50 N.J.L. 414 | N.J. | 1888
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In 1884, Willets, the plaintiff below, deposited in Maurice River Cove, in this state, a boat-load of oyster shells, and marked the deposit by stakes.
It appears that to the shells so deposited the germs of oysters floating in these waters will attach themselves, and in about two years will develop into marketable oysters.
It was admitted that the defendants below entered upon these deposits and carried away and appropriated these oysters. This suit was instituted to recover their value.
Whether the planting was made upon a natural oyster-bed, whereby property in the oysters would be forfeited under the statute of 1882, which applies to Maurice river and Delaware ■bay, was properly left to the jury. Rev. Sup., p. 118, pi. 24.
That in this respect the law was correctly stated is too well ■•settled to be a subject of controversy. Paul v. Hazleton, 8 Vroom 106; Wooley v. Campbell, Id. 163; State v. Taylor, 3 Dutcher 117; Metzger v. Post, 15 Vroom 74.
There can be no better right to take and appropriate the property of another, deposited in the water-ways of the state, than there is to take a load of wood or a carriage left by the owner in the public road, to the nuisance of those who may pass and repass thereon.
Exception is taken to the further instruction to the jury that the same rule applied to the planting of oyster shells, and that the property which the plaintiffs had in the shells which were deposited by them attached to the entire property, which, by natural increase, had grown from this deposit.
Assuming, as we must, from the case as presented, that it was necessary to deposit the natural shell in order to attract the germ or sprout, and thereby in the order of natural growth produce the oyster, it seems as incontrovertibly to follow that the full-grown oyster is the property of him who planted the shell, as that the oyster when of marketable size belongs to him who planted it in its infant state, or as that ■the title to the colt is not lost by its growth and development into the horse.
The title to the colt is not lost by permitting it to run upon
State v. Taylor and Metzger v. Post, supra, control this case, and establish the right of the plaintiffs below to recover.
The court refused to charge, as requested by the defendants below, that the plaintiffs’ claim being in derogation of the common right, it must be established by a clear preponderance of the testimony.
None of the evidence submitted to the jury in this case appears in the bill of exceptions, and the pertinence of this request to charge is, therefore, not apparent.
The planting of the oyster shells by the plaintiffs and the taking of the oysters by the defendants, the facts upon which the plaintiffs’ right to recover rests, do not appear to have been disputed. It was properly held that the duty fell upon the defendants to satisfy the jury that the plaintiffs had forfeited their property-right by planting upon a natural oyster-bed in contravention of the statute of 1882.
No error appears in this refusal to charge.
The defendants requested the court also to charge “ that if a less amount of ground would have been amply sufficient for the use of their thirty-five hundred bushels of shells, their attempt to take an unnecessary area of ground was unlawful, and deprived them of any exclusive right in the premises.”
This request was properly refused. Conceding that the planting of the shells constituted a public nuisance, that fact furnished no justification for converting the property of the plaintiffs to the use of the defendants. State v. Taylor and Metzger v. Post, supra.
The judgment below should be affirmed.