Friends of Thayer Lake LLC v. Brown
Transcription
Friends of Thayer Lake LLC v. Brown
To be Argued by: DENNIS J. PHILLIPS, ESQ. (Time Requested: 30 Minutes) APL-2015-00051 Hamilton County Clerk’s Index No. 6803-2010 Court of Appeals of the State of New York FRIENDS OF THAYER LAKE LLC; BRANDRETH PARK ASSOCIATION, CATHRYN POTTER, AS TREASURER; BRANDRETH PARK ASSOCIATION RECREATIONAL TRUST, CATHRYN POTTER, AS INITIAL TRUSTEE; AND WILLIAM L. BINGHAM, JR., INDIVIDUALLY AND AS A REPRESENTATIVE MEMBER OF THE BRANDRETH PARK ASSOCIATION AND A REPRESENTATIVE BENEFICIARY OF THE BRANDRETH PARK ASSOCIATION RECREATIONAL TRUST, Plaintiffs-Appellants, – against – PHIL BROWN, Defendant-Respondent, and JANE DOE (THE “LADY IN RED”) AND ANY OTHER PERSON, KNOWN OR UNKNOWN, Defendant, – and – THE STATE OF NEW YORK and the NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION, Intervenors-Defendants-Respondents. REPLY BRIEF FOR PLAINTIFFS-APPELLANTS MCPHILLIPS, FITZGERALD & CULLUM, L.L.P. Dennis J. Phillips, Esq. Attorneys for Plaintiffs-Appellants 288 Glen Street, Post Office Box 299 Glens Falls, New York 12801 Tel.: (518) 792-1174 Fax: (518) 792-1675 Date of Completion: October 29, 2015 TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE OF AUTHORITIES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . iii PRELIMINARY STATEMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 ARGUMENTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 POINT 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 BRANDRETH PARK (1851) AND ADJOINING LAKE LILA TRACT (1787) AND ADJOINING WHITNEY TRACT (1787) ARE LANDS WHOSE WATERS AND WATERWAYS NEVER WERE AND ARE NOT NOW HIGHWAYS FOR COMMERCE AND ARE NOT SUBJECT TO A PUBLIC EASEMENT AS MEASURED BY THE NAVIGABLE-IN-FACT EXCEPTION TO PRIVATE OWNERSHIP THAT TRUMPS THE RIGHT TO EXCLUDE. POINT 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 THE COURT SHOULD SEE THROUGH THE ATTEMPTS OF THE DEFENDANTS TO “MAKE UP” COMMERCIAL USE OF THE MUD POND WATERWAY SO AS TO SUPPORT THEIR UNFOUNDED THEORY THAT THE RECREATION OF CANOEING CAN ESTABLISH A COMMON LAW EASEMENT AND A HIGHWAY FOR TRANSPORTATION AND/OR COMMERCE. A. B. C. D. E.R. Wallace Used Brandreth Park by Consent . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wilderness Trapping is a Recreation and Potter’s Father Was Not Engaged in the Fur-Trapping Business . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . David E. Cilley . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Plaintiffs’ Personal Use and Enjoyment of the Mud Pond Parcel Should Not be a Consideration When the Right to Exclude is the Issue, as Opposed to Canoeing Use Supporting Log Floatation or Bridge Taxation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . i 22 25 32 40 POINT 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 THE CENTRAL PREMISE OF THE COMMON-LAW REMAINS THE SAME: IN ORDER TO BE NAVIGABLE-IN-FACT, A RIVER MUST PROVIDE PRACTICAL UTILITY TO THE PUBLIC AS A MEANS OF TRANSPORTATION. A. B. C. Remoteness . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Necessity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 Beaver Habitat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 POINT 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 A TAKING ISSUE IS, PER SE, BEFORE THE COURT IN ANY CASE WHERE NAVIGABILITY-IN-FACT IS TO BE DETERMINED, WHETHER BY LEGISLATIVE FIAT OR BY A JUDICIAL TAKING. CONCLUSION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 ADDENDUM E Totten & Crossfield Purchase ADDENDUM F Map A, Outlying Camps Photo 1, St. Agnes, Mud Pond Logs Photo 2, Foot of Mud Pond Rapids, Mud Pond Logs ii TABLES OF AUTHORITIES CASES Adirondack League Club v. Sierra Club, 92 N.Y.2d 591 (1998) . . . . . . . . . passim Adirondack League Club v. Sierra Club, 201 A.D.2d 225 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . passim In the Matter of Adirondack Mountain Club v. Adirondack Park Agency, 33 Misc.3d 383 (2011) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 Albright v. Mets, 217 A.D.2d 123, 126, 128-129, Third Department (1995) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26, 27 Bott v. Natural Resources Commission, 415 Mich. 45 (1982) . . . . . . . . . . . . 37, 39 Julie Schafler Dale v. Chisholm, 67 AD3d 626 (2009) . . . . . . . . . . . 49, 54 (chart) William S. DeCamp v. Lemon Thomson, 16 A.D. 528, affirmed 159 N.Y. 436 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 Economy Light and Power Co. v. United States, 256 U.S. 113 (1921) . . . . . . . . 28 Erie Railroad Company v. State Tax Commission, 266 A.D. 452 (1943) . . . . . . 44 Friends of Thayer Lake, et al v. Brown, 126 A.D.3d 22 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . passim Hale de Jure Maris; Ex Parte Jennings, 6 Cow. 518 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Hanigan v. State of New York, 213 AD2d 80 (1995) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39, 54 (chart) Helms v. Reid, 90 Misc.2d 583, 604 (1997) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37, 38 The People of the State of New York ex rel Lehigh Valley Railway Co., et al v. State Tax Commission, 247 N.Y. 9 (1928) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43, 44 Mohawk Valley Ski Club, Inc. v. Town of Duanesburg, 304 AD2d 881 (2003) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 (chart) iii Morgan v. King, 35 N.Y. 454 (1886) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . passim Mountain Properties, Inc. v. Tyler Hill Realty, 767 A.D.2d 1096 (2001) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Stop the Beach Renourishment, Inc. v. Florida Department of Environmental Protection, 557 U.S. 903 (2010) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 Town of North Elba v. William Grimditch, Jr., 98 A.D.3d 183, 192 (2012]) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 REGULATIONS 6 N.Y.C.R.R. § 190.8(a) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 STATUTES Environmental Conservation Law §15-2701 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2, 3 Environmental Conservation Law § 15-2711 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 General Obligations Law §9-103 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Navigation Law §2(5) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26, 35, 54 (chart) MISCELLANEOUS The Adirondack Atlas, Jerry Jenkins with Andy Keal, Syracuse University Press, 2004 - Totten & Crossfield Purchase . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Brady, Maureen E., Defining ‘Navigability’: Balancing State-Court Flexibility and Private Rights in Waterways [March 5, 2015], Cardozo Law Review, Vol. 36, p. 1415. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2574356) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 Donaldson, A History of the Adirondacks, 51-61 (1921) . . . . . . . . . . . 8, 10, 11, 16 iv PRELIMINARY STATEMENT This case is about paddling in a canoe in the Adirondack Wilderness, plain and simple. More particularly, this case is about canoeing and hiking in the remote back country of the Adirondack Mountains in upstate New York, but at the same time it could be about canoeing and hiking in any part of the state where there are small private brooks and small private ponds. This case is not about logging, as was the case in Adirondack League Club v. Sierra Club, 92 N.Y.2d 591 (1998) (hereinafter “Adirondack League Club”) where the large and important South Branch of the Moose River (the “South Branch”) was involved, large in the sense that the segment of the river under review was 12 miles long with an average depth of three to four feet, and important in the sense that the river was used over the course of at least 50 years for floating logs to market; indeed, a “major driving stream,” one of the top five in the Adirondacks. (Adirondack League Club v. Sierra Club, 201 A.D.2d 225) Added to this physical and historical importance is the fact that the South Branch is a legislatively-designated scenic river under Article 15 of the Environmental Conservation Law’s Wild, Scenic and Recreational Rivers System, which means, as determined by the Legislature that the South Branch possesses “outstanding natural, scenic, historic, ecological and recreational values,” and therefore is one of those “certain selected rivers of the state” to be protected “for the benefit and enjoyment of present and future DJP-10/29/15 -1- generations.” (Environmental Conservation Law §15-2701) Although regulatory in purpose, this Court implicitly recognized the modern legislatively-designated importance of the South Branch by quoting language from Environmental Conservation Law - §15-2701 (Adirondack League Club at 603) At the same time, this Court explicitly recognized that only “some waterways are of such practicality” as to be “subject to an easement for public travel.” (Adirondack League Club at 601) In contrast to the South Branch, the small and shallow Mud Pond with an average depth of 15.5 inches; the three quarter mile small and shallow Mud Pond Outlet Brook tributary to Shingle Shanty Brook that Supreme Court found measures an average of 16 feet wide and 17 inches deep with a minimum width of 12 feet and a minimum depth of 4 inches”; and the one mile stretch of Shingle Shanty Brook that meanders through extensive wetlands and beaver country is not susceptible to logging and is not of any legislatively-recognized importance. As confirmed by the record and the decisions below, the Mud Pond Outlet Brook “has never been used to float pulp or timber logs to market,” (R.22-Supreme Court) and “it is incapable of transporting any timber, a traditional test for navigability.” (R.2452 - Dissent)1 The “practical, commercial use of the South Branch” was 1 The Dissent in the Court below, Friends of Thayer Lake, et al v. Brown, 126 A.D. 3d 22, will hereinafter be referred to as the “Dissent” and the Majority in the Court Below as the “Majority.” The case shall be referred to as FOTL v. Brown. DJP-10/29/15 -2- logging. (Adirondack League Club at 606) Here, there is no history of such use and no physical capacity for such use. Moreover, unlike the South Branch, the constituent water bodies of the Mud Pond Waterway (two ponds and two brooks) do not constitute a river and are not within the “certain selected rivers of the state” category that have a special designation. [“No waterways occur within the Area that are classified under Article 15-2711 of the Environmental Conservation Law as wild, scenic or recreational.”] (R.1557; Environmental Conservation Law §15-2701) In reality, there is no comparison between the South Branch, a river of great magnitude and importance, and the insignificant and remote Mud Pond Waterway, but if there is, the comparison is apples to oranges and freighted with imperfections. If a picture is worth a thousand words, this lack of comparability can be visualized by viewing a photo of the contested South Branch displayed in the record at page 1507, where this Court nevertheless could not conclude that the river was navigable-in-fact and a highway for transportation, with a photo of the Mud Pond Outlet Brook displayed in the record at page 1608, where log floating did not and could not occur. With logging off the table as an issue in the instant case, the log floating expansion of the common law standard is not applicable and the question of navigability reverts to the basic rule; that is to say, do “boats, lighters or rafts float to market” over the Mud Pond Waterway? The simple answer is, “no,” but DJP-10/29/15 -3- unfortunately the Defendant Brown (“Brown”) and the State Defendants (“State”) are pushing a legislative agenda and are trying to fit the square peg recreation of paddling a canoe into the round hole commercial foundation and structure of the common law that otherwise justifies an exception to the right to exclude under the navigability-in-fact doctrine. The two do not fit. The position of the Defendants is that the floatability of a canoe and the recreational activity of paddling by itself, without any objectively realistic commercial justification for the general public and welfare, can open up waterways on private land in New York for public use, thus abolishing almost two centuries of jurisprudence, and it makes no difference whether the land over which water flows in certain circumstances is public or private. The State brief, for example, marches to the false drumbeat that the Lila Traverse on State land and its attempted extension over the Mud Pond Parcel on private land has been “regularly used for boat travel” and is fit for “regular travel by boats,” and such terminology is used over 20 times in its brief.2 In fact, however, the record shows that there is nothing “regular” about the Lila Traverse; that canoeing is not ordinary travel but a “recreational activity”; and that “canoes,” a specialty kind of boat, not boats in a general sense, were used on the Mud Pond 2 State brief 1, 4, 5, 15, 16, 17, 19, 20, 22, 23, 24, 30, 42 DJP-10/29/15 -4- Waterway. In reality then, the record does not show “regular travel by boats,” but instead “irregular recreational activity by canoe in the wilds of the Adirondack Mountains of New York. Aside from the State’s journalistic technique, which may be designed to distract those who are inclined to be deluded, why the State’s drumbeat? The answer is that the State needs the general classification of “boats” to attempt to make its recreational case, rather than the specialty canoes, for no reported case dealing with the navigability-in-fact exception in the State of New York has trumped the right to exclude and open up the private land and waters of the state because of the emotional wishes of a paddler. Whereas the State brief avoids the reality of the exclusive use of the Mud Pond Outlet Brook and Shingle Shanty Brook by canoes, needing boats in general in order to tailor the jurisprudence of the waterways involving railroads and bridges in the populated and developed areas of the state to the facts of the instant case, the Brown brief needs a river, notwithstanding the findings of both the Majority and the Dissent that the Mud Pond Waterway is not a river. 3 As a matter of fact, with log driving out of the picture, most of the jurisprudence of the state relating to the navigability-in-fact exception involves the major rivers or lakes 3 Despite all official records and the deposition of Potter, as well as the Opinion and Order of the Appellate Division, Brown’s counsel has conjured up the notion that the Mud Pond Waterway and the hydrological drainage of which it is part is a “river.” Disconnected from the natural order of drainages, Brown’s counsel has a river flowing into a brook. DJP-10/29/15 -5- across the state or the immediate tributaries thereof. No New York Court has extended the navigability-in-fact exception to a remote pond in the middle of the wilderness as small as Mud Pond, and a remote brook in the middle of the wilderness as small as the Mud Pond Outlet Brook. Furthermore, no Court in New York has found a waterbody navigable-in-fact on the speculation that the use of a waterway on private land for purely recreational purposes to transport materials to a tiny hunting camp in the middle of the wilderness, a rustic hunting camp described as “that most remote end-of-the-line wilderness outpost,” and “a roof in the wilderness, a place to get out of the rain and snow, and a place to get warm,” “reveals that it has the capacity to transport similar goods for commercial purposes.”(R.2236; R.2370; R.242-Majority)4 Such a speculation is unprecedented and is arbitrary and capricious, as it does not even satisfy the lowest evidentiary standard of having a rationale basis. Indeed, when the historical and statutorily recognized private property right of canoeing is on the block and a Court is attempting to assess potential traditional commercial use as opposed to actual commercial use, the highest evidentiary standard of beyond a reasonable doubt should be applied, for even in the case of Adirondack League Club, when the actual use of logging was overwhelming, this Court sought 4 The State brief refers to this arbitrary and capricious speculation as “[t]his straight forward reasoning....” (State Brief, 31) DJP-10/29/15 -6- evidence” to compel a conclusion that practical, commercial use of the South Branch” had occurred. (Adirondack League Club at 606) The first point of this Reply Brief will break the circle of the circular reasoning of Brown and the State to the effect that Plaintiffs should have had no expectations for well settled principles of property law in New York. Thereafter, arguments of both Brown and the State will be addressed. The conclusion will set forth a structured chart in which to apply the common law to the facts of the case, which should result in a determination that the Mud Pond Waterway as it runs across Plaintiffs’ private lands is not a highway for commerce and is not navigable-in-fact. ARGUMENTS POINT 1 BRANDRETH PARK (1851) AND ADJOINING LAKE LILA TRACT (1787) AND ADJOINING WHITNEY TRACT (1787) ARE LANDS WHOSE WATERS AND WATERWAYS NEVER WERE AND ARE NOT NOW HIGHWAYS FOR COMMERCE AND ARE NOT SUBJECT TO A PUBLIC EASEMENT AS MEASURED BY THE NAVIGABLE-IN-FACT EXCEPTION TO PRIVATE OWNERSHIP THAT TRUMPS THE RIGHT TO EXCLUDE. The State claims that ancestors of the Plaintiffs, in 1851, “never had reason to believe that excluding the public” from Mud Pond, the small Mud Pond Outlet Brook and the small Shingle Shanty Brook “was within their bundle of property rights they acquired.” (State Brief, 43) The State then makes references to a book DJP-10/29/15 -7- written by Alfred L. Donaldson, A History of the Adirondacks, 51-61 (1921), in support of a totally convoluted argument to the effect that perhaps Brandreth and the Plaintiffs must “bargain in the marketplace,” for the right to exclude and attempt “to acquire an ownership interest in the neighboring property from which the waterway [Mud Pond Waterway] could be accessed.” (State Brief, 44-45) Such an argument demonstrates a lack of understanding and respect for private property ownership in New York and is preposterous. While Brown admits that the Majority shared the view of the Dissent that the Opinion and Order would “destabilize settled expectations of private property ownership,” and said that it, too, had “a concern that its ruling would destabilize long-established expectations because it appeared unlikely that anyone would have contemplated, prior to the State’s acquisition of the adjoining lands, the Appellants’ property would be subject to a public navigation easement,” Brown patronizingly concludes that “[t]his concern is unfounded.” (R.2445, footnote 5 [Majority]; R.2452 [Dissent]; Brown Brief 59-60) Brown’s rationale for this conclusion is that a public navigation easement “merely lay dormant while access to it was barred by private ownership of the adjoining lands.” (Brown Brief, 61) Devoting point VII and nine pages of his brief to this proposition, Brown advances the incredible theme that due to Brandreth’s involvement as a member of the New York State legislature, that Brandreth and the Plaintiffs “would have been well DJP-10/29/15 -8- aware that ‘long-established expectations’ regarding public navigation could become disestablished.” (Brown Brief, 61-62) Moreover, after a twisted analysis of various facts and law, Brown then patted the Majority on the back and stated that the “Appellate Division’s concern, while understandable, was not wellfounded in either the facts or the law.” (Brown Brief, 67) Based on the immediate record and the historical record introduced by the State, nothing could be farther from the facts, the law or the truth of the matter. Looking first at the Brandreth membership in the New York State Senate and the legislative declaration that the 160-mile long and 297 average width of the Racket River was a public highway for floating timber, Brandreth and the other members of the Legislature would certainly have known that a legislative declaration of navigability was an act of eminent domain that required compensation, particularly in light of New York’s Constitution that added such a requirement in 1846. (Morgan v. King, 35 N.Y. 454 (1866); Plaintiff’s Brief, Addendum B, page 181) Indeed, the Morgan court specifically addressed the eminent domain and just compensation issue of the Racket River and noted: “If, prior to the passage of the act, the stream was private, in use as is property, the Legislature could not take away the rights of those who were riparian owners, nor subject such rights to a public use, created or authorized by the act itself, without compensation.” (Morgan v. King, 35 N.Y. 454 (1866); Plaintiff’s Brief 182) With DJP-10/29/15 -9- this knowledge, Brandreth surely would have known that the very small and shallow Mud Pond and its outlet brook were private property, subject to “destabilization” only if the Legislature paid just compensation. As more convincing evidence of well-settled expectations, the historical record as reported by Donaldson provides a history of the Totten and Crossfield’s Purchase, the base land purchase for the Mud Pond Parcel and adjoining lands that were formerly private but now owned by the State. (1 Donaldson, Chapter IX, 5161; The Adirondack Atlas, Jerry Jenkins with Andy Keal, Syracuse University Press, 2004 - Totten & Crossfield Purchase [see Addendum E attached hereto]) As contained in the record, the separate and distinct Lake Lila Tract adjoining the Mud Pond Parcel to the north and northwest and containing Lake Lila is a combination of Townships or parts of Townships 37, 38, 42 and 43 of the Totten and Crossfield’s Purchase. (R.1808) In spatial relationship to the Mud Pond Parcel in Township 39, portions of the Lake Lila Tract located in Townships 37 and 38 of the Totten and Crossfield’s Purchase are shown on the NYS DEC Adirondack Map. (R.1811-1813) According to Donaldson as seen in Addendum E hereof, Township 38 containing the bulk of Lake Lila was transferred from the State into private ownership to Alexander Macomb in 1787, and according to the record, it was in private ownership until it was conveyed to the State in 1979, a period of 192 years of private ownership and a period of 222 years before the DJP-10/29/15 -10- paddling assault on the Mud Pond Parcel by Brown in the year 2009. (R.1808; 1 Donaldson 59) During the 192 years of private ownership of the Lake Lila Tract, no public navigation claim was made against the adjoining Mud Pond Parcel by the owners thereof or by any member of the public to the effect of there being any common law highway for commerce or highway for transportation originating at Lake Lila, or any other place, and then running over the Township 39 Mud Pond Parcel portion of Shingle Shanty Brook and the Mud Pond Outlet Brook outlet. This makes all of the sense in the world, for it just takes a quick glance at the NYS DEC Adirondack Map to see that as of April 30, 1985, both the Mud Pond Parcel in Township 39 and the Whitney Tract in Township 36, to be covered next, were private lands (colored in white), and therefore inaccessible to the public for any objectively realistic commerce originating from the Lake Lila Tract. Moreover, both before and after 1979, a wilderness paddler floating across Lake Lila and canoeing up the Shingle Shanty Brook would have no public or private destination for the transportation of people or property into the interior of the private Township 39 owned by the Plaintiffs or the private Township 36 owned by Whitney Industries. (R.1812) This fact was acknowledged by the Majority when it admitted that: “The wilderness area was private owned before the twentieth century, and there were no nearby roads or other means of public access....” (R.2443; FOTL v. Brown, 126 A.D.3d 22, 29) Based on the reasoning of the DJP-10/29/15 -11- Majority, if Brown had attempted to paddle up the private Shingle Shanty Brook and the Mud Pond Outlet Brook between 1979 and before 1998 to reach Lilypad Pond located on the private Whitney Tract in Township 36, he would have been a trespasser, for Lilypad Pond was then “[a] body of water on private land that has no inlet, outlet or public access - such that it cannot be reached without crossing private land or cannot be used as a travel route to other destinations - is not navigable in fact.” (R.2444; FOTL v. Brown, 126 A.D.3d 22, 30) Simply stated, for a period of 211 years between the year 1787 and 1998, Lilypad Pond was a body of water on private land that had no public access such that it could be reached without crossing private lands and could not be used as a travel route to other destinations. (R.2444) It is clear from the facts and common law that if the State only owned the Lake Lila Tract but not the Whitney Tract at the time of Brown’s paddling trip, the outcome of the case even for the Majority would have been different; that is to say, the Mud Pond Waterway would not have been declared navigable-in-fact because Lilypad Pond would not have been any kind of a public destination that he Brown could paddle to or from. Upon reaching the remote Lilypad Pond surrounded by the private Whitney Tract, Brown would have had to turn around and go back to his starting point at the parking lot at Lake Lila and no intervening private lands and waterways would be navigable-in-fact. Before the purchase of the Whitney Tract in 1998, Brown would have failed all DJP-10/29/15 -12- renditions of the navigability-in-fact test. If the Mud Pond Waterway were not navigable-in-fact in 1979 and thereafter, it is not navigable-in-fact now. Similarly, the separate and distinct Whitney Tract containing Lilypad Pond adjoining the Mud Pond Parcel on the east is a combination of Townships 36 and 23 of the Totten and Crossfield’s purchase. (R. 1809) According to Donaldson, Township 36 was also conveyed by the sovereign State of New York to the private Alexander Macomb in 1787, a period of 211 years of private ownership before the conveyance to the State, and a period of 222 years before the paddling assault on the Mud Pond Parcel by Brown in the year 2009. It can be seen then, that at the time of the Brandreth Letters Patent in 1851, adjoining lands had already been in private ownership for 64 years, a substantial period of time to have expectations about the ownership of private property in New York. (R.1796) Moreover, prior to his purchase, Brandreth’s Township 39 had been surveyed by John Richards, the Deputy State Surveyor, in 1821. (R.1158) As written by Potter, the survey laid out Township 39 into 154 lots, “a fact that might have caught the attention of any purchaser... and was officially put on file in the next year.” (R.1158) Thirty years after the survey and the filing thereof, the deed into Brandreth (the “Letters Patent”) made reference to the “Field Book and Map thereof on file in our Secretary’s office,” and conveyed “all and singular the rights, hereditaments, and appurtenances to the same belonging, or in any wise DJP-10/29/15 -13- appertaining” except the “Gold and Silver Mines.” (R.1858 [1821 Map]; R.1796) Based on the State survey and filed survey map, there were no exceptions noted on the map for a highway for commerce in the vicinity of Mud Pond. Based on this official record and evidence, Brandreth and his heirs were and are justified in having the expectation that there are no waterborne highways for commerce or common law trade routes affecting their current ownership. Within the four corners of his 1851 Letters Patent from the State, Brandreth would have felt secure. But on the ground, the physical characteristics of Township 39 would also have justified Brandreth’s expectation that his property rights would not become “disestablished.” Relative to this point, Brown introduced into the record an excerpt from a book entitled, Brandreth, a History of Brandreth Park, 1851-2010, whereby it was written that Brandreth’s “...Township 39 stood out. It was a headwaters tract with a handsome lake as its centerpiece. It had no major water courses flowing into it but much water flowing out; and in fact it contains the headwaters for three major rivers....” (R.1158) To be sure, Brandreth chose wisely and picked the small upstream ponds and brooks that would not be downstream and at the mercy of log floaters and the logging industry. The physical characteristics and location of the Mud Pond Parcel are such that Brandreth never would have expected his property rights to be “disestablished” by log drives or by “boats, lighters or rafts” being floated to DJP-10/29/15 -14- market. (Hale de Jure Maris; Ex parte Jennings, 6 COW. 518; Morgan v. King, 35 N.Y. 454 (1866). Log drives are downstream phenomena and markets are not usually found in the remote mountain headwaters. Both Brown and the State are way off base when they suggest that Brandreth should have known that his property rights could become disestablished or that he and his ancestors had to purchase more land to protect them. All of this begs the question: Did the State’s 1998 purchase of the Whitney Tract in its proprietary capacity, as opposed to its sovereign capacity, take from the Plaintiffs’ their right to exclude trespassers from crossing their private Mud Pond Parcel? The Dissent understood the history of the area and pointed out that the land bordering the Mud Pond Parcel was historically privately owned, “but Defendant State of New York acquired neighboring Lake Lila in 1979 and the Whitney Wilderness area...in 1998.” (R.2446; FOTL v. Brown, 126 A.D.3d 22, 32) The Dissent also noted that: “[d]efendants do not dispute that it is only as a result of the State’s recent acquisition that the waterway may be accessed from publicly-owned land...whereas they previously had no way of accessing it.” (R.2446; FOTL v. Brown, 126 A.D.3d 22, 32) Even the Majority admitted that “there is no indication of public use for attempts to gain public access to the waterway until after the State acquired the wilderness area and canoeists began using the Lila Traverse.” (R.2443; FOTL v. Brown, 126 A.D.3d 22, 30) DJP-10/29/15 -15- Putting the question to rest, the common law is settled on the point: “as a general rule, non-tidal waters, with the exception of those the Courts have deemed to be owned by the state in its sovereign capacity, are owned in a proprietary capacity by the riparian owners, whether such owners be the state, individuals or other entities (citations omitted). Title to the beds of these smaller and less important bodies of water passes into private ownership with a grant of riparian land, absent an expressed reservation.” (Town of North Elba v. William Grimditch, Jr., 98 A.D.3d 183, 192 [2012]) Applying the rule to both the Lake Lila Tract and the Whitney Tract, the State divested itself of these tracts in 1787 in its sovereign capacity by issuing Letters Patent, the ultimate form of land conveyance from the sovereign, without reservation except for the gold and silver mines with respect to Township 39, thus conveying all right, title and interest to the Mud Pond Parcel. But when the State reacquired the adjoining Lake Lila Tract and the adjoining Whitney Tract, it reacquired them in its proprietary capacity, thus making the State a proprietary riparian owner and putting it in the shoes of its private grantors and thus subject to the rules of the common law. (1 Donaldson 59; Town of North Elba v. Grimditch, 98 A.D.3d 183,192) Following this rule to its conclusion, the State acquisition of lands adjoining the Mud Pond Parcel did not create any so-called “termini” in the middle of the wilderness, a consideration incorrectly applied by the Majority to the remote land boundaries in the middle of DJP-10/29/15 -16- the wilderness, and the State could not transform a small pond and two small brooks that were not highways for commerce under the common law into navigable-in-fact highways for transportation for the lobby of wilderness paddlers. To do so would definitely destabilize well-settled expectations of private ownership across the state. Finally, Brandreth and the Plaintiffs are first in time and first in right relative to the creation of the so-called Lila Traverse, a recreational wilderness and pond-hopping canoe and hiking route that did not come into existence until after the State acquired the Whitney Tract in 1998. As admitted by a State (DEC) official, Christopher A. Amato, the then Assistant Commissioner for natural resources, “[a]s shown on DEC maps, the canoe route traverses several ponds and waterways and includes several portages, or canoe carries, of varying lengths.” (R.272) Amato goes on to say that the canoe route “is described in DEC’s brochure for the William C. Whitney Wilderness Area” and that it “traverses rugged, remote back country and most paddlers take two or more days to complete the route.” (R.273) Amato does not refer to the canoeists as “boaters” but tells it like it is and properly characterizes them as paddlers. Reflecting the newness of the canoe route, David E. Cilley (hereinafter “Cilley”) referred to it as “a route only a few hardy paddlers have explored...but first the State Department of Environmental Conservation must clear carry trails DJP-10/29/15 -17- through dense spruce and brambly fields.” (R.1391; Plaintiffs’ Brief, 88-89) In his Paddler’s Guide (not his “Boater’s” Guide), Cilley referred to the canoe route as “wilderness paddling: rough, unmarked portages, mud...” and that “[p]ortages are not signed,” although “...portages (#2-5) are expected to be marked and signed in the near future. As early as early spring 2008 they are still unmarked except by surveyors tape.” (R.153, 157) Brown, too, reflected on the newness of the canoe route when he lamented, “[i]t’s a shame that more than a decade after the Whitney purchase, the state has failed to properly mark the carry trails.... Though the lack of signs and trail disks makes it look no one is taking care of this natural treasure.” (R.1703) But confirming the fact that the canoe route never existed as a highway for transportation or commerce over either the Whitney Tract itself or over the adjoining private Mud Pond Parcel before it was created by the State after 1998, Brown wrote: “You won’t find this variation of the traverse in guidebooks or on maps. As far as I know, this story contains the first detailed account of the route.” (R.1702) Neither the DEC Map nor the DEC brochure, nor the Cilley map, show the new Lake Lila Traverse canoe route traversing the Plaintiffs’ Mud Pond Parcel and Mud Pond Waterway. (R.220-223; R.1786, 1787a; Plaintiffs’ Brief Addendum A, Maps 1 and 2) If the State had the slightest inclination to impose the newly DJP-10/29/15 -18- created canoe route on the Plaintiffs’ Mud Pond Parcel, it would have the legal obligation to disclose such a plan under the full environmental assessment form pursuant to the State Environmental Quality Review Act, which it did not do, followed by a hard look at all the facts and circumstances before giving itself a free pass and issuing a negative declaration for the Whitney Plan. (R.1455-1461) To the contrary, admitting that the newness of the pond-hopping canoe route was confined to State lands, the State expressly supported its negative declaration by stating that “[t]he development and designation of specific trails and trailheads will eliminate conflicts and trespassing on private lands.” (R.1459) The creation of an after-the-fact canoe route and the coordinated attack on the private property rights of the Plaintiffs after 158 years of vested title does destabilize expectations of private property across the state. The Mud Pond Waterway is private property; it is not navigable-in-fact. POINT 2 THE COURT SHOULD SEE THROUGH THE ATTEMPTS OF THE DEFENDANTS TO “MAKE UP” COMMERCIAL USE OF THE MUD POND WATERWAY SO AS TO SUPPORT THEIR UNFOUNDED THEORY THAT THE RECREATION OF CANOEING CAN ESTABLISH A COMMON LAW EASEMENT AND A HIGHWAY FOR TRANSPORTATION AND/OR COMMERCE. In his Dissent in Adirondack League Club, Judge Bellacosa lucidly explains what the Appellate Division did and what this Court said and meant with respect DJP-10/29/15 -19- to the governing law principle used to determine whether a private waterway is navigable-in-fact and, therefore, a highway for commerce open to the general public. Judge Bellacosa stated: “One facet of this case is relatively easy for me. I agree with the governing law principle articulated in Judge Ciparick’s opinion for the Court. The traditional viability test, used to determine navigability-in-fact of a waterway, survives. (see, Morgan v. King, 35 N.Y. 454, 459), and is updated to include a modernized influx of realistic recreational usage (citation omitted).” (Adirondack League Club at 608) In the context of Judge Bellacosa’s explanation, a look-back at the Appellate Division’s decision in the case is also instructive, for it is clear that the Appellate Division did not abandon the common law commercial use standard. Rather succinctly, the Appellate Division stated: “Rather than abandon the standard, however, we are of the view that the recreational uses of a stream should be considered as relevant evidence of the stream’s suitability and capacity for commercial use.” (Adirondack League Club v. Sierra Club, 201 A.D.2d 225, 229-230) The application of the above rule by the Appellate Division, as confirmed by the explanation of Judge Bellacosa, was also clear: “The river’s capacity for floating logs is supported by the recreational use of the river by canoeists.” (Adirondack League Club at 231) In other words, logs float and canoes float, it’s as simple as that, and the fact that a canoe could float on the river supported the historical use of the river for the floating of logs where the only real issue in the DJP-10/29/15 -20- case related to the traditional log driving rule of whether logs could be floated on the river in its natural state. In the instant case, however, logs did not and cannot be floated on the Mud Pond Waterway, which means that there is no “practical, commercial use” in the sense of Adirondack League Club, so the floating of a canoe on the waterway has no commercial use to support and, therefore, is out of the common law equation as proof for navigability-in-fact. Despite all of their writings to the contrary, both Brown and the State understand the test as applied by the Appellate Division in Adirondack League Club, and they know that without a substantial dose of commercial use to mix with canoe floatation, that they are dead in the water with respect to their cause and unsupported theories relating to a paddler’s universal right of navigation. Indeed, Brown and the State were faced with a dilemma, as there was no evidence of any historical use of the Waterway for commercial purposes, and there was no evidence that any claim had been made for the Waterway to be a highway for commerce throughout history. To overcome their dilemma, Brown and the State have resorted to four diversions of false commercial use or capacity for commercial use - red herrings by any other name - as a ploy to shroud their purpose of having this Court abolish the historical and Constitutional constraints of the navigability-in-fact doctrine, in order to delude the Court into a judicial taking of the established property right of canoeing without just compensation. DJP-10/29/15 -21- A. E.R. Wallace Used Brandreth Park by Consent Despite the State’s assertion that the Waterway “has been regarded as supporting boat travel since the 1870s” (State Brief, 20), and Brown’s assertion that it was “popular with Adirondack guides and sportsmen” (Brown Brief, 29), the guide cited by Brown and State, E.R. Wallace (“Wallace”), referred to the Shingle Shanty Brook portion of the Waterway as an indirect and difficult route up “a desperately crooked stream, with its navigation considerably obstructed by ‘flood-jams,’” and the Mud Pond Outlet Brook as a place where “boats are generally towed or pulled ½ or 3/4 m. to the portage.” (Plaintiffs’ Brief, 42) Supreme Court focused on this fact when it acknowledged that “the traverse of Shingle Shanty Brook to Mud Pond as an indirect and difficult route in which boats are generally towed or pulled to the bottom of the rapids.” (R.22) Consistent with this historical record is the writing under Photo 2 included in Addendum F to this Reply Brief, where Potter read the writing under the 1964 photo where from St. Agnes (a canoe landing in the middle of Brandreth Park) his two sons “tore out all dams, arrived in cold rain, wading much of the way.” (Plaintiffs’ Brief, 36) Also consistent with the historical record is the testimony of Potter relative to the need to keep the Waterway open for a period of “say 50 years, 60 years.” (Plaintiffs’ Brief, 38) Even the Majority found that Potter routinely maintained the Waterway by “removing fallen trees, vegetation and other obstacles that would DJP-10/29/15 -22- otherwise block or narrow the channel.” And that “canoes are the only type of vessel that can pass.” (R.2440; FOTL v. Brown, 126 A.D.2d 22, 27) These facts do not support the State’s assertion of “regular travel by boats.” More importantly, however, is the fact that Wallace made no claim to the Waterway as a highway for commerce, and in his later editions of his Descriptive Guide to the Adirondacks (the “Descriptive Guide”), he announced that the Mud Pond Parcel and Waterway and all 24,000 acres of Brandreth Park were “no longer open to the public, as the privilege was abused,” yet he thanked the “courteous proprietors” of Brandreth Park for the “royal hospitality once received.” (Plaintiffs’ Brief, 43) In effect, Wallace understood the common law of New York and the fact that he was a recreational licensee for the use of the Waterway under the modern equivalent of Penal Law §140.00 (“...with license and privilege unless notice against trespass...is giving by posting in a conspicuous manner.”), but that his license could be revoked at any time. (Plaintiffs’ Brief, 9-12) Although it is clear that Wallace noted that the entire 24,000 acres was no longer open for recreation, Brown has attempted to limit this prohibition against trespass to the “grounds” of the Brandreth houses. (Brown Brief, 12) Where Brown came up with interpretation is unknown, but it flies in the face of the interpretation of the State’s expert, Philip G. Terrie, PhD, who stated that the Descriptive Guide “is considered factually accurate, and it is my opinion that it is factually accurate.” DJP-10/29/15 -23- (R.582-583) Moreover, it is expert Terrie’s opinion that “Wallace’s Descriptive Guide is reliable.” (R.583) Brown is no expert, Terrie is, so Wallace’s statement that “sportsmen will not trespass upon this preserve, which embraces “all of Township 39 - some 24,000 acres” has to be interpreted for what it says, but not for Brown’s spin on the statement. To be sure, Wallace considered the Mud Pond Parcel to be private property and respected it as such by adding the note to his Guidebook. Like Cilley in modern times, Wallace made no claims against Brandreth for a highway for commerce across the remote wilderness private lands. The Majority acknowledged that Wallace wrote about the Waterway during the late 1800s while admitting that “the owners eventually withdrew permission for entry,” and that there was “no indication of public use or attempts to gain public access to the Waterway until after the State acquired the Wilderness Area and canoeists began the Lila Traverse.” (R.2443; FOTL v. Brown, 126 A.D.3d 22,30) It appears that the Majority gave no specific weight to any late 1800s permissive use of the Waterway based on Wallace’s Guide other than to mention it in passing, whereas the Dissent was more focused and stated: “the proof that the Plaintiffs’ predecessors allowed individuals to travel through the Waterway for a period of time in the 1800s before closing access to it...merely reflects their private property rights in the Waterway and does not establish any practical utility to the general public for travel or transport.” (R.2452; FOTL v. Brown, 126 A.D.3d 22, DJP-10/29/15 -24- 37) Wallace’s late 1800s Descriptive Guide proves that the Plaintiffs’ right to exclude the public from the Mud Pond Waterway was well-established, exercised and respected in the 19th century and that canoe routes were not highways for commerce under the navigability-in-fact exception. Wallace’s published gratitude for his permission to use Brandreth Park would make no sense whatsoever if there were any substance to Brown’s and the State’s theory that historic or newly created and cobbled-together canoe routes are and always have been public highways under the common law. Brown and the State fail to cite any case law challenging the right to exclude from private property where the recreational activity of canoe travel was involved. It is unfortunate that Wallace became one of the red herrings in the case. B. Wilderness Trapping is a Recreation and Potter’s Father Was Not Engaged in the Fur-Trapping Business. It is unfortunate that the Majority reached the erroneous conclusion that the Waterway “saw some limited commercial use in the 1920s and 1930s when Potter’s father operated a trapping business and sometimes used the Waterway to transport furs to market.” (R.2442; FOTL v. Brown, 126 A.D.3d 22, 29) The fact is that Potter’s father was employed by the Whitney’s at the time and, in that capacity, he hired trappers to come into the private properties for the purpose of trapping and nuisance control. However, the Waterway and the Whitney portion DJP-10/29/15 -25- of Lilypad Pond was not necessary to be used for transporting the pelts, as the pelts “might well have been packed out from Mud Pond...without going [over] any water route.” (R.978) The pelts were taken out for sale for the benefit of the trappers, not for the benefit of Potter’s father. (R.979) The erroneous conclusion of the Majority reflects its willingness to be deluded by advocacy rather than carefully scrutinizing the facts in the record, for there is nothing in the record to support that either Potter or his father engaged in trapping to the degree that it could be characterized under the common law standard as a “trapping-business.” Morgan gives a little bit of guidance about what may constitute a common law business: “It would be going beyond the warrant of either principle or precedent to hold...so temporary, precarious and unprofitable.” (Morgan v. King, 35 N.Y. 454, 460) But the Navigation Law may be more on point as it addresses “useful commerce of a substantial and permanent character,” but also echoing Morgan with the language of “temporary, precarious and unprofitable.” (Navigation Law §2[5]) Aside from the guides given by Morgan and the Navigation Law, the real answer is that trapping is a recreation, as it is listed as such in General Obligations Law §9-103, otherwise referred to as the Recreational Use Statute, where trapping is “one of the recreational activities listed in the statute.” (See Albright v. Mets, 217 A.D.2d 123, 126, 128-129, Third Department [1995]) The same as canoeing, which is also listed as a recreational private DJP-10/29/15 -26- property right, trapping is a recreation that fits under the umbrella of the Recreational Use Statute, “the sole purpose” of which “is to induce property owners to permit persons to come on their property to pursue specified activities,” for the “Legislature intended to open up” suitable properties for public recreational use by enacting the statute. (Albright v. Mets, 217 A.D.2d 123, 126, 129) Although Brown’s primary argument in this case is that capacity for commercial use is not a part of the test for determination that a private waterway is navigable-in-fact, and therefore a highway for commerce or transportation based on recreational use, and that proof of recreational use by canoes is enough to establish a public easement, Brown advances the back-up position that if commercial use were required, “The Mud Pond Waterway would meet it.” (Brown Brief, Point VI, 43-59) Similarly, the State argues that the Mud Pond Waterway is capable of commercial use, even though it “is not proximate to a marketplace.” (State Brief, 29) Pushing the envelope on this alleged capacity beyond the realm of credibility, without any proof in the record, the State argues that the Waterway has a history of a fur-trapping business operated by Potter’s father. (State Brief, 31-32) Despite having no evidence in the record about what may constitute a furtrapping business, or what may constitute a commercial standard for such a business under the strictures of the common law for such a business, the State DJP-10/29/15 -27- beats the drum five times and alleges that Potter’s father operated a “fur-trapping business.” (State Brief, 31-33) Brown is more reserved on the point and never comes out and actually asserts a fur trapping business. Instead, Brown seemed to be content with the erroneous finding of the Majority that the Waterway “saw some limited commercial use in the 1920s and 1930s, when Potter’s father operated a trapping business and sometimes used the Waterway to transport furs to market.” (R.2442; FOTL v. Brown, 126 A.D.3d 22, 29) Brown has cited Economy Light and Power Co. v. United States, 256 U.S. 113 (1921), a case involving interstate commerce and the construction of a dam in violation of an Act of Congress on the Des Plaines River, an interstate river flowing southward for 133 miles and eventually forming the Illinois River, for the proposition that proof of the use of canoes for transporting furs and goods is sufficient to establish a river as navigable-in-fact. (Brown Brief, 56) However, the case reads that “canoes and other boats of various kinds were employed, having light draft, but capable of carrying several tons each, and manned by crews of six or eight men.” Moreover, the Court noted that the public interest in the river had a very definite origin, the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 where it was declared: “the navigable waters leading into the Mississippi...shall be common highways....” So, as is the situation with many of Brown’s citations, there is usually the rest of the story to tell. Surely, the Mud Pond Waterway is not an interstate river and does DJP-10/29/15 -28- not fall under the regulation of an Act of Congress. Therefore, it has no applicability to the case at hand. Desperate to support the notion that fur trapping is commercial, Brown and the State have attempted to exploit and manipulate the private and personal Potter family diary kept at the rustic Mud Pond Camp and transform it, magician-like, into a record that they assert supports a conclusion that the Mud Pond Waterway was actually used for transport for commercial activities, and, in addition, has the capacity to be used for transport for commercial activities. The State makes the further assertion that Potter’s father would use the Mud Pond Waterway to make part of the trip to market to sell pelts and that “Potter’s part-time trapping business” suggests a “sufficiently full-time trapping business could use the Waterway to generate significantly more income.” (State Brief, 31-33) The State makes these assertions in spite of the detailed facts in Plaintiffs’ Brief that make it absolutely clear that Potter’s father was not in the trapping business, detailed facts presented by Potter under oath, the only person who had personal knowledge as to whether or not his father was involved in the trapping business. (Plaintiffs’ Brief, 50-61) The summary of these pages of Plaintiffs’ Brief is that Potter’s father was otherwise employed in the 1920s and 1930s, mostly by the adjoining Whitneys; that the Mud Pond Camp was solely used for recreation, not business; and that no DJP-10/29/15 -29- part of the Mud Pond Waterway provided access to any end market in any direction. Further realizing the need for commercial use of the Waterway to support the cause, Brown distorted the Mud Pond Log entries relative to the recreation of trapping and recharacterized the private diary as proof of “a significant activity on the property.” (R.1847) Unrestrained, Brown then called it “a very significant activity,” where “even a minimal amount of commercial activity would satisfy the test.” (R.1848) Brown then itemized the entries in the Mud Pond Logs to attempt to prove his pre-ordained conclusion of substantial income from trapping, but in doing so, he really proved that trapping was nothing more than a temporary, sporadic and unprofitable activity. Brown did not refer to the trapping as the “furtrapping business.” The proof of the recreation of trapping based on the record Brown lifted from the Mud Pond Logs is charted in Addendum D of the Plaintiffs’ Brief. (Plaintiffs’ Brief, 189-192) Except for the year that Potter’s father came back from World War II when he had some relative trapping success, the other years show nothing but minimal activity and very, very short-term trapping moments. Nevertheless, Brown jumped to the conclusion that “a significant” recreational activity “demonstrates that the Waterways in question have ‘practical utility to the public as a means of transportation’ and the ‘capacity for transport, whether for trade or travel.’” (R.1847) DJP-10/29/15 -30- To be sure, trapping is a recreational activity, and as a listed activity in the Recreational Use Statute, trapping on one’s land is a private property right. For Brown and the State to make the leap from the use and enjoyment on private property of the private recreation of trapping to the legal conclusion that the Waterway on that land is a highway for commerce as measured by the navigability-in-fact exception is an absurdity; that is to say, another red herring. On the other hand, the common sense of the Dissent in terms of understanding how landowners in Upstate New York and the Adirondacks use and enjoy their private property, reinforces confidence in judicial wisdom, for the Dissent concluded “that individual members of Plaintiffs used the Waterway for hunting, trapping and carrying supplies to their isolated hunting camp, merely reflects their private property rights in the Waterway....” (R.2452; FOTL v. Brown, 126 A.D.3d 22, 37) All of the above aside, the real question is, so what? What if trapping is a business? Landowners are allowed to conduct business on their lands for profit without running the risks that the public will acquire any kind of right, title, or interest in their lands. Apple growers can grow apples for profit without any public intervention. Farmers can grow corn, wheat and hay and transport the crop from Point A to Point B on their lands without worrying about public easement rights. Adirondack landowners can harvest trees for profit without giving away DJP-10/29/15 -31- recreational rights. The trapping issue is a big red herring and the Majority was deluded by it. C. David E. Cilley David E. Cilley (hereinafter “Cilley”), the owner of a business that rents canoes and paddling equipment, guides clients and sells canoes, has “never been on the Mud Pond Waterway.” (R.455-456) Cilley’s main office and store are in Saranac Lake, New York, a considerable distance away from the Whitney Wilderness. (R.456) Cilley published the “Adirondack Paddler’s Map” in 2004 and the Adirondack Paddler’s Guide in 2008 and 2009. (R.457-458) Cilley states that his map and book are recognized as a key resource for paddlers. (R.458) Cilley states that “[c]arries are routine in the course of water travel in the Adirondacks,” and that “carries of one-half to one mile long are common; and carries longer than a mile are not uncommon”; and paddling areas in the Adirondacks from pond to pond are “referred to by most paddlers as ‘pond hopping.’” (R.460) It is known from the record before this Court that the Lila Traverse has one carry of 1.75 miles and that the State carry from Lilypad Pond to Shingle Shanty Brook is .77 miles, which means that these carries are within the normal parameters as sworn to by Cilley. (R.565) In this respect, Cilley states that the “carries on his loop are not unusual in length.” (R.462) Cilley’s involvement with the Lila Traverse is set forth in Plaintiffs’ Brief in some detail. (Plaintiffs’ DJP-10/29/15 -32- Brief. 88-91) Significantly, in the year 2009 before Cilley submitted his affidavit in the instant action, Cilley labeled the Mud Pond Waterway in his Paddler’s Guide as being “private land.” (Plaintiffs’ Brief Addendum A, Mapset, Map 2) Cilley has made no legal claim to the Plaintiffs’ Mud Pond Waterway; all he has sworn to is this: “If the water route between Lilypad Pond and Shingle Shanty Brook were open to the public, my clients and others could paddle the entire reach between Lilypad Pond and Shingle Shanty Brook....” (R.464) Cilley states that the “approach from Lake Lila would be good for those who want to experience the remoteness of Little Salmon Lake.” (R.465) In other words, Cilley would like to change the common law of New York based on a potential feeling of one of his clients to “experience the remoteness.” The Dissent is dismissive of Cilley’s proposal on the ground that it does not “prove the Waterway’s capacity for common use by the general public.” (R.2452; FOTL v. Brown, 126 A.D.3d 22, 38) The Majority, on the other hand, strays from the judicial function into the legislative arena and speculates that “in this modern view of a waterway’s utility, recreational and commercial uses are often intertwined” as illustrated by the affidavit of Cilley, “who stated that his business now includes canoe tours in the Wilderness Area, and that he would include the Waterway in this commercial activity....” (R.2443; FOTL v. Brown, 126 A.D.3d 22, 29) The Majority has misstated the Cilley’s sworn affidavit about “canoe tours” and erroneously DJP-10/29/15 -33- concluded that canoeing the Lila Traverse, or canoeing, is a commercial activity. A close reading of Cilley reveals the following facts: 1. Cilley’s business “rents canoes and paddling equipment”; “guides clients”; and sells “canoes, food, books, maps, and gear for camping and canoeing/kayaking.” (R.456) 2. Cilley has “led hundreds of people on trips....” (R.457) 3. Cilley has done the Lila Traverse “at least eight times in several different years.” (R.462) 4. Cilley only guides “clients on that journey.” (R.463) Firstly, Cilley does not say that he gives “canoe tours” as recited by the Majority, for his business is to rent and sell canoes and stuff or to guide clients. But leading and guiding a client is not transporting a client; the clients do not become passengers in Cilley’s canoe; they do the paddling themselves, which is a recreational activity, not travel in any ordinary sense. As Cilley states, whether or not guided, that making the Lila Traverse all on State land “gives my clients a great sense of enjoyment and accomplishment” and it would be good for some “to experience the remoteness.” (R.462, 465) This is not “practical utility to the public as a means of transportation,” or the “touchstone” of “practical usefulness to the public as a highway for transportation.” (Adirondack League Club v. Sierra Club, 92 N.Y.2d 591, 602-603) This is not Cilley transporting his clients as passengers DJP-10/29/15 -34- across the wilderness. This is a different kind of transport, one where the client does the paddling as a recreational activity while being transported by emotion to the feeling of “remoteness” and “sense of enjoyment and accomplishment.” Or, as Brown stated without having Cilley guide him, “closeness to nature, everchanging scenery, remoteness from roads.” (R.1704) So this is not the kind of transport or transportation that forms the foundation of New York’s navigabilityin-fact doctrine. It is something different. It is something else. It is a feeling. But feelings and wishes of a few should not topple the established property law of New York and move the property right of canoeing into the public domain. Secondly, Cilley says nothing in his affidavit about economics, whether adding the private Mud Pond Waterway to the public Lila Traverse would be profitable or would make any difference to his bottom line. The Legislature’s guidance on this subject would be “useful commerce of a substantial and permanent character,” but not one that is “temporary, precarious and unprofitable.” (Navigation Law, §2[5]) The Majority missed this concept and requirement but the Dissent realized that something unprofitable would most likely not justify a “stream a public highway.” (R.2450; FOTL v. Brown, 126 A.D.3d 22, 36) Contrary to Brown’s assertion that Cilley’s affidavit could be used to prove navigability-in-fact, there is no such proof in this record. (Brown Brief, 58) It is submitted that if this Court were to revisit the fact that canoeing is a statutory DJP-10/29/15 -35- recreation in New York, and the fact that a canoe is a “pleasure vessel,” mostly self-propelled (but not a customary mode of trade and travel), as well as considering that the act of paddling a canoe is a recreational activity that unto itself produces physical and emotional rewards, that this Court would be less inclined to put canoeing into any commercial classification. Addressing the point, a professional economist member of the Plaintiffs’ (“Bradford”) saw “no relationship or relevance” between Cilley’s business and the Mud Pond Parcel. (R.1830) Bradford is of the opinion that the “Whitney Wilderness and the ponds and waters of the Mud Pond Parcel are not essential” to any outdoor recreational business “and it cannot be established that any of those businesses will sell one more canoe or kayak because of the existence or nonexistence of access to the Mud Pond Parcel.” (R.1831) Bradford asserts that the Plaintiffs are not charged with helping Mr. Cilley in the running of his business...nor do they have the obligation to make any contribution of their recreational rights in the Mud Pond Parcel” to him. (R.1831) Bradford further states that the State has contributed to Cilley’s business by the acquisition of the Whitney Wilderness and that Cilley “has the freedom to become content with what he does have, as opposed to what he does not have.” (R.1831) Bradford sees no cause and effect, no direct link, no substantial nexus between the business of DJP-10/29/15 -36- Cilley and “the navigability for commerce standard for public entry on waterbodies such as those on the Mud Pond Parcel.” (R.1832) In the context of the above, if Cilley’s business were deemed to be a commercial activity by the State with respect to Cilley’s presence or guiding across the Lila Traverse on the Whitney Wilderness, which it is not, Cilley would be prohibited from using the Lila Traverse in his business. (6 N.Y.C.R.R. §190.8[a]; Plaintiffs’ Brief, 87-88) If Cilley’s business of renting canoes to individuals for use on the Lila Traverse, or leading paddlers on the Lila Traverse, is not a commercial use in the eyes of the State as a matter of law, it cannot be viewed as a commercial use with respect to the adjoining Mud Pond Parcel. The State cannot have it both ways; there cannot be a double standard. As a Michigan Court stated in the context of a similar challenge to its common law, “The state must be honest.” (Bott v. Natural Resources Commission, 415 Mich. 45 [1982]) As for the Majority heralding a “modern view” of a waterway’s ability, there are no “evolving necessities and circumstances” that “may warrant a different emphasis regarding” the Mud Pond Waterway’s usefulness, as the State Legislature has adopted the Adirondack Park State Land Master Plan (the “State Master Plan”), which has been construed as having “the force of a legislative enactment.” (Helms v. Reid, 90 Misc.2d 583, 604 [1997]; In the Matter of Adirondack Mountain Club v. Adirondack Park Agency, 33 Misc.3d 383 [2011]) DJP-10/29/15 -37- With respect to “acquisition policy recommendations” for canoe route easements, the State Master Plan is clear and reads as follows: “9. Canoe route easements should be purchased to reopen Adirondack canoe routes for non-motorized access in appropriate areas of the Park.” (ASLMP, approved November 1987, updated October 2011, p. 7) With the Helms case (1977) above referenced preceding both the State’s acquisition of the Lake Lila Tract in 1979 and the Whitney Tract in 1998, the State must be charged with the knowledge that it had the obligation to purchase routes; it could not take them. (R.1808-1809, 1825) Such a policy has been admitted to by former DEC official, Morrison. (R.1825, 1649, 1684) After the above two purchases that were combined to make the Whitney Wilderness, the State continued to purchase canoe routes, as well as other lands, most notably the 69,000 acres of former Finch lands where the lands according to the press release statement: “Paddling opportunities will be opened up on some of the wildest stretches of rivers and pristine ponds and lakes in the eastern United States.” (R.1825-1829) In the context of the above State policy, the twice repudiated “Enforcement Guidance Memorandum” which was based on contracted research by a law professor and by research performed by DEC under the watch of Charles C. Morrison, and which was distributed to enforcement officers across the state, is a DJP-10/29/15 -38- violation of the policy of the State Master Plan, and also a violation of the doctrine of separation of powers, for it was a directive from DEC to law enforcement agencies having the force and effect of law and acted upon by the officers of the state, as evidenced by its repudiation in Hanigan v. State, 213 A.D.2d 80 (1995) (R.1381-1384). There is no doubt but what the DEC Enforcement Guidance Memorandum was without any outside review and that it was arbitrary and capricious and an abuse of discretion by the State. (Plaintiffs’ Brief, 126-129) A so-called “modern view” was rejected in the neighboring state of Pennsylvania where the Court said: “The definition of navigability is best addressed by the Legislature due to the takings problem created by vesting title in the Commonwealth to a vast expansion of navigable (public) waterways.” (Mountain Properties, Inc. v. Tyler Hill Realty, 767 A.D.2d 1096 [2001]) In another Great Lake state, Michigan, the Supreme Court was of the same mind. The argument was that changes in property law were needed to meet “current public needs,” but the Court declined on the ground that it had not been demonstrated “that a change of the law is needed,” and then commented on rules of property law which were proposed to be changed that had been fully established “for over 60 years, and the underlying concepts were over 125 years.” (Bott v. Natural Resources Commission, 415 Mich. 45 [1982]) Although out-of-state cases are not authorities for New York, they do point out the slippery slope of changing the common law to DJP-10/29/15 -39- the detriment of existing landowners and their expectations relative to their property rights. In New York, as a matter of its acquisition policy, the public need for recreational opportunities has been recognized, funded, and acted upon, as evidenced by the two recent acquisitions involved in this case, the Lake Lila Tract in 1979 and the Whitney Tract in 1998. Under these circumstances, it was not necessary for the Majority to slip into the legislative realm and, in substance, make a sea change in the New York common law shrouded in the red herrings set forth above. Following the lead of the Dissent, this Court should summarily dismiss Cilley’s affidavit as being nothing but a third red herring. D. Plaintiffs’ Personal Use and Enjoyment of the Mud Pond Parcel Should Not be a Consideration When the Right to Exclude is the Issue, as Opposed to Canoeing Use Supporting Log Floatation or Bridge Taxation. The Majority recognized that the Plaintiffs’ use of the Waterway “has been almost exclusively private and recreational,” and that the Waterway was a “primary means of traveling to Mud Pond Camp from other parts of their property.” (R.2442; FOTL v. Brown, 126 A.D.2d 22, 29) In this regard, the record shows that the main “other part” of their property is a point on the bank of Shingle Shanty Brook in the middle of the property called “St. Agnes.” St. Agnes is fully described by Potter as being “entirely inside of the historical boundaries of Brandreth Park, all private land after 1851 and to date, DJP-10/29/15 -40- and it is almost six miles from Brandreth Station and two miles from Brandreth Lake.” Potter described St. Agnes as “a starting point and return for canoeing on the Mud Pond Parcel,” but that “St. Agnes Landing was not the end of the trip to get the deer and pelts out of the woods; rather it was the point of beginning for another long journey on a private road inside Brandreth Park to Brandreth Station.” (R.2371) To visualize the relationship between the location of St. Agnes and the location of the Mud Pond Camp, Map A is included in Addendum F after this brief. The map shows the spatial relationship between the two locations inside Brandreth Park. (R.1612; R.1173; R.2371) For the sake of clarity, St. Agnes is labeled Point “A” on the map and the Mud Pond Camp is labeled Point “B.” Coming from the Mud Pond Camp to St. Agnes, Point B to Point A, Potter stated that it “was the end of one tough haul and the beginning of another.” (R.2372) Indeed, the overland trek to or from Brandreth Station to St. Agnes is private, a route that the public would have no access to, and therefore the public could not and has not had any ability to use the Waterway for going to or from a market under the common law. This six mile trek by itself would break any chain. Peculiarly, while recognizing that the use of the Waterway has been almost exclusively private and recreational, with the further recognition that much of the use “has been undertaken for recreational reasons such as hunting and fishing,” the Majority then made the statement that “the family has also regularly used the DJP-10/29/15 -41- Waterway for such utilitarian purposes as transporting goods and supplies to Mud Pond Camp.” (R.2442; FOTL v. Brown, 126 A.D.3d 22, 28-29) This statement is strange in the sense that it does not complete the sentence by stating that goods and supplies were brought into the Mud Pond Camp for use at the camp for recreational purposes, and for nothing else, as if to imply that private “utilitarian purposes” are disconnected from recreational purposes, or perhaps to use the word “utilitarian” because it sounds similar to the term “practical difficulty”? It is to be expected that food and gear would be brought into the Mud Pond Camp in order to engage in the recreational uses of hunting, fishing and trapping, and in order to construct the camp in the first place, and it would be expected that building materials would have to be brought in from the outside world. However, as soon as those building materials crossed the private property boundary of Brandreth Park or, upon consent, as soon as those building materials crossed the private property boundary of Whitney Park with respect to that brief period in 1927 when Potter’s father was also employed by Whitney Park and certain building materials were floated across Lilypad Pond, the external and public chain of commerce was broken and everything from the moment of entering private property was private. Going the other way from inside the private property to the outside boundary lines, no goods and materials, deer hides or pelts entered into any kind of public commerce until they reached a public highway, either a road in DJP-10/29/15 -42- the case of Whitney Park, or the Brandreth railroad station in the case of Brandreth Park, six miles from St. Agnes. The distinction between the internal use of private property and external highways for commerce is recognizable and the Dissent easily concluded that the recreational activities of the Plaintiffs merely reflected their “private property rights in the Waterway.” This conclusion, as a matter of law, is consistent with DeCamp v Thompson, 16 A.D. 528, affirmed 159 N.Y. 436. (Plaintiffs’ Brief, 152-154, 173-176) The transportation of goods and materials to build a hunting camp in the middle of the wilderness and to maintain and repair it over the years, as charted in Addendum C of Plaintiffs’ Brief, cannot possibly “reveal” that it has the capacity to transport similar goods for similar purposes, particularly when there is no “to” destination for such goods and there is no “from” destination to take such goods and materials from, unlike the facts of Lehigh Valley Railway Co., et al v. State Tax Commission, 247 N.Y. 9 (1928), as minutely analyzed in the record and argued by the Plaintiffs. (Plaintiffs’ Brief, 133-136, 138-139, 175, 177) Again, if a picture is worth a thousand words, the photo of Potter’s sons bringing basic spring-beds into the Mud Pond Camp by canoe in ankle deep water at the bottom of the rapids after wading much of the way tells the story and leads to the legal conclusion of the Dissent. (Addendum F, photo 2) DJP-10/29/15 -43- There is no logging involved in this case, as there was in Adirondack League Club, where the recreational use of the river by paddlers supported the river’s capacity for floating logs. (Adirondack League Club at 231) Similarly, there is no railroad bridge taxation to support, where the tributaries of the Hudson River, a tidal river, the interstate Chemung River, and the navigable arms of the sovereign-owned Cayuga Lake demonstrated extensive historical and actual commercial use other than by canoes. (Lehigh Valley Railway Co., et al v. State Tax Commission, 247 N.Y. 9 [1928]; Erie Railroad Company v. State Tax Commission, 266 A.D. 452 [1943]) In the instant case, canoe floating would only support canoe floating, for without the red herrings of Wallace, Potter’s father’s trapping and Cilley, this case is reduced to the bare and essential question of whether individual members of the public can use and enjoy the Mud Pond Waterway for canoeing by looping off the 1998 Whitney Tract onto private land, transporting themselves by self-propulsion across the Shingle Shanty Brook, the Mud Pond Outlet Brook, Mud Pond and the Narrows of Lilypad Pond, transporting themselves emotionally by the scenery, solitude and remoteness, and then going on their merry way. Brown and the State want to use the Mud Pond Waterway in the same way as the Plaintiffs, except that they do not want to pay for it. The Mud Pond Waterway is private property; it is not navigable-in-fact. DJP-10/29/15 -44- POINT 3 THE CENTRAL PREMISE OF THE COMMON-LAW REMAINS THE SAME: IN ORDER TO BE NAVIGABLE-IN-FACT, A RIVER MUST PROVIDE PRACTICAL UTILITY TO THE PUBLIC AS A MEANS OF TRANSPORTATION. A. REMOTENESS Brown puts on his blinders and argues that remoteness, necessity and beaver habitat are not relevant to the main issue before this Court; that is to say, whether the Mud Pond Waterway has practical utility to the public as a means of transportation. (Brown Brief, Point VIII, IX and XI) Brown argues that “so long as a waterway provides a practical route between two points,” in this case between two parking lots, “it matters not who will use it or how often it will be used.” (Brown Brief, 71) Brown goes on to say that “a waterway’s remoteness enhances its usefulness as a means for transportation and its desirability as a route for recreational navigation.” (Brown Brief, 73) There is no doubt but what this is the thinking of the wilderness paddler - the farther away from civilization and the channels of regular commerce, the better. One of the State’s main arguments is that the Waterway “need not have proximity to a marketplace,” and then misinterprets Adirondack League Club by quoting some dicta. (State Brief, 24) The State most likely is forced into this position because, as a matter of law, it has confirmed the characteristics of the Lila DJP-10/29/15 -45- Traverse by its wilderness designation under the State Master Plan - “a wilderness area...is an area where the earth and its community of life are untrammeled by man - where man himself is a visitor who does not remain.” (R.1408) Citing Adirondack League Club, Brown argues that the issue of remoteness was not decided by the Court, and, therefore, it is not an issue here. However, nothing could be more directly related to the meaning of “practical utility for transportation” in the common law sense, for the development of the common law evolved from commerce and the need for the commercial development of the State. The issue of remoteness did not have to be a factor in Adirondack League Club because it was a given fact that the South Branch of the Moose River was heavily used over the course of at least 50 years for floating logs to market. The test of navigability in Adirondack League Club was the traditional log floating test. If the Sierra Club could establish an easement by the traditional test of log floating, then the Sierra Club would be able to use the easement for recreational purposes. But it was not the recreation that could establish the easement. In the instant case, no logs had been floated and cannot be, and the Defendants are attempting to expand a newly created canoe route in the wilderness of the Adirondack Mountains, the Lila Traverse, by imposing an easement on the adjoining Mud Pond Waterway. Considering the remoteness and the wilderness history of the Mud Pond Parcel and adjoining area, such a remote area is only DJP-10/29/15 -46- suitable for limited outdoor recreation but has no practical utility for transportation. The logging cases cited by Brown are not applicable to the issues in this case where the Defendants are arguing that a joy ride in a canoe by Brown can establish a common law easement. B. NECESSITY With respect to necessity, Brown has agreed that the word “necessity” was used in the context of the overall needs of society, which led to the framing of the test. (Brown Brief, 75) The Plaintiffs agree with this statement. The State refers to the word “necessities” as dictum that “describes the policy reasons why the adoption of the common-law rule made sense,” but then goes on to refer to the “notion of necessity” as part of “that origin story” of Morgan v. King, 35 N.Y. 454. It appears that the State has transformed the entire foundation of New York’s navigability-in-fact doctrine into a “notion.” As both Defendants want to shed any principled reasoning for invading and taking private property rights in New York, and substituting the fun of canoeing for over 149 years of the common law in New York, it is understandable why they want to put to rest the importance of necessity, the only reason for the common law navigability-in-fact doctrine in the first place. The Plaintiffs have addressed the issue in their main brief. (Plaintiffs’ Brief, 129-133; Point 2, 143-147) It is respectfully submitted that necessity is a component part of practical utility and its apparent abandonment by the Majority DJP-10/29/15 -47- has resulted in the abolition, if not erosion, of the navigability-in-fact doctrine in New York. This Court should resurrect the requirement of necessity and declare that the Mud Pond Waterway is not navigable-in-fact. C. BEAVER HABITAT The Majority has stated that the standard is concerned with a Waterway’s “capacity and characteristics.” (R.2444; FOTL v Brown, 126 A.D.3d 22, 30) Both the Majority and Dissent agree that the capacity of the two brooks involved Shingle Shanty Brook and Mud Pond Outlet Brook - is for canoes. But the record is filled with information about beavers and beaver habitat, the existence of which goes to the issue of the Waterway’s characteristics and its practical utility for transport. Generally speaking, beavers do not dam up large and significant rivers; their habitat is more related to and suitable for small streams and ponds. Brown argues that “where beaver dams cross rivers and streams, it is usually easy to float over them, pull a canoe over them, or quickly portage around them.” (Brown Brief, 78-79) By this statement, Brown shows a total disregard for invading the natural regime. Forgetting that the Mud Pond Waterway is not a river, Brown has also asserted that there are “no reported cases in which the flora and fauna found in and near a river have affected the determination of its navigability.” (Brown Brief, 79) Indeed, other than for logging, there would not be any such reported cases, for never in the history of New York has a claim been DJP-10/29/15 -48- made like the one now before the Court to the effect that a man in a lightweight canoe - independent of any meaningful, objective and rational commercial use, recreating on small brooks on private land in the wilderness - can establish a public highway for transportation. In fact, as recited by the Dissent, “recreational use alone is insufficient to establish that a body of water is navigable in fact.” (Dale v. Chisholm, 67 A.D.3d 626, 627) (R.2447; FOTL v. Brown, 126 A.D.3d 22, 33) Moreover, as set forth in an earlier footnote: “The Decision of Adirondack League Club v Sierra Club (supra) did not alter the established standard for determining navigability so as to permit a determination of navigability based solely upon a waterway’s suitability and capacity for recreational use.” (Hanigan v. State, 213 A.D.2d 80, 84) At bottom, beaver habitat is a factor in the weighing of practical utility, particularly where the record shows, as it does here, that the Waterway flows through a highly protected environmental area. The Mud Pond Parcel is a fragile resource area encumbered and protected by a “forever wild” Conservation Easement. (R.1833-1835) Under the Conservation Easement, the “Ecological integrity” of the Mud Pond Parcel is preserved and protected, meaning that the property should be “as free from human manipulation and disturbance as possible.” (R.1718) The Plaintiffs’ use of the Waterway is local, so they “are not carriers of organisms or vegetation from outside of the Mud Pond Parcel area,” as would be the case with a public highway. (R.1719) Beaver habitat in the context DJP-10/29/15 -49- of the legally protected environment of the Mud Pond Parcel should have been a major factor for the Majority to consider as it weighed the limited capacity of the Waterway. Indeed, beaver habitat is reflective of the entire characteristics of the Waterway and by itself could have been a reason for a declaration that the Waterway is not navigable-in-fact. POINT 4 A TAKING ISSUE IS, PER SE, BEFORE THE COURT IN ANY CASE WHERE NAVIGABILITY-IN-FACT IS TO BE DETERMINED, WHETHER BY LEGISLATIVE FIAT OR BY A JUDICIAL TAKING. As early as Morgan v. King, 35 N.Y. 454 (1866), this Court was concerned with the relationship between private property and the eminent domain power of the State. That concern has been charted in the Plaintiffs’ Brief. (Addendum B, 181-183) More recently, the concept of a judicial taking has been raised by the Supreme Court of the United States and a plurality of six justices have endorsed the concept as falling under either the Fifth Amendment or the Fourteenth Amendment as a matter of either eminent domain or a violation of due process of law. In the case at bar, the Majority has attempted to insulate itself from immunity for a taking by saying that its determination of navigability-in-fact does not result in a taking and does not alter private property rights. Until the Majority made such a pronouncement, there was no judicial taking, but now there is and the issue DJP-10/29/15 -50- has been raised in the Plaintiffs’ Brief. The takings issue as it relates to waterways is very modern in that it provides a Court with external constraints, a new development in the jurisprudence involving the balancing of private rights and the public interest. A recent law review article explores the Constitutional constraints in detail, particularly in light of Stop the Beach Renourishment, Inc. v. Florida Department of Environmental Protection, 557 U.S. 903 (2010). (See Brady, Maureen E., Defining ‘Navigability’: Balancing State-Court Flexibility and Private Rights in Waterways [March 5, 2015], Cardozo Law Review, Vol. 36, p. 1415. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2574356) In the conclusion to the Law Review article, it is stated: “...it is clear that some Constitutional oversight is necessary to protect the owners of water rights and riparian land against egregious uses of the doctrine.” It is submitted that the Opinion and Order of the Majority is one of those “egregious uses of the doctrine,” for it has taken the established and defined canoeing right of the Plaintiffs and put canoeing on the private Mud Pond Waterway into the public domain. If this is not a judicial taking, nothing is, and Plaintiffs should not be foreclosed from raising it before this Court. DJP-10/29/15 -51- CONCLUSION The case now before the Court was spawned by Charles C. Morrison (“Morrison”) when he used his position with the State to put into motion an attempted change of New York’s navigability-in-fact doctrine so that the canoers of the Sierra Club and the other outdoor organizations could paddle wherever they wanted to (the “Cause”), regardless of the size of the waterbody whenever water could float a canoe between two public roads or access portals that could be elevated to the status of public access. (R.1639) By pushing the Cause within the State, Morrison influenced the publication and distribution of the “Enforcement Guidance Memorandum” above referred to, so that the Cause was broadcast to law enforcement agencies across the State. (R.1636-1651) Morrison’s Cause was rebuffed by the Legislature. (R.1641-1647) and the Courts, including this Court when it reversed summary judgment in Adirondack League Club and did not allow for the recreations of canoeing and kayaking, independently, to establish a common law easement over private land. Nevertheless, Morrison and the Sierra Club have kept the Cause alive, and this time, stripped of any semblance of actual commercial use affecting the Mud Pond Waterway, or real and meaningful capacity for future commercial use (canoeing in the Adirondacks is a recreation in every sense of the word, whether individually or in a group), the Cause is being put to this Court in a naked form. DJP-10/29/15 -52- The question is, did Brown’s navigation over the private Mud Pond Waterway, land and water considered to be private property by everybody until the year 2009, confirm or create for the first time a public easement over the Mud Pond Parcel? A structured analysis of the facts and circumstances of this case, assisted by the chart below that unbundles the complexities of the navigational analysis, should result in a finding that the Mud Pond Waterway is not navigable in fact. Reading the chart from left to right for each use of a waterway will reveal the consequences of a determination of navigability-in-fact, subject to the given fact that no stream in New York has yet been determined to be navigable-in-fact by canoeing use alone. DJP-10/29/15 -53- WATERWAY USE DOES WATERWAY USE ESTABLISH NIF EASEMENT? IF NIF EASEMENT, IS CANOEING ALLOWED? IF NIF EASEMENT, IS PORTAGING ALLOWED? 1 Navigation for commerce Yes “A river is, in fact, navigable, on which boats, lighters or rafts may be floated to market” (Hale de Jure Maris: Ex parte Jennings, 6 Cow. 518; Navigation Law §2[5]) Yes Yes 2 Log floating in natural state Yes (Morgan v. King, 35 N.Y. 454 [1866]) Yes (Adirondack League Club v. Sierra Club, 92 N.Y.2d 591 [1998]) Yes (Adirondack League Club v. Sierra Club, 92 N.Y.2d 591 [1998]) 3 Navigation by canoe for recreation No (Hanigan v. State of New York, 213 AD2d 80 [1995]; Mohawk Valley Ski Club, Inc. v. Town of Duanesburg, 304 AD2d 881 [2003]; Julie Schafler Dale v. Chisholm, 67 AD3d 626 [2009]) No No This Court has been presented with the extreme case, the unprecedented notion that the evidentiary standard for “practical utility for transportation” is a DJP-10/29/15 -54- minimal standard, notwithstanding the Constitutional property rights at risk where the standard should be a maximum standard, and individual canoeing for recreation is the kind of transportation or transport envisioned by the navigabilityin-fact doctrine, a body of law that is not grounded in recreation but is firmly based on economic necessity and commerce for the benefit of society as a whole. If this Court adopts this extreme theory and determines that the recreational activity of canoeing and its travel is sufficient to render a small and remote pond and two brooks a common law public highway, such a decision will have adverse consequences for an unknown and untold number of landowners across the State of New York. The Opinion and Order of the Appellate Division should be reversed and this Court should determine that the Mud Pond Waterway is not navigable-in-fact. Dated: October 29, 2015 Respectfully submitted, Dennis J. Phillips, McPhillips, Fitzge 288 Glen Street, P.O. Box 299 Glens Falls, New York 12801 Tel. #(518) 792-1174 DJP-10/29/15 -55- ADDENDUM E ADDENDUM F