Bird v. Smith

8 Watts 434
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 15, 1839
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 8 Watts 434 (Bird v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bird v. Smith, 8 Watts 434 (Pa. 1839).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Gibson, C. J.

Some of the points presented are comparatively unimportant; and as it is intimated that the cause has not been brought here merely for reversal, we have turned our attention particularly to those which involve principles of right.

Over the surface of a public river, riparian owners have no peculiar right. Such is the principle of Carson v. Blazer and Shrunk v. The Schuylkill Navigation Company, which seem to have put the public rights of navigation and fishery on the same footing. The right of navigation, transverse or otherwise, being enjoyed in common, is susceptible of exclusive appropriation only by grant from the public, to whom it belongs; and we have, consequently, no such [439]*439thing as a ferry by prescriptive right, or presumptive grant of exclusive navigation from length of time. The doctrine of nullum tempus alone, would prevent a title drawn from a source so like the statute of limitations, front being set up against the commonwealth or her grantee. The foundation, however, of what is nearly as effective, is the power whiph the owners of the shores have to control the subservient and indispensable right of embarkation and landing. ■ The existence of such .a power over even the terminus of a public road, is established by Chambers v. Fury and Cooper v. Smith, cited in the argument, as well as by Chess v. Manawn, 3 Watts 219. The presumptive grant of an incorporeal right, sustained as it .is by analogy to the statute of limitations, is founded in an adverse assertion.of right^and nan have no place in respect to a thing ofxvhich there cap not* be an adverse use; consequently, it can havu no place in respect to a river which is navigated by general licenser, pursuant to which the individual does nothing to challenge the general right. The principle-of these presumptive grants has been carried further,fin some respects, than the admitted foundation of it would seem to warrant;- as in the case of ancient lights, which happen not to be an annoyance to the premises they serve to overlook, and which would' rather encourage a supposition of indifference on the part of the owner than a want of right to obstruct tljgm, inasmuch as no man is bound to enclose his ground to prevent his neighbour from looking at it. Even as regards acts of apparent usurpation, the rule is that they must be such as in their nature carry with them an assertion of right. Thus in Doe v. Reed, 5 B. & A. 232, the jury were not allowed to presume a conveyance after a possession of fifty years, as a creditor under a judgment; and Chief Justice Abbd'fadded, that these presumptions had been carried too far. Doubtless they have, where the possession or use bore nothing on its face like a pretension of title. In point of reason, no lapse of time, bearing any proportion to the period of the statute, ought to require an exertion of a man’s right merely to show that he (tad not parted with it, when there was nothing in the situation or possession of the property to indicate that he had; and such is the principle which ruled the case of Butz v. Ihrie, 2 Rawle 218, where it was held that the reservation of a right to swell water on the land of an adjoining owner, was not lost merely because it had not been exerted for thirty-two years. Yet a window, which enables the occupant of it to pry into the domestic economy of his neighbour, is a nuisance whose continuance can be explained only by a want of right to abate it. Perhaps the apparent difficulty of reducing all the decisions on this head to principles of reason, arises from a tendency in the judicial mind to generalize, without stopping to dispose of specific differences. The rights of the parties here, however, are determinable by the plaintiff’s occupancy, not of the stream, but of the shore.

Had the judge therefore charged, as it is.imputed to him, that an [440]*440exclusive right might be gained by an exclusive occupancy betwixt the shores, he would have been in error; but he pointedly said, that no other advantage could be had on the water than was had from the ownership of the land. But the wrong charged in the declaration is a disturbance, not of the plaintiff’s easement in the landing, but of an alleged right to an ancient ferry; and hence, it is argued, the evidence did not support the count. Had there been a prayer for direction to that effect, it must have prevailed, for the variance would have been fatal; but nothing like it is perceptible on the record: and, indeed, to have defeated the plaintiff on that .ground, would only have protracted the contest, by reserving the determination of the right for another law suit. In starting the point here, the defendant has slipped his time.

The title to the locus in quo is in the defendant’s lessor, and a .material question was whether the plaintiff had not acquired an exclusive right to use it, by a presumptive grant of one of the lessor’s predecessors; as to which, the judge charged that a grant .presumed from exclusive enjoyment is also exclusive. The extent of the right is doubtless determinable by the nature of the use; and the principle admits of a ready application to positive enjoyment, in order to carry the right to the extent of it, the difficulty being to .know whether it may not be carried even further by a want of actual participation on the other side. There is a plain implication of exclusive right, where the full benefit of the supposed grant could not be had from a concurrent enjoyment of it; as in the case of a pew barely sufficient to accommodate the occupant’s family. In the case of a way, the right is not necessarily exclusive, as was admitted in Kirkham v. Sharp, 1 Whart. 333. The rule seems to be, that the grant shall not be extended beyond the purpose to be .answered by it; nor ought it in reason to be. The presumption being that there was an actual grant, there is no room to suppose the grantee paid for, or the grantor parted with, more than was adequate to the purpose. Accordingly, in Martin v. Goble, 2 Camp. 322, a plaintiff who prescribed for a window which admitted more light than was necessary for the business of a madhouse, of which it was part, was not allowed to maintain an action for the ¡erection of a wail which shut out the excess. The proper inquiry below, then, was whether the privilege to land passengers on the .defendant’s soil, would have been curtailed by a concurrent use of it; and it presented a question of fact which was, perhaps, not of easy solution. The place was used only at high, or very low water, and at irregular times of the day. A common landing might be alternately used without collision, by boats plying exactly at stated intervals, and even that is barely possible; but the difficulty is insurmountable where, as on our fresh water rivers, the ferry boat plies whenever a passenger presents himself. In all such cases, the jury ought to presume the right to be exclusive, whenever its value would be lessened, in the least degree, by participation. In [441]*441addition to the presumption from enjoyment, there was at least some parol evidence of ah exclusive grant, which was-also for the consideration of the jury.

Another material question was whether the use of the easement had been so notorious as to give notice of it to subsequent pur-' chasers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Watts 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bird-v-smith-pa-1839.