Town of Hempstead v. City of New York

52 A.D. 182, 65 N.Y.S. 14
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 52 A.D. 182 (Town of Hempstead v. City of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Hempstead v. City of New York, 52 A.D. 182, 65 N.Y.S. 14 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Goodrich, P. J.:

An act became a law on April 22,1898 (Chap. 469), entitled “ An act to protect navigation in certain tidewaters within ■ the state of Hew York,” the 1st section of which reads as follows :

“ Section 1. Whenever a municipal corporation shall divert, or cause to be diverted, the water, or a portion thereof, of a fresh water stream or streams outside the limits of an incorporated city flowing into a tidewater creek or estuary, which tidewater creek or estuary before such diversion was navigable for vessels of twenty or more tons burthen, it shall be the duty of the corporation so diverting, or causing to be diverted, such stream or streams of fresh water, to keep said navigable tidewater creek or estuary deepened to the depth of at least three feet at low' water mark from its mouth to the head of tidewater for the full natural width of said creek, and to maintain such navigable depth of water at all times.”

The 2d section provides that the officials óf any. town wherein the tidewater creek or estuary is located may serve notice on the municipal corporation “ so diverting water from the stream of fresh water * * - of the fact of such tidewater creek or estuary not being maintained at the depth and width herein provided for, and the said municipal corporation shall within fifteen days thereafter, by dredging or otherwise, restore such navigable stream to the depth, as specified by this act; and it shall not be lawful for such corporation to continue the diversion of any such fresh water stream, after said fifteen days have expired from the time of serving such notice until the tidewater creek or estuary into which any such stream flows shall have been deepened to the required depth and width.”

Section 4 provides that at the expiration of said fifteen days application may be made “ to the supreme court for an injunction restraining said municipal corporation from diverting any fresh water from the stream or streams above until such tidewater creek or estuary shall have been put into tlie'proper condition as to depth •and width herein provided for.”

Section-6 reads: “Any corporation or individual continuing to divert water from such fresh water stream without maintaining the navigable depth of the tidewater creek or estuary into which it flows, as herein provided for, shall be liable to a penalty of fifty dollars per day for each and every day such diversion is continued, computing [184]*184from the expiration of fifteen days after notice is given as provided in section two, which penalty may he sued for and'recovered by such supervise!’ or village president in the name of the town or village in which such tidewater creek is so located, and the-amount recovered shall be paid .into the treasury of such town or village.”

This action was brought to recover the penalties, provided by said act, accruing between July 27 and November 22, 189-8. It was referred to John R. Reid, Esq., who reported in favor of the plaintiff; and the defendant appeals from.the judgment entered thereon.

The referee found, as matter of fact, that the defendant had diverted or caused to be diverted a portion of the water of East Meadow brook and Freeport brook ;■ that such diversion of the water or a portion thereof occurred after the passage of the act and continued up to November 22,1898 ; that said brooks were fresh-water streams flowing naturally into the Freeport creek which is a tidewater creek or estuary and before such diversion was navigable for vessels of twenty or more tons burthen; that notice of such diversion, in accordance with the act, was on July twelfth duly served on the mayor of the defendant; and that from the time of such service,, up to November. twenty-second, Freeport creek was not maintained "at the depth of at least three feet at low-water mark, from its mouth to the head of tidewater, for the natural width of said creek.

The plaintiff’s contention, briefly stated, is that it was necessary only to prove that.the city, after the passage of the act, by structures in use before such act, continued to divert from fresh-water stream's waters which otherwise would have flowed into Freeport, creek; that said creek at any time before such diversion was navigable for vessels of twenty or more tons burden ; that notice thereof was served on the defendant, and that the creek within fifteen days thereafter was not, by dredging or otherwise, put into and maintained at the depth of a-t least three feet at low water from its mouth to the head of tidewater and for the full natural width of said-creek.

The defendant contends that the action is not within the scope of the act, which relates to future means of diversion and was designed to protect or conserve some condition of navigation existing at the time of its passage, and not to restore such navigability as might [185]*185have existed previously. This brings us to a more detailed statement of facts not fully found by the referee.

The Nassau Water Company was incorporated by chapter 333 of the Laws of 1855, which provided that for the purpose of supplying the city of Brooklyn with water the company, upon making compensation therefor, either by voluntary arrangement or by condemnation proceedings, might enter upon lands and take water from any streams or other sources, and divert and convey the same to said city, laying conduits or other works or machinery necessary for that purpose. In 1858, this company commenced proceedings to condemn lands and ponds in the town of Hempstead, in which commissioners awarded to the town certain damages for the use and the right of the water and streams running to and proposed to be diverted by said works, as shown by maps * * It was conceded at the trial that the proceedings related to the fresh-water brooks in question in these condemnation proceedings. The city of Brooklyn succeeded to the rights of the Nassau Water Company, under chapter 22, Laws of 1851, and the city of New York' to the rights of Brooklyn, under the Greater New York charter.

By its charter (Chap. 583, Laws of 1888) the city of Brooklyn was authorized, for the purpose of extending the water works, to take water from any streams or other sources and to divert and convey the same to the city, and to lay and construct pipes, conduits or other machinery necessary or proper therefor, and to take proceedings for the condemnation of such land or water. Under this act the city constructed pipes, conduits and other structures, by which water from the two brooks was conducted to the city. There is no evidence to show that any act has been done by either municipality to change the condition of the water diversion since the construction of the conduit in 1890. The plaintiff also conceded that Freeport creek had not three feet of water, at low water, from its mouth to the head of tidewater,, prior to 1890, when the defendant’s conduit,, by which the plaintiff claims that the fresh waters are diverted, was constructed.

In construing this statute we must seek the intention of the Legis-. lature. From previous statutes we may assume that the Legislature was generally familiar with the fact that much of the water supply of the city of Brooklyn was taken from the locality in ques[186]*186tian through conduits and other extensive structures which had been in existence for many years, and that this supply was decreasing the .natural flow of fresh water in that vicinity. The liability of the city for damages occasioned thereby to property owners had ■been the subject of litigation, as in Smith v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 A.D. 182, 65 N.Y.S. 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-hempstead-v-city-of-new-york-nyappdiv-1900.