Ross v. Acadian Seaplants, LTD

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 14, 2017
DocketWAScv-15-022
StatusUnpublished

This text of Ross v. Acadian Seaplants, LTD (Ross v. Acadian Seaplants, LTD) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ross v. Acadian Seaplants, LTD, (Me. Super. Ct. 2017).

Opinion

ST/\TE OF M/\INE SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL ACTION WASHINGTON, ss DOCKET NO.SC-CV-15-022

KENNETH W. ROSS, CARL E. ROSS ) and ROQUE ISLAND GARDNER ) ORDER on HOMESTEAD CORPORATION ) CROSS-MOTIONS Plaintiffs ) for \IS. ) SUMMARY JUDGMENT ) ) ACADIAN SEAPLANTS, LTD ) Defendant )

Kenneth W. Ross, Carl E. Ross and Roque Island Gardner Homestead Corporation (colleclively Plaintiffs) and Acadian Scaplants, LTD (Defendant or Acadian Seaplanls) have filed Cross-Motions for Sununary Judgment. The parties submit!ed lheir motions on a Joint Statement of Material Facts. At issue is whether rock weed, a form of seaweed, growing on private intertidal property is private prope11y or a marine product owned by the State in trust for the public.

FACTS

Plaintiffs own coastal property, including intertidal property, on Cobscook Bay and Chandler Day in Washington County. JSMF ~~1-3. Rockwccd growing in the tidal waters attached to the intertidal properties of the Plaintiffs has been harvested and carried off by Defendant, without Plaintiffs' consent, within the past six years. JSMF ri,l8- I0. Defendant harvested the rockweed from watercraft floating in the waters above Plaintiffs' intertidal land where rockweed grows without actually walking or travelling upon Plaintiffs' land. JSMF ~1~16-7. Harvesting was typically done during mid-tide when the rnckweed was Ooating vertically. Id. Harvested rockweed is used in fo11ilizer and animal feed products. JSMF ~ 5. Rockweed used as a form of fertilizer is ofien refened to as "sea manure." JSMF, Ex. I, p. 462.

Roekweed is the common name for a species of brown intertidal seaweed, known as Ascophy/111111 nodosum and is found on the rocks and ledges of the coast. JSMF 1 11. Rockweed docs not grow on intertidal sandy beaches but rather on hard objects such as rocky substrates, including rocks, stones and logs. The rockweed attaches lo rocky substrates by a "holdfast" which penetrates the bedrock by up to four millimeters. JSMF ~, 12-14. Once attached hy the holdfost, rockweed docs not move, but if broken m· detached, the rockweed will either float on the ocean or be cast upon the shore. JSMF~ 15. The holdfast's sole purpose is to keep the rockweed in place and is not a means to extract nutrients from the ground. JSMF ~ 16. Instead, rockwccd receives nutrients from the sea, and absorbs CO2 from the air and seawater. JSMF ~ 18. Under normal conditions rockweed generally grows between two and four feet tall when standing vertical in high tide, but can grow to over six feet tall. JSMF ~ 13.

Rock weed beds arc ecologically impo11ant. They provide cover and a habitat for multiple organisms, help lo moderate temperature in the sea, and are a source of nutrients to the marine ecosystem. JSMF ,1,119, 23-24. Each year, rockwecd will release a portion of its biomass due to natural effects of the environment. But the hold fast, if not severely damaged, can remain intact and attached for decades, allowing the plant to generate new growth. JSMF ~ 23 .

And rockwced plants reproduce. Male rockweed plants release free-floating sperm and female rockweed plants release eggs. Once an egg is fertilized, the embryo will attempt to attach to rocky substrate. Once it docs, the rockweed remains a stationary, perennial species for the remainder of its life. In undisturbed locations, it can survive for decades. JSMF ~ 20.

Harvesting of rockwccd is regulated by the State, including harvesting locations or sectors, amounts and heights. JSMF ~~26-27. A license is required to commercially harvest rockwecd in the State of Maine. JSMF ,J 28.

DISCUSSION

I .ls the right to take seaweed a profit or an easement? Analysis of this case must begin with a discussion of Hill v. Lord, 48 Me. 83(1861). That case was a trespass case in which the defendant took seaweed from the shore of land established to be the property of plain tin: including the flats which belong to the owner of the upland, as appmtenant to il. From the evidence discussed, large quantities of seaweed, a part or it growing on the beach, nnd a part t1oatecl hy the tides from other localities, accumulated upon the flats. kl al 96. The Court held " .. the title to the seaweed is in the owner of the flats; and both together, unless there has been a severance, belong to the riparian owner. Id., citing Emans v. Tumbull, 2Johns.313. The decision in l-li/1 v. Lord turned on the question whether the right to take seaweed was a right to take a profit in the soil or an easement. Upon considering other precedent, the Com1 noted: So far as any general mle can be deduced.fi'Olu these cases, /hey lend lo //,e conclusion thal lhe righl lo lake seaweed is a right lo take a projil in lhe soil. 11 does nol come within the princip(l/s applied to aquatic righls. The su~iecl ,~/'ii is; in part, a product of lhe soil where ii is found And, in regard lo Ihat portion which is washed ashore by the tides, though 1101 permanent~y remaining, lhe righl which the owner ol

2 the.flats has to if is much more analogous lo the }us a/luvionis

The Hill v. lord Comt mlcd the right to take seaweed is not an easement, but is a right to take a profit from the soil, which in that case belonged to the owner of the flats. This distinction is important. As Defendant acknowledges, the right to products of the soil is an alienable right described as a "profit a prendre", which is the right to take from another's land a part of the soil or of the products of the soil. Maine Practice Series, Maine Real Estate law and Practice, 211d Hdition, §8:2; See also Beckwith v. Rossi, 175 A.2d 732 (A4e. 1961). Examples include the right to cut and take away trees, to remove sand, gravel or soil or quarry granite. id 2. The Public Trust Doctrine Switching to the Public Trust Doctrine and casements, by common law, reserved out of the fee title of the upland owner is a public easement for fishing, fowling, and navigation. Bell v. Wells, 557 A.2d 168, /73(Me. 1989). The terms fishing, fowling and navigation have been allowed "sympathetically generous interpretations''. Id. But the Court has never decided a question of the scope of the intc1tidal public easement without referring to the three specific public uses of fishing, fowling or navigation. Id. 2 However a review and application of the doctrine from McGarvey v. Whillredge, 2011 ME 97 is necessary. McGar11ey does indeed clarify, and shift away from a strict approach that the public's rights of use in the intertidal zone be a form of fishing, fowling or navigation. McGarvey at ~~53-57. Those tlu·ee terms provide context, but it should not be understood that they exclusively define the scope of public rights. Id, ~~ 56-57. Instead, the better approach is to ask two questions. Id at ,149. First, docs the activity fall readily within the aquatic rights of "fishing, fowling or navigation?" Id If so, no further questions arc required. Id. This court does not find harvesting a plant such as rockwecd to be a form of any of the three identified activities. Harvesting a terrestrial plant is no more a fishing activity, such as worming, digging for mussels, trapping lobsters or dropping a line for fish clearly are, than is harvesting a tree the same as hunting or trapping wildlife. Rockwccd is a terrestrial plant. .ISMF §§ 11, 12, 15, 16,20. The harvesting of rock weed cannot be said to be a form of fishing, fowling or navigating.

1 Regarding "that portion which is washed ashore ..

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Related

Beckwith v. Rossi
175 A.2d 732 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1961)
McGarvey v. Whittredge
2011 ME 97 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2011)
Bell v. Town of Wells
557 A.2d 168 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1989)
Moore v. Griffin
22 Me. 350 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1843)
Hill v. Lord
48 Me. 83 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1861)
Marshall v. Walker
45 A. 497 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1900)
Anthony v. Gifford
84 Mass. 549 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1861)

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Bluebook (online)
Ross v. Acadian Seaplants, LTD, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-v-acadian-seaplants-ltd-mesuperct-2017.