77 Md. 148 | Md. | 1893
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case was probably instituted for the purpose ■of trying the title to certain land, covered by water,
The plaintiff’s second prayer raises the question whether a continuous and adverse possession for twenty years, prior to 1890, of land covered by water, within the ebb and flow of the tide, will confer such a title to the soil as will enable a party to maintain trespass against one who enters thereon and catches fish without permission from the person claiming it. Since the passage of the Act of 1862, ch. 129, there can be no difficulty on this point. That Act, which is codified in the present Code, Article 54, sec. 46, provides, that “no patent shall hereafter issue for land covered by navigable waters.” “All the soil below high water mark within the limits of the State, where the tide ebbs and flows, that is the subject of exclusive propriety and ownership, belongs to the State, subject only to such lawful grants of such soil, as may have been heretofore made.” Hess vs. Muir, et al., 65 Md., 607; Browne vs. Kennedy, 5 H. & J., 203.
Terrapin Gove, therefore, being a tributary of Patuxent River, and within the ebb and flow of the tide, must be regarded as a public river or arm of the sea, the soil of which under the charter granted to Lord Baltimore, became
Of the prayers granted by the Court at the instance of the defendant, the second and third are apparently based upon the theory, that Terrapin Cove was an “artificial pond” constructed by the plaintiff under the statute law of Maryland, and that there could be no recovery unless the plaintiff had put certain “notices” in two or three newspapers in Calvert County, or given such “notices” “by written handbills put up at public places near said pond.” But said cove was an “arm of Mearses’ Cove” and therefore a tributary of Patuxent River, and not within the scope of any statute which has for its purpose the protection of fish in artificial ponds.
The statute supposed to he applicable to this case, is not specifically mentioned in the record, nor in the brief of the appellee. It is described, however, in the brief of the appellant, as being sec. 76 of Article 39 of the Code, and this being the only statute in anywise germane to ’ this subject, we suppose it is the one, upon which the theory of these two prayers was constructed. But this is a penal statute, enacted for the purpose of protecting
Judgment reversed, and new trial awarded.