Lewis v. City of Utica

159 A.D. 160, 145 N.Y.S. 346, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8921
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedOctober 1, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 159 A.D. 160 (Lewis v. City of Utica) 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
Lewis v. City of Utica, 159 A.D. 160, 145 N.Y.S. 346, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8921 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinions

Merrell, J.:

This action is in ejectment, plaintiff alleging that she is the owner and entitled to the possession of a small parcel of land that formerly constituted a part of the bed of the Mohawk river and now situate within the corporate limits of the city of Utica. The defendant, the City of Utica, is in possession of the lands claimed by plaintiff, said city claiming title thereto and the right to the exclusive possession thereof. Plaintiff claims title and bases her right to possession of the disputed premises upon a certain grant made in 1734 by King George the Second of Great Britain, through the English Colonial Government in the Province of New York to Joseph Worrell and others, by deed or letters patent, dated January 2, 1734. This grant was known as Cosby’s Manor, taking its name from the then English Colonial Governor of New York, and prefixed to the grant is the certificate of Governor Cosby and the other officers of the Colonial Government recommending the grant and describing the lands so to he conveyed as a part of a larger tract or parcel of land. The larger tract or parcel of land is referred to as follows: All that Tract of land in the Mohawks Country on both sides of the river between the Great Fflat or Plain above the fall and the Land granted to the wife & Children of Johan Jurck East as also another Tract of land hegiryiing on the West side of the Granted Lands on both sides of the said River running up Westward to a certaine Creek Called Sadahqueda and in breadth in the woods on both sides of the said River Six English Miles.”

The tract or parcel of land conveyed is described in such certificate and also in the grant or letters patent proper in substantially the same words and the following is the description as recited in the letters patent: “A Certaine Tract or Parcel of Land Scituate lying and being in the County of Albany on both sides of the Mohawks River beginning at a Certain place ■ on the South side of the said Mohawks River and the West side of a brook called Sedaghqueda where the said Brook falls into the said River and runs thence South thirty-eight Degrees West two hundred and thirty-eight Chains then South fifty-two Degrees East four hundred and eighty-three [162]*162Chains then North thirty-eight Degrees East four hundred and eighty Chains then North fifty-two Degrees West four hundred & eighty-three Chains and then South thirty-eight Degrees West two hundred and forty-two Chains to the place where the same Tract began Containing twenty-two thousand Acres of Land and the usual Allowance for Highways,” etc.

Then following the usual words of a grant the tract or parcel of land conveyed is described as follows: All the said Tract or Parcell of Land so set out as aforesaid and so abutted Bounded and Described as is above Expressed Concerning the same Containing in the whole twenty-two thousand Acres of Land besides the usuall Allowance for Highways together with all and Singular the woods and underwoods Trees Timbers feedings pastures Meadows Marshes Swamps ways waters water Courses Rivers brooks Rivulets Runs and Streams of water Ponds Pools fishings fowlings hunting and hawking Mines & Minerals whatsoever (except Gold Mines and Silver Mines),” etc.

The plaintiff traces her title from said Cosby’s Manor grant through various mesne grantors to herself.

As before stated, the disputed territory formerly was a part of the bed of the Mohawk river and became valuable as land only upon the course and channel of the said river being recently changed, and through certain legislative enactments whereby it is claimed that the abandoned bed of the Mohawk river, including the disputed parcel, became the property of the city of Utica.

Prior to March 20, 1891, the disputed premises were within the bounds of the town of Deerfield,- Oneida county. On said last-mentioned date chapter 92 of the Laws of 1891 became effective bringing the said premises within the corporate limits of the city of Utica. On the same date chapter 93 of the Laws of 1891 was enacted and became effective straightening the Mohawk river and thereby changing its course to a location about half a mile northerly from the locus in quo, thus leaving the old channel, including the disputed premises, dry land. By virtue of the aforesaid legislation and through chapter 579 , of the Laws of 1901 and chapter 131 of the Laws of 1907, the city of Utica succeeded to whatever title and interest the State [163]*163of New York had in the bed of the old channel of the river, including the locus in quo. It must be admitted that it was the intent of the Legislature and that the legislation above mentioned was appropriate and sufficient to convey to the city of Utica any title which the State of New York had to the old river channel at the time said several acts were passed. But the real issue is as to whether the State then had any interest which it could convey; whether or not the Crown by its Cosby’s Manor grant above mentioned had granted the bed of said river to plaintiff’s predecessor in title.

Upon the trial of this action the learned trial justice held that at the time of the grant of Cosby’s Manor by King George the Second of Great Britain the jus privatum or title to the bed of the Mohawk river reposed in the king, subject to the jus publicum or right of the public to use the same and the water for all proper purposes of navigation, and, therefore, that the king had the clear right to include in his grant the bed of the river subject to the public use of the stream flowing over said bed. To that extent the learned trial justice sustained the contention of the plaintiff, but denied her the relief which she seeks by this action upon the sole ground that said Cosby’s Manor grant, under the interpretation and construction of the learned trial justice, did not convey the bed of said fiver, and that the same eventually ¿ame to the People of the State of New York, who succeeded to all the rights of Great Britain at the close of the Revolutionary war.

It, therefore, seems to me that this appeal presents two questions for our determination: First, was the title to the bed of the Mohawk river on January 2, 1734, in King George the Second of Great Britain, with power to grant and convey the same; and, second, did the king, by the letters patent above referred to, convey the bed of said river, including the parcel in dispute, to Joseph Worrell, plaintiff’s predecessor in title ?

In the orderly disposition of this case we will consider these questions in the order named.

As to the title of the Crown of England to the bed of the. Mohawk river, it will be observed that at the time of this grant and for more than sixty years there had been no dominion or sovereignty over any of the territory through which the Mohawk [164]*164river flowed, except that of Great Britain, and, therefore, the common law of England must be deemed as controlling the grant under this particular patent. Under the English common law the title to the bed of all navigable arms of the sea and navigable rivers throughout the kingdom was in the king. Such lands under water were his private property, which he could dispose of as he saw fit without restraint or hindrance from the law. These lands under said waters were known as the jus privatum and were held and conveyed by the king in his private individual capacity. The navigable waters themselves the king held as sovereign, but not in an individual capacity.

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Bluebook (online)
159 A.D. 160, 145 N.Y.S. 346, 1913 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8921, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-city-of-utica-nyappdiv-1913.