10 Johns. 236 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1813
According to the authority of Sir Mathew Hale, and which was cited in Palmer v. Mulligan, (3 Caines’ Rep. 315. 319.) a river not navigable in the common law sense of the term, and though the fee of it belongs to the owners of the adjoining banks, may still be liable to the public uses of rafting and boat navigation, as a public highway. The Battenkill has been used for rafting for twenty-six years and upwards. This was fully proved upon the trial, and no right was set up in opposition to the right founded on this usage. A usage of this length of time will, of itself, grow into a public right, and especially, where the public interest, or public convenience, is essentially promoted. Thus, a private passage leading from one part qf a public street to another, and being open to all the world, for a great number of years, was held by Lord Ellenborough to grow into a public right, which could not be interrupted. (Rex v. Lloyd, 1 Campb. 260.) In the case of Balston v. Bensted, (1 Campb. 463.) Lord Ellenborough also ruled, that twenty years’ exclusive enjoyment of water, in any particular manner, affords a conclusive presumption of right in the party so enjoying it. The case of Beales v. Shaw (6 East, 208.) was a solemn decision of the K. B. on that very point.
Though the Battenkill be omitted in the statute declaring cer
Judgment affirmed-