Waterford Electric Light, Heat & Power Co. v. State

117 Misc. 480
CourtNew York Court of Claims
DecidedDecember 15, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 117 Misc. 480 (Waterford Electric Light, Heat & Power Co. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waterford Electric Light, Heat & Power Co. v. State, 117 Misc. 480 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1921).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This claim has been filed to recover from the state of New York compensation for lands and flowage rights permanently appropriated and destroyed by the state, pursuant to chapter 147, Laws of 1903, for the Champlain canal.

The lands and flowage rights appropriated and destroyed extend along both sides of the Hudson river above tidewater for a distance of approximately two and one-half miles, forming connected and uninterrupted stretches along both sides of the river, and between their northerly and southerly limits there is a substantial slope in the river bed.

The appropriated lands were originally parts of the lands granted by English Colonial Patents, viz., on the easterly or Rensselaer county side of the river, the patent from William and Mary to Tunison and Bradt, dated August 27, 1691, the patent from George II to David Abrahamson Schuyler and others, dated May 19, 1737, and the patent from George III to Isaac Sawyer and others, dated July 23, 1763, and, on the westerly or Saratoga county side of the river the Halfmoon Patent granted by the Duke of York to Philip Pieterson Schuyler and Goosen Garritson, dated October 13, 1665, a confirmatory patent between the same parties dated May 4,1668, and a second con[483]*483firmatory patent from Governor Dongan to Anthony Van Schaick, dated May 30, 1687.

Claimant claims that these patents, construed, as it claims they must be, according to the principles of the English common law, conveyed to the several patentees title to the bed of the Hudson river in front of the uplands granted by the patents, on each side of the thread of the stream, and that claimant as the successor to the titles of the patentees is the owner of the bed as well as the banks of the river and adjacent uplands within the limits of the appropriation.

Chapter 164 of the Laws of 1901, which was passed by a two-thirds vote in each house of the legislature and took effect on March 22, 1901, provides as follows:

Waterford Electric Light, Heat and Power Company, its successors and assigns, are hereby authorized to construct a dam across the Hudson river on the lands now owned by it or which it shall hereafter purchase or acquire in the towns of Halfmoon, Sara-toga county, and Schaghticoke, Rensselaer county, in such a manner as not to injuriously affect the water privilege of the Hudson river power transmission company, and such company is hereby authorized to forever maintain said dam and to flood back up said river so far as it owns or shall hereafter purchase or acquire the adjacent uplands or may have or shall hereafter purchase or acquire the rights of flowage thereon for the purpose of maintaining the pond formed by such dam; and any interests of the state in lands under the waters of said river covered by said dam or which may be flooded by the erection thereof or under any works which said company shall construct on or adjacent to said dam is hereby granted to said company, its successors and assigns.”

A part of claimant’s lands and flowage rights had been acquired by claimant prior to the enactment of [484]*484the act of 1901, but more than one-half of the frontage on the river, on both sides, had been in good, faith acquired and other development expenditures made after the passage of the act and in reliance upon its provisions, although it did not construct its proposed dam.

It is claimed by claimant that the effect of the act of 1901 was to quitclaim to and vest in claimant all of the right, title and interest of the state, if it had any, to and in the lands under the waters of the river which might be covered by the waters impounded by its dam when erected, or at least to grant to claimant a franchise, which when accepted and acted upon was irrevocable without compensation, to construct and forever maintain a dam in the river.

Claimant, therefore, claims that it’s lands and flow-age rights on both sides of the river together with the lands under water which it claims to have owned as the successor of the original patentees thereof, or by quitclaim from the state, or both, constituted a very valuable potential water power site, worth at least $350,000, and that, if it be held that it did not own the lands under water, its uplands together with the franchise which it claims was granted by the act of 1901, constituted a property of no less value. •

By a series of appropriations duly made pursuant to the provisions of chapter 147, Laws of 1903, the. state has appropriated from claimant all of its uplands, and, from the owners of the fee thereof, the uplands over which claimant had acquired flowage, rights, and has constructed a stretch of the Champlain canal partly in the river adjacent to .claimant’s uplands and partly in and through uplands, flotation of sufficient depth at this location having been furnished by means of a dam in the river at substantially the place where claimant had contemplated locating [485]*485its dam, this state dam causing claimant’s uplands and the uplands over which claimant had acquired flowage rights to be overflowed by the waters' of the river and canal, thus taking and destroying all of claimant’s property and rights in the lands appropriated. As compensation for such lands and rights so taken and destroyed claimant demands judgment for $350,000, the value thereof, as claimed, as a water power property.

The state contends that the bed of the river was not granted by the patents under which claimant •claims title or by the act of 1901, that no franchise or water rights, in fact, nothing more than a revocable permit or license, was granted by the act of 1901, that whatever the nature of claimant’s rights in and to the bed of the river, or to the use of the waters of the river, they were subject and subservient to the state’s right to improve the navigation of the river, a right which the state claims it was exercising in 'building the Champlain canal, that claimant, having failed to obtain the consent of Congress to erect its dam, or the approval by the federal war department of its plans therefor, in accordance with the River and Harbor Act of March 3, 1899, was without sufficient lawful power, authority and right to proceed with its water power development, and that even though claimant owned the bed of the river, or an irrevocable franchise from the state by virtue of the act of 1901, and was not precluded from proceeding with its development by the fact of its failure to obtain the consent to and approval of its project by the federal authorities, yet its property and rights were of inconsiderable value as a water power property, and worth not more than $50,000.

The rule that a grant of land bounded by a non-tidal stream is presumed to convey to the thread of [486]*486the stream is a rule of construction to be used in ascertaining the true intention of the parties. The question whether the conveyance carries title to the center of the stream depends upon the intent of the parties, to be gathered from the description of the premises read in connection with other parts of the deed or grant and by reference to the situation of the lands' and the condition and relation of the parties to those and other lands in the vicinity. The presumption that the grantee takes to the center of the stream may be controlled by the terms of the conveyance as interpreted by the surrounding circumstances manifesting intention to the contrary. 9 C. J. 189; Mott v. Mott, 68 N. Y. 246; Hall v. Whitehall Water Power Co., Ltd., 103 id. 129; Graham v. Stern,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Holmes v. Haines
1 N.W.2d 746 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1942)
Finch, Pruyn & Co. v. State
122 Misc. 404 (New York State Court of Claims, 1924)
Watervliet Hydraulic Co. v. State
119 Misc. 743 (New York State Court of Claims, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 Misc. 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waterford-electric-light-heat-power-co-v-state-nyclaimsct-1921.