The plaintiff claims a right to walk on the defendants’ land, between high and low water marks, in order to fish from a jetty not owned by the defendants. A judge of the Superior Court decided that the plaintiff has the right he claims, and the defendants appealed. We uphold the right as part of the “free fishing and fowling” granted by the colonial ordinance of 1641-1647, found in the 1649 codification, The Book of the General Lawes and Libertyes, at 50. See
Opinion of the Justices,
We summarize the statement of agreed facts. The plaintiff and the defendants own lots of land fronting on Center-ville Harbor. A jetty built in 1957 at public expense ex *279 tends from the beach on the defendants’ land into the water, and the defendants do not claim to own the jetty. A prior owner of the defendants’ land allowed the plaintiff and members of the public to cross the defendants’ beach between mean high water and mean low water to enable them to reach the jetty and to walk on the jetty for the purpose of fishing. Since the defendants acquired the land, they have refused to permit such walking and fishing.
The judge ordered judgment declaring that the plaintiff has the right to use the defendants’ “property between the high and low water mark as a means of access to the jetty,” and a right to fish from the jetty, and directing the defendants not to interfere with those rights. The defendants appealed, and we brought the case here on our own motion.
The colonial ordinance was in the nature of a grant of ownership, “subject to a reserved easement.”
Commonwealth
v.
Alger,
*280 The first paragraph of the judgment appealed from is to be modified by inserting, after the words “as a means of access to the jetty,” the words “in order to fish from the jetty.” As so modified, the judgment is affirmed.
So ordered.
