Matthews v. Treat

75 Me. 594, 1884 Me. LEXIS 136
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedFebruary 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 75 Me. 594 (Matthews v. Treat) 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
Matthews v. Treat, 75 Me. 594, 1884 Me. LEXIS 136 (Me. 1884).

Opinion

Danforth, J.

In this action the plaintiff claims damages fora disturbance of his alleged right of fishery, the limits of whichi are fully described in the writ. The place is located upon an arm of the sea where tlie tide ebbs and flows.

The defence besides the general issue, is a denial of the plaintiff’s and a claim of title in the defendant, that the right claimed by the plaintiff is a public right, that whatever the defendant has done, was in the exercise of that right and that the plaintiff did not have the exclusive right of taking fish as described in his writ. Thus the defence is put upon two grounds ;. that of title in himself exclusively and a general right in the-public, or a free fishery.

That the public have the right of fishing in all tide waters, by the common law is too well settled to admit of denial. Moulton v. Libbey, 37 Maine, 472; Weston v. Sampson, 8 Cush. 347; Proctor v. Wells, 103 Mass. 216. Thus the defendant as a part of' the public and in common with all other persons, would have-the right to take fish not only from the deep waters adjacent to the flats described, but also from the water over the flats at flood, tide. The fish swimming in the water above, as well as below low water mark, are the property of the first taker whether he-has or has not an interest in the soil under the water where they are taken. This right resting in the public can be conveyed only by the public, or the sovereign power which represents the public- and can be exercised only by such ordinary methods as will not interfere with private rights.

[598]*598Since the ordinance of 1641, modified by that of 1647, which is a part of the common law of this state, (Barrows v. McDermott, 73 Maine, 441) the flats not exceeding one hundred rods in width are the property of the owner of the adjacent upland, or his grantee, subject to the rights of the public to pass over and fish in the waters upon them. This private ownership must necessarily give to the proprietor some privileges which do not belong to the public. Among others is the right of erecting fixtures thereon or attaching them to the shores. Hence while the proprietor of the flats may fasten his seine by grappling to the shore and erfect weirs for the purpose of catching fish, those having public rights only cannot do so. Duncan v. Sylvester, 24 Maine, 482-486; Locke v. Motley, 2 Gray, 265. This being a private right may, of course, be conyeyed by the owner with or without the upland and with such limitations and qualifications as he sees fit. This principle of law was recognized and adopted in a case from Sagadahoc county not yet reported. [ Wyman v. Oliver, ante, p. 421, Reporter.]

It is an infringement of this private right, the erection of a weir upon or attached to the flats or shore which is here complained of. Thus the public right of fishery is not involved in this case. The only question at issue is whether the defendant has wrongfully erected a weir within an exclusive right of fishery belonging to the plaintiff.

That each party has a weir or weirs plainly appears from the report of the case. The plaintiff alleges that he has the exclusive right of fishing for salmon, shad and alewives within certain limits described in his writ and that the defendant has erected his weir within those limits and thereby interfered with his privilege. This exclusive right if it exists, is not derived from the .sovereign power and must therefore grow out of and in its origin be incidental to an ownership in the flats. In other words it must be confined to a right to catch the fish named by means of fixtures attached to the soil and the interference must be by a wrongful attachment of fixtures to the soil for the same purpose. 'This directly presents the issue of title claimed by each party and by each traced through mesne conveyances to the same .source.

[599]*599It appears that Josiah Grant was formerly the owner of the upland and of the flats described as incidental thereto. In 1841, Mr. Grant, by a deed of warranty, conveyed to Giles C. Grant, "all the right of taking salmon, shad and alewives, on the southeasterly side of Cape Jellison in said Prospect, beginning at the shore on the southerly line of land of John and Charles Staples, and extending westerly to the southernmost extremity of Squam Point Ledge, so called, together with all the privileges necessary for carrying on the said fishing. This deed would necessarily give the exclusive right to catch the fish named within the limits described, by means of fixtures attached to the flats or shore. It could give no more as the grantor had no more to give. Preble v. Brown, 47 Maine, 284.

This privilege came to the plaintiff through the deeds of Giles C. Grant to Charles Staples and of Robert F. Staples as the representative of Charles. ' It is true that in the last two deeds the word " all ” is not used before the words " the right of taking salmon,” &c. But it is also true that the right is conveyed with the same description as in the first with no words to limit or qualify it, and when a thing is thus conveyed we cannot infer that but a part of it is intended.

The defendant claims title to the fishing privilege as incidental to a title to the upland which he obtains by virtue of a will from the same Josiah Grant and mesne conveyances to himself. But in these several conveyances the fishing privilege is not described or alluded to and as it had previously been conveyed he evidently obtains no title to that.

It is further contended that whatever the liability of the defendant it cannot be enforced in this form of action. If this is to be considered an action of trespass q. c. the objection would seem to be 'well founded. For although the title of the plaintiff is to an exclusive right to catch certain fish named within certain well defined limits, a right which is incidental to and grows out of an ownership in the soil, yet the grant does not carry the soil with it. Whether other kinds of fish may or may not be caught there does not appear. But there are other uses to which the [600]*600land may be put and which are not conveyed. The title to the soil therefore remained in the grantor and the conveyance was that of an easement, the remedy for an injury to which is case and not trespass q. c. Duncan v. Sylvester, supra; Washburn on Easements, 3 ed. *420; Morgan v. Boyes, 65 Maine, 124.

The beginning of each count in the declaration, alleging that the defendant "with force and arms broke and entered the plaintiff’s close” is technically that of trespass q. c. especially followed as it is by a description of the premises, and yet using the word " close ” in its more comprehensive sense as indicated here by the words " fishery and fishing privilege ” following, it is not entirely inappropriate here, in an action on the case. The fishery is one that may properly be denominated territorial. It covers certain described premises though it may not carry any interest in or title to the soil. The complaint is for entering upon the described premises for a special purpose, which is a violation of the plaintiff’s alleged rights and taking the whole of either count in the declaration together we find all th'e facts set out upon which the plaintiff relies to support his action. It is a statement of the plaintiff’s "own case” which is the distinguishing characteristic of an action on the case. Hathorn v.

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Bluebook (online)
75 Me. 594, 1884 Me. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matthews-v-treat-me-1884.