Dumont v. Speers

245 A.2d 151, 1968 Me. LEXIS 240
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedAugust 22, 1968
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 245 A.2d 151 (Dumont v. Speers) 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
Dumont v. Speers, 245 A.2d 151, 1968 Me. LEXIS 240 (Me. 1968).

Opinion

MARDEN, Justice.

On appeal. Under the provisions of 12 M.R.S.A. § 2201 1 appellants addressed a petition to the Commissioner of Inland Fisheries & Game (Commissioner), seeking the installation of a fishway in the dam across the Kennebec River at Augusta serving the Bates Manufacturing Company. The Commissioner assigned the matter for hearing on February 10, 1967. It may be concluded that the Commissioner made no immediate decision on the petition, and by pleading entitled “Complaint in Review of the Administrative Action” dated August 21, 1967, appellants sought, in the nature of a Petition for a Writ of Mandamus, to require the Commissioner to (a) record a decision upon the petition heard on February 10, 1967, and (b) to require that the fishway be provided. To this pleading defendant Commissioner filed a Motion to Dismiss upon the ground (1) that the petitioners failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted, and (2) that the Commissioner’s discretion in the premises was absolute and not subject to review by the court.

Meantime it appearing that the dam in question was owned by the Economic Development Corporation and not Bates Manufacturing Company, the complaint was amended on November 8, 1967 in conformity with the fact, in response to which the Economic Development Corporation filed a Motion to Dismiss over date of November 17, 1967 for substantially the same reasons as those advanced by the Commissioner.

*153 Also meantime, according to finding by the presiding Justice, the Deputy Commissioner on behalf of the Commissioner notified counsel for appellants by letter of November 14, 1967, that the decision of the Commissioner was “not to order the construction of the requested fishway.”

By letter of November 30, 1967 the Commissioner notified appellant’s attorney that “after due consideration, it is the decision of the Commissioner not to order construction of such fishway.”

The Superior Court, by order dated January 26, 1968, granted the motions of both defendants for dismissal and petitioners appealed.

The Justice below held, in substance, 1) that if the pleading filed by petitioners be accepted as a petition for Writ of Mandamus, which Writ could require the Commissioner to act upon the evidence presented to him, but not how to act, Rogers v. Brown, et als., 135 Me. 117, 119, 190 A. 632; Young v. Johnson, 161 Me. 64, 70, 207 A.2d 392, the issue became moot when the Commissioner filed his decision. 2) That if the pleading be accepted as an appeal from administrative action under Rule 80B M.R.C.P., it had no standing as such for on its date there was nothing from which to appeal.

Appellants urge:

A. That if the Court treated their pleading as seeking a Writ of Mandamus, its conclusion was in error because (1) under the reference statute the Commissioner, upon petition by the required number of citizens and proof that the inland waters involved were frequented by the fish specified, is required as a matter of law to order the installation of a fishway, or (2) if under the statute the installation of the fishway is not mandatory, but rests within the discretion of the Commissioner, such discretion lodged with the Commissioner violates (a) public policy, and (b) is a wrongful delegation of a legislative function.
That a dam without a fishway is a public nuisance. B.

Fishway required upon petition?

With relation to appellants' contention A. 1., the statute, on its face, lodges discretion in the Commissioner to require a fishway, but appellants insist that the word “may” in the statute must be read as “shall” upon the principle declared in Low v. Dunham, 61 Me. 566, 569, and Collins v. State, 161 Me. 445, 449, 213 A.2d 835. In the phrasing of the rule as given in those cases not only do we fail to find anything to give the public or third persons a claim de jure for the installation of a fishway in this dam, but a long legislative history in the treatment of fishways make it clear that the legislature never intended that this statute be mandatory instead of permissive.

In no “Mill Act,” from the original appearing in Chapter 45 of the Revised Statutes of 1821 to the present (38 M.R.S.A. § 651 et seq.), has a fishway been required in the construction of dams authorized by that Act. The first legislative consideration of fishways appears to have been in Chapter 16 of the Public Laws of 1840 wherein the County Commissioners were authorized to require fishways in dams located in streams emptying into rivers in which “Salmon, Shad or Alewives abound.”

The Revised Statutes of 1841, Chapter 61 § 10, required the County Commissioners to inspect all such dams, “decide what would be a suitable fishway” and require its construction.

The Revised Statutes of 1857, Chapter 40 § 22, required the County Commissioners to so act “on the written application of three or more responsible persons.”

The Public Laws of 1869, Chapter 70 § 4, which also created a Commissioner of Fisheries, required the owner or occupant of dams above tidewater and those in tidal waters of the Kennebec River (as a fishery district under § 9) to provide, keep in repair and open for the passage of fish “a *154 durable and efficient fishway” of such form, capacity and location as might be determined by the Commissioner. This provision continued until 1913.

Chapter 206 of the Public Laws of 1913 revised Chapter 32 R.S. 1903 (the Fish and Game Laws) and by Section 17 of revised Chapter 32 the Commissioners, then three in number, were given authority “in their discretion to compel” the owner of a dam above tidewater in any river or stream “frequented by salmon, landlocked salmon, shad, alewives or other migratory fishes” to provide a fishway. The Kennebec River is not declared a fishing district and by Section 2 of the Chapter 206 all inconsistent acts and provisions “not incorporated in this act” were repealed.

By Chapter 331 of the Public Laws of 1929 the supervision, administration and enforcement of the inland fish and game laws was given to a single Commissioner (Section 1) with an advisory council of seven members (Section 4) and lodged with the Commissioner (Section 5) the power to require a fishway in such a dam when he “determines it expedient.” With some change in order of phrasing, that law has remained.

Only by Chapter 386 of the Public Laws of 1965 was the right to initiate a hearing to determine the expediency of a fishway in a dam given to “200 citizens,” “majority of the County Commissioners” and the “Inland Fish and Game Legislative Committee.”

There is nothing in this legislative history to support a contention that these petitioners have a claim de jure for a fishway in this dam. There is much in the legislative history, and supported by logic, that the legislature did not intend to require every dam above tidewater to have a fish-way. The fish and game law revision of 1913 specifically removed the dams in the tidal waters of the Kennebec River from the category for which fishways could be required.

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Bluebook (online)
245 A.2d 151, 1968 Me. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dumont-v-speers-me-1968.