Passaic Valley Council, Boy Scouts of America v. Hartwood Syndicate, Inc.

75 Misc. 2d 1018, 348 N.Y.S.2d 883, 1973 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1403
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 75 Misc. 2d 1018 (Passaic Valley Council, Boy Scouts of America v. Hartwood Syndicate, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Passaic Valley Council, Boy Scouts of America v. Hartwood Syndicate, Inc., 75 Misc. 2d 1018, 348 N.Y.S.2d 883, 1973 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1403 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1973).

Opinion

James Gibsoh, J.

This action was tried in Albany County under stipulation of the parties and their attorneys pursuant to CPLR, 4013. The case was finally submitted (CPLR 4213, subd. [c]) on October 9, 1973 with the filing of defendant Syndicate’s rebuttal brief.

The subject of the litigation is an artificial body of water known as the Beaver Dam Reservoir in Sullivan County and Orange County. The primary issue is whether certain rights in the reservoir were appurtenant to a canal operated by the original owner of those rights, so as to be extinguished upon the abandonment of the canal; or whether they were, rather, in the nature of a profit or an easement in gross, thus surviving the abandonment of the canal and being susceptible of conveyance to a third party.

The plaintiff Passaic Valley Council, Boy Scouts of America, formerly Alhtaha Council, Boy Scouts of America (Council) and the defendants Hartwood Syndicate, Inc. (Syndicate), and The Hartwood Club (Club) assert conflicting rights to the use and enjoyment of the waters of the reservoir. The Council seeks judgment declaratory of its rights and enjoining defendants from interfering with the reservoir dam and the impounded waters. The Syndicate and the Club, separately defending, interpose denials, defenses and counterclaims, and demand judgment declaring their respective rights and granting appropriate injunctive relief.

I

THE ISSUES

The Council is the owner of the fee, as conveyed by deeds of July 16, 1855 to Osmer B. Wheeler, by the president, managers and company of the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company (Canal Company). The Syndicate’s and the Club’s claims to rights in the reservoir derive from the Canal Company’s reservation in each of the two 1855 deeds of the rights, among others, to occupy so much of the land as the grantor Canal Company might consider necessary for a reservoir and to construct a dam for reservoir purposes. The Council contends, however, that the rights were appurtenant to the Canal Company’s canal and were extinguished when the canal operation was terminated in 1898; but the Syndicate and the Club assert that the reservoir rights were not easements appurtenant to the canal but [1021]*1021constituted a separately alienable profit a prendre or, alternatively, an easement in gross, which survived the abandonment of the canal and was, in fact, conveyed by the Canal Company to the Club by 1903 quitclaim and thereafter, by the Club’s successors in title, to the Syndicate. The issues thus outlined are the primary ones. Involved, also, are certain hunting, fishing and boating rights claimed by the Club. Other questions, including the parties’ several claims of prescriptive rights, are presented and will be discussed in due course.

II

THE APPLICABLE PKIÍTCIPLES OP LAW

The relevant principles of law may be synopsized at this point and to the extent necessary will later be discussed in somewhat greater detail.

A profit a prendre has been defined as a right exercised by one person in the soil of another, including the right to take a part of the soil or produce of the land. Examples are the right to take timber, gravel, coal or minerals generally, from the land of another; but it has been said that flowing water ‘£ is not considered a product of the soil [and] a right to take such water is not a right of profit a prendre, but rather is an easement ’ ’ (25 Am. Jur. 2d, Easements and Licenses, § 4, pp. 419, 420-421; 17 N. Y. Jur., Easements and Licenses, § 4).1 It is stated, too, that1 ‘ a distinction between an easement and a profit a prendre is that the former generally implies the existence of a dominant and a servient estate while the latter may exist without both estates ’ ’; but the profit £ £ is nevertheless in the nature of an easement, and although capable of being transferred in gross, may also be attached to land as an appurtenance and pass as such ’ ’; and ‘ ‘ it is doubtful whether it can be severed from the estate to which it is attached or be granted alone ” (17 N. Y. Jur., Easements and Licenses, § 4, pp. 256-257). It is said that easements in gross are those ‘ which are not appurtenant to any land, and which the owner may enjoy, although he does not own or possess a dominant estate, or any land whatever ” and that Such a right or easement is for the personal benefit of the grantee and is not incident of or concerned with a dominant estate; it exists where there is only a servient estate, and the privilege given to the grantee attaches to the person and not to any land ” (op. cit., § 8, p. 260).

[1022]*1022A case has been made for elimination of the term “ profits ” as redundant, so that in matters such as this the distinction would be as between two forms of easement, i.e., easements appurtenant and easements in gross (Restatement, Property, § 450, Special Note, pp. 2901-2092). The apposite definitions are these: ‘‘ An easement is appurtenant to land when the easement is created to benefit and does benefit the possessor of the land in his use of the land ” (op. cit., § 453); while An easement is in gross when it is not created to benefit or when it does not benefit the possessor of any tract of land in his use of it as such possessor ” (op. cit., § 454). An easement may be in gross either because it is not connected with the use of any particular land, or because, even if it is, it was not intended to be appurtenant to such land (op. cit., § 454, comment a., pp. 2917-2918).

Important to the decision of this case are the principles that: ‘ Easements in gross are not favored by the courts, however, and an easement will never be presumed as personal when it may fairly be construed as appurtenant to some other estate. If doubt exists as to its real nature, an easement is presumed to be appurtenant, and not in gross.” (25 Am. Jur. 2d, Easements and Licenses, § 13, p. 427; Wilson v. Ford, 209 N. Y. 186, 196, mot. for rearg. den. 209 N. Y. 565, and authorities there cited.) In the light of these general principles, the background facts may now be considered.

Ill

THE FACTS

The problem posed involves an interesting chapter in the history of transportation — that concerning the construction and subsequent enlargement of a canal designed to transport coal from the mines of Pennsylvania to the City of New York. Construction commenced in 1823 and the canal was completed in 1828. The route extended from Honesdale, Pennsylvania, easterly and northeasterly to Kingston, New York, whence the canal boats continued in the Hudson River to New York City. In the second quarter of the 19th century the volume of business so greatly increased — and, indeed, the canal carried the bulk of New York City’s coal until after the Civil War — that the Canal Company enlarged the facility substantially. In the process, the Beaver Dam Reservoir involved in this litigation was constructed to feed water to the enlarged canal. The reservoir dam was erected across a small brook which became the outlet of the reservoir, emptying into Bushkill Creek and flow[1023]*1023ing thence into the Never sink River, which crossed the Canal Company’s property at the site of the canal.

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Bluebook (online)
75 Misc. 2d 1018, 348 N.Y.S.2d 883, 1973 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/passaic-valley-council-boy-scouts-of-america-v-hartwood-syndicate-inc-nysupct-1973.