5 Day 22 | Conn. | 1811
This is an action of trespass for entering upon the plaintiff’s land, and digging up ids soil, destroying his sedge grass, and taking away a quantity of clams, oysters, and other shell-fish.
The defendant claimed a right to enter on the said lands, to take clams ; that it had been customary for the inhabitants of the town, and other places adjacent, from the first settlement of the country, to take clams from this ¡¡lace without molestation, being sedge fiats, which are covered at high water, but arc above low-water mark. On fhej-c fiats the defendant entered, and committed no other trespass than what arose from entering and digging up as much sedge was necessary to take the clams, and no more. The defendant denies, indeed, that the place in question was covered by the plaintiff’s deeds, as set forth in the case stated. I shall lay this question out of the case, by only observing, that I entertain no doubt but that the said flats ar, included in the plaintiff’s deed, so as to convey to him !he right oí soil. But, however that is, by the state of the case j*. appears that it has been, for more than forty years, in the exclusive possession of the plaintiff, and those under whom he
It appears, from the state of the case reserved, that the plaintiff offered to prove that, in going to the said flats, for the purpose of taking clams, persons went either by water, or on or over thé lands in the declaration mentioned, and other inclosures of the plaintiff, and of other persons. But such evidence «vas rejected by the court. I am of opinion that it was properly rejected ; for it is not stated in the declaration that any trespass was committed by the defendant-except entering on the land described in the declaration. Whether the defendant might go across other inclosures of the plaintiff for the purpose of getting to the flats, is not a question before the court. It is not even stated, that the defendant was one of those people who went upon other inclosures of the plaintiff.
The only question, which remains, is this : Is the right of fbhing for shell-fish, where the ground must be dug to take them, on land which is covered with water at high-water mark, but which is above low-water mark, or, in other words, on lands over which the tide flows, and from which it ebbs, a public right, which may be exercised by every citizen; or is it a right which belongs exclusively to the proprietor of such land ? If the former, judgment must be for the defendant ; if the latter, judgment must he for the plaintiff. To settle this question, we are not to resort to any train of reasoning as to what is most or least reasonable. We are not,
I would here observe, that I do not contend, that the pro prielor of such land cannot acquire ari exclusive right to fist thereon. I admit it. I think this is clearly established b\ authorities.
As it respects the various method? in which such a right may be acquired, in England and in this country. I have no thing to observe. The only question stated on the record is, does such a right result to the proprietor, by virtue of bis ownership of the soil ? If no such right results to him by the common law, as i shall attempt to prove from the authorities, it behoves him to shew that he has gained such right. The presumption is against him ; and he must remove this out of the way, before he can ¡nail himself of such an exclusive right.
The law of England., in this case, must with great proprietj be deemed our law ; for our ancestors came from that country, bringing with them the legal notions which there prevailed ; which have ever been considered the common law of this country, unless altered by our own legislative acts, or so manifestly improper to be received, arising from widely differing local circumstances, that our courts have been obliged to reject them, to attain the ends of justice, for which all laws are made. But iu a ease where the reason is the same, and as strong in this country as that, and of equal apniieabilify to our circumstances as theirs, the law is the same, hi relation to the present subject, there is no statute altering .¡lie common law ⅛ there is no reason for the existence of such a law in that country, which does not apply with equal force in this; and nothing in our local circumstances, which militates against the adoption of it by us. The usage stated in the case I make no use of, except that it furnishes evidence that our ancestors always supposed that they had a right to fish and take clams on such lands as these, the
In lord Fitzwalter’s Case, reported in 1 Mod. 105. and in ti Ktb. 2-12. we find it laid down by chief justice Hale, that in case of a river which flows and reflows, and is an arm of the sea, the right of fishing is common to#a!l, and that, in an action of trespass brought for fishing there, it is a good justification to say, that the locus in quo is an arm of the sea. It is clear that by this is meant, when the proprietor of the soil hri>is:s the action of trespass ; for no other person could bring trespass but the proprietor, or sortie person having a possession under him 5 and that the case before the court was by the proprietor, is manifest from the observation of lord Hale, who says there is no contradiction between the soil being in one, and \ ct the river common for all fishers. From this case we learn, that the right of fishing in such place where there is a flux and reflux of the sea, is a right common to every citizen, although Ihe soil be the estate of a particular person.
The doctrine here laid down is every where recognized to be correct. We find the genera! rule established in Warren v. Matthews, reported in 1 Salk. 357. and in 6 Mod. 73. and in Carter et al. v. Murcot et al. 4 Burr. 2162. In the last case, it was laid down by lord Mansfield, that a man may have an exclusive privilege of fishing in an arm of the sea ; but such right is not to be presumed ; it must be proved: and Mr. Jusliee Pahs observes, (hat he knew a case to fail, wherein this claim was made, because such prescriptive right could not be prox ed ; and in that case it was determined, that a right oí fishing in such place was common to all.
The case of The Mayor and Commonalty of Orford v. Richardson et al. in Ihe King’s Bench, 4 Term Rep. 437. and in Error in the Exchequer Chamber, 2 H. Black. 182. was determined wholly upon ihe ground, that every subject, prima facie, has a right to fish in an arm of the sea; yet an appropriate rigid may be proved in another, which will give Mm the exciu.-i\ e privilege of fishing there. No person can read and understand the pleadings in that case, without perceiving tnat the before.mentioned doctrine was admitted by
The foregoing authorities abundantly prove the general proposition, that the right of fishing on the soil of another, when nveiflo'u’d with the tide from (hr sea, or arm of the -yea, Is a coin mom right. The only doubt that can arise, in cases of fliis kind, is, whether theie is a common right of fishing for shell-fish, after the reflux of the tide ?
Although tlii? right is nowhere denied Sty any authority, and as the principle is certainly included in the general proposition, that on such lands the right of fishing is common to every subject ; yet, I think, some reasonable doubt might have been entertained on this subject, if no further authority could have been produced. The case of Bagott v. Orr, 2 Bos. & Pul. 472. is, 1 apprehend, a casein point. It was the very case of entering upon land of the plaintiff, and taking shell-fish, by digging up the earth betwixt high and low-water mark ; which could be done only after the reflux of the sea. This ease was determined in favour of the defendant, on the ground that such fishery, in such a place, which is the very case before the court, was a matter of common right. The court, in delivering their opinion, say, -.hat if the plaintiff had it in his power to abridge the common-law right of the subject -to take sea-fish (meaning in that case shell-fish, for that was the case before the court), he should have replied that matter specially ; and, that not having done so, the defendant must succeed lipón his plea for taking the fish.
Here the court most expressly recognize the doctrine, that it is a right common to every subject, to enter upon the lands of the plaintiff, betwixt high and low-wats r rnaik, and to take from thence shell-fish, by digging up the soil.
In this opinion the other judges concurred, excepting
Judgment to be entered for the ilefcudant