| Conn. | Jun 7, 1895

Hamersley, J.

The complaint is in the nature of an action of trespass. The defendant justifies. The main fact in issue is the validity of the plaintiff’s title to the oyster plantation described in the complaint. The material facts bearing on the question of title are as follows:—

The ground in question was designated to individuals for the planting and cultivation of oysters thereon, between February 4th, 1879, and February 16th, 1881; and the rights acquired by such designation were, prior to the alleged trespass, conveyed to the plaintiff. At the time of designation the ground designated was a natural oyster bed and a natural clam bed (this fact was found upon parol evidence, objected to by the plaintiff because the evidence was parol, and received subject to the objection). The designated ground constitutes the westerly end of one of the natural beds under State jurisdiction, (known as Roton Point and Fish Island natural beds), located and described in § 2328 of the General-*289Statutes. Pursuant to the provisions of chapter 110, Public Acts of 1893, the State shell fish commissioners caused the Roton Point and Fish Island natural beds to be buoyed, leaving out the ground now in question (evidence of this fact was objected to by the defendant as immaterial, and admitted subject to the objection).

Upon the facts so found, judgment must be rendered for the defendant.

The designation of a natural oyster bed is void, and cannot affect the right of the public to take oysters on such ground. The fact that ground designated was at the time of designation a natural oyster bed, may be proved by parol. Averill v. Hull, 37 Conn., 320" court="Conn." date_filed="1870-09-15" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/averill-v-hull-6579128?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6579128">37 Conn., 320.

The plaintiff claims that since the legislation of 1881 and 1885, parol evidence of such fact is inadmissible; and cites State v. Nash, 62 Conn., 47" court="Conn." date_filed="1892-05-28" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/state-v-nash-3319075?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="3319075">62 Conn., 47, in support of his claim.

By the Act of April 14th, 1881, the legislature placed all shell fisheries within the area therein described, under the exclusive jurisdiction and control of the State, and empowered the commissioners of shell fisheries to grant, in the name of the State, franchises for cultivating shell fish within that area; it placed all shell fisheries not within that area, within the jurisdiction and control of the towns in which they are located, and authorized the town authorities to grant franchises for cultivating shell fish within this area of town jurisdiction; it provided for the record of future grants that might he made, either by the State, or by the town; it forbade all future grants of franchises in any natural oyster or clam bed; it validated all designations and transfers of oyster grounds previously made, except designations made of natural oyster beds, such designations remaining after the passage of the Act, as they were before, absolutely void; it directed the shell fish commissioners to cause a survey to be made of all the natural oyster beds within the area of State jurisdiction, and to locate and delineate such natural beds on said map, and report to the General Assembty.

In 1885 the locations and designations of the natural oyster beds under State jurisdiction, as made by the eommis*290sioners of shell fisheries pursuant to the Act of 1881, were by the Act of April 28d, 1885 (Public Acts, 1885, p. 525), “ accepted, ratified, established and confirmed by the State as follows, to wit: ” specifying with mathematical accuracy the boundaries of each natural bed, including the Roton Point and Fish Island natural beds.

State v. Nash, supra, holds that “ the effect of these enactments is, that in a proceeding like the present (i. e., a criminal complaint for taking oysters from a plantation within the State jurisdiction, and designated by the shell fish commissioners since 1885), and in a case where the grant of the franchise to private parties has been made since such enactment, while the fact that such ground is a natural oyster bed would render the grant invalid, the only proof of such fact which is admissible by way of collateral attack is not by parol evidence, but by showing that such ground is embraced in the locations and descriptions contained in the statute of the natural oyster beds under State jurisdiction.” Neither the precise point decided, nor the reason of the decision, affect the present case. State v. Nash is dealing with a collateral attack upon a designation, — here we have a direct attack. The validity of the designation is the very thing, and substantially the only thing, put in issue by the pleadings; there is no way by which the validity of a designation of a natural growth oyster bed, made prior to April, 1881, can be attacked more directly than in an action of trespass where, as in this case, the plaintiff alleges a special title to the locus in quo by virtue of the designation, on which allegation issue is joined.

Again, State v. Nash is confined to grants made by the State since the law establishing State jurisdiction of shell fisheries, and holds that in a collateral attack on such grants, evidence that the ground covered by the grant is in fact a natural oyster bed, must be confined to showing that the ground in question is embraced within the locations and descriptions of natural beds contained in the statute ; such record evidence of the fact that at the time of designation the ground in question was not a natural oyster bed, cannot be collaterally attacked. But when there is involved the *291validity of a grant made by a town, prior to the establishment of State jurisdiction and prior to the establishment of any statutory or authoritative record of natural oyster beds, there is then no evidence that can be produced of such grounds being at the time of designation a natural oyster bed, except parol evidence; the conditions are then exactly the same as when Averill v. Hull, supra, was decided. Analogy between the two cases is impossible, but if it were possible it would not benefit the plaintiff, because it appears that the ground covered by his designation is embraced within the statutory description of natural oyster beds.

The plaintiff, however, claims that chapter 110 of the Public Acts of 1893 amended § 2328, so as to exclude from the natural oyster beds established by that section, any ground the shell fish commissioners may leave out in buoying one of those beds as directed by the Act.

Such effect cannot be given to the Act of 1893. This Act does not purport to amend § 2328, nor to repeal or alter any existing legislation; on the contrary it treats the existing statutory description of the Roton Point and Fish Island beds as conclusive. It is simply administrative, and directs the shell fish commissioners to mark those established beds and two others named, with State buoys, and provides a penalty for displacing such buoys. The plaintiff’s claim is based wholly on the following sentence: “ No buoys shall be so set or lines so run as to include within the natural or public beds any private or designated grounds.” The object of this direction and the meaning of the language used may, as claimed, be open to doubt; but it is certain that this phrase cannot be construed as authorizing the shell fish commissioners, in executing an order to place buoys for marking the natural oyster beds as established by law, to alter that law and to make a new statute establishing the natural oyster beds within the State jurisdiction.

The plaintiff claims in his brief, that the question whether the locus was a natural oyster bed, could not be raised under the pleadings in this case, because the proceeding under § 2356 for the removal of stakes from an oyster bed which *292has been improperly staked out, is the only way in which the plaintiff’s title can be tested.

If the plaintiff can properly raise this question upon the record before us, and if § 2356 applies to an oyster bed within the exclusive jurisdiction of the State, the claim is nevertheless unfounded. There is nothing in § 2356 which prevents the public from exercising its right of fishing on natural oyster beds which individuals attempt to appropriate under a pretended designation. The provisions of this section have been in force in their present form since 1870, and their meaning has been settled. In the case of the Application of the Clinton Oyster Gtround Committee, 52 Conn., 10, the Act of 1870 was treated as furnishing a specific remedy against trespass-on public grounds, in addition to the light of any one to take-oysters from grounds so illegally designated and to defend against prosecution or action for such taking by showing-that the ground was a natural oyster bed. Clinton v. Bacon was a petition for an order for the removal of stakes under § 2356. The ground in question had been designated and staked out in 1863, and had since been continuously kept inclosed; but during all that time it had been a natural oyster bed. In advising a judgment for the plaintiff, this court holds that the proceeding is not an action to test the title, but is in the nature of an equitable proceeding to remove a cloud upon the title of the State, and says: “ The pretended designation is void, and the title of the public to the ground is not affected by it, but it, and the stakes set up by the defendant as evidence of it, constitute a cloud upon the title to the ground and tend to deter the public from the enjoyment of it.” 56 Conn., 519. In White v. Petty, 57 Conn., 582, the court says: “ The purpose of the statute of 1875-(Act of 1870) is not, as the defendants claim, to provide a way for the trial of questions of title, but to effect the removal of stakes improperly set up, by means of which the public are deterred from exercising their rights upon ground belonging to them.” In State v. Bassett, 64 Conn., 217" court="Conn." date_filed="1894-03-06" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/state-v-bassett-6583224?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6583224">64 Conn., 217, in a prosecution for willful trespass upon a designated bed, parol evidence of title in the State by reason of the ground being-*293a natural oyster bed, and the consequent invalidity of the designation, was admitted, and its admissibility was unquestioned.

The plaintiff also claims that § 2356 of the General Statutes, in providing that the court when ordering the removal of stakes inclosing an oyster bed improperly staked, shall (if oysters have been planted or improvements made in good faith before the petition for removal was brought) allow a reasonable time for the removal of such oysters and improvements, gives to persons who in good faith trespass upon an oyster bed belonging to the public, the right to recover in an action of trespass the value of any oysters they may plant on such bed and which may be mingled with oysters lawfully taken therefrom, and claims that, since some of the oysters taken by the defendant were proved to have been planted by the plaintiff in good faith, the plaintiff is entitled to a judgment for the value of such oysters. The value of all the oysters taken is found to be one dollar, and it appears that the plaintiff did not prove whether the planted oysters mingled with those taken were two or more, or that they had any value; and the plaintiff does not state the amount of the judgment which he claims. The result, however, would be the same if the finding showed the number of cents which represent the value of the planted oysters. This provision of § 2356 was intended to protect, from the injury of a sudden and forcible ejectment, a trespasser upon public grounds who has acted in good faith; it does not restrict the rights of the public in the use of natural oyster beds.

The Court of Common Pleas is advised to render judgment for the defendant.

In this opinion the other judges concurred.

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