6 Cow. 518 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1826
intimated when the attorney general first moved, that there could be no objection to change the peremptory mandamus into an alternative one, if this alone was requested. The court, at the last term, understood the counsel for the appraisers as saying explicitly, that nothing farther was desired than the opinion of the court on the case, as it then stood; which would be acquiesced in by the appraisers. Otherwise, the course would have been to grant an alternative mandamus.
After the argument was dosed ; and the court had taken several days for advisement,
Savage, Ch. J. remarked, that the main question made at the last term related to the extent of the boundary. The court were then of the opinion, that it carried the land to the centre of the stream. Nothing which had fallen from the attorney general on the re-argument, had changed their opinion upon this point. Objections, that a mandamus will not lie ; and that the relators do not make out their case, are now started ; but w7e adhere to the opinion, that the case is one to which the remedy by mandamus is applicable; and that the case is sufficiently made out in evidence. We understand the appraisers refused to act
It is, however, suggested, that the question is an important one, on account of the amount oí the property involved in it; and that it should be put in such a shape as to be reviewed on error, should the state desire this. We think the suggestion perfectly right; and with a view to that object, we direct the former rule and subsequent proceedings to be vacated, and that an alternative mandamus issue. This will enable the appraisers to put the facts on record by a return, if they shall be so advised; and the judgment to be rendered oil that return may be reviewed.
Rule accordingly,
The treatise of sir Mai/hew Hate, De Jure Maris, ha3 been so often re cftgnized in this country, and in England, that it has become the text book, from which, when properly understood, there seems to be no appeal either by sovereign or subject, upon any question relating to their respective rights, either in the sea, arms of the sea, or private streams of water» (Vid. Palmer v. Mulligan, 3 Cain. Hep. 307. id. 315, per Thompson, J. id 318, per Kent, C. J. People v. Platt, 17 John. 195, 209, 210. Hooker v. Cummings, 20 John. 90, 99, to 101. Adams v Pease, 2 Con. Rep. N. S. 481, 483, 484. Arnold v. Mundy. 1 Halst. Rep 1, 74. Claremont v. Carlton, 2 N. H. Rep. 369, 371. Haye's Exr v. Bouman, 1 Randolph's Rep. 417. 420.) In England, even on rights of prerogative, the courts scr«n his words with as much care as if they had been found in Magna Chorta ; and the meaning once ascertained, they do not trouble themselves to search any farther, (Vid. The King v. Lord Yarborough, 3 Barnw. & Creswell. 91.) They almost justify, in respect to his writings the extravagant encomium which Mr. H irt has passed upon him as a judge ; that,“with a mind beaming the effulgence of noon-day, he sat on the bench like a descended god I” (2 Burr. Tr. by Rob. 67.) His work is go often quoted, his doctrines are so lull, his distinctions so cl< ar, and his illustrations so striking and apposite, that they seem to deserve an insertion in our books, somewhat more at length than they are to be found in the quotations of counsel or judges ; especially as there is, (I believe,) no late edition of the work ; and, to moay of the profession, it is cot, therefore, readily accessible. It was first published by the learned Pra* Hargrave
PARS PRIVJA.
De Jure Maris ci Bracfiiorum ejusdem,
CAP I.
Concerning the interest of fresh rivers.
Fresh rivers, of what kind soever, do, of common right, belong to the owners of the soil adjacent ; so that the owners of the one side have, of common right, the, propriety of the soil; and consequently the right of fishing, usque filam aquaz; and the owners of the other sale, the right of soil or ownership, and fishing unto the jilum aquae on their side. And, if a mau be owner of the land of both sides, in common presumption, he is owner of the whole river ; and hath the ngh of filling according to the extent of his land in length. With this agrees the common experience, [Palmer v. Mulligan, &c. and other cases cited above at the beginning of this note.]
But special usage may aber that common presumption; for one man may have the river, and others the soil adjacent; or one man may have the river and soil thereof; and another the free or several fishing in that river.
If a fresh river, between the lands of two lords or owners, do insensibly gain on one side, or the other side ; it Í9 held that the propriety continues as before in the river. [What shall be deemed insensible gain. The King v. Ld. Yarborough, cited ante, in this note ] But if it be done sensibly and suddenly, then the ownership of the soil remains according to the former bounds. As if the river running between the lands of A and B, leaves his course; and sensibly mak’-.s his channel entirely in the lands of A; the whole river belongs to A. Aqua cedit solo. And so it is, though if the alteration be by insensble degrees, but there be other known boundaries, as stakes or extent of land. 22 Ass. pi. 93. And though the book make a question, whether it hold the same law in the case of the sea or the arms of it; yet certainly the law will be all one, as we shall have occasion to shew in the ensuing discourse.
But yetspecial custom may alter the casein great rivers. For instance the river of Severn» which is a wild river ; yet, by the common custom, used below Gloucester bridge, it is the common boundary of the manors of either side, what course soever the river takes; viz. the jilum aquae is the common mark or boundary ; though it borrow great quantities ef
Though fresh rivers are, in point of propriety, as before, prima facie, of a pvivaie interest; yet. as well fresh rivers as salt, or such as flow and reflow, may be under these two servitudes, or affected by them : viz. one of prerogative belonging to the king, and another of public interest, or belonging to (he people in general.
Qf these in the ensuing chapters.
CAP H.
Of the right of prerogative in private or fresh rivers.
The king by an ancient right of prerogative, hath had a certain interest in many fresh rivers, even where the sea doth not flow or reflow, as well as in salt or arms of the sea ; and those are these which follow :
1st. A right of franchise or privilege* that no man may set up a com» mon ferry tor all passengers, without a prescription time out of mind, or a charter from the King. He [the owner] may make a ferry for his own use or the use of his family ; but not for the common use of all the King’s subjects -assing that way ; because it doth, in consequent, tend to a common «harge ; and is become a thing of public interest and use, and every man for his passage pays a toll, which is a common charge, and every ferry ought to be under a publ.c regulation ; viz. that it give attendance at due times, keep a boat in due order, and take but reasonable toll ; for if be [the ferryman] fail in these he is finable. And hence it is, that jfa common bridge be broken, whereby there is no passage, but by a boat or ferry; it hath been anciently practised in the exchequer, to compel that ferryman, that ferries over people for profit, without a charter from the King or a lawful prescription, to account for the benefit above hie reasonable pains and charge.
And this that is said in reference to a fresh or private river, holds place much more in a public river or arm of the sea ; and therefore it need not be repeated when we come to that subject.
2ndty. An interest, as I may call it, of pleasure or recreation [Inapplicable to the U States; and obselete in England* as ^ale says.]
3d An interest of ju>is’hction ; viz. in reference to common nuisances in or by rivers ; as where the sewers were not kept, which gave rise to the commission of sewers, as well for fresh ivers as for salt
And another part of the King’s jurisdiction in reformation of nuisances is, to reform and punish nuisances in all rivers, whether fresh or salt, that are a common passage, not only for ships and grea er vessels, but also for smaller, as barges or boats; to reform the obstructions or annoyances that are therein to such common passage : for, as the common highways on the land are for the common land passage, so these kind of rivers, whether fresh or salt, that bear boats or barges, are highways by water; and as the highways by land are called altee vice regice, so these public rivers for public passage are called flnvii regales, and haul slreames le Roy ; not in reference to the propriety of the river, but to the public use ; nil things o ¿uiblic safety and convenience being in a special manner under the King's
And this leads me to the third chapter,
CAP- III.
Concerning public streams.
There he some streams or rivers, that are private, not only in propriety or ownership ; but also iu use. as little streams and rivers that aré not a common passage for the Kings people Again ; there be other rivers, as well fre-h as salt, that are of common or public use, for carriage of boats and lighters. And these whether they are fresh or salt, whether they flow and re-flow or not, are prima facie pubVci juris, common highways for man or goods, or both, from one inland town io another. Thus the rivers of IVey of Severn, of Thames and divers others, as well above the bridges and ports as below ; as well above the flowings of the sea as below, and as well where they have come to be of private propriety, as in what part they are of the King’s propriety, are public rivers juris pubUci. And therefore all nuisances and impediments of passages of boats and vessel«, though in the private soil of any person, may be punished by indictments, and <emoved ; and this was the reason of the statute of Magna Charla, cap 23
Omnes kidelli deponanlur per Thamifam el Medway am, el per toiam Angliam nisi per cosleram mans.
These kinds of nuisances were such as himleied or obstructed the passage of boats, as wears, piles, choaking up of the passage with filth, diverting of the water by eutts or trenches, decay of the banks, or the like.
And they were reformed.
Sometimes by indictments or presentments in the leets, sessions of the peace, oyer and terminer, or before justices of assize.
Often times iu the king’s bench ; as Hil. 50 E. 3. B. R, Rot. 23. for nuisances in the river Tent; H. 23. E. 3. B. R. Rot. 61. in the river Ouse; H. 21. E. 1. in the river Severn; Tr. 28 E. 3 Rot 29. in the river Leigh ; and generally in all other rivers within the bodies of counties, which had common passage of boats or barges, whether the water were fresh or salt; the king’s or a subject’s.
Sometimes by special commission, as for the river of Leigh.
And sometimes by the parties that were prejudiced by such nuisance, without any process of law.
But if any person at his own charge, makes his own private stream to be passable for boa is or barges either by making of locks or eutts, or drawing together other streams : and hereby that river, which was his own in point of propriety become now capable of carriage of vessels ; yet this seems not to make.il pubhci ; and he may pull it down again, or apply it to his own private use. Fo¡ itisnoi hereby mule to be juris publici. unless it were done at a common charge, or by u public authority : or that by long
CAP. IV.
Concerning the king's interest in salt waters, the sea and its arms, and the soil'hereof; arid first of the right of fishing ther*.
Thus much concerning fresh waters or inland rivers, which, though they empty themselves mediately into the sea, are not called arms of the sea, either in respect of the distance or smallness of them.
We come now to consider the sea and its arms : and first, concerning the sea itself.
The sea is that which lies within the body of a county or without. That arm or branch of the sea, which ties Within the fauces terree* where a man may reasonably discerne between shore and shore, is, or at least, may be within the body of a county ; and, therefore, within the jurisdiction the sheriff or coroner.
The part of the sea which lies not within the body of a county, is called the main sea or ocean.
The narrow sea, adjoining to the coast of England, is part of the wast and demesnes and dominions of the King of England, whether it lie within the body of any county or not.
The k ng’s right of propriety or ownership in the sea and soil thereof, is evidenced principally in these things that follow.
1st. The right of fishing in this sea, and the creeks and armes thereof, is originally lodged in the crown, as the right of depasturing is originally lodged in the owner of the wast whereof he is lord, or as the right of fishing belongs to him that is the owner of a private or inland river.
But though the king is the owner of this great wast, and as a consequent of his propriety, hath the primary right of fishing in the sea and the creekesnnd arms thereof; yet the common people of England have regularly a liberty of fishing in the sea or creekes or armes thereof, as a public common of piscary ; and may not, without injury to their right, be restrained of it; unless in such places, creeks or navigable rivers, where either the king or some particular subject, hath gained a propriety exclusive of that common liberty.
lid. The next evidence of the king’s right and propriety in the sea, and the arms thereof, is his right ot propriety to
The Marítima Incrementa.
(1.) The shore is that ground that is between the ordinary high water and low water mark. This doth prima facie and of common right belong to the king, both in the shore of the sea, and the shore of the arms of the sea.
And herein there shall be these things examinable,
1st. What shall be said the shore, or litlus maris.
2d. What shall be said an arm or creek of the sea.
3d. What evidence there is o the king’s propriety thereof.
1. For the first of these ; it is certain, that that which the sea overfiow&> either at high spring tides, or at extraordinary tides,comes not,as to this purpose, uuder the denomination of litlus maris ; and consequently, the king's title is not of that large extent; but only to land that is usually overflowed at ordinary tides. That, therefore, I call the shore, that is between the common high water and low water mark.
2. For the second ; that is called an arm of the sea where the sea flows and reflows ; and so far only as the sea flows and reflows; so that the river of Thames, above Kingston, and the river of Severn, above Teu'kesbU’ ry, &c. though there they are publick rivers, yet are not arms of the sea. But it seems that although the water be fresh at high water, yet the denomination of an arm of the sea continues, if it flow and reflow a9 m Thames, above the bridge. [Doug. 444.]
3. For the third ; it is admitted that de jure communi between the high water and low water mark doth prima facie belong to the king, 5 Rep, 307. Constable's case» Dy. 326. Although it is true, that such shore maybe, and commonly is parcel of the manor adjacent, and so may be belonging to a subject, as shall be shewn, yet prima facie it is the king's.
And as the shore of the sea doth prima facie belong to the king, viz. be» tween the ordinary high water and low water mark, so the shore of an arm of the sea between the high water and low water mark, belongs prima fa~ cie to the king, though it may also belong to a subject, as shall be shewn in the next chapter. [He mentions here two cases, of a number of houses claimed by or in right of the king; in which it was adjudged that the claim was good because they were built between high and low water mark, where the tide flowed and reflowed ; the one case arising upon the river Tyne, the other upon the Thames,]
And this shall suffice for the king’s right in the shore of the sea, or rivers that are arms of the sea, v;z. the land lying between the high water and the low water mark at ordinary tides.
(2.) The king hath a title to maratima incrementa, or increase of land joy the sea; and this is of three k;nds, viz. 1. Increase per projectionerft vti alluvionem. 2. Increase per felietionem vel dtsertionem. 3. Per insuloe' productionem,
1. The increase per alluvionem is, when the sea, by casting up sand and earth, doth by degrees increase the land, and shut itself out further than the ancient bounds went ; and this is usual. The reason why this belongs to the crown is, because in truth the soil, where there is now dry land/
2. The increase per relidionem, or recess of the sea. This doth, de jure commitni belong to the king ; ior, as the sea is parcell o! the wnst or demesne ; so, of necessity, the land tha* lies under it ; and therefore it belongs to the king when left by Ihe sea ; and so also it regularly holds in lands deserted by a river, that is an arm of the sea or a creek of the sea, prima facie, especially if the creek or river be part of a port.
Car. primi. upon an information against Oldswor'h and others, for that which is now called Sutton Marsh, that 300 acres of land was relic turn per mare, and that the defendants had intruded into it ; the delendants pleaded specially, and entitled themselves by prescription to the la^ds project by the sea; and upon a demurrer adjudged against them. That Is', by the prescription or title made to lauds project, which is jus ,d¿'*v:on‘ ⅛, no answer is given to the tille of information for lands relict, tor these were of several natures. 2. it was held, that it lies not in prescription to claim lands relict per mare; ior so if the channel between us and France should dry up, a man might prescribe for it, which is unreasonable ; tor
Nihil presemb ¡tur nisi qu< d possii ctur.
But this hath found some exceptions, besides these that follow in the ensuing chapter.
If a subject hath" had by proscription, the property of a certain tract, ox creek, or navigable river, or arm of the sea, even while it. is covered with water, by cettain known metes or extent ; this, though it should be relicted) the subject will have the propriety in the soil relicted. For he had it before, though covered with water ; and although the sea js a fluid, yet the ierraor solum subjcctum is fixed ; and by force of a clear and evident usage* a-subject may have the propriety of a private river ; though the acquest of the former be more difficult, and requires a very good evidence to make it out, as shall be said in the ensuing chapter.
lía subject hath land adjoining the sea, and the violence of the sea swallow it up, but so that yet there be reasonable marks to continue the notice of it ; or though the marks be defaced : yet if by situation and ex ent of quantity, and bounding upon ihe firm land, the same can be known, though the sea leave this land again, or it be by art or industry regained, the subject doth not lose his propriety ; and accordingly it was held by Cooke and Foster, M. 7. Jac. C. B. though the inundation continue forty years.
If the mark remain or coutinue, or extent can reasonably be certain, the case is clear.
3. The third sort of maratime increase are islands arising de novo in the king’s seas, or the king's arms thereof. These upon the same account and reason prima facie and of common right belong to the king ; lor they are part of that soil of the sea, that belonged before in point of propriety fo the king ; for when islands de novo arise, it is either by the recess or sinking of the water, or else by the exaggeration of sand and slubb, which in process
And thus much of the king's right of propriety which he hath in the sea ; ami also prima facie aud in common presumption, in the ports and creeks and armes of the sea.
Mr» Butler In his note [205] to Co. Lit. 261, a, considers Ld. Hale as having exhausted the subject upon which he treats; and had this great man followed out his doctrine of private rivers, with its var>ous consequences and illustrations, as fully as he has done his doctrines of the sea and its arms, very little vould have been left for our courts to. do in filling up the outline. As his positions are,however, more general in respect to the for-sne--, while at the same time, they are of more extensive application, they have been oftner the subject of discussion in our courts ; and would seem to call for farther notice.
The general policy and excellence of his doctrines have been the most fully and ably vindicated in Connecticut and New-York. 44 A more perfect system of regulations on this subject,” (says Ch. J. Swift, 2 Con. Rep. N. S. 433,) ** could not be devised. It secures common right?, as far as the public interest requires; and furnishes a proper line of demarcation between them and private rights ” This doctrine, says fJosmer, J. 44 promotes the grand end< of civil society by pursuing that wise and orderly maxim of assigning to every thing capable of ownership, a legal and determinate owner.” These remarks are followed up and vindicated by Spencer, late \ h. Justice, in Hooker v. Cummings, (20 John. 101.)
The general distinctions, deemed of so much excellence and importance by ’hese learned judges ; and which, at this day no lawyer will hazard his reputation by controverting, are, that rivers not navigable, that is, fresh rivets, of what kind soever, do, of common right, belong to the owners of the soil adjacent, to the extent of heir land in length. i that rivers where the tide ebbs and flows belong of common right, to the state. That this ownership of the citizen is of the whole river, vis. the soil and the water of the river; except, that in his river where boats, rafts, Sec. may be floated to market, the public have a right of way or easement. In a special manner where the subject claims under a grant from the state, bounded by a river not navigable, this grant extend* usque filum aqua, ; as was held in Hayes's exr. v. Bowman. (1 Randolph's Rep. 420, per Cur.,) Claremont v. Carlton, (2 N. H Rep. 369, S. P.) and Lunt v. Holland, (14 Mass. Rep. 149.) This was also admitted by the attorney general, it will be recollected, in arguing the principal case, (ante, 534 )
The only question that can generally arise between the citizen and the state, as to the ownership of rivers above the tide, is, whether the former be owner of the soil adjacent, within the meaning of Hale.
As to this question ; there is certainly no technical or particular mode of expression in the grant, necessary to make him so. In the case of the river Banne, (Dav. 152) it is said, in every river not navigable, 44 the ierlenanis on each side have an interest of common rightand so is the abbreviation of that case in 2 Rol. Abr. 170, pl. 14, which was edited by Hale. By Holt, 12 Mod. 510,44 If a river run contiguously between the land of two persons, each of them is, of common right, owner of that part ot the river which i⅛
The proposition for thecititizen to establish, then, is that he is the own-cr, tertenant, or proprietor of the soil adjacent to the river above the tide; and then, of common right, he owns the river.
1. Owner tertenant or proprietor.] No doubt this may be either in fee or of any particular estate, of an equitable or legal estate ; and the ownership of the river shall be co-extensive in estate, as well as territory. This was held in the principal case, (ante, 516.)
2. Of the adjacent soil.] Adjacent, (in Lat. adjacens ah adjaceo,) is defined lying close, bordering upon. The Lat. verb means, to lie contiguous or border upon, to abut, adjoin. Thus an assize stated by Hale De Jur, Mar. ch. 1, Í3 “quia dicunt, quod omnes, qpi tenent terras abuttanteb super aquam ilium, in ea piscantur pro volúntale sua usque filum aquas.’* &c. This was of the IdelU a fresh water stream; and upon this there is no difference in the cases. All agree that where a man’s land abuts upon or adjoins to any river ab.ove tide water, he owns the river to ihe centre of the stream. As long ago as 1605, in Palmer v. Mulligan, it appearing that the defendant owned the shore of the Hudson as low down as Stillwater* this being above tide water, Thompson, J. and Kent, C. J. applied to his case the doctrine of Ld. Hale, that his ownership extended to the centre of that great river; and the latter then hinted at what is now established, that if the state will bound a grantee upon a river not navigable, he shall hold to the centre, unless there he an exception of the river in the grant. ( Vid* 3 Caines, 319.) In Adams v. Pease, (2 Con. Rep. N. S. 481.) the plaintiff owned a large farm bounded east on Connecticut river, above the flowiug of the tide ; but where it was large, and passable with flat bottomed boats of from 5 to 30 tons burthen; and sometimes vessels built above had been floated down ; yet held that the boundary, in terms, on the river* carried the pla niifí’s ownership of th,e river to its centre. The rule is there laid down by Swift, Ch. J. that the adjoining proprietors have this right. The doctrine of this case was approved in its full extent, by the supreme court of this state, in Hooper v. Cummings, (20 John. 91) where it was applied to Salmon river which empties into lake Ontario. Spencer, Ch. J. who delivered the opinion of the court, says, “ If the soil on both sides be owned by an individual, he has the sole and exclusive right ; but if there be different proprietors on each side, they own their respective sides, ad fi-lum medium aqutzfi And the court approved what Kent, C. J. said in Palmer v. Mulligan, touching the Hudson being private property as low down as Stillwater. They also show that the cases which hold the contrary in Pennsylvania are founded on a repudiation of the common law. (Vid. also 17 John.Q09, 10, &c.) In Arnold v. Mundy, (1 Halst. N. J. Rep. 1) the plaintiff’s land ran to, or was bounded on a river where the tide did ebb and flow ; and he and those under whom he claimed, had staked off and planted a bed of oyster^, some of which the defendant took away ; for which the action was brought. At the trial, the defendant’s counsel moved for a nonsuit; and the judge in giving his opinion remarked, (id. p. 10) “that a grant of land to a subject or citizen, bounded upon afresh water stream or
Thus explore the books of the common law, wherever that law prevails : And in no casé as between sovereign and subject, except the principal one, has it ever been questioned, that where a grant, either actually or con-constructively, goes to the water’s edge, the grantee is the owner to the cen-tre of the river, if it be above tide water. Lastly, he is the owner
Of common right.} It will be remembered that this phrase continually occurs in Hale, and in the decisions which follow' him. it is an important,an emphatic part oí the proposition with which we set out; and has been defined, in its general sense, by the greatest writer in the law *, and by one very little his inferior, as to the particular sense inwhich it is used by Hale. First, I quote from Lord Coke, who explains its use by Littleton. (Co. Lit. 142. a.) “ ‘ De common droit,5 of common right; that is, by the common law ; so called, because the common law is the best and most common birth ' right that the subject hath, for the safe guard and defence, not onely of his goods, lands and revenues, but of his wife and children, his body, fame and life also. So as the meaning of Littleton in this particular'case is, that the lord may distreine for his rent of common right, that is, by the common law, without any particular reservation or provision of the party. And ifc is to be observed that the common law of England sometimes is called right, sometimes common right, and sometimes communis jusiitia. Litteion, in this his treatise, nameth common droit sixe times.’5 Thus, within the sense given by Lord Coke, the party whose grant boandshim by any words on a river, or its margin above tide water, owns of course, without any express provision in the grant usque filum aqua. The right is incident and annexed by law to his grant, the same as a right of distress to a rent service of which Lord Coke is speaking. In the notes to Co. Lit. by Hargrave & Butler, the latter, (note 205 top. 201. a.) speaking of Hale De Jur Mar, says, “ Thai where, in enquiries of this kind, it is said that a person is entitled to the right, or property in question, by common right, but that it may belong to another, it is intended to say, that the right or property in question is, by the common law annexed to the particular capacity of the party» or t" some property of which he is the owner ; yet that it is not so inseparably or inalienably annexed to this capacity or ownership, but that the party may transfer it to another.”
Thus where one owns the shore of a river above tide* by grant from the 3tate ; the common law (common right) annexes to his capacity as owner, the right of soil in the river usque Jilum aqua. And it has often been said by our courts, that the only way in which this right of soil in the river ca» be withheld from ¡he subject, is by a reservation express or implied. This doctrine as I before remarked (ante, 544*) was hinted by the sagacious Kent, the chief justice of the supreme court, in Palmer v. Mulligan, (3 Caines, 319.) And it was afterwards directly advanced by the court in Claremont v. Carlton, (2 N. H. Rep. 371, 372.) It is there said this exception may be by the actf of the parties, or an express provision in their conveyances, So in Hayes's exrr. Bowman, (1 Randolph, 420, cited an
l am sensible that I owe the profession au apology for the length of this discussion, and its verba! and minute criticisms. But the amount involved is neither verbal nor minute. It was stated by the counsel of the appraisers, (ante, 523,) to be $¡00,000, on the line of the canals alone. Take the whole state with its ilrmense inland waters ; and it gives an aggregate of millions. Probably there is hardly a patent in the state which grants the bed of a stream by name. I am. informed that our patents have generally selected these streams as the best and most convenient limits fur their g.ants, and are abutted or bounded upon them by different words ; leaving it to the common law to say what portion of the stream passes, accordingly as the boundary may be above or below tide water. Our considerable rivers and creeks are covered with hydraulic machinery, and other establishments, depending for their value and their existence on the doctrine that these patents carry the ownership of the grantees to the thread of the stream. What more usual description of parcels than a line running to a given point on a creek or river ; and then along the same as it winds and turns, for many miles? It is speaking within bounds, to say
Ex parte Geo. Tibbits, Oct. term, 1826.
In this case it appeared that a valuable waterfall of 12 feet,in the middle sprout of the Mohawk, which falls into the Hudson between Van Sehaick and Greene islands, had been destroyed by a dam erected for the use of the canals. That the tide never eb is and flows at the fall. This fall was granted, in terms, as so much land covered with water, May 5, 1792, by Stephen Van Rensselaer to Jacobus Van Schoonhoven ; and had come by mesne conveyances to the relator ; there being an actual individual seisin of the fall eo nomine for upwards of 30 years. It ts well known that the land on both sides of the fall was granted away at a very early period by the state, which had not afterwards asserted the least claim.
The appraisers refused to allow the relator any damages, on the sole ground that the land under water belonged to the state.
The supreme court granted an alternative mandamus, in this case, against the appraisers,at the time they decided Jenning's case,
J. P. Cushman for the relator.
The following case came under the review of the supreme court, on appeal from an appraisal by the canal commissioners. Itrelatecfto a valuable landing or depot for lumber on the river Hudson, which was inundated and destroyed by the colossal dam at Fort Edward :
Ex parte Walter and Charles Rogers. Utica, August term, I82S.
The affidavit of one of the owners stated, that 21 acres at Dtadman's point, above the dam, and lying adjacent to the Hudson river, had for many years before the erection of the dam, been used as a landing ground for lumber, yielding an average income to the two proprietors, (to whom it had been devised by their ancestor,) of about 400 dollars annually. That it had been rendered nearly useless as a lauding, from the time when the canal commissioners commenced the dam at Fort Edward, Cor a feeder to the northern canal, in the summer of 1821 ; and when the dam was completed in the summer of 1822, the landing was inundated, and the buildings removed. That the canal commissioners, Messrs. Young and Sey-msur, had appraised the damages in March, 1825, at only 630 dollars. And they informed the deponent, “ that theyjestimated the land inundated, for the purposs of Ullage, without reference to its value as a landing ground, at. 30 dollars per acre.” That the value of the land censisted almest e»*
On motion to set aside this appraisal, the single -point staled, (andil was stated and discussed in writing,) was, that the commissioners should have allowed the value of the premises destroyed asa landing# It was argued that this was its value to the owners; this would have fixed the price in market, which would obviously have been about $fjQ(X>, instead of $630# The latter was but little more than the income for a single year. The motion was not opposed by the commissioners; but the court, as was their course on all appeals from these appraisals, took the papers, examined the question, and set aside the appraisal ; deciding that it should have been according to the value as a landing ground,
I was afterwards informed by Mr. Youngs that be had acted in awarding such small damages, on the principle that the soil of the Hudson at the place in question, though far above tide water, belonged to the state#
With deference, this was evidently adopting a new rule, unknown to the common law. It was not only adopting a new rule ; but it was carrying that rule, in its application, one step farther than it ever can be carried» Admitting the more despotic rule of the civil law : “ Flumina autem omnia, el porlus, publica sunt ; ideoque jus piscandi omnibus commune cst in porlu fluminibusque (Just. Lib. 2, tit. 1, s 2;) the conclusion drawn by the canal commissioners, would, by no means, follow. The common law, so applied, would authorise them, in the prosecution of their splendid works, to cut up or inundate the valuable lumber yards at Troy, Albany or New-York, and then to pay, instead of their value as lying on a public stream, the price which they would fetch in market, as wheat fields, meadows, Ac. according to their agricultura1 value. Their value arises from their local situation and advantages, their worth in market; and the revenues derivable from them are to be taken into the account. (The Schuylkill Navigation Co. v. Thoburn, 7 Serg. & Rawle, 411. 1 Domat, 431, Of the restitution of fruits, 1, 2, 3.) The state is bound to make restitution upon the same principle as an individual, who should commit the injury. (1 Bl. Com. 141, 2.) This is so even in more despotic countries ; (2 Montesq. L'Esp. de Lois, ch. 15;) and the maxim, sic utere tuo ui alienum non laidas, applies with equal force to both. I do not, therefore, think that the decision of the supreme court, necessarily involved the question, whether tbe civil or common law should prevail. I do not believe they stopped to inquire whether the Hudson was a public or private river at the place in question. Such a point was not presented by the, affidavit. This did not state whether the place was above or below tide water ; nor was the point raised in argument. It is evident, therefore» that the court held the result to be the same, upon both the civil and. common law.
On the case coming before the present appraisers, the. question whether the Hudson, at the landing, was private property, was again raised, as will be seen by the case which they drew up, with a copy of which I have been favored. It is in these words :
u They claim title to a tract of laud lying within the bounds of the Kay-oiderosseras patent, which w is granted on the 2d 1708 ; bounded as foilows : fc thence easterly or northe rly to the third falls on Albany river,’ [Baker's Falls on the Hudson. 1 John. 156.] ⅛ about 20 miles, more or less ; thence along the said river, down southerly, to the northeasterly bounds of Saratoga&c.
About 21 acres of that tract lie on the west margin of the Hudson river, and about 1-2 a mile above the dam at Fort Edward. A part of the tract, before the dam was built, was used as a place on which to deposit lumber, for the purpose of rafting and floating it down the river ; and which produced an annual revenue to the claimants, as they allege, of $400 or $500 » but which, since that dam was built, is rendered totally useless for that purpose; the dam having destroyed the navigation of the river to that place, and covered the land with water about 27 feet deep.
The place in question is about 40 miles above tide water ; and much farther above where the water becomes fresh. There is no natural and continued navigation up the river to the land which is the subject of this claim.
On the 15th April, 1771, 62 years after the gram, of the Kayaderosseras patent, the Britisn government made a grant to Henry Stilson, the subject of which is described as toiiows : ⅜ All that certain tract of land, ground and soil, under and covered with the water of Hudson's river, in the county. of Albany^ within our province of New- York ; beginning on the west bank of the said river, at the division Une between lot No. 7 and lot No. 8, in the 19th allotment of the Kayaderosseras patent; and runs tnence into the river, east 3 chains, then parallel to the said bank of the said river, at 3 chains distance, south 13 degrees east, 1 chain and 60 Jinks, and south 30 degrees east, 5 chains and 60 links, then west 3 chains and 65 links to the bank of the river ; and then along the said bank, as the same doth wind and turn, northward to the place oi beginning, containing 2 acres ; together with all and singular, the benefits, liberties, privileges, waters, watercourses, mills, mill dams, easements, emoluments, tenements and here-ditaments whatsoever,’ &c. [Book of Military Patents, No. 2, p. 379, 590.]
The questions are, 1. Are the claimants entitled to the value of this land, according to its increased value by means of the use and unobstructed navigation of the river, as it was before the dam was built; or are they only entitled to its value for agricultural purposes ?
2. Are the claimants entitled to pay for their fishery, which has been destroyed by the dam
Now, there is no doubt, upon the cases before cited, that the boundary “ to the falls, and thence along the river down southerly,” &c. to which the 21 acres in question extend, will, per se, carry the right of soil in the claimants to the thread of the Hudson. (12 John. 252, 255. 14 Mass. Rep. 149, 2 Con. Rep. N. S. 481. 2 N. H. Hep. 369.) Of course, the exclusive right of fishing goes to the same extent. (20 John. 90.)
The only argument against this construction is the little 2 acre military patent to Stilson. Now, had this been granted before the Kayadorosseras patent issued, and had it been a part of the identical bed of the river covered by the 21 acres, it must be admitted that, within what the court say
It will be seen, by the above sketches, that the board of canal appraisal, and the regular and ordinary tribunals of the country, have, in their respective adjudications upon the right annexed to riparian ownership, begun at different points. The former, in effect, have begun at the civil law; the latter at the common law. And even when both have assumed the civil law as the starting point, they have diverged to directly opposite conclusions. The rules which the former.have deemed it their duty to adopt, are most unfavorable to the rights of private property. Those by which our courts of justice have been guided, are more favorable, because dictated by the benign spirit of the common law. If the former be right, a large sum of individual suffering and ruin must be the consequence. With the utmost deference to that very able and respectable board, we mu9t be permitted to doubt the soundness of their legal positions, when we see them overruled by the decisions of the high superintending jurisdictions of our country ; and especially when we see those decisions so plainly supported by the sainted doctrines of ,.a Hale, a Holt and a Mansfield.