30 F.2d 332 | 3rd Cir. | 1929
In the court below the United States and Merchants’ Warehouse Company, hereafter called government, filed a bill in equity against the Pennsylvania Salt Manufacturing Company, a corporation of Pennsylvania, hereafter styled salt company, to enjoin the latter from mooring vessels to a certain bulkhead. On final hearing that court dismissed the bill, whereupon the plaintiff took this appeal.
The proofs in the case were that for
“1. The Company hereby grants to the Government the right and privilege to construct on the property of the company along the southerly line thereof on the Delaware River and the Government hereby agrees to construct and maintain a bulkhead for the purpose of retaining the earth along said boundary line for the maintenance and protection of the waterway, dock, or slip to be opened, constructed, and maintained by the Government between said Bulkhead (marked ‘Pier G’) and the Government Northerly pier (marked ‘Pier C’) on plan hereto attached and made part hereof, said bulkhead to be constructed out to and including the end of the Company’s Pier 94 as at present exists in accordance'with plans hereto attached. * " :
“6. The Company hereby expressly reserves unto itself, its successors and assigns, the right and privilege to use said bulkhead and structure so built by the Government upon the Company’s land in any lawful manner.
“7. It is further agreed that the Company shall have the right and privilege at any time hereafter to extend said bulkhead into the Delaware River to such line as is now or may be hereafter established as the pier head line by the Secretary of War or any other properly constituted authority.”
By deed .of November 24, 1922, the strip was conveyed by the salt company to the government, wherein it was provided:
“It being understood that the execution and delivery of this deed does not waive the ’ privileges or affect the obligations of the parties expressly granted or imposed by the terms of a certain contract entered into between the grantor herein and the Constructing Quartermaster of the Philadelphia Terminal, dated January 5, 1920, and Recorded in the Office of the Recorder of Deeds for the City and County of Philadelphia in Deed Book J. M. H. No. -, p. - — , etc., for the construction and maintenance of a Bulkhead or Retaining Wall on Grantor’s land adjoining the property herein conveyed.”
It further appears that, as the bulkhead was being constructed, the salt company designated certain places on its top where cleats and moving posts, which it furnished, were embedded in concrete by government. In 1922 the 'United States, acting by the United States Shipping Board Emergency Meet Corporation, leased its terminal property to the Merchants’ Warehouse Company, which operates the property as a general water terminal. The latter company objected to salt company bringing a vessel into the slip and mooring the same to the bulkhead, and thereafter a bill, afterwards amended, was filed by the United States and the Merchants’ Warehouse Company, wherein was prayed a perpetual injunction against salt company from using the slip by vessel entry, from vessel passage through its waters, from permitting all vessels from mooring to the bulkhead on salt company’s land for the purpose of unloading, and “generally from occupying or using or inviting, permitting, soliciting, or encouraging others, to occupy or use the said slip or any part thereof, or the waters thereof or therein, or the land underlying the same, or any part thereof, for any purpose whatsoever.”
We are of opinion that, under the facts, agreements, deed, etc., the court below committed no error in dismissing the bill, and in support of such view we note these facts. The old slip formed part of the navigable waters of the Delaware river.