The Stella B.

183 F. 507, 1910 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 106
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 15, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 183 F. 507 (The Stella B.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Stella B., 183 F. 507, 1910 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 106 (E.D.N.Y. 1910).

Opinion

CHATFIRLD, District Judge.

The power boat Stella B, on July 30, 1908, was being operated upon a portion of the waters of what is generally known as Great South Bay, or one of the navigable arms thereof, and did not comply with the provisions of Act June 7, 1897, c. 4, 30 Stat. 96 (U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 2875), requiring the maintenance of a red port light, a green starboard light, and a white masthead light placed and constructed according to the provisions of the statute. On the other hand, the boat did comply with the local and town ordinances and rules (if any there be) of the township of Huntington, within, whose limits it was at the time. The United States has filed a libel for the statutory penalty upon the assumption that the boat was subject to the law of Congress referred to, and has alleged that it was upon an arm of the sea capable of being used for interstate commerce, and within the admiralty jurisdiction of the United States.

The contention of the claimant is that the statute relied upon has no application, and that the United States has no jurisdiction, inasmuch as the town of Huntington received by charter from the Governor of the colony of New York, under the crown of England, title to all of the territory, including the locality in question, both land and water, and the various rights to and uses of that land and water, which patent or charter, by authority of James, Duke of York, dated November 30, 1666, and signed and sealed by Richard Nicoll, as Governor General, later confirmed on the 2d of August, 1688, by GoV. Dongan, under the authority of James II, king of England, and again on the 5th of October, 1694, confirmed by Benj. Fletcher, under the authority of William and Mary, king and queen of England, was recognized and confirmed by an act of the colonial Legislature on the 6th of May, 1691. The claimant alleges that the treaty of peace between Great Britain and the United States at the close of the Revolution confirmed these grants of land to the town of Hunting[509]*509ton, and that the various Constitutions of the state of New York, in the years 1777, 1821, 1846, and 1894, have provided, that all grants made by authority of the king of Great Britain or his predecessors, or charters to bodies politic or corporate, by him or persons acting with his authority, shall be valid and not affected by any of the provisions of said constitutions, if said charters were made prior to October, 1775.

The charter granted by Gov. Nicolls gave not only property rights, but certain corporate or political franchises. It conveys certain lands, described by boundaries, with all ‘'Havens Harbours Creekes Quarryes Woodland Meadowes Pastures hlarshes Waters Lakes ffishing Hawking Hunting and Fowling And all other Proffitts, Commodityes, Emolumts, and Hereditamts * * * To have & to hold the said Lands and Necks of Lands Hereditamts and prmisses with' their and every of their Appurtenances and of every Part & Parcell thereof to the said Patentees and their Associates their Heires Successors aud Assignes forever.” This conveyed the property and rights in the property itself.

But the charter also confirmed and granted unto the said patentees and their associates, their heirs, successors and assigns, “all the Priviledges belonging to a Towne within this Governmt and that the Place of their prsent Habitacon shall continue and retaine the Name of Huntington.”

The charter of Gov. Dongan confirmed the first tinder substantially the same description, but provided for the creation of a body known as the “trustees of the freeholders and commonalty of the town of Huntington,” with perpetual succession.

The third charter, from Gov. Fletcher, is again confirmatory of the two previous charters, and makes some changes in the boundaries, but has no bearing upon the question with which we have to deal.

These charters and the political rights granted thereby are referred to in the case of Lowndes v. Huntington, 153 U. S. 1, 14 Sup. Ct. 758, 38 L. Ed. 615. The particular question before the court in that case was as to the boundaries of the grants under these various charters, and as to whether a certain bay, known as Huntington Bay, ivas included within the properties and rights given to the town of Huntington. The court affirmed the decision of the court below, holding that the plaintiff, the town, was entitled to eject the defendant from the lands determined to be within the grants of these various charters, and also held (page 19 of 153 U. S., 14 Sup. Ct. 758, 38 L. Ed. 615) that the recognized rules of real property, both as to the rights attaching to certain lands within the territorial limits of the state and the extent and purposes to and for which the state might give the title and control of submerged lands, depended upon the settled law of the state. The law of the state, as to the extent of the rights given under these charters, is so thoroughly discussed, and the various cases referred to, in the opinion of Chief Justice Parker in People ex rel. Howell v. Jessup, 160 N. Y. 249, 54 N. E. 682, that they need not be discussed here. The Jessup Case decided that the title to the lands under water and the right of possession and control of [510]*510the waters in question were in the trustees of the town, “who had the right in their sovereign character to do in the discharge of then-trust precisely what their predecessor sovereign could have done, or what the state, had it, instead of the town, succeeded to the title and rights of the English government, might have done, or may yet do, shall it hereafter so succeed, by an exercise of its right of eminent domain.” But the court says (page 202 of 160 N. Y., page 686 of 54 N. E.), where it refers to the various cases in the Court of Appeals of New York upon the terms of these various charters, that “the trustees were invested with the power of management and authorized to perform such acts and make such orders, not repugnant to the laws of England, as they might see fit.” The court took into consideration the proposition that a grant of land under water by the king "to private individuals did not include the right of navigation (which rested in the crown with Parliament), but did include all conveyable rights expressly given by the grant, and that since the Revolution the states of this Union have succeeded to the rights of both crown and Parliament in navigable waters as well as in the soil, subject only to such charters as had been previously given. The court quotes the language of Chief Justice Taney from the case of Martin v. Waddell, 16 Pet. 412, 10 L. Ed. 997, where he says as to a similar charter:

“It is not a deed conveying private property, to be interpreted by the rules applicable to cases of that description. It was an instrument upon which was to be founded the institutions of a great political community; and in that light it should be regarded and construed.”

And the Court of Appeals says:

“We could, guided by this rule alone, quite readily reach the conehision that the letters patent were broad enough in terms to grant to the trustees of the freeholders and commonalty of the town of Southampton not only lands under the waters, but the sovereignty over the waters itself for the benefit of the freeholders and inhabitants of the town, to such extent at least as would enable them to authorize such a construction as that involved in this action.”

The construction involved in that action was the maintenance of a bridge over waters held by the court not to be navigable.

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Related

Martin v. Lessee of Waddell
41 U.S. 367 (Supreme Court, 1842)
Lowndes v. Huntington
153 U.S. 1 (Supreme Court, 1894)
Kerr v. . W.S.R.R. Co.
27 N.E. 833 (New York Court of Appeals, 1891)
Lewis Blue Point Oyster Cultivation Co. v. Briggs
91 N.E. 846 (New York Court of Appeals, 1910)
People Ex Rel. Howell v. . Jessup
54 N.E. 682 (New York Court of Appeals, 1899)

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Bluebook (online)
183 F. 507, 1910 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-stella-b-nyed-1910.