Watervliet Hydraulic Co. v. State

119 Misc. 743
CourtNew York Court of Claims
DecidedDecember 15, 1922
DocketClaim No. 10786
StatusPublished

This text of 119 Misc. 743 (Watervliet Hydraulic 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
Watervliet Hydraulic Co. v. State, 119 Misc. 743 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This is the second trial of this claim, a determination by the Board of Claims awarding to the claimant $153,713.83 having been in part affirmed and in part reversed by the Appellate Division, third department. Watervliet Hydraulic Co. v. State of New York, 177 App. Div. 7.

The claim was filed to obtain compensation for the value of lands appropriated by the state of New York for Barge canal purposes and for damages resulting from such appropriation. Claimant, Watervliet Hydraulic Company, hereinafter called the Hydraulic Company, is a corporation incorporated in conformity with the provisions of chapter 737 of the Laws of 1873, commonly known as the Water Companies Act. The other parties claimant are successors in interest to the rights of the Watervliet Hydraulic Company or some part thereof.

For many years prior to the Barge canal improvement the Hydraulic Company had owned shore lands along and on both sides of the Mohawk river at Dunsbach Ferry, the lands on the northerly side of the river being in the town of Half Moon, Saratoga county, N. Y., and the lands on the southerly side of the river being in the town of Colonie, Albany county, N. Y. There was an island in the river between the two parcels of shore land, the area of which was one and twenty-four one-hundredths acres, which the Hydraulic Company in its claim as filed claimed to own. The record, however, does not disclose any ownership of this island in the Hydraulic Company.

The Hydraulic Company had constructed two dams across the river connecting this island with the north and south shores, thus impounding the waters of the river which were utilized to develop water power, by means of which the Hydraulic Company pumped water from the river and distributed it to the city of Watervliet and its inhabitants.

The company’s pumphouse and other buildings were situated on the lands which it owned on the southerly or Albany county side of the river.

On January 26, 1910, the state of New York, pursuant to the provisions of chapter 147 of the Laws of 1903, appropriated for Barge canal purposes all of the lands of the Hydraulic Company [745]*745located on the northerly or Saratoga county side of the river, two and sixty-two one-hundredths acres; and on July 26, 1911, it in like manner appropriated a part of the lands of the Hydraulic Company located on the southerly or Albany county side of the river, twenty-three one-hundredths acres; also “ any right title or interest in all that land being an island in the river opposite the pumphouse of the Watervliet Hydraulic Company containing 1.24 acres of land be the same more or less; ” also the two dam structures above mentioned; and also “ any right title and interest which the said Watervliet Hydraulic Company may have to the bed or waters of the Mohawk River.”

Both certificates of appropriation recited that the appropriations covered merely lands, water rights, buildings and other structures, and that all fixtures, machinery or appurtenances which might be deemed fairly removable remained the property of the owner and subject to its disposition. After these two several appropriations had been consummated, the Hydraulic Company filed this claim, claiming compensation and damages as follows:

4.09 acres of land appropriated...................... $25,000

2 river dams totally destroyed....................... 100,000

Pumphouse destroyed or rendered useless............. 10,000

Waterwheels destroyed or rendered useless............ 5,000

Damages to or total destruction of claimant’s water power privileges, right and title of, in and to the bed and water of the Mohawk river, and increased cost of fuel and steam power thereby made necessary in

place thereof.................................... 250,000

Damages for cost of necessary alterations, changes, and removal of buildings, appliances, machinery, structures rendered necessary by the state’s appropriations for the Barge canal aforesaid................. 50,000

Total...................................... $440,000

Subsequent to the filing of the claim the state, in form at least, on May 23, 1913, made another appropriation which purported to appropriate the Albany county parcel of lands which had been appropriated on July 26, 1911, and the buildings thereon situated. The certificate or notice of this appropriation contained, after a description of the lands appropriated, the following qualification: “ Excepting from the foregoing appropriation and reserving to the Watervliet Hydraulic Company its power and right if any to have, take, divert and make use of for water supply purposes, the waters of the Mohawk river acquired pursuant to the provisions [746]*746of chapter 737 of the Laws of 1873 and acts amendatory thereof and supplementary thereto, and the right to obtain access thereto over the lands hereby appropriated in any manner which will not interfere with the maintenance or operation of the canal by the state.”

This last certificate or notice of appropriation contained no mention of the island or of the dams connecting the island with the northerly and southerly shores of the river, or of the bed of the river, or of the waters thereof, except as in the reservation above quoted. It was obviously the purpose of the state officers by this last appropriation to supersede the appropriation of July 26, 1911, so that there should be no appropriation from the claimant, in terms or otherwise, of the island, of the bed of the river or of any water power or water rights.

After the so-called superseding appropriation had been made, and upon the trial of the claim before the Board of Claims, and upon claimant’s application, the claim was amended by adding thereto the following allegation: That since the filing of the claim herein, September 21st, 1911, and on or about the 28th day of May, 1913, notice of permanent appropriation of the claimant’s lands for the State barge canal, together with the map accompanying the same, a copy of which is hereto annexed, was filed in the office of the Superintendent of Public Works, and in the office of the Clerk of the County of Albany, and served on the claimant, but that a long time prior thereto the State had taken possession of all the lands, property, property rights, privileges and water rights of the claimant under the two appropriations alleged in said claim, and had destroyed the dam therein mentioned and described, and had damaged, injured and destroyed the remaining property, property rights, privileges and water rights of the clamant to the amount of five hundred thousand ($500,000) dollars.”

The apparent purpose and effect of this amendment was to present the contention that if the superseding appropriation of May 28, 1913, had operated to render inoperative and ineffectual the appropriation of July 26, 1911, so far as the latter purported to appropriate the island, the dams, the bed and waters of the river and the right if any to have, take, divert and make use of for water supply purposes the waters of the Mohawk river acquired pursuant to the provisions of chapter 737 of the Laws of 1873 and the acts amendatory thereof and supplementary thereto, yet the state having actually taken possession of all of the lands, property rights, privileges and water rights of the Hydraulic Company under and as described in the two first appropriations, and having actually destroyed the dams, had effectually destroyed all of the company’s [747]

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Bluebook (online)
119 Misc. 743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watervliet-hydraulic-co-v-state-nyclaimsct-1922.