Hazleton v. Webster

20 A.D. 177, 46 N.Y.S. 922
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 20 A.D. 177 (Hazleton v. Webster) 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
Hazleton v. Webster, 20 A.D. 177, 46 N.Y.S. 922 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Adams, J.:

The facts of this case, which have been necessarily stated,with considerable detail, are, in- the main, such as were found by the •learned trial court. None, of them has been excepted to by the plaintiff, and they must conséquently, for the purposes of this appeal, be regarded as established. Some additional circumstances were made to appear upon the trial which were probably sufficient to justify the plaintiff in invoking the aid of a court of equity, provided he can maintain his contention that the defendants, in'cutting and removing the ice from Lime lake, were invading his; legal rights, and were, in fact, trespassers.

Proceeding, therefore, to a consideration of the case from, a legal point of- view, we discover that; the plaintiff. rests his contention upon the following propositions, viz.:

[183]*183(1) That he acquired an absolute and unqualified right of ownership in the ice forming in the lake through the purchase, by his predecessors, of the right to flow the lands of the riparian owners; (2) that the agreement of October 29,1890, was void, because wholly without consideration, and (3) that by accepting and acting under the right or license granted under this agreement, the defendants were estopped from denying the plaintiff’s title to the ice.

As introductory to the examination of these propositions it may be profitable to determine what would be the relative interests of these parties in the subject-matter of the action, if the same were in no wise affected by the respective grants under which each claims the exclusive right to the ice.

To accomplish this it seems only necessary to refer to the fact that the defendants are riparian owners while the plaintiff is not, in consequence of which, Lime lake being an inland and non-navigable body of water, the presumption arises that, unless restricted by some reservation in their deed, the defendants’ title extends to the center of the lake. (Smith v. City of Rochester, 92 N. Y. 463 ; Gouverneur v. The National Ice Co., 134 id. 355 ; Deuterman, v. Gainsborg, 9 App. Div. 151; City of Syracuse v. Stacey, 86 Hun, 441.)

It was not made to appear at the trial, nor do we understand it to be now claimed, that the defendants are in anywise embarrassed by restrictions of the character adverted to, but to repel the presumption existing in their favor, the plaintiff relies mainly, if not entirely, •upon the grants which his - predecessors in title, Colgrove and Follett, obtained from the riparian owners to flow their lands. These grants were executed by different parties and at different times, but in their language they are nearly identical, and there is no difference whatever in their legal import. In short, they convey “ all the light and privilege of .flowing by means of a dam erected at or on the outlet of Lime Lake, so much of lot No.- * * * as is now flowed by said dam, and to keep the same so flowed as long as the water raised by and drawn from said dam is used for the purpose of propelling machinery.”

It is apparent from the language here quoted that the mill owners, in order to propel the machinery of their mill, found it necessary to increase their water power. This could be done only by raising the dam; and the addition of two feet to the height of the dam, of [184]*184course, raised 'the'water correspondingly in the lake and caused, it to overflow the lands of the adjoining owners. It was consequently to provide against this- contingency, and to protect the mill owners in the enjoyment of their increased facilities, that grants were obtained from the riparian owners of .the right to maintain the dam at its increased height, and to flood the lands of the latter as long as the ' water raised by and drawn from the dam should be used for the ■purpose of propelling the machinery of the mill.

But we fail to see wherein these grants diminished or in any manner affected the rights of the riparian owners in the waters of the lake, or in the ice which formed upon. its surface. ■ For while, strictly speaking, it cannot be said that they ever had any property .in the Waters themselves (Matter of Thompson, 85Hun, 438), their title, nevertheless, covered the bed of the lake, and they consequently had the undoubted right to use the waters thereof and to cut and ir.emove the ice formed thereon, provided this right was exercised reasonably and in such a manner as. not to materially diminish'the ■volume of water .in the lake to the injury of lower proprietors. ■(Marshall v. Peters, 12 How. Pr. 218; Dodge v. Berry, 26 Hun, 246 ; De Baun v. Bean, 29 id. 236; Cummings v. Barrett, 10 Cush. 186; Bigelow v. Shaw, 65 Mich. 344.)

■ It follows, of course, that-if the riparian- owners conveyed no other or greater right than the mere privilege of flowing their lands, the mill owner • obtained no better .proprietary interest in the waters of the lake than he. enjoyed -previous to the execution of the grant, which, as we have seen, was limited to' their use for mill purposes, subject to a.prior, reasonable use thereof by the riparian owners.

The record before us seems to make it quite obvious, however, that the defendants, while carrying on the..ice business as alfifm, took such quantities of ice from the lake as to give, rise to the-complaint that their use of its- waters wks unreasonable, in consequence of which an action was. brought- against them by Euchner, who was then the owner of the mill lot, and it was to compromise and settle this action that- the agreement of October 29,1890, was. entered into.

We are thus brought to a consideration of the effect of this instrument, upon the rights of the respective parties; and in this connection it is to be' observed that, as the plaintiff purchased his property [185]*185in subjection to whatever rights his grantor had parted with, he occupies precisely the same attitude towards these defendants as would Euchner, if he were still the owner of the property.

An examination of the agreement referred to will disclose the fact that it was evidently designed to accomplish the following objects: (1) To convey to the defendants a small strip of land therein mentioned; (2) to grant to them the unrestricted right, privilege and permission to cut and remove ice from the lake; (3) to release them from all damages which had accrued or which might thereafter be sustained by reason of any interference by them with the water flowing on to the mill lot, and (4) to reserve to the grantors of these rights and privileges compensation therefor upon the basis of one-half cent, for each ton of ice cut and removed.

This agreement appears to have been duly executed. Its language is neither vague nor ambiguous, and we see no reason to doubt its efficiency for the purpose for which it was designed, namely: To confer upon the defendants the right, which they did not theretofore possess, of cutting and removing ice from Lime lake in unlimited quantities, even if in so doing they injured or absolutely destroyed their grantors’ mill privilege, if or is the instrument to be regarded as a mere license. On the contrary, it is in effect what we have repeatedly termed it, a grant, and the mill owner’s rights in the waters of the lake, whatever they may have been, were distinct and substantive subjects of a grant. (Goold on Waters, § 304 ; Hall v. Sterling I. & R. Co., 148 N. Y. 432.)

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Bluebook (online)
20 A.D. 177, 46 N.Y.S. 922, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hazleton-v-webster-nyappdiv-1897.