Trustees of the Freeholders & Commonalty of Brookhaven v. Smith

80 N.E. 665, 188 N.Y. 74, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 1107
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 12, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by99 cases

This text of 80 N.E. 665 (Trustees of the Freeholders & Commonalty of Brookhaven v. Smith) 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
Trustees of the Freeholders & Commonalty of Brookhaven v. Smith, 80 N.E. 665, 188 N.Y. 74, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 1107 (N.Y. 1907).

Opinions

Gbay, J.

This action is in trespass, for building a pier upon certain lands under water, in the Great South bay; of which the plaintiff, the town of Brookhaven, is seized in fee, under crown grants made by royal governors in the years 1666, 1686 and 1693. The appellant Smith is the owner of a. piece of upland, bounded on high water mark, by title derived under a crown grant made to William FTicoll in 1697. From this upland a pier, built upon piles, extended for about 150 *77 feet into and over the waters of the bay; which was owned and used by Smith and the other defendants for then greater convenience and facility in entering and in leaving their pleasure boats. Post, who is joined with the town as a party plaintiff, is its lessee. I understand that the plaintiffs conceded that the dock, or pier, was suitable enough for the purpose and, regarded, merely, as a structure, unobjectionable, and that their contention is that, Avitliout their consent, the defendants could not erect and maintain it. The defendants claim that, in erecting the pier, they have but lawfully exercised such rights as appertained to their ownership of the upland and as Avere necessary, in order to gain access to navigable waters. The question has been considered and decided below in the light of the rule of the common law of England ; as the same Avas at the time of the grants and as it construed the rights of a riparian' owner. It was held that these grants, having been confirmed by the constitution of this state, constituted contracts,-the obligations of Avhicli the state cannot impair, and that, therefore, they are to be protected to the extent that they would, have been, had “ the Sovereign of Great Britain continued the owner of the soil.” In this view the riparian owner is accorded no right, in the absence of a license therefor, to build anything below high water mark and “ has no higher rights than those of the General Public.” It is contended upon the authorities, and with reason, that so absolute was the character of the crown proprietorship, if the owner of lands in England, upon the tide Avater of the sea, or of navigable rivers, constructed a Avliarf, or a dock, beyond high water mark, his structure, if obstructing the public right of navigation, or the jus publicum, could be abated as a nuisance; or if a mere intrusion upon the jus privatum of the sovereign, as a purpresture, it was, equally, subject to removal at the.pleasure of the crown. (See Gould on Waters, sec. 167; Hale’s de Portibus Maris, 85; Atty. Gen'l v. Richards, 2 Anstr. 603; Shively v. Bowlby, 152 U. S. 1.) It is insisted that this rigid .common-law doctrine, upon the subject of a-riparian owner’s rights, should control *78 our present decision ; notwithstanding that this court has, in several instances, expressed, and quite deliberately, a rule of interpretation, which gives a practical value, or utility, to the riparian owner’s conceded right of access to the navigable part of the body of water in front of his upland. I cannot agree that, in construing these grants of lands under the waters of the bay, we are bound to hold with the doctrine of the common law of England, as to the exclusive nature of the grantee’s possession and as to his right to restrict the enjoyment of the riparian owner’s right of access. The evidence of the common law, so far as it has not been declared in English statutes, we find in decisions of English courts rendered in existing controversies and those decisions wfill be given their due effect here, when the law has not been changed by our statutes; unless new conditions, or a different public policy, demand that the rule contended for be modified by our courts in its application. Different political and geographical conditions may justify modifications and whether common-law rules will be followed strictly by our courts will, necessarily, where no vested rights are actually concerned, depend upon the extent to which they are reasonable and in accord with our public policy and sentiment. In not applying, in all its strictness, the common-law doctrine, as declared by the English courts, this court has only interpreted the rule hi a j aster and more equitable sense and has affected no vested rights. That the town of Brookhaven, under its grants, acquired the title to the particular lands under water of the bay was settled by the decision, in its case against Strong (60 N. Y. 56); but it took and held the thing granted in its corporate political capacity, and as the representative of the crown, or of the colonial government, to be administered for the public good. (De Lancey v. Piepgras, 138 N. Y. 26.) Bponthe organization of the state government, it continued to hold the soil of the bay in that capacity, and, representatively, for the benefit of the membe$/3 of, the community. Whatever its rights acquired by t[te grant, they were and are, nevertheless, subject to the piiBlie *79 rights of navigation and to rights of access of riparian owners.' These rights have ever existed and, with respect to the latter, their nature and extent, when "brought into question in this state, were not necessarily to be measured by English standards. The proprietary rights of the town were, and they must continue to be, subject to what, under the circumstances, is decided to be a reasonable exercise by the riparian owner of his right of access to the navigable waters of the bay. The argument that the measure of .the right of the riparian owner to the use of the foreshore, or land below high-water mark, for purposes of access to the bay, must be' ascertained by reference to what was the rule at common law, at the time of the grants, in my opinion, is unsound. The adoption by the people of this state of such parts of the common law, as were in force on the 20th day of April, 1777, does not compel us to incorporate into our system of jurisprudence principles, which are inapplicable to our circumstances and which are inconsistent with our notions of what a just consideration of those circumstances demands. The common law of England, upon the subject of the rights of riparian owners, has but an imperfect application to the situation in a state like this, with its numerous large navigable bodies of waters, in bays, rivers and inland lakes. (See Brown v. Scofield, 8 Barb. 239; People ex rel. Loomis v. Canal Appraisers, 33 N. Y. 461.) To borrow the language of Judge Bkonsoh, in his opinion in Starr v. Child, (20 Wend. 149), “ no doctrine is better settled than that such portions of the law of England, as are not adapted to our condition, form no part of the law of this state.” Such as were inconsistent with the spirit of our institutions, or had special reference to the physical conditions of a country widely differing from our own, never became a part of our law, upon the organization of this state. (Lowber v. Wells, 13 How. Pr. 456 ; People ex rel. Loomis v. Canal Appraisers, supra.) ■ We have but to consider the position of Great Britain, as an island, with short rivers,'navigable only as far as the tide flows and ebbs, and a reason for the rigidity of the rule early asserted as to the extent

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80 N.E. 665, 188 N.Y. 74, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 1107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trustees-of-the-freeholders-commonalty-of-brookhaven-v-smith-ny-1907.