133 Mass. 65 | Mass. | 1882
By the common law the exclusive right to a fishery in a stream not navigable was in the proprietors of the banks, who, owning the bed of the stream ad filum aquae, thus owned the land where such fishery was carried on. It was a right of taking the fish only, and did not involve the right to prevent their passage to the portion of the stream which lay above such fishery. But this rule has been modified in this Commonwealth by successive legislative acts from the earliest settlement of the country, passed under the two governments of the Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay Colonies, as well as under the Province- and our present form of government. There was much jealousy on the subject of exclusive individual privileges in fisheries, and much desire to protect the public in the
It was especially deemed for the public good that certain fisheries, like those for salmon, shad and ale wives, which furnished an abundant supply of healthful and agreeable food, should be subjected to public control and dealt with as public property whenever the Legislature should see fit to interpose. “From the first settlement of the State,” says Mr. Dane, “men have understood that they have held these non-navigable rivers and streams, subject to this legislative control, and, therefore, it is, as it were, a part of our common law.” 2 Dane Ab. c. 68, art. 6, § 1. The paramount claims of the public are thus necessarily implied in all grants of the lands abutting on these streams, and the rights of citizens of this Commonwealth in the fisheries are to be determined according to the effect of this ancient and long-established system of legislation, rather than by the principles of the common law. Nickerson v. Brackett, 10 Mass. 212. Commonwealth v. Chapin, 5 Pick. 199. Vinton v. Welsh, 9 Pick. 87. Angeli on Watercourses, § 85.
The diligence of the counsel for the respondent has enabled them to furnish a long list of acts passed by the Provincial Legislature and that of the Commonwealth, by which the full control over and property in the ale wive fisheries within their limits has been transferred to the towns in which they were located, not only as to the mode in which the fishery shall be pursued, but as to the persons by whom they shall be enjoyed. These acts are very various in form, but all treat these fisheries as properties belonging to the Colony, Province or State, which the Legislature may confer upon the town, on such terms as it deems proper for the interest of the public, and which may be managed by the towns or their authorities as they see fit, subject to the regulations made. The days of taking the fish are
It is true that those persons authorized to construct dams across streams are so under the implied obligation to provide sufficient sluices and fishways for the passage of fish, and that a grant made by the Legislature to erect a dam across a river is to be construed as under the implied condition to keep open fishways for the benefit of riparian owners of fisheries as well as of towns, unless such implication is excluded by an express provision. Stoughton v. Baker, 4 Mass. 522.
Where dams have been authorized by the Legislature, even when fishways have been provided for therein, as these might prove but partially sufficient, the riparian owners of fishing rights above have also been allowed to recover damages against the owners of the dams. McFarlin v. Essex Co. 10 Cush. 304.
As against all others than the public, the riparian owners of these fishing privileges have the rights which belong to private property. When these rights are taken away or diminished for the benefit of those engaged in a private enterprise for their own profit, although deemed by the Legislature so much for the public advantage that they should be allowed by the right of eminent domain to take private property, they have been permitted to do so only upon the condition of providing suitable compensation. In such cases, the Legislature has not invested them completely with the public right, subject to which the riparian owners hold their fishing privileges, and which by long usage it has been accustomed to confide to towns in the interest of the public for the purpose of controlling the fishery within their limits and receiving its emoluments.
The petitioners further contend that, whether .the Legislature could or could not take the right of fishery, which the petitioners had in a non-navigable stream, for the benefit of the town of Eastham, without providing proper compensation therefor, the Legislature did provide such compensation, and that such is the true construction of the St. of 1879, c. 45. The object of the act, as seen by the first section, is to enable the town “ to make the necessary improvements for the preservation and taking of ale wives in the Great Pond, so called, in the town of Eastham and the waters connected therewith and the outlet therefrom to the sea; ” and the town is authorized to “take land and do all acts necessary for the purpose of establishing, protecting and regulating an alewife fishery in said waters.” As the second section requires the" town to pay all damages sustained in any way by any persons in their property, and as the third section further enacts that “ any fishery so created shall be deemed to be the property of said town of Eastham,” it is argued that the fishery of the petitioners is recognized as property which before the taking belonged to them, and after the taking became the property of Eastham upon payment of compensation. But, in view of the law which exists and has long prevailed in this Commonwealth, it must be considered that the property for which the petitioners are to receive compensation is private property strictly, and not
The verdict rendered for the petitioners for the smaller sum, which was the value of the land taken, was therefore correct.
Judgment affirmed.