Deutermann v. Gainsborg

75 N.Y. St. Rep. 634

This text of 75 N.Y. St. Rep. 634 (Deutermann 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
Deutermann v. Gainsborg, 75 N.Y. St. Rep. 634 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

CULLEN, J.

The plaintiffs, claiming to own a mill dam, mill seat, and mill pond, including the lands under the water of the pond, brought this action to restrain the defendant Gainsborg, the owner of land abutting the pond, from emptying sand, muck, or obnoxious matter into the pond, and to recover damages. The defendant answered, denying title in the plaintiffs to the easterly half -of the lands under the lake or pond, and also denying that the defendant had interfered with the plaintiffs’ water rights or privileges. The defendant prayed for an affirmative judgment establishing the boundary line between his lands and the plaintiffs’ lands under the waters of the pond; and also determining the plaintiffs’ water rights and privileges in in the pond. On the trial the claim for -damages was withdrawn, and the sole question litigated between the parties was the title of the defendant to the lands under the water of the easterly half of the pond. The title of the plaintiffs to mill dam and sites, and to the use of the water of the pond for milling purposes, was conceded. The court decided the issue litigated between the parties in faver of the defendant holding that the plaintiffs had not established their title to the lands in dispute. On this appeal the parties raise no other question than that thus litigated and determined in the trial court.

It seems to be the settled rule of a law in this state that, in the •-case of streams, ponds, or lakes, the adjoining proprietors are prima facie and presumptively the owners of the soil under water to the center of the stream or pond, as in the case with highways. This presumption may be rebutted, but, till rebutted, the presumption remains. Child v. Starr, 4 Hill, 369; Nostrand v. Durland, 21 Barb. 478; Smith v. City of Rochester, 92 N. Y. 463; Gouverneur v. Ice Co., 134 N. Y, 355, 47 S. R. 601. In the present case the title of the defendant Gainsborg to the abutting upland is not [635]*635attacked. Therefore he is presumptively the owner of the adjacent land under water to the center of the pond, and it is incumbent upon the plaintiffs to establish affirmatively a superior title in themselves. This they have attempted to do by a series of deeds placed in evidence. The trial court found that these deeds did not establish the plaintiffs’ title to the land in dispute, and it is the dispute, and it is the correctness of this decision that we are now called upon to review.

The original source of the title to the premises in dispute is a grant from the crown, made March 13,1721, to several named persons; of a tract of over 4,000 acres. Neither of the parties have been able to trace their title back to the grantees in that patent. The first deed produced by the plaintiffs is from Daniel Brundeg to Eleazer Yeomans, and bears date December 28, 1730. It conveys “one certain corn mill, and all belonging unto it, standing near the upper end of the White Plains purchase, & all the land beginning," etc. The description in this deed gives no course or distances, refers to no known road or highway, or to any monuments except marked trees and saplings. It would seem to include one-half of a mill pond from the fact that one line in the description runs along “ the long Mid-do w brook till it comes to the said mouth of the ditch that leads from the mill,” but there is nothing to show which side of the mill pond is included. It is wholly impossible to now locate that mill pond from the description, and so the trial court found. The next conveyance, dated February 23 1739, from Walter Williams to Eleazer Yeomans, conveys a tract of 80 acres, bounded east by the Mamaroneck river, and westerly by the brook in the mill pond, northerly by David Purdy’s land and Yeomans’ own land, and southerly by Yeomans’ own land and David Cornwell’s land and Caleb Hyatt’s land. The next deed is from Jacob Cornell to said Yeomans, dated March 1, 1741. It conveys a tract of land at Brown’s Point, being the equal half of a lot that formerly belonged to Caleb Hyatt and John Haight. The description reads: •“ Beginning at a maple tree by the mill dam, thence running southerly by the mill brook to a butternut staddle, thence running easterly by the land of Daniel Cornell,” etc. The trial court found that the deed from Williams to Yeomans embraced a portion of the lands of the defendant, and that the brook in the mill pond, mentioned as its westerly boundary, was the brook in the pond here in dispute. Of course, this is in fact a matter solely of argument from the internal evidence of the deeds themselves, the character of the descriptions, and the names of the adjacent owners mentioned in the deeds. The defendant complains of this finding, but we think that it is correct, for the subsequent deed from ■Cornwell to Horton, hereafter to be mentioned, which is concededly a link in the defendant’s chain of title, by its description would seem to convey the same tract as that conveyed from Williams to Yeomans. We think it probable that the deed from Williams to conveyed a tract immediately south of it, and that the only land that Yeomans had between these two plots was the mill dam itself. On May 3, 1744, Yeomans coneyed to John Horton “ one certain house and barn and come mill and tract of land [636]*636situate, lying, and being in the White Plains and Harrison’s purchase, butted and bounded as follows : Beginning at a cheri tree-standing near the house, from thence westerly to a heap of stone,” etc. ' The description in this conveyance, like that from Brundeg to Yeomans, sGates no distance. The courses are given in the most general manner, either as northerly or southerly, and the monuments are such as cannot now be located, being marked trees and heaps of stones. Wherever the mill pond conveyed by this deed was, the description would seem to include the whole of it, as it run up on one side and down on the other. The contention of the plaintiffs is that this deed conveys the locus in quo, to which they claim they have shotvn title in Yeomans by the deeds before referred to. The trial court found that this deed did not convey the bed of the pond, and that the lands and property described in it could not be located or identified'as the premises of the plaintiffs or the bed of present lake. The plaintiffs claim through this deed to Horton. There is no pretense that subsequent to the time of this conveyance Horton or his successors in title have acquired the bed of the lake from the abutting owners on its easterly side. We think also it is clear that there was no such possession of the locus in quo by the parties on either side of this litigation or their predecessors in title as would either establish a title by adverse possession or be sufficient to justify the presumption of a* grant. Hence the question as to what lands were embraced in this conveyance is the vital point in plaintiffs’ case. The question, .however, is one solely of fact, and, while it is a question of fact not arising from conflicting statements of witnesses, but from inferences from written documents, we think the same rule applies to it's determination by the trial court as applies to other questions of fact; that is to say, this division of the court is not justify in reversing the determination of the trial court unless it affirmatively appears that the trial court clearly erred in its decision. Aldridge v. Aldridge, 120 N. Y. 614, 31 S. R. 948; Barnard v. Gantz, 140 N. Y. 249 55 S. R. 541.

Before proceeding to discuss what lands are included in the deed to Horton, we shall examine the title of the grantor, Yeomans.

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Related

Gouverneur v. National Ice Co.
31 N.E. 865 (New York Court of Appeals, 1892)
Aldridge v. . Aldridge
24 N.E. 1022 (New York Court of Appeals, 1890)
Smith v. . City of Rochester
92 N.Y. 463 (New York Court of Appeals, 1883)
Barnard v. . Gantz
35 N.E. 430 (New York Court of Appeals, 1893)
Nostrand v. Durland
21 Barb. 478 (New York Supreme Court, 1856)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 N.Y. St. Rep. 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deutermann-v-gainsborg-nyappdiv-1896.