64 N.J.L. 330 | N.J. | 1900
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The declaration is in tort, and seeks damages from the defendant for breaking and entering the close of the plaintiff, being a tract of land covered with water in Still-water township, in Sussex county, known as Swartswood pond, and for fishing and catching fish therein, in disregard of a notice by the plaintiff not to trespass on his land, and especially not to fish in said pond.
The gist of the defence is found ifi the following extract from the fifth plea, upon which issue has been joined : “That the said Swartswood pond has been stocked with fish by the fish commissioners of the State of New Jersey for twenty-five-years, and that the fish therein belong to the public, and that the public for sixty years last past have entered the said close
At the trial the plaintiff proved both possession and title by deed in himself, before and at the time of the acts complained of, and that the defendant had fished in said pond, though notified by the plaintiff not to do so. The defendant then offered to prove that the pond had been stocked by the ■State of New Jersey about twenty-five years before, and that the public had continuously fished there for sixty years, which offers were denied, and a verdict for six cents was directed and rendered for the plaintiff. The questions presented by the exceptions are whether one who fishes in non-tidal water that covers land of another, though forbidden to do so by the ■owner of such land, can justify either by the long-continued usage of the public, or because the water has been stocked by the State of New Jersey. These defences, though blended in the special plea, are logically distinct.
Leaving out of view certain relations that are plainly foreign to this case, it may be said that whatever right, provable by user, the defendant could have had in the plaintiff’s land must have been by way of easement, custom or prescription. The right that the defendant asserted was not an easement, which is a privilege without profit. Nor could he, as one of the public, acquire this profitable right by custom. In the first place, a common law custom, as distinguished from a usage of trade, must be immemorial, and this, in New Jersey, is impossible. Ackerman v. Shelp, 3 Halst. 125; Allen v.
In view, no doubt, of these considerations the special plea alleges “a prescriptive right” in the defendant to which he is entitled “as one of the public.”’ This proposition is unsound, because it conflicts with the rule that the public cannot prescribe. A right that a man claims merely as one of the public does not lie in grant, and therefore not in prescription,, which presupposes a lost grant, and so can embrace only things that are grantable. “A prescription,” says Lord Coke, “always is alleged in the person.” Gateward’s Case, 6 Co. 60 b. “ Prescription,” says Sir William Blackstone, “ is-merely a personal usage: as that Sempronius and his ancestors, or those whose estate he hath, have used time out of mind to have such an advantage or privilege.” 2 Bl. Com. 262. Mr. Greenleaf says: “Prescription is a personal right, belonging to one or a few persons by particular designation, as, for example, the owners of a certain parcel of land.” 2 Greenl. Evid., § 248. To use a technical phrase, the claimant, in such a case, must prescribe in a que estate—that is, under or in the .right of some other person or persons whose estate has come to him.
That a right to take profit from another’s land cannot arise by custom was decided as early as Gateward’s Case, supra. Lord Kenyon, in Grimstead v. Marlowe, 4 T. R. 717, said that the law had been so settled ever since the time of Gate-
The following extract is from the opinion by Mr. Justice North, in Smith v. Andrews: “ The idea is sometimes entertained that the right to pass along a public navigable river carries with it the right to fish in it, but so far as regards non-tidal rivers this is not so. No lawyer could take that view. Persons using a navigable highway no more acquire thereby a right to fish there than persons passing along a public highway on land acquire a right to shoot upon it. Some few passages may be found in the books in which judges are reported to have said that subjects have a right to fish in navigable rivers, just as in the sea; but on investigation it always will be found that they are referring to navigable rivers where the tide ebbs and flows and nothing else. * * *
The leading case in this state is Cobb v. Davenport, 3 Vroom 369, decided by the Supreme Court on facts much like those now before us. The plaintiff claimed to own a natural, non-tidal lake in Morris county called Green pond. The action was trespass for breaking his close and fishing in water that covered his land. The defendant pleaded the general issue, denying that the plaintiff had an exclusive right to fish in said pond, set up the statute of limitations and license from the plaintiff and also alleged a prescriptive right to fish by virtue of certain grants to persons under whom the defendant claimed. A verdict was rendered for the defendant, which was set aside on rule to show cause. The Supreme Court held that the plaintiff had proved his title and that the defence,
“ The evidence in this case shows that the public in general, for a period of forty years and upwards, were accustomed to fish in the pond in question without hindrance or molestation, and that permission to do so was neither asked nor granted; that the fishery was never used by its owners, either before or since the plaintiff acquired title, as a source of pecuniary profit, but that every one, without regard to residence or tenure of lands, was permitted to fish in all parts of the pond at will and whenever his inclination prompted him to do so, and that this privilege was exercised under a prevalent impression that the fishery, in the language of one of the witnesses, was a free fishery. And it is a noticeable fact in the case that although the witnesses who fished in the pond testify that they did so under a conviction of their right, yet no one claimed a right personal to himself or other than such as it was thought belonged to the public in general. This evidence tends merely to establish a customary right in all the inhabitants and frequenters in that locality to-fish in these waters if a right to fish could be established by proof of custom. But the right- of fishing being a profit a prendre in another’s soil, as distinguished from an easement, cannot be claimed by custom but must be prescribed for in a que estate. The defendant cannot justify under a custom, nor will proof of a custom sustain a plea of prescriptive right
The defendant subsequently applied for leave to file an additional plea justifying the alleged trespass on the ground that the fishery had become public by dedication. Leave was granted in order that the question might appear on the record, and the plea was then, after argument, struck out. The opinion is reported in 4 Vroom 223. The conclusions expressed by the court are that the right to fish and take fish in alieno solo is not an easement but is a profit a prendre and can be acquired only by grant or prescription, which must be pleaded; that such a right, so universal and unqualified as to subsist in the entire public, cannot be gained by custom or prescription, and that the doctrine of dedication to public uses does not embrace a claim of this character. The pleadings in the case now under consideration do not present the defence of dedication. The case of Cobb v. Davenport has been cited with approval by this court in Attorney-General v. Delaware and Bound Brook Railroad Co., 12 C. E. Gr. 631 (at p. 639), and in Attorney-General v. City of Paterson, decided at the present term, the exact point of the citation being, in each case, the tidal distinction between public and private waters.
It is plain from an examination of the authorities above referred to, and of many others that might be mentioned if it were worth while to multiply citations, that the Supreme Court, in Cobb v. Davenport, declared and enforced the ancient and established law. There is nothing in our local conditions which closely resemble those of England, or in the requirements of modern life that calls for the adoption of a different rule. It may be true that there is here, as there seems to be in England, a common misapprehension on this subject, and that a good deal of fishing that is thought to be of right is only permissive. But it is not desirable to change an important rule of law merely because it is sometimes misunderstood. In country life a multitude of acts are habitually committed that are technically trespasses. Persons walk,
The other ground of defence is that the state, some twenty-five years ago, stocked this pond with land-locked salmon, and that therefore the defendant, as one of the public, might fish in it. Inasmuch as evidence on this point was struck out, and the subsequent offer was not full, the facts relied on by the defendant do not appear as plainly as they otherwise might do. The waters of Swartswood pond, of course, escape and find their way to the ocean. It is not clear whether fish also may escape, or can enter from without, or even that salmon are now in the pond, or whether other kinds of fish are there. It is not distinctly shown that the defendant desired to catch salmon. He fished on two days and seems to have caught nothing. It is fair to assume, in favor of the defendant, that there were salmon in the pond, either placed there originally by the State of New Jersey or the successors of such; that they were desirable, and that the defendant would have been glad to catch them, and was at least attempting to do so. The fish thus introduced into this body of water must have been, at the dates of the alleged trespasses, the property of the plaintiff, or of the state, or of the public, meaning by the latter phrase that the public were at liberty to catch them where they lawfully might. If these fish were the property of the plaintiff, the second defence fails. The defendant sometimes calls them the property of the state, and sometimes the property of the public. If they were the property of the state, this defence fails, and the defendant could no more take them than if they were still in the hatchery. The third alternative is that they were for the public, and this is probably what is meant when they are called the prop
The declared policy of the State of New Jersey is to promote and protect certain forms of animal life in the interest of sport and to increase the supply of food. To these ends non-tidal waters have been stocked with fish, and woods and fields may be hereafter stocked with game. It may happen that gunners will then claim that they can cross lands against the protest of the owners, and will allege as their justification, in close analogy to this defence, that the birds which they seek were originally impressed by state authority with a special public character. No theory can be sound that would warrant such an invasion of private property in pursuit of private advantage. The trial judge did not err in overruling the second defence.
The plaintiff was entitled to the direction that the jury find a verdict in his favor for nominal damages. The judgment is affirmed.
For affirmance—Depue, Van Syckel, Garrison, Lippincott, Gummere, Ludlow, Collins, Bogert, Nixon, Hendrickson, Adams, Vredenburgh. 12.
For reversal—None.