Pickford v. Koeneman

277 A.2d 1, 262 Md. 71, 1 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20277, 2 ERC (BNA) 1541, 1971 Md. LEXIS 907
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 11, 1971
Docket[No. 388, September Term, 1970.]
StatusPublished

This text of 277 A.2d 1 (Pickford v. Koeneman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pickford v. Koeneman, 277 A.2d 1, 262 Md. 71, 1 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20277, 2 ERC (BNA) 1541, 1971 Md. LEXIS 907 (Md. 1971).

Opinion

Smith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Professor Garrett Power in his article entitled More About Oysters Than You Wanted To Know, 30 Md.L. Rev. 199 (1970),said:

“Opposition to private oyster leases continues unabated. * * * Furthermore, the opposition to private leasing has a new impetus. Since 1945, natural clam and crab beds have been explicitly exempted from leasing. In the early 1950’s, Fletcher Hanks of Easton, Maryland, developed a hydraulic clam rig which made the taking of soft-shelled clams efficient. The result has been a marriage of convenience between strange bedfellows. Clammers and public oystermen are natural rivals since they compete for much of the same bottom, but they have a common interest in preventing the development of an expansive private oyster culture. Hence clammers have joined in the fight against private leasing and, according to one authority, had managed to become the primary force behind such opposition by 1964.” Id. at 215.

This case is a part of that battle and that “marriage of convenience”. We shall be obliged to reverse the action of a trial judge who found upon the basis of protests by clammers that an area might not be leased for a private oyster bed.

Code (1970 Repl. Vol.) Art. 66C, § 708 (a) grants authority to the Department of Tidewater Fisheries to lease in the name of the State “tracts or parcels of land to be used for protecting, sowing, bedding or cultivating oysters or other- shell fish beneath the waters of this State, subject to the provisions, limitations and restric *73 tions” set forth in § 708. Section 708 (b) then provides in pertinent part :

“No lease shall be granted for any * * * clam bed as defined by the charts or amended charts of the Oyster Survey of 1906 to 1912 on file in the offices of the Department of Tidewater Fisheries.” 1

As Professor Power indicates in his article, the 1906-1912 survey came about through the efforts of a Maryland lawyer who advocated a new system for more extensive cultivation of barren bottoms, being concerned with the extent to which even at that time the catch of oysters had declined drastically from the historic Mghs of the 1880’s.

Section 708 (c) makes provision for resurveys of State waters. The Department of Chesapeake Bay Affairs (the Department) is authorized at any time to “resurvey any of the submerged areas of this State for the purpose of determining the position and extent of any natural oyster bars, clam beds, or crab beds”. It is directed to amend its charts to reflect the results of such survey. That subsection defines:

“[A] natural oyster or natural clam bar [as] mean[ing] and including] all oyster or clam beds or bars under any of the waters of this State whereon the natural growth of oysters or clams is of such abundance that the public have resorted to such beds or bars for a livelihood, whether continuously or at intervals, within five years prior to the resurvey or provided that at the time of the resurvey there are oysters or clams to be found naturally and in sufficiently large quantities in such beds or bars to enable *74 the public to use such bars or beds for a livelihood.”

The charts within 90 days of such resurvey are to be deposited in the Department and also with the clerk of the circuit court “in which or nearest to which the area resurveyed is located.”

Section 708 (d) provides for reclassification “from natural oyster bed, excluded from leasing, to barren bottom open to being leased”. The Department is directed to “advertise the time, place, and purpose to reexamine the area, twice a week for two successive weeks, in a newspaper of general circulation in the county, if the area is within county waters, or in a newspaper of general circulation in the State, if the area is not within tie waters of any county.” 2 The section goes on to provide, “Any members of the public may be present at the reexamination.” It further provides:

“If upon such reexamination the Department of Tidewater Fisheries proposes to reclassify the area from natural bed to barren bottom, it shall first hold a public hearing, and the time, place, and purpose shall be advertised as aforesaid. Any person may, by way of appeal from the decision of the Department, file petition in the circuit court of the county, at any time until expiration of thirty days from the filing of an amended chart in said circuit court showing the reclassification, and the same proceedings shall be had thereon as are now provided in subsection (k) of this section and with the same rights of appeal from the decision of the circuit court.”

Section 708 (k) provides that persons may protest against a lease in the circuit courts of the respective *75 counties. Those courts are to “decide whether the area described in said petition is or is not within any of the prohibited areas set forth in subsection (b) * * * for which a lease shall not be granted”. Provision is made for the right of appeal “by either party to1 said cause from the judgment of said circuit court” with this Court to “have the power to review all questions of fact or law involved.” That section then provides:

“If the final decision shall be that the area in question is a natural oyster bar or bed, charts of the Oyster Survey of 1906 to 1912, on record in the office of the Department of Tidewater Fisheries, shall be amended accordingly.”

In this case appellant Thomas Henry Pickford made application for authority to lease for the cultivation of oysters a four acre area in Talbot County several miles southeast of St. Michaels. The area had been reclassified in 1968 from oyster bottom to barren bottom. The protestant appellees are all clammers. The trial judge rendered an oral opinion in which he said:

“As I have found, to my great chagrin, so often in dealing with conservation cases, the way the laws are written are so unclear as to be nebulous, but I have come to the reluctant conclusion on the basis of * * * Smack [v. Jackson, 238 Md. 35, 207 A. 2d 511 (1965)] that even though the charts do not define a certain area as a natural clam bed, that if the protestants can come in and by a fair preponderance of the evidence show that it is a natural clam bed or bar, because it has such a natural growth of oysters or clams, that the public have resorted to such beds or bars for a livelihood, whether continuously or at intervals, within five years prior to the resurvey, or provided that at the time of the resurvey there were oysters or clams to be found naturally and in suffi *76 ciently large quantities in such beds or bars to enable the public to use such beds or bars for a livelihood. Now we have here a situation that has gotten to be quite common, a private property owner wants to take out a little bit of oyster ground and immediately the organized watermen come in and protest and testify that they have resorted to this area for a livelihood.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Smack v. Jackson
207 A.2d 511 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1965)
Popham v. Conservation Commission
46 A.2d 184 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1946)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
277 A.2d 1, 262 Md. 71, 1 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20277, 2 ERC (BNA) 1541, 1971 Md. LEXIS 907, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pickford-v-koeneman-md-1971.