[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 417 Questions affecting the titles to two pieces of property are presented in these two proceedings and, since the same rules of law are applicable, they will be treated together. In the first, the closing proceeding (12th Avenue), the parcel affected is part of one which extended from the original line of high water, as shown on the Randel Map of 1820, westerly to the easterly line of 12th Avenue, as extended by act of the Legislature (L. 1837, ch. 182) and as laid out on maps filed by the city. The grant was made by the city to the predecessor of claimants on January 14, 1889. At that time, approximately half of the land granted had already been filled in. The other half and the proposed exterior street, 12th Avenue, were still under water. The grant was to the upland owner and the filling in had been projected and supervised by the Department of Docks of the city. A plan providing for the filling in of the land under water up to the easterly line of 12th Avenue had been filed by the Department of Docks and approved by the commissioners of the sinking fund of the city on April 27, 1871. The easterly line of 12th Avenue was within the exterior bulkhead line established at that point on the Hudson River by Laws of 1857, chapter 763.
The other parcel, in the opening proceeding (East River Drive), was deeded by the city on April 6, 1893, to the upland owner, who was the predecessor of claimants. It had concededly been completely filled in under the supervision of the Dock Department prior to the grant. It also was outshore of the original Randel line of highwater but inshore of the 1857 line, to which reference has been made.
It is the contention of the city that, at the times of the grants in question, there was no power in it to alienate any land, whether under water or filled in, which was situated outshore of the Randel highwater line, by reason of Laws of 1871, chapter 574, and Laws of 1873, chapter 335; that those statutes "impliedly repealed" the provision in the 1858 statute (L. 1858, ch. 360) that no grants were to be made of land under waterbeyond the exterior line of the city as fixed by Laws of 1857, *Page 423 chapter 763, and that the Consolidation Act (L. 1882, ch. 410) although it reenacted the pertinent provisions of all threestatutes, did not save the 1858 provision from such "implied repeal."
Grants of land under water inshore of the exterior city lines were clearly valid before 1871 except for a period between 1855 and 1858, when they were expressly prohibited by statute. See Laws of 1855, chapter 121, section 2, repealed by Laws of 1858, chapter 360; Matter of City of New York (Willard ParkerHospital), (217 N.Y. 1, 13). For a grant of land outshore of the highwater line made prior to 1871, which was held valid, seeAppleby v. City of New York (235 N.Y. 351) and Matter ofAppleby v. Delaney (235 N.Y. 364, 366).
In 1855 the Legislature initiated a program for controlling the development of the water front and harbor of the city. (Matterof City of New York [Willard Parker Hospital], supra.) A harbor commission was appointed for the "preservation of the harbor of New York from encroachments, and to prevent obstructions to the necessary navigation thereof." (L. 1855, ch. 121.) The commission was to make necessary surveys of the harbor and report to the Legislature, recommending the establishment of "such exterior lines * * * beyond which, no erection or permanent obstruction of any kind should be permitted" (§ 1). (Emphasis supplied.) No grants of land under water were to be made until further direction of the Legislature (§ 2). The harbor commissioners having made their report, the Legislature adopted a bulkhead line or line of solid filling as recommended, except that it changed the line in certain areas (L. 1857, ch. 763, passed April 17, 1857). By Laws of 1858, chapter 360, the prohibition in the 1855 act against grants of land under water was repealed, and it was provided that: "No grants are to be made beyond the exterior lines of the city, as fixed by an act of the legislature, passed April seventeenth, eighteen hundred and fifty-seven, entitled `An act to establish bulkhead and pier lines for the port of New York'".
That provision concededly was never expressly repealed but, on the contrary was in substance re-enacted, as we have seen (supra), in the Consolidation Act of 1882 (L. 1882, ch. 410, § 729), which prohibited grants of land under water *Page 424 "beyond the exterior lines of the city, as fixed by an act of the legislature passed April seventeenth, eighteen hundred and fifty-seven * * * as amended by subsequent acts * * *".
It seems to us that it is a compelling, if not a necessary, inference that when the Legislature declared that "no grants are to be made beyond the exterior lines of the city," it intended that grants inshore of the exterior lines should be valid, and that the factor in determining the power of the city to make grants of land under water was to be the legislatively fixed exterior lines rather than the original Randel highwater line of 1820. (Williams v. Mayor, 105 N.Y. 419, 430-432; Matter ofCity of New York [Willard Parker Hospital], 217 N.Y. 1, 13;City of New York v. D., L. W.R.R. Co., 237 N.Y. 398,405-406.)
Such an inference, it is true, might yield to an express "sweeping declaration" of inalienability of the sort embodied in section 71 of the Greater New York Charter of 1897. That section — which was enacted after the grants here in question had been made — declared flatly that the "rights of the city in and to its water front, ferries, wharf property, land under water, public landings, wharves, docks, streets, avenues, parks, and all other public places are hereby declared to be inalienable." But, certainly, we find no such clear statutory declaration — or anything similar to it — applicable here.
Nevertheless, it is urged upon us that authorities in this court, particularly City of New York v. Wilson Co. (278 N.Y. 86) and Matter of City of New York (Piers Old Nos. 8-11) (228 N.Y. 140) have so construed the statutes of 1871 and 1873 as to read into them an implied restraint on alienation of any land originally under water outshore of the Randel highwater line.
The statute of 1871 (ch. 574) did not expressly prohibit grants of any of the city's water fronts. That statute (§ 6 [amdg. § 99, subd. 2, of the New York City Government Reorganization Act, 1870]) merely vested in the Department of Docks, created in 1870 "exclusive charge and control" subject to supervision by the sinking fund commissioners "of all the wharf property belonging to the corporation of the city of New York, including all the wharves, piers, bulkheads and structures *Page 425 thereon, and waters adjacent thereto, and all the slips, basins, docks, water-fronts, land under water, and structures thereon and the appurtenances, easements, uses, reversions and rights belonging thereto, which are now owned or possessed by the said corporation, or to which said corporation is or may become entitled, or which said corporation may acquire under the provisions hereof, or otherwise;" and also "the exclusive government and regulation" of all wharves, etc., not owned by the city. Section 6 (amdg. § 99, supra, subd. 12) cited by the city, defined the terms "property" and "wharf property", whenever used in the act, "to mean not only all wharves, piers, docks, bulkheads, slips, and basins, but the land beneath the same, and all rights, privileges and easements thereto." (Emphasis supplied.) That statute, therefore, defined the property belonging to the city of which the Department of Docks was to have "exclusive charge and control." The 1873 statute (ch. 335) repealed practically all of the 1871 statute, but saved section 6. It also limited the power of the commissioners of the sinking fund to sell "any city property" so that thereafter they might not sell "wharves and piers." (L. 1873, ch. 335, § 102). The parcels herein were neither wharves nor piers. Quite evidently, the definitions of the properties of which the Department of Docks was to have "exclusive charge and control" under the 1871 statute may not be read into the 1873 statute so as to limit still further the powers of the sinking fund commissioners to sell city lands as declared in section 102 thereof. Thus the 1871 statute effected no repeal of the 1858 statute. It was concerned only with the city's wharf property (Matter of City of New York [Piers Old Nos. 8-11] supra; Langdon v. Mayor, 133 N.Y. 628; Kingsland v. Mayor, 110 N.Y. 569). It neither made mention of any highwater line nor prohibited the grant of any land under water. The 1873 statute prohibited the selling of wharves and piers. The property here involved was inshore of the exterior lines fixed by the 1857 statute — the city's waterfront — and was within the power of the city to sell.
Matter of City of New York (Piers Old Nos. 8-11) (supra), involved a claim to title by adverse possession commenced after 1873, to certain piers and a portion of a bulkhead. The property involved clearly fell within the express limitation of the *Page 426 statute of 1873 on the alienability of "wharves and piers" and it was accordingly unnecessary for the court to determine whether any water front property "other than wharves and piers" was made inalienable by the legislation of 1871 and 1873. Judge CHASE'S discussion in that case as to "the intention of the legislature to prohibit the alienation of all water front property owned by the city" (228 N.Y. at p. 151), was probably in answer to the contention of claimants' counsel that the exception concerning "wharves and piers" was a restriction only on the power of the commissioners of the sinking fund, rather than a general declaration of inalienability of such property or a restraint on the power of sale of other city agencies, such as the board of aldermen. Judge CHASE thus observed that "a power of sale in theboard of aldermen" would contravene the legislative purpose (228 N.Y. at p. 151). (Emphasis supplied.) Judge CHASE did not in terms state that the statute of 1871 was properly interpretable as imposing an implied restraint on alienation of all of the city's water front property. His analysis of the legislative purpose may have been only in aid of his interpretation of the scope of the express restraint on alienation of wharves and piers imposed by the statute of 1873. It is not clear that he considered specifically the problem of alienability of water front property other than wharves or piers, or the bearing thereon of the statute of 1858 heretofore mentioned. At any rate, the parcels involved here were not water front property. In the opinion of Judge FINCH, in City of New York v. Wilson Co. (supra) it was recognized that it would be possible to confine the Piers Old Nos. 8-11 case to the question of whether wharves and piers, rather than land under water, were inalienable. The construction of the statutes urged by the city would run counter to the practical construction of those statutes by the public officers charged with duties and obligations under them. Numerous grants of land under water, such as those involved here, have been made by the city subsequent to 1873. That effect should be given by courts to such a practical construction was pointed out in Matter of City of New York (Willard Parker Hospital), (supra, 217 N.Y. 1, 12) which involved the determination of the bulkhead line under Laws of 1857, chapter 763. *Page 427
Moreover, the validity of the grants made in these cases is clear, even if we assume that the statutes of 1871 and 1873 did by implication prohibit the alienation of "all water front property owned by the city."
Judge CHASE, in his opinion in Matter of City of New York (Piers Old Nos. 8-11), (supra), regarded "the intention of the legislature to prohibit the alienation of all water front property owned by the city" as "included in its purpose to authorize and empower the city to obtain and continue to hold complete control of its water front as provided by the statutes." He stated that "a power of sale in the board of aldermen is not only not essential to the accomplishment of the purpose of the legislature and the work of the board of the department of docks but would be antagonistic to and possibly destructive of its work and purpose as defined by the statutes." (228 N.Y. at p. 151.)
As pointed out heretofore, the 1871 statute vested in the department of docks "exclusive charge and control", subject to specified supervision by the commissioners of the sinking fund, "of all the wharf property belonging to the corporation of the city of New York, including * * * land under water * * *." (L. 1871, ch. 574, § 6 [amdg. § 99, supra, subd. 2].)
By section 6 (amdg. § 99, supra, subd. 3) it was provided that the board of the Department of Docks should determine upon plans for the water front to be submitted to the commissioners of the sinking fund, and that such plans, when adopted by the commissioners of the sinking fund, "shall be * * * the sole plan according to which any wharf, pier, bulkhead, basin, dock, or slip * * * shall thereafter be laid out or constructed * * * and be the sole plan and authority for solid filling in the waters surrounding said city and for extending piers into said waters and erecting bulkheads around said city; and all other provisions of law regulating solid filling and pier and bulkhead lines in said waters are to be deemed to be repealed upon the filing of said plan, if said plan be inconsistent with such provisions of law." (Emphasis supplied.)
In the instant cases, plans duly formulated by the Department of Docks and approved by the commissioners of the sinking fund for improvement and development of the water front in the localities in question provided for the filling in of specified *Page 428 areas of land under water, including the parcels here involved, and the locating of the water front beyond such land under water and beyond marginal streets laid out on the plans. In the street opening proceeding (East River Drive), the land granted had been completely filled in at the time of the grant under the supervision of the Department of Docks; in the street closing case (12th Avenue), approximately half of the land granted had been thus filled in at the time of the grant.
The filling in and grant of such land under water was clearly not "antagonistic to and possibly destructive of" the work and purpose of the Department of Docks. The filling in was done in pursuance of "authority for solid filling" granted by plans formulated by the Department of Docks in accordance with the statute, and in effectuation of such plans. By the adoption of such plans, the Department of Docks, the agency vested by the statute with the "exclusive charge and control" of the city's water front property, duly determined that the land under water was not needed for water front purposes and should be converted to upland. It would unduly extend any implied restraint on alienation of water front property beyond the assumed necessities of the statutory objectives, to apply it to land which was thus removed from the category of water front property in the manner prescribed by the Legislature. The land here involved had thus lost its character as water front property long before any grant by the city. (See: 3 McQuillin, Municipal Corporations [2d ed. 1943], §§ 1243, 1242, and cases there cited.)
Nor is it material that in the 12th Avenue case the filling in had not been completed at the time of the grant to claimants' predecessor. The solid filling having been authorized by the Department of Docks pursuant to the statute, the legislative purposes would not be contravened by the fact that the filling was done even by the city's grantee rather than by the city itself. "Great cities have been built up by grants of land under water. The city of New York has been similarly developed by extending it over submerged lands. The promotion of the commercial prosperity of the port has been one purpose of such grants." (See: Appleby v. City of New York, 235 N.Y. 351,362.)
On the other hand, in the Wilson case the claimant's predecessors had applied for a grant of the land in question and had been refused; the claimant itself had sought permission to erect *Page 429 a bulkhead in front of its premises and that, too, had been refused. In brief, there was no official recognition in theWilson case that the land was not, or would not be, required in the future development of the harbor; there was no official act which separated that parcel from the water front or deprived it of its status as water front property. What was there done was done by the upland owners in derogation of the city's rights, without permission from the dock department or any other authorized agency.
Moreover, the rule that "land originally under water is treated as land under water even after it is filled" is not an inflexible one and was not stated to be such. (City of New York v. Wilson Co., 278 N.Y. 86, 97.) The cases cited generally in support of that statement are decisions to the effect that an upland owner — as in the Wilson case — cannot acquire title to land under water owned by the State merely by filling it in without a grant or authorization from the State (see cases cited in City of NewYork v. Wilson Co., supra, at p. 97) and in Hinkley v.State of New York (234 N.Y. 309, 319), or that the riparian rights, as distinguished from ownership, of an upland owner as regards adjacent land under water may continue even after the solid filling in of such land under water (cf. Tiffany v. Townof Oyster Bay, 234 N.Y. 15; City of New York v. Third Ave.Ry. Co., 294 N.Y. 238). To that extent, and for sound reason, the act of filling in is denied operative effect. But those decisions do not establish that land originally under water necessarily retains its character as such for all time and for all purposes. It has thus been recognized that land under water may lose its "character of foreshore" at least for some purposes, with consequent changes in rights and legal relations, where the filling in is pursuant to permission or grant. (Cf. Tiffany v.Town of Oyster Bay, supra, at p. 20; Williams v. Mayor,supra; Appleby v. City of New York, supra, at pp. 361, 362.)
While the views expressed may render unnecessary consideration of respondent's claim of res judicata in the 12th Avenue case, we treat it briefly. The question of title is not resolved in claimants' favor by an award made to claimants' predecessors in a 1933 street opening proceeding for a different parcel derived from the same source as the parcel in question here. *Page 430 Since the parcels involved in the two proceedings are not the same, and the question of title was not actually litigated in the earlier proceeding, the claim of res judicata can in no event be sustained. (Matter of City of New York [Jamaica Bay],250 App. Div. 124, affd. 275 N.Y. 458; see Schuylkill Fuel Corp. v.Nieberg Realty Corp., 250 N.Y. 304, 306, 307; Restatement of Judgments, § 68, subd. (2), and comment c., p. 299.)
The orders should be affirmed, with costs.