Keister's Appeal From Shell Fish Commissioners

92 A. 744, 89 Conn. 7, 1914 Conn. LEXIS 104
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 21, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 92 A. 744 (Keister's Appeal From Shell Fish Commissioners) 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
Keister's Appeal From Shell Fish Commissioners, 92 A. 744, 89 Conn. 7, 1914 Conn. LEXIS 104 (Colo. 1914).

Opinion

Beach, J.

The petitioner made application to the Shell Fish Commissioners under § 3222 of the General Statutes, as amended by chapter 209 of the Public Acts of 1907, p. 762, to have a certain oyster ground known as 083 on the official map of the Shell Fish Commission declared a part of the natural oyster grounds of the town of Orange. The respondent, the Sealshipt Oyster System, claims title to the lot under a designation made by the oyster ground committee of the town of New Haven, dated June 29th, 1876, to John M. Button and twenty-nine others, pursuant to § 3 of chapter 4, Title 16, of the Revised Statutes of 1875, p. 214.

It appears from the finding of the trial court that neither Button, nor any other of the twenty-nine grantees, ever staked or buoyed out the lot as required by the statute, or ever planted or cultivated any shell-fish thereon, or paid taxes thereon, or took possession, or exercised any act of ownership over it, other than to have the designation recorded in the New Haven oyster ground records. Button died in 1905, and the lot was not inventoried or administered upon as part of his estate. In 1907 the boundaries of the lot were, for the first time, marked by stakes or buoys by the surveyor of the Shell Fish Commission, and in 1911 the widow of John M. Button, by written assignment, attempted to convey her interest in the lot to the Sealshipt Oyster System.

It is also found that for forty years prior to 1907, and during each year, all of the natural growth oyster-men, including, for many years, the petitioner, gathered oysters from this lot, claiming the right to do so, which right had never been questioned or disputed; and that *10 Button himself, in company with other oystermen, frequently gathered oysters from the lot, treating it as part of the natural public bed, and making no claim of any private right or interest therein.

In 1884 the Superior Court for New Haven county, pursuant to the statute, located the natural oyster-beds of the town of Orange, and caused the boundaries thereof to be recorded. The trial court found that the lot in question is, and was in 1876, located within the navigable waters of the town of Orange; that it is and was a part of the natural oyster-beds of that town; and that the oyster ground committee of the town of New Haven had no jurisdiction to make the original designation to John M. Button. It also found that if Button and his associates ever acquired any valid interest by such designation, they have abandoned and forfeited the same. The assignments of error which we deem it necessary to discuss relate to the findings above stated.

We take up, first, the question of jurisdiction. By § 1, chapter 4, Title 16, of the Revision of 1875, p. 213, the selectmen of Orange had the exclusive right to designate oyster grounds within “the navigable waters in such town,” subject to the general rule that a designation of ground included in a natural oyster-bed is void. Averill v. Hull, 37 Conn. 320, 322; Cook v. Raymond, 66 Conn. 285, 289, 33 Atl. 1006. The location of the natural oyster ground by the Superior Court in 1884 did not create a natural ground, but ascertained the boundaries of a then existing natural ground. In re Application of Clinton Oyster Ground Committee, 52 Conn. 5, 10. The location was conclusive evidence of the boundaries of the natural bed in 1884, and admissible evidence of its extent in 1876. White v. Petty, 57 Conn. 576, 579, 18 Atl. 253. The easterly boundary of the natural oyster ground in question is described as *11 “running along the westerly side of the designated lots in the New Haven harbor channel”; and the location of lot 083 is such that, if it was a “designated lot” in 1884, it is excluded from this description, but if not a designated lot, it is included as a part of the natural oyster-bed.

Considering that the Superior Court was laying out the boundaries of a natural oyster-bed within the town of Orange, and that there had been no designation of this lot by the selectmen of the town of Orange, and that the attempted designation by the oyster ground committee of the town of New Haven was never completed by stakes or buoys, as required by statute, we think that lot 083 was not, in 1884, a designated lot within the meaning of the official description, and that it was included by that description in the natural oyster ground of the town of Orange.

We also think the Superior Court was right in holding that the oyster ground committee of the town of New Haven had no jurisdiction to make a valid designation of lot 083, because it was located in the navigable waters of the town of Orange.

In Rowe v. Smith, 48 Conn. 444, this court, in passing upon the validity of a designation made by the New Haven oyster ground committee in 1875, determined that the divisional lines between the navigable waters of one town and those of another were meridional lines extending south from the termini of the lines separating the territorial proprietorship of the towns to the line between Connecticut and New York in Long Island Sound.

Orange was incorporated as a separate town in 1822, and, as far as material to this case, the dividing line between New Haven and Orange was described as “beginning at the Sound and extending through the harbor by the point of the beach to the mouth of West River *12 and thence up said river through the center thereof, to the bridge.” In 1874 the Superior Court established more definitely the dividing line, and, as shown upon the map made part of the finding, the point at which the line extending through the harbor intersects the line which was established as marking the northerly limit of Long Island Sound, is so located that a meridional line extending due south therefrom would locate the whole of lot 083 well within the navigable waters of the town of Orange. The respondent claims that the jurisdiction of the town of Orange does not extend south of the line established in 1874 as the northerly fine of the Sound. But this same question was definitely settled in Rowe v. Smith, 48 Conn. 444, where it was held that, although the territorial proprietorship of New Haven along a portion of its southern boundary terminated at high-water mark, because the grant to New Haven did not undertake to convey the title of the Colony to the shores of the sea, yet the undoubted power of the State to create individual proprietorships in oyster grounds below high-water mark might be exercised through the instrumentality of the towns fronting on the shore. The intention to do so in the case of the town of Orange is plainly shown by the Act of 1875, giving to the selectmen of the town of Orange the exclusive right to designate oyster grounds within the navigable waters in such town. The same intent is expressed in chapter 22 of the Public Acts of 1878, p. 273, by which the selectmen of the town of Orange are authorized to designate “any ground covered by the waters of Long Island Sound” lying within certain east and west limits. Whether tested by the Act of 1878, as interpreted on the map, respondent’s Exhibit A, or by the rule laid down in Rowe v. Smith, 48 Conn. 444, the lot in question is within the navigable waters of the town of Orange.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 A. 744, 89 Conn. 7, 1914 Conn. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keisters-appeal-from-shell-fish-commissioners-conn-1914.