Van Cortlandt v. New York Central Railroad

139 Misc. 892, 250 N.Y.S. 298, 1931 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1332
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 27, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 139 Misc. 892 (Van Cortlandt v. New York Central Railroad) 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
Van Cortlandt v. New York Central Railroad, 139 Misc. 892, 250 N.Y.S. 298, 1931 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1332 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1931).

Opinion

Morschauer, J.

The plaintiffs are heirs of the original patentee of the manor of Cortlandt, and own a parcel of land which may be roughly described as a rectangle, bounded on the west by the New York Central tracks, on the south by the Croton river, on the east by the Albany post road, which is carried over the Croton river by a bridge, and on the north by a road running from the Albany post road to Harmon station.

The nuisance complained of is the unauthorized and illegal [894]*894maintenance by the defendant of a rigid railroad bridge across the Croton river which, the plaintiffs claim, effectually prevents the navigation of that river by vessels. The plaintiffs allege, also, that they are specially damaged by the nuisance because they are riparian owners whose property alone abuts directly on the nuisance and that the value of their property has been substantially impaired by the existence of the nuisance.

The defendant’s predecessor, the Hudson River Railroad Company, was organized in 1846 by a special act of the Legislature, for the purpose of constructing a railroad from New York to Albany across the navigable creeks and streams running into the Hudson river on the express condition that such bridges should “ contain a draw of sufficient width to admit the passage of vessels adapted to navigation of said river, streams or inlets with standing masts,” etc.

From about 1847 to about 1907 the said railroad maintained a drawbridge over the Croton river, which it erected in the former year. In about the year 1907 the drawbridge was discontinued, a rigid immovable bridge constructed on masonry abutments was erected, and it is this bridge which now prevents the navigation of the said Croton river to and from the lands of the plaintiffs on the Croton river into the Hudson river; in fact, the Croton river is entirely closed to navigation to large vessels.

The Croton river from the Croton or Cornell dam to where its waters flow into the Hudson river is about three miles in length. For about two miles of this distance it is a fresh water stream supplied by the overflow of the dam and by the natural runoff of the waters of the land bordering on the river. At the dam the city of New York impounds the water and diverts it through underground channels or aqueducts to its water supply and the millions of gallons of water that formerly found their way to the Hudson river are thus diverted in another course in the aqueducts.

Above the masonry are flash boards further holding back the water which formerly overflowed. Below the dam are pools of water only, and except in very rainy seasons there is little water in the Croton river from the Croton dam to a point a mile or so east of the defendant’s railroad bridge, except such as comes from the adjoining land and from springs bordering on the river, and what water there is flows in a southwesterly direction among boulders and rocks between steep banks in a winding channel which is unnavigable. About a mile from the defendant’s railroad bridge and at a place called the deep hole there is the beginning of tide water, and from this point the river gradually broadens out until it finally forms the Croton bay. The manor house and the ferry house are located on the northeasterly side of the Croton river a [895]*895short distance above the present State highway bridge on the Albany post road, which is carried over the said post road by culverts, one at the southerly end and one at the northerly end, with a fill between the same. The culverts and fill are permanent structures erected by the State. From the beginning of tide water and opposite the plaintiffs’ property as far as the railroad bridge, the Croton river has become filled with sedge, and the bay likewise, and this sedge land is alternately covered and exposed with the rise and fall of the tide.

Plaintiffs’ property is located a mile or more from the deep water of the Hudson and the channel leading to the same is about eighty feet wide at mean high water and with a minimum depth of one and six-tenths feet at mean low tide. At low water one can walk from Crawbuckie point on the Croton river just west of the defendant’s railroad tracks to Croton point. A sand bar about 500 feet west of the railroad bridge is constantly being added to by the action of the river and the tide and thus encroaching further upon the channel as it now exists.

In former days light draft boats and vessels passed up the Croton river as far as the deep hole, but in 1841 the bursting of the Croton dam inundated the stream and carried down huge quantities of sand and debris, clogging the channel and rendering it unfit for navigation by other than boats and vessels of light draft, which could only be poled by hand up stream on a rising tide. This practice, however, continued but a short time and was finally discontinued as the channel further filled with the lapse of years. The wire mill of generations ago, located at the deep hole, was not a financial success and was abandoned. Today the place where the mill stood is a jungle of trees and bushes and little is left to locate it.

The Oliver or Potter dock on the southerly bank of the Croton river just below and to the west of the post road bridge has deteriorated. It is only an apology for a dock. It is now and has been for many years in a state of deterioration, and the approaches to it are filled with brushes and elm and other trees. Except for a few industries there never was any commercial navigation on the Croton river. Small boats and small launches use the river today and this has been so for many years. Time has wrought natural changes and due to the fill, sedge and other debris the river channel outlived its usefulness because of the natural conditions that always follow in the circumstances surrounding such streams as the Croton river and bay.

The river and bay of today are not navigable except for small boats and launches and then for a very limited area, and will only [896]*896be kept so by being dredged, except in so far as the natural force of the flow of the Croton river will keep some part of the channel open.

The court, pursuant to stipulation of the respective attorneys, visited the premises in question upon two occasions, one occasion being at low tide and the other occasion being at high tide, and made a careful examination, not only of the property of the plaintiffs, but of the Croton river, the Croton dam, and of the property bordering on both sides of the river and between it and the Croton dam. It was stipulated that the court should take such examination and observation of the premises into consideration in deciding the case.

I am convinced from such examination and from the testimony presented and the facts herein shown that the Croton river and bay are not navigable for commerce.

To change the present rigid railroad bridge of the defendant to a draw bridge would entail an expenditure by the defendant of over $3,000,000. To dredge the channel of the Croton river and construct bulkheads for commercial purposes on the property of the plaintiffs abutting on the river would involve an expenditure by them of over $400,000. This cost would be prohibitive, considering the various other water front lands on the Hudson in that section, a few miles above and below the defendant’s railroad bridge, available for commercial use. The folly of carrying out the plan outlined by the witnesses on behalf of the plaintiffs in this respect is apparent upon examination of all the conditions. There are no factory buildings upon the Croton river or Croton bay.

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Bluebook (online)
139 Misc. 892, 250 N.Y.S. 298, 1931 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-cortlandt-v-new-york-central-railroad-nysupct-1931.