Consolidated Ice Co. v. . Mayor, Etc., of N.Y.

59 N.E. 713, 166 N.Y. 92, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 1244
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 26, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 59 N.E. 713 (Consolidated Ice Co. v. . Mayor, Etc., of N.Y.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Consolidated Ice Co. v. . Mayor, Etc., of N.Y., 59 N.E. 713, 166 N.Y. 92, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 1244 (N.Y. 1901).

Opinion

Parker, Ch. J.

This controversy relates to the land underwater betweeen One Hundred and Thirteenth and One Hundred and Fourteenth streets, nearly all of it being below low-water line. The plaintiff claims to have acquired title, not only to the land in question, but to the land between high and low-water mark as well, by grant from the city to plaintiff’s predecessor in title, executed and delivered in 1870, vdiich in terms describes the premises in question as well as the other land under water between it and the upland, the description, however, being followed by this clause :

“ Saving and reserving out of the hereby granted premises *96 so much thereof as may form any part of any street or streets, avenue or avenues, that may now or hereafter be assigned, designated or laid out through said premises according to law for the uses and purposes of public streets, avenues and highways as hereinafter mentioned, or which are now in use as such.” ■ ■

The position of defendant is that by this saving clause there was expressly excepted from the premises described in the grant so much thereof as is spoken of in this record as Exterior street, a strip of land under water, nearly all of which is below low-water mark, having a width of seventy feet. As the premises described in the grant to plaintiff, as well as in that which its predecessor in title obtained from the city in 1870, include the locus -in quo, upon the trial of this action the plaintiff insisted that in it was vested all the title the city had in 1870, for the reasons, among others:

1. That the legal effect of the clause was not to except the lands within the lines of Exterior street from the lands granted by the description.
2. That Exterior street was never legally laid out, and, hence, the attempted reservation was of something that had never had an existence.
3. That assuming it had been legally laid out as a street, nevertheless the legislature two years before the grant to the city had (by chap. 150 of the Laws of 1868) authorized riparian proprietors on the Harlem river, “instead of building an exterior continuous bulkhead, as now laid out by the harbor commissioners, to erect piers and wharves therein, and to excavate the slips between the same,” and, hence, it is claimed the state had changed the public use to which should be put lands under water granted by it to the city of New York, and the authority which the city had thereafter and down to the time of making this grant, to devote Exterior street to other purposes, as permitted by the statute, passed to plaintiff’s predecessor in title by the grant from the city.
1. That even if there were a defect in plaintiff’s paper title, it had acquired title by adverse possession.

*97 The plaintiff brought this action (under sections 1638 to 1650 of the Code) to determine the claim made by defendant city to this parcel of land seventy feet wide lying along the bulkhead line between One Hundred and Thirteenth and One Hundred and Fourteenth streets.

The result of the trial was adverse to the plaintiff, which appealed to the Appellate Division, and that court unanimously affirmed the judgment.

The effect of that unanimous affirmance has been to deprive this court of the power to examine two very important questions which were argued at this bar. The first is the plaintiff’s claim that it had established title by adverse possession. The legal effect of the judgment of the Special Term is to negatively establish that the evidence would not permit a finding that the plaintiff had occupied adversely for such a period of time as would ripen into a title, and the unanimous affirmance prohibits us from looking into the record to inquire whether or not such was the fact. (Reed v. McCord, 160 N. Y. 330; Consolidated El. Storage Co. v. Atlantic Trust Co., 161 N. Y. 605.) Whether evidence bearing upon that question was improperly received or rejected may be considered if presented by proper objection and exception. It is claimed that there are such questions, at least one of which will be considered later on. But the claim of plaintiff that it established title by adverse possession cannot be considered by us for the reason given.

The other question, which was stoutly contested by counsel in their arguments before this court, is whether the premises are in fact located upon the Harlem river or upon the East river, the appellant zealously contending that they are located upon the latter river, while the respondent as strenuously insists that they are located on the former. Whether the lands in controversy are located upon one river or the other, was a question of fact which the trial court found adversely to the claim .of plaintiff. The findings bearing upon that subject are as follows:

“ The premises in dispute consist of a strip of land described *98 in the complaint, running along the river from One Hundred 'and Thirteenth to One Hundred and Fourteenth street.
“ The premises described in the complaint are situated upon the Flarlem river.
“ The title to the lands under water exterior to low-water mark became vested in the defendant under and pursuant to-the provisions of chapter 285 of the Laws of 1852, entitled Lin act to establish a permanent exterior street in the city of Hew York along the shore of the Harlem river from the East, river or sound to the Hortli river.’ ”

The effect of the unanimous affirmance, therefore, is to-establish conclusively the fact that the premises are situated on the Harlem river, and, hence, the argument of counsel based iqion the claim, strenuously made, that the premises-were in fact situated upon the East river, cannot receive further consideration.

With these facts established, we proceed to state the conclusions reached by us upon such questions as are left open, for our consideration. First, it is urged that while the legislature by the act of 1852 granted to the city of Hew York all the right and title of the people of the state to the lands covered by water along the shore of the Harlem river from the East-river or sound to the Horth or Hudson rivei’, extending from low-water mark to and including the exterior line of that which is known in this action as Exterior street, and authorized the mayor, aldermen and commonalty of the city to lay out and fix a permanent street upon such lands, the-steps taken by the city to accomplish that result were not. in conformity with the statute regulating the laying out. of new streets in the city of Hew York, and, hence, that as no street had been regularly laid out, the language of the-reservation or exception clause had nothing upon which to-operate. There is still another position of thé appellant to which reference should be made in this connection, because-the answer which we make to the one contention is equally applicable to the other, and that is that, by chapter 150 of the Laws of 1868, the legislature authorized the owners of adjacent *99

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Bluebook (online)
59 N.E. 713, 166 N.Y. 92, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 1244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-ice-co-v-mayor-etc-of-ny-ny-1901.