270 A.D. 1042 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1946
In an action to enjoin the diversion of Little Neck Creek at Brock-haven, Long Island, to restrain the respondents from trespassing, and to bar the respondents pursuant to section 500 of the Real Property Law from all claim to an estate or interest in the property described in the fourth and fifth paragraphs of the complaint, judgment dismissing the first, third and fourth causes of action and dismissing the second cause of action in part, insofar as appealed from, unanimously affirmed, with costs. Little Neck Creek, running principally in a southerly direction, constitutes the chief boundary between property owned by appellants and respondents. Appellants failed to establish that respondents diverted the stream, trespassed upon appellants’ properly, or unjustly claimed title to any lands belonging to appellants on the latters’ side of the stream. Appellants did not definitely establish the " original ” location of the stream and therefore were unable to show it had been diverted. Furthermore, they did not show that respondents’ use of the stream in the operation of a duck farm was so unreasonable as to constitute a diversion. (Colrick v. Swinburne, 105 N. Y. 503; Pierson V. Speyer, 178 N. Y. 270; United P. B. Co. v. Iroquois P. & P. Go., 226 N. Y. 38.) The trial court found that respondents and their predecessors erected their fences in the stream in what appeared to be the center line thereof. Implicit in the trial court’s opinion is a further finding that the fences erected in the center of the stream were correctly located in accordance with the lines of respondents’ record title. The record sustains these findings and we affirm them. We also find that the fences have been maintained substantially as originally erected and that they have not been moved by respondents so as to encroach upon the appellants’ lands. The record also demonstrates that