People v. . Delaware Hudson Co.

107 N.E. 506, 213 N.Y. 194, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 749
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 8, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 107 N.E. 506 (People v. . Delaware Hudson Co.) 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 v. . Delaware Hudson Co., 107 N.E. 506, 213 N.Y. 194, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 749 (N.Y. 1914).

Opinion

Chase, J.

This action is brought to abate an alleged public nuisance and to have it adjudged that certain embankments which it is alleged in the complaint the defendant erected in the waters of Island creek and also a certain trestle bridge which the defendant had erected across said stream interfered with and obstructed navigation and that they were purprestures and public nuisances, and to restrain and enjoin the defendant from continuing to encroach upon the bed and waters of said stream and also to compel it to remove forthwith at its own cost and expense the encroachments and obstructions which it had placed in said stream and restore it to its original condition.

Issues were joined and, at the trial judgment was obtained substantially as asked for in the complaint except that it was therein provided that the defendant, as a condition of being required to remove its said bridge and trestle and the piles supporting it, and of restoring Island creek to its former depth and width, be permitted, when that is done, to build a draw, lift or suspension bridge at the place of the present bridge, which will not interfere with the navigation of such creek and which will afford necessary railroad connection to Rensselaer island.”

The People did not appeal from said judgment, but the defendant appealed to the Appellate Division where the judgment of the Trial Term was modified so as to limit its provisions, relating to the removal of alleged encroachments and obstructions, to such removal within the boundaries of the stream as defined by certain bulkhead lines established by chapter 689 of the Laws of 1906, and by further modifying its provisions so as to give the defendant at its election the right to “build abridge supported upon piers at practically the place of the old *198 bridge, which shall leave an open clearance over the thread of the stream of not less than fifty feet in width and at least two feet greater in height than the present bridge, and that in case the appellant shall elect to build a bridge other than a drawbridge, the respondent shall have the right at any time, should the reasonable use of the stream for navigation require, to apply to the court for a modification of the decree entered hereon, by requiring the defendant, its successors and assigns, to so change the bridge as the public interests may seem to demand.” It is from the modifications of the judgment that the People appeal to this court.

Island creek is a navigable stream about three or four miles long, having its source at and its outlet into the Hudson river. It is in part the southerly boundary of the city of Albany, and in such part it is included within the. territory of said city. It bounds Rensselaer island on the north, west and south. There is an ordinary highway bridge crossing the creek from Green street in the city of Albany to said island. Although a navigable stream in which the tide ebbs and flows, which has been used as such from time immemorial, its use as such has been confined to pleasure boats and occasional boats with steam power drawing from four to five feet of. water. Prior to 1870 the Albany and Susquehanna Railroad Company obtained the title to the lands on each side of said creek from a point near said bridge, westerly and southerly to a point south of the trestle railroad bridge referred to in the judgment. The title thus obtained by said railroad company is in part a title in fee and in part the ordinary title of a railroad corporation for public use. About 1870 said railroad company leased its railroad property and rights to the defendant company. About 1871 or 1872 the defendant erected a trestle bridge to support a single railroad track diagonally across said creek, which trestle or bridge was supported by wooden piles driven into the bed of the stream. The bridge was erected to enable the *199 defendant, by a spur track, to transport freight to and from certain industrial plants or factories that had been erected upon said island. About 1901 the old trestle bridge was taken down and a new one erected on which two railroad tracks were placed to be used in connection with two spur tracks running to said plants or factories. Such spur tracks are the only connection by railroad with said island and said plants or factories.

It is found by the trial court in substance that the defendant filled in certain parts of the lands between low and high-water mark adjoining its real property on each side of said creek. It is also found by the trial court that the legislature, by chapter 689 of- the Laws of 1906, passed an act entitled An act to provide for the improvement of the river front in the city of Albany, ” and in substance that by said act a bulkhead fine was fixed and established on each side of said creek at a point outside of high-water mark.

The title to the bed of navigable streams and the control of navigable waters are vested in the state, subject to the limitations found in the Federal Constitution. (Langdon v. Mayor, etc., of N. Y., 93 N. Y. 129.) The state, except for such limitations, has power to grant the title to lands underwater, unconditionally or conditionally, or it may grant special rights therein, or it may restrict the boundaries of navigable waters by defining the same.

The bulkhead line along each side of said creek determines the point beyond which wharfs, docks and piers cannot be lawfully erected, and it fixes and defines the boundaries to be devoted to the navigable channel. An obstruction outside of the bulkhead line is an interference with the public highway and a nuisance per se. An encroachment or filling within the bulkhead line may or may not be a public nuisance. It would be a lawful act on the part of an absolute owner of the adjoining upland, if the filling was for the-ultimate purpose of erecting a wharf or dock, and of securing access from such adjoin *200 ing uplands to it. (Langdon v. Mayor, etc., of N. Y., supra; Williams v. Mayor, etc., of N. Y., 105 N. Y. 419.)

If the lands between high-water mark and the bulkhead Hues were actually covered by navigable water, the public would have a right to use such water for the purpose of navigation until such land was filled in for a lawful purpose and its unauthorized obstruction would be á public nuisance. The record does not warrant a finding that the lands on which the defendant placed earth and other substances inside the bulkhead lines were ever sufficiently'covered by water so as to be actually navigable and the Trial Term did not so specifically find.

As we have seen, the title of the railroad company to a portion of the adjoining land is an unrestricted fee. Although not decided, in Matter of City of Buffalo (206 N. Y. 319) a majority of the court did not dissent from the opinion expressed in the concurring memorandum therein by Cullen, Chief Judge, to the effect that a railroad corporation may have riparian rights adjoining lands held in unrestricted fee. The riparian rights incident to the ownership of the upland exist in this case either in the defendant or in others.

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Bluebook (online)
107 N.E. 506, 213 N.Y. 194, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 749, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-delaware-hudson-co-ny-1914.