Hettrick v. . Page

82 N.C. 65
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 82 N.C. 65 (Hettrick v. . Page) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hettrick v. . Page, 82 N.C. 65 (N.C. 1880).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

This action was commenced on the 12th ■day of September, 1879, and its object is to restrain the defendant by injunction from removing. or interfering with •certain stakes put up in the waters of Albemarle sound upon which the plaintiffs propose, to hang their pod and pound-nets to catch fish. The stakes -commencing opposite the plaintiffs’ shore and extending about one thousand yards ■out into the water, are about three by six inches in size, and separated from each other by short intervals, in a line, are driven some four or more feet into the bottom or bed of the sound, and the net is stretched out and fastened to them, with several pounds or enclosures into which the fish, arrested in their migratory movement up the waters, and seeking an outlet, enter; and being unable to find their way out are taken up with dip-nets. The defendant has purchased- the shore on. which an old but long disused seine fishery was operated and purposes to re-open it. Preparatory to commencing his fishing operations, the defendant finds it necessary 'to-clear out the obstructions, among which .axe the plaintiffs’ stakes, in the adjacent waters through which his seine must be drawn, and threatens and has directed his servants to take up the stakes and carry them .away from his seine-ground. The stakes were placed in *67 their present position several years ago by the plaintiffs, and. have since remained and been used to stretch their nets upon, and are necessary for that purpose. The defendant has only recently become the owner of the land, of which the beach forms a part, on which the fishery is -to be "operated. The aim and scope of the suit is to forbid and prevent the removal of the stakes, or any interruption of the plaintiffs in their use, and the aid of the court is asked upon the ground that the consequence of the threatened act, if done, would be an irreparable mischief to them.

These are substantially the facts presented in the complaint, answer and replication, so far as deemed material to the proper understanding of the action of the court in vacating the temporary restraining order previously issued, and denying the motion for an injunction, pending the suit.

The appellant’s first exception is to the refusal of His Honor to place the cause on the summons docket, in order to a jury trial of disputed facts, and his proceeding, himself, to pass upon the evidence. The essential averments -in 'the complaint upon which the equitable claim to relief depends, are not controverted in the answer, and there is no such repugnancy in the allegations of the parties as requires the elimination of issues and the intervention of a jury, at least in this preliminary stage of the proceeding, and it was entirely proper for the court to act upon the case presented in the complaint and to refuse the interlocutory order. But were it otherwise, the action of the court is sustained by the decision in Jones v. Boyd, 80 N. C., 258. In that ease the defendant appealed from an interlocutory judgment, awarding an injunction and appointing a receiver to take possession of the property in dispute, and the court discussing the effect of the late constitutional amendment enlarging its jurisdiction, say: “ Without undertaking to define the limits to which our appellate power is carried by this change, it is sufficient to say, it embraces the present appeal and requires *68 us to examine the evidence and to determine the fads, as well as the law arising thereon, in revising the subject matter of the appeal.” The decree was accordingly reviewed and reversed.

The plaintiffs second and principal exception involving the merits of their application, is to the refusal of the court to continue in force the restraining order until the final hearing of the cause.

It does not appear that the plaintiffs were engaged in catching fish when they began the action, or then had any immediate need of the stakes for spreading tlieir nets, and that they could not replace any which should be removed, in ample time for the fishing season, and at a price easily ascertained and measurable in damages, and if so, they could in a proper action for the injury recover full and adequate compensation. Without, therefore, conceding the plaintiffs' right to the remedy sought, even upon the assumption of the truth of the matters set out in their complaint, or that they show a case of irreparable injury, entitling them to the exercise of the preventive power of the court, according to the usages of equity practice, we proceed to consider their claim to protection upon its merits.

Since the decision in the two appeals in Collins v. Benbury, 3 Ired., 277, and 5 Ired., 118, the law has been considered settled in regard to the right of fishing in the navigable waters of the state, and the results are summarized and approved in Skinner v. Hettrick, 73 N. C., 53, in these words:

1. “ While the owner of a beach has the right of drawing his seine to his beach in exclusion of others, yet he cannot acquire the sole right of fishing independent of all others, in a certain portion of the waters of the sound.”
2. “At common law there could not be a several fishery in a navigable stream.”
3. “ Every citizen of the state has the liberty and privilege of fishing ” in the waters of Albemarle sound.
*69 4. “ Tbe regulation of the right of fishing in navigable streams is a proper subject of legislation.”

These propositions are sustained by the courts of New York and Pennsylvania in the cases cited in the argument for defendant. Lowndes v. Dickenson, 34 Barb., 586 ; Fishing Co. v. Carter, 61 Penn., 21.

The general assembly has undertaken, in a degree, by the act of March 28, 1875, entitled “ an act in relation to fishing in Albemarle sound and certain rivers,” to prescribe the terms and conditions under which pod-nets, requiring stationary posts, may be used, and makes the rights of this class -of fishermen subservient to those who operate their seines from the shore, in the manner intended by the defendant. The provisions of the act are in substance, as follows:

Section two makes it unlawful for any person to set or fish with a dutch or pod-net within half a mile to the eastward or westward of the outside windlasses or watch-blocks of any seine-fishery on said sound, and section three requires the removal of all stakes by the first day of June next succeeding the fishing season.”

Section four declares that “ if any person shall set or fish any dutch-uet or pod-net in said sound in violation of this act, he shall be guilty of a misdemeanor,” punishable with fine or imprisonment,' and be subject to a further penalty of three hundred dollars, recoverable by suit in the superior court of the county wherein the offence shall, have been committed.” It also provides that the sheriff

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Bluebook (online)
82 N.C. 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hettrick-v-page-nc-1880.