Trustees of the Freeholders & Commonalty v. Dyett Sand-Lime Brick Co.

75 Misc. 310, 135 N.Y.S. 165
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 75 Misc. 310 (Trustees of the Freeholders & Commonalty v. Dyett Sand-Lime Brick Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court 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 v. Dyett Sand-Lime Brick Co., 75 Misc. 310, 135 N.Y.S. 165 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

Jaycox, J.

The premises in. dispute are a tract of land upon the shore of Port Jefferson bay, in the town of Brook-haven, Suffolk county, H. Y., between the waters of said bay and the cliff. There is no question but the premises in question, and all the lands under the waters of said bay and in the northern part of the town of Brookhaven, became the property of said town under two royal patents or charters known respectively as the Hicolls patent (dated 1660) and the Dongan patent (dated 1686), and a certain deed from the Indians. Roe v. Strong, 107 N. Y. 358; Hand v. Newton, 92 id. 91; Trustees of Brookhaven v. Strong, 60 id. 71. At,a town meeting held September 26, 1672, “it was also voted and agreed upon that George’s Heck shall be laid out to the inhabitants according to every man’s allotment and six pole to lay common all along by the water side for highways.” The evidence, I think, clearly indicates that the premises in question are on George’s Heck. In 1753 it was voted and agreed that the lots laid out on the sound and harbors should extend to the bottom of the cliffs, including the cliffs to the bottom, and that all persons owning said lots should be entitled to the same to that extent. It is not disputed that the land upon this neck, except the beach or space at the foot of the cliffs, is the subject of private ownership. [312]*312The town still owns the lands under the waters of the bay. If the town has not been divested of title by adverse possession or erosion it still owns the land at the foot of the cliffs as the defendant makes no title under the patents.

The evidence as to gathering seaweed upon it is so general in character and so indefinite as to quantity as to amount to practically nothing. The same may be said as to the water fences claimed to have extended from the cliff to the water. Only one witness testified as to them, and he said they were there several years, and apparently cattle only went on the beach when they got out of the lots.

But there is another piece of evidence strongly indicative of adverse possession. In 1885 James Van Brunt, then the owner of the upland, made a lease of two acres of land and the shore, which,, as I understand the description, embraced the premises in suit, to the Bridgeport, and Port Jefferson Steamboat Company. Under' this lease the lessee entered into possession and built a building known as a pavilion for the entertainment of picnic parties or excursions. This building remained upon the premises until 1906, a period of twenty-one years. ' This lease was dated July 1, 1885. On the Yth day of July, 1885, the plaintiffs executed a lease to the same company for " one certain piece of land under water on the west side of Port Jefferson Bay, 'known as California,’ said hereby granted premises to extend into the bay two hundred feet from low-water mark, for the purpose of building a dock, and to include the shore frontage of forty rods in front of their property from high to low water mark.” Although not absolutely clear as to whose property was meant by their property,” still, bearing in mind the purpose for which leased, I think it must be considered as the property of the lessee. The same result is reached' by grammatical construction, as the last antecedent of the pronoun “ their ” is “ the parties of the second part,” the lessee.

This naturally suggests for determination three questions: First. Was the possession under this lease sufficient to constitute adverse possession? Second. Can title be obtained by adverse possession of land held by a municipal corporation for a public purpose? Third• Is the town estopped by [313]*313the description contained in the lease from claiming .title to the premises ?

The building in question was used only in the summer time, and was used as stated above for the entertainment of picnic parties, and was'not used as a residence or for any purpose indicative of permanence of possession. It was used in the manner described for about ten or twelve years at most. Then it was abandoned, and apparently no further use made of it. It was exposed to the elements and was injured by the ice and storms and was in a dilapidated condition during the balance of the time it remained there. I am inclined to the opinion that use of this character and for this period does not constitute adverse possession. A mere annual entry upon another man’s land to cut timber, 'to feed cattle, to hunt or fish, can never give title. Wheeler v. Winn, 53 Penn. St. 122. Occupation of a spot five or six years as a fishing place, is not a possession sufficient for the Statute of Limitations. McCullough v. Wall, 4 Rich. (S. C.) 68. In Wilson v. Blake, 53 Vt. 315, it was held that occupying a sugar place from year to year only for the purpose of making sugar, such place being separated from the homeland hv intervening lands owned by others, is not actual or continuous possession. The most that can be claimed under this class of evidence is only possession for a short time each summer for 'ten or twelve years. Clearly this is not sufficient. If the camp of the lumberman, the hut of the fisherman or the cabin in the sugar bush cannot when occupied occasionally be considered as adequate adverse possession, then this pavilion used for brief periods in the summer for a few years cannot be so considered.

Second. I think it is clear that a municipal corporation cannot be deprived of the title to lands which it holds for public purposes by adverse possession. I do not think that the extent to which the land is used by the public is very material. It is the purpose for which the property is held and not the extent of the use that must determine the character of the title held by the corporation. This land was reserved for highway purposes, and the evidence shows some use of it for that purpose, as far hack as the memory of man [314]*314extends. I do not mean to say that there must not be some use for the purpose for which property is set aside. But, when property is reasonably adapted to the purpose for which it is set aside, is reasonable in amount, and the public avail themselves to some extent of the opportunity to use such property for a highway, it does not matter that such highway is not used as much as some other’ highways are. Its character as a highway is not changed thereby, and it cannot be affected by any act of an adjoining landowner that would not affect a more traveled highway. This reservation was made at a town meeting by a vote of the “ freeholders and commonalty ” of the town — those having the ultimate interest in the property. This, I think, constituted at once a dedication and acceptance. If this land is part of a highway, then the permanent occujiation of it by inclosure or cultivation is manifestly inconsistent with the right of passage of the traveling public, and no matter how long continued can certainly never ripen into a title as against the public. Bliss v. Johnson, 94 N. Y. 241. This is true no matter how long continued, and even if«such occupation is acquiesced in. Driggs v. Phillips, 103 N. Y. 77; St. Vincent Orphan Asylum v. City of Troy, 76 id. 108; Walker v. Caywood, 31 id. 51; Morison v. N. Y. El. R. R. Co., 74 Hun, 398; Kellogg v. Thompson, 66 N. Y. 88.

The title the town held was subject to a trust by reason of' such dedication and could not be conveyed in contravention to such trust. Knickerbocker Ice Co. v. Forty-second St. R. R. Co., 85 App. Div. 530, 540. It has been held, even in those jurisdictions where streets

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Bluebook (online)
75 Misc. 310, 135 N.Y.S. 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trustees-of-the-freeholders-commonalty-v-dyett-sand-lime-brick-co-nysupct-1912.