Cole v. Schweer

159 Ill. App. 278, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 56
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 7, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 159 Ill. App. 278 (Cole v. Schweer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cole v. Schweer, 159 Ill. App. 278, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 56 (Ill. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Philbrick

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee herein was engaged in the fishery business along the Illinois Eiver. Through his employes he placed a seine in the body of water known as Wood Slough; this body of water had never been meandered by the government. It is conceded that the Beardstown Fish Company owned all of the land covered by this slough or body of water with the exception of the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter and the southwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section 35, town 19 north, range 12, Cass county. That portion of Wood Slough which was contained within the boundaries of the southwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section 35 was known as “No-Man’s Land” or Bradley tract; and the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter, of said section 35, at the time of the injury complained of was owned by Christie & Lowe and was known as the Christie & Lowe tract.

The record discloses that appellant and the Beards-town Fish Company had been in the habit of seining in the waters on the Christie & Lowe tract and were notified by Christie & Lowe that they must discontinue seining that body of water until some arrangement was made concerning it, either by rental or purchase of the fishery rights therein.

The Beardstown Fish Company, through T. K. Condit, entered into negotiations for the purchase of this tract of land from Christie & Lowe, but no deed of conveyance had been delivered to them and they had not obtained the fishery rights in these waters at the time of the injury complained of. After negotiations to purchase the Christie & Lowe tract had been begun and before any deed or contract had been delivered by Christie & Lowe to Condit for the benefit of the Beardstown Fish Company, appellee on the twenty-ninth day of January, 1909, by his employes, cast his seine in the waters included within the boundaries of the land owned by Christie & Lowe, and “No Man’s Land.” Appellant had then secured no fishery rights from Christie & Lowe. There is some conflict in the evidence as to whether or not in placing the seine, making the haul, some portion of the seine passed through or was in a portion of the waters on the land owned by the Beardstown Fish Company. There is also a conflict in the evidence as to the amount of fish gathered in the seine by the haul made by the employes of appellee. After the seine had been placed and the attempt at landing made, the employes of appellee, owing to its being so late in the day, decided to leave the fish in the seine until the following morning. The employes of the Beardstown Fish Company and appellant were present, watched the haul by appellee, and made no claim or complaint that it was being hauled through any portion of the' waters of the Beardstown Fish Company. After the seine had been made secure so as to retain the fish until the following morning appellant with other members and stockholders of the Beardstown Fish Company and who were then negotiating for the purchase of the Christie & Lowe tract of land, during the evening of the twenty-ninth of January took a boat, went into the waters of either Christie & Lowe or “No Man’s Land,” lifted or moved the seine, so made secure by appellee, and thereby freed and released from the seine the fish containd therein. At the time that these fish were released, they were not upon the land of the Beards-town Fish Company and were not in any waters or upon any land over which the Beardstown Fish Company or appellant had any greater right than did appellee.

Appellee brought his action against.all of the members of the Beardstown Fish Company for damages for releasing and permitting to escape the fish which he had caught and then held captive confined within his seine. Before the trial was finally concluded, appellee dismissed his suit as to all defendants except appellant herein. The trial below resulted in a verdict against appellant and in favor of appellee for $500 and it is to reverse this judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

In the trial court the only justification relied on for the act of appellant in releasing the fish was that he claimed to have the exclusive fishery right within all of the waters of Wood Slough with the exception of “No Man’s Land,” and that at least a portion of the captive fish were caught in the waters of the Beardstown Fish Company.

The questions as to where the seine was first placed by appellee and whether any part of the haul was made within the waters over which appellant or the Beardstown Fish Company owned the fishery right and the question of the amount of fish contained in the seine were questions of fact as was also the question whether appellant or the Beardstown Fish Company owned the exclusive fishery rights in these waters and the burden of proof was upon appellant to establish these facts by the evidence.

The deed from Christie & Lowe to Condit for the benefit of the Beardstown Fish Company had not been delivered and they had received no conveyance for the land designated as the Christie & Lowe tract; neither had they secured any right of fishing there. Lowe, who conducted the negotiations for the sale of the Christie & Lowe tract, is positive in his evidence that the Beardstown Fish Company had no fishery rights in these waters ■ prior to the conveyance to Condit. They had no ground of complaint or right to interfere with appellee in dragging the waters of Wood Slough upon the Christie & Lowe tract, and appellee, having cast his seine and confined therein the fish from these waters and made the seine secure in waters in which appellant or the Beardstown Fish Company had no interest or right whatever, neither appellant nor the Beardstown Fish Company had any right to interfere therewith, and while appellee may have been a trespasser upon the land or waters of the Christie & Lowe tract, neither appellant nor Beardstown Fish Company occupied any better position, and at the time these fish were released from the seine appellant was also a trespasser in the waters sn which these fish were confined and secured by appellee and he had, neither for himself nor the Beardstown Fish Company, any right to release from the seine the fish confined therein. While it may be conceded that appellee was a trespasser in regard to Christie & Lowe, this fact gave appellant no right to interfere with or release the fish confined within appellee’s seine. Scott v. Bryson, 74 Ill. 420; State v. House, 65 N. Car. 315; State v. Shaw, 60 L. R. A. 481.

The Supreme Court of this State has held in the People v. Bridges, 142 Ill. 30, that fish in streams or bodies of water are always classed by the common law as ferae naturae, in which the riparian proprietor or owner of the soil covered by the water, although he may have the exclusive right of fishing, has at best a qualified property therein and this is wholly divested the moment the fish escape to other waters. None of the fish claimed to have been taken by appellee in his seine were ever in the possession or confined in any way by appellant or the Beardstown Fish Company and. if they were captured in waters over which the appellant or the Beardstown Fish Company did not have the absolute riparian rights, then they have no right to complain óf the capture of these fish; and in this case the jury determined by its verdict that the fish were not entrapped in the seine or caught within the waters over which either appellant or the Beardstown Fish Company had any control.

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Related

Scott v. Bryson
74 Ill. 420 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1874)
People v. Bridges
16 L.R.A. 684 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1892)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 Ill. App. 278, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-schweer-illappct-1910.