208 A.D. 273 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1924
Lead Opinion
The claimant, prior to the year 1910, was the owner of both banks of the Hudson river at Van Schoenhoven rapids. These rapids were a short distance above Waterford, and were the first rapids in the Hudson river above the confluence of the Hudson and the Mohawk. There was here a natural drop of nine feet, distributed through a. distance of one-half mile. About four miles above there was a water power belonging to the Hudson River Power Transmission Company. The Van Schoenhoven rapids were susceptible of development to constitute a valuable water privilege. A dam erected at Split Rock would have furnished a head of thirteen feet. By means of such a dam 5,000 horse power on the average could be developed. Such a dam would not have minimized the water privilege of the Hudson River Power Transmission Company, or set back the waters to overflow lands other
In the early cases in this State, as well as in other jurisdictions, the statement was frequently made that under the common law of England non-tidal rivers were not navigable. The statement first appeared in an opinion by Chancellor Kent in Palmer v. Mulligan (3 Caines, 307). “ Chancellor Kent originated a theory that at common law only tidal streams were navigable.” (Farnam Waters, § 23a.) The theory thus advanced was adopted by Angelí in his book on Water Courses (6th ed. § 542), and thereby gained general currency. (Id.) This doctrine was reasserted by many judges in this State, notably, by Vice-Chancellor Gridley in Varick v. Smith (9 Paige, 547); by Mr. Justice Bronson in Starr v. Child (20 Wend. 149); by Senator Beardsley in Canal Appraisers v. People (17 id. 571); by Judge Smith in Morgan v. King (35 N. Y. 454); and by Judge Gray in Fulton Light, H. & P. Co. v. State of New York (200 id. 400). The correctness of the doctrine was doubted by
It is self-evident that the Hudson river, somewhere in its windings between Waterford and its source near Mount Marcy, ceases to be navigable, and, like the Raquette and the Saranac rivers, becomes a private stream. Although it has been authoritatively held, therefore, that the Hudson, at points above the properties of the claimant, is navigable, it may be well to make reference to some of the proof which evidences its navigability in the early days of our history. That proof will show the Hudson in its natural state, and indicate the extent and character of its use at a time when, navigated without artificial aid.
The State introduced in evidence many documents and maps relating to the early navigation of the Hudson. (1) A deposition made by Nanning Harmentsen and others on September 7, 1687. Harmentsen and his associates therein describe a journey from Albany to Quebec and return made prior to the year 1687. They state as follows: “ The Examinants declare that four of them in number made their escape in the night from Quebecq and came in five dayes time to Albany all the way by water except one carrying place of about three Dutch miles and another of about 150 paces.” (2) A report from Mr. Livingston to the government of Connecticut, dated April 11, 1690. Livingston says “ the whole jurney to Canida from Albany can be performed by water except att the
That the riparian owners upon fresh water rivers, whether navigable or not, own to the thread of the stream, is a general proposition, which, although denied in Canal Appraisers v. People ex rel. Tibbits (17 Wend. 571) and in People ex rel. Loomis v. Canal Appraisers (33 N. Y. 461) is now firmly established in this State. (Commissioners of Canal Fund v. Kempshall, 26 Wend. 404; Smith v. City of Rochester, 92 N. Y. 463; Fulton Light, H. & P. Co. v. State of New York, 200 id. 400; Danes v. State of New York, 219 id. 67.) It was held in the Tibbits case, the Loomis case, the Smith case and the Danes case that the bed of the Mohawk river, notwithstanding the general rule, presumptively belonged to the people of the State. It was said in these cases as well as in the Fulton case, that the bed of the Hudson river above tide water, likewise belonged to the people of the State. All of these cases, however, involved beds of streams
The banks of a river bordering a waterfall furnish land elevations, which, when the banks are tied together by a dam, provide
The claimant contends that irrespective of its common-law rights, it was the owner of the bed of the river at Van Schoenhoven rapids and above, by virtue of a legislative grant contained in chapter 164 of the Laws of 1901. The material provisions of that act are as follows: “ Waterford Electric Light, Heat and Power Company, its successors and assigns, are hereby authorized to construct a dam across the Hudson river on the lands now owned by it or which it shall hereafter purchase or acquire in the towns of Halfmoon, Saratoga county, and Schaghticoke, Rensselaer county, in such a manner as not to injuriously affect the water privilege of the Hudson River Power Transmission Company, and such company is hereby authorized to forever maintain said dam and to flood back up said river so far as it owns or shall hereafter purchase or acquire the adjacent uplands or may have or shall hereafter purchase or acquire the rights of flowage thereon for the purpose of maintaining the pond formed by such dam; and any interests
The State, in its relation to the Hudson river, enjoys a double character. It is the proprietor of the lands under the waters of the river. It is, also, the representative of the public at large, in whom is vested the easement of passage along the stream. If it conveys the under water lands to an individual its act has the quality of an ordinary grant by a land proprietor. If, as the representative of the public, it releases the easement of passage, or if its grant of the land expressly or impliedly carries with it a right to defeat or diminish the public use, it exercises sovereign or governmental powers. (People v. New York & S. I. F. Co., 68 N. Y. 71; Smith v. City of Rochester, 92 id. 463; Langdon v. Mayor, etc., 93 id. 129.) It has sometimes been thought that because the King of England, while empowered to convey the bed of navigable waters, could not release the public easement, therein, therefore, the Legislature of a State had no such power. This was an erroneous theory. It was said by Hand, J., in Morgan v. King (18 Barb. 277): “ I am aware that it has been said the Crown can not grant a right to obstruct a public navigable river. [Williams v. Wilcox, 8 A. & E. 314; 3 Kent, 427.] But Parliament can. [Woolr. on Ways, 60; Rex v. Montague, 4 B. & C. 598. And see Abraham v. Great Northern R. Co., 16 Q. B. Rep. 586. Reg. v. Betts, Id. 1022.] And our Legislature, when acting within the pale of the Constitution, has full power over the matter.” It was said by Andrews, J., in People v. New York & S. I. F. Co. (supra): “ But while the sovereign can make no grant in derogation of the common right of passage over navigable waters, Parliament may do so. * * • * The State in place of the Crown, holds the title, as trustee of a public trust, but the Legislature may, as the representative of the people, grant the soil, or confer an exclusive privilege in tide waters, or authorize a use inconsistent with the public right.” It was said by Earl, J., in Langdon v. Mayor, etc. (supra, 155): “ The Crown could convey
We have hitherto discussed the question whether the Hudson river between Waterford and Fort Edward was in law a navigable stream. In order to find the solution we considered the uses made of the river when still in its natural state at times now remote. We have here a wholly different question. Did the legislative grant to claimant in the year 1901 unreasonably or substantially
The State also contends that under the River and Harbor Appropriations Act of March 3, 1899 (30 U. S. Stat. as Large, 1151, § 9; U. S. Comp. Stat. 1918, § 9971; Barnes’Fed. Code 1919, § 9437), the claimant could not have built a dam at Van Schoenhoven rapids without a Federal license; that it had no such license; consequently, that when its lands were appropriated the water power seized was valueless. The argument proves too much. Assuming that the act applied to the Hudson river at this point, then, if it barred the erection of a dam by the claimant, it barred the erection of a dam by the State. It is, of course, true that not even the State itself may exercise the power of eminent domain for other than a public purpose. “ The general grant of legislative power in the Constitution of a State does not enable the Legislature, in the exercise either of the right of eminent domain or of the right of taxation, to take private property, without the owner’s consent, for any but a public object.” (Per Gray, J., in Cole v.
The State further contends that the riparian rights of the claimant were held subject to the paramount right of the State to improve navigation; that the State built the dam at Van Schoenhoven rapids in the exercise of this right; that the claimant is, therefore, not entitled to compensation. In Commissioners of Canal Fund v. Kempshall (supra) the State, in the course of constructing an aqueduct for canal purposes, obstructed a raceway by which water was conducted from the Genesee river to a mill of a riparian
This case finds a close parallel in First Construction Co. v. State of New York (221 N. Y. 295). There the State had granted to the predecessors of the claimant the right to erect wharves upon lands under water in Gowanus bay in Brooklyn, N. Y. The harbor improvement intended to be made was far from being completed when the State of New York made appropriation for Barge canal purposes of a portion of the rights conveyed. The lands involved were for the greater part under water lands and unimproved. The Court of Appeals held that the claimant was entitled to compensation for all the under water lands taken whether built upon or otherwise. Chief Judge Hiscock, writing for the court, after pointing out that in some States the rights granted were held to be mere licenses, revocable at will, said: “ I think, however, that the privilege amounts to more than this, and that an act granting the right to fill in lands under water, and thereby acquire title to the same, gives an inchoate, vested interest in the lands described which is ^a property right and of which, unless forfeited or lost in some way, the grantee cannot be deprived without compensation." And this was the holding notwithstanding that the appropriation made by the State was for purposes of navigation. We think that that case is conclusive upon the issue now made.
The question of interest remains. The Court of Claims has found that the lands and flowage rights owned by claimant “ constituted one entire property whose most beneficial and valuable use was its employment as a whole for the development of water power,” and that “ its value depended upon its use as an entirety.” The State made twenty-two separate appropriations of parcels of lands owned or controlled by the claimant. Three of these parcels were appropriated in the year 1910, and the remaining parcels were appropriated in the year 1913. Parcel No. 2318 consisted of forty-seven one-hundredths acres owned in fee by the claimant. This parcel is located on the easterly side of the river immediately above the easterly end of the dam which has been erected by the
The judgment should be modified by providing for the payment of additional interest as stated herein, and as modified should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur, Hinman, J., with an opinion, except Van Kirk, J., dissenting, with an opinion in which Cochrane, P. J., concurs.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur with Mr. Justice Kellogg because I think we are bound by the holding in First Construction Co. v. State of New York (221 N. Y. 295). It is true that above the dam constructed by the State no channel was made separate from the river and waters thereof were not diverted from the stream opposite or above the claimant’s lands, as Mr. Justice Van Kirk says. The dam erected by the State was needed to accomplish that improvement of navigation in the river itself. The argument of Mr. Justice Van Kirk is that this characterizes the act of the State as an exercise of its governmental power to improve navigation; that the claimant accepted its grant subject to the implied right of the State to foreclose the enjoyment of it without compensation, whenever the State saw fit to do so in aid of navigation. He concedes, however, certain exceptions: (1) Where the State, in aid of navigation, has made a previous grant in aid of navigation, not an obstruction or hindrance to navigation. (2) Where the -State seeks to divert the water of the stream to aid navigation in an artificial channel and not an improvement of the stream itself for that purpose.
It is assumed by Mr. Justice Van Kirk that the grant to the claimant was not given in aid of navigation and that the erection of claimant’s dam would use the entire stream and constitute an interference with navigation. It is difficult to see how the original purpose of the grant has any significance, provided the exercise of the right granted accomplishes the very aid to navigation in the channel of the river above the dam now supplied by the State’s dam. The
Dissenting Opinion
The claimant, the Waterford Electric Light, Heat and Power Company, purchased and became the owner of the uplands, or the flowage rights upon the uplands, adjoining the Hudson river on either side for a distance of about two miles, which uplands, including those on which it had flowage rights, would be submerged by a dam which it purposed to construct across the Hudson river a short distance above Waterford and at the lower end of its riparian rights. After it had procured a part of these uplands and flowage rights, it procured from the Legislature the enactment of chapter 164 of the Laws of 1901, which became a law March 22,1901, which act authorized the claimant to construct a dam across the Hudson river on the lands now owned by it, or which it shall hereafter purchase or acquire, and to forever maintain said dam and to flood back up said river so far as it owns or shall hereafter purchase or acquire the adjacent uplands, or the rights of flowage thereon, for the purpose of maintaining the pond formed by such dam; and any interest of the State in the lands under the waters of said river covered by said dam, or which may be flooded by the erection thereof, was granted to the claimant, its successors and assigns. Claimant had paid for its uplands and flowage rights, but paid nothing to the State for that which it received under the aforesaid act of the Legislature.
In 1900, by chapter 411 of the Laws of that year, the State Engineer and Surveyor was required to cause to be made the surveys necessary to determine the cost of constructing the Champlain, Erie and Oswego canals and to make surveys between Watervliet and Fort Edward, “ to ascertain whether it will be cheaper to improve the Champlain canal along its present route or to canahze the Hudson river between those points.” (See §§1,5.) Pursuant to this requirement, and on February 12, 1901, the State Engineer and Surveyor rendered his report setting forth the cost of improving the Champlain canal along the old route through the land and also the cost by way of the Hudson river from Troy to Whitehall. Thereafter the Barge Canal Act (Laws of 1903, chap. 147) was passed, by which the State determined that “the route of the Champlain canal as improved shall be as follows: Beginning in the Hudson river at Waterford, thence up the Hudson river canalized to near Fort Edward.” (See § 3.) The plan adopted fixed the canal for the distance of forty miles between Watervliet and Fort Edward, thirty-six miles in the river and four miles outside of the river. Under this act the State has constructed a dam across the Hudson river, slightly below the site chosen by this claimant for its dam, and has in consequence flooded the uplands and the lands on which claimant had flowage rights. The claimant then filed its claim and has procured an
It is not questioned that the claimant is entitled to compensation from the State for its uplands and flowage rights on uplands, together with such consequential damages to its remaining uplands, if any, as it has suffered. The question presented is whether or not it is entitled to compensation for such value as its so-called franchise has in connection with these lands. In other words, whether or not the claimant is entitled to recover, in addition to just compensation for its uplands and flowage rights, an increased amount because of its alleged “ franchise to build a dam.”
That the Hudson river, at the place in question, above tide water, is a public navigable stream in law, is not open to question in this court (West Virginia Pulp & Paper Co. v. Peck, 189 App. Div. 286; Thompson v. Fort Miller Pulp & Paper Co., 195 id. 271; Thompson v. State of New York, 204 id. 684), or in the Court of Appeals as we understand the decisions. (Fulton Light, H. & P. Co. v. State of New York, 200 N. Y. 400, 413; Danes v. State of New York, 219 id. 67, and cases cited.) And by the evidence painstakingly prepared the Attorney-General has shown that it has been and is in its ordinary and natural condition navigable in fact. Title to its bed is in the State, except where there has been an express and direct grant from the sovereign of the bed of the stream. (Williams v. City of Utica, 217 N. Y. 162.) Prior to the act of 1901 (supra) the title to the bed of the Hudson river had not been conveyed by the State to the claimant or its predecessors in title./
The power to improve public streams for navigation purposes belonged to the people of the State when the Federal Constitution was adopted; the State or its people did not surrender this right and still have it.
A riparian owner on a navigable stream, having also title to the bed of the stream, has not that full, complete title to the submerged lands which he has to his uplands; it is a qualified title. The rights of the riparian owner in a stream and in the submerged lands under a stream are aways subject to the paramount right of the State. (Union Bridge Co. v. United States, 204 U. S. 389, 392, 398, 399; Gibson v. United States, 166 id. 269, 271; United States v. Chandler-Dunbar Co., 229 id. 53, 70.) Acts done by the State in the proper exercise of its governmental power to improve a public stream for navigation and commerce, which impair or destroy the use by a riparian owner of his rights in the stream or in the lands under the stream are not a taldng of private property for the public use within the meaning of the constitutional limitation; and the consequences of such acts do not entitle the owner of such rights in the stream or its submerged lands to compensation from the State or its agents, or give to the riparian owner any right of action therefor. (Union Bridge Co. v. United States, supra, 390; Transportation Co. v. Chicago, 99 U. S. 635; Sage v. Mayor, 154 N. Y. 61, 77.) The loss of the rights in the stream in the submerged lands is merely incidental to the exercise of a servitude to which the property had always been subject; the servient right exists so long only as the dominant right is not exercised; when the dominant right is exercised to the damage of the servient right, the latter is not taken; it expires. Riparian ownership is subject to the obligation to suffer the consequences of the improvement of navigation in the exercise of the dominant right of the government in that regard. The right of navigation rests in the waters of the stream and not in its submerged lands and no burden in the form of damages, as compensation for the value of a subservient right, rests upon the government because of the exercise of its dominant right; the State cannot be so crippled in the exercise of its sovereign powers. The rights in a public stream belonging to the riparian owner, or the owner of the bed of the stream, are held with knowledge that those rights may be lost when the dominant right is exercised. When the State improves a public stream
Unless, therefore, the act of 1901 (supra) gave to the claimant some special property right, a property right other than the riparian owners who own the submerged lands of a public stream have, the act of the State in determining to improve the Hudson river and in so doing did not take the rights of the claimant in the stream within the meaning of the Constitution (Art. 1, § 6) requiring compensation for the taking of private property for the public use.
It is to be noted that there was nothing in this act of 1901, chapter 164, limiting the power of the State, should occasion arise, to improve the stream for navigation and commerce. The passage of the act and the granting of the rights therein described did not and could not legally limit this power of the State. (Union Bridge Co. Case, supra, 395.) “ The so-called jus privatum, or absolute ownership of lands under navigable waters, together with the exclusive privilege in the waters themselves, which attached to the English crown, resides in the people in their sovereign capacity and cannot be conveyed for private purposes.” (Appleby v. City of New York, 235 N. Y. 351, 362.) The right to control navigation upon the public waters of the State remains in the State to be exercised in the public interest. (Id.) “ ‘ The State can no more abdicate its trust over property in which the whole people are interested, like navigable waters and soils under them, so as to leave them entirely under the use and control of private parties, except in the instance of parcels mentioned for the improvement of the navigation and use of the waters, or when parcels can be disposed of without impairment of the public interest in what remains, than it can abdicate its police powers in the administration of government and the preservation of the peace.’ ” (Matter of Long Sault Development Co., 212 N. Y. 1, 10.)
What then of the grant of the right to build a dam? In Stone v. Mississippi (101 U. S. 814) the State had granted a charter to a private corporation to conduct a lottery for a period of twenty-five years, for which the corporation paid to the State a valuable consideration in money. The following year by an amendment to the State Constitution the Legislature was forbidden to authorize any lottery. The corporation was then forbidden to further operate its lottery. The court held that in this there was no violation of that provision of the United States Constitution (Art. 1, § 10, subd. 1) which prohibits a State from passing any act which impairs the obligation of contracts. It said (p. 819): “ No Legislature can bargain away the public health or the public morals. The people themselves cannot do it, much less their servants. The supervision
The grant to this claimant of the privilege of building a dam in the river was a license or privilege only, subject to be repealed or revoked whenever, in the interests of the public, the State should determine to improve the Hudson river for purposes of navigation and commerce; it was not a contract by which it bargained away its sovereign powers. (Matter of Long Sault Development Co., supra) This claimant accepted the grant, knowing that this was the nature and extent of its rights. The injury to these limited private rights claimed in the stream, at least before they have been exercised, must be deemed incidental to, and to have resulted from, the exercise of the governmental function, reasonably exercised for the public good, and the claimant is not entitled to compensation therefor. It is established by a long line of decisions (in addition to those above cited) that “ injury may often come to private property * * * taken for the public good and for no other purpose, and yet there will be no taking of such property within the meaning of the constitutional guarantee * * * against the taking of private property for public use without compensation.” (Chicago, B. & Q.
In Fulton Light, H. & P. Co. v. State of New York (200 N. Y. 400), which arose on the Oswego river, and in Commissioners of Canal Fund v. Kempshall (26 Wend. 404), which arose oh the Genesee river, the court held that the action of the State complained of was a diversion of the water of the stream to aid navigation in an artificial channel and was not an improvement of the stream in the public interest; that the State could do the act under its sovereign right of eminent domain, but not under its sovereign power to improve navigation and commerce; in consequence that the claimants were entitled to compensation for the resulting damages. But in the instant case the rights of the claimant have not been so destroyed or diminished. The State built its dam a little distance below the point at which claimant says it intended building its dam. It constructed headgates at the end of this dam, through which water is let into a canal, all of which is below the dam. This canal extends for some 2,700 feet, partly in a cut through the uplands and partly in a channel of the river. Above the dam, for a short distance, the river bank was cut or shaved off, but no channel was made separate from the stream opposite or above the claimant’s lands. It was the construction of the dam by the State which has deprived the claimant of the opportunity to exercise its right to build a dam in the stream and this construction was a part of a comprehensive plan to canalize the river to improve navigation and commerce in the stream.
It is not believed that any of these conclusions are in conflict with the holding in First Construction Co. v. State of New York (221 N. Y. 295). In that case the harbor and pier lines had been established in the tideway and grants to the several shore owners gave the right to construct piers and docks and to fill in from the shore, within a general scheme for improving the harbor and constructing the Brooklyn basin; such a grant is in aid of commerce and navigation, not an obstruction or hindrance to navigation, and the court intimates that there is some consideration therefor in that the individual pays the cost of harbor construction rather than the public. It was said no controlling authority holds that “ the grant of a mere privilege to fill in tidewater lands, so long as unexercised, conveys title;” that such grants, while they do not convey title, may not be revoked at will, though they may be lost or revoked for nonuser; they may not be arbitrarily taken without compensation and, when exercised, will mature into title in the grantee. This I understand was held because the grant was in aid of navigation. The privilege of building
I have believed that the canalizing of the Hudson river is an improvement thereof by the sovereign State in the public interest for the purposes of navigation and commerce. If it is not, a vast amount of discussion in this case is wasted. The fact that the State has decided to construct the canal for short distances outside of the river to shorten or straighten the route does not change the character or purpose of this work. Nor is there force in the claim that the dam constructed is an obstruction to the navigation of the stream. The State has determined upon its plan for improving the stream and its determination is conclusive. The construction of the dam is an essential part of this plan of improvement. It was built for this sole purpose and there was no intent thereby, as the concurrent opinion says, to create “ a water power which it [the State] may use for gainful purposes and of which it has deprived claimant, for no reason other than to own the water power itself.” The claimant had built no dam or any part of a plant, nor did it give any evidence of an intent to build, though ten years went by after the act of 1901 became a law before the State built. During these years the claimant was in no wise restrained from building by anything stronger than apprehension. This was a long nonuser. The State was not called upon to wait its public work until claimant decided to act. It expended its money and built the dam when the necessity arose, as it, performing a sovereign act, had a right to do. It is a mistake to argue that, if claimant had built a similar dam on this location, it would have answered the same purpose as the State dam and so the grant to it is in aid of navigation. There was no such intent when the grant of 1901 was made. It was exclusively for a private purpose. That purpose or intent is not changed because in the course of events the dam, if claimant had built one, might serve another purpose. The grant of 1901 was in no sense in aid of navigation.
It has not yet been held that, by building a dam in a public stream, the State deprives any riparian owner of his water power
What damages could have been allowed to the claimant, had it constructed its dam and plant prior to the improvement of the river by the State, or whether the State, under its power of eminent domain, has taken more of claimant’s uplands above the flowage line of the pond than was necessary for its purpose and has thereby deprived the claimant as a riparian owner of its right to use the waters of the stream as it passes its premises, in so far as that use does not conflict with the right of the State, are questions not before the court on this appeal. The Court of Claims has not considered either of these elements in awarding damages and I do not understand that the proofs are in the case upon which this court could fix the amount of damage, if it thought an award on either ground might be made. The sole question here, as above stated, is whether or not damages may be allowed because claimant has been deprived of its so-called franchise right to build a dam across the Hudson river near the location of the State dam.
The judgment should be reversed and the case remitted to the Court of Claims to determine the value of the uplands and the flow-age rights, with consequential damages, if any, for which claimant is entitled to compensation, which compensation shall not be increased by reason of any property right or privilege to build a dam granted to the claimant under the act of 1901.
Cochrane, P. J., concurs.
Judgment modified by providing for payment- of an increased sum for interest, as indicated in the opinion of H. T. Kellogg, J., and as modified affirmed, with costs.