People ex rel. Blakslee v. Commissioners of Land-Office

15 N.Y.S. 644, 39 N.Y. St. Rep. 642, 61 Hun 620, 1891 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 89
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 11, 1891
StatusPublished

This text of 15 N.Y.S. 644 (People ex rel. Blakslee v. Commissioners of Land-Office) 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
People ex rel. Blakslee v. Commissioners of Land-Office, 15 N.Y.S. 644, 39 N.Y. St. Rep. 642, 61 Hun 620, 1891 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 89 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1891).

Opinion

Mayham, J.

The petitioner, Bbenezer G. Blakslee, and the appellant, the E. G. Blakslee Manufacturing Company, derive their claim of title through several conveyances, transfers, and reservations coming from Reuben Quimby, who was the original owner and common source of title. The claim of the petitioner is based upon a title derived through a mortgage foreclosure, followed by several mesne conveyances of the land under water, based upon a reservation made by Quimby in his conveyance of the upland, the title to which comes to the‘applicant, the B. G. Blakslee Manufacturing Company, through several mesne conveyances from the same Quimby deed. In that deed Quimby, the grantor, makes this reservation: “Excepting and reserving to said Quimby, his heirs and assigns, all the water-rights and privileges in the Hudson river, west of said railroad, which now do or hereafter may appear in or belong to the above-described premises, the same and in the same manner as if these presents had not been made.” By the conveyance of the title derived under the deed, the applicants became the riparian owners, and the petitioner, at the time of the grant of land to the applicant of this land under water by the commissioners of the land-office, which is attacked in this proceeding, was the owner and grantee of whatever right or title was contained in the reservation above referred to, in the Quimby deed. If that reservation was invalid, and carried no right with it, then the purchaser of that right under a foreclosure, and his subsequent grantees, got no title or interest in the land under water; and the petitioner, who claims that right, would have no interest in the land under water conveyed to the applicant, and no standing in court to attack this grant. So that the main question seems to be, did the reservation in the Quimby deed deprive the purchaser of the upland, or his assigns or grantees of the right of riparian owners to obtain this grant from the state, or did that reservation divest the state of the right or power to grant the land under water, opposite to these highlands, to the riparian owner? The answer to these questions must be decisive of this case. If Quimby, when he conveyed to Gregory and Mead, could make a valid exception and reservation, to himself and his successors, of the land under water lying along these uplands, then Gregory and Mead and their grantees got no right in the lands under water as an appurtenant to their grant, and the applicant who succeeds to their title could get no greater rights than were conveyed to, and belonged to, its grantor, and consequently no riparian rights to a grant of land under water passed to this applicant. But this conclusion can only be reached upon the theory that a riparian owner has, before receiving any grant from the state, a right in the land under water which he may sever from the upland, and hold, not only as against the granlee of the upland, but also as against the state, in which all lands under waters of a navigable stream is vested. The constitution vests in the commissioners of the land-office such authority and power over the public lands of the state as may be conferred on them by the legislature. Section 5, art. 5, Const. The powers and duties of such commissioners, as to land under navigable waters, are prescribed in section 1, c. 385, Laws 1850, (1. Rev.St., 7th Ed., p. 573, § 67,) as follows: “The commissioners of the land-office shall have power to grant, in perpetuity or otherwise, so much of the land under the waters of navigable rivers and lakes as they shall deem necessary to promote the commerce of this state, or proper for the purpose of beneficial enjoyment of the same by the adjacent owner; but no such grant shall be made to any person other than the proprietors of the adjacent lands, and any such grant that shall be made to any other person shall be void.” The grant by Quimby conveyed the land above high-water mark, and reserved only the right to land under water, so that, after that conveyance, he or his grantees or mortgagees had no adjacent land, and were not, therefore, the proprietors of the adjacent lands, within the statute above referred to. By the terms of the statute, any conveyance by the commissioners of the land-office, to him or his grantees or [646]*646mortgagees, would be void. If his reservation in bis conveyance could have-the effect of divesting the right of the state, through the commissioners of the land-office, of the power to grant adjacent lands under water to Gregory and Mead, Quimby’s grantees, it would, in effect, deprive the state of the-right to make a grant of this land under water, and thus defeat the very object contemplated and expressed in the statute,—the promotion of commerce-of the state, or the beneficial enjoyment of the same by adjacent owners.

But it is insisted by the petitioner that this is not an open question, but. has been settled by authority, and we are referred to the cases of People v. Jones, 112 N. Y. 597, 20 N. E. Rep. 577; Benson v. Townsend, 7 N. Y. Supp. 162. In People v. Jones, supra, which arose on certiorari to the action of the commissioner of land-office, the court, Ruger, C. J., says: “The undisputed evidence in the case shows that there was a strip of land situate between the lake and the premises embraced in the metes and bounds contained in the first deed.” It is true that the learned judge in that case used language referring to the rights of riparian owners to limit the effect of their grant, so as to reserve the riparian privilege, and also subsequent accretions, which, if it had been used in a case like this, would seem to be conclusive; but, as it was used in a case where the grantee had acquired by his deed no riparian rights by reason of the existence of intervening lands between those-conveyed and the lake, the language must be construed as applicable to the case under consideration by the court, and not. to one standing upon an entirely different state of facts. It is true that-, at the time Quimby purchased these lands, high-water mark was east of the railroad, and that, before making the conveyance to Gregory and Mead, he filled up on the east of the railroad, and made up-land of all east of the railroad, so that by his conveyance to them he bound them on the east line of the railroad; but it also appears-from the case that at that time there was no upland west of the railroad, and that the applicant owned at the time of this application all the upland.

It also appears in the case that the only upland now existing west of the railroad, and between it and the river, is artificially made land, formed from the dumping of the refuse from applicant’s furnace within the last two or three years, or by the petitioner’s directions while he was foreman of the applicant’s company. We are not, therefore,' called'upon to determine the rights-of the petitioner, under the reservation in the Quimby deed as to any natural accretions to the upland; and the question remains, it seems to us, as to the-boundary of the highlands, as they existed at the time of the execution of the Quimby deed. As the railroad was constructed in the river below high-water mark, it did not, it seems, become a riparian owner, nor in any way affect the rights of the former riparian owner, as to the right to a grant of' land under water, under the statute. In Rumsey v. Railroad Co., 114 N. Y. 423, 21 N. E. Rep.

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Gould v. . Hudson River Railroad Company
6 N.Y. 522 (New York Court of Appeals, 1852)
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68 N.Y. 71 (New York Court of Appeals, 1877)
Benson v. Townsend
7 N.Y.S. 162 (New York Supreme Court, 1889)

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.Y.S. 644, 39 N.Y. St. Rep. 642, 61 Hun 620, 1891 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-blakslee-v-commissioners-of-land-office-nysupct-1891.