43 N.Y.S. 927 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
Lead Opinion
The defendants own a pier at the foot of Main street, Sing Sing, extending into the Hudson river. It is fifty-eight feet wide. South of defendants’ pier, also at the 'foot of Main street, is a pier sixty feet wide, owned by the plaintiffs, and sejiarated from it by a slip thirty-two feet wide. Both piers extend the same distance into the river.
There is also a slip below the plaintiffs’ pier thirty-two feet wide, and below that a pier also owned by the plaintiffs, which is a hundred feet shorter than the plaintiffs’ upper pier, leaving a large space of clear water. The plaintiffs’ boat is accustomed to land and tie up at night in this slip on the southerly side of their upper pier.
Just north of the defendants’ pier is a creek which empties into the river, and, being subject to violent freshets, deposits large quantities of sand on .the fiats and in front of the docks. It is- alleged in the moving affidavits, and declared by the learned judge in his opinion at Special Term, that one object of the addition is to prevent this deposit, and the evidence shows that the addition would do much to prevent it, especially in front of the defendants’ dock, where it shoals the water so as to hinder the moorings of coal boats and barges at the end of their pier, where there is at present only three or four feet of water.
The defendants, as shown by the diagrams in- evidence, began to . build out into the river an addition to their dock, forty feet in length, the northerly line being an extension of the northerly line ' of the pier, the addition to be about fifteen feet narrower than the present pier. There is some evidence that tlie body of the proposed ‘ -dock is somewhat to the south of tlie place shown on the diagram, but the defendants would be concluded by their own maps from any other location if it • were needful to insert such a provision in the judgment.
The plaintiffs own, and' for about ten years have been running daily to their dock, a passenger and freight steamboat, and claim that in going up the river and in docking their steamboat it is sometimes necessary to lap the bow of their boat some five or.ten feet upon the outer or river end of the defendants’ pier, preparatory to warping the boat into its berth on the lower side of their own pier, and that the defendants’ ¡iroposed addition will, seriously interfere with, if not practically destroy, this beneficial use of their own pier, ■and prevent them from warping their boat into the slip, or from landing passengers and freight while moored at tlie end of their pier.
The boat is 140 feet in length, and the plaintiffs’ dock 60 feet in width, the' slip, between the two docks 32 feet, and the slip south of plaintiffs’ pier is 32 feet wide, with open water of 100 feet, and it is somewhat difficult to see why the boat -cannot he warped into its slip without lapping the defendants’ pier, as from the outer lower corner
The average depth of water at the lower end of the defendants’’ pier is only six feet at low water, while the boat draws about seven and one-half feet light, and something more when loaded. It is. difficult to see how the boat can use this water without grounding her bow in front of the defendants’ dock, except at, or nearly at high tide, the rise and fall of which is three and a half or four feet.
The plaintiffs sometimes land their boat at the end of their pier and unload from a gangplank at the after gangway. Ho reason is shown why they may not unload from the forward gangway, but even when they use the after gangway, the gangplank is ten or twelve feet from the lower line of their pier, and there does not seem to be any necessity for lapping the defendants’ dock, as the lower line of that dock is seventy-eight feet distant from the gangway,, about four-sevenths of the length of the boat.
The learned trial judge at Special Term states in his opinion that “ it would be very difficult at all times, and impossible many times, to bring the plaintiffs’ boat to her dock without running her bow about fifty feet in front of the dock of the defendants.” Ho such claim is made in the plaintiffs’ papers, and as this would bring the stern of the boat above the lower line of the plaintiffs’ dock, we are not able to agree with that part of the opinion.
As the addition laid out. on the diagram leaves a water space of fifteen feet above the lower line of the defendants’ dock, and as the plaintiffs only claim that they lap the defendants’ dock about ten feet, it is difficult, to see how the new structure will interfere with their landing. Hor does it appear why they may not make their landing in their own slip in an oblique direction, or from the north, with the bow heading down the river as is sometimes done.
The original grant to the defendants or their grantors is not in evidence, but it appears .that their dock was built about 1876, and it may be assumed that they also had a grant. In 1893 the defendants obtained another grant “-for the beneficial enjoyment.” This grant extends about seventy-five feet beyond the end of the present docks.
There is a difference between these two classes of grants; that for purposes of commerce is limited upon the erection of a dock within the named period; that for the beneficial enjoyment contains no.' such provision arid is apparently perpetual and authorizes the construction of such dock out to the exterior line of the grant as is necessary to beneficial enjoyment.
When the plaintiffs’ dock was erected under their grant, it may be assumed that the grant of lands under water in front, of their upland' became perpetual, but I cannot see that the plaintiffs -acquired any exclusive right in the waters beyond a line running substantially at right angles to their own shore or to the exclusive navigation of any adjacent waters.
If any distinction is to be drawn between the grant to the ' "plaintiffs in 1873, and the grant to the defendants in 1893, it would •seem at least that the defendants’ grant was not inferior to that of 'the plaintiffs.
Both parties built their docks the same distance out into the river, -and thus acquired rights, but the defendants have now obtained an •additional grant under which they claim the right to build their proposed dock.
Knickerbocker Ice Oo. v. Shultz (116 N. Y. 382) was a case where •a grant had been given to the plaintiff’s assignor, who had erected a dock below high-water mark, and subsequently obtained a grant of the lands under water in front of his upland. Later the defendants -obtained a grant for beneficial enjoyment of lands under water in .front of their premises which lay to the south of the plaintiff’s dock.
The plaintiffs contend that the act of Congress, familiarly known as the River and Harbor Act (25 U. S. Stat. at Large, 425; amd., 26 U. S. Stat. at Large, 454, § 7) prohibits, the erection of any pier, wharf, breakwater or structure in any navigable waters of the United States, where no harbor lines are established, in such a manner as to obstruct or impair navigation, commerce or anchorage of said waters, without permission of the Secretary of War. It is evident that the statute only prohibits the erection of a dyke where it obstructs or impairs navigation, and this is one of the questions óf fact which is presented' in the present action. And wé do not find testimony sufficient to hold that the proposed structure will obstruct or impair navigation.
In support of his contention the plaintiffs’ counsel cites the case of Grand Trunk R. Co. v. Backus (46 Fed. Rep. 211), decided in the United States Circuit Court, where Judge Jaoicson, in an action brought by an adjoining ferry company, enjoined the extension of a wharf twenty-five feet into the Detroit river, to a point where the depth of water was twenty-six feet, and Where it may be assumed that the largest vessels were using the waters and where the channel was comparatively narrow. This, however, presents a very different case from the present one, where the waters are seldom traversed, and then only by vessels of small capacity, and where it is shown that the proposed structure will be no obstruction to general navigation. One rule might well apply to the former, and another rule to the latter case, when the rights of the public are considered. It is not shown here that there is any considerable use of
Judge Jacksost also says that the building of - the proposed dock would prevent the crossing of navigable waters by the ferryboats in' entering and leaving their slip. This action differs so materially from the case at bar that it does not seem to assist our conclusion.
This court .at the present term, in the case of The City of Brooklyn v. Machay (13 App. Div. 105), following the case of Wetmore v. The Brooklyn Gas Light Co. (42 N. Y. 384) and Rumsey v. N. Y. & N. E. R. R. Co. (133 id. 79), held that the owner of the upland on a navigable stream had the right to construct a proper pier or wharf for his own use and that of the public, even though he had not obtained from the State a grant of the land under water. .We see no reason why the same rule does not equally pertain to the rights of the United States. It is not necessary for us to decide whether the Secretary of War could prevent the construction of the dock in question, but until action for that purpose is instituted no good reason is shown why the court should enjoin the construction of the dock in question, and thus prevent the defendants’ beneficial enjoyment of their property, ¡at the suit of, and for the benefit of the owners of
■ an adjacent piér, where the papers and evidence show that the interference with the landing of their boat is shadowy and unsubstantial, even if the exclusive use, as- claimed, found any authority in law.
The judgment is reversed, with costs to abide event.
All concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
Under the-English law a littoral owner had a right of access to the adjacent waters, the same as to a highway, but it was only a right of - access, and he could erect no pier, wharf or other structure in the water without the consent of the crown. (Gould on Waters, § 167 ; Black’s Pom. Wat. Rights, § 250.) In this country it has generally been held that the upland owner has the additional right of constructing a proper pier or landing for the use of himself and the public, subject to the general regulations prescribed by the State or -the United States (Yates v. Milwaukee, 10 Wall. 497); and since the decision in Rumsey v. N. Y. & N. E. R. R. Co. (133 N. Y. 79) that is the rule in this State. But, though the owner of adjacent
A contrary rule would give the riparian owner who might first erect a pier the power to prevent adjacent owners exercising their rights, by keeping the water clear for access to the sides of his pier, or limit such rights 'by preventing the adjacent proprietors from making piers extending any further into the stream than that first erected. In the harbor of Few York, and I presume generally in ports with much commerce, .pier lines and bulkhead lines have been established under the authority both of the State and Federal governments. The State has also prescribed that piers shall not be built out in that harbor within a specified distance from other piers.. Under this legislation, the owner of a pier which extends to the pier-line, obtains a certain protection against too great propinquity of other structures. But in the absence of such legislation one must so build his pier with reference to his ownership of the upland as to secure himself from interference by the structures of adjacent proprietors.
■ Rbr do we think the Federal statute (26 U. S. Stat. at Large, 454, § 7.) renders the defendants’ work illegal. By that statute it is provided .“ that it shall not be lawful to build any wharf, pier, dolphin, boom, dam, weir, breakwater, bulkhead, jetty or structure of any kind outside established harbor lines, or in any navigable waters óf the United States where no harbor lines are or may be established, without the permission of' the Secretary of War, in any port, roadstead, haven, harbor, navigable river, or other waters of the United States, in such manner as shall obstruct or impair navigation, commerce or anchorage of said waters.” This section does not render any pier, that may be erected in navigable waters, without the permission of the Secretary of War, unlawful, but only such a pier as..obstructs or impairs navigation, commerce or anchorage of said waters. As. ■already stated, we think it has not been shown that the pier in ques
The judgment appealed from should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
Judgment reversed and new trial gfanted, costs to abide the event.