Town of Hempstead v. Lawrence

147 A.D. 624, 132 N.Y.S. 615, 1911 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2931
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 147 A.D. 624 (Town of Hempstead v. Lawrence) 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. Lawrence, 147 A.D. 624, 132 N.Y.S. 615, 1911 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2931 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Woodward, J.:

The plaintiff brings this action to .establish its title 'to a strip of beach land along the shore of the Atlantic ocean, and being the extreme southerly portion of the township. This property [625]*625is a strip of sandy outer beach about three and one-half miles in length, and about 1,760 feet wide at its easterly extremity, and of substantial width throughout its entire length. This parcel of land is separated from the mainland, known as Hicks beach, by a shallow channel, and is bounded on the south by the Atlantic ocean. Eastward of Hicks beach is a body of water forming a portion of Hempstead bay, known as Broad channel, The premises in dispute are within the lateral boundaries of the lands, meadows, marshes, waters and beaches Which were granted to the freeholders. and inhabitants of the town of Hempstead by royal patent, executed by Thomas Dongan, Lieutenant-Governor of New York, and dated April 17, 1685. Prior to.the year 1870 a strip of sandy beach extended along the southerly line of the town of Hempstead, bounded southerly by the Atlantic ocean, from a point easterly of the premises described in the complaint to a point westerly thereof. In the month of April, '1870, a new inlet, then known as Deb’s inlet and subsequently known as Hog island or East Eockaway inlet, broke through from Hempstead bay to the Atlantic ocean at a point to the east of the easterly line of the premises described in the complaint. This inlet, at first very shallow, soon reached a considerable depth and became navigable both in fact and in law, being.used for ingress and egress from the ‘ cove which separated the beach, from the mainland. This inlet, in effect a river in which the tide ebbed and flowed between the Atlantic ocean and the cove, did not remain fixed, but gradually moved to the westward at an average rate, as appears from the testimony, of about 400 feet each year. This inlet or river appears- to have been practically one-half mile wide, with a channel ranging in depth from 3 to 7 feet at varying tides and about 500 feet wide, so that the inlet or-river in its progress to the west cut a channel of several feet in depth across this outer beach and opened it to navigation. With this movement of the channel to the west there came a gradual accretion to the easterly shore, and the evidence indicates clearly that this accretion,, following the westerly drifting of the channel, formed a considerable distance to the south or ocean side of the former location of the outer beach, though over[626]*626lapping- the same to some extent, and the plaintiff claims that this accretion belongs to the town of Hempstead as the owner of the lands to which -the changing sands of the inlet attached, even though the location covers some of the area originally covered by the defendant’s land.. The learned court at Special Term has dismissed the complaint upon the merits (70 Misc. Rep. 52), and the plaintiff appeals to this court. In the process of time there was a moment when the plaintiff owned the eastern bank of the inlet or river while the defendant .or his predecessor in title owned the western bank of the inlet or river, and the evidence in this case shows that this inlet or river has gradually and with imperceptible movement proceeded to the westward, while a corresponding shore line has emerged to the eastward, the channel of half a 'mile in width, 500 feet of it being open to practical navigation for small craft, intervening at all times. Angelí on Watercourses (§ 57) quotes Blackstone to the effect that if a river by degrees gains upon the land of a person on one side and thereby leaves the other dry, the owner who loses his ground thus imperceptibly has no remedy. The same author continues: A river ran between two lordships, and the soil of one side, together with the river, entirely belonged to one of the lordships; and the river, by very slow degrees, did encroach upon the soil of the opposite lordship; but so very deliberately, that it was impossible- to perceive an immediate alteration; therefore, by. this imperceptible increase,-the land relicted became the property of the first lord. But if the river, by-a sudden and unusual flood, had gained hastily a great parcel of the other lord’s ground, he should still be entitled to the same.”

In the case at bar ah inlet or river is formed upon, the land of the town of Hempstead; it is a natural waterway in which the tide ebbs and flows, and by imperceptible erosions on the one side and accretions on the -other, the land of the defendant to the westward is shifted and made to attach itself to the lands of the town of Hempstead on the east, and if the land of one lordship could be transferred to. the other by this same process, we see no reason why the same result should not follow here; It is true, of course, in the case at bar that' the evidence does not show an imperceptible change, in the sense that the change [627]*627could not be discovered at short intervals of time, but there is no evidence in the case which tends to show that any one could discover changes at the time they were being made, or that they could discover them at periods of a few days; the evidence is practically undisputed that intervals of weeks and months were necessary to show the changes, and that the movement has been at the rate of about 400 feet per year. In the leading case of King v. Lord Yarborough (3 B. & C. 91), which dealt with a tidewater ease, two passages were cited from Hale’s De Jure Maris in behalf of the crown, where the writer speaks of land gained by alluvion as belonging generally to the crown, unless the gain be so insensible that it cannot by any means, according to the words of one of the passages, or by any limits or marks, according to the words of the other passage, be found that the sea was there. This led to a discussion of the meaning of the word “ imperceptible,” and the court, speaking by Abbott, C. J., say: “In these passages, however, Sir Matthew Hale is speaking of the legal consequence of such an accretion, and does not explain what ought to be considered as accretion insensible or imperceptible in itself, but considers that as being insensible, of which it cannot be said with certainty that the sea ever was there. An accretion extremely minute, so minute as to be imperceptible even by known antecedent marks or limits at the end of four or five years, may become, by gradual increase, perceptible by such marks or limits at the end of a century, or even of forty or fifty years. For it is to be remembered that if the limit on one side be land, or something growing or placed thereon, as a tree, a house, or a bank, the limit on the other side will be the sea, which rises to a height varying almost at every tide, and of which the variations do not depend merely upon the ordinary course of nature at fixed and ascertained periods, but in part also, upon the strength and direction of the wind, which are different almost from day to day. And therefore, these passages from the work of Sir Matthew Hale are not properly applicable to this question. And considering the word imperceptible-’ in this issue, as connected with the words slow and gradual,’ we think it must be understood as expressive only of the- manner of the accretion, as the other words undoubtedly [628]*628are, and as meaning imperceptible in its progress, not imperceptible after a long lapse of time.” So Angell on TideWaters (1st ed.

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Bluebook (online)
147 A.D. 624, 132 N.Y.S. 615, 1911 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2931, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-hempstead-v-lawrence-nyappdiv-1911.