Deuterman v. Gainsborg

54 A.D. 575
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 54 A.D. 575 (Deuterman v. Gainsborg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deuterman v. Gainsborg, 54 A.D. 575 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Willard Bartlett, J.:

This complicated-controversy relates to the ownership of certain land under water, east of the middle line of a long mill pond or lake in Westchester county, variously known at different times in its history as Willets’ pond, Horton’s mill pond, Deuterman’s pond, St. Mary’s lake and Silver lake. This body of water, now about forty-seven acres in extent, has been formed by the action of an [576]*576ancient dam placed' across a running stream which has thus been deepened and widened.

The present suit was begun by the late Charles Deuterman and has been continued by his executors.

The plaintiff claimed to own the whole of the lake and complained that the defendants had commenced to. drain- impure water and obnoxious matter into it, thereby injuring and polluting the pond and rendering the same unfit to procuré ice from. The prayer of the complaint was for an Injunction restraining such acts and for $5,000 damages; but the case was. tried solely as a suit for in june tion relief.

The answer did not question the plaintiff’s ownership of the lake west of the middle line, but alleged that the plaintiff was not the owner of the pond-or any land east of the center or original stream of the said lake, and that the defendant Gainsborg was the owner of the uplands on the east side of the pond and all the lands thereof under water to the center, or, more properly speaking, to the thread or middle line of the original stream. For an affirmative defense, the answer further alleged . that the plaintiff threatened to interfere with the defendant Gainsborg in the enjoyment of his own land; and the defendants prayed not only for a dismissal of the complaint, but that the defendant Gainsborg might have his boundary line, between the plaintiff’s lands and his own under the waters of the pond, fixed and established, and also his water rights and privileges in said pond.

The only relation of the defendant Pollock to the litigation grew out of the fact that he was a contractor employed by .the defendant Gainsborg'in doing some of the acts which the plaintiff alleged to be in derogation of his property rights in the land in or about the pond in question.

The case was tried before Mr. Justice Dykman, and resulted in a defeat of the plaintiff and a judgment declaring that the defendant Gainsborg was the owner of that portion of the lake -and the land under the waters thereof which lay east of the center of the stream or channel, while the plaintiffs were held to own only the western part of the pond and the adjacent uplands on the- opposite side. That judgment' was affirmed by this court in October, 1896. (Deu[577]*577terman v. Gainsborg, 9 App. Div. 151.) Thereafter the plaintiffs moved at Special Term for a new trial upon the ground of newly-discovered evidence, and their motion was granted. The second trial, -which took place before the same justice as the first, has terminated in a like judgment in favor of the defendant Gainsborg, and this judgment must also be sustained, unless the case as now presented differs essentially from that which was before us upon the first appeal.

"While there are differences in the record, due to the presence of ■evidence which was not adduced upon the original trial, we do not ■deem them sufficient to require or justify a reversal.

The case turns now, as it turned then, upon the scope and effect ■of a deed from Eleazer Yeomans to John Horton, dated May 3, 1744. Did it or did it not convey that eastern portion of the existing mill pond which is the subject of controversy in this action ? On the previous appeal Mr. Justice Cullen said: “ If I were compelled to answer as a historical question whether the deed to Horton conveyed this pond or not, and not suffered to plead insufficient knowledge, I would say that it did, though I am strongly of opinion that if such were the case the pond, as it then existed, must have been much smaller than the present one. But I am not prepared to say that the contrary conclusion arrived at by theNtriai court was elearly erroneous. Further, I am of that opinion while the facts recited may show that the balance of the probabilities are in favor of the proposition, still it may be doubted whether they aré sufficient as legal evidence to establish it. Therefore, I think we are not justified in disturbing the finding of the trial court.”

The same situation confronts us upon the present appeal. We ■are not convinced that the trial court reached a wrong result, even in the light of the additional evidence.

An elaborate review or analysis of the proof would be tedious to, the reader, as it would not call for the consideration or discussion of any question of law which might be serviceable in other litigations. The record comprises 768 printed pages, and there are in all 362 pages of briefs. These have been studied with due care, to make, sure that no point has been overlooked which might demand a change in the conclusion expressed by Judge Cullen in the opinion [578]*578cited. It is necessary to consider in the present opinion only such mattei’s as could not have been passed upon in our previous decision.

Earnest complaint is made beuause the plaintiffs were compelled to "retry the case before Mr. Justice Dykman, who had decided against them in the first instance. We are not able to discover in the record the bias or prejudice of which counsel thus complain. Long and complex equity cases like this are generally tried before a, resident judge of the county in which the venue is laid if there be a Supreme Court justice residing- there. Mr. Justice Keogh, although living in Westchester county, could not try this case, for it was he who commenced the action when at the bar as the attorney for the original plaintiff. Under the circumstances, it was natural and proper, that the new trial should be had before Mr. Justice Dykmah, the other resident judge, and "the changes favorable to the plaintiffs which he made in some of the findings, in consequence of the newly-discovered evidence, certainly indicate that he took up the case for the second time with an impartial mind and a disposition to decide it fairly, irrespective of the previous-judgment.

There was one manifest error in procedure, but this does not invalidate the result.

The order "for a new trial provided that at the election of the-defendant the testimony already taken in the cause should stand and be read in'evidence from -the stenographer’s minutes on such new trial with the same force and effect as if the same witnesses-were recalled and examined and so testified upon such retrial, “ subject-,. however, to any legal objections to any part of such testimony or evidence which were taken by either party upon the former trial.”

This provision was construed by the learned trial judge as a requirement that.all the proof adduced upon the first trial must be admitted, subject to the objections and exceptions then taken, and as an order which precluded him from changing any of the rulings which were made upon the first trial in respect to the admission or exclusion of evidence. I think that this view was erroneous. The-judge at Special Term, who granted the new trial on the ground of newly-discovered evidence, could not have intended to constrain the trial judge to adhere to rulings which the Appellate Division had [579]*579condemned or which the trial judge himself, upon reflection, might conclude were incorrect.

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Related

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179 A.D. 425 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
54 A.D. 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deuterman-v-gainsborg-nyappdiv-1900.