People v. Kraemer

7 Misc. 2d 373, 164 N.Y.S.2d 423, 1957 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2800
CourtLloyd Harbor Village Police Court
DecidedJune 26, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 7 Misc. 2d 373 (People v. Kraemer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lloyd Harbor Village Police Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Kraemer, 7 Misc. 2d 373, 164 N.Y.S.2d 423, 1957 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2800 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1957).

Opinion

Charles c. MacLean, Jr., P. J.

The defendants herein are charged in sworn informations with having violated section 1 of Ordinance 12 of the Incorporated Village of Lloyd Harbor by willfully trespassing upon property, located within the village, owned by Sherman M. Fairchild or under lease to him from the Field Foundation, Inc.

[375]*375Ordinance No. 12, entitled “No Trespassing” provides:

“ Section 1. No person shall intrude upon any lot or piece of land within the boundaries of the Village of Lloyd Harbor, without authority from the owner thereof, and no person shall erect or occupy thereon any building or other structure whatever without such authority.

“ Section 2. Any person violating any of the provisions of this ordinance shall, upon conviction, be punishable by a fine of not to exceed One Hundred Dollars and, in addition thereto, such violation shall constitute and is hereby declared to be disorderly conduct, and any person violating the same shall and is hereby declared to be a disorderly person.”

Specifically, each of the defendants other than Seannella is charged with having dropped anchor from his boat, without the authority of Mr. Fairchild, upon posted land under water owned by or under lease to Mr. Fairchild and with having refused to remove the anchor after being informed of the alleged violation. The defendant Seannella is charged with willful trespass upon the beach included in the area under lease to Mr. Fairchild from the Field Foundation and also with having dropped anchor on the underwater lands. The information specifies that the alleged trespass on the beach occurred below mean high water level.

The defendants do not deny dropping anchor on the underwater lands, as charged, nor does the defendant Seannella deny intruding upon the foreshore, as charged. They base their defense solely on two grounds: (1) their claim that ownership of the land in question remains in the State of New York, and (2) the legal proposition that, regardless of the ownership of the land, the waters over the land are navigable waters and therefore subject to the public right of navigation, which includes, they say, the right to anchor and to enter on the foreshore.

The area involved is a harbor opening off Long Island Sound, located in the northwest portion of Lloyd Neck, and situated within the limits of the village of Lloyd Harbor. This harbor, which is a body of water entirely distinct from Lloyd Harbor itself, is referred to by some as “ Lloyd Point Basin ” and by others as “ Sand City ”. The most recent issue of the chart of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey for the Oyster and Huntington Bays area (Chart 224 [3d ed.], Feb. 1, 1943, rev. May 14, 1956) indicates that the harbor measures about seven tenths of a nautical mile between its northerly and southerly ends and about three tenths of a nautical mile at its

[376]*376376

7 MISCELLANEOUS REPORTS, 2d SERIES

greatest width, east and west. The entrance from the sound is on the west side of the harbor and is shown by the chart to have a depth of 12 feet at mean low water. The harbor itself is shown to have a depth, at mean low water, of 18 feet near its center and about 9 feet at the northerly and southerly ends.

The harbor is bounded on the west and north by sand bars which separate it from the deep waters of the sound. On the east, the northerly half of the harbor is bounded by tidal marshlands and the southerly half by a sand beach behind which the upland raises sharply to a height of more than 100 feet above mean high water level. The harbor and surrounding area as of the present time are fairly depicted in the aerial photograph introduced in evidence as People’s Exhibit 9.

The parties to these proceedings are in agreement that the harbor is not a natural one but has been made by man in relatively recent times. This conclusion is supported by the survey introduced in evidence in connection with the question of title. The earliest of these surveys, dated 1685 (of " Horse Neck alias Queen's Village ", made for James Lloyd) shows the entire area of the present harbor and surrounding sand bars as "Meadow & Beach ". A stream running through the area to the sound is described as " a Brook 7' foot at highest a Ohaine wide ".* A survey dated 1722, entitled "A Survey of the Mannor of Queens Village ", shows the same conditions in the area except that a line of trees is indicated along the northwesterly edge of the "Meadow & Beach ", in the approximate location of the present beach areas on the north and west sides of the harbor.

A much more detailed survey made by Samuel Willis in 1764 (on file in the Suffolk County Clerk’s office) describes the area of the present harbor as “ Broken marsh, ponds, creeks, etc.”, but further shows, as the older surveys do not, that a wide strip of beach separated the tidal area from the sound at all points except the cut where the stream entered the sound. In general, the beach areas shown on the 1764 survey conform to the present beach areas on the west and north sides of the harbor.

Referring to the above-mentioned surveys and charts, the brief on behalf of the complainant states: “ The record before this Court, we submit, can lead .only to the conclusion that the Basin was man-made after it came into private ownership.”

*A chain’s length, according to usage current in 1661, equalled “66 feet or 4 poles”. (1 Shorter Oxford English Dictionary [2d ed., 1936].)

[377]*377This is not disputed by the defendants, who also claim, however, that the present beaches on the north and west sides of the harbor are man-made. On this point, the brief submitted on their behalf states: Sand and gravel operations, begun commercially in 1893 by Godfrey and Jones and continued down through the last war, have resulted in the dredging away of the marsh pond and beach shingle and the creation of a new beach to the north by deposit of the screenings. The present tidal basin is located where the original tidal marsh and pond once were.”

The United States Coast Pilot (Atlantic Coast, Section B, Cape Cod to Sandy Hook [5th ed., 1950]) contains the following description of the area (p. 344) :

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Bluebook (online)
7 Misc. 2d 373, 164 N.Y.S.2d 423, 1957 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2800, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-kraemer-nyjustctlloydha-1957.