Buffalo Pipe Line Co. v. N. Y., Lake Erie & Western R. R. Co.

10 Abb. N. Cas. 107
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 10 Abb. N. Cas. 107 (Buffalo Pipe Line Co. v. N. Y., Lake Erie & Western R. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buffalo Pipe Line Co. v. N. Y., Lake Erie & Western R. R. Co., 10 Abb. N. Cas. 107 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1880).

Opinion

Barker, J.

The defendant is in the possession of [109]*109the lands on each side of a stream in the town of Allegany, in the county of Cattaraugus, called the Five Mile Run, upon which it has constructed its road-bed, and on which it now operates the same as a part of its main line, and by means of a bridge or trestle-work. It crosses the said stream ; the span of the structure is about seventy feet, is eleven feet above the water, and rests on abutments erected on each bank of the creek.

The underlying and principal question presented on this motion is, where is the title, the fee to the bed or bottom of the said stream—or where is the same vested ? The plaintiff contends that it is not in the defendant; that its right and privilege to cross the stream is in the nature of an easement ? that such is its utmost right, and a use by others of the bed of the stream, which does not disturb the defendant’s enjoyment, does not interfere with or infringe upon its right or title.

The contrary position is maintained by the defendant. It contends that the proofs show that it has secured by deed, from those who held the same, the fee to the bed or bottom of the stream, as well as to the lands on either side of the creek occupied by it, and upon which its road-bed is laid and constructed.

The determination of the controversy depends mostly, if not altogether, upon the character and capacity of the Five Mile Run, and the class of rivers or streams to which it belongs. The stream itself is about six miles in length, being rapid enough in its fall to create mill privileges at short intervals, and in fact there are four or five saw-mills located thereon, and run by the waters thereof. For a portion of the year, in season of its greatest flow, single saw-logs can be and often are floated down the same, from near its source, to supply the mills operated thereon. During some periods, those of the drier part of the year, nothing can be floated thereon, and it is nearly dry. It [110]*110empties into the Alleghany river, and the defendant crosses the same about one mile from its mouth. Just above the bridge is located Norton’s saw-mill. At this mill, at times, small lumber rafts are made up and run down the stream into the Alleghany river. No boat or vessel of any description ever navigated this run so far up the same as the place of crossing.

The country along the stream is settled up and improved, and from its mouth to its source the same is generally the boundary between farmers who live on the opposite banks.

When the defendant’s road was constructed, and at the time when it received its title, the lands on the east side were owned and occupied by one set of owners, those on the west by another. From each the defendant’s predecessor took a conveyance, under which it claims title. A further reference to these conveyances will be made on another proposition.

With a view of determining the question of title to the bed or bottom of rivers and streams in this State, they may be divided into classes.

First. Those where the tide flows and recurs, together with the tideless rivers of the first magnitude, such as the Niagara, St. Lawrence, Mohawk, Genesee and Alleghany.

In rivers of this' class the riparian owners have no title to the bed of the same, consequently no exclusive privileges therein; but the same remains in the State for the common use and enjoyment of all the public.

Second. Those of lesser magnitude, which are in fact navigable for portions of the year, but their capacity in that respect is not historic and traditional, and the court cannot take judicial notice of their characteristics, but must rely upon proof to ascertain the real capacity of the same and the use which may be made of them.

In this class the riparian owner takes a title in the [111]*111bed of the stream to the center, and the opposite owner comes np to the same line. The title is thus out of the State and in the citizen. But the public have an easement in the stream, the right to navigate the same, to use the waters in all ways in which they can be practicably utilized. And here it may be specially mentioned as bearing on the case in hand, that the capacity to float logs single or together, to run rafts, however small, gives to all the public this easement, the right to use and navigate.

Third. Those which have no navigable capacity whatever. They are wholly private.

Such a division, without more minuteness and without attempting to mention qualifications depending upon the terms of grants coming from the State, or deeds passing between individuals, will be found sufficiently accurate, in view of the facts of this case, to apply the law and to guide me in disposing of the pending motion.

The Five Mile Run does not belong to the first class; therefore the title is not in the State.

It does not belong to the third, for it has a floating capacity sufficient to carry out the lumber product of the region along its banks and about its source.

It should rightfully be placed in the second class.

Then at the time the defendant constructed its road and received its deeds from the then owners of the respective pieces of land lying on each bank of the creek, they each owned to the center line of the creek. Each of these parties did convey to the defendant’s predecessor to the center of the stream ; and it secured the same title to the bed of the stream, subject to the easement, which it received to the land on the banks.

In support of the foregoing propositions and conclusions, I shall not cite more than Morgan v. King, 85 N. Y. 454; People ex rel. Loomis v. Canal Appraisers, 33 Id. 461.

[112]*112The plaintiff further contends, that if it is held that the riparian owners own the fee to the bed of the stream, then by the deed from Gfeorge C. Sheldon and Olcott P. Boardman, who deeded to the defendant on the west bank of the creek, it only secured the right to lay its track and operate its road, a mere easement, and that the fee remained in the grantors, who could use the land for all purposes not inconsistent with such enjoyment, and the plaintiff’s use is no interference with the defendant’s use and privilege.

In considering this point, I shall hold as a fact that the place in the bed of the stream where the plaintiff’s pipe is laid is on the piece of land embraced in Sheldon’s deed, and is not on any part of the land embraced in Le Roy’s conveyance.

The deed given by Sheldon and Boardman was to the New .York & Erie Railroad, its “ successors and assigns.” The same was upon a consideration of $600,. and contained covenants of warranty.

The words and clauses used were sufficient, and such as are customarily used to convey the fee in land. Tt is a deed in perpetuity, notwithstanding the condition inserted in the deed “the above described premises being hereby conveyed for the uses and purposes of a railroad and for.no other purposes.” This constitutes a condition subsequent in the law. It does not prevent the fee vesting in the grantee, nor does it restrain the grantee from alienating the same. So long as the condition is fully observed the fee is out of the grantor who imposed the condition; on its violation, then the title reverts to the grantor. The event may never happen which determines the purchaser’s estate.' There is only a possibility'of a reverter. No estate is left in the grantor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Abb. N. Cas. 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buffalo-pipe-line-co-v-n-y-lake-erie-western-r-r-co-nysupct-1880.