White House Press Release, Message of President Harry S. Truman to the United States House of Representatives
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OCR Page 1 of 2362
HOLD FOR RELEASE
HOLD FOR RELEASE
HOLD FOR RELEASE
AUGUST 1, 1946
CONFIDENTIAL:
To be held in STRICT CONFIDENCE and no portion,
synopsis or intimation to be given out or published until the
READING of the President's Message has begun in the House of
Representatives. Extreme care must therefore be exercised to
avoid premature publication.
CHARLES G. ROSS
Secretary to the President
TO THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES:
I return herewith, without my signature, House Joint Resolu-
tion 225, entitled "A Joint Resolution to quiet the titles of the
respective States, and others, to lands beneath tidewaters and lands
beneath navigable waters within the boundaries of such States and to
prevent further clouding of such titles."
The purpose of this measure is to renounce and disclaim all
right, title, interest, claim or demand of the United States in "lands
beneath tidewaters," as defined in the Joint Resolution, and in lands
beneath all navigable waters within the boundaries of the respective
States, and to the minerals in such lands. The phrase "lands beneath
NARA
tidewaters" is defined SO broadly as to include all lands, either
submerged or reclaimed, situated under the ocean beyond the low water
mark and extending out to a line three geographical miles distant from
the coastline or to the boundary line of any State whose boundary, at
the time of the admission of the State to the Union, extended oceanward
beyond three geographical miles. Lands acquired by the United States
from any State or its successors in interest, or through conveyance or
condemnation, would be excluded from the operation of the measure.
There would also be excluded the interest of the United States in that
part of the continental shelf (lands under the ocean contiguous to and
forming part of the land mass of our coasts) which lies more than three
miles beyond the low water mark or the boundary of any particular State.
On May 29, 1945, at my direction, the then Attorney General
filed a suit in the United States District Court at Los Angeles, in the
name of the United States, to determine the rights in the land and
minerals situated in the bed of the Pacific Ocean adjacent to the coast
of California and within the three-mile limit above described. There-
after, in order to secure a more expeditious determination of the matter,
the present Attorney General brought suit in the Supreme Court of the
United States. The case in the District Court was dismissed. I am ad-
vised by the Attorney General that the case will be heard in the Supreme
Court and will probably be decided during the next term of the Court.
The Supreme Court's decision in the pending case will determine
rights in lands lying beyond ordinary low water mark along the coast
extending seaward for a distance of three miles. Contrary to widespread
misunderstanding, the case does not involve any tidelands, which are
lands covered and uncovered by the daily ebb and flow of the tides; nor
does it involve any lands under bays, harbors, ports, lakes, rivers or
other inland waters. Consequently the case does not constitute any
threat to or cloud upon the titles of the several States to such lands,
or the improvements thereon. When the Joint Resolution was being de-
bated in the Senate, an amendment was offered which would have resulted
in giving an outright acquittance to the respective States of all tide-
lands and all lands under bays, harbors, ports, lakes, rivers and other
inland waters. Proponents of the present measure, however, defeated
this Amendment. This clearly emphasized that the primary purpose of
the legislation was to give to the States and their lessees any right,
title or interest of the United States in the lands and minerals under
the waters within the three-mile limit.
(OVER)
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