Rainbow over bins

Rainbow over bins
Planting 2010
Showing posts with label Crown Patent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crown Patent. Show all posts

Thursday, May 28, 2015

Court rules that Bear Creek was navigable in 1831 - natural severance of property results

I first posted about this case in December, 2012; it has now gone to a hearing and a decision has been rendered.  Justice Mitchell has declared that the portion of Bear Creek that passes through the property owned by the respondents in the application "was navigable in 1831 and, therefore, title to its bed was retained by the Crown creating a natural severance of the property."  That was the position that had been taken by the respondent landowners when they hired a surveyor to prepare a reference plan showing Bear Creek as a navigable watercourse comprising unpatented Crown land.  Based upon that reference plan, they purported to convey the land on one side of the creek from joint ownership to ownership by one of the landowners alone.

The court application was commenced by the local municipality, which took objection to the reference plan prepared by the surveyor.  The municipality asked the Court to declare that the watercourse (which is now part of a municipal drain under the Drainage Act) does not create a natural severance of the property.  Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Ontario was also added as a respondent to the application and supported the municipality's position.

In making her decision, Justice Mitchell started from the finding ("not seriously challenged by the Municipality in its argument on the application") that the present watercourse on the property "is the same watercourse located on the property in 1831" at the time of the Crown grant.  Therefore, in determining whether the watercourse was navigable in 1831, Justice Mitchell could rely on the present navigability of the watercourse.

She concluded: "The depth of the watercourse is presently and, based on the evidence of Mr. Burwell, also was at the time of the original grant, sufficient to float a small craft or a log.  There is no suggestion that the water does not flow freely along the watercourse or that its flow is obstructed in any meaningful way.  There may be seasonal fluctuations in the depth and flow of the watercourse but the parties agree this evidence is not determinative of the issue: See the seventh and eighth criterion in Coleman.  The watercourse was, therefore, "navigable" in fact at the time of the original Crown grant."

However, in order to create the natural severance, the watercourse must also have been "capable of public use" or "public utility" in 1831.  Justice Mitchell said of this requirement: "Trite to say that actual use, both historical and present day, is the best evidence of a watercourse's capability of public use.  That said, other "lesser" evidence will suffice to meet the evidentiary burden."  On a review of  the totality of the evidence, she found that "it is more probable than not that the watercourse was not only "capable of public use" in 1831 but was actually used by the public. ... It was capable of constituting an aqueous highway for public commercial and/or recreational use at the time of the original Crown grant regardless of whether or not it was considered by the public useful for such purposes."

As a result, the bed of Bear Creek as it passes through the respondent landowners' property was never actually granted by the Crown to private landowners in 1831.  It was the bed of a navigable watercourse that was reserved to the Crown and now serves as a physical separation between the respondents' property (properties) that lies on either side of the watercourse.

Read the decision at: Municipality of Middlesex Centre v MacMillan et al.

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Natural severance granted to two landowners by Superior Court

Owners of two different properties in the Hamilton, ON area brought applications to "clarify or determine title" to the bed of a waterway that traverses each of the properties.  If the waterway was determined to be navigable, then the bed of the waterway would remain the property of the Crown and would effect a severance of the properties involved.  Section 1 of the Beds of Navigable Waters Act provides: 
"Where land that borders on a navigable body of water or stream, or on which the whole or a part of a navigable body of water or stream is situate, or through which a navigable body of water or stream flows, has been or is granted by the Crown, it shall be deemed, in the absence of an express grant of it, that the bed of such body of water was not intended to pass and did not pass to the grantee."
The Crown Patent for both properties was issued on January 11, 1816 to a single owner.  The original Patent did not contain any express grant of the bed of the watercourse.  Therefore, if the watercourse was found to be navigable as of the date of the grant, then title to the bed of it would remain vested in the Crown.

On the basis of evidence presented by the parties, the Court concluded that it was probable that the waterway was navigable for significant periods of the year in 1816.  Title of the bed of the waterway remains in the Crown (resulting in the natural severance of the Applicants' properties).

Read the decision at: O’Donnell v. Ontario (Attorney General) and Obratoski v. Ontario (Attorney General).

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

When can a stream create a natural severance of a property?

A case is before the Ontario Superior Court in London to determine whether a local watercourse effectively severs a property into two parts.  An application has been commenced by the Municipality of Middlesex Centre for a declaration that a stream (the Bear Creek Drain) is not a navigable waterway such that a particular property through which it flows would be severed in two.  The predecessors in title of the affected landowners had previously applied to sever their property, but the application was denied.  The current landowners then obtained an opinion that the stream created a "natural severance"; a surveyor agreed and registered a reference plan showing the lands north and south of the stream as two separate parts and denoting the stream itself as "Unpatented Crown Land".

This was done without the knowledge of the municipality; the circumstances were discovered when the landowners made an application for a building permit that would have constituted a second dwelling on the same 10-acre parcel; this would not have been permitted without a rezoning unless there was a "natural severance".

Justice Heeney has ruled that it will not be necessary for the municipality to serve its application on other landowners along the Bear Creek Drain as the issue to be determined at trial will relate solely to the specific property in question: "was the stream a naviagble waterway at the time of the original Crown grant to the current owners' predecessors in title in 1831?  If the answer is yes, then the stream bed is deemed to have been excluded from the original grant, and title to it remains vested in the Crown, irrespective of the current status of the waterway.  If the answer is no, the stream bed was included in the deed to the parcel over which it flowed, and title to it vested in the private landowner who obtained the deed from the Crown, and in his successors in title, up to and including" the current landowners.

As the onus of proof will be on the landowners, Justice Heeney also ruled that they will present their case first at trial, to be followed by the municipality and then the Province of Ontario.

Read the decision at: Middlesex Centre v. MacMillan et al.