Barrows v. McDermott

73 Me. 441, 1882 Me. LEXIS 69
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMay 27, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 73 Me. 441 (Barrows v. McDermott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barrows v. McDermott, 73 Me. 441, 1882 Me. LEXIS 69 (Me. 1882).

Opinion

Barrows, J.

The substance of the admitted facts upon which this case is presented for decision is as follows : In the summer of 1880, the plaintiff held as proprietor a tract of land in the township of Howard, containing a natural pond covering about twenty acres called Grindstone Pond, surrounded by wild and uncultivated land with the exception of a single piece of about two acres which had been cleared and cultivated, adjacent to the pond, but upon which no crops were raised or grass cut in 1880. To protect and increase the propagation of fish in this pond the plaintiff had forbidden all persons from entering on his land surrounding the pond or fishing in its waters, by posting on the cleared piece above mentioned and elsewhere around and on the shore of the pond conspicuous notices to that effect painted upon boards in legible letters.

But the defendant in defiance of the prohibition on divers days in the summer of 1880, went there, as all who wished had been [447]*447accustomed to do for thirty-five years before the notices were posted, and caught and carried away fish from the pond without permission from the plaintiff, passing for that purpose over and through the cleared piece of land adjoining the pond, no part of which was enclosed by a fence of any kind. Hence this action of trespass quare clausum, alleging in proper form the above facts with the exception of the posting of the plaintiff’s prohibitory notices. The case is hereupon submitted to the court for judgment according to the legal rights of the parties, the damages, if the plaintiff is found entitled to prevail, being agreed to be one dollar.

The defendant bases his justification of the acts here complained of as trespasses, upon the Massachusetts Bay Colonial Ordinance of 1641 as amended in 1647, which is an early declaration of common rights and liberties, and some rules and principles respecting the tenure and proprietorship of certain kinds of real estate, adopted by the Massachusetts Bay colonists soon after the settlement there was effected. It declares among other things the right of free speech within due and orderly limits at public assemblies, the right of free fishing and fowling for all in and upon any great pond lying in common and containing more than ten acres in extent with the incidental right to "pass and re-pass on foot through any man’s property for that end so they trespass not upon any man’s corn or meadow” — the right of property to low water mark in the owner of lands adjoining the salt water where the sea doth not ebb above a hundred rods, and no more where it ebbs further, subject to the right of passage of boats or vessels — and the free right of removal from the colony " provided there be no legal impediment to the contrary.” Anc. Chart, and Laws of Mass. Bay, chap, lviii, p. 148.

The plaintiff’s counsel strikes at the root of this defence in an elaborate effort, exhibiting not a little historical research, to show that those who framed this ordinance had no jurisdiction over the locus, and that it never was law for such portion of this State as falls within the limits of the ancient Acadia.

It may well be that the ordinance has no force by virtue of positive enactment by any legislative body having jurisdiction at [448]*448the time of suc]i enactment over what is now the county of Piscataquis, and that its operation has never been extended there by any specific act of legislation since; and it is quite true that when under the charter of "William and Mary, the great and general court of Assembly of the Province, in 1692, acting for the three united colonies of Massachusetts Bay, Plymouth, and Maine, re-enacted " all the local laws respectively ordered and made by the late governor and company of the Massachusetts Bay and the late government of New Plymouth” it was done on such terms that they continued in force only " in the respective places for which they were made and used” so that the ordinance under consideration was never in terms extended to the Plymouth colony or to Maine under any legislative sanction. See Anc. Charters, &c. pp. 213, 229.

But it has been so often and so fully recognized by the courts both in this State and in Massachusetts as a familiar part of the common law of both, throughout their entire extent, without regard to its source or its limited original force as a piece of legislation for the colony of Massachusetts Bay, that we could not but regard it as a piece of judicial legislation to do away with any part of it or to fail to give it its due force throughout the State until it shall have been changed by the proper law making power. When a statute or ordinance has thus become part of the common law of a State it must be regarded as adopted in its entirety and throughout the entii’e jurisdiction of the court declaring its adoption. Barker v. Bates, 13 Pick. 255 ; Commonwealth v. Alger, 7 Cush. 53, 76, 79.

It is not adopted solely at the discretion of the court declaring its adoption, but because the court find that it has been so largely accepted and acted on by the community as law that it would be fraught with mischief to set it aside.

It is not here and now a question whether this ordinance shall be adopted with such modifications as might be deemed proper under the circumstances of the country. It has been long since adopted in all its parts, acted upon by the whole community and its adoption declared by the courts; and now the argument of the plaintiff’s counsel aims to have us declare either that it has not [449]*449the force of law in certain parts of the State, or that the court may change it if satisfied that it does not operate beneficially under present circumstances. We cannot so view it. That which has the force of common law in one county in this State has the same force in all.

To show that this ordinance has been long and constantly regarded as law in this State reference may be had to the following decisions: Storer v. Freeman, (Cumberland county,) 6 Mass. 435, 438 ; Codman v. Winslow, (Cumberland, 1813,) 10 Mass. 146; Lapish v. Bangor Bank, 8 Maine, 85, 93; Emerson v. Taylor, 9 Maine, 43; Knox v. Pickering, 7 Maine, 106, 109; Parker v. Cutler Milldam Co. 20 Maine, 353 ; Deering v. Long Wharf, 25 Maine, 51, 64; Winslow v. Patten, 34 Maine, 25 ; Partridge v. Luce, 36 Maine, 19 ; Moulton v. Libbey, 37 Maine, 472, (where the effect of the ordinance upon rights to fisheries is considered,) Clancey v. Houdlette, 39 Maine, 451, 456; Hill v. Lord, 48 Maine, 83.

It must be regarded as settled that the public have such rights to fish in the waters of Grindstone Pond, and such way of approach to it for that end as the ordinance gives them unless the right has been abridged by subsequent legislation.

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Bluebook (online)
73 Me. 441, 1882 Me. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barrows-v-mcdermott-me-1882.