- Florida v. Georgia
"
Florida v. Georgia" was a case heard in December1854 before theU.S. Supreme Court , under itsoriginal jurisdiction in state-versus-state matters. Thecourt case was brought by theU.S. state of Florida against the state of Georgia, regarding most of theboundary between the two.Florida claimed that the state line was a straight line (called McNeil's line, for the man who surveyed it for the
U.S. government ) from theconfluence of Georgia's Chattahoochee and Flintriver s (forming theApalachicola River , at a point now underLake Seminole ), east and very slightly south to the beginning of theSt. Mary's River , then along it to theAtlantic Ocean . Georgia claimed that the eastern point of the straight line should be some 30 miles or nearly 50 kilometers south, atLake Spalding orLake Randolph , and then along the river.The
court ruled in favor of Florida, and it is along McNeil's line that the state line still runs today.There are also three other boundary
dispute s which Georgia has had with itsneighbor s before the court: "Alabama v. Georgia " in 1859, and two "Georgia v. South Carolina " cases in 1922 and 1990. Additionally, "South Carolina v. Georgia " in 1876 was a dispute overnavigation in a boundary river.External links
* [http://supreme.justia.com/us/58/478/index.html Case text]
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