34 Barb. 586 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1861
This is an action of trespass de boms asportatis, tried before Mr. Justice Emott, at the Suffolk circuit, in June, 1860, where the plaintiff had a verdict. The wrong consisted in taking and carrying away a quantity of oysters from the bed or bottom of Long Island Sound, about 100 yards from the shore, within or adjacent to the town of Huntington, in the county of Suffolk, where the plaintiff had deposited or planted them. The taking of the oysters was not disputed upon the trial, but the point litigated was the right of property in the plaintiff, and his right to maintain this action.
Upon the trial the plaintiff gave evidence tending to show that he commenced planting oysters in the waters of Horthport Harbor in the year 1845, and has continued to plant there every year since, in water five feet in depth in-shore at ordinary tides, and from five to six fathoms deep on the outer edge of the bed. Before commencing to plant, he examined the bottom with a dredge. The ground was 500 or 600 yards in length by 300 yards in width. He took up some scollops and stones, but found no oysters. Before beginning the examination, the boundaries of the ground were marked with stakes inside and buoys on the outside. The stakes remained until the ice in winter carried them away, and in the spring they were replaced. The buoys were visible at high tide and the stakes at low tide. The in-shore line is about 110 yards off shore. Within the two years before the trial the plain
The two cases of Fleet v. Hegeman, (14 Wend. 42,) and Decker v. Fisher, (4 Barb. 592,) are authorities to show that oysters planted by an individual in a bed clearly marked out and defined in the tide waters of a bay or arm of the sea, which is a common fishery to all the inhabitants of the state where the bay or arm of the sea is situated, and where there are no oysters growing spontaneously at the time, are the property of the person who plants them, and the taking them by another person is a trespass, for which an action lies. It is indispensable to the existence of the right of property in oysters thus planted, that the bed shall not interfere with the exercise of the common right of fishing; for if the oysters were mingled with and undistinguishable from others, of natural growth, in the public waters, the interest of the person planting them would be subservient to the public use. The reasoning by which the court reached this conclusion will be found in the opinion of Gh. J. Nelson, delivered in the first named of these cases. It rests upon well settled principles, and need not be alluded to further. Northport Harbor, where the oyster bed of the plaintiff was located, is an indentation upon the southern shore of Long Island Sound, which, upon all the definitions, is a part of the high seas. If the jury believed the plaintiff's witnesses-—and that was exclusively their province—then all the conditions required by the authorities to which I have referred, to entitle the plaintiff primarily to recover, existed, and he was entitled to a verdict; unless the defendant established the existence of some right or title in himself and others, or in those under whom he claimed, to exclude the plaintiff from the enjoyment of the oyster bed, and from appropriating a portion of the waters and bottom of the sound to the uses claimed by him. This he sought to
This right of taking fish in the sea, and in the creeks and arms thereof, is common to the people of England, as a public common of piscary, and they may not, without injury to their right, be restrained thereof. And one of the points made by the counsel for the plaintiff is whether, since magna charter, “ either the king or any particular subject can gain a proprietary exclusive of the common liberty.” Diverse opinions have been given by the courts in this country and in England upon the subject. The weight of authority would seem to be adverse to the existence of any power in the crown to grant any such franchise. Its existence, however, has been affirmed in this court in the case of Rogers v. Jones, (1 Wend. 237.) It is manifest, however, upon looking into the opinion of Mr. Justice Woodworth, in that case, that he did not distinguish between grants by the crown alone and grants by the crown in concurrence with the legislative power of the realm expressed through an act of parliament, There
The things primarily granted by the patent of the 5th of October, 1694, are therein described as “ all the afore recited tracts and necks of land lying upon our island of Nassau, bounded on the west,” &e., and giving as the northern boundary, “the sound that runs between our said island of Nassau and the main continent.” To what line or limit does this northern boundary of the patent extend ? Does it reach into the waters of the sound, and if so, how far, or does it stop at the shore ? If Long Island Sound was a fresh water river, not flowed by the tide, we should know that this boundary would extend ad filum medium aguce. But the sound is not a river at all, but an arm of the sea, separating the island of Nassau from the main continent, and therefore the rule in regard to fresh water rivers above tide waters does not apply. The rule I understand to be this: “ A grant of land to a subject, or citizen, bounded upon a fresh water stream or river, where the tide neither ebbs nor flows, extends ad filum medium aguce ; but a grant bounded upon a navigable river, that is, a river flowed by the tide, extends to the edge of the water only.” (1 Halstead’s N. J. Rep. 1. See also the reporter’s note to Ex parte Jennings, 6 Cowen’s Rep. at page 544.)
The defendant, under his 4th point, contends that the patent geographically includes Northport Harbor, because the boundary not only goes to the sound on the north, but among the things granted are havens, harbors, creeks, &c, The
I conclude, for these reasons, that the title to the lands under the waters of Horthport Harbor in Long Island Sound is not in the town of Huntington; that the inhabitants thereof have not the exclusive right to take fish therein; and that the justice who tried this action was right in refusing to instruct the jury as requested by the defendant’s counsel.
Judgment upon the verdict should be entered for the plaintiff.
Emott, Brown and Scrugham, Justices.]