People Ex Rel. Howell v. . Jessup

54 N.E. 682, 160 N.Y. 249, 14 E.H. Smith 249, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 1153
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 3, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 54 N.E. 682 (People Ex Rel. Howell v. . Jessup) 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
People Ex Rel. Howell v. . Jessup, 54 N.E. 682, 160 N.Y. 249, 14 E.H. Smith 249, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 1153 (N.Y. 1899).

Opinion

Parker, Ch. J.

Great South bay stretches its way along the south side of Long Island for a distance of about forty ■miles, separated from the ocean only by a narrow sand spit or beach, varying in width from a few hundred yards to half a mile, except at Fire Island, where there is an inlet through which the waters of the ocean flow and ebb to and from the bay; craft, employed both for pleasure and for trade, have ploughed its waters for many years, although there are, of course, very many small arms or bays, as well as what are termed meadows, where it is not practicable to sail even the smallest vessels.

The defendant has owned for some time certain premises on the north side of the bay called Potunk Point; he also *252 owned the beach in front of this piece of land, which separated the bay from the ocean. Between Potunk Point and the beach is a distance of between three and four hundred feet; the depth of the water generally is not given, bnt some idea of it may be formed from the fact that the relator, who undertook to show that navigation was interfered with by the erection of a structure, of which we shall hereafter speak, only claimed the channel to be of a width of from fifty to seventy-five feet, and while there is no finding as to its depth, the relator testified that it is “ just deep enough to float a boat about eighteen inches; ” other witnesses thought it was from two to four and a half feet deep.

The defendant, desiring for the convenience of summer guests, to connect the beach with his property on the other side of the bay by a bridge and a road built on piles, made application to the trustees of the freeholders and commonalty of the .town of Southampton for authority to make such construction ; this procedure was in accordance with the custom which had been in vogue in the town of Southampton for much more than a century. The trustees, claiming the right to do so, had for even a much longer period of time leased the fisheries to particular persons, generally on condition that the fish be sold only to inhabitants, of the town ; prohibited the taking of fish, clams and oysters during certain periods of the year; enforced such prohibitions by penalties; leased lands under water for oyster planting, agreeing to indemnify and defend the lessees against assertion of hostile rights in the leased property; sold the seaweed from the beaches; given consents to the erection of wharves and docks, and regulated the use thereof. (Town of Southampton v. Mecox Bay Oyster Co., 116 N. Y. 1-16.) Upon receipt of this defendant’s application a notice ¿was given by the trustees to the freeholders of the town advising them of the application and appointing the time and place for its consideration. On that day freeholders numbering from one hundred to one hundred and fifty appeared and examined the situation, after which the question of whether or not the application should be granted *253 was submitted to a rising vote. Nearly every person present voted in favor of granting the application. When the vote of those opposed was called for, only one person stood up, and he is a relator in this action. Thereupon, and on the second day of June, 1888, the trustees of the freeholders and commonalty of the town of Southampton passed a resolution, of which the following is a copy: “ Resolved, That Nathan C. Jessup be and is hereby given liberty-to make a roadway and to erect a bridge across the Great South Bay, commencing at the south point of Potunk Neck, thence running southerly to the beach, the said bridge to be a drawbridge of a width of not less than twenty feet, the height above the meadow three feet, and the draw to be twenty feet wide ; and the said Nathan C. Jessup shall hot cause any unnecessary delay to those navigating the waters of the bay.” Relying upon the sufficiency of the consent the defendant proceeded to make the roadway and construct the bridge, as by the resolution he was authorized to do, and no question is made but that he strictly complied with its directions. Nor is it pretended that he made an unreasonable use of the drawbridge by keeping it closed when he was not using it, thus obstructing the passage through of small pleasure sailing boats, which make the most frequent use of the waters at this point. On the contrary, it appears that the drawbridge has always been left open, except while being actually used by the defendant for crossing purposes. Indeed, one of the engineers connected with the Avar department (Major Adams) testified that he had made an official examination of the waters and the bridge at Potunk Point and had caused a map thereof to be made, and had made a report thereon to the secretary of Avar, and as the result of such official examination he stated that in his opinion the bridge as erected Avas not an unreasonable obstruction to navigation. His view'was fully concurred in by Col. Roberts, who testified that he had made an examination of the bridge under the direction of the secretary of war. And the learned trial judge, being asked to find by the defendant “ that said bridge so erected is no unreasonable obstruction *254 to navigation,” said: “ Found, if bridge constructed by lawful authority,” meaning thereby, as we understand the finding, that if the construction had been duly authorized it- could not be condemned as an unreasonable obstruction to navigation; but if the construction was without authority, then the defendant was not entitled to the finding, for the reason that any attempt on the part of a riparian proprietor to appropriate to his own use the lands under water in front of his premises constitutes a purpresture, which is defined to be an invasion of the soil while the same remains in the People and may be removed at their suit. (Knickerbocker Ice Co. v. Shultz, 116 N. Y. 383.) And, if the invasion amounts to an interference with the common or public right to navigate the waters, it constitutes a nuisance that may be abated at the instance of' the People, whether it can be shown to produce any injury or not. (People v. Vanderbilt, 26 N. Y. 287.) But while an individual, whether riparian proprietor or not, may not appropriate lands under water to his own use or otherwise interfere with the rights belonging to" the public at large of fishing in or navigating the public waters, the sovereign authority may authorize the construction of bridges, piers, wharves or other obstructions in navigable waters, and when such obstructions are not obnoxious to the, regulations of Congress and do not come in conflict with the paramount authority of the United States, they are not nuisances. (Kerr v. West Shore R. R. Co., 127 N. Y. 269.) So had the title to the lands under water and the sovereignty of the waters at Potunk Point been in the state, subject only to the paramount authority of the Hnited States and it had granted the authority to make this construction, the validity of its grant could not have been challenged.

The question of the power of the sovereign holding in trust for the People the navigable waters to partially diminish the navigability of such waters has been long settled. Abundant illustration of the exercise of the power may be found in the grants of lands under water in the Hudson river to the Hudson River and the West Shore railroad companies by which *255

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Bluebook (online)
54 N.E. 682, 160 N.Y. 249, 14 E.H. Smith 249, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 1153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-howell-v-jessup-ny-1899.