Philadelphia Brewing Co. v. McOwen

73 A. 518, 76 N.J.L. 636, 1909 N.J. LEXIS 144
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 1, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 73 A. 518 (Philadelphia Brewing Co. v. McOwen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Philadelphia Brewing Co. v. McOwen, 73 A. 518, 76 N.J.L. 636, 1909 N.J. LEXIS 144 (N.J. 1909).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Garrison, J.

This is an action of ejectment for lands lying beneath the waters of the river Delaware. The locus in quo described in the declaration has a base of two hundred and thirty-eight and ninety-four hundredths feet in a line drawn parallel with Eront street, of the city of Camden, and three hundred and twenty feet to the west of the westerly side thereof, which line so drawn is below the high-water line of the river. This base of two hundred and thirty-eight and ninety-four hundredths feet is the1 easternmost boundary of the locus in quo, and if extended westwardly out into the river until the exterior wharf line is reached, will include the land for which this suit is brought, which each party claims under the state’s riparian grant.

It will be observed that the tra[ct of land under water thus described does not adjoin the fast land on the Jersey shore, but that between the easterly end or base of such tract and the shore the river Delaware rises at high tide; that is to say, the river at high water intervenes between the easternmost boundary of the locus in quo and the fast land of the shore. [637]*637It is upon this fact that the plaintiff relies as the ground of its present action.

Originally, of course, the land described in the plaintiff’s declaration belonged to the State of New Jersey, and each of the parties to the present action has a grant from the riparian commissioners which in its descriptive portion covers the locus in quo. The defendant’s grant was earlier in point of time but the plaintiff contends, and its present action is based upon the proposition of fact, that the defendant is not now, and was not when he got his riparian grant, the owner of any land adjoining the locus in quo, and hence that he did not by the said grant acquire the rights of the state therein; but that on the other hand the plaintiff’s grant covering the same lands was duly supported by its ownership of the ripa opposite the locus in quo, i. c., the land adjoining the waters of the river that intervene between the locus in quo and the high-water line on the Jersey shore. If the plaintiff’s proposition of fact is true its legal proposition is also correct, for the defendant’s grant from the state expressly provided that such grant should be void “if the said Frederick McOwen is not the owner of the land adjoining the land under water hereby granted.”

The fundamental question therefore is whether or not the defendant was the owner of land on which the river rose at high water adjoining the locus in quo. In more concrete form the precise question is whether the Pavonia Land Association, which was the common grantor, had conveyed to the defendant, who was the earlier grantee, any land adjoining the locus in quo, or whether such common grantor did not remain the owner of the land at high water to the east of the locus in quo until by a subsequent conveyance it conveyed such land to the immediate grantor of the plaintiff.

At the trial the plaintiff made out a case under its declaration by proving the following facts: On October 18th, 1893, the Pavonia Land Association owned a city block on the easterly bank of the Delaware river, extending from Dupont street on the south to Cooper avenue on the north, bounded on the east by Front street, of the city of Camden, and on the west by the Delaware river, whose waters washed the entire [638]*638front of the lot, a distance of over four hundred feet. The shore line of mean high tide was not, however, exactly parallel with Front street, from the westerly side of which the shore was more than three hundred and twenty feet distant at the northerly end of the lot although not at the southerly end. In other words, the river at this point describes a double curve somewhat similar to a capital S, so that at the south end of the lot the river bellied into the land and at the north end the land jutted out into the river. This incurve in the southerly half of the lot would cut a straight line parallel with Front street and three hundred and twenty feet west of its westerly side at two points, the distance between which would be two hundred and thirty-eight and ninety-four hundredths feet, for which distance such line would run wholly beneath the waters of the river. This two hundred and thirty-eight and ninety-four hundredths feet is the base or easterly boundary of the locus in quo, which extends westwardly out to the exterior wharf line. The significance of the line three hundred and twenty feet from the westerly side of Front street and parallel thereto is that such a line is, by the deed from the Pavonia Land Association to the defendant, dated October 18th, 1893, made the easterly boundary of the land thereby conveyed. In other words, the defendant, by his said deed, got all of the land that the association owned to the west of such line, i. e., between such line and the Delaware river, but got thereby no land to the east of such line, i. e., between such line and Front street. The land between such line and Front street remained the property of the association until June 17th, 1895, when it conveyed it to the immediate grantor of the plaintiff. If therefore at the southerly end of the tract conveyed to the defendant such line, on October 18th, 1893, ran for a distance of two hundred and thirty-eight and ninety-four hundredths feet through the waters of the river, i. c., below its high-water line, the defendant, as to such distance, got title to no land for the reason that the title to the land so under water was not in his grantor but in the State of New Jersey; from this it also follows that the defendant got no title to such land under water from the [639]*639State of New Jersey by his riparian grant for the reason that as to such two hundred and thirty-eight and ninety-four hundredths feet he was not the owner of any adjoining land which by the express provision of his grant was an essential condition of its validity. This was the plaintiff’s case, which was not contradicted by any oral testimony offered by the defendant. The plaintiff having proved the foregoing state of facts rested its case, and the defendant having introduced certain documentary evidence also rested, whereupon each counsel requested the court to direct a verdict in his favor, plaintiff’s counsel relying upon the uncontroverted state of facts, defendant’s counsel relying upon certain propositions of law based upon documentary evidence that he had introduced. Each counsel admitted that there was no question touching the case made by the plaintiff that required to be submitted to the jury. The trial judge, after argument, denied the defendant’s motion and directed a verdict for the plaintiff, to which rulings exceptions were severally allowed and sealed.

On this writ of error the defendant below, who is now the plaintiff in error, relies upon the propositions of law advanced by him in the trial court as grounds for the granting of the motion he then made. If, however, in view of any of such propositions it was error for the trial court to direct a verdict for the defendant in error, the plaintiff in error may avail himself thereof.

The propositions in question have therefore been examined with the view of determining whether error was committed at the trial either in the denial of the motion then made by the plaintiff in error or in the granting of that made by the defendant in error.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 A. 518, 76 N.J.L. 636, 1909 N.J. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philadelphia-brewing-co-v-mcowen-nj-1909.