Starr v. Child

20 Wend. 149
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1838
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 20 Wend. 149 (Starr v. Child) 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
Starr v. Child, 20 Wend. 149 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1838).

Opinion

By the Court, Co wen, J.

The counsel for the plaintiffs adverted on the argument to the evident purpose for which this lot, No. 12, with other lots, were laid out along the river, among the original proprietors. He insisted, that granting them as water-lots looked to the enjoyment of hydraulic privileges ; and it would, no doubt, be strange, that after deliberately arranging and conveying lots for such an object, the law should cut off the purchasers from the river, by a puzzledom to be raised on a few equivocal words in the grant.

But there is no necessity for looking to extrinsic circumstances. There can be no question, that the deeds to Cobb Sc Morgan, on ' their face, invested them with a fee simple in the bank of the river. The south line runs about 42 feet to the Genesee.river, thence northwardly, along the shore of the said river to Buffalo-street; and it is insisted by the counsel for the defendants, that these latter words are so strong, as to subvert the plain meaning of the former words to the river, and tie up the grant to the shore. But suppose we were to expunge the words to the river, and take the shore as the boundary : the grantees became-proprietors of the shore; which when applied to a fresh water river, means the bank. Johns. Dic. quarto. Shore and bank, signifies the earth arising on each side of the water. Id. Bank. And then, says Sir John Leach, V. C., Wright v. Howard, 1 Sim. & Stu. 203, "Prima facie, the proprietor of each bank of a stream, is the proprietor of half the land covered by the stream." The bank and the water are correlative. You cannot own one without touching the other. But the bank is the principal object; and when the law once fixes the proprietorship of that, the soil of the river follows as an incident, or rather as a part of the subject matter, usque filum aquce. Lord Hale puts it that fresh rivers do, of common right, belong to the owners of the soil adjacent. De Jure Maris, ch. 1. 6 Cowen, 537. The law does not stop to criticise the words by which a man is made owner : it enquires, Is he the shore owner 1 If that be so, he [153]*153touches the water. Per Marshall, C. J. in Handly's lessee v. Anthony, 5 Wheat. 385. It is conceded that the words to and along the river, would include the'stream. What difference, I ask, between that and to and along the shorel A difference of words signifying the same thing. In either case, taken literally, and according to common understanding, they carry you to a line intermediate the water and the land, and touching both. How do they take more l Upon construction of law, which does not require express words for the grant of every part, as houses, fences, mines, or the elements of water, or air, which all pass by the word land; and, as a grant of land by certain boundaries, prima facie psases all such parts to the grantee, usque ad ceelum et ad infernos: so, within the same principle, it passes the adjoining fresh water stream, usque ad filum aqua. The passing of the one kind may just as well be questioned as another, not only in the eye of the law, but of common sense and reason. Within the first maxim it is said, one shall not build so as to overhang another’s premises, darken his lights, or confine the air ; and surely it, would be more absurd for the law to give a man the shore or side of a fresh water river 3 and yet, by saving the bed to the grantor, make the owner of the land a trespasser, every time he should slake his thirst or wash Ms hands in the stream. In Gavit’s administrators v. Chambers, 3 Ohio Rep. 495, a case by which the supreme court of the state of Ohio adopted the doctrines of Lord Hale, they say,te a river consists of water, bed and banks.” By running up or down, or along either, therefore, you touch the river within this case. I have said that along the shore is the same thing. I admit it is not critically correct to say the shore of a river. The term belongs in its strict sense to the ocean. Dr. Johnson says, it applies to a river only in a secondary, or, as he calls it, a licentious sense. “ Beside the fruitful shore of muddy Nile.” Johns. Dict. 4to. Shore. Yet, it is sometimes so applied in legal proceedings. The compact between Virginia and Kentucky speaks of the shores of the Ohio ; which word shores was treated by C. J. Marshall, in Handly's lessee v. Anthony, as the same with side or bank. We know it means the same in common understanding [154]*154among us, which must govern in the construction of a conveyance.

It is true that parts of the thing may be excluded, or excepted from the grant, or may exist in separate hands by prescription ; or they may be granted by name together with the land ; but in no case does the mere omission to mention them operate as an exclusion. No matter how particularly the area of the land may be described ; no matter how definitely bounded, it will carry every part, whether above, below, or collateral. That this rule in respect to the soil of fresh wat^r rivers has long practically prevailed, may be seen in the books and authorities which I collated in 6 Cowen, 543 to 551. It follows, also, I think, conclusively from the cases there cited, that if there be an exception or exclusion of the part, the burthen of showing that, lies on the side of the party who affirms it. The exception is to be raised like that to the right of using a stream running across another’s farm. It may be expressly reserved for the grantor’s mill below, or there may be an adverse user of twenty years, &c. all of which is very fully considered in many cases. There is but one difference between a stream running by the side of a man’s farm and one which runs through it ; in the former case he of course owns but half, and in the latter the whole of the ground covered by the stream. In Gavitfs administrators v. Chambers, the plaintiffs had taken possession of the bed of the Sandusky river, built a mill, and sued the defendants for building below and flowing back the water upon the mill. The defendants denied that the plaintiffs owned the bed of the stream ; for they claimed under a conveyance from the United States bounding them on the bank ; and, indeed, the area of the river to high water mark was deducted by the United States, "and only lands on the shores paid for. Yet the bed of the stream was held to pass. Here was every thing but an express exception by the United States. They had included the river in their surveys ; but deducted the bed from the price and bounded the patentee on the banks. Yet what say the court'? They ask, “ at what point does the right of the owner of the adj oining lands terminate1? on the top or at the bottom [155]

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Bluebook (online)
20 Wend. 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/starr-v-child-nysupct-1838.