State v. Case

86 Misc. 43
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1976
StatusPublished

This text of 86 Misc. 43 (State v. Case) 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
State v. Case, 86 Misc. 43 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1976).

Opinion

Howard A. Zeller, J.

The Erie Canal connecting the Hudson River at Albany with Lake Erie at Buffalo was completed in 1825.1 Along its 363-mile length was a path on one bank or berm upon which teams of mules and horses trod pulling and towing scows, boats, bullheads and packets. A controversy exists as to the ownership and right to use approximately one mile of this former towpath. The canal lands from Dewitt, near Syracuse, to Rome were recently set aside for and designated as public park and recreation areas under the jurisdiction of the State Office of Parks and Recreation and the old towpath now is used by hikers, bicycle riders, fishermen and snowmobile operators. Defendants own parcels of real property in the Town of Sullivan, Madison County, abutting a portion of the Canal lands.

Plaintiff State of New York seeks a judgment declaring that title to these canal lands is vested in the State and that [45]*45defendants have no right, title or interest therein nor any right to maintain encroachments thereon or to go on or use the same except in compliance with the laws, rules and regulations pertaining thereto. The State asks that defendants be permanently enjoined from erecting, using or maintaining any private structure upon these canal lands and be directed to remove any structures encroaching upon such lands. The State also requests defendants be permanently enjoined from going on or using these canal lands for their own private purposes and from continuing any such use by them heretofore made in derogation of or as might interfere with the rights of the State and of the public in these lands.

Defendants’ answers admit their use of the towpath for their private purposes and assert these canal lands were used by their predecessors in title and by the public generally as a public way. Defendants claim such private use of the towpath long anteceded the establishment by maps of the State’s rights in and to the lands within the "Blue Line” and that thus they have acquired the prescriptive right to continue to use the towpath for their own private purposes; and they assert the State is equitably estopped from prohibiting or limiting these uses because of defendants’ "economic necessity”.

On appeal in this action from an order of the Supreme Court, Special Term, entered in Madison County in 1973 denying plaintiffs motion for summary judgment, the Supreme Court, Appellate Division affirmed (45 AD2d 779), but stated plaintiff was correct that adverse possession cannot be used against the State, citing Smith v People (9 AD2d 205). However, the Appellate Division then wrote: "plaintiff also seeks injunctive relief to enjoin the defendants 'from going on and utilizing the said lands for their own purposes’ and to compel the removal 'from the said lands all buildings [and] structures * * * encroaching upon or interfering’ with the subject land. Whether the plaintiff is entitled to this relief against any or all of the defendants cannot be decided on the instant record. There are presented issues as to title and defendants’ possible rights of use of the land involved which must be explored at a plenary trial.” (45 AD2d 779).

A plenary trial was held.

The lands involved are owned separately by defendants and together constitute a roughly triangular tract bordered on the west and south by Erie Canal lands and easterly by Chittenango Creek. The tract is bordered on the north by McGraw [46]*46Road. From south to north, the individually owned parcels belong to Button, Brownell, Tierney and Case. The Case property has frontage on McGraw Road.

Defendant Button owns four acres of unimproved land which he uses for recreational purposes only and gains access to it by walking over the towpath. There is no public roadway to this property. A quitclaim deed to him recites the land is bounded "on the south by Erie Canal”. Defendant Brownell’s 20 acres of bare land are not accessible by public highway and he has used the towpath to haul top soil from his acreage. The deed to him sets a line along the canal lands with a line point in the "toe of Berm Bank of the enlarged Erie Canal”, and refers to both the Blue Line and Map Sheet No. 377 (1927 survey).

Peter Tierney, predecessor in title to defendant Tierney, was grantee in a 1906 deed which refers to a line point as being a "stake on tow-path of Erie Canal * * * thence on tow-path” to a point. Earlier deeds in this chain of title recite the line to be the towing path of the Erie Canal before enlargement or "the line of said canal”.2 The "enlargement” was a sovereign taking. The Tierney family has farmed their 125 acres as a single farm, 75 acres of which, with the family residence, is on the westerly side of the Erie Canal and 50 acres is on the easterly side. The 50 acres are not accessible by public highway and the Tierneys have always gotten to it by using the towpath.

Defendant Case’s grandfather, Archibald D. Case, acquired the Case farm in 1904 by deed which recites the Blue Line as its westerly boundary. He had had previous experience with the significance of the Blue Line as marking the bounds of canal lands. In 1900 he had been served a notice of permanent appropriation of other lands of his, and a map,3 to increase the Blue Line bounds. The Case farm consists of five parcels. The residence and two of the parcels are located on Bolivar Road to the west of the canal and are not here involved. The other parcels are to the east of the canal and do have frontage on a public highway. The Case barn is mostly situated on one of the parcels east of the canal although some 13.9 to 16.4 feet of the barn and a silo are actually located within the Blue Line [47]*47of the Erie Canal. This barn has been there since 1882, has been used for farm purposes and is now used for storing hay and keeping a pony and some riding horses. The towpath is used about 30 days a year to get to the barn.

The Central New York State Park extends from Dewitt to Rome with the towpath as the main part designated for recreational use. It is barricaded at various places to prevent vehicles from using the towpath. A fence was erected by the Park Commission with a gate east of Bolivar Road and on a temporary basis defendants Case, Tierney and Brownell have been given keys to the gate to allow them to open the gate and to move farm vehicles and equipment over the towpath to their properties.

The concept of and the State’s title to the lands constituting the old Erie Canal dates back to the enactment of chapter 262 of the Laws of 1817 (See, also, L 1816, ch 237).4 Subdivision 13 of section 2 of the Canal Law states " 'Blue Line’ shall mean the boundary of canal lands owned by the state previous to the approval of chapter one hundred forty-seven, laws of nineteen hundred three”. Subdivision 14 states " 'Old Canal Lands’ shall mean canal lands lying within the blue line”. The canal lands in this present litigation are "Old Canal Lands”, as "enlarged” prior to 1903, and first came into active use in 1820 when the Erie Canal opened to navigation between Utica and Rochester.5

A survey of the subject area of the canal lands was made for the State in October, 1975. The Blue Line as shown on the 1975 survey maps was based upon a prior State survey made in 1927, and recorded maps and on monuments found on the properties. This Blue Line established by the 1927 and 1975 maps conclusively demarcates the common bounds of the State’s and defendants’ lands.

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Bluebook (online)
86 Misc. 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-case-nysupct-1976.