Burkhard v. H. I. Heinz Co.

71 N.J.L. 562 | N.J. | 1905

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dixon, J.

This was an action of ejectment in which the plaintiffs relied on a riparian title granted by the state, through the riparian commissioners, to Mary A. Wootton, by deed dated December 1st, 1898. At that time the grantee owned the upland tying between Rhode Island avenue and Massachusetts avenue, in Atlantic City, and extending southerly to the high-water mark of the Atlantic ocean. The state’s grant purported to convey to her the land under the ocean hounded on the easterly and westerly sides by the corresponding lines of her upland extended southerly to the exterior line fixed by the riparian commissioners. The plaintiffs have her title to a tract one hundred and fifty feet wide tying between Rhode Island avenue and Metropolitan avenue, and extending southerly to the exterior line.

The controversy between the plaintiffs and defendant arises from the fact that the latter has built and is maintaining a *563pier extending from “the boardwalk,” in Atlantic Cit}1, out into the'ocean, and occupying part of the southwesterly corner of the tract claimed by the plaintiffs under the title above stated.

At the trial in the Atlantic Circuit a verdict for the plaintiffs was directed, and the only- complaint now made against that direction is based on the proposition that the riparian grant to Mary A. Wootton conveyed only the right to reclaim the land under water and to appropriate it after-wards, but gave no right to exclusive possession before reclamation. The authority cited for this proposition is Polhemus v. Bateman, 31 Vroom 163.

The question for decision in the cited case was whether the riparian deed then under consideration gave the grantee the right to maintain trespass against a person taking oysters from the land under water within the boundaries of the grant. The riparian deed conveyed by metes and bounds about seventy acres of land, flowed by tidewater, but contained these words: “With the right, liberty, privilege and franchise to exclude the tidewater from so much of the lands above described as lie under tidewater, by Ailing in or otherwise improving the same, and to appropriate the lands above described to his exclusive private uses.” The opinion delivered for the court was to the effect that these words restricted the grant by indicating that it was made only for the purpose of reclamation, and that the deed would not be given the same force as if it contained only a provision that the grantee could appropriate the lands to his own exclusive private uses; but, on the contraiy, must be deemed to give him no title to the exclusive use of any portion of the land under water until he filled in or improved it.

This construction was confessedly a strict one, and can be supported only upon the idea that in the last part of the clause just quoted, viz., “and to appropriate the lands above described to his exclusive private uses,” the lands intended were those which had been filled in or otherwise improved.

The deed in the present case differs on this very point. Here the corresponding clause runs as follows: “With the *564right and privilege, under the covenants and conditions of this grant, to exclude the tidewater from so much of the lands above described as lie under water, by filling in or otherwise improving the same, and to appropriate the lands under water above described to her and their exclusive private uses.” In view of these words “the lands under water,” it is evidently impossible to confine the right of' exclusive appropriation to land which has been reclaimed or improved.

The judgment in the cited case was not so far-reaching as the opinion. The act of the defendant, which the plaintiff alleged to be a trespass upon his property, was merely the exercise of the common right to fish in the sea, and the legal effect of the judgment was simply that such common rights were not annulled until the plaintiff made some appropriation of the property which was inconsistent with them. To that extent no criticism of the case is now intended. But here the defendant has taken a permanent and exclusive possession of the land under water as if he were the private owner of it, and-we have no doubt that the riparian deec] now under consideration expresses an intention to vest in the grantee such a title as would enable her and her assigns to-expel such a possessor.

It is not questioned that the state had a title adequate for that purpose, and that under the act of March 21st, 1871 (Gen. Stat., p. 2790), the riparian commissioners had power to make a deed which, in the words of that statute, would vest all the rights of the state in the grantee.

We think the direction of a verdict for the plaintiffs ivas ' right, and the judgment should be affirmed.

For affirmance — The Chancellor, Chief Justice, Dixon, Garrison, Fort, Garretson, Pitney, Swayze, Bogert, Vredenburgi-i, Vkooh, Green, Gray. 13.

For reversal — None.