Walton v. Tifft

By the Court, Willard, P. J.

The jury were warranted in •finding from the evidence, that the deed from Walton to Pitcher, under which title the defendant held, was bounded on the north by the main channel of the river; and if so, there was no pretense that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover. The judge was authorized to direct a verdict for the defendant, on that ground alone. The plaintiffs did not ask to go to the jury on what were the actual contents of the deed to Pitcher, nor whether it was lost or not. But assuming that the deed described the premises exactly as they were described in the mortgage, of which an exemplification was produced by the plaintiffs, it carried the grantee to the center of the main channel of the river. The plaintiffs maintain that this boundary merely includes the island to high-water mark, and thus leaves in the plaintiffs, as heirs of Henry Walton, that portion of the bed of the river, lying north of the center of the main channel and highwater mark on the south side of the island. This is the point in dispute, and, as I understand the case, the only point.

At common law, a grant of land bounded upon the sea shore, *219or upon a stream or arm of the sea, where the tide ebbs and flows, conveys to-the grantee only that part of the bank which is not covered by the water at the ordinary flood tide. It does not carry with it the lands under water, the islands in the stream, or the right of fishery. In order to pass these, the terms of the grant must be so clear and explicit as to leave no manner of doubt as to the intention of the grantor to part with those rights. But the rule is directly the reverse as to those grants which are bounded on rivers and streams above tide water. In such cases, if the grant is bounded on the stream, or along the same, or on the margin thereof, or on the bank of the river, or when any other words of similar import are used, it legally extends to the middle or thread of the stream; and not only the bank but the bed of the river, and the islands therein, and the exclusive right of fishing, are conveyed to the grantee, unless they are expressly reserved, or the terms of the grant are such as to show a clear intention to exclude them from the general operation of the rule of law. (Per Walworth, Ch. in Canal Commissioners v. The People, 5 Wend. 443. Same v. Kempshall, 26 Id. 404. Child v. Starr, 4 Hill, 369, 373. Varick v. Smith, 9 Paige, 547. 5 Coke's Rep. 106. Ex parte Jennings, 6 Cowen, 518.) The right of the riparian owner to the stream itself is not absolute, by the English common law. If the stream be navigable, the grantee bounded on the river takes the legal ownership to the center of the stream, subject, nevertheless, to the right of the public to use the waters thereof, as a public highway for the passage of boats or other water craft. (Hale de Jure Maris. 6 Cowen, 539, note, and the cases before cited.) Such, too, is the common law of this state.

In applying these principles, it was held in Luce v. Carley, (24 Wend. 451,) where one of the courses in the deed ran to a hemlock stake standing on the east bank of the river, from thence down the river as it winds and turns, 24 chains and 94 links, to a hard maple tree,” &c. that the grantee took to the center of the stream. Cowen, J. in delivering the judgment of the court, says, where the grant is so framed as to touch the water of the river, and the parties do not expressly except the *220river, one half the bed of the stream, if it be above tide, is included by construction of law. If the parties mean to exclude it, they should do so by express exception. The doctrine of this case is not shaken by Child v. Starr, (4 Hill, 369,) reversing the same case in the supreme court. (20 Wend. 149.) On the contrary, the general doctrine of Luce v. Carley is affirmed by the court of errors in Child v. Starr. The only effect of the' latter case is to show that a boundary along the shore of a river is an express restriction of the grant, and prevents the grantee from taking to the center of the stream. It has never been denied, in this state, that the grantor may so limit his grant as to exclude -the bed of the river, or the highway, as either may happen to be referred to in the grant. (Jackson v. Hathaway, 15 John. 454.) But if, without any language of exclusion, the line is described as along a highway, or upon a highway, or as running to a highway, or as by the river, or along the river, or upon the margin of the river, or to the bank of the river, it has been pretty uniformly held in this state, that those expressions carry the grantee to the center of the highway in the one case, and to the center of the river in the other. The court of errors held, in Child v. Starr, that, under the circumstances of that case, the words along the shore of the river, meant the bank above low water mark, and did not mean the thread of the stream. The supreme court of Massachusetts, in Hatch v. Dwight, (17 Mass. Rep. 298,) decided that when land was bounded by the bank of a stream, and it appeared pretty clear that the stream was intended to be excluded, the grant would be limited by the bank. Judge Story made a similar decision in Dunlap v. Stetson, (4 Mason, 349.) Both those cases were rather cases of construction than otherwise, for both learned courts concede the law to be as it has been above explained.

The case under consideration does not fall within any of those which restrict the boundary to the bank, and exclude the river. The west line of the lot runs north till it strikes “ the north bounds of Hudson river, thence easterly along the said river, so as to include so much of the island as is situated in lot No. 2.” Even the words along the said river, are prima facie suffi*221cient to indicate the center of the stream as the line. The words so as to include the island, &c. were inserted, lest a doubt might be entertained as to which channel of the river would be meant by the words along the said river. The word bounds” of the river, in this deed, do not indicate the bank or shore of the river, but the center. The same word is applied, in the same conveyance, to the division line between lots 2 and 3 and the north line of the patent. By hounds is meant the legal, imaginary line by which the different parcels of land are divided. The plaintiffs’ counsel concedes that the west line does not stop at the north bounds, or bank of the river. If it did, it could not thence run along the said river, nor could it include the island which lies north of the main channel. Many of the American cases on this point are collected in a note to Dovaston v. Payne, (2 Smith’s Lead. Cases, Hare & Wallace’s ed. 192, 193,) and in Angell on Watercourses, 21 to 41, the last edition.

[Fulton General Term, September 6, 1852.

Willard, Hand, Cady and C. L. Allen, Justices.]

The offer of the plaintiffs to show that Henry Walton and Gerard Walton conveyed the parts of lots 1 and 3, and the south part of lot 2, by a description, bounding the grantees on the shore, leaving the channel and islands out of such conveyances, was properly rejected by the learned judge. The fact that the grantors expressly excepted the channel of the river, in these cases, can have no effect on the legal construction of the deed under which the defendant holds. But as the decision was not excepted to, it need not be further noticed.

The cause was correctly disposed of at the circuit, and the judgment should be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.