Opinion
Argued May 8, 1901
Decided October 1, 1901
William N. Dykman for appellant. Percy S. Dudley for respondent.
I think this judgment should not stand. The question in the case is whether Tebo, the defendant's testator, in dredging out the slip by his pier, could become liable to the plaintiff for any damage occasioned to the latter's neighboring pier, by reason of the soil, upon which it stood, subsiding, or falling away, into the excavation made by the dredging. There is no finding that the dredging was negligently performed; although it is found that the dredge, in its operation, excavated a portion of the state land intervening between Tebo's slip and the plaintiff's pier. Negligence will not be presumed and our assumption must be that the excavation beyond Tebo's boundary line was accidental, or without any intention to prejudice the plaintiff in any of his rights. The theory, upon which the plaintiff's right to recover has been upheld, is that the plaintiff had an easement of lateral support in the adjacent land and that it was the defendant's duty to protect the plaintiff's pier by preserving to it what lateral support there had been. I entertain the gravest doubt that the common-law rule thus invoked has its proper application to the case of land under the waters of the sea. The differing circumstances and the interests of the state incline me to the view that it should not be applied. But if we should assume that it might apply, still, in my opinion, the plaintiff made out no right to recover damages. Tebo's wrongdoing, if any there was, consisted in the fact that he excavated the sea bottom by his dredge to a depth which, by force of natural laws, drew into it the soft and plastic mud upon the adjacent and intervening land of the state, with the consequence that the plaintiff's pier, losing some of its previous support, yielded and sank.
Tebo, as riparian owner, had the common-law right, as against all but the state, to have his access to the navigable part of the waters in front of his upland and, by grant from the state, the lands under water, between high and low-water mark, became his for their appropriation to the purposes of commerce, by the erection of a dock, or docks, thereon. He constructed a pier out from high-water mark and a slip, by which it could be availed of for commercial uses. By the legislation of 1873 and 1884, (Chaps. 702 and 491), the owners of real estate in that locality, fronting on the water, were authorized to fill in the lands under water to exterior bulkhead and pier lines. That, however, did not affect the right of Tebo to maintain the pier. It was a permission from the state and not a command. He was under no obligation to destroy the pier property. There is no question here upon his grant, or of his compliance with its conditions. If the grant to Tebo is to be construed as requiring the grantee to fill in the lands under water and a failure to do so has entailed a forfeiture of the grant, that is a question which the state alone can raise, in a proper action. Having then an apparent right to maintain his pier, it would seem to follow that he had a clear right to dredge out the slip alongside the pier, to any proper depth to make it commercially useful, and of the purposes of commerce the maintenance of a dry dock is certainly no inconsiderable one. A slip with water of sufficient depth to float vessels was a necessary incident to the pier. Not only had Tebo the general right to dredge his slip, to the extent necessary to make it commercially useful; but the duty rested upon him by statute, as a pier owner, to properly dredge the adjoining slip. (L. 1860, ch. 254, sec. 4.) If it is an admissible legal proposition that he owed a duty to the plaintiff to protect him in the enjoyment of an easement of lateral support to his pier in the adjacent land, it was, at most, one which regarded the land itself and not the structure upon it. Tebo had a right to excavate upon his lands and the limitation upon that right, if we are to apply the common-law rule referred to, was that it should be without injury to the adjacent land in its natural state. If that land had been burdened by the owner with some improvement, that fact gave to him no right to claim any greater easement of lateral support. This rule should be regarded as settled by the decisions of the courts of this state. ( Lasala v. Holbrook, 4 Paige, 169; Farrand v. Marshall, 19 Barb. 380; and aff'd. 21 ib. 409; Dorrity v. Rapp, 72 N.Y. 307; Booth v. R., W. O.T.R.R. Co., 140 ib. 267. And see Washburn on Easements, 4th ed., pp. 585, 586.) The courts in Massachusetts, at an earlier day, had declared this rule in Thurston v. Hancock, ( 12 Mass. 223), and in Gilmore v. Driscoll, ( 122 Mass. 199), it was mentioned as a rule which had the weight of American authority; a number of cases being cited.
The situation, here, was that all these lands under water, in question, being part of the bed of the bay of New York, consisted of mud; which, having no consistency, would subside or fall away, with any change effected in the level of the adjacent sea bottom, and to that result the weight of the pier would, naturally, contribute. There is no finding that the pier did not increase the lateral pressure upon the adjacent land and, therefore, the natural presumption may be indulged, under the circumstances, that it did. It is plain that no appreciable damage could have been done to the plaintiff's land. In its natural state, it was soft mud. Its withdrawal or subsidence, would, ordinarily, be of advantage in the deepening of the water. Its subsidence, in the nature of things, must have happened and it is only by considering the effect upon the superstructure of the pier, that we get at the damage to the plaintiff. But, within the rule of law, as it has been declared in England and in this state, that could not give rise to a cause of action. ( Smith v. Thackerah, L.R. [1 C.P.,] 564; Lasala v. Holbrook, supra; Booth v. R., W. O.T.R.R. Co., supra.)
As it was observed by Judge ANDREWS in the Booth case, in speaking of the rule as applying only to lands in their natural condition and as not extending so as to give to the owner of a building the right to a lateral support, there was, in this case, "damage but no wrong, because what was done by the adjacent owner was in the lawful and permitted use of his property." In dredging out his slip, Tebo was in the lawful exercise of his property rights and as that which resulted to the plaintiff's lands was not a damage of any appreciable nature, he cannot be rendered liable because the plaintiff's pier sank with the subsidence of its plastic bed. This is the result which I reach upon the theory that the common-law rule of lateral support is applicable. But, as I have suggested, it cannot, reasonably, be applicable to such conditions. Applied to the land, as it is usually owned, it can be seen to have its reasonable operation upon the relative obligations of adjacent landowners; but I am quite unable to see how it had any relevancy to the case of lands under water, where the tide ebbs and flows; whose ownership is in the state, in trust for the benefit of the people, and which are granted by the state for the advancement of its commerce.
Then, in my opinion, there is a further view to be taken of this question from the standpoint of the state. While the grant was obtained by Tebo for his private advantage, nevertheless, it was made by the state, primarily, in pursuance of a policy to benefit the municipality by the improvement of its harbor and, therefore, to advantage, to that extent, the commonwealth. ( Langdon v. Mayor, etc., of N.Y., 93 N.Y. 129.) It contemplated a development of the subject of the grant by the grantee, in a direction that would promote the purposes of commerce. As I have before observed, the question is not here as to whether Tebo has complied with the conditions of the grant. If he has not, that is for the state to assert. If it shall be held in this case that the owner of lands lying under the waters of the sea cannot deepen, or improve, them for commercial purposes, without incurring a possible liability to an adjacent owner by reason of the effect upon his structures of the shifting of the loose soil or mud, upon which they were insufficiently rested; or if he is legally bound to anticipate such a result and to make exertions to protect all such adjacent structures, the precedent must militate against the free and effective operation of the policy of the state, as it would tend to impose a more or less onerous burden upon the riparian proprietor in the exercise of his right to develop his water properties. The deepening by Tebo of his slip was to make it available to vessels entering from the public highway of the sea. As long as he elected not to avail himself of the permission to fill in his lands under water, they remained a part of the bay of New York and that was, too, the case with those intervening between his property and the plaintiff's and which still remained in the ownership of the state. It was Tebo's right and it was the interest of the state that he should make use of his water properties for purposes of commerce, and no restrictions upon that right should be countenanced by the courts, which interfere with its lawful exercise; unless they can be seen to be based upon some rule of property of clear and obvious application in such cases.
For these reasons, I think the judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered, costs to abide event.
PARKER, Ch. J., BARTLETT, MARTIN and VANN, JJ., concur; HAIGHT and WERNER, JJ., dissent.
Judgment reversed, etc.