Philadelphia Brewing Co. v. McOwen
Philadelphia Brewing Co. v. McOwen
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an action of ejectment for lands lying beneath the waters of the river Delaware. The locus in quo described in the declaration has a base of two hundred and thirty-eight and ninety-four hundredths feet in a line drawn parallel with Eront street, of the city of Camden, and three hundred and twenty feet to the west of the westerly side thereof, which line so drawn is below the high-water line of the river. This base of two hundred and thirty-eight and ninety-four hundredths feet is the1 easternmost boundary of the locus in quo, and if extended westwardly out into the river until the exterior wharf line is reached, will include the land for which this suit is brought, which each party claims under the state’s riparian grant.
It will be observed that the tra[ct of land under water thus described does not adjoin the fast land on the Jersey shore, but that between the easterly end or base of such tract and the shore the river Delaware rises at high tide; that is to say, the river at high water intervenes between the easternmost boundary of the locus in quo and the fast land of the shore.
Originally, of course, the land described in the plaintiff’s declaration belonged to the State of New Jersey, and each of the parties to the present action has a grant from the riparian commissioners which in its descriptive portion covers the locus in quo. The defendant’s grant was earlier in point of time but the plaintiff contends, and its present action is based upon the proposition of fact, that the defendant is not now, and was not when he got his riparian grant, the owner of any land adjoining the locus in quo, and hence that he did not by the said grant acquire the rights of the state therein; but that on the other hand the plaintiff’s grant covering the same lands was duly supported by its ownership of the ripa opposite the locus in quo, i. c., the land adjoining the waters of the river that intervene between the locus in quo and the high-water line on the Jersey shore. If the plaintiff’s proposition of fact is true its legal proposition is also correct, for the defendant’s grant from the state expressly provided that such grant should be void “if the said Frederick McOwen is not the owner of the land adjoining the land under water hereby granted.”
The fundamental question therefore is whether or not the defendant was the owner of land on which the river rose at high water adjoining the locus in quo. In more concrete form the precise question is whether the Pavonia Land Association, which was the common grantor, had conveyed to the defendant, who was the earlier grantee, any land adjoining the locus in quo, or whether such common grantor did not remain the owner of the land at high water to the east of the locus in quo until by a subsequent conveyance it conveyed such land to the immediate grantor of the plaintiff.
At the trial the plaintiff made out a case under its declaration by proving the following facts: On October 18th, 1893, the Pavonia Land Association owned a city block on the easterly bank of the Delaware river, extending from Dupont street on the south to Cooper avenue on the north, bounded on the east by Front street, of the city of Camden, and on the west by the Delaware river, whose waters washed the entire
On this writ of error the defendant below, who is now the plaintiff in error, relies upon the propositions of law advanced by him in the trial court as grounds for the granting of the motion he then made. If, however, in view of any of such propositions it was error for the trial court to direct a verdict for the defendant in error, the plaintiff in error may avail himself thereof.
The propositions in question have therefore been examined with the view of determining whether error was committed at the trial either in the denial of the motion then made by the plaintiff in error or in the granting of that made by the defendant in error.
The first proposition relied upon for reversal is that the riparian grant made to the defendant in error inured as matter of law to the plaintiff in error by way of estoppel. The line of reasoning upon which this proposition is invoked is that the common grantor, i. e., the Pavonia Land Association, claiming to own what it conveyed to the plaintiff in error, warranted its title thereto, so that if such grantor had acquired the state’s title to the land in question it could not
The next proposition is that the riparian act under which the defendant in error got the state’s grant did not authorize such grant, because such act is by its title limited to “lands lying under the waters of the bay of New York and elsewhere in this state.”
The argument upon this point is that “if the words ‘and elsewhere’ were omitted, the statute would clearly apply to nothing but the bay of New York;” to which the plenary answer is that the words “and elsewhere” were not omitted.
The next contention is that the rights obtained from the state by the defendant in error cannot be asserted in this case for the reason that certain rents due the state are in arrears. This fact, if true, does not in a legal sense concern the plaintiff in error. As to such matters the state is represented by agencies of its own creation, of which the plaintiff in error is not one.
Next it is claimed that “the state never acquired any title to the land in question.” This contention involves the affirmative of the proposition that the land in suit, although originally granted by the Duke of York through mesne conveyances to the .Proprietors was not included in the surrender-made by the latter to the Crown in 1702, and hence did not
The argument thus made assumes as its major premise that “title to the land under tidewater passed by the grant from Charles II. to the Duke of York,” citing in support of this proposition Martin v. Waddell, 16 Pet. 367, and American Dock and Improvement Co. v. Trustees, 12 Stew. Eq. 409. Martin v. Waddell was decided by the Supreme Court of the United States in 1842 and was reprinted in our state reports for that year. 3 Harr. 495. In the opinion delivered by Chief Justice Taney, the principal matter discussed was whether the grant of Charles II. to the Dube of York separated the “soils” under navigable waters in this state from “the other royalties”' so as to convert them into private property, or whether such “soils” passed to the Duke of York to be held by him, as, since Magna Charta, the king himself had held them, i. e., “of common liberty,” as Lord Hale characterizes “the jura regalia.” Be Juris Maris, Harr. R. L. 711.
Chief Justice Taney construed the grant as having the latter effect. “No words,” he says, “are used for the purpose of separating them from the jura regalia and converting them into private property.” Upon this point the opinion concludes with these words: “In the judgment of the court the land under the navigable waters passed to the grantee as one of the royalties incident to the powers of government; and were to be held by him in the same manner and for the same purposes that the navigable waters of England and the soils under them are held by .the Crown.”
In 1870 Chief Justice Beasley, delivering the opinion of
The other case cited was American Dock and Improvement Co. v. Trustees. In this equity case it appears that Mr. Justice Depue, charging the jury in an issue of law out of chancerj', said: “These rights in lands under tidewaters in the province of East Jersey were granted by Charles II. to the Duke of York by the charters of 1664 and 1674, and the land or soil under such waters passed to the Duke of York, to be held by him in the same manner as the soil under the navigable waters of England was held by the Crown,” citing Martin v. Waddell, 16 Pet. 367, and Stevens v. Paterson and Newark Railroad Co., 5 Vroom 532. The only action of the Court of Chancery in this case was to deny a new trial.
It would seem, therefore, that unless this court is prepared to recede from the views expressed in Stevens v. Paterson and Newark Railroad Co., the Duke of York did not take in lands under the navigable waters of this state that private property therein that is necessary to sustain the argument and trial theory of the plaintiff in error. For if the Duke of York did not take in such lands the property to low water he could not have transferred such property to the Proprietors, and if the Proprietors did not have it they could by no act of theirs vest in Samuel Coles a title to private property they themselves did not possess, so that such property should remain in their grantee notwithstanding their surrender to the Crown in 1702.
Inasmuch, however, as we have not had the benefit of counsels'1 views upon this precise phase of the case the matter now under consideration will be disposed of upon grounds directly within the lines of their argument.
It is evident therefore, assuming all that is argued, that the survey to Jacob Spicer in 1734 rested in part upon the survey to Samuel Coles said to be prior to 1685 and in part upon a warrant made to Isaac DeCou in 1717, and that it is impossible to tell, assuming that the survey of 1734 covered the locus in quo, whether such particular part of the three hundred and sixty acres was originally in the Coles survey or came into the Spicer survey as “overplush” by force of the DeCou warrant, which was in 1717, and hence after the surrender to the Crown. Nothing therefore was shown, even inferentially, by this documentary evidence that could have been accepted by the trial court or that should have.been submitted to the jury.
Such rights adverse to the state were not established at the trial, nor is any legal error of the trial court in dealing with the testimony upon this branch of the case pointed out.
The production of certain “descriptions of fisheries” and the self-serving recitals of the accompanying bonds to the effect that the obligors therein were the owners of the fisheries so described did not, as documentary evidence addressed to the court, establish the existence of such rights as against the state or demonstrate to the court that the fisheries in question were operated on the locus in quo. The most that can be said is that such proof, taken in connection with the very meager oral testimony on the subject, may have presented a question for the jury that it would have been error for the trial judge to refuse to submit to them. Upon this point, however, the plaintiff in error is concluded by the admission of his counsel contained in the following colloquium with the court at the conclusion of the testimony:
“The Court—I believe it is agreed there is no question of fact which the jury ought to pass upon?” to which counsel for the defendant in error said: “That is our view of the case,” and counsel for the plaintiff in error said: “I cannot conceive why we are not entitled to a direction. It seems to me that the Court should determine that question,” and then proceeded to argue matters of law the points on which his motion was based. After this motion had been denied the court again asked, “Now is there any question of fact to be submitted to the jury?”' to which counsel of plaintiff in error responded that he thought it should be left to the jury to say whether there was a survey of the land prior to 1702, and then added, “I do not think of any question except that.”
In view of this double interrogation of counsel and his replies to the court it cannot now be said that a question proper to be left to -the jury was erroneously withheld from them, or that from the testimony alone, without the aid of the jury, the trial judge should have held that rights adverse to
The attempts of counsel to cross-examine the witnesses of the other side as to fishing • operations were overruled, but such rulings merely regulated the order of proof and did not prevent the plaintiff in error from calling such witnesses as part of his own case. The remarks of judges and text-writers cited as historical proof of the existence and incidents of shore fisheries in the Delaware river did not in the slightest degree tend to show the operation on the land in question of the fisheries mentioned in the documentary proof that was offered.
No error of the trial court in dealing with this assignment is disclosed, but to avoid misapprehension it should be added that if error had occurred in this or in the immediately preceding assignment it is not to be conclusively assumed that such error would require the reversal of the judgment recovered in this action of ejectment.
In such actions, when both parties at the trial are claiming title from a common grantor, it is not in general requisite that either should trace his title back of such common source. Such was the ease here, where each party claimed under a riparian grant from the state through the Pavonia Land Association. The effort, therefore, of the plaintiff in error to show that the state had no title presents the question we have indicated but which, in view of the conclusion we have reached, we shall not further discuss.
Finding no error that should lead to reversal, the judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
For reversal—None.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.