5 Denio 389 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1848
The first question that arises in this case is, whether an action of ejectment will lie for the premises in question? They are situated below high water mark on the shore of New-Yorlc bay. To determine that, it will not be necessary to decide whether that action can in any case be maintained by the people for lands under the navigable waters of the state. For whatever was originally the condition of these premises in that respect, they had before suit brought been transformed by human labor into dry land. It might as well be said of the property in Water, Front and South-streets in the city of New-York, and other places similarly formed, which have been the subjects of private property for years, that they are lands under water. There can be no doubt that the action would be maintained. And the plaintiffs having shown a prima facie right to recover, the judge was correct in refusing to nonsuit at the request of defendants.
The remaining inquiry arises on the point, whether the letters patent, together with the deed from the patentees to the defendants produced by them were a bar to the action. The plaintiffs object that the grant from the commissioners of the land office is void, because it was made by patent and not by deed. The first section of the act concerning the commissioners Á the land office, (1 R. L. 292,) provides, that they shall have power “ to direct the granting of unappropriated lands within the state according to such powers and directions as shall be
It is also objected that the patent was void for not excepting gold and silver mines, as directed by the statute. The act requires that patents shall contain an exception and reservation of such mines. (Id. § 5.) To this it may be answered in the first place, that if, as is contended by the plaintiff’s counsel and as is admitted above, it was lawful for the commissioners to have conveyed lands under water by their deed, then the provision in relation to gold and silver mines does not, nor did the legislature intend it should relate to such lands; for the provision applies, by its terms, only to patents. For inasmuch as the statute provides that the commissioners shall have power to direct the granting of unappropriated lands, thereby clearly indicating that it should be done by patent; it also declares that it shall be lawful for them to grant the lands under the waters of navigable rivers, manifestly leaving it to the determination of the commissioners whether to use their own deed or a patent. It follows that there was no intention to provide for the exception of those mines in grants of lands of the latter description. If there had been, it would not have been left to
But the commissioners in the present case were the agents of the state, and hence if their acts are to be estimated according to the rules applicable to private agents, this patent may be good for the lands and void for the mines, if any should hereafter be discovered, the two subjects being easily separable. The rule in such cases is that if an agent do what he is authorized to do, and more, the execution is good for what is warranted and bad for the excess, provided such excess is manifestly distinguishable. (Perkins on Convey. 187; Adams v. Adams, Cowper, 651; Livermore on Agency, 101, 102; Story on Agency, §§ 166,168, 2d ed.) And that the principle of the rule is applicable to grants by patent, appears by the case of Patterson v. Jenks, (2 Peters, 216, 236.) It was there held that a patent from the state of Georgia for lands partly without and partly within the limits of the lands claimed by the Indians, was good for the former while it was void for the latter.
It was also insisted that the patent was not evidence of a grant without proof that the notice of the application therefor had been.given as provided by the statute, and also that the grantees were the proprietors of the adjacent lands. These objections are untenable. The principles governing here have no analogy to the rules applicable to the cases to which we were referred on the argument, such as purchasers under sales for taxes and the like. Parties claiming under such proceed
It was finally objected by the plaintiff’s counsel that the patent was void, because the grantees had no authority to take a grant of land under water; and more especially because it did not appear that the commissioners to lay out their road had ever done so over the premises granted, and because the authority vested in the commissioners of the land office was improperly exercised by this grant to a turnpike company.
A patent being a record, it is a principle well settled that unless it is absolutely void on its face it cannot be assailed in a collateral action, but only in a proceeding directly for the purpose ; and this is even true though it were issued by mistake, or obtained by fraud or misrepresentation. (Jackson v. Marsh, supra ; Jackson v. Lawton, 10 John. 23; Jackson v. Hart, 12 id. 82; Bagnel v. Broderick, 13 Peters, 436, 450.) Though it does not appear on the face of the patent that the grantees are a turnpike company, and that the premises lay adjoining their road, still I know no rule of law by which it is on that account absolutely void. It is one of the ordinary powers of a corporation to take, hold and convey real estate; and whetner this corporation had such power or not, must be determined by its charter and the acts amending the same, and by any other statutory provisions relating to the subject generally. This would certainly produce an inquiry altogether outside of the nstrument itself.
But it follows from the principles already laid down, the evidence that the grantees were not the proprietors of the adjacent lands being extrinsic, that even if that were sufficient to authorize a judgment vacating the patent in a regular proceeding for that puipose, still it can produce no correspondent result here in a collateral action. A patent, valid on its face cannot be
Neither was the effect of the dissolution of the turnpike company such as was declared by the circuit judge. It was assumed that the company took an estate under the patent and conveyed the same to the defendants—during their charter. It is unnecessary to inquire what would have been the result, if the
New trial ordered.