Appeal from an order of the Supreme Court (Williams, J.), entered August 3, 1992 in Sullivan County, which granted plaintiff’s motion for a preliminary injunction and denied defendants’ cross motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint.
In this appeal, our review is sought of yet another aspect of the ongoing struggle between plaintiff and defendant State of New York to define incidents appurtenant to the former’s fishing and hunting rights in certain of the State’s land located in the Neversink gorge area in Sullivan County. This time the dispute concerns plaintiff’s right to use a certain footbridge over the Neversink River to access a portion of the lands encumbered by the hunting and fishing rights.
As is recounted in our prior decisions (Matter of Wechsler v New York State Dept. of Envtl. Conservation,
In 1934, Bradford died seized of the reserved hunting and fishing rights and lands west of the Neversink less the 500-acre tract (hereinafter the west lands). Following several intermediate conveyances, both these interests were acquired by Philwold Estates, Inc. (hereinafter Philwold) which, during the period 1939 to 1968, entered into agreements with various sportsmen’s clubs permitting them to fish, hunt and trap on the 1,800-acre tract. In 1954, one of the clubs, acting on behalf of Philwold, constructed a cable and steel suspension footbridge over the Neversink. It is uncontroverted that the bridge, which connected the southerly portion of Philwold’s west lands to the southerly portion of the 1,300-acre tract and whose easterly terminus was situate upon that tract, was constructed without consent of its then owner, Orange and Rockland Utility Company. Nonetheless, it apparently was used by Philwold and its licensees over the years as a means of access to the southerly portion of the 1,300-acre tract for purposes of exercising the reserved hunting and fishing rights.
In 1968, things began to change. Plaintiff, a partner in the Philwold Company, the partnership which owned Philwold, retired. As part of his retirement distribution, Philwold conveyed to plaintiff the reserved hunting and fishing rights. In addition, while Philwold retained its interest in the southerly portion of the west lands upon which the footbridge was constructed (hereinafter the southerly tract), it also conveyed to plaintiff the northerly 2,325 acres. In conjunction with this conveyance, Philwold granted plaintiff various easements for ingress and egress over certain private roads and beaten paths existing in its retained southerly tract. Significantly, however, it did not specifically grant plaintiff any rights relative to his use of the footbridge. By 1981, the State acquired title to the 1,800-acre tract from Orange and Rockland upon which the easterly terminus of the footbridge lay (albeit subject to the reserved hunting and fishing rights), and in 1991 acquired the southerly tract from Philwold upon which the westerly terminus was situate.
We reverse. Based upon the evidence submitted we discern no factual issues with respect to plaintiff’s asserted right to use the footbridge and conclude that none of plaintiff’s claims in this regard, namely that he has a deeded or prescriptive right to use it or that its use is necessary to the enjoyment of the reserved hunting and fishing rights, is sustainable as a matter of law. Accordingly, defendants are entitled to an award of summary judgment dismissing the complaint.
Obviously, whether plaintiff has an expressly deeded easement to use Philwold’s portion of the footbridge by virtue of the 1968 Philwold to plaintiff deed depends upon the language of the instrument itself (see, e.g., Mandia v King Lbr. & Plywood Co.,
With respect to plaintiff’s prescriptive easement claim, we note initially that because the prescriptive period ran during the period the footbridge connected two separately and privately owned parcels of land, neither of which belonged to plaintiff, in order for him to prevail on this claim he must establish the requisite elements of a prescriptive easement against both the then-owner of the 1,800-acre tract (Orange and Rockland) and the then-owner of the southerly tract (Philwold). While it appears from the record that plaintiff has succeeded in establishing his prescriptive right to the easterly portion of the footbridge, he has not sustained the requisite showing to obtain a prescriptive right over the westerly portion thereof. Accordingly, his claim must fail.
Undoubtedly, the proponent of a prescriptive easement claim bears the burden of proving, by clear and convincing evidence, hostile, open, notorious and continuous use over the other’s land for the prescriptive period (see, e.g., Hamilton v Kennedy,
Here, inasmuch as the record evidence establishes that Philwold was owned by a family partnership of which plaintiff formerly was a member until his retirement in 1968 and that he admittedly used the footbridge permissively since its erection, we find that ample evidence exists to negate the presumption of hostility (see, Weinberg v Shafler, supra). Thus, the onus remained upon plaintiff to come forward with evidence of hostile use sufficient to raise a triable issue of fact. Moreover, inasmuch as plaintiffs use of the footbridge from its erection in 1954 until 1968 obviously was permissive and there exists a presumption that a use which was permissive in its inception continues until the contrary appears (cf., Shandaken Refm. Church v Leone,
Plaintiffs final claim of necessity is similarly unavailing. It has already been established that the reserved hunting and fishing rights do not carry with them the power to construct or maintain permanent structures on the burdened 1,800-acre tract (Wechsler v People,
We have reviewed the remaining arguments and find them to be without merit or rendered academic by our resolution.
Weiss, P. J., Levine and Crew III, JJ., concur. Ordered that the order is reversed, on the law, without costs, motion denied, cross motion granted, summary judgment awarded to defendants and complaint dismissed.
