American Title & Trust Co. v. Gulf Refining Co.

72 F.2d 248, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4512
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 16, 1934
DocketNo. 243
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 72 F.2d 248 (American Title & Trust Co. v. Gulf Refining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Title & Trust Co. v. Gulf Refining Co., 72 F.2d 248, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4512 (2d Cir. 1934).

Opinion

AUGUSTUS N. HAND, Circuit Judge.

This appeal is from a judgment for the defendants in an action of ejectment. The plaintiff claims to have derived title to a certain part of the foreshore of Staten Island through a grant made in 1708 by Queen Anne to Lancaster Symes, a major in the Colonial Army. The title claimed by the plaintiff is an undivided 87/ioo interest.

The defendants Corbin Land Company and Gulf Refining Company contend that the lands in question, which lie between high and low water mark, were not included in the Symes grant but remained -in the crown, passed to the state of New York at the time .of the Revolution, and from it, in 1930, by letters patent to Corbin Land Company under whose title, through a lease by the latter, Gulf Refining Company came into possession.

The Symes letters patent, after reciting that Symes had presented to Lord Combury, Governor of the Province of New York, his petition praying for a grant of all the “Peices & Pareells of Vacant and unappropriated Land and Meadow on Staten Island in the County of Richmond” granted unto “Lancaster Symes his Heirs and Assignes all the beforemeneoned Peices and Pareells of Vacant & Unappropriated Land and Premisses and all and Singular the Hereditaments & Appurtenenees thereunto belonging within the bounds and limitts above in these Presents menconed and Expressed together with all and Singular the woods Underwoods Trees Timber findings Meadows Marshes Swamps Pooles Ponds Waters Watercourses Rivers Rivoletts Runns & Streams of Water Brooks ffishing and ffowling hunting hawking Mines & Miiieralls Standing Growing Lyeing or being or to be had used or enjoyed within the Bounds and limitts aforesaid and all other Proffitts Benefitts Advantages Hereditaments and appurtenances whatsoever unto the sd Peices and Pareells of Land and Premisses belonging or in any wise Appurtoyning (Except and always Reserved out of this our Present Grant all Gold and Silver Mines) To have & to Hold the said Peices & Pareells of Land & Premisses with their Appurtenances hereby granted or meant menconed or intended to be hereby Granted as aforesd (Except before Excepted) unto the said Lancaster Symes his Heirs and Assigns forever. * * *"

The trial court held that the grant to Symes did not cover any part of the foreshore of Staten Island and accordingly that the plaintiff had no title to the undivided interest which it claimed.

The complaint sought recovery in ejectment of two parcels which it described by metes and bounds and as “now or formerly between the high and low water lines of Arthur Kill or Staten Island Sound, situate lying and being on Staten Island.” It was conceded at the trial that the stretch of land involved was “between high and low water mark” (fol. 231).

The plaintiff contends that the words of the Symes’ patent which conveyed “all * * * Vacant and unappropriated Land and Meadow on Staten Island” embraced everything belonging to the crown that had not been disposed of under earlier grants. But a long line of authorities indicates that these words were insufficient to transfer the foreshore to Symes. As early as the decision in Cortelyou v. Van Brundt, 2 Johns. (N. Y.) 357, 362, 3 Am. Dec. 439, a patent described land as “stretching along the bay,” and the court said that “the rule of the common law carries it down to ordinary high-water mark.” In Canal Commissioners v. People, 5 Wend. (N. Y.) 423, 443, Chancellor Walworth remarked that “In England * * * a grant of land bounded upon the sea shore, or upon a stream or arm of the sea where the tide ebbs and flows, conveys to the grantee only ihat part of the hank which is not covered by the water at flood tide,” and added that “this principle of the common law has not only been adopted in this state, hut in nearly every other state in the union, where the question has been agitated.” In Mayor, etc., of the City of New York v. Hart, 95 N. Y. 413, a colonial grant to the inhabitants of Ilarlem of a tract extending “Eastward to the end of the Ry ver, or any parte of the said Ryver on which this island doth abutt” was [250]*250held only to convey crown lands np to high-water mark. In Sage v. City of New York, 154 N. Y. 61, 47 N. E. 1096, 38 L. R. A. 606, 61 Am. St. Rep. 592, the New York Court of Appeals again ruled to the same effect. The statement in Matter of Mayor, etc., of New York, 182 N. Y. at page 365, 75 N. E. 156, and the decision in Tiffany v. Town of Oyster Bay, 209 N. Y. 1, 9, 102 N. E. 585, are to the same effect.

While the plaintiff admits that, if the premises in the Symes grant had been described as bounded “by the shore,” or “by or upon the water,” or as “extending to the shore,” the deed would not have covered the foreshore, it insists that the words “on Staten Island” are sufficient to include any land appurtenant to the upland which in a geological sense may be regarded as a part of the island. Such a contention seems to us directly in the face of the decision of the Court of Appeals in De Lancey v. Piepgras, 138 N. Y. 26, 33 N. E. 822. In that case the grant relied on as a source of title was made to Thomas Pell having, as lord of the manor, judicial and administrative functions, and in terms was of a whole island. Yet the court held that it did not cover the foreshore. In the light of that decision there can be nothing in the claim that a grant of lands “on Staten Island” included everything geologically a part of it. Indeed the contention might as well be pushed farther and the claim made that in a geological sense land of Staten Island beneath low-water mark is part of and hence equally with land between high and low water mark “on” the island. Certainly the grant of a whole island is as inclusive as one of land “on” the island. The offer to prove that land between high and low water mark was geologically “on” the island was properly rejected for, under accepted canons of construction, the grant was free from ambiguity and the judicial, rather than the scientific, meaning of the words “on Staten Island” was the matter for consideration. A governmental grant of lands between high and low water mark should not rest on mere implication but appear in plain words.

Moreover this very patent was considered by the New York courts in Matter of the City of New York (Staten Island Proceeding) 116 Misc. 179, 189 N. Y. S. 839, and was held not to include lands between high and low water mark. Affirmed in 209 App. Div. 828, 204 N. Y. S. 898, and 240 N. Y. 565, 148 N. E. 707.

The fact that prior grants were made by the crown of lands on Staten Island, which in some instances included the foreshore and in others specifically excluded it, does not suggest to us that the Symes patent, which contained none of these provisions, was ambiguous, and needed extrinsic evidence to construe it. Nor did the words conveying “Meadows Marshes Swamps Pooles Waters Watercourses,” particularly when preceded by the clause “within the bounds and limits above,” extend the grant beyond the island itself. They all related to meadows and waters within its confines taken at high-water mark.

The claim that the decision in Crown Lands Corporation v. Corbin Land Co., 204 App. Div. 895, 197 N. Y. S. 907, helps plaintiff’s case is without foundation. If it should be regarded as favorable, it would be overborne by the later decision in Matter of the City of New York, 116 Misc. 179, 189 N. Y. S. 839, affirmed by the Court of Appeals in 240 N. Y. 565, 148 N. E. 707. But in Crown Lands Corporation v. Corbin Land Co. the court dealt with lands under water within the confines of the island, and not with the foreshore.

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Bluebook (online)
72 F.2d 248, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-title-trust-co-v-gulf-refining-co-ca2-1934.