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Jones agt. Jones.

SUPREME COURT.

THOMAS W. JONES agt. JANE JONES, ELIZABETH GARMON and CATHERINE OWEN.

Will-Construction of — By whom action to determine the effect and meaning of a devise of real estate may be brought Code of Civil Procedure, section 1866- · Mohawk river - The title thereto.

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By the provisions of section 1866 of the Code of Civil Procedure a devisee in a will is vested with the right to bring his action to determine the true effect and meaning of a devise to him of real estate; and he has a right to require, by action brought for that purpose, the judgment of the supreme court, as to the intent and meaning of a testator in making a testamentary disposition of real estate, so far as the same involves the interests of the devisees.

The Mohawk river is a navigable stream, and the title to the bed of the river is in the people of the state, and the decedent's title to land described as extending to the "Mohawk river" extends only to its bank.

Oneida Special Term, March, 1885.

THIS action is brought by the plaintiff, as devisee and heirat-law of William Jones, against the defendants, also his devisees and heirs-at-law, for the purpose of determining the construction and effect of certain devises of real estate to each, under the last will and testament of said William Jones. William Jones, then a resident of the county of Oneida, died in the month of January, 1884, leaving a last will and testament, and also leaving him surviving, the parties to this action, his children and heirs-at-law. After his death the will was duly proven before the surrogate of Oneida county, as a will of real estate, and duly recorded as such in the office of the clerk of said county. At the time of his death the decedent was the owner in fee and died seized and possessed of certain real estate situate in the town of Marcy, in said county of Oneida, and lying between and south of the highway leading from Deerfield to Rome and the Mohawk river. He acquired title to the same in two parcels, one of thirty-two acres and

Jones agt. Jones.

one of seventy-five. It is admitted by the answer that the description of each is correctly set forth in the complaint. The grant in one case runs to the Mohawk river, and thence along the same for its southern boundary. The second parcel is bounded on the south by the Mohawk river. The total amount of lands is 107 acres, and comprises the farm and homestead of the decedent, and upon which he lived at the time of his death. The eastern boundary of the premises is designated as the Miller line, or line between lands known as the Miller land, and the lands in question. This line is an original lot line, crossing the Deerfield road, and extending from it southerly to the Mohawk river. The decedent, William Jones, by his said last will, devised said real estate to his said children as follows: To his daughter Jane Jones, he gave twenty acres, and described the same as lying south of the center of said highway, also called the river road, and runs down to the Mohawk river, and adjoins on the west what was the "Miller lot." To his daughter Elizabeth Garmon, he gave twenty acres, lying west of the above twenty acres, and adjoining the same, and running from the center of said road to said river. To his daughter Catherine Owen he also gave twenty acres, lying on the westerly side of the lands above devised to his daughter Elizabeth, and adjoining the same, and running from the center of said road to said river. He gave and devised to his son Thomas W. Jones, the plaintiff, during and for the term of his natural life, the rest, residue and remainder of his farm and lands upon which he then resided on said road, and after his death he gave the fee to his (said Thomas') children.

No question is made as to a defect of parties. Indeed that question is especially waived by the defendants. The plaintiff seeks to establish the boundaries of the respective twenty acres given to his sisters, and to do this two questions are presented.

First. Did the land of the decedent, at the time of his death, extend to the center of the Mohawk river, and if so, is the river bed included in the several devisees to his three daughters?

Jones agt. Jones.

Second. In giving the respective twenty acres to his daughter, did he intend, and should the number of acres be ascertained by running the westerly line of each, parallel with the above mentioned "Miller line," and extending thence to the center of said river.

D. C. Stoddard, for plaintiff.

Joseph S. Avery, for defendant.

KENNEDY, J.-The defendants waive any defect of parties. I am of the opinion that the remainderman after the termination of the life estate will be in no manner affected by the judgment in this action. It would be prudent at least to have made them parties. Yielding, however, to the wishes of the parties, I think it proper to dispose of the questions in the case at least so far as the same may relate to and affect the life estate of the plaintiff.

It is insisted by the defendants that the plaintiff, as devisee, cannot maintain this action, it being one involving the construction of the will. The plaintiff concedes that before the adoption of the Code of Civil Procedure this action could not. be maintained, but he insists that by the provisions of section 1866 of said Code the right is vested in the plaintiff to bring it for the construction of, and to have adjudged the effect of the said several devises.

By chapter 238 of the Laws of 1853, as amended by chapter 316 of the Laws of 1879, it is provided that the validity of any actual or alleged devise or will of real estate may be determined by the supreme court in a proper action for that purpose, &c. By this provision the only action a devisee could maintain was one to determine the validity of any actual or alleged devise. Section 1866, which is a substitute for and is enacted in the place of said provision, provides "that the validity, construction or effect, under the laws of the state, of a testamentary disposition of real property situate within the state, or of an interest in such property which

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Jones agt. Jones.

would descend to an heir of the intestate, may be determined, in an action brought for that purpose, in like manner as the validity of a deed purporting to convey real estate may be determined," &c.

I am not aware that this provision has received a judicial construction. In the absence of this I am left to give it such effect as the language imports and as the legislature manifestly intended. I am of the opinion that the added words "construction" and "effect" are to be taken and construed in their literal sense and ordinarily understood meaning; and giving them this construction it was intended to vest in a devisee a right to bring his action to determine the true effect and meaning of a devise to him of real estate, and that he has a right to require, by action brought for that purpose, the judgment of this court as to the intent and meaning of a testator in making a testamentary disposition of real estate so far as the same involves the interest of the devisees. This seems the more manifest from the subsequent language: "In the same manner as the validity of a deed purporting to convey real estate may be determined." If this construction is denied, no effect can be given to the words quoted, incorporated as new, in said section. It was manifestly the intention of the testator to give to his children, the several devisees, all the land which he owned, lying south of and between the river road and the Mohawk river. It would be unjust to assume, if he in fact owned to the center of the river, that he intended to limit the devised lands to the bank of the stream and retain the bed, which of itself was of no value and could not be rendered of avail independent of the adjoining lands for any practical purpose. The question then as to the extent of the gift must be determined by the title in the decedent as it existed at the time of his death. The complaint alleges that the decedent's title to the piece of land first described, extended to the "Mohawk river" and thence along the same. As to the second parcel it is alleged as bounded on the south by the "Mohawk river." The truth of these

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Jones agt. Jones.

allegations is expressly admitted by the answer; and if the river was a non-navigable stream, upon the description in the grant, no question could arise but that it carried the title to the middle of the stream. It must be regarded as established, and judicial notice may be taken of the fact, that the Mohawk river is a navigable stream, and the extent of the testator's title must be determined in the light of this fact.

The question whether the bed of navigable rivers in this state remained in the people when the tide did not ebb and flow, or whether the public reservation extended only to a simple easement consisting of, and limited to, the right of passage has been the subject of much discussion, and in earlier days of considerable judicial conflict (Tibbitts case, 17 Wend., 571; Commissioners of the Canal agt. Kempshall, 26 Wend., 404; Child agt. Starr, 4 Hill, 369; Walton agt. Tifft, 14 Barb., 216). These and many others, apparently conflicting, came under review by the court of appeals (In the People on the relation, &c., as Canal Appraisers, 33 N. Y., 461). Judge DAVIS there examines the authorities not only in this state but in many sister states, as well also those in England, and reached the conclusion that the doctrine of the commonlaw that those streams could only be regarded as navigable in a legal sense when the tide ebbed and flowed was not applicable to the inland waters of this state; but that the question was to be determined by the fact, regardless of the commonlaw limitations, and such was the unanimous judgment of the court. This doctrine has been frequently affirmed since, and I think may be regarded as settled (Crill agt. City of Rome, 47 How., 398; see, also, Seneca Nation of Indians agt. Knight, 23 N. Y., 500). This being the law the title to the bed of the Mohawk river remains in the people, and the decedent under his conveyance took only to its bank.

It is suggested by the plaintiff that in the absence of proof, and in light of the fact that the changed state of things renders the reservation of the bed in the state valueless, that a grant may be presumed. I cannot subscribe to this notion, but

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