Utilities & Industries Corp. v. Palisades Interstate Park Commission

45 Misc. 2d 1014, 258 N.Y.S.2d 700, 1965 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2046
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 45 Misc. 2d 1014 (Utilities & Industries Corp. v. Palisades Interstate Park Commission) 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
Utilities & Industries Corp. v. Palisades Interstate Park Commission, 45 Misc. 2d 1014, 258 N.Y.S.2d 700, 1965 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2046 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1965).

Opinion

Clare J. Hoyt, J.

In this action brought to determine plaintiff’s claim to real property (Real Property Law, art. 15, now Real Property Actions and Proceedings Law), a detailed statement of facts is necessary since they encompass a period from 1901 to 1959, the date of the commencement of the action.

Plaintiff is a domestic corporation succeeding, by merger and change of name, the Haverstraw Water Supply Company (hereinafter called “ Haverstraw ”), a corporation organized in 1901 under the Transportation Corporations Law for the purpose of supplying water to municipalities and the inhabitants thereof in New York State. At its inception, Haverstraw secured franchises from the Town of Stony Point and the Villages of Haverstraw and West Haverstraw in Rockland County, which franchises are still in effect.

The defendant is a body corporate created by compact between the States of New York and New Jersey in 1937, succeeding to the interests of the Board of Commissioners of Palisades Interstate Park, created in 1900, and hereinafter called “ Commissioners ”.

Plaintiff and its corporate predecessors have since 1901 owned and operated a public water supply plant and system known as its Haverstraw Plant consisting of the franchises and distribution system acquired and constructed by Haverstraw. Water is furnished for domestic, industrial, municipal and fire protection purposes under the franchises. The principal source of water for this plant has .been and continues to be the Stony Point Station. Other and lesser sources of water for the Haverstraw Plant are springs and wells at Thiells and a deep well at Garnerville, all in Rockland County.

The Stony Point Station is located alongside Tiorati Brook, formerly known as Cedar Pond Brook, from which water is pumped into the distribution system. A reservoir, known as the lower one, having a capacity of 4 million gallons is formed by a dam in the brook. A smaller reservoir has been constructed beside it and a few feet higher, having a capacity of 1.2 million gallons. Water is pumped from the lower reservoir into the upper one, which serves as a settling reservoir and then flows into the pumping station where it is forced into the distribution system. These facilities were in operation in 1914, a date that becomes important, and were augmented thereafter by a reservoir on a nearby hill having a capacity of 1.25 [1016]*1016million gallons. Only about one half of the storage capacities of these installations is available for distribution in the system because of the need to maintain pressure and because of the turbidity that exists in the lower levels of the reservoirs.

At the commencement of this action in 1959 the average daily production of the Haverstraw Plant was about 1.3 million gallons, about three fourths of which was produced by the Stony Point Station. In 1963 the average daily production had risen to approximately 1.5 million gallons for the Haverstraw Plant and 1 million gallons for the Stony Point Station. The Stony Point Station’s rated capacity is 1 million gallons per day and it is capable of producing 15% in excess thereof.

From June to October in each year the demand for water is at its height and frequently during this period little or no water flows down Tiorati Brook. Tiorati Brook is the sole source of water for the Stony Point Station. Tiorati Brook, although fed by some tributaries, has as its principal source of water the overflow from Lake Tiorati, situate up the brook some 6 or 7 miles. It is plaintiff’s contention, resisted by defendant, that it has the right to withdraw waters from Lake Tiorati when the level of the lake is not high enough to run over the spillway in the dam. This is the issue in this litigation.

Lake Tiorati is a man-made body of water resulting from a dam erected in 1914 by the Commissioners. The lake has an area of 288 acres, a capacity of 1,397 million gallons and an elevation at its spillways of 1,030 feet. (All elevations herein are expressed in feet above mean high water at Sandy Hook in accordance with the 1914 datum; 2.45 feet should be added to express elevation according to the U. S. Gr. S. datum based upon mean sea level.) The construction of the dam and its impounding of waters inundated Big Cedar Pond and Little Cedar Pond and surrounding lands.

In 1907 Rockland County Realty Corporation, hereinafter called Rockland ”, a corporation controlled by one Martin Driscoll who also controlled Haverstraw, acquired a parcel of land containing 664 acres, known as the Cedar Pond Furnace Lot, which embraced most of Big Cedar Pond and some surrounding lands. It did not include, as claimed by plaintiff, all of Big Cedar Pond and a portion of Little Cedar Pond. These ponds, about 1,500 feet apart, had a combined area of 98 acres and a capacity of 208 million gallons. Both ponds were natural basins with no dams or other improvements. They had elevations of approximately 1,012 and 1,014 feet respectively. Little Cedar Pond flowed into Big Cedar Pond and the latter became the source of Cedar Pond Brook, now known as Tiorati Brook. [1017]*1017Rockland upon its acquisition of these lands leased them to Haverstraw for a 10-year term.

In 1910 Mary W. Harriman conveyed to the Commissioners 10,000 acres of land for park purposes, some of which lands adjoined the Cedar Pond Furnace Lot previously conveyed to Rockland. In addition, a gift of $1,000,000 was made by Mrs. Harriman to the Commissioners to acquire other lands for park purposes. The Harriman conveyance included a portion of Big Cedar Pond as it then existed and lands to the north thereof and the Commissioners, in addition, acquired from the Cunningham Estate lands to the southwest of the Cedar Pond Furnace Lot which lands embraced Little Cedar Pond and the lands surrounding it.

On July 25, 1914 Rockland agreed to sell its 664-acre parcel to the Commissioners. Simultaneously therewith, Haverstraw entered into an agreement with the Commissioners, the interpretation of which determines the rights of the parties herein.

Considerable evidence was produced as to what Haverstraw did with these ponds under its lease before entering into the 1914 agreement. Plaintiff asserts that Haverstraw erected a dam in 1911 in Cedar Pond Brook at the approximate location of the present dam which created Lake Tiorati. It is claimed that this old dam had an elevation of 1,018.1 feet at its spillway and that it formed from the two natural ponds a new body of water having an area of 180 acres and a capacity of 425 million gallons. Defendant asserts that the evidence shows no such body of water was ever impounded. From all the evidence, the court finds at most that a stone dam was in existence at or near the present dam site in 1914, that Haverstraw had made expenditures for a gate in the dam and that a spillway was constructed at the claimed elevation. There is no evidence, however, that the dam was ever put in operation or that any waters were ever impounded thereby. On the contrary, the evidence establishes that the first flooding of the old ponds resulted from the dam built by the Commissioners after acquiring title from Rockland. In arriving at this determination the court has considered along with other evidence defendant’s Exhibit BG- for identification and has admitted said exhibit in evidence on defendant’s motion, decision having been reserved thereon at the trial.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Misc. 2d 1014, 258 N.Y.S.2d 700, 1965 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2046, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/utilities-industries-corp-v-palisades-interstate-park-commission-nysupct-1965.