48 A. 805 | R.I. | 1901
The plaintiff, who is the owner of land bounding upon the sea, brings this action of trespass on the case, claiming damage for the disturbance of his easement or incorporal right to take the sea-weed which has become stranded on the shore adjacent to his land.
The defendant demurs to the declaration, on the ground that the right to take sea-weed landed upon the beach below high-water mark is in the public and not in the owner of the adjacent upland.
The demurrer must be overruled. The right to take sea-weed is not one of the rights which the State holds in trust for the public, like navigation or fishery, but a private right in the shore which belongs to the land bordering upon the beach, and which the littoral owner may control and convey.
The original right to the shore under the common law is in the sovereign. By early grants in England, certain portions of the shore were given to the lords of manors, the sovereign retaining for the use of the public only the right of navigation in some cases, and in others only the rights of navigation and fishery. So in this country the fee of the shore was given by colonial ordinance in some cases to the owner of the adjacent upland, as in Massachusetts in 1641; while in other colonies, as in Rhode Island, it remained in the sovereign, now represented by the legislature of the State. But whether the fee between high and low-water mark belongs to the State or to individuals, the respective rights of the parties are not generally affected by that circumstance.
"In this country the common rights of the people" (in tide-waters) "both before and since the Revolution, may be said generally to be confined to what is of public use; while the owners of lands adjoining navigable waters are permitted to enjoy what remains of the rights and privileges in the soil beyond their strict boundary lines, after giving to the public the full enjoyment of their rights." Gould on Waters, § 168. *530
The State may not give up its right to control the private rights, as well as the public ones, but it may suffer the littoral proprietor to acquire, as against all the world but itself, these private rights which naturally fall to him as the first appropriator, so that he becomes by the common law of the State the owner of these rights with the exclusive power to exercise them as long as this does not interfere with the public rights of which the State reserves control.
The right of access to the sea is one which the State cannot arbitrarily take from the littoral owner. The right to build wharves below high-water mark is one which in this State is attached to the upland, but which the State may regulate in the interest of the public right of navigation. The court say, inEngs v. Peckham,
So the right to take sea-weed and drift-stuff, and the right to take sand and stones from the beach have always been recognized and upheld by our courts as rights attached to the ownership of the upland bordering on the sea. No doubt the State as owner of the fee might limit and perhaps take away these rights; at any rate, the sovereign power could have done so before the "long-continued usage had acquired the force of law," Gould, § 168; but the littoral owner now holds these rights in the beach to the exclusion of the public or other individuals.
The first case in this country upon the subject is Emans v.Turnbull, 2 Johns. 313, decided in 1807. The locus was a barren strip of land bordering on tide-water. The defendant had forcibly prevented the plaintiff from taking any sea-weed which had collected on the beach adjacent to this land, and justified his assault by claiming that sea-weed, when it *531 lodged upon the beach, became his by reason of his ownership of the upland. The sea-weed was taken, evidently, below high-water mark, for the report says, p. 317: "It appeared that if the sea-weed were left on the beach it would be driven up by the sea, form a row, and protect the bank from being washed and the sand from being thrown upon the neck." In New York the fee of the shore is in the State, except as it has been given to others by patent, so that this early case is exactly in point. After verdict for the defendant the case came before the Supreme Court, of which James Kent was then Chief Justice, and he delivered the opinion, denying the motion for a new trial. After deciding that the defendant was the owner of the neck, he continues: "The next point in the case is whether the sea-weed thrown by the sea upon the shore or beach of the neck did thereby vest in the owner of the soil or belong to the first occupant. The plaintiff's right, if any, rested upon occupancy: . . . Any stranger would have had an equal right to take it. The sea-weed thus thrown up by the sea may be considered as one of those marine increases arising by slow degrees, and, according to the rule of the common law, it belongs to the owner of the soil. The rule is that if the marine increase be by small and almost imperceptible degrees, it goes to the owner of the land; but if it be sudden and considerable, it belongs to the sovereign. (2 Black. Com. 261. Harg. Law Tracts, 28.) The sea-weed must be supposed to have accumulated gradually. The slow increase and its usefulness as a manure and as a protection to the bank will, upon every just and equitable principle, vest the property of the weed in the owner of the land. It forms a reasonable compensation to him for the gradual encroachments of the sea, to which other parts of his estate may be exposed; this is one sound reason for vesting these marine increments in the proprietor of the shore. The jus alluvionis ought in this respect to receive a liberal encouragement in favour of private right."
This case was approved by Angell in his book on tide-waters, a work which embodied the results of accurate research and discriminating judgment, and which must be *532
considered good authority as to the law of Rhode Island from the earliest times. In Massachusetts, in Phillips v. Rhodes, 7 Met. 322, the Supreme Court approve Chief Justice Kent's opinion, and it has ever since been followed in Massachusetts, Maine, and New Hampshire. The Supreme Court of Connecticut, in Church v.Meeker,
The Connecticut case itself is not authority, for a statute in Connecticut regulated the taking of sea-weed from shores owned by the State. The question, however, arose again in Connecticut, and the court, in Mather v. Chapman,
But whatever may be our conclusion as to the logical *533
grounds for the doctrine, it is certain that it has been recognized as the common law of this State whenever the question has arisen. The authority of Angell on Tide Waters and Emans v.Turnbull were approved by the court in Kenyon v. Nichols,
"Upon a reconsideration of the question and a careful review of the authorities, we are unanimously of opinion that the ruling of the court in that case was correct. That decision is supported not only by the authorities cited by the plaintiff's counsel, but by the current of authorities from Gatewood's case and the cases of Hardy v. Hollyday and Grimstead v. Marlow, down to the present time, 6 Rep. 60, 4 T.R. 717.
"The claim made by the defendant is to have an interest orprofit a prendre in the soil of another. This point is sustained by the reasons given in the adjudicated cases for vesting marine increments in the proprietor of the adjoining land. Emans v. Turnbull, 2 Johns. 313. Angell on Tide Waters, 260."
Judge Curtis, in the United States Circuit Court, inKnowles v. Nichols, 2 Curt. 571, thus refers to this case, p. 577: "In Kenyon v. Nichols,
"I am inclined to agree with that learned court in this conclusion, though I have not had occasion very fully to examine its grounds. But it is quite consistent with the rights claimed by the plaintiff that the title to the soil should be in the State. The defendant, however, also insists that the rights of common are in all the inhabitants of the State. What has been above said indicates my opinion on this subject."
The next Rhode Island case in which the subject was considered is Bailey v. Sisson,
The right, as appurtenant to the adjacent farm and uplands, is unconditionally recognized.
Hall v. Lawrence,
Watson v. Knowles,
In Middletown v. Newport Hospital,
After this uniform line of decision this court, in Allen v.Allen,
To alter the rule after it has been so well settled and so long acquiesced in would disturb rights of property which in many cases have largely fixed the values given and received for littoral estate, and this alone would forbid the court to make such change without the clearest proof of error. But we have no doubt that the rule is founded in good law as well as upon natural equity: in the case where the proprietor owns to low-water mark, upon his ownership of the soil; *536 in the case where he owns only to high-water mark (the State not asserting any claim), upon the doctrine of accession.
Demurrer overruled, and case remitted to Common Pleas Division for further proceedings.