Lacustrine Fertilizer Co. v. Lake Guano & Fertilizer Co.

82 N.Y. 476, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 388
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 9, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 82 N.Y. 476 (Lacustrine Fertilizer Co. v. Lake Guano & Fertilizer Co.) 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
Lacustrine Fertilizer Co. v. Lake Guano & Fertilizer Co., 82 N.Y. 476, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 388 (N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

The marl, the subject of this controversy, was excavated by the State, between the years 1851 and 1853, in making a channel to turn the water of the Canandaigua river for canal purposes, through lands then owned by one Torrey. The marl underlaid a stratum of muck about four feet in depth, and in removing the soil for the excavation, the muck was thrown out, and the underlying marl was afterward excavated and deposited over the muck on the banks of the cut.. The mounds of earth made by the deposit remained undisturbed until 1865. They were covered with annual growths of grass and weeds, and in that year potatoes were planted in the soil formed thereby. Torrey remained the owner of the land until the 6th of January, 1865, when he conveyed his farm, including the land on which the marl had been deposited, to one Spaulding, by warranty deed, containing this exception: “Excepting the beds or deposit of marl on both banks of the Canandaigua river, which passes through said land; and it is an express stipulation and agreement between the parties hereto that the said marl may remain on said land for a period of ten years from the date of this indenture, and that the party of the first part may, at any time, within said ten years, remove a part or the whole of said marl.”

When this conveyance was made, the marl was a part of Torrey’s land. It was a part of the soil when excavated, and its character as land was not changed by reason of its displacement from the bed it originally occupied, and its deposit on the other land of Torrey. It was not deposited with a view to removal. The value of the marl as a fertilizer was not known until about the time of Torrey’s conveyance to Spaulding. It was not severed from the land, as timber trees cut by the owner, or as coal or minerals mined 'and deposited on the surface, with a view to a sale as chattels. By the deposit it became incorporated with and a part of the *481 soil where it was deposited, and after as before the deposit it was a part of Torrey’s freehold. It does not appear that the State, before cutting the channel, had acquired title to the land through which it was made. But if that fact had been shown it would not, we think, have changed the conclusion that the marl, when deposited, became a part of the land on which it was placed. Soil removed from the land of one person and placed on the land of another by his consent, without any intention on the part of the former to reclaim it, or any agreement authorizing him to remove it, becomes a part of the land of the latter. In Blewett v. Tregonning (3 Ad. & El. 554), the plaintiff sued the defendant in trespass for taking sand from his close. The defendant pleaded that the sand drifted on to the plaintiff’s close from the sea-shore, and that, by custom, the defendant was entitled to the sand for manuring his own soil. The alleged custom was held to be void, and Patteson, J., said: “I am of opinion that when any thing in the nature of soil is blown or lodged upon a man’s close, it is a part of his close, and he has a right to it against all the world.” It can, we think, make no difference whether, by avulsion or alluvion, or other action of the elements, the soil of one person is transferred to the land of another, or is placed there by the voluntary act of the former owner, with the consent of the other party, with the intention of leaving it there permanently. (See, also, Dearden v. Evans, 5 M. & W. 11.)

The marl being then a part of the realty, at' the time of the conveyance to Spaulding the question arises as to the effect of the exception in Torrey’s deed. The exception was of a part of the soil, viz.: the “ beds of marl,” with the right in the grantor to remove them within ten years from the date of the deed. The title to the land on which the marl was deposited was not excepted from the conveyance. It was like an exception by a grantor of the timber trees growing on the land granted, with the right of removal within a fixed period. The position and rights of Torrey under this deed were, we think, precisely similar to what they would have been, if Spaulding had owned the land, and had granted to Torrey the *482 beds of marl, with the same right of removal as is contained in Torrey’s deed. The exception was of an interest in the land conveyed, but it was an interest terminable at the expiration of the ten years. It was in legal effect a reservation to Torrey of so much of the marl as he should remove from the premises within that time. If the right of removal was not exercised within the time limited, the right was gone, and Torrey’s grantee would thereafter hold the land and the marl, relieved from the burden created by the exception. In McIntyre v. Barnard (1 Sandf. Ch. 52), an instrument was executed in 1836, by which M. granted, bargained and sold to 0. and H. all the pine timber standing on certain land, habendum to them, their heirs, etc., together with the right of entering upon the land until January 1, 1841, to cut and remove the timber, and the Vice-Chancellor held that it was a grant of all the pine timber which should be removed from the land before the 1st of January, 1841, and that after that day the grantees had no interest or right in the timber then standing on the premises. The same rule was applied to a contract for the sale of timber trees, in Boisaubin v. Reed (2 Keyes, 323), and in Kellam v. McKinstry (69 N. Y. 264), to a contract for the sale of bark, to be taken from trees by the vendee. And long before these cases, it was said in Touchstone: If one grants lands in fee, excepting the trees or any other thing, to the grantee, without saying ‘ and to his heirs,’ by this exception the thing excepted is severed only for the life' of the grantee, and then it shall pass with the rest of the thing'granted ” (page 100).

On the 23d of July, 1866, Torrey, who had meanwhile acquired no new interest in the land, executed to Henry A. Barnum a sealed instrument purporting to grant and convey to him the beds of marl then on the land, habendum to him and his heirs forever, containing a covenant to warrant' the sale of said marl ” to Barnum, his heirs and assigns. The plaintiff’s claim to the marl is derived from Barnum through certain mesne conveyances or transfers of his title from Torrey. Torrey in December, 1869, reacquired title to the premises conveyed *483 to Spaulding, through the foreclosure of a purchase-money mortgage, executed by Spaulding, on the purchase of the land. Torrey died in 1870, having before his death devised the land, and his devisees in 1874, by deeds duly executed, acknowledged and recorded, conveyed to one Evans. The deeds to Evans express a pecuniary consideration of several hundred dollars, payment of which is acknowledged. There is no evidence that Evans, when he took his deeds, had any notice of the conveyance to Barnum. That instrument was not recorded. Evans was chargeable with notice of the exception in the deed from Torrey to Spaulding, as that deed was on record at the time he took his conveyance. But the right reserved to Torrey thereby, except for the conveyance, to Barnum, would have merged in the fee acquired by Torrey on the mortgage sale. The principle was adjudged in Liford's Case (11 Rep.

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Bluebook (online)
82 N.Y. 476, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lacustrine-fertilizer-co-v-lake-guano-fertilizer-co-ny-1880.