172 N.E. 452 | NY | 1930
William Smith of the town of Clarkstown, Rockland county, on the first day of May, 1841, conveyed to George E. Felter of the same place, certain lands adjoining the southern shore of Rockland lake, by description reading as follows: "Beginning at the south east corner of said lot in the middle of the public road that runs along the south side of the Rockland Lake it being also the south west corner of the land of Garret Henion thence running northerly along the land of said Garret Henion to the Rockland Lake thence westerly along the south side of the Rockland Lake to the land of the heirs of John Smith deceased thence running southerly along the land of the said heirs of John Smith deceased to the middle of the public road aforesaid thence easterly along the middle of the said road to the place of beginning containing about two acres of land be the same more or less with the appurtenances and all the estate title and interest of the said party of the first part therein."
Through mesne conveyances the Knickerbocker Ice Company became the owner of a sixteen-foot strip running along the edge of the lake, which on the plaintiff's Exhibit No. 1 is designated by the numeral II. The plaintiff, through similar conveyances, is now the owner of the remaining portion of the upland, designated on said exhibit by the numeral I. She has no means of reaching the lake except to pass over the property of the Knickerbocker Ice Company.
In 1926 plaintiff also took a deed from Smith's heirs to at least an undivided two-thirds interest of the land under water adjacent to the shore, which under the *155
rulings in Calkins v. Hart (
Rockland lake is about one mile long and three-quarters of a mile wide. The defendants apparently concede that if William Smith had reserved by his deed the land under water in front of the property conveyed to Felter, the plaintiff is entitled to an easement by way of necessity, so we shall not pause to consider the nature of such an easement as applicable to the facts in this case.
The rights of the respective parties, therefore, depend upon the interpretation to be given to the Smith deed. Both sides rely upon Gouverneur v. National Ice Co. (
The legal effect of a conveyance is determined by the terms employed. (Smith v. Bartlett,
In order to focus our attention upon the facts it is well to state again some of the old and well-settled rules. Where a grant is so framed as to touch the water of a *156
river, and the parties do not expressly except the river, one-half of the bed of the stream is included by construction of law. The value, such as they have, of small non-navigable lakes and ponds, as a general rule, is mainly in their relation to adjacent lands. If the parties mean to exclude the land under water, they should do so by express exception; the restriction ought to be framed in very plain and express words. (Gouverneur
v. National Ice Co., supra; Seneca Nation of Indians v.Knight,
A description carrying the boundary "by the shore" is such an express restriction (Child v. Starr, 4 Hill, 369, 375); likewise, "to the bank" (Halsey v. McCormick,
The Court of Errors in Child v. Starr (supra, at p. 373) said: "Where the grant to the riparian proprietor has no other boundary on the side thereof which is adjacent to the river but the stream itself, the legal presumption is that his grantor intended to convey to the middle of such stream. * * * Running to a monument standing on the bank, and from thence running by theriver or along the river, etc., does not restrict the grant to the bank of the stream."
These principles of law as settled by the courts of this *157
State, were summarized by GRAY, J., in Fulton Light, Heat Power Co., v. State of New York (
The description which runs the boundary by the river or pond, or which is so framed as to touch the water of the river or pond, carries title to the center thereof. It is not a clear and express restriction of the title to the upland. (Luce v.Carley, supra; Gouverneur v. National Ice Co., supra.) The description in Hardin v. Jordan (
The conclusion to be drawn from these cases appears to be that if the description runs the title along dry land such as the bank or the shore, there is an express restriction which excludes or reserves title in the river or pond; whereas, if the boundary touches the water or is along the water or by the water, and not dry land, the presumption remains that title is carried to the center of the river or pond.
The Smith deed carried the boundary "to the Rockland Lake" — all of it — not to the shore or to the bank or to the edge, or even to the side of the lake. It then ran along "the south side of the Rockland Lake." The point, therefore, ran from the lake as a body of water, along the side of that water, which must be the same in point of contact as the water itself. We cannot imagine the minutest distance between a point which is by the lake, and one the side of the lake; both points touch the water. The imaginary line drawn from a point which is designated as "the Rockland Lake" along the side of the lake is the same as saying, "by the lake." Any attempted distinction would be so highly artificial and mythical as to render the above rules of interpretation *158 useless, as well as meaningless. The rule reiterated in all the cases is that a grant of land adjacent to a small lake carries title to the center thereof, unless the presumption is negatived by express words or by such a description as clearly excludes it from the land conveyed.
The Supreme Court of Maine, in Lowell v. Robinson (
The deed itself, moreover, is so phrased as to indicate the intention of the grantor to include the land under water, not to exclude it. The word "side" has many meanings. It may not always refer to the border or edge of the water of a lake; it may refer to any part or position viewed as opposite to or contrasted with another, as the south side or north side of the pond or lake. (Webster's New International Dictionary.) Whether the one meaning or the other be intended depends entirely upon the context. (Winslow v. Cooper,
That this was and is the meaning of the description in this deed is apparent from the circumstances of the property at the time Smith conveyed it to Felter. The conveyance carried all the upland down to the water, and under the presumptive rule, carried title to the center of the lake. If Smith, by the words of the deed, reserved title to the triangular gore in front of this property, he was completely shut off on all sides. The trial court found that at the time of the conveyance to Felter, William Smith did not own any land contiguous to said land under water, and that there existed no ingress to said land under the waters of said Rockland Lake — being the land marked III on plaintiff's Exhibit 1, except over the land so conveyed by him to said Felter, being land marked I and II on said exhibit. The land under water surrounding him was private to the same extent as other real estate (Halsey v. McCormick,
This meaning of the word "side," as used in descriptions of this nature, finds support in Land Lake Assn. v. Beardsley
(
The distinction between the rule as applicable to rivers and lakes and that relating to the conveyances of land adjacent to highways is referred to in the Gouverneur case. Another difference, not there mentioned, is the easement which a property owner has in the street as a highway. Even if the grantee of land adjacent to the highway takes no fee in the street, he may use it as a public highway and may not be deprived of the easements of light, air and access without compensation. (Holloway v.Southmayd,
For the reasons stated, the deed of Smith to Felter carried the land under water in the lake to the center thereof. The complaint should have been dismissed.
The judgment of the Appellate Division and that of the Special Term should be reversed, and the complaint dismissed, with costs in all courts.
CARDOZO, Ch. J., KELLOGG, O'BRIEN and HUBBS, JJ., concur; POUND, J., not voting; LEHMAN, J., not sitting.
Judgments reversed, etc.