American Whitewater
Kansas Navigability Report
Summary
Many Kansas streams are non-navigable. Navigable streams must be able to be used to transport the local products (usually agricultural and not silvicultural products such as logs). This has caused the test in Kansas to be even stricter than the “log float” test. The public may use a navigable stream up to the ordinary high water mark; no law discusses whether land above this mark can be used for portage.
State Test of Navigability
Kansas has followed Colorado's lead in limiting the waters that are open to the public.1). The test of navigability in Kansas is the “navigable in fact test;” therefore, it is basically the same as the federal commerce test: ”[W]hether a river is navigable in fact is to be determined by inquiring whether it is used, or is susceptible of being used, in its natural and ordinary condition as a highway for commerce, over which trade and travel are or may be conducted in the customary modes of trade and travel on water.”2)
To determine navigability, the first question is whether title to the riverbed passed to the state upon admittance into the Union.3) Under this test, the Arkansas, the Kansas, and the Missouri Rivers have been declared navigable.4) The major problem is that there is virtually no public access to these three public rivers. The Neosho, the Delaware, and the Smoky Hill Rivers have been declared non-navigable.5)
In a case involving the Neosho River6), the Supreme Court of Kansas determined that the Neosho is non-navigable despite the operation of ferryboats, floating of logs, and use by motor boats for pleasure, because the river contains shallow riffles which boats need to be dragged across.7) Additionally, the river had never been used to transport agricultural products.8) Similarly, the Supreme Court of Kansas declared it to be non-navigable despite use by a canoe rental company that ran float trips on the creek and use by another company for plant collections.9) In issuing this ruling, the court determined that the creek had shallow riffles that even a canoe needed to be dragged across and the creek had not been used for valuable floatage in transportation to market of the products of the country through which it runs.10)
Extent of Public Rights in Navigable & Non-Navigable Rivers
The public has the right to use navigable streams for recreational purposes, including boating, up to the ordinary high water mark.11) Thus, the bed and banks, up to the line to which water rises in time of ordinary high water, are public property that can be used by the public for lawful or non-destructive recreational purposes. Where no public access exists, however, one may need to obtain permission from the adjoining landowner in order to travel on private land to get to the public land.12) In this regard, Kansas's courts have not applied the statute, which dedicates ”[a]ll water within the state of Kansas . . . to the use of the people of the state . . . ,” in support of a right to use water for recreational purposes.13) This is contrary to some other jurisdictions with similar statutes.14) In fact, the statutory definition of criminal trespass includes entering on non-navigable water.15)
The title to the bed of a navigable river is vested in the state.16) The riparian owner's land extends to the bank of the stream, which is the ordinary high water mark.17) Owners of the bed have the exclusive right of control of everything above the streambed, which also lends support to the idea that where the streambed is privately owned, the public cannot use the surface.18) What constitutes a state and private ownership interest in the bed and banks of a navigable river changes as the river gradually moves over time, and thus, the ownership interests are not fixed.19)
Kansas's law has not dealt with the issue of portage and other incidents of navigation on navigable streams.
Miscellaneous
In Meek v. Hays, the court pointed out that where the legislature refuses to create a public trust for recreational purposes in non-navigable streams, courts should not alter the legislature's statement of public policy by judicial legislation. If the non-navigable waters of Kansas are to be appropriated for recreational use, then the legislative process is the proper method to achieve this goal. Despite the strong desire for this to happen by the citizens of Kansas, no such legislation has been promulgated to date.
Criminal trespass on private land or non-navigable water that is fenced or posted against trespass or where the owner has communicated to the trespasser is a class B non-person misdemeanor.20)