The plaintiff in this case seeks a remedy.under the provisions of section 1925 of the Code of Civil Procedure,, as supplemented by chapter 531 of the Laws of 1881,. and chapter 673 of the Laws of 1887. Under these statutes it was held by the court of appeals in Talcott v. City of Buffalo, 26 N. E. Rep. 263, that the remedy was confined to cases where the acts complained of are without power, or where corruption, fraud, or bad faith amounting to fraud is charged; it being said that the terms “waste” and “injury” used in the statute “comprehended only illegal, wrongful, or dishonest official acts, and were not intended to subject the official action of boards, officers, or municipal bodies acting within the limits of their jurisdiction and discretion, but which some tax-payer might conceive to be unwise, improvident, or based on errors of judgment, to the supervision of the judicial tribunal.” Upon this basis the questions in this case are: (1) Whether the act of 1889 is unconstitutional by reason of its title, as in violation of section 16, article 3, of the constitution, which provides that no local or private bill shall embrace more than one subject, and that shall be expressed in the title. (2) Whether the provisions in the act of 1889 for the issuing of bonds are invalid, under section 11 of article 8 of the constitution of this state, by reason of the term of the bonds exceeding 20 years, and the absence of any provision for a sinking fund. (3) Whether section 18 of the act, as amended in 1890, is. in violation of section 6 of article 7 of the constitution, which provides that the legislature shall not sell, lease, or otherwise dispose of the Erie canal, or is in violation of section 9 of article 1 of the constitution, which provides for the assent of two-thirds of each branch of the legislature to every bill appropriating the public moneys or property for local or private purposes.
1. The title of the act of 1889 is “An act to establish and maintain a water department in and for the city of Syracuse. ” The claim is that this does not adequately express the subject of the act, which is to supply the city of Syracuse with water. In People v. Briggs, 50 N. Y. 554, it was held that the title, “An act to amend the several acts in relation to the city of Rochester,” expressed a subject broad enough to embrace all the details of the charter and government of the city of Rochester. In Astor v. Railroad Co., 113 N. Y. 93, 110, 20 N. E. Rep. 594, it is said: “When the subject is expressed, all-matters fairly and reasonably connected with it, and all measures which will or may facilitate its accomplishment, are proper to be incorporated in the act, and are germane to the title. The title must be such, at least, as fairly to suggest or give a clue to the subject dealt with in the act, and unless it comes up to' this standard it falls below the constitutional requirement. ” In Cooley, Const. Lim. 172, it is said: “The generality of a title1 is, therefore, no objection to it, so long as it is not made a cover to legislation incongruous in it* *425self, and which by no fair intendment can be considered as having a necessary and proper connection. The legislature must determine for itself how broad and comprehensive shall be the object of a statute, and how much particularity shall be employed in the title in defining it.” Within these rules the title in question was sufficient. A water department, as that expression is ordinarily understood to mean, could not be established and maintained without a supply of water. The obtaining of such supply would, therefore, be within the scope of the subject as expressed in the title.
2. Section 11 of article 8 of the constitution is as follows: “Sec. 11. Mo county, city, town, or village shall hereafter give any money or property or loan its money or credit to or in aid of any individual, association, or corporation, or’become directly or indirectly the owner of stock in or bonds of any association or corporation; nor shall any such county, city, town, or village be allowed to incur any indebtedness except for county, city, town, or village purposes. This section shall not prevent such county, city, town, or village from making such provision for the aid or support of its poor as may be authorized by law. Mo county containing a city of over 100,000 inhabitants, or any such city, shall be allowed to become indebted for any purpose or in any manner to an amount which, including existing indebtedness, shall exceed ten per centum of the assessed valuation of the real estate of such county or city subject to taxation, as it appeared by the assessment rolls of said county or city on the last assessment for state or county taxes prior to the incurring of such indebtedness; and all indebtedness in excess of such limitation, except such as may now exist, shall be absolutely void, except as herein otherwise provided. Mo. such county or such city whose present indebtedness exceeds ten per centum of the assessed valuation of its real estate subject to taxation shall be allowed to become indebted in any further amount until such indebtedness shall be reduced within such limit. This section shall not be construed to prevent the issuing of certificates of indebtedness or revenue bonds issued in anticipation of the collection of taxes for amounts actually contained or to be contained in the taxes for the year when such certificates or revenue bonds are issued and payable out of such taxes. Mor shall this section be construed to prevent the issue of bonds to provide for the supply of water, but the term of the bonds issued to provide for the supply of water shall not exceed twenty years, and a sinking fund shall be created on the issuing of the said bonds for their redemption by raising annually a sum which will produce an amount equal to the sum of the principal and interest of said bonds at their maturity. The amount hereafter to be raiséd by tax for county or city purposes in any county containing a city of over one hundred thousand inhabitants, or any such city of this state, in addition to providing for the principal and interest of existing debts, shall not in the aggregate exceed in any one year two per centum of the assessed valuation of the real and per-’ sonal estate of such county or city, to be ascertained as prescribed in this section in respect to county or city debt.”' The claim of the defendants is that the provision as to bonds issued to provide for the supply of water applies only to cities containing over 100,000 inhabitants. The claim of the plaintiff is that the provision is general, and applies to all cities. It is conceded that the city of Syracuse has less than 100,000 inhabitants. Section 11, as it now stands, was adopted in Movember, 1884. It was made up of section 11 as it existed prior to that date, adding thereto the provisions commencing with the words, “Mo county containing a city of over one hundred thousand inhabitants, or any such city,” etc., to the end of the section, so that prior to 1884 no county, city, town, or village could give any money or property or loan its money or credit to or in aid of any individual or corporation, or incur any indebtedness except for county, city, town, or village purposes. An exception was made in favor of the poor, apparently upon the idea that the general.inhibition of gifts of money or property to or in aid of any one would unless quali*426fled include the poor. Under the section as it then stood, as applicable to all cities, there was unlimited power in the legislature to authorize them to incur indebtedness, except only it must be for city purposes. The amendatory clauses of 1884 restricted this general legislative power by providing that no city of over 100,000 inhabitants should be allowed to incur indebtednes for any purpose beyond a certain limit. Then came the provisions: “This section shall not be construed to prevent the issuing of certificates” in certain cases; “nor shall this section be construed to prevent the issue of bonds to provide for the supply of water, ” etc. These limitations of construction both had reference to some limitation of power, and the only limitation on the subject was that having reference only to the large cities. The power as to the smaller cities remained unlimited. There was no occasion to enlarge it. It is conceded that the furnishing of a water supply is for city purposes. It would seem, therefore, that the provision as to water bonds had reference only to those large cities whose right to incur debts was limited. They were the only ones to be benefited by the reservation or privilege, and the burden is no more extensive than the benefit conferred. In fact, it is quite apparent that all the amendatory clauses had reference only to the described class of cities. But it is said that there is no more reason for- limiting the term and providing a sinking fund in case of bonds of large cities than of smaller ones. That may be so. And so it may be said with as much reason that smaller cities should be limited in the amount of their indebtedness to the same extent as larger ones. It is not done, however; and the same reason that would allow this to so remain w'ould allow the power as to water bonds to be unlimited. The question for us is, what is the' fair construction of the section, having in viéw the circumstances of its adoption? We therefore conclude that the limitation as to water bonds does not apply to the present case.
3. Does section 18 of the act, as amended in 1890, appropriate the public property for local or private purposes? It is conceded that the law did not have the two-thirds assent required by the constitution, and it was a local act. People v. O’Brien, 38 N. Y. 194. This is not disputed. Was there an appropriation of public property? The city, through its water board, was authorized to take and conduct from Skaneateles lake water not required for the Erie canal, through a pipe not exceeding 30 inches in diameter. Before doing this, however, the city must increase the storage capacity of the lake sufficiently to store therein all the ordinary flow of its water-shed, and must acquire or extinguish all water-power rights upon the outlet of the lake to be affected by such storage. The work authorized by the section must be done under the direction and control of the superintendent of the public works, and in accordance with plans and specifications prepared or approved by the state engineer, and the dam and all structures connected therewith, arid the regulation of the flow of water from the lake into the pipe, should continue in the exclusive charge and control of such superintendent, and shall by or under his direction be maintained and kept in repair at the expense of the city. If for any reason the flow of water into the pipe should prevent the state from having a sufficient quantity for all the uses of the Erie canal, the superintendent was authorized and required to stop such flow, in whole or in part, so far as might be necessary in his judgment to secure such sufficient quantity, “it being understood that the rights of the city of Syracuse hereby conferred in and to such surplus waters are to be subject always to the superior claims of the state thereto. ” The board was given full power to do and. perform all acts and things necessary or proper to enable the city to acquire, store, and obtain water from the lake in accordance with the provisions of the section. In substance the city was given the surplus waters as such surplus might be determined by the state officers, without reference to whether such surplus was greater or less than the additional storage to be furnished at its expense. The expression “superior claims,” used in the clause above quoted, had ref*427erence only to the claims ofthe state of water for the use of the canal, evidently contemplating that there was and would be a surplus which would be obtained by the city. The city was also given the right or privilege of using the lake as a means of storage of its additional waters, any right to or in which of any riparian owner upon the lake or outlet it was bound to extinguish. Slcaneateles lake, as the case shows, is a body of water about 15 miles long, with a general width of about 1 mile, having a surface area of about 13 square miles. It is located about 17 miles from Syracuse, and is about 453 feet above the level of the Erie canal at the Jordan level. It has a watershed, including the surface of the lake, of 73J square miles, and discharges its water, through an outlet known as “Skaneateles Creek,” northerly into the Seneca river, distant between 10 and 11 miles. The lake has been for many years navigated by steam-boats and other craft, but there is no navigable communication between it and any other waters. There is no direct evidence as to the ownership of the bed of the lake. It was conceded at the trial and is found that the patents issued for the state by the lands surrounding the lake designate by lot numbers the lands conveyed, and do not describe the same by metes and bounds, and that the original surveyor’s field-notes of the lots show the shore lines of the lake as bounding lines thereof. Assuming, as we probably may, that the state was the original owner of the whole, its patents carried the title to low-water mark, according to the rule laid down in Wheeler v. Spinola, 54 N. Y. 377. That would leave the state the owner of the bed below low-water mark. The state, from the first construction of the Erie canal, had used a portion of the waters of the lake to supply the canal. Prior to 1843 a further supply was found to be necessary, and therefore, on the 29th June, 1843, the canal board of the state, as they were authorized by law to do, adopted a resolution “that the waters of Skaneateles lake, and the outlet of the same, be, and they are hereby, appropriated to the use of the public for a reservoir and feeder to the Erie canal;” and the canal commissioners were directed to make the improvements necessary to carry the resolution into effect. From the map of the appropriation it appears that at the foot of the lake lands were taken which included the dam and water-rights at that point. No question is made, as I understand the case, about the legality of the appropriation as made by the resolution of the canal board. The point is as to the extent or effect of such appropriation. From that time the state maintained a dam at the foot of the lake, and now the flow of water from the lake at that point is regulated by a dam nine feet high, containing gates through which the water is permitted to flow into the outlet, and these gates, since 1843, have been under the management of an employe of the state. About nine miles below the foot of the lake, at the village of Jordan, a dam has been constructed across the outlet, by means of which a portion of the flow from the lake is discharged into the canal. An aqueduct constructed under the canal permits the flow of that part of the stream not, used for canal purposes beneath the canal and on to the Seneca river, through its natural channel. Upon the outlet and between the lake and the canal are situated, numerous mills, deriving their power from the use of the waters of the outlet, and these are the powers referred to in the act of 1890. During the time in every year when the canals are closed a volume of water has been permitted to flow through the gates of the dam at the foot of the lake for the use of mills along the outlet, except for several periods in different years, when the water was held back either for purposes of repair or to increase the storage in the lake. The quantity of water thus ordinarily permitted to flow during the closed season of navigation amounts, as the court below found, approximately to about 50,000,000 gallons per day. This water has never been utilized by the state for canal purposes. The carrying capacity of the 30-inc.h pipe authorized to be laid is found to be 15,000,000 gallons per day, and the drawing of that amount per day would be *428equivalent in one month to 2 inches in depth from the surface of the lake. These are the main facts upon the subject. The theory of the defendants is that by the appropriation of 1843 the state only acquired the right to so much water as might be required for the uses of the canal; that the balance belongs to the riparian owners; and that, therefore, the statute in question did not give to the city any property of the state. The theory of the plaintiff is that the appropriation in 1843 was a permanent one, and passed the fee to the state, and the act which gave the city an interest in it appropriated to that extent public property .to the use of the city.
The appropriation of 1843 was in form permanent and absolute. In this respect it differs from the case of Manufacturing Co. v. State, 104 N. Y. 562, 11 N. E. Rep. 264, where the state possessed only the rights of the Seneca Lock navigation Company, and those were expressly limited to the use of only so much as was necessary for the purposes of navigation, and upon that ground a liability for waste was held to exist against the state. There is no doubt that in fact this was a permanent appropriation, and in such a case, as said in Heacock v. State, 105 N. Y. 248, 11 N. E. Rep. 638, under the Revised Statutes then in force (sections 46, 48, pt. 1, c. 9, tit. 9, p. 484, 1 Rev. St., 4th Ed.) it was provided that the state should take a fee, and, unless the land-owner applied for compensation within one year, his right should be deemed extinguished. See, also, Mark v. State, 97 N. Y. 572. In such a case, if the use for the purposes of a canal was abandoned, the property would not revert. Rexford v. Knight, 11 N. Y. 308; Railroad Co. v. Slaight, 1 N. Y. Supp. 554; Cooley, Const. Lim. (6th Ed.) 688. If the statute authorized the entire ownership to be taken, and the appropriation followed the statute, the fact that all might not be needed for the use of the canal would not reduce the extent of the right taken. In Sweet v. Railroad Co., 79 N. Y. 293, it was held that a fee may be taken, although the public use for which the land is to be taken is special, and not of necessity permanent- or perpetual; and that, when a statute authorizes the taking of a fee, it cannot be held invalid, or that an easement only was acquired thereunder, on the ground that an easement only was required to accomplish the purpose in view. It is also to be borne in mind that in 1843 there was a statute (pt. 1, c. 9, tit. 9, Rev. St. § 75 etseq.) providing for the sale of surplus waters, thus indicating that the appropriations of that character were not simply of so much as was necessary for the uses of the canals. It seems to me, therefore, that we must assume that the appropriation of 1843 was not simply of what was required for the Erie canal, but was just as broad as the resolution of the canal board made it,—“the waters of Skaneateles lake, and the outlet of the same.” It would then follow that when the act of 1890 assumed to give to the city of Syracuse the right to take waters “not required for the- canal,” it would, if operative, give to the city the benefit of a portion of the title of the state; in other words, appropriate public property. Under the appropriation as made by the canal board the state was entitled to take and have delivered through the outlet to the point where the state dam at the foot of the outlet is erected all the flow from Skaneateles lake. The state, at its dam at the foot of the outlet, could either turn the water into the canal or into the Seneca river, or, under the law as it then stood, sell the surplus. Suppose, as claimed by the defendants, that the riparian owners along the outlet had a right to use the water as it passed along, that would not give them any right to divert it, and prevent its delivery at the foot of the outlet; and the city, as their grantee, would obtain no such right. Yo one but the state could give the right to divert. In doing so it would part with a right to property. There is another feature of the case which is of some importance on this question. The state, by its appropriation in 1843 and subsequent improvements, became the possessor and owner of a complete reservoir. The act of 1890 gives to the city of Syracuse the right in perpetuity to use this reservoir for the purpose of *429storage of surplus waters for its benefit. There is thus constituted á kind of dual ownership, which, to say the least, is an impairment of the previous complete ownership of the state. The impairment of rights is the taking of property. Ex parte Jennings, 6 Cow. 525. I am not prepared to say that the act of 1890 can be construed to be within that provision of the constitution which says that the legislature “shall not sell, lease, or otherwise dispose of the Erie canal.” In the previous constitution the provision was that “the legislature shall never sell or dispose of * * * the said navigable communications, or any part or section thereof.” It is true that by the statute in force in 1846 (1 Rev. St. pt. 1, c. 9, tit. 9, art. 1, § 1) “the navigable communication connecting the waters of Lake Erie with those of the Hudson river, and all the side-cuts, feeders, and other works belonging to the state connected therewith, were known and designated by the name of the ‘ Erie Canal.’” This would include, very likely, the Skaneateles reservoir and feeder. Still the act of 1890 made the rights of the city of Syracuse subserv-. lent to the uses of the Erie canal. It aims to take surplus waters, which, though they may belong to the state, would hardly be considered a part of the Erie canal. True it is, too, that certain rights in the reservoir are conferred, but the paramount control for the benefit of the canal is retained. In the future management there might arise opportunity for friction and embarrassment in regard to conflicting claims or wants of the respective parties. Still there is some force in the suggestion that the inhibition upon a sale, lease, or disposal of the canal, apparently as an entirety, does not reach the present case. Be that as it may, I see no way to escape the conclusion that the act of 1890 assumes to appropriate public property to a local purpose, and is therefore invalid, by reason of the absence of the requisite two-thirds assent of the legislature. Upon this ground the judgment should be modified by inserting a provision in effect declaring the invalidity of section 18 of the act of 1889 as amended by the act of 1890, and striking out the award of costs to the defendants. The appellant should have the costs of the appeal.
Judgment accordingly. All concur.