Hoeft v. Seaman

6 Jones & S. 62
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedJuly 1, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 Jones & S. 62 (Hoeft v. Seaman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoeft v. Seaman, 6 Jones & S. 62 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1874).

Opinion

Monell, Ch. J.

The space occupied by the plaintiffs for their bathing h ouse, under a “ permit, ” or license from the commissioners of the department of docks, is a part of the navigable waters of the Bast river. It lies below the low-water mark, and partly in the channel of the stream, and is used wholly for private emolument.

Such a use of a public navigable river would be a purpresture or public nuisance, unless authorized by law.

Section 99 of the act to reorganize the local government of the city of New York, as amended in 1871, declares that the department of docks shall have exclusive charge and control .... of all the wharf property belonging to the city, including all the wharves, piers, bulkheads and structures thereon, and waters adjacent thereto, and all the slips, basins, docks, water fronts, land under water, and the appurtenances, easements, uses, reversions and rights belonging thereto, which are now owned or possessed by the corporation. Such ■department also has the exclusive charge and control of the repairing, maintaining, leasing and protecting the [66]*66property ; and is invested with the exclusive government and regulation of ad wharves, piers, bulkheads and structures thereon, and waters adjacent thereto, and all the basins, slips and docks with the land under water in said city, not owned by the corporation.

Under this most comprehensive and clearly defined authority in the dock commissioners, over the dock property of the city, which extends, as will be seen, over the slips, basins and adjacent waters, and includes as well, property owned and not owned by the city, the power of the commissioners, to grant leases and franchises, and to permit private uses of such slips, basins and adjacent waters, where such use does not essentially interfere with or obstruct the public use, cannot well be questioned.

All navigable streams belong to the public, and the State can not grant them to any private use that will impair the public use. Congress, under its authority to regulate commerce, may in furtherance of commerce, restrict, in some degree, the public use of navigable waters (State of Penh. v. Wheeling, &c. Bridge Co., 18 How. Pr. 421). But no such authority is reserved to the States (Gilman v. Philadelphia, 3 Wall. 713). A grant of a monopoly of the Hudson river, given to Robert R. Livingston, in 1798, was declared by the supreme court of the United States, to have been unconstitutional, as infringing the exclusive power of congress to regulate commerce (Gibbons v. Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1).

The authority of that case has since been uniformly recognized and followed; and grants by the State have been confined to such uses only, as do not impede the public use. Hence, in grants for the erection of bridges or other structures over or in navigable streams or waters, provision must be made for their construction in such manner, as not essentially to obstruct the common free navigation by the public [67]*67(People v. Saratoga & Rens. R. R. Co., 15 Wend. 113 ; Penn. v. Wheeling, &c. Bridge Co., 13 How. Pr. 518 ; Columbus Ins. Co. v. Peoria Bridge Co., 6 McLean, 70.)

The act of the legislature creating the department of docks is valid, if no grant is made under it which will obstruct commerce. The commissioners may regulate the use of the basins and slips, and may permit them to be used for private purposes, provided such use does not essentially impair the public use. There are no riparian rights to adjacent waters, and the public can complain only when its use is obstructed.

In Lansing v. Smith (4 Wend. 1), involving the Albany pier question, the chancellor says,( p. 21) “there can be no doubt of the right of the legislature to make grants, when they do not interfere with the vested rights of individuals. The right to navigate public waters of the State and to fish therein . . . are public rights, and not the private unalienable rights of each individual.”

But should the department grant the exclusive private use of slips or basins to a degree that would essentially interfere with the rights of the public; it would be a purpresture and indictable as a public nuisance (People v. Vanderbilt, 26 N. Y. 287; 28 Id. 396).

But within the restrictions mentioned the department, under the power to regulate the use of slips and basins, may lawfully permit their use for a private purpose. In one case (Hecker v. Balance Dock, 24 Wend. 215), the court even held that the corporation might direct the use of any particular slip to be appropriated exclusively to any particular craft or class of vessels.

Without, however, concurring in this perhaps extreme view, it is sufficient, if the appropriation to a private use, does not essentially interfere with the use for commerce.

[68]*68The test, therefore, of a legislative grant of power over navigable waters, is whether it allows of any essential interference with the public use, and that is always a question of fact to be disposed of in the manner such questions are usually determined. If there is no such interference or obstruction of the public use, then a legislative grant of a private use is neither a purpresture nor a public nuisance.

Independently of this general principle, applicable to all navigable streams, the right and authority of the corporation to and over the wharves, piers, slips and basins, granted first by the ancient charters (Montgomerie, § 38), and since recognized and continued in all subsequent legislation, extends the jurisdiction of the city, over much of the adjacent waters, which at the present day reaches at least to the pier or bulkhead line (People v. Vanderbilt, 26 N. Y. 287).

It has not, I think, been doubted at any time, that within the space thus granted, the corporation has the most ample power to occupy and use it, and, as an incident or appurtenant, to grant to others the right to occupy and use it, to any extent that does not, at least, obstruct the free navigation of the river. The construction of piers, slips and basins are as essential to commerce as the water itself, and that which is so essential to commerce, can hardly be said to obstruct it.

The proofs presented upon this motion fail to satisfy me that the small space occupied by the plaintiff’s bath house can cause any material interference with, or obstruction of, the free and common use of the river by the public. Of course while such space is occupied it can not be used by others, and so far, it may be said, to obstruct the public use. But so it may be said of a bridge with its draw closed. If, however, it is provided with a sufficient draw, it is a lawful structure, notwithstanding it may, at times and to some extent, [69]*69interrupt the public use of the stream (Renwick v. Moore, 3 Hill, 621).

Nevertheless, such use of the slip would constitute it a public.nuisance, if it were not sanctioned by the commissioners’ license. No person, without a grant, can permanently moor a floating structure in a public river. It would per se be a public nuisance (Hart v. Mayor, &c. of Albany, 9 Wend. 571.)

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cole v. Kelly
1 N.Y. City Ct. Rep. 400 (New York Marine Court, 1883)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Jones & S. 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoeft-v-seaman-nysuperctnyc-1874.