
    O’Donnell and Clark against Kelsey.
    Where a grant is made by the state to riparian owners upon an irregular waterfront, of the land under water to a certain distance'from the shore, and an apportionment of the land so granted is afterwards made upon a basis not strictly correct, and one of such proprietors has made improvements, laid out streets and lots and executed conveyances according to such apportionment during a less period than twenty years, he will be held to have acquiesced in such apportionment so far that he cannot claim a new partition upon technically correct principles.
    As such acquiescence does not act merely as an estoppel, it is not necessary that the party seeking to take advantage of it should have been induced, by the conduct of the party acquiescing, to make improvements according to such apportionment.
    [The rule of partition for lands formed by alluvion laid down by Edmonds, J.]
    In November, 1833, the defendant Kelsey and Anson Blake purchased a tract of land in the city of Brooklyn, lying directly on the shore of the East river and principally valuable for its water-front. They thus became purchasers for themselves and others who were interested with them, in whose behalf they executed a declaration of trust.
    In 1836 the legislature passed a law authorizing Kelsey & Blake and other riparian owners, on the same shore on both sides of them, to dock out a certain distance into the river.
    In 1851 another statute was enacted, altering the outer line in front of Kelsey & Blake, and others who owned south of them, and permitting them to dock out still further.
    The shore at the upland had many variations and sinuosities where it came down to the water, but the outer or water line, as granted by the legislature, was straight in front of the lands conveyed to Kelsey & Blake, and indeed the whole of the distance granted, except a change in its direction at a point directly in line with the northern boundary of their premises. That boundary in their deed was the centre line of Butler-street (afterwards Harrison-street) and that variation in the water line was at a point made by the prolongation of that centre line into the river.
    Under an act of the legislature commissioners were appointed to lay out Brooklyn into streets, squares and avenues, and those commissioners laid out streets, &c., over these premises of Kelsey & Blake, and over the lands of the owners on both sides of them.
    Kelsey & Blake laid out their premises into lots and streets, according to the general plan of the commissioners, and in doing so, included the lands under water in front of their premises taking the centre line of Harrison-street as it was prolonged into the river as their northern boundary, and adopting as their southern line one parallel to it.
    The other riparian owners divided the lands under water among themselves upon the same principle, taking the line of the public streets as their basis and appropriating to themselves the lands that came in front on this basis.
    Kelsey & Blake conveyed to their cesluis que trust the shares belonging to them, and released to each other each one’s share, as agreed on partition among themselves. On such partition the deeds all assumed the same basis as to the land under water.
    The various riparian owners went on and made improvements on the lands under water agreeable to this settlement of their respective interests, and among others Kelsey filled up some of the lots in front of his upland upon the same basis.
    Afterwards Kelsey claimed that he was entitled to have his share of the land under water set off to him on the basis of a line running at right angles with the outer or water line as granted by the statute, or the basis of a line running at right angles with the shore, either of which would have carried his line under water to the north of the centre line of Harrison-street and in front of a lot belonging to the plaintiffs, who owned adjoining him on the north, and thus cut them off entirely from a water-front, or compelled them in the same manner to run their line angularly in front of the land next above them.
    The plaintiffs filed their bill in the late court of chancery, in the year 1846, to have their rights settled, and to compel the defendant to acquiesce in the general settlement thus made or acquiesced in by all the riparian owners interested in the whole grant from the state. The superior court of the city of New-York, to which the cause was afterwards transferred, granted the prayer of the complaint (4 Sanaf. S. C. R., 202), and from this judgment the defendant appealed.
    
      John C. Spencer for the appellant.
    
      Murray Hoffman for the respondents.
   The opinion of the court was given by

Edmonds, J.

The several grants from the state in 1836 and 1851 were of land under water in front of uplands belonging to several different riparian owners. The grants were to certain persons specifically named in the acts, and not to them as riparian owners, and gave them authority to erect bulkheads and wharves out to certain lines therein described. It does not appear from the case whether the persons named in the statute were the riparian owners, nor whether they were to take as such the land granted. The case, however, throughout treats the question as one between riparian owners and settling riparian rights, and probably ought so to be regarded by us; though we have no certain means of knowing that it is so. At all events, as at present advised, it seems to me proper to look at it in that point of view only.

The true mode of dividing the land under water thus granted was to assume the water line established by these acts of the legislature as the base; and as it had in it one indentation, namely, that at the extension of the central line of Harrison-street, the true base should be ascertained by drawing a line between the two extreme points of the grant, in the general direction there given, and so as to equalize the quantity of granted land on both sides of that line. Adopting this as a base, each riparian owner is to have his proportion of the outer or water line according to the length of his shore line. Thus, as the whole shore line is to the whole water line, so is each one’s share of the shore line to each one’s share of the water line.

It may be necessary for practical purposes that slight indentations in the shore line should be disregarded, and a general line of the shore adopted. But it is unnecessary to consider that here, because that would affect quantity more than it would the exterior lines of each proprietor, and would not be material or necessary in determining the questions involved in this suit.

The doctrine as to lands formed by alluvion is well applicable in principle to the case in hand. That is laid down in Angelí on Tide Waters, 258, thus: “ Measure the whole extent of the line on the river and ascertain how many feet each proprietor owned on this line ; divide the newly formed line into equal parts and appropriate to each proprietor as many of these parts as he owned feet on the old line, and then draw lines from the points at which the proprietors respectively bounded upon the old to the points thus determined as the points of division on the newly formed line.” This rule is to be modified under particular circumstances; for instance, if the ancient margin has deep indentations or sharp projections, the general available line on the river ought to he taken, and not the actual length of the margin as thus elongated by the indentations or projections ; and he cites a work of the civil law entitled “ Collection of New Decisions, by Deesart;" Deerfield v. Arms (17 Pick., 41); Sparhawk v. Bullard (1 Metc., 95).

Now whether that base be taken, or the general line of the shore be adopted ■ as the base, it is evident that the defendant’s lines would run in the direction he claims and not in the direction claimed by the plaintiffs. Not in precisely the same direction in both instances, but sufficiently so to defeat the plaintiff’s claim. Then the question recurs, for what reason should we depart from these principles, or one of them ?

One reason given is, because all the riparian owners are not parties to the suit, .and neither principle can be carried out without them. That may be a good reason for dismissing the bill for want of parties, or staying the hearing until the necessary parties can be brought in, but is not a good reason for deciding the case upon wrong principles.

Another reason is, that if the defendant and his associates have their full quantity of front, they cannot be allowed to disturb the settlement made by the other proprietors for the sake of establishing a boundary based on an abstract rule. I cannot acknowledge the force of this objection. For the defendant may have a right to the application of the abstract rule of which he cannot be deprived by settlements of others to which- he was no party, and that abstract rule may give him a particular location of great value which cannot be satisfied by giving him his quantity of less value elsewhere.

Another reason is, that he has acquiesced in those settlements by others, and therefore ought not now to disturb them. This, it seems to me, is the important question in the case; and upon this point alone, if any, is he to be precluded.

The settlement thus referred to, took the line of the streets as the basis and gave to each one the front under water marked out according to those lines. Thus the defendant, instead of running diagonally across Harrison-street and taking in the lands under water claimed by these plaintiffs, and perhaps also those claimed by Johnson and by Wood and Havermeyer, as he now claims, would run out parallel with the centre line of Harrison-street, being the location which the plaintiffs insist ought to be adopted.

This would undoubtedly, as was suggested, be more convenient to many of the parties and not give rise to the disturbance and litigation which might flow from the opposite course ; but still the dread of those consequences must not control our decision, unless we can find in the evidence that it has influenced the defendant in bringing about his alleged acquiescence which we are now to inquire into.

It is a conceded fact that the defendant has laid out his land, as well under water as his upland, according to the line of the streets, and thus has taken to himself, as his front, the land under water in front of him according to those streets, and not according as he now claims; and he has conveyed and improved accordingly. In the complaint it is alleged that he did this in execution of the division of the land under water, to which all the proprietors had agreed. In the answer he denies that it was done for any such purpose, but merely for the purpose of dividing his lands into streets, squares and avenues, agreeable to the laying out of streets, &c., made by the commissioners appointed for that purpose.

But there are two important considerations which tend to show that the allegation of the complaint in this respect must be true. One, that he has included in his map, in his improvements and in his conveyances, land under water, to which he would have no title, if his present claim is allowed, and to which he has title only by reason of his acquiescing in the settlement to which it is now sought to confine him. The other is, that he has allowed other parties claiming according to that settlement to occupy, improve and build on the land which he now claims and to which those other parties would have had no right, if his claim is allowed, and their right to which is founded on that settlement alone.

It is true he may not be estopped as regards these plaintiffs from setting up bis claim against them, because they have not been induced by his silence to make any improvements ; but though these acts of his may not work an estoppel against him, they may be properly referred to as pretty strong evidence of acquiescence.

There is another consideration connected with this which is entitled to some weight, and that is, that all the other riparian owners have taken their respective shares according to this settlement and without any objection on his part; So that there is just enough of the land under water left to answer the call of both the parties to this suit, provided it is to be taken according to the principles of that settlement; and now, by allowing the defendant his present claim, he cuts off the plaintiffs entirely from any water-front on one of his boundaries, and on the other takes to himself land which the proprietors on that side have abandoned to him in execution of that settlement, and to which otherwise he would have no right.

' Now it may be, for aught that we can see in this case, that all the other proprietors are fixed and settled in their respective rights, as to each other and as to the defendant, and to allow his present claim would enable him to claim the advantage of the settlement by reason of his agreement to it as a party to it, and on the other hand to repudiate it, and thus enjoy the advantage of both sides of that question. It may be that he has a right to such consequences, but I refer to them to show the probability of his acquiescence, which I am now seeking for.

It would be difficult to conceive that the defendant did not know of and acquiesce in the settlement. He was a large owner of the adjoining shore in his own interest and in trust for others; he is named in the statute with others as the grantee of the water rights. He saw those others proceeding to partition among themselves; he made partition with his co-owners upon the same principle. He laid out his lands into streets and lots upon the same principle, and gave and received deeds, that fully carried it out, and thus. publicly to all the world proclaimed his assent to it, and he appropriated to himself lands to which he had no right, except what he derived from that settlement. The case therefore seems to me that of two adjoining proprietors who settle by agreement among themselves the dividing line of their respective lands, and for sometime act accordingly; and in such case neither party is at liberty to depart from the arrangement.

It is upon the doctrine of acquiescence in the dividing line between adjoining estates, and not upon that of estoppel or adverse possession, that I think the defendant is barred of his present claim, and it seems to me that his acquiescence may well be presumed from his various acts as detailed in this case.

The doctrine of acquiescence is well recognized in the law as an admission- by the party. But to have that effect, it must exhibit some act of the mind and amount to voluntary demeanor or conduct of the party, and whether it is acquiescence in the conduct or language of others, it must plainly appear that such conduct was fully known or the language fully understood by the party, before any inference can be drawn from his passiveness or silence. But where those ingredients are found the acquiescence becomes as binding as any other admission of a party. (1 Green. Ev., 6, 197.) Thus the entry on an account-book against a particular person, or making out a bill of parcels in his name, is an admission that the goods were furnished on Ms credit. (Storr v. Scott, 6 Carr. and Payne, 241.) So where A pointed out one-fifth of certain property as belonging to the defendant in an execution, A owning the other four-fifths, he is to be regarded as admitting the ownership of the one-fifth. (Stephens v. Baird, 9 Cow., 274.) So where a man declared to be a bankrupt introduced his assignee to an auctioneer, he is concluded from denying his bankruptcy. (Clarke v. Clarke, 6 Esp., 61.) To the same effect are Morgans v. Bridges (1 Barn. and Ald., 650); Williams v. Lownders (1 Hall, 579); Davenport v. Wheeler (7 Cow., 231); Jackson v. Vedder (2 Caines, 211); Welland Canal Company v. Hathaway (8 Wend., 483); Phillips v. Hall (8 Wend., 610).

It is upon this principle that I am of opinion that the judgment ought to be affirmed.

Rüggles, Oh. J., and Gardiner, Johnson, Welles and Watson, Js., concurred. Jewett, J., did not hear the argument.

Judgment affirmed.  