Brower v. Wakeman

89 A. 913, 88 Conn. 8, 1914 Conn. LEXIS 2
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 5, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 89 A. 913 (Brower v. Wakeman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brower v. Wakeman, 89 A. 913, 88 Conn. 8, 1914 Conn. LEXIS 2 (Colo. 1914).

Opinion

Wheeler, J.

The action is one to recover damages for the removal of a bath-house and the destruction of it and its contents. The defendants justify in several ways, upon one of which the trial court rendered judgment in their favor. This justification was that the bath-house stood on a public beach owned by the town of Westport, and that the defendants, acting as selectmen and under direction of a town meeting, removed the bath-house and its contents, after the plaintiff had received notice of the intended action and after his failure or refusal to remove them.

The decision of two questions of law and one of fact will be decisive of this appeal. 1. Did Westport have title to or the right to that part of the beach on which the bath-house stood? 2. Was the plaintiff’s occupation such as to entitle him to a reasonable notice prior to the removal and destruction of the bathhouse and its contents? 3. If so, was this given him?

The plaintiff insists that the location of the bathhouse is, by the finding, upon a public beach below high-water mark, and therefore the town neither has nor could acquire a right of ownership or of possession to this part of the beach. “A public beach is one left by the State, or those claiming it, open to the common *11 use of the public, and which the unorganized public and each’of its members have a right to use while it remains such.” Dawson v. Orange, 78 Conn. 96, 119, 61 Atl. 101. It may be that part of the shore between high and low-water mark; or a strip of shore lying above high-water, which, by dedication, has become a public beach. Dawson v. Orange, supra.

The title to that part of the beach below high-water is in the State as the representative of the public. The town has no ownership or control of this. Simons v. French, 25 Conn. 346, 352; Church v. Meeker, 34 Conn. 421, 427; New Haven Steamboat Co. v. Sargent & Co., 50 Conn. 199, 202; Farist Steel Co. v. Bridgeport, 60 Conn. 278, 282, 22 Atl. 561; Dawson v. Orange, 78 Conn. 96, 118, 119, 61 Atl. 101. The General Assembly could create a proprietorship in such a beach, and grant to the town such a proprietorship. Rowe v. Smith, 48 Conn. 444, 446. It has not attempted to convey to Westport any of the shore below high-water mark. The Special Act of 1907, p. 574, upon which the defendants rely, recites: “Any common or undivided lands situated within the town of Westport, that may have formerly belonged to the town of Fairfield or to the proprietors therein, shall belong to and be under the control of the town of Westport.” This grant was of common or undivided lands, formerly belonging to the town of Fairfield or to the proprietors therein. The shore below high-water, as we have seen, never belonged to the town, or to the proprietors therein. If, then, the locus of the bath-house was below high-water, the town and the officials of the town had no right or control over it.

One paragraph of the finding recites that the bathhouse was located upon a beach extending into the waters of Long Island Sound. It is upon this recital the plaintiff bases his claim that the finding locates the *12 bath-house below high-water mark. As we read the finding in its entirety and mark its conclusions, we think it clear the trial court located the bath-house above and not below high-water. The beach may have extended above high-water and below it, hence into the waters of Long Island Sound. The trial court expressly finds that this locus was contained in the grant to the proprietors of Fairfield, and that it was never alloted to any individual. The grant to the early proprietors conveyed only to high-water. Dawson v. Orange, 78 Conn. 96, 119, 61 Atl. 101; Church v. Meeker, 34 Conn. 421. This was a fact of early recognition in our law, and there is nothing to indicate that the court did not have in mind this historic fact in making up its finding. .

From the finding we learn not only that the locus of the bath-house was upon the beach above high-water, but that this part of the beach formerly belonged to the early proprietors; that they never conveyed it; that it has always been used by the general public, and was finally abandoned by the proprietors to the general public and became common and undivided land. This did not give the town any title to or proprietary interest in this undivided land of the shore. The proper representatives of the interest of the general public would be, as in the case of a highway, a number of the public, or the State. The State, through the General Assembly, could convey the rights of the public in the shore between high and low-water mark. Rowe v. Smith, 48 Conn. 444, 446. Likewise the General Assembly could convey the rights of the public to the part of the beach above high-water mark abandoned to them. This it did by the Special Act already quoted. By virtue of this Act Westport became the owner of this part of the beach, and, since this Act went into effect, has had the right to its exclusive control.

*13 Westport, in 1903, before the passage of this Act, assumed, without right, authority over Compo Beach by action taken at a town meeting in voting to appoint a committee “to investigate and ascertain what measures the town should employ to secure to the public the greatest possible benefit that can be derived from the shore property at Compo Beach and report.” The report of this committee was accepted at a subsequent town meeting, and its recommendation adopted, that permits be granted by the town clerk for one year on payment of SI to any one to occupy a lot on Compo Beach from those laid out upon a chart to be filed in the town clerk’s office. And it was further voted that the applicant have the right to renew the permit as long as the present system continued. Although no chart was made, and the town clerk did not issue such permits, the selectmen of the town individually did grant such permits, and the town received the money therefor, and no objection was ever made to this course. The plaintiff received in 1905 or 1906 an oral permit from one of the selectmen to place a bath-house on this beach, paid the fee charged, and built his bath-house while having the permit, and maintained it until its removal in 1909 by the town. No moneys were received by the town from such permit after 1906, and the plaintiff paid nothing after his first fee; apparently the town did not request it. Since the plaintiff’s occupancy was because of his permit, and the town received his money and knew of his occupancy, it must be held to have been begun and maintained under color of right. His continued occupancy after Westport had acquired, through the Special Act of 1907, ownership of this part of the beach, and with the knowledge of the town under the circumstances of this case, constituted a continuing license. The term of the license having long since expired it was revocable, and an expenditure *14 made in reliance upon the license did not prevent the revocation. Foot v. New Haven & N. Co., 23 Conn.

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Bluebook (online)
89 A. 913, 88 Conn. 8, 1914 Conn. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brower-v-wakeman-conn-1914.