20 Johns. 90 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1822
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The case of Nevins v. Keeler, (6 Johns. Rep. 64.) is decisive, that the second and third pleas are informal. They profess to answer the whole declaration. The defendant should have justified as to one locus in quo, and pleaded not guilty to all but one close. He had no right to narrow the plaintiff’s declaration in the manner attempted; and the plaintiff could not take issue on the allegation that the several closes %were one and the same, and that the fisheries were one and the same. But the real question in the cause is, whether the defendant has set forth, in the third plea, sufficient matter to bar the plaintiff’s right of action. He alleges that the locus in quo is part and parcel of Salmon river, and that the part thereof in which, &tc., is, and always has been, a public and common navigable river, in which the waters of lake Ontario have flowed and reflowed, and that every citizen of the state has the right of fishing therein ; and therefore, Sic, justifying the fishing complained of by the plaintiff.
We cannot consider this plea as setting up, that the waters of Salmon river are not fresh water; or that the flowing of the waters of lake Ontario into it, and the reflowing thereof, are the flux and reflux of the tides, or any thing else than occasional and rare instances of a swell in the lake, and a setting up of the waters into the river, and the subsiding of such swells; nor can we understand the allegation, that it is a public and common navigable river, in any other sense, than that it is used with boats and small craft. I will not say, that we can judicially notice the real state of the facts, but they are indisputably soand as the plaintiff must have
The defendant’s counsel laid some stress on the acts of the legislature, (2 R. L. 544. and the act, sess. 37. ch. 214.) regulating fishing, and the taking of salmon, in Salmon river. These acts prove nothing; for the legislature have, confessedly, the right of regulating the taking of fish in private rivers; and do, every year, pass laws for that purpose, as to rivers not navigable in any sense, and which are, unquestionably, private property.
Judgment accordingly.