130 Mass. 469 | Mass. | 1881
In the view which we take of this case, it is not necessary to decide the question, which was discussed at the argument, whether the grant to Humphrey by the General Couri in the year 1635 gave him the exclusive right to fish in the great pond now known as Humphrey’s Pond; nor the further question, whether that right, if given to him, passed to the present owners of the land which surrounds the pond. If the exclusive right to fish did not vest in Humphrey, the pond stands like all other great ponds in the Commonwealth which have not been specially granted by law nor leased by the commissioners of inland fisheries, and the fishery thereof is public, and the defendant committed no offence in fishing there. St. 1869, o. 384, § 8.
If, on the other hand, the exclusive right of fishery in this pond was granted to Humphrey, and passed from him to the present owners of the land surrounding the pond, the government failed to make a case against the defendant. The leases were not executed by all the owners of the shore of the pond. Those who did not execute them retained the same right to fish in the pond which they had before any lease was given. The fish which were put into the pond by the lessees, and the increase of such fish, had the whole extent of the pond to swim in, and the owners who were not lessors had the whole extent of the pond to fish in. It was impossible, therefore, that there should be an absolute ownership of those fishes by the lessees. The St. of 1869, e. 384, under which the complaint in this case was made, provides, in § 7, that the riparian proprietors of any pond less than twenty acres in extent shall have the exclusive control of the fisheries therein; so that they have the same rights which the owners of the shore of Humphrey’s Pond have if Humphrey took by his grant the exclusive right of fishing therein, and it passed to the present owners of the shore. Now it is clear that, so long as any of these owners has the right to fish, there can be no exclusive or absolute property in any one in the fish going at large in the pond. Undoubtedly all the owners might unite in leasing the fishery to one of their
The leases did not give the lessees the exclusive control of the fishery of the pond. The fishes there, both those which were propagated naturally and those which were propagated artificially, had the whole range of the pond. They were not, therefore, within the control of the lessees, but were liable to be lawfully taken out of the pond by others.
Under these circumstances, we are of opinion that they were not protected by the provisions of the statute; and that the judge of the Superior Court erred in admitting the leases signed by only a part of the owners of the shore, and not purporting to be signed by all said owners, as evidence of the right of the lessees to propagate fishes, in the pond, and of the fact that fishes were there artificially propagated, within the meaning of the law, so as to make fishing there by a stranger a penal offence under the statute.
¡Exceptions sustained.