Northern New York Power Corp. v. State

183 Misc. 306, 298 N.Y.S. 688, 1937 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1763
CourtNew York Court of Claims
DecidedAugust 7, 1937
DocketClaim No. 726-A
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 183 Misc. 306 (Northern New York Power Corp. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northern New York Power Corp. v. State, 183 Misc. 306, 298 N.Y.S. 688, 1937 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1763 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1937).

Opinion

Fred M. Ackerson,

Official Referee Acting as Judge of the Court of Claims. The trial of this claim was commenced in this court in January, 1917. The trial was continued from timé to time until January 9,1918, when the attorneys for the respective parties hereto united ip submitting to the court for decision, [308]*308before further proceeding with the trial, two preliminary questions, as follows:

First: As to whether or not the so-called waiver and release of April 14, 1910, which is Exhibit 126 in the case, is a valid instrument; and

Second: The question as to the nature and extent of claimant’s water rights and privileges at this time.

The court thereupon acceded to the said joint request of counsel and requested them to file briefs covering the law and the facts necessary to be considered by the court in passing upon the two questions so submitted. for decision. The respective counsel complied with the court’s request in this regard and such briefs were filed with the court in February, 1919.

Thereafter in April, 1920, this court handed down an opinion setting forth its views at that time on the two questions submitted. This opinion is reported in 111 Miscellaneous 13.

The trial was then proceeded with and concluded at Rochester on the 2d day of October, 1923.

The counsel then agreed to submit their briefs and requests to find, after which it was agreed there should be an oral argument.

In the meantime the State had filed a counterclaim herein, dated October 1, 1922, demanding. from the claimant $100,000 for each year since October 1, 1915, for the taking and use of excess water for power at the dam at Minetto over and above what it was legally entitled to use.

The State’s final brief was filed on December 26, 1923, but the claimant’s brief on the final hearing was not filed until March 26, 1935, and its supplemental brief was not filed until June 11, 1937.

The counsel for the respective parties argued the issues involved herein orally before the court at Syracuse on June 17, 1935, and before that time filed their requests to find.

We now come to the final decision of this important claim which for so many years has engaged the attention of this court.

In our preliminary opinion above referred to we made a statement in regard to the allegations of the claim under consideration and concerning the history of the relations of the claimant and its predecessors to the premises in question, which for convenience in referring to we incorporate in this opinion as follows:

[The court here quotes that part of the preliminary opinion printed at 111 'Miscellaneous 13 which begins with the words “ The counsel for the state” at the bottom of page 15 and ends on page 35 with the words Such in brief is the history of the state’s and the claimant’s connections with the Oswego river at Minetto.”]

[309]*309We then proceeded to hold that the waiver and release of April 14,1910, meant nothing at that time, so far as having any influence on the determination of the rights of the parties here, because it was based on an impossible hypothesis. We took this position because it appeared to us that the claimant had never been entitled to use all of the surplus waters of the river not necessary for the canal or for the purposes of navigation simply because its grantors were limited to such portions of that surplus as will pass through 540.5 square feet of openings in the dam at a head of seven and one-half feet and that none of them, therefore, could convey any greater interest.

We based that .holding on what this court had held in reference to the rights of riparian owners on the Oswego Eiver in a very similar case entitled Fulton Light, H. & P. Co. v. State of N. Y. and reported in 65 Miscellaneous 263. This decision was affirmed in 138 Appellate Division 931 and 200 New York 400.

We find the following statement in the opinion in that case, which also sets forth the conditions which existed at Minetto when the State invaded the premises of the predecessors of this claimant at the time it constructed the original Oswego Canal in about 1826. That portion of the opinion which we then thought should be controlling here reads as follows (65 Misc. 263, 281): The rights of the parties must be determined by reference to the facts and the established decisions of the courts. The difficulty of determining the rights of the parties since the appropriations by the State for the old Oswego canal lies in the fact that no grant of land or water rights affecting these premises was made under the act of 1816 (chap. 237) and no appraisement was made pursuant to the act of 1817 (chap. 262)'; and, as there are no living witnesses to recount the actual transactions as they occurred at that time, reliance must be had upon the acts of the parties themselves, interpreted in the light of •such documentary evidence as is available. One of the facts that assists in determining the rights acquired by the State and those that remained in the claimants is the statute under which the rights of way for the original canal were acquired. This statute, enacted in 1817, provided that the State might acquire such land and water as might be ‘ necessary ’ for the canal, ‘ doing nevertheless no unnecessary harm.’ Laws of 1817, chap. 262. It seemed to be the intention of this act that only such rights should be acquired by the State as were necessary for the proposed canal, and that in acquiring those rights no unnecessary harm should be done; but there is no grant or award showing what rights the State regarded as necessary, and recourse [310]*310must be had to what was actually done. * * * When it began the construction of its canal in 1825, claimants’ predecessors were in possession of the uplands and owned the fee of the bed of the river. The State removed the wing dam, extending nearly to the center of the river, and in its place substituted a dam built across the river, .furnishing a head of about twelve feet. It connected by a pier the east end of the dam with the east high bank of the river, allowed claimants’ predecessors to rest their sawmill upon this pier, and placed openings in the pier for the supply of water to the mill and also to the old wooden flume which previously existed. * * * Although the appropriation made by the State was not followed by an appraisement, as required by the Statute of 1817 (chap. 262), the State acquired the right to use so much of the water of the Oswego river as was necessary for the operation of the canal, reserving for the claimants’ predecessors such portion of the remainder of the water as was available through the openings which it left in the pier. It was evidently thought at the time by claimants’ predecessors that this supply of water, with the additional head furnished by the new dam, would compensate them for such damages as they sustained; and it does not appear that any effort was made, either by them or by the State, to secure an appraisement. Any objection rising from the absence of a grant or appraisement has long since been cured, and the title of both parties has become fixed by lapse of time. * * *

“ Obviously it was not deemed necessary by the State to take from the claimants’ predecessors all of the water of the Oswego river.

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Bluebook (online)
183 Misc. 306, 298 N.Y.S. 688, 1937 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1763, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-new-york-power-corp-v-state-nyclaimsct-1937.