                 W. JOEL BLASS
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES:                     JAMES LAWTON ROBERTSON
                                             OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
                                             BY: NANCY MORSE PARKES
                                             KAREN J. YOUNG
                                             JOSEPH R. MEADOWS
                                             GINA BARDWELL TOMPKINS
                                             RONALD G. PERESICH
NATURE OF THE CASE:                          CIVIL - REAL PROPERTY
DISPOSITION:                                 REVERSED AND REMANDED - 10/12/2006
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:




       EN BANC.

       CARLSON, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1.    This case is best described as a land ownership and boundary dispute between the State

of Mississippi and Bayview Land, Ltd., and Imperial Palace of Mississippi, Inc., concerning

land upon which the Imperial Palace casino had built a parking garage and a hotel, although tax

questions between the State of Mississippi and all of the Appellants are also at issue.       The

casino had obtained various federal, state, county and city permits to build the hotel and garage

before this dispute arose. The case centers around questions of ownership of the land on which

the hotel and garage are located. The land, which borders Biloxi Back Bay near the Mississippi

Gulf Coast, and which the State asserts is a part of the public trust tidelands, had been extended

seaward over many years, undisputedly changing the shoreline.      The portion of additional land

consists of 3.05 acres of what are known as artificial accretions extending into the water it

borders.   Artificial accretions occur in various ways, such as from an accumulation of oyster

shells, or “wharfing out.” Bayview and Imperial Palace argue that such accreted land vests in

                                                2
the State only if the State meets its statutory burden to prove (1) the accretions were not made

as statutorily permitted consistent with the Mississippi Constitution and (2) for a higher public

purpose – a burden the appellants argue the State did not meet. The State argues that the land

had been extended seaward by these accretions (the shoreline has undisputedly changed over

many years) and that the portion of the land created by artificial accretions, as well as the

accompanying littoral rights, should be vested in the State.      After a lengthy trial, the chancellor

agreed with the State.     For the reasons stated, we reverse the final judgment entered by the

Chancery Court for the Second Judicial District of Harrison County, and remand this case to

the chancellor with directions to enter an appropriate judgment after conducting further

proceedings consistent with this opinion.

                    FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS IN THE TRIAL COURT

¶2.     The land in question borders the Back Bay of Biloxi, a body of water connected to the

Gulf of Mexico.     The Mississippi Sound is directly below Mississippi’s southern boundary of

beaches and shoreline, and includes filled tidelands or fastlands, being the part of the land that

is covered with water and uncovered daily as it lies between high and low tides. Black’s Law

Dictionary 1482 (6th ed. 1990). This is to be distinguished from what are known as submerged

lands, which remain under water.            The portion of the Imperial Palace of Mississippi (IPM)

parcel in question bordering the water on the Biloxi Back Bay is approximately 3.05 acres of

land created by artificial accretions which comprise the extension of land into the water.         The

term accretion is “usually applied to the gradual and imperceptible accumulation of land by

natural causes, as out of the sea or a river.” Id. at 20. The high tide mark can be changed

                                                     3
naturally through accretions or through reliction, when the land is uncovered through a gradual

subsidence of water.   However, accretions can also be artificial or man- made, for example,

through the accumulation of oyster shells over time, or what is known as “wharfing out” into

the water, which is establishing or affixing to the land a permanent structure to some point

within a navigable body of water. Id. at 1595. IPM facilities on the disputed property include

a 32-story hotel and a 12-story, 1300- car parking garage. The disputed land is bordered on the

south by Bayview Avenue (which runs in a generally east and west direction), and on the west

by Caillavet Street (which runs in a generally north and south direction). Interstate 110 (which

connects Interstate I-10, running generally in an east-west direction, with U. S. Highway 90,

also running generally in an east-west direction) is located just west of (and parallel with)

Caillavet Street. The land is bound on the north and east by a steel bulkhead on the Back Bay.

This appeal comes to the Court after the consolidation of three chancery court actions with

separate cause numbers, all of which had been filed in the Chancery Court for the Second

Judicial District of Harrison County. Bayview Land, Ltd. (Bayview), and Imperial Palace of

Mississippi, Inc. (IPM),1 filed suit in cause number C2402-98-00389 on April 3, 1998, naming

as the defendant the State of Mississippi via Secretary of State Eric Clark in his official

capacity. Bayview owns land in fee simple in Harrison County and, through a lease agreement,

IPM operates a casino and hotel on that property. These two Nevada corporations brought suit




       1
        Bayview and Imperial Palace will sometimes be referred to collectively as “IPM.”
Likewise, we will on occasion use the term “IPM” to refer collectively to all appellants in
these consolidated causes.

                                               4
to resolve the dispute of the location of the boundary on the Bayview land and for declaratory,

injunctive, and equitable relief.        The State filed its answer and counterclaim, stating that

pursuant to the Public Trust Tidelands Act, Miss. Code Ann. §§ 29-15-1, et seq. (Rev. 2005),

the accreted land in question belonged to the State of Mississippi and was held in trust, with

the Secretary of State as the trustee. The owner of the 3.05-acre accreted land would of course

also be the owner of the littoral rights of the land.2

¶3.     IPM filed suit in another case under cause number C2402-01-00251 on March 21,

2001, naming as defendants Tal Flurry, Harrison County Tax Assessor, David V. Larosa, Sr.,

Harrison County Tax Collector; and the Harrison County Board of Supervisors.         IPM claimed

that it had paid, or caused to be paid through its lessor, Bayview, taxes levied on its land. The

crux of the complaint was that IPM had been subject to double taxation and questionable tax

valuation methods and that therefore IPM’s constitutional rights were violated, grounding its

cause of action in violations of due process, equal protection of the laws, and civil rights. The

answer filed denied any of these claims and asserted a counter-complaint that the State owned

the lands because of the Public Trust Tidelands Act.         On June 4, 2001, Treasure Bay, LLC3


        2
       Littoral rights are those rights concerning property which abuts an ocean, sea or lake.
Columbia Land Dev., LLC v. Sec’y of State, 868 So.2d 1006, 1012 (Miss. 2004) (citing
Watts v. Lawrence, 703 So.2d 236, 238 (Miss. 1997) (quoting Black’s Law Dictionary 934)).

        3
          While this matter has been pending before us on appeal, this Court entered an order
granting the joint motion of Treasure Bay Corp. and the Mladinich Family Limited Partnership
to have Treasure Bay LLC substituted and designated as the real party in interest, with the
Mladinich Family Limited Partnership likewise remaining a party to this appeal. For the sake
of clarity, we will refer to Treasure Bay LLC simply as “Treasure Bay.” Treasure Bay Casino
is located on Highway 90, overlooking the Mississippi Sound and the Gulf of Mexico.

                                                         5
filed suit in cause number C2401- 01- 00522, naming as defendants Flurry and Larosa, in their

official capacities as Harrison County Tax Assessor and Tax Collector, respectively, and the

Harrison County Board of Supervisors. Treasure Bay’s complaint prayed for injunctive and

other relief due to taxes assessed to Treasure Bay as the lessee of a parcel of land. Treasure

Bay’s complaint was almost identical to IPM’s complaint filed in cause number C2402-01-

00251, and stated that Treasure Bay had paid taxes, or caused the taxes to be paid, on its land

through its lessor, June S. Mladinich.

¶4.     On a joint motion of the parties in the two tax cases, the trial court entered an agreed

order on August 1, 2001, consolidating the two cases. On August 14, 2001, the Secretary of

State filed a motion for leave to intervene as a party in the IPM tax case under Miss. R. Civ. P.

24, and that motion was granted. The Secretary of State then filed its Answer and Complaint

in Intervention on September 4, 2001.          After holding a hearing, the trial court granted the

motion on September 10, 2001, and ordered that all three cases be consolidated. That same

day, the City of Biloxi also filed its answer to the complaint in intervention. The City of Biloxi

and the Biloxi Public School District joined in the State’s Expert Witness Disclosure on

October 1, 2001, as parties in interest in support of the Secretary of State as plaintiff in

intervention.    On November 14, 2001, Mladinich filed her answer to the Secretary of State’s

Complaint in Intervention and cross-claim against Treasure Bay, her lessee, praying for

indemnification from any taxes assessed against Treasure Bay.4          On December 3, 2001, this




        4
            Treasure Bay would later answer the cross-claim on May 3, 2002.

                                                    6
Court appointed Judge Donald Patterson to be the Special Judge to preside over the case. On

December 31, 2001, Chancellor Patterson ordered that the trial be bifurcated.

¶5.    On April 22, 2002, the chancellor entered a very thorough ten-page opinion (“Decision

of the Court”), in which the chancellor acknowledged that the ultimate issue at trial would be

“the location on the ground of the boundary line between land belonging to IPM (Uplands) and

lands held by the State as part of the Public Tidelands Trust (Tidelands),” and that this issue

could not be litigated and determined “until the court resolve[d] the threshold controversy of

the significance, if any, of the location of the boundary of the Public Trust, as shown on the

Secretary’s final certified map.”    In the end, the trial court concluded that at the trial, the

Secretary of State would have the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence “(1)

the exact location on the ground of the boundary line delineated on the final certified map and

(2) that some exact portion of [IPM’s] property violates the public trust.” En route to this

decision, the chancellor meticulously analyzed Miss. Code Ann. §§ 29-15-1, et seq. (more

specifically, section 29-15-7), and this Court’s decision in Secretary of State v. Wiesenberg,

633 So.2d 983 (Miss. 1994).          On May 6, 2002, the Secretary of State, via a motion to

reconsider, requested the trial court to revisit its decision in light of this Court’s decision in

Stewart v. Hoover, 815 So.2d 1157 (Miss. 2002) (decided, April 18, 2002), which was handed

down after the parties had completed their briefing and “only two business days prior to entry”

of the opinion.    The chancellor eventually granted the Secretary’s motion for rehearing and




                                                  7
withdrew its opinion of April 22, 2002.5       In Stewart, one party argued his property was not

subject to the trust because the final certified map did not contain the property at issue;

however, we held that “the Legislature’s goal of establishing certain and stable land titles does

not contemplate a loss of public trust lands because of an oversight in the mapping process.”

Id. at 1162.      In the case sub judice, in disposing of the motion to reconsider, the trial court

allowed the Secretary of State to proceed with additional proof, notwithstanding the 1994 final

certified map, and allowed Bayview and IPM to present rebuttal evidence.            The trial court

further passed on the remaining issues contained in the motion, for a subsequent ruling after

the trial of this case.

¶6.      The twenty-five day trial began August 20, 2002, and concluded on November 18, 2002

(with obvious extended recesses).6     The trial court heard testimony from twenty-one witnesses

and received more than four hundred exhibits.          At the conclusion of this lengthy trial, the

chancellor understandably took this matter under advisement, and on April 9, 2004, the

chancellor entered his Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.       On June 22, 2004, the trial

court entered its final judgment consistent with its findings of fact and conclusions of law,

denying along the way, motions to reconsider. The practical effect of this judgment was that




         5
         In its findings of fact and conclusions of law entered on April 9, 2004, subsequent to
the trial of this cause, the chancellor conceded what he perceived to be error in light of
Stewart and withdrew his opinion of April 22, 2002.

         6
        The trial covered a span of ninety days, which obviously means that the trial was not
conducted over a period of twenty-five consecutive business days.

                                                  8
the State was vested with title to the disputed land. On July 9, 2004, the chancellor entered an

amendment to the judgment to correct a clerical error. This appeal ensued.

                                           DISCUSSION

¶7.    Mladinich, the Mladinich Limited Family Partnership, Bayview, IPM, and Treasure Bay,

all timely appealed from the final judgment entered by the chancellor. Bayview and IPM appeal

the trial court’s findings that title to the accretions and littoral rights were confirmed as

belonging to the State, and that the 3.05 acres of the artificial accretion land cut off all littoral

rights to Bayview and IPM, whose property originally bordered the Back Bay of Biloxi.

Bayview and IPM argue that the State failed in meeting its burden of proving that any accretions

were not already vested in the uplands owner by common or statutory law of the public trust.

The State argues that the findings of the chancery court are well-supported by substantial

credible evidence and that the chancery court correctly found that the fastlands are held by the

State as part of the Public Trust Tidelands.          Flurry, Larosa, the Board of Supervisors of

Harrison County, the City of Biloxi, and the Biloxi Municipal Separate School District all

joined the Secretary of State’s appellate brief which was submitted to this Court. The issues

raised today include constitutional questions of takings of the littoral rights, tax questions, and

interpretation of the 1989 Public Trust Tidelands Act.        The State argues no questions of first

impression exist, but the various appellants argue that the questions of first impression include

what constitutes reasonable use of riparian/littoral rights, how those rights are cut off by

accretions, and how the 1989 Public Trust Tidelands Act should be construed with regard to




                                                  9
a tidelands boundary dispute in developed areas under the Act. We will restate and reorder

these various issues in today’s discussion.

¶8.     When we are called upon to review a chancellor’s opinion after a plenary trial on the

merits of a case, our standard of review is well established.            This Court will not reverse the

chancellor’s findings of fact “unless they are manifestly wrong, not supported by substantial

credible evidence, or an erroneous legal standard was applied.” Columbia Land Dev., LLC v.

Sec’y of State, 868 So.2d 1006, 1011 (Miss. 2004) (citing Vaughn v. Vaughn, 798 So.2d

431, 433 (Miss. 2001); Tucker v. Prisock, 791 So.2d 190, 192 (Miss. 2001)). On the other

hand, when we review questions of law, a de novo standard of review is applied. Tucker, 791

So.2d at 192 (citing In re Carney, 758 So.2d 1017, 1019 (Miss. 2000)).

        I.      WHETHER ARTIFICIAL ACCRETIONS     RESULTING FROM
                CERTAIN SPECIFIC CAUSES ARE VESTED IN THE UPLANDS
                OWNER

¶9.     Bayview and IPM assert that the State failed to meet its burden of proving by a

preponderance of the evidence that any accretions were not already vested in the uplands owner

by common or statutory law.          The State, as appellee, asserts that: (1) the findings of the

chancery court are well-supported by substantial credible evidence; and, (2) the chancery court

correctly found that the fastlands are held by the State as part of the Public Trust Tidelands.

                A.       The origin of Mississippi’s tidelands in trust

¶10.    Before beginning our analysis, we provide an overview of the history of this body of

law.   Before Mississippi entered statehood in 1817, title to the tidelands and navigable waters



                                                    10
within its boundaries had been held by the United States. Wiesenberg, 633 So.2d at 987. Upon

Mississippi’s entering the Union in 1817, title to those tidelands and navigable waters “was

conveyed to Mississippi in trust and became immediately vested, subject to that trust.”       Id.

(citations omitted).   This principle has been recognized by the United States Supreme Court.

“[W]e reaffirm our longstanding precedents which hold that the States, upon entry into the

Union, received ownership of all lands under waters subject to the ebb and flow of the tide.”

Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Miss., 484 U.S. 469, 476, 108 S. Ct. 791, 795, 98 L. Ed. 2d 877,

886 (1988). “[T]he individual States have the authority to define the limits of the lands held

in public trust and to recognize private rights in such lands as they see fit.” Id. at 475.

¶11.    Actually, two great public trusts were created and conveyed to each new state, sixteenth

section school lands and “the tidelands and navigable waters of the state together with the beds

and lands underneath same.” Cinque Bambini P’ship v. State, 491 So. 2d 508, 511 (Miss.

1986). We are concerned today with the latter of these “two great public trusts,”which we have

described as those lands, “including their mineral and other subsurface resources, subject to

the ebb and flow of the tide below the [1817] mean high water level – regardless of whether

the water courses were commercially navigable at the time of Mississippi’s admission into the

Union, regardless of how insignificant the tidal influence, or how shallow the water, regardless

of how far inland and remote from the sea. Similarly granted were the beds and streams of all

non-tidal waters which were navigable in fact in 1817.” Id. at 516-17. It is also clear in our

case law that since the time Mississippi entered the Union and received both these tidelands



                                                     11
and these submerged lands in trust,7 “the common law of this State has adhered to the doctrine

of public trust, applying it in both sixteenth section lands as well as tidelands.” Wiesenberg,

633 So.2d at 987 (citations omitted).    “The only way public trust lands can be disposed of is

if it is done pursuant to ‘a higher public purpose,’ while at the same time not being detrimental

to the general public.   Once land is held by the state in trust, properties are committed to the

public (purpose) trust and may be alienated from the State only upon the authority of legislative

enactment and then only consistent with the public purposes of the trust.”          Id. (citations

omitted).   Additionally, we have interpreted Miss. Const. art.4, § 104 (1890)8 to hold that the

State’s title to these public tidelands “may not be lost via adverse possession, limitations or

laches.” Cinque Bambini, 491 So.2d at 521.

¶12.    Naturally, and as has been recognized by this Court, the line where the land actually

borders the water is “wildly meandering” and constantly moving and changing.         Id. at 515.

Thus, determining where the privately-owned lands ended and where the state-owned tidelands

began was seemingly impossible.     At the time of Cinque Bambini, we recognized that the

mean high water mark was found as a more constant boundary of necessity, and as a line that

is ascertainable through established and accepted scientific methods.   Id.   “That mark is not


        7
        By way of clarification, while “submerged lands” refers to lands “which remain covered
by waters, where the tides ebb and flow, at ordinary low tides,” “tidelands” refers to “lands
which are daily covered and uncovered by water by the action of the tides, up to the mean line
of the ordinary high tides.” Miss. Code Ann. § 29-15-1(g), (h). See also Phillips Petroleum,
484 U.S. at 477.
        8
          Miss. Const. art. 4, § 104 (1890) states that “[s]tatutes of limitation in civil causes
shall not run against the State, or any subdivision or municipal corporation thereof.”

                                               12
a line observable on the ground, although it may be plotted by surveyors trained in the field.

When plotted we confront the geographical reality of a continuous, unbroken line wildly

meandering, to be sure, but reaching from Alabama on the east in uninterrupted sequence to

Louisiana on the west.” Id. at 515. The line separating the water from the land, which also

separates private land from that land held in trust, changes over time in part due to accretions

to the land, which can be natural deposits or artificial fill.     Accretions include the gradual

deposits of alluvial soil upon the margin of the water (gradual recession of the water can, of

course, also change the line), or deposits of silt or sand over tidewaters adjacent to the

shoreline due to artificial causes. Harrison County v. Guice, 244 Miss. 95, 108, 140 So.2d

838, 842 (1962).

¶13.    In Guice, this Court had to determine what the legal effect of these accretions would

be.    At the time of Guice, we recognized that the rule was generally that the uplands owner is

entitled to the title to accretions to his land, protecting the riparian or littoral owner’s access

to the water.      Id.   We found it irrelevant whether the accretions were the result of natural

causes or artificial ones, attempting to ensure that a landowner’s littoral rights would not be

cut off. Id. “This reason is just as valid when the area adjacent to the upland owner is filled in

or pumped up by acts of strangers to the upland title, as it is when the gradual deposit of alluvial

soil raises the land adjacent to the upland owner.   In either event, the upland owner should be

given title in fee to the new land so that he may have continued access to the water.” Id. at

842-43. This rule was eventually modified when we overruled Guice in part in Miss. State



                                                13
Highway Comm’n v. Gilich, 609 So.2d 367, 375 (Miss. 1992).9 In 1989, after our decisions

in Guice and Cinque Bambini, but before our decision in Gilich, the state legislature enacted

the Public Trust Tidelands Act, Miss. Code Ann. §§ 29-15-1, et seq., in an attempt to make a

determination of the line of demarcation between land belonging to private landowners and

land belonging to the public trust. Wiesenberg, 633 So. 2d at 987.

¶14.    In its enactment of the Public Trust Tidelands Act, the legislature made unquestionably

clear its intent and purpose. Section 29-15-3 provides:

        Declaration of public policy and purpose
        (1) It is declared to be the public policy of this state to favor the preservation
        of the natural state of the public trust tidelands and their ecosystems and to
        prevent the despoliation and destruction of them, except where a specific
        alteration of specific public trust tidelands would serve a higher public interest
        in compliance with the public purposes of the public trust in which such
        tidelands are held.
        (2) It is hereby declared to be a higher public purpose of this state and the public
        tidelands trust to resolve the uncertainty and disputes which have arisen as to the
        location of the boundary between the state's public trust tidelands and the upland
        property and to confirm the mean high water boundary line as determined by the
        Mississippi Supreme Court, the laws of this state and this chapter.

In Wiesenberg, we set out legislative findings of fact relating to the enactment of the Public

Trust Tidelands Act, as provided in the Editor’s Note – Laws, 1989, ch. 495, § 1, effective

from and after March 31, 1989:


        9
         In Gilich, we stated, “[O]n the basis of Section 95 [“no- donation of state-owned or
state-controlled lands”] of the Mississippi Constitution we hereby overrule Guice insofar as
it applies the doctrine of artificial accretion so as to render lands once a part of the public
trust, the property of private land owners by the action of the government in artificially
recovering such lands.” 609 So.2d at 375. However, as will be discussed in more detail, infra,
our limited overruling of Guice in Gilich does not affect the outcome of today’s case. Gilich
was factually dissimilar to Guice, and likewise, to today’s case.

                                                  14
SECTION 1. The Legislature finds that certainty and stability of the land titles
of riparian and littoral property owners along the banks of the navigable rivers
and waterways on the borders and in the interior of the state and along the shores
of the tidally affected waters of the state are essential to the economic welfare
of the state and to the peace, tranquility and financial security of the many
thousands of citizens who own such lands; that a dispute has developed with
respect to such lands bordering on tidally affected waters, calling into question
titles and legal issues believed secure and determined from the date of
statehood; that this dispute has cast a doubt and cloud over the titles to all
littoral lands and all riparian lands along the rivers and shorelines of the coastal
area to such a degree that land sales are being prevented, business and home
purchasing has been made difficult or impossible, industrial financing based on
such titles has become unavailable, and homeowners and other owners have been
rendered apprehensive as to their security in their ownership. Economic growth
and development in the coastal counties are at a virtual standstill, creating a
constantly increasing and incalculable loss of dollars to the area as well as the
loss of countless new jobs for the average citizens of this state. The Legislature
finds that this dispute has already caused extensive harm, is intolerable, and
immediate resolution is required and would serve the higher public purpose, in
order that public trust tidelands and submerged lands may be utilized through
their normal interface with the fast lands in furtherance of all the usual purposes
of the trust.

The Legislature recognizes that it serves the interests of all the citizens of the
state as well as the interests of each individual area and that when controversies
and problems arise between divergent interests it becomes the duty and
responsibility of the Legislature to balance these interests and reach equitable
solutions which will create the least amount of harm to the individual citizens
and the state as a whole. The Legislature finds, in accordance with justice and
sound policy, that resolving the problems in the manner herein set out would
create far less harm and be of greater benefit to the state and its citizens in
terms of preventing economic loss, loss of jobs, loss of development, use and
enjoyment of the tidelands and submerged lands, loss of industry and loss of
revenue to the state than any benefits which would be derived from any attempt
to completely rectify unregulated wetlands use which has occurred in the past,
that the amount of damage, harm or loss that has occurred to the lands held in
public trust since statehood is negligible compared to the benefit of resolving
the problem, that the cost of any other solution is far in excess of the amount
of public gain.




                                        15
633 So.2d at 987-88. The statutory purpose was “to resolve the uncertainty and disputes which

have arisen as to the location of the boundary between the state’s public trust tidelands and the

upland property and to confirm the mean high water boundary line as determined by the

Mississippi Supreme Court, the laws of this state and this chapter.” Miss. Code Ann. § 29-15-

3(2).

                  B.       An overview of the Public Trust Tidelands Act

¶15.    An overview of the Public Trust Tidelands Act is equally important as we consider

today’s case.10        Miss. Code Ann. § 29-15-7 and this Court’s decision in Wiesenberg, 633


        10
       In fact, we interject here various definitions which will be helpful to the reader. Miss.
Code Ann. § 29-15-1 provides numerous definitions:

        (a) "Commission" means the Mississippi Commission on Marine Resources.

        (b) "Local tidal datum" means the datum established for a specific tide station
        through the use of tidal observations made at that station.

        (c) "Mean high water" means the arithmetic mean of all the high waters
        occurring in a particular nineteen-year tidal epoch period; or for a shorter period
        of time after corrections are applied to the short term observations to reduce
        these values to the equivalent nineteen-year value.

        (d) "Mean high water line" means the intersection of the tidal datum plane of
        mean high water with the shore.

        (e) "Mean high water survey" means a survey of the intersection of the shoreline
        with the tidal datum plane of mean high water using local tidal datums and
        surveying methodologies approved by the commission. Methodologies shall
        include but not be limited to the "staking method," "the topographic method" and
        "tide coordinated aerial photography."

        (f) "National map accuracy standards" means a set of guidelines published by the
        Office of Management and Budget of the United States to which maps produced

                                                  16
So.2d at 990-93, outline in detail the procedure to be used in determining a final map of

Mississippi’s public trust tidelands; however, restating here verbatim the procedure laid out

in the Act and discussed at length in Wiesenberg would serve no useful purpose, and thus we

will not do so.

¶16.    On the other hand, we will generally discuss the mapping procedure here, focusing on

section 29-15-7 and Wiesenberg. The Secretary of State is to file a preliminary map depicting

“the boundary as the current mean high water line where shoreline is undeveloped and in

developed areas or where there have been encroachments, such maps shall depict the boundary

as the determinable mean high water line nearest the effective date of the Coastal Wetlands

Protection Act.” Miss. Code Ann. § 29-15-7(1); Wiesenberg, 633 So.2d at 990.                This

preliminary map is submitted to the chancery clerks of the coastal counties (Hancock,

Harrison and Jackson), and each of the chancery clerks is to post the map in a public place in

the clerk’s office.    Miss. Code Ann. § 29-15-7(3).        The Secretary of State likewise is

statutorily required to cause this preliminary map to be published in a newspaper having general

circulation within each of the coastal counties; to publish a notice in three (3) public places

in each coastal county; and to have the map available for public inspection in the office of the


        by the United States government adhere.

        (g) "Submerged lands" means lands which remain covered by waters, where the
        tides ebb and flow, at ordinary low tides.

        (h) "Tidelands" means those lands which are daily covered and uncovered by
        water by the action of the tides, up to the mean line of the ordinary high tides.


                                                  17
Secretary of State. Id.      For sixty (60) days after publication, comments and/or additional

documentation may be received, with the Secretary of State having discretion to revise the map

based on receipt of comments and/or documentation, though further revision is not statutorily

mandated. Id. Section 29-15-7(4).      The final certified map is to then be published, utilizing the

same method of publication, and shall be filed in the land records located in the chancery

clerk’s offices in each of the three coastal counties.11        Upon recordation, the map is final as

to properties not subject to the trust; however, as to those properties subject to the trust, the

Secretary of State, within one-hundred twenty (120) days of final adoption of the certified

map, shall notify those property owners that their lands are subject to the public trust and are

in violation of the trust.   Any such property owner shall have six (6) months to negotiate a

settlement with the Secretary of State. Id.    Absent a settlement, the aggrieved property owner

may commence suit in the appropriate chancery court. Section 29-15-7(5). Aggrieved parties

have additional remedies as provided in section 29-15-7(6).12

¶17.   Turning to today’s case, and keeping in mind the facts and circumstances peculiar to this

particular case, we emphasize that how the mean high water line is to be determined for the

preliminary map depends on whether shorelines of the mapped areas are developed or

undeveloped.    In developed lands, as in today’s case, the preliminary map “shall depict the

       11
           Recognizing that Harrison County has two judicial districts with the county seat of the
First Judicial District being Gulfport, and the county seat of the Second Judicial District being
Biloxi, there would be filings in both offices. See Miss. Code Ann. § 9-1-39 (Rev. 2002).
       12
         Again, this is but a generalized overview of the statutory mapping procedure. Other
statutory requirements not discussed here must also be followed. The mapping procedure and
boundary challenge procedure are set out in detail in section 29-15-7(1)-(6).

                                                 18
boundary as the determinable mean high water line nearest the effective date of the Coastal

Wetlands Protection Act,”13 which is July 1, 1973.      Miss. Code Ann. § 29-15-7(1).       The

Secretary of State, in exercising discretion vested under the statute, may revise the preliminary

map based on comments and additional documentation received during the statutory 60-day

period, and prepare the final map accordingly. “Any comments indicating the presence of any

unauthorized artificial filling on developed properties prior to July 1, 1973, should be

reflected on the final map.” Wiesenberg, 633 So.2d at 991.

¶18.   Once the certified final map is filed, the Secretary of State is to determine which

landowners are in violation of the public trust, meaning they occupy land that, because of the

trust boundary, is actually the property of the State, and then notify those landowners by

certified mail. Miss. Code Ann. § 29-15-7(4). Pursuant to the Act, after the notice is received

by the landowners, the affected landowners are allowed a six-month period in which “to

negotiate and settle differences with the Secretary of State” arising from the final map, also

allowing for any extensions granted by the Secretary of State, in the exercise of discretion.


       13
           Miss. Code Ann. § 49-27-1. Miss. Code Ann. § 49-27-5(a)(b) (Rev. 2003), as it
existed and applied to today’s case, defined “coastal wetlands” as “all publicly- owned lands
subject to the ebb and flow of the tide; which are below the watermark of ordinary high tide;
all publicly- owned accretions above the watermark of ordinary high tide and all publicly-owned
submerged water-bottoms below the watermark of ordinary high tide” and includes “the flora
and fauna on the wetlands and in the wetlands.” In 2005, the legislature amended this statute
by, inter alia, basically combining subsections (a) and (b) into a new subsection (a). The
Coastal Wetlands Protection Act declared the public policy of this state to be “to favor the
preservation of the natural state of the coastal wetlands and their ecosystems and to prevent
the despoliation and destruction of them, except where a specific alteration of specific coastal
wetlands would serve a higher public interest in compliance with the public purposes of the
public trust in which coastal wetlands are held.” Miss. Code Ann. § 49-27-3.

                                               19
Id.   The notice delivered by certified mail is to include an explanation of the procedures

available to the affected landowners to resolve these disputes.   Id. § 29-15-7(5). See also id.

§§ 11-17-1, et seq. (Rev. 2004). The Secretary of State and the affected landowner may

execute a boundary determination in a written agreement which would be final and binding to

its parties after it is recorded in the proper chancery clerk’s office where the property is

located (in either Hancock, Harrison or Jackson Counties). Id. 29-15-7(4).           The affected

landowners who are unable to resolve their disputes via this statutory avenue may then seek

judicial relief by filing suit within three years following receipt of the notice described above.

Id. §§ 29-15-7(5)(6). If no action is taken by any adversely affected landowner within that time

period, the boundary on the certified map is to become final.       Id. § 29-15-7(6).    The Act

clearly provides that “[i]n any such action, the state shall have the burden of proof by a

preponderance of evidence that any such land is subject to the trust.” Id. § 29-15-7(5). The

State carries this statutorily required burden of proof regardless of whether the judicial

proceedings are commenced by the State or by the individual landowner. This Court has stated,

“[a]fter the preliminary map is drawn using the mean high water line in developed areas as of

July 1, 1973, the burden of proof is on the Secretary of State to show that any artificial

accretion occurring prior to July 1, 1973, was not done pursuant to a constitutional legislative

enactment and for a higher public purpose.” Wiesenberg, 633 So.2d at 992.




                                               20
                 C.   How the boundary was determined in this case

¶19.    We now turn to the facts of today’s case.        The State filed its preliminary map in

September of 1994. On November 14, 1994, Bayview and IPM submitted their comments and

objections to the preliminary map.    The State filed its final certified Map of Public Trust

Tidelands on December 15, 1994.       This final map had no changes incorporated into it based

on the comments and objections that Bayview and IPM had submitted, but was instead identical

to the preliminary map with regard to the Bayview property. On April 4, 1995, the Secretary

of State sent out the notices required under the Act to three of IPM’s predecessors in title.

On June 7, 1995, Bayview and IPM filed their Notice of Protest and Dispute.       Bayview and

IPM filed their complaint on April 3, 1998, within the statutorily allowed three-year

limitations period.

¶20.    The trial court heard testimony from various witnesses, including engineers from

Thompson Engineering, geologists from the Mississippi Office of Geology, experts in

geography, experts in coastal surveying, as well as archeologists and land surveyors. The trial

court also received into evidence various documents prepared by the experts. Based on the

evidence presented at trial, the chancellor found that relevant, credible evidence appeared in

the record to show where the last natural shoreline position existed.          Specifically, the

chancellor found:

        Based upon the totality of the credible, relevant evidence in this record, the
        Court finds by a preponderance of the evidence that (1) the 1851 coastal survey
        map (B-1) depicts the natural mean high water line, circa 1851, at the IPM site;
        (2) there is no credible evidence that the LNSP (Last Natural Shoreline
        Position) at the IPM site has been masked or placed beyond reasonable

                                              21
       discovery by hurricanes or dredging; (3) that between the 1880's and early
       1900's there were massive unnatural, manmade alterations of the natural
       shoreline at the IPM site; (4) that such manmade alterations consisted of oyster
       shells and fill placed by IPM’s canning company predecessors in interest; (5)
       that the highest probability LNSP at the IPM site is the TELNSP (Thompson
       Engineering Last Natural Shoreline [Meander] Position) as shown on Exhibit S-
       26; (6) that the TELNSP at the IPM site is credibly surveyed and depicted by
       reference to existing and known landmarks and the land lying north and east of
       the TELNSP is credibly surveyed, depicted, described and quantified. (Exhibits
       S161 and S179).

The chancellor thus found that the 1851 natural mean high water line was reliably ascertainable;

that the last natural shoreline position was not beyond reasonable discovery; and, that

manmade, artificial accretions occurred at the IPM site between the 1880's and early 1900's

which changed the shoreline. The chancellor concluded:

       Having found by a preponderance of the evidence that the line which
       corresponds with the mean high water line at its last natural position at the IPM
       site at the moment of human intervention is the TELNSP and that all land lying
       bayward, i.e. north and east of said TELNSP is the result of artificial filling it
       follows as a matter of law that the boundary line separating State owned public
       trust tidelands and uplands owned by IPM is the TELNSP as surveyed and placed
       on the ground by [professional land surveyor] Michael Cassady. Title to all land
       lying north and east of said boundary line is confirmed in the State. Title to all
       lands claimed by IPM lying south and west of said line is confirmed in IPM.

               D.      The arguments on appeal

¶21.   Exactly what the State must prove (by a preponderance of the evidence) is “that any

artificial accretion occurring prior to July 1, 1973, was not done pursuant to a constitutional

legislative enactment and for a higher public purpose.” Wiesenberg, 633 So.2d at 992. For

example, if a landowner artificially accreted to his land to provide environmental protection

or to allow docking of vessels and make fishing more efficient, this would serve a higher


                                                22
public purpose of the trust.   Cinque Bambini, 491 So.2d at 512 (citations omitted). In such

cases, such an artificial accretion would be authorized and vest to the uplands title holder. On

the other hand, for the land to vest in the trust, the Secretary of State must prove the accretions

offend our state constitution and were not made for a higher public purpose.           This should

ordinarily be done “[a]fter the preliminary map is drawn using the mean high water line in

developed areas as of July 1, 1973.” Wiesenberg, 633 So.2d at 992. This is so because, in

Wiesenberg, we affirmed that date as a starting point for determination of the mean high

water line in developed areas. Id. at 986, 991 (emphasis in original). We no doubt emphasized

that this date was not “a mandatory bench mark.” Id.

¶22.   Bayview and IPM first point out that the State holds its tidelands and submerged lands

in trust for two beneficiaries, members of the general public and private landowners with

littoral and riparian rights under statute and common law. Miss. Code Ann. § 29-15-5. Next,

Bayview and IPM, conceding that its land was in fact extended bayward by pre-1973 artificial

accretions, contend now that the Secretary of State simply did not meet at trial the burden it

carried, in that the State never showed that the artificial accretions were not done pursuant to

a constitutional legislative enactment and for a higher public purpose.    In fact, Bayview and

IPM argue that the evidence the State presented shows that the accretions were consistent with

the common law and the statutory law of the public trust.    This Court has held the many public

purposes of the trust to include “navigation and transportation, commerce, fishing, bathing,

swimming, and other recreational activities, development of mineral resources, environmental



                                                23
protection and preservation, the enhancement of aquatic, avarian and marine life, sea

agriculture and no doubt others.”     Cinque Bambini, 491 So.2d at 512 (internal citations

omitted).    See also Wiesenberg, 633 So.2d at 988-89.        Bayview and IPM argue that the

Secretary of State had the burden to prove that not an inch of ground arose from the acts of

strangers, including the state, and had the burden to prove that any accretions were not already

vested in the upland owner by common or statutory law of the trust.        IPM thus argues that

because the State cannot meet its burden, the State cannot prove that the IPM accretions are

subject to the trust.

¶23.    The State, on the other hand, argues that land that was once in trust, beginning upon

Mississippi’s admission to the Union, simply cannot be taken away from the trust. The State

directs our attention to our holding that “once the state possesses public trust lands it is

deemed to possess such property forever.” Gilich, 609 So.2d at 374. This holding was based

on our reading of Miss. Const. art. 4, § 95 (1890), which provides that “lands belonging to, or

under the control of the state, shall never be donated directly or indirectly to private

corporations or individuals.” Id.   The State further argues that because the mean high water

line is naturally ambulatory, and because the statute recognizes this, the legal boundary moves

with the mean high water line and where the trust boundary may have been at an earlier time

becomes legally irrelevant.   Miss. Code Ann. § 29-15-7(2).    See also Cinque Bambini, 491

So.2d at 510-11.14 On the other hand, the State argues that the same cannot be said when the


        14
         We held that “fee simple title to all lands naturally subject to tidal influence, inland
to today’s mean high water mark, is held by the State of Mississippi in trust. On the other hand,

                                               24
water line ambulates from non-natural means.           Private land can be artificially submerged,

through trenching for example, and become subject to the tidal influence without becoming

part of the public trust; likewise, private land can be artificially accreted to and abut further into

the trust tidelands without making those filled tidelands a new part of the private land.         The

State may settle boundary disputes, charged with a duty to “hold to a minimum any incidental

or accidental public trust losses.” Wiesenberg, 633 So. 2d at 991.

¶24.   The history of the IPM parcel of land is a fascinating one.             In the early twentieth

century, the Biloxi Canning Company, owned by a Croatian immigrant, Bernard Taltavull,

occupied the land.15   Mountains of oyster shells began occupying the land bordering the water

of the Back Bay.       Evidence presented at trial strongly infers that the enormous amount of

shells played a vital role in eventually changing the shoreline.     The State went to great lengths

through the evidence it presented at trial (1) to show that land composed of artificial

accretions lay between the natural land and the shore; and, (2) to determine the last natural

shoreline position between the natural land and this accreted land bordering the water.

However, the State failed to meet its burden of proving by a preponderance of the credible

evidence that the accretions were not done pursuant to a constitutional legislative enactment



lands brought within the ebb and flow of the tide by avulsion or by artificial or non-natural
means are owned by their private record titleholders.” Cinque Bambini P’ship v. State, 491
So.2d 508, 510-11 (Miss. 1986). In other words, lands naturally submerged and subject to the
tide belong to the State and lands artificially submerged and subject to the tide belong to the
private landowners.
       15
         Actually, the record reveals that an oyster canning company had occupied this site
since 1881.

                                                 25
and for a higher public purpose.        The State did present substantial credible evidence that went

to prove the location of the last natural shoreline, but that substantial credible evidence did not

show that the accretions to the IPM land were not done pursuant to a constitutional legislative

enactment or for a higher public purpose. Not unlike part of the Secretary of State’s argument

in Wiesenberg, the argument of the Secretary of State today depends on using something other

than the July 1, 1973, mean high water line as the beginning boundary delineation point to

prevail.     Nowhere in the statute or in the applicable case law does the last natural shoreline

position determine the rights of the State or the private landowner in such a dispute.           The

Secretary of State should have begun with a preliminary map based on the July 1, 1973, mean

high water line. This he did not do. In Wiesenberg, the Secretary of State argued in part that

the appropriate date to determine the boundary on the preliminary map was the date on which

the property was developed. Today, the Secretary of State uses as his beginning point the date

Mississippi entered the Union in 1817.       Following the history of the land up to present day,

the Secretary of State relies on a map from 1851 to be of great evidentiary value and notes that

after the early 1880s, the shape of the land bordering the water began to change because of

artificial accretions.   His charge is to use the mean high water line nearest July 1, 1973. In

doing so, if the Secretary of State is able to present a different water line revealing unlawful

accretions, the Secretary may unquestionably use this water line as opposed to the mean high

water nearest July 1, 1973.

¶25.       In settling other claims in similar boundary disputes, the Secretary admits to the agreed

use of a 1954 seawall. Indeed the State points us to the time period when the land in question

                                                  26
was being developed, beginning in the early 1880s. We have warned against doing so. “If the

developed areas were to be surveyed as of the date of development, the cost would be

enormous. In addition it would create more lawsuits to determine exactly what constitutes

development, what precise time did this development occur, who did it and why, and was it

somehow authorized. The more efficient method is to determine the tidelands boundaries as

of one point in time, therefore making it applicable to everyone at the same time, in the same

manner, and with all having a right to be heard.” Wiesenberg, 633 So.2d at 992-93.

¶26.   We have stated that we do not interpret the tidelands legislation to be a donation in

violation of Miss. Const. art. 4, § 95 (1890), “but rather as a unified attempt by the Legislature

to resolve the discord existing between the State and area landowners,” and one we have held

to be constitutional. Wiesenberg, 633 So.2d at 991.       While, as the State points out today, it

remains true that the July 1, 1973, line was never meant to be the final determination, we have

affirmed its use as “a starting point in ascertaining the mean high water line in developed

areas.” Id. The State instead used a starting point which precedes 1973 by more than one and

one-half centuries, the boundary line as it existed when Mississippi entered the Union in 1817.

We have conceded this 1973 line to be imperfect, but one that should protect the public’s

interest as well as private ownership.   Id.   We quoted the chancellor’s words in Wiesenberg

to point out that “while a few may improvidently benefit from the 1989 Tidelands Act, and

while a few may be harmed by it, the overall effect of the Act will not be to donate public

property to private interests, but will act as a long delayed delineation between public and



                                                27
private interests.” Id. (emphasis in original).   This is in accord with the purposes of the trust,

reflected in the accompanying legislative history to Section 29- 15- 1 and in the text of Section

29-15- 3, which declares that a higher public purpose of the state and of the Act is “to resolve

the uncertainty and disputes which have arisen as to the location of the boundary between the

state’s public trust tidelands and the upland property and to confirm the mean high water

boundary line as determined by the Mississippi Supreme Court, the laws of this state and this

chapter.” However this end can only be efficiently achieved if the procedures and burdens in

the Act are heeded.

¶27.   We found in Wiesenberg that there was “‘no substantial interference with the original

purposes of the trust imposed upon the state in connection with [the lands in question], and the

development as authorized by the statutes is consistent with the public trust.’”       Id. at 993

(quoting Treuting v. Bridge & Park Comm’n of City of Biloxi, 199 So.2d 627, 633 (Miss.

1967)). In Treuting, we held, “If the totality of the development promotes the public interest

in general,   the incidental private ownership         of individual lots does not negate the

comprehensive public purpose.”        199 So.2d at 633.          We reaffirmed this principle in

Wiesenberg, where we relied on Treuting to find that a transfer of public property to a private

party as a result of using the 1973 mean high water line in developed areas for preparing the

preliminary map did not violate our state constitution where the transfer was incidental to

achieving a higher public purpose, such as determining a definite boundary and stimulating the

coast economy. 633 So.2d at 993. We noted that the “presence of any unauthorized artificial



                                                  28
filling on developed properties prior to July 1, 1973, should be reflected on the final map.”

Id. at 991 (emphasis added). When looking to the purposes of the trust as defined in the Act

and in our case law, the presence of the accretions on the land at issue here certainly appear

to be one of which is the promotion of commerce.        The question we resolved in Wiesenberg

is not unlike the one presented to us today. We recognized there that the Act “explicitly states

that the common law doctrines pertaining to tidelands such as natural accretion and reliction

continue to be applicable.” Id. at 992. See Miss. Code Ann. § 29-15-7(2). We have stated,

“There is no constraint on the final map to include or exclude any lands which have been

artificially filled prior to 1973.   However, if a landowner can show that this artificial filling

was done pursuant to a legislative act, or for a higher public purpose, the 1973 mean high water

line should remain in tact.” Id. (emphasis added). The State, throughout the life of these civil

proceedings, was shouldered with the preponderance of the evidence burden of proof.           Here

that burden was to show that any pre-1973 accretions were “not done pursuant to a

constitutional legislative enactment and for a higher purpose.”     Id.   (emphasis added).    We

unquestionably find that the State failed to meet that burden at trial and made no attempt to

show on appeal how that burden was met.

¶28.    Indeed, the totality of the record reveals that the artificial accretions (primarily oyster

shells) constituted “a specific alteration of specific public trust tidelands” which “serve[d] a

higher public interest in compliance with the public purposes of the public trust in which such

tidelands are held.”     Miss. Code Ann. § 29-15-3(1).       During the years of existence of the



                                                 29
oyster industry on this Back Bay location, the State maintained a program jointly with the

oyster canneries to replant the oyster shells on reefs in the trust waters. For example, Miss.

Code, 1930, § 6881, provided, inter alia, that twenty-five percent of all oyster shells which

were taken from the public reefs were declared to be the non-transferrable property of the state

and were to be delivered to the sea-food commission by stock-piling the shells at the place of

business of the oyster dealer or factory.       An oyster dealer’s failure to comply with this

statutory mandate was a misdemeanor subject to payment of a fine.

¶29.    The State of Mississippi thus, not only acquiesced in, but mandated certain actions by

the oyster industry resulting at least in large part to the artificial accretions which are the

subject of today’s litigation.   Likewise a portion of these stockpiled oyster shells were used

for replanting on reefs in the waters of the trust. Certainly this activity would not only be non-

violative of our state constitution, but consistent with its provisions, and certainly would be

consistent with our common law and legislative enactments.          We recognized such higher public

interests and purposes as fishing and the enhancement of aquatic, avarian and marine life and

sea agriculture in Wiesenberg, 633 So.2d at 988-89 (citing Cinque Bambini, 491 So.2d at

512).

¶30.    We now turn to the common law on accretions, which as discussed above, still applies

to the Act. In Harrison County v. Guice, 244 Miss. 95, 107-08, 140 So.2d 838, 842-43

(1962), we held that accretions caused by third-party strangers to the upland title will vest in

the upland owner, warning against the mischiefs that could occur if a stranger could sandwich

himself between the water and upland owner, cutting off the upland owner’s littoral rights.

                                                30
Specifically, we stated, “where the owner of the upland had no part in creating the artificial

addition or accretion, such owner acquires title in fee to such additional land.           Reason and

authority recommend this rule.” Id. at 842.              The land belonging to the private landowner in

Guice was extended via accretions which were the result of authorized highway protection

improvements by Harrison County, including a state-constructed seawall, in an effort to

restore eroded land and prevent further erosion.            Id. at 840.   Guice once owned lands that

bordered the water which partially eroded away as a result of a seawall; however, the State later

restored that eroded land and actually added to the Guice property, extending it into the water

farther than it had been before the erosion. The effect of our holding in Guice was to make the

artificially accreted land, which before the erosion had been submerged lands belonging to the

State in trust, part of the privately-owned Guice parcel.

¶31.    As already noted, Guice was overruled in part by Miss. State Highway Comm’n v.

Gilich, 609 So.2d 367, 375 (Miss. 1992), where we stated that Guice was overruled “insofar

as it applies the doctrine of artificial accretions so as to render lands once a part of the public

trust, the property of private land owners by the action of the government in artificially

recovering such lands.” In Gilich, the private landowners were claiming their oceanfront beach

property was taken by the State without compensation in violation of the Mississippi

Constitution when the State Highway Commission began building the “I-110 loop,” a

connecting route to I-10 which at its southernmost point is a ramp looping over the Gulf of

Mexico and back to Highway 90.           Id. at 369.      We looked to the Fifth Circuit’s reasoning in



                                                    31
United States v. Harrison County, 399 F.2d 485, 488 (5th Cir. 1968), to find that the Guice

holding conflicted with Miss. Const. art. 4, § 95 (1890), which provides, “Lands belonging to,

or under the control of the State, shall never be donated directly or indirectly, to private

corporations or individuals, or to railroad companies. Nor shall such land be sold to

corporations or associations for a less price than that for which it is subject to sale to

individuals.” 609 So.2d at 375. The Fifth Circuit in Harrison County, 399 F.2d at 491, held

that “[t]he common law doctrine of artificial accretion must yield to the command of the

Mississippi Constitution as to the disposition of state owned lands” and we agreed in Gilich.

Id.    Bayview and IPM now ask us to revisit Gilich and Guice and reconsider the logical

consequences of this Court’s rulings.     While we today distinguish Gilich and thus find it

inapplicable to today’s case, we continue our discussion consistent with the invitation to revisit

Gilich and Guice.

¶32.    IPM argues that Gilich’s overruling of Guice applied only insofar as it implicated

Section 95 of the Mississippi Constitution, and thus applied only to the State of Mississippi

as a stranger to upland title, and Gilich overturned Guice only in part because the facts

supporting Guice were not present in Gilich, i.e., Guice actually owned land south of the

seawall that was covered by the county’s actions, whereas Gilich did not. IPM emphasizes that

the Gilich holding was a limited overruling of Guice because this Court stated that Guice was

overruled “insofar as it applies the doctrine of artificial accretions so as to render lands once

a part of the public trust, the property of private land owners by the action of the government



                                               32
in artificially recovering such lands.” Gilich, 609 So.2d at 375 (emphasis added). Treasure

Bay asserts that the common law rule that accretions caused by third- party strangers to the

upland title will vest in the upland owner is still the law in Mississippi, at least as to non-state

third-party strangers to the upland title. Guice, 140 So. 2d at 842. We agree. We have already

held that employing the Act to determine the boundary of the Public Tidelands Trust does not

violate the donation clause of the Mississippi Constitution.     Wiesenberg, 633 So.2d at 991.

Also the statute and case law leave no doubt that the common law on accretions is to remain

intact and work in conjunction with the Act. Holding otherwise would be akin to holding that

piers, wharves, and other structures, constructed by private landowners as a statutory right

under sections 49-15-9 and 49-27-7,16 would inure to the benefit of the State, causing the State


       16
          Miss. Code Ann. Section 49-27-7 allows an owner of riparian rights to construct and
maintain piers, boathouses and similar structures if they are constructed on pilings that permit
a reasonably unobstructed ebb and flow of the tide. “Riparian” refers to land bordering rivers
and streams, and “littoral” refers to lands bordering lakes and oceans; however, the statute
clearly refers to lands subject to the ebb and flow of the tide. Id. § 49-27-5(a). Ocean waters
and connected bays would obviously be subject to the tide while rivers and streams would not
ordinarily be. Therefore we must assume the legislature is loosely using the word “riparian”
to mean both riparian and littoral. Also, “[t]he riparian owner may reasonably alter the wetland
at the end of his pier in order to allow docking of his vessels.” Id. § 49-27-7. “The sole right
of planting, cultivating in racks or other structures, and gathering oysters and erecting
bathhouses and other structures in front of any land bordering on the Gulf of Mexico or
Mississippi Sound or waters tributary thereto belongs to the riparian owner . . . but no person
shall plant in any natural channel so as to interfere with navigation, and such riparian rights shall
not include any reef or natural oyster bed and does not extend beyond any channel.” Id. § 49-
15-9. “All bathhouses, piers, wharfs, docks and pavilions, or other structures owned by riparian
owner are likewise the private property of such owner, who shall be entitled to the exclusive
use, occupancy and possession thereof, and may abate any private or public nuisance
committed by any person or persons in the area of his riparian ownership and may, for such
purposes, resort to any remedial action authorized by law.” Id.


                                                33
to become the upland owner and holder of the littoral rights which accompany the real

property.

¶33.    Presented with a substantial question of law in this case, we are to review the issues de

novo.   In reviewing an opinion issued after a trial on the merits held before a chancellor, we

are to overturn the findings of the chancellor only when they are manifestly wrong or when an

erroneous legal standard has been applied. Columbia Land Dev., 868 So.2d at 1011 (relying

on Vaughn, 798 So.2d at 433; Tucker, 791 So.2d at 192). We are thus constrained to find that

the findings of the chancellor were manifestly wrong in this case as an erroneous legal standard

was applied, that being the use of the last natural shoreline position to determine the public

trust boundary in developed areas. Our case law and statute are clear that the correct standard

to use was the mean high water line nearest to July, 1 1973, and with this in mind the State was

then required to prove by a preponderance of the credible evidence that the artificial accretions

above this mean high water line were not done pursuant to a constitutional legislative

enactment and for a higher public purpose.      Inasmuch as the State wholly failed to meet its

mandated burden of proof in this case, we find this issue, as asserted by Bayview and IPM, to

have merit. Our disposition of this issue thus requires that we remand this case to the trial

court, for the limited purpose of conducting a further evidentiary hearing consistent with our

directives in order to determine the mean high water line nearest the effective date of the

Coastal Wetlands Protection Act [Miss. Code Ann. §§ 49-27-1, et seq.]. The effective date of

the Coastal Wetlands Protection Act was July 1, 1973.      See Miss. Code Ann. § 29-15-7(1);

Wiesenberg, 633 So.2d at 991.           Once the chancellor has made this determination, the

                                               34
chancellor shall then declare that all land lying north and east of this line shall be vested in the

State as part of the public trust tidelands, and that all land lying south and west of this line as

determined by the chancellor shall vest in Bayview and IPM.

       II.     WHETHER THE 1928 PUBLIC LAND PATENT TO TALTAVULL
               WAS VALID

¶34.   The trial court held that the land patent from the State presumedly conveying the land

in question to Taltavull, one of IPM’s supposed predecessors in interest, was null and void for

want of authority.    Taltavull had owned the IPM parcel of land in 1928 where he operated his

Biloxi Canning and Packing Company and Bay View Crushing Company businesses engaged

in oyster canning and crushing and disposing of the byproduct shells.      On July 11, 1928, the

State of Mississippi issued a Public Land Patent to Taltavull, for consideration of $8.13.      The

biennial report of the Commissioner of State Lands dating from July 1, 1927, to June 30,

1929, shows the Taltavull Patent to be 6.5 acres of land for a consideration of $8.13, the

statutory minimum of $1.25 per acre as fixed by law in the 1906 Mississippi Code. The trial

court concluded that “[t]here is no credible evidence that the statutory minimum consideration

paid by Taltavull for the patented land is so grossly inadequate that it constitutes a donation

prohibited by Section 95 our State Constitution,” and we agree.

¶35.     However, the trial court went further and found there were no later conveyances from

Taltavull divesting him, his heirs or devises, of title to the patented land and there were no

conveyances vesting IPM or its predecessors in title with any interest in the land. Thus the trial

court found the patent null and void for want of authority and violative of section 81 of our



                                                 35
state constitution (“Legislature shall never authorize the permanent obstruction of any of the

navigable waters of the State”).

¶36.    Bayview and IPM argue that Taltavull conveyed to Roy Rosalis and Virgilio DosSantos

the upland and the part of the patent area filled.   However, the trial court found that no part of

the patented land was included in the conveyance.         Bayview and IPM point out that the

Chancery Court of Harrison County upheld a similar grant of such tidelands to the Beau

Rivage, and argue that there is no material difference between the character of the tidelands,

the grantee, or the public purposes of the trust that were served through the grant. In Money

v. Wood, 152 Miss. 17, 118 So. 357 (1928), this Court voided an attempted sale of public state

land to a private party under what was then Section 2919 Miss. Code of 1906 (currently Miss.

Code Ann. § 29- 1- 65).        This doctrine has been reaffirmed in International Paper Co. v.

Mi ssissippi State Highway Dep’t, 271 So.2d 395, 399 (Miss. 1972).              See also Cinque

Bambini, 491 So.2d at 521. This Court held that “the state cannot convey in fee such rights

to private owners for private purposes” because the Court found no authority given to the land

commissioner to make such a conveyance.       Money, 152 Miss. at 29, 118 So. at 359 (relying

on Huber v. Freret, 138 Miss. 238, 103 So. 3 (1925)). Finding the deeds “absolutely void for

want of authority on the part of the land commissioner to make such a sale,” this Court

reasoned that “land” in the statute at issue in that case meant dry land and not submerged land.

Id. at 359-60.      This Court found there that the improvements planned by the purchaser for the

land purchased were not for any public purpose but rather for “private enterprise, designed as



                                                36
a scheme of financial advantage.” Id. at 358. The trial court distinguished Treuting, where a

public land patent to the Biloxi Park Commission was upheld, based on the facts of that

particular case.   The overall purpose of the conveyed, submerged land in Treuting was to be

development of a large marina and some 46 miles of inland waterways fronted by residential

property, with plans of better access to seafood packing plants for fishing boats, and a

reduction of wave action on the shore of Biloxi, offering greater protection to the Biloxi

harbor area. 199 So.2d at 631.

        When the project is completed, approximately twenty-seven percent of the land
        area of Deer Island will be devoted to public uses. Included in this classification
        is land for two 18-hole golf courses, two nine-hole courses, beaches, parks,
        green belts, waterways, schools, churches, marinas, and similar facilities.
        Another twenty percent of the island’s surface will be allocated to such uses as
        street rights of way, utility easements, sewage treatment plants, water wells, and
        fire stations. The remaining fifty to fifty-three percent of the island will be
        devoted to residential, commercial and resort development. The completed
        project will offer 8,700 residential units for sale on the island. A fixed level
        bridge to the island will be built with a horizontal clearance of 125 feet and a
        vertical clearance of 50 feet. All of the some 280 vessels which make Biloxi
        their home port will be able to pass under this bridge.
                                             ************
        The cost of constructing the project is estimated to be some forty million
        dollars. The project will be financed by revenue bonds, secured by the sale of
        property on the island. Revenue from the island is expected to produce some
        forty million dollars.
Id.

¶37.    In the end, this Court concluded in Treuting that this action by the State was an

appropriate exercise of authority and consistent with the overall purposes of the public trust.

        [B]ecause the overall purposes of the proposed development of Deer Island
        promote a large number of public interests and uses, the incidental private
        ownership of parts of the development is not inconsistent with the public trust


                                               37
        in the submerged lands. In essence it is an effectual development and discharge
        of this trust.
                                            ************
        The proposed development of Deer Island will promote navigation and fishing,
        and will give some protection to the Biloxi port. Navigation will be assisted by
        deeper channels. Biloxi fisheries will be better protected from storms and
        dangerous weather.         Necessary additional housing for the geographically
        restricted City of Biloxi will promote additional manufacturing, and assist in the
        industrial development of the area.

Id. at 634.

¶38.    Distinguishing today’s case from Treuting, the trial court            explicitly found that

Taltavull’s operating his business on the land in question served no more of a public purpose

than the attempted purchaser in Money.         Because of this, the trial court found the Taltavull

patent to be void for want of authority (of the land commissioner), meaning IPM could not

claim to be a successor in interest by deed.

¶39.    IPM and Bayview point out that certain exceptions to the Money rule exist.        IPM also

draws our attention to State v. Stockett, 249 So.2d 388 (Miss. 1971), where this Court upheld

a land patent conveying submerged swamp lands under the same statute at issue today.           The

reasoning in that case was that the land at issue in Stockett was rural rather than urban when

conveyed, and validity of a land patent depends on the circumstances of the land at the time of

conveyance; thus, this Court was able to distinguish the facts from those in other cases where

land patents have been found invalid. Stockett, 249 So.2d at 391-94.

¶40.    In the end, we find of significant import the trial court’s application of Money and

Treuting to today’s case.      The chancellor found this case to be factually aligned with Money



                                                  38
and distinguishable from Treuting; however, we find that the case sub judice is factually

aligned with Treuting and distinguishable from Money. In Money, a private landowner, Wood,

who had a home facing the Mississippi Sound on the beach at Biloxi, and who also had certain

property on the west end of Deer Island, brought a suit to prevent private persons from

developing property on the west end of Deer Island. 152 Miss. at 24, 118 So. at 358. These

private persons had received title to this property from the state land commissioner.    Id.   “It

appear[ed] that the [individuals] had undertaken to buy lands from the state of Mississippi lying

under the waters of the Mississippi Sound for the purpose of constructing and erecting an

artificial island, with hotels, boulevards, and residences for the private purposes of the

[individuals].”   Id.   Wood claimed that this construction would “invade his rights as enjoyed

under the laws of the state, and....would so interfere with his navigation, fishing, and other

legitimate uses of the public waters which he enjoyed, and....the enjoyment of his property both

on the beach and on Deer Island.” 152 Miss. at 26, 118 So. at 358.       This Court, in Money,

found that the deeds in question were “void for want of authority on the part of the land

commissioner to make the sale” because section 81 of our state constitution prohibited the

sale of state lands of such character to “a person for purely private business.” 152 Miss. at

30-31, 118 So. at 360 (emphasis added).

¶41.    In today’s case, Taltavull’s 1928 public land patent from the State was at a time when

his property (and the subject property in today’s case) was being utilized, albeit by a private

company, to promote the State’s booming oyster industry.           Taltavull and Biloxi Canning



                                               39
Company, in concert with the State, and indeed as required by statute, was storing oyster shells

on its property subject to disposition at the direction of the State, with a portion of the shells

being used, inter alia, for paving roads and replanting in the natural oyster reefs of the

tidelands. See also 1926 Miss. Laws, ch. 293; 1928 Miss. Laws, § 6881; 1944 Miss. Laws,

ch. 288; 1958 Miss. Laws, ch. 195. Thus, clearly, the facts of today’s case are more aligned

with the facts of Treuting, as opposed to Money. The 1928 public land patent from the State

to Taltavull was not violative of section 81 of our state constitution.       This public land patent

was certainly wholly consistent with the public purposes of the public trust tidelands. We thus

find that the chancellor erred in finding that this conveyance was null and void for want of

authority.    We are likewise constrained from the record before us to find error in the

chancellor’s determination that there were no existing conveyances divesting Taltavull and his

heirs of title to he subject property.        The substantial credible evidence in the record reveals

that the 1943 deed from Taltavull to Rosalis and DosSantos conveyed title to Taltavull’s

uplands, including the patented area, as substantiated by the deraignment of title submitted by

Bayview and IPM.        Therefore, we find that the chancellor likewise erred in finding that there

were no existing conveyances divesting Taltavull and his heirs of title to the patented land and

vesting title in Bayview’s predecessors in title.




                                                    40
       III.    WHETHER IPM, BAYVIEW LAND, TREASURE BAY, OR THE
               MLADINICH FAMILY ENJOY ANY LITTORAL RIGHTS

¶42.   Littoral rights are the rights of landowners whose land is abutting an ocean, sea or lake

rather than a river or stream, in which case the rights would be riparian, not littoral. Stewart,

815 So.2d at 1163 (internal citations omitted).         “Littoral rights are usually concerned with the

use and enjoyment of the shore.”             Id. (internal citations omitted).    However, we have

consistently held that littoral rights are not property rights per se, but are merely licenses or

privileges. Columbia Land Dev., 868 So.2d at 1012. See also Stewart, 815 So.2d at 1163

(citing Watts v. Lawrence, 703 So.2d 236, 238 (Miss. 1997); Gilich, 609 So.2d at 375. These

licenses or privileges are also revocable.     Stewart, 815 So.2d at 1163. “Littoral and riparian

property owners have common law and statutory rights under the Coastal Wetlands Protection

Law which extend into the waters and beyond the low tide line, and the state’s responsibilities

as trustee extends to such owners as well as to the other members of the public.” Miss. Code

Ann. § 29-15-5. These rights are rights to reasonable use, subject to the State’s interest in the

lands. State ex rel. Rice v. Stewart, 184 Miss. 202, 237, 184 So.2d 44, 53-54 (1938) (citing

Money, 118 So. 359).      Operating gaming facilities and a hotel would constitute reasonable use

and encourage commerce on the water. The Act and our case law make it clear that these rights

are administered through the agency so designated by statute. Watts, 703 So.2d at 239. “That

agency’s procedures and requirements must be followed.” Id. That agency is the Secretary of

State. Columbia Land Dev., 868 So.2d at 1013. See also Miss. Code Ann. § 7- 11-11. These




                                                   41
littoral rights, essentially the right to use and enjoyment of the water, include many activities

laid out in the statute. Miss. Code Ann. §§ 49-15-9, 49-27-7.

¶43.    The trial court found that because the 3.05- acre of land made up of accretions was

vested in the State, IPM had no land touching the water, except for small slivers of land on

either side of the accreted parcel in question, and therefore no littoral rights to the water

touching any of the land except its own, those small slivers flanking the accretions.    “And the

land must not only be contiguous to the water, but in contact with it. Proximity without contact

is insufficient.” Ill. Cent. RR. v. Illinois, 146 U.S. 387, 445, 13 S. Ct. 110, 115, 36 L. Ed.

1018, 1040 (1892).       Because of our disposition of Issue I in favor of IPM, we find that the

position of the Mladinich Family and Treasure Bay, which IPM and Bayview join, has merit,

in that they do enjoy certain littoral rights to be determined by the chancellor upon conducting

further proceedings consistent with our disposition of Issue I, above.

        IV.     WHETHER THE STATE POSSESSES THE AUTHORITY TO
                REQUIRE LEASES AND COLLECT RENTS ON THE LAND

¶44.    The trial court looked to both Miss. Code Ann. Section 29-1-107(2) and Wiesenberg

to hold explicitly that Mississippi has authorized the Secretary of State to require leases and

collect rents on submerged tidelands belonging to the State and held in trust. The thrust of the

argument of Treasure Bay and the Mladinich Family with regard to this issue is that authorizing

the State to do this constitutes judicial approval of a taking, offending the Constitutions of both

Mississippi and the United States.      To make this argument, Treasure Bay relies on our holding

in Guice, where we held that a taking occurs if the State fills tidelands below the mean high


                                                   42
water line, cutting off the landowner’s littoral rights. “It is a matter of common knowledge that

the littoral rights incident to the ownership of beach front property along the Mississippi Gulf

Coast is the most valuable attribute of such property. If the State, acting through the County,

could ‘pump up’ the submerged bottoms adjacent to privately owned uplands, and thereby cut

off direct access to the water, it could effectively destroy the value of much residential

property as well as commercial and industrial water front property. Such taking of private

property could not be accomplished without first paying just compensation. Mississippi

Constitution, Sec. 17.” Guice, 140 So. 2d at 842. This argument confuses two issues before

the Court today. While this holding does have a material effect on the first issue in this case,

it is of no consequence to the issue at hand.       There is quite a difference between filling up

tidelands, as illustrated in Guice, and requiring leases and rent for those submerged tidelands

that belong to the State.

¶45.    Our statutes and our case law provide this authority and leave no room for doubt. “The

Secretary of State, with the approval of the Governor, may rent or lease surface lands, tidelands

or submerged lands owned or controlled by the State of Mississippi lying in or adjacent to the

Mississippi Sound or Gulf of Mexico or streams emptying therein, for a period not exceeding

forty (40) years for rental payable to the state annually. However, the term of any lease of state

public trust tidelands to a person possessing a license under the Mississippi Gaming Control

Act shall be governed by the provisions of subsection (4) of this section.” Miss. Code Ann.

§ 29-1-107(2)(a).      We have addressed this issue before.     “This statute unequivocally affords

the Secretary of State the discretion to enter into a lease of the public tidelands.” Columbia

                                               43
Land Dev., 868 So.2d at 1013. Further, in Wiesenberg, we clearly recognized that “the State

from time to time has granted leases to allow private interests to use certain public trust

lands.” 633 So.2d at 989.           To restate a principle, “the individual States have the authority to

define the limits of the lands held in public trust and to recognize private rights in such lands

as they see fit.” Phillips Petroleum, 484 U.S. at 475. This issue is without merit.

        V.      WHETHER THE STATE HAS THE AUTHORITY TO LEVY TAXES
                UPON THE LAND WHICH THE APPELLANTS LEASE

¶46.    The trial court looked to Miss. Code Ann. § 29-15-11 to find that the State and its

political subdivisions have authority to assess and collect ad valorem taxes from persons or

firms occupying land held by the State in the Public Tidelands Trust. The Appellants reiterate

and incorporate their earlier arguments to convince this Court otherwise.             “Upon the proper

authorized leasing of any state public trust tidelands, or submerged lands, the lessee shall be

responsible for any county or municipal tax levy upon the leasehold interest.” Miss. Code Ann.

§ 29-15-11. This issue is without merit.

        VI.     WHETHER ANY STATE ACTION IN THIS CASE AMOUNTS TO
                AN UNCONSTITUTIONAL TAKING OF THE LAND

¶47.    On this issue, the Appellants collectively argue that the State’s action has constituted

a taking of littoral rights, offending the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S.

Constitution and Miss. Const. art. 3, § 17 (1890). Because of our disposition of Issue I, above,

this issue need not be addressed.




                                                    44
       VII.    WHETHER THERE IS A DENIAL OF THE APPELLANTS’ DUE
               PROCESS AND EQUAL PROTECTION OF THE LAWS

¶48.   The arguments put forward by all of the Appellants here rests on the fact that the State

granted 8.255 acres of land to the Beau Rivage because of obvious comparisons between the

two casinos, or in other words, IPM was the victim of discriminatory action by the State. The

trial court found that this occurred in part because the State had a rational basis for its

settlements with the Beau Rivage and IPM exercised its statutory right to decline negotiation.

The trial court found IPM was adamant that unless the State abandoned its claim completely,

it would pursue its remedy in court. The State argues, at least in part, that because IPM did not

attempt to reach amicable settlements like the Beau Rivage, it invited different treatment from

that which the Beau Rivage received.    However, because of our disposition of Issue I, above,

addressing this argument becomes unnecessary.

                                        CONCLUSION

¶49.   The Public Trust Tidelands Act serves a higher public purpose, and one this Court has

held to be consistent with our State Constitution.   That purpose is to settle age-old boundary

disputes between land belonging to private landowners and that belonging to the State in trust.

That the boundary line cannot be drawn exactly where it lay when Mississippi entered the

Union and acquired its tidelands and submerged lands is naturally central to many disputes;

however, the Act has laid out one final way to determine a line and we have upheld this method

as one that protects the interests of the public and the affected private landowners as well as

one that is designed to “put to rest the chaos that has plagued this subject matter and this



                                                45
geographical area for many years.” Wiesenberg, 633 So.2d at 991. Looking to the Act and

Wiesenberg, we find that Bayview and IPM own all artificially accreted land lying south and

west of the mean high water line nearest the date of July 1, 1973, to be determined by the

chancellor.     This restores the littoral rights to the landowners and settles any disputes

concerning them.     For these reasons, we reverse the judgment of the Chancery Court for the

Second Judicial District of Harrison County and remand this case to the chancellor with

directions to enter an appropriate judgment upon conducting further proceedings consistent

with this opinion.

¶50.    REVERSED AND REMANDED.

    SMITH, C.J., WALLER AND COBB, P.JJ., DIAZ, EASLEY, GRAVES AND
RANDOLPH, JJ., CONCUR. DICKINSON, J., NOT PARTICIPATING.




                                              46
