delivered the opinion of the Court.
Onе who must decide the meaning of the term “public easements” in the context of the statute, Code (1957), Art. 81, § 112, which makes a decree in a proceeding to foreclose the right of redemption of property sold for taxes final and conclusive and which vests in the plaintiff “an absolute and indefeasible title in fee simple in the property, free and clear of all * * * encumbrances thereon, except * * * public easements to which the property is subject,” 1 must be reminded of Shakespeare’s thought in Act I, Scene 3, of the Merchant of Venice that “the devil can cite Scripture for his purpose.”
One view is that a publiс easement is one which gives the individual members of the general public a right of passage over or the use of delineated or ascertainable areas of land or water (and probably less well-delineated areas of air) ; another view, more amorphous, is that included in the concept of a public easement is an easement which a рublic utility or public service corporation could acquire by condemnation because it could be so acquired only for a public use.
The need to find the answer arises in this wisе. In 1961 William Edward Fluharty and his wife conveyed to the Eastern Shore Public Service Company of Maryland (now the Delmarva Power and Light Company) and to the Chesapeake and Potomaс Telephone Company of Maryland, by a writing duly signed, sealed, acknowledged and recorded, permission to place on their property near Federalsburg in Caroline County “the overhang of conductors which are to extend from Pole % 39AN * * * to a proposed pole to be located on the property adjoining Grantor’s property to the Wеst” and granted a right of in *276 ■gress and egress for the purposes of construction, inspection, renewal, repair and removal. The Fluhartys did not pay their taxes and the treasurer of Carоline County sold their property which had an assessed value of $1,800 to recover $133.57 of taxes in arrears. Eberhard, the appellee, bought the property and was issued a Certificаte of Sale. The property was not redeemed within the time the law permits and Eberhard filed a bill in the Circuit Court for Caroline County seeking a decree which would foreclose all rights оf redemption. Delmarva and the Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company were made parties. Delmarva appeared, asserting that “its easement is a public easement within the purview of § 112 of Article 81” of the Code.
The parties stipulated that Delmarva is a Maryland public service or public utility corporation engaged in the exercise of its franchise in the operation and distribution of electricity to various communities including Federalsburg and adjoining areas in Caroline County to those of the public who desire to be consumers of its electric current, that Delmarva is authorized and empowered to acquire by condemnation any property or right whatsoever necessary for its purposes and that on November 24, 1961, Delmarva obtained the easement here involved from the Fluhartys.
After consideration of the bill and answer and the stipulation, Judge DeWeese Carter construed the term public easement to mean a public way, that is, a road or street which every citizen has the right himself to use. Delmarva appeals, asserting still that its eаsement is a public easement.
Clearly a public easement includes an easement that gives members of the public a right of passage over a road or street, whether the bed is privately or publicly owned. 3 Tiffany,
Real Property
§§ 772 and 923-37 (3d ed.); 2
Americcm Lem of Property
§ 9.50; 25 Am. Jur. 2d
Easements and
Licenses, § 7;
Lonaconing Railway Co. v. Consolidation Coal Co.,
There are other public rights which can be classed as public easements, such as the right in the general public of navigation on the waters of a stream or lake, whether the bed is privately or publicly owned, the similar right of fishing and hunting over *277 navigable waters (sometimes restricted to waters publicly owned), and the right to use parks, squarеs or commons and beaches and the shores. These public rights are discussed and delineated in 2 American Law of Property, Ch. IV, “Public Rights,” and in 3 American Law of Property, §§ 12:31-12:34. The easement which a governmental body may have for facilitating the passage of water, sewage, gas or electricity would necessarily be a public easement.
The close point in the case is whether the easement which a public service corporation has to permit the passage of cars or to facilitate the transmission of water, sewage, oil, gas, electricity and sludge so as to enable it to fulfill its function of serving the public is a public easement.
Easements held by a public utility or a public service corporation which are devoted to public use undoubtedly have analogies to, and points of similarity with, the public easements we have enumerated but they have significant differences, too. Commentators and cases have found similarity in the fact that a public sеrvice corporation constitutionally can condemn an easement in private property for the furtherance of the exercise of its franchise only for a publiс use and some, therefore, have equated a public easement to a public use.
We think the easement here involved was a private easement or, at the most, only a quasi public easement. A private easement ordinarily has a dominant tenement to which the right belongs and a servient tenement upon which it rests.
2
3 Tiffany,
Real Property,
§ 758 (3d ed.). A public easement is appurtеnant to nothing, having no dominant tenement, and is an easement in gross.
Maryland & Pa. R. R. Co. v. Silver,
Consolidated Gas Co. v. Baltimore City,
We think the Legislature in using the phrase “public easements” in § 112 of Art. 81 did not intend to include easements, owned by utilities privately operated for profit (even though publicly supervised), and did not equate the concept of a public easement with that of a public use. We are persuaded of this in part because of the holdings in the
Gas Company
cases, dis
*279
cussed above, and in part because § 97 of Art. 81 of the Code (1957), under the subtitle “Foreclosure of Rights of Redemption by Equity Suits,” provides that the provisions of the following sections of this subtitle (§112 being within the subtitle) “shall be liberally construed as remedial legislation to encourage the foreclosure of rights of redemption by suits in the equity courts and for the decreeing of marketable titles * * *.”
Thomas v. Kolker,
Decree affirmed, with costs.
Notes
. Chapter 69 of the Laws of 1967 amended § 112 of Art. 81 to substitute for “public easements” “easements to which the property is subject and of which the plaintiff had actual or construсtive notice at the time of sale.”
. Tiffany also points out that:
“A right or interest in another’s land may, however, exist as an irrevocable personal right, apart from any particular dominant tenement, and in this country the possibility of the existence of a personal privilege in the nature of an easement or, as it is usually termed, of an ‘easement in gross,’ has been freely recognized.” 3 Tiffany, Real Property, § 758, p. 204.
