Town of Babylon v. . Darling

100 N.E. 727, 207 N.Y. 651, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 1445
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 31, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 100 N.E. 727 (Town of Babylon v. . Darling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Babylon v. . Darling, 100 N.E. 727, 207 N.Y. 651, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 1445 (N.Y. 1912).

Opinion

*652 Collin, J.

The town of Babylon seeks by this action to establish its ownership of the lands under the waters of Great South Bay within Long Island, between the western line, within the bay, of the town of Brookhaven and a line extending from Sampawams Point southerly across the bay. The action was against the defendant as a trespasser for taking clams from those lands. The decision of the trial court, that the title to the lands was not in the plaintiff, but was in the state of New York, was unanimously affirmed by the Appellate Division. The appellant asserts that the findings of fact of the trial court compel the reverse decision.

The appellant finds the title it asserts in the patent granted in 1666 unto the town of Huntington by Richard Nicolls, the colonial governor, and known as The Nicolls Patent.” It granted to the town the land from a certaine river or creeke on the West Com’only called by the Indyans by the name of Nackaquatck and by the English the Cold Spring, to stretch eastward to Nassaquack River; on the North to bee bounded by the Sound running betwixt Long Island and the Maine; and on ye South by ye sea, including there nine several necks of Meadow Ground.” This patent was confirmed by the royal patent of 1688, known as the Dongan patent.

The appellant was created in 1812, from the town of Huntington, by an act of the legislature, and all the property, interests or rights which the town of Huntington had in the Great South Bay east of a line drawn south from Sampawams Point to the Atlantic Ocean was vested in it. The western boundary line of the grant by the Nicolls patent is not in dispute, and is several miles west of a north and south line through Sampawams Point. The Nassaquack River (now the Nissaquoque River), named by the grant as an easterly boundary, flows northerly and empties into Long Island Sound. Its source is approximately equidistant from the sound and the northern shore of the bay. Obviously, therefore,' the easterly boundary of the granted lands from the source of the Nassaquack River southerly to the Atlantic Ocean was not *653 fixed by the Nicolls and Dongan patents, except in so far as the words “including there nine several necks of Meadow Ground ” may effect that result. Such fact is the source of this litigation.

In 1694 a third royal patent, known as the Fletcher patent, was executed. to the town of Huntington. While this patent is not included in the findings of the court it is within the record, and is asserted and used by both of the parties as a found fact. Moreover, undisputed facts may be considered for the purpose of upholding the judgment. (Dyke v. Spargur, 143 N. Y. 651.) The Fletcher patent gave, granted, ratified and confirmed unto the town of Huntington the land bounded on the south, west and north as described in the Nicolls and Dongan patents, “ and on the east by a line running from the west side of a pond called and known by the name of Freshpond to the west side of Whitman’s dale or hollow, and from thence to a river on the south side of our said Island of Nassau on the east side of a neck called Sampawams, and from the said river, running south to the said South Sea.” The east boundary was, therefore, a line running from the sound southerly to the east side of Sampawams Neck or Point and thence to the Atlantic Ocean. The trial court found that subsequent to the year 1757 the town of Huntington, and the town of Babylon subsequent to its creation in 1872, claimed and exercised certain rights over the waters of the bay and islands within and lands thereunder east of the line running south from Sampawams Point, but as those findings are not inconsistent with or contradictory of the finding that “the eastern boundary of the Town of Babylon as to the land under water in the Great South Bay is a line running south from the easterly side of Sampawams Point” they do not invalidate the conclusion of law that the land under the waters of the bay east of the line south from the easterly side of Sampawams and west of the town of Brookhaven or the ranges is in the state of New York. The question for our determination is: Did the Nicolls and Dongan patents grant to the town of Huntington *654 any part of such lands ? It requires no discussion to uphold the conclusion that the Fletcher patent did not divest ownership vested by the earlier patents.

The appellant asserts that those patents did include that land and that the Fletcher patent operated only to constrict the municipal and civil jurisdiction of the town.

We have stated that under the earlier patents there was no eastern boundary of the grant from the source of the Nassaquack River south to the Atlantic shore. In September, 1675, a judgment was rendered in an action in which Richard Smith was the plaintiff “ that the land in question between Nassaquack River westward at Whitman’s Hollow, and so to the fresh ponds, doth of right belong unto him (Richard Smith) and he is to be put in possession of the same.” The judgment further provided: “However the said lands to bee within the jurisdiction of Huntington, as within their patent, though the property adjudged to the plaintiff.” The land thus adjudged to Smith extended west from the Nassaquack River to Freshpond, the northern end of the east boundary line in the Fletcher patent, and to Whitman’s dale or hollow by the west side of which that line ran.

The Fletcher patent recited at length the Nicolls patent and that certain named persons “in behalf of themselves and the rest of our loving subjects, the freeholders and inhabitants of our said town of Huntington, have by petition * * * prayed our grant and confirmation of the premises, so only as that the limits and bounds of the said town of Huntington shall not be as above mentioned, but as hereafter expressed — that is to say ” as in the description we have already referred to from the patent. The recital was followed by the granting clause as follows:

“We have given, granted, ratified and confirmed, and by these presents do for us, our heirs and successors, give, grant, ratify and confirm unto the said Joseph Bayly, Thomas Wickes, Jonas Wood, John Wood, John Wickes, Thomas Brush, and John Adams, Freeholders and Inhabit *655

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Related

O'Brien v. Town of Huntington
66 A.D.2d 160 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2009)
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199 N.E. 10 (New York Court of Appeals, 1935)
People v. Foote
242 A.D. 162 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1934)
Sammis v. Town of Huntington
186 A.D. 463 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1919)

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Bluebook (online)
100 N.E. 727, 207 N.Y. 651, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 1445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-babylon-v-darling-ny-1912.