136 N.E. 224 | NY | 1922
Plaintiff had asserted rights to lands below high-water mark, adjacent to his spacious residential estate on Oyster Bay along the westerly shore of Cold Spring Harbor, under a grant from the state of New York made to him by the commissioners of the land office. The validity of this grant was challenged by the town, and was in a former action sustained in the trial court and by the Appellate Division. (Tiffany v. Town of Oyster Bay,
After the decision of this court, plaintiff offered to restore the foreshore by removing the fill, thus putting the shore back in the condition it had been. This proposal the town declined, and in June, 1916, it took possession of the filled-in land and employed defendant Kunz to build thereon a structure to contain thirty-three public bath houses of about fifty feet by ten or fifteen feet each; height not indicated. Plaintiff thereupon began this action in which he asks leave to restore the foreshore to its original condition and also asks that defendants be enjoined from building bath houses or any structures whatever thereon and that he be restored to his rights as a riparian owner of the lands belonging to him.
The trial court held that the filling in of the foreshore was a trespass; that the title of the town, derived from the Andros charter, authorized it to put up the projected bath houses, and that the filled-in land could be used generally for purposes of public recreation. (Tiffany v. Oyster Bay,
The only new findings material to the issue made by the *20 Appellate Division are a finding to the effect that the erection of the bath house structure interferes with plaintiff's riparian rights as owner of the upland and a finding to the effect that the maintenance of the fill transforms the plaintiff into an inland owner by cutting off actual contact with the waters of Cold Spring Harbor to the extent of the fill.
If plaintiff had succeeded in establishing his title to lands under water, below high-water mark, the filled-in lands in front of his upland would have lost their character of foreshore and would have become upland, stripped of all public easements, and his own easement as riparian owner would have been merged in his superior title. When the sovereign grants to the owner of the adjacent upland the title to lands under navigable waters, such owner may, subject to the limitations imposed by the United States Constitution (Lewis B.P.O.C. Co. v. Briggs,
The question is what are the present rights of the parties in relation thereto. The answer requires a consideration (a) of thejus publicum, (b) the jus privatum, and (c) the right of the owner of the adjacent upland. The law on the subject is rather indefinite. Judges have decided cases and indulged in safe generalities, but have refrained from forming explicit rules unnecessary to the decision. The English cases in point are not wholly applicable to our conditions.
The foreshore or land under the waters of the sea and its arms, between high and low-water mark, is subject, first, to the juspublicum — the right of navigation, and when the tide is out, the right of access to the water for fishing, bathing and other lawful purposes to which the right of passage over the beach may be a necessary incident. (Barnes v. Midland R.R.T. Co.,
On the facts as they appear in this case, our conclusion is that the title to the plaintiff's upland and to the fill made by him on the foreshore without authority having been severed by the decision in the former case, the town of Oyster Bay holds title to the latter, subject to the rights of Tiffany as riparian owner; that the filled-in land retains its character as land under water and the plaintiff, as owner of the adjacent upland, has the same rights and no greater rights in and across the same as if no filling had been done, or as if the filling had been done lawfully by the *22 town; and that plaintiff's rights as a riparian owner continue and he has not become an inland owner to the extent of the fill.
The town of Oyster Bay asserts the right to make such public use of the filled-in land as it deems proper, free from any easement on the part of the plaintiff as owner of the upland; to devote the same, e.g., to the exclusive use of the public as an amusement park. (Oelsner v. Nassau L. P. Co.,
The Appellate Division, on its finding of fact, was right in restraining the defendant from interfering with plaintiff's suitable and reasonable means of access to the ocean by appropriating the fill to the erection of a permanent public bath house structure fifty feet in length, paralleling plaintiff's shore line. Such an erection would not have been permitted on the foreshore. The fill does not enlarge the rights of the town in this regard. What is a reasonable use of the foreshore by the proprietary is to some extent a question of time, degree and circumstances. Doubtless the town has large beneficial rights and privileges therein, but we should not undertake by premature assertion to decide their nature and extent in detail. The question of conflicting rights is not as well settled as it might be. The case of Sage v. Mayor, etc., of N.Y. (
By the judgment of the court below, the town at its option is permitted to have the fill removed at plaintiff's expense. Equity may thus permit the parties to do what they have a legal right to agree to do. When one litigation over bona fide claims of title to property has terminated and another is pending, the parties need not stand on their legal rights. They may adjust their differences by mutual consent and concessions. The court should encourage and facilitate such settlements. Even *24 the present decision does not define the jus privatum with sufficient comprehensiveness to prevent further differences as to the rights of the proprietary and the riparian owner. The town may prefer the open water if it may not assert its claim as an owner of the upland.
The judgment appealed from should be modified by striking therefrom the words "or any other structures whatever," and as so modified affirmed, without costs.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., HOGAN, CARDOZO, McLAUGHLIN and ANDREWS, JJ., concur; CRANE, J., dissents
Judgment accordingly.