Somerville v. City of New York

78 Misc. 203, 137 N.Y.S. 919
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 78 Misc. 203 (Somerville v. City of New York) 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
Somerville v. City of New York, 78 Misc. 203, 137 N.Y.S. 919 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

Crane, J.

While this action is brought to restrain the city of Hew York and the commissioner of docks of said city from interfering with the erection and construction of a bulkhead by the plaintiffs on their land under water, it is really an action to determine whether the land under water in Gravesend bay belongs to the state of Hew York or to the city of Hew York as the successor to the town of Gravesend. Gravesend bay is formed by a neck of land running out on the south known as Coney Island and bounded on the east and north by Gravesend and Hew Utrecht. It is by no means a land locked harbor or bay but is part of Hew York harbor or bay, curving to the southeast into the main land and protected from the ocean on the south by this Coney Island neck. The claim of the town to that part of the bay surrounded on the three sides by the township lands, which include Coney Island, is based entirely upon colonial grants and the acts of user thereunder.

The importance of this question is at once apparent when it is stated that beginning with 1897 the state of Hew York has made numerous grants of land under water in Gravesend bay adjoining the north shore of Coney Island, and that these lands have been filled in and improved into streets and building sites. A portion of what is known as Sea Gate has been developed upon land thus filled in.

While the city of Hew York has treated this property as belonging to the persons deriving title from the state and has assessed and taxed it accordingly, yet this does not create such an estoppel as to prevent the city from now making claim of ownership. McFarlane v. Kerr, 10 Bosw. 249; Consolidated Ice Co. v. City of New York, 166 N. Y. 92-101.

It is therefore necessary to refer to these ancient patents to ascertain whether the town of Gravesend received by grant the land under water in Gravesend bay.

[205]*205The Lovelace patent of July 1, 1670 and the Dongan patent of 1686 upon which the claim of the town is chiefly based are better understood in the light of previous grants and litigations. Following Governor Kieft’s patent to Anthony Jansen in 1643 and a grant to Robert Penoyer on November 29, 1645, both covering property to the north and west of that claimed by Gravesend, the same governor on December 16, 1645, granted to Lady Deborah Moody and other patentees land which subsequently became the township of Gravesend. The description therein pertinent to this inquiry is as follows:

“ a Certaine quantitie or parcel of land, together with all ye havens, harbours, rivers, Creekes, woodland, marshes and all other appurtenances thereunto belonging, lyeing and being uppon and about ye Weastermost parte of Longe Island, and begining att ye mouth of a Greek adjacent to Coneyne Island and being bounded one ye Westward parte thereof with ye land appertaining to Anthony Johnsonn and Robert Pennoyre and soe to runn as farre as the westermost part of a Certaine pond in an ould Indian field, etc.,''

Passing by the Indian deeds which are so uncertain in terminology and description as to be of little value we come to the ¡Nicoll patent to the town of Gravesend in 1668, a confirmation of the Kieft patent, the description pertinent being the same as above quoted. Between the grantee of the adjoining land, Anthony Jansen, and the town 'of Gravesend there arose a dispute as to a neck of land lying between Mill creek and Gravesend bay and forming part of the easterly shore of that bay. This dispute resulted in a petition to the director-general and council of New Netherland, who in June, 1656 proceeded to Gravesend to inspect the property and settle boundaries. This was followed in a few days by a judgment of the director-general and council of the New Netherlands declaring that the patent of Gravesend begins at the kill or creek next to Coney island,'and not at the middle of the bay, and stretches thence not along the shore of the bay but to the point where the lands of Anthony Jansen and Robert Penoyer join each other; that is, that the line of [206]*206Gravesend patent ran along Hill creek and not along the shore of the bay.

¡No doubt much of this dispute between Jansen and the town of Gravesend was due to the uncertainty in fixing the starting point of the latter’s grants. It will be noticed that the Kfieft and ¡Nicoll patents read “ Beginning at the mouth of a creek adjacent to Ooney Island.” Where this creek was cannot now be determined and is not shown upon any of the early maps. The map of the town of Gravesend shows only Hill creek; the map of 1188 shows two creeks south of Hill creek, while plaintiff’s exhibit 23 shows a different formation altogether. If the grants to the town of Gravesend rested here it would be quite certain that no judgment could be given awarding the town land under water in Gravesend bay as it could not be determined where the starting point or creek adjoining Ooney Island was located.

Evidently the judgment above referred to was not acquiesced in by the town, for Jansen again complained that his rights were being interfered with by the people of Gravesend and a commission was appointed to examine into the boundary question which resulted in an order being made directing the survey of Anthony Jansen’s land and the drawing of a line from the mouth of the kill to the easternmost part of Anthony Jansen’s line. This was not along the shore front but inside and aloug the creek. Another judgment was given in council dated August 29, 1656 determining the boundaries as theretofore settled and as above stated. Even then the dispute was 'not terminated as in 1669 Francis Brown, Jansen’s successor in title, and the inhabitants of Gravesend submitted their differences over the boundary to the governor before whom it was claimed by the township that their western boundary in the grant from Governor Kieft “ begin at the mouth of a smale creeke on Ooney Island whence a line being drawne north and by east to Anthony Janssen land it doth fully comprehend within it the meadow ground or valley in dispute.”

In reply to this claim it was stated: “ Neither doth it fully appear (if allowed) which is the Houth of the Creeke upon Coney Island from whence their lines is to be stretched, [207]*207other Creekes appearing, which may more probably bee given the denomination of Creeks, then that which they so much urge and if so then their pretensions by that westerly line are cutt off.”

The decision upon this hearing was rendered on the 23rd of August, 1669, to the effect that both parties should enjoy a portion of this neck or meadow in dispute, unless, thinking themselves aggrieved, they sue for redress at the next Court of Assizes. The parties resorted to litigation where a verdict for Brown, the defendant in the suit, was set aside. Evidently intending, to end all further questionings and litigations the inhabitants of Gravesend and Francis Brown on the 29th day of April, 1670, entered into an agreement regarding this neck of land, running the town line up through the creek but giving the inhabitants of the town the right to pass over the neck of land to reach the bay for fishing and fowling purposes.

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Bluebook (online)
78 Misc. 203, 137 N.Y.S. 919, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/somerville-v-city-of-new-york-nysupct-1912.