State v. Bassett

29 A. 471, 64 Conn. 217, 1894 Conn. LEXIS 18
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 6, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 29 A. 471 (State v. Bassett) 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
State v. Bassett, 29 A. 471, 64 Conn. 217, 1894 Conn. LEXIS 18 (Colo. 1894).

Opinion

Tobjrauce, J.

This is a prosecution brought under § 2381 of the General Statutes which reads as follows:—“ Every person who shall willfully commit any trespass or injury with any eel spears or other implements on any designated oyster ground on which oysters are being cultivated, shall be fined not more than seven dollars, or imprisoned not more than thirty days, or both.”

The locus in quo is a part of the bottom of the Quinnipiac river, a tributary of the New Haven harbor, in which the tide rises and falls. It is situated on the east side of the river, about three hundred and twenty-five feet above the Shore Line Railroad bridge, where the water is navigable. It was originally designated and allotted to Mrs. D. E. Foote' of the town of East Haven, for the purpose of planting oysters thereon, by a committee of the town of East Haven in the month of October, 1875. It came by regular conveyances to Daniel H. Graniss, and was, when the alleged trespasses were committed, in his possession and ownership, properly staked and marked as required by law, and was then used by him for the planting and cultivation of oysters.

The defense, in substance, was that the original designation mad.e in 1875 was void; first, because the committee had no power or authority to make any designation or allotment of ground for the planting and cultivation of oysters; and second,,because the locus in quo was at the time of such original designation natural clam and oyster ground. Upon this last point the finding of the court below is as follows :— “ It was testified and not contradicted that from time immemorial these fiats have been natural clan; and oyster grounds; [219]*219that clams have grown upon them and do grow upon them in great quantities; that they can be readily gathered and dug because of the shallow water at low tide, and that many persons are accustomed to dig clams upon these flats, and have obtained a portion of their entire livelihood in that way; that prior to 1875 the flats were used by clammers without hindrance; that since the designation the owners of the grounds have had constant and increasing difficulty in protecting their rights.”

Tire defendant asked the court to charge, in substance, that if the jury found that the locus in quo had been natural clam and oyster ground, the designation made by the committee to Mi’s. Foote in 1875, “ was illegal, contrary to common law, and void under the statutes of this State; ” that the State had never authorized said committee to designate this ground; and that digging on said ground for clams was not a willful trespass under the statute. The court declined to so charge, but did charge in substance that the original designation was a valid one, which gave to Mrs. Foote and her assigns, they complying with the requirements of the statutes relating to this matter in other respects, the exclusive right to occupy and use such ground for the purpose of planting and cultivating oysters thereon. Of this charge and refusal to charge the defendant complains on this appeal.

The questions thus raised on this appeal were considered by this court in the case of the State v. Simpkins at its December Term 1888, held at New Haven. That case was not reported, but the opinion in the case was filed with the clerk of the Superior Court for New Haven County in whose custody it now is, and we think it is decisive of the present ease against the defendant.

That was a prosecution of substantially the same nature as the present one. The locus in quo was covered by the waters of the Quinnipiae river, and was situated not far from the locus in quo in the present case. The original designation in that case was made in October, 1875, by the same committee that made the original designation in the case at [220]*220bar. In that case (State v. Simpkins) it is found that the State “ admitted that the ground in question was at the time of the designation thereof and is now natural clam and oyster ground, -but it was admitted that such ground was within one of the tributaries of New Haven harbor.”

In all essential respects, then, the two cases are in their main facts identical. The points made in this case, namely, that the committee who made the designation in 1875 had no power to make any designation, and that they certainly had none to designate natural oyster grounds, were made and discussed in argument in that case. In that case this court expressly held that the action of said committee in making the designation then in question had been ratified and made valid by the legislature in 1877. In the opinion no notice is taken of the point made that the locus in quo was admitted to be natural oyster and clam ground, but the court, we think, must be understood as holding that, in New Haven harbor and its tributaries, such designation might be made in 1875, even of ground which was natural oyster or clam ground. At this time § 6 of Chap. 4, Tit. 16, of the Revised Statutes of 1875 (p. 214) was in force, which provides that “ the designation of all places within the navigable waters of New Haven harbor, or its tributaries, which have been or may be designated to any person for the purpose of planting or cultivating oysters therein in pursuance of the provisions of this chapter shall be valid, although such places may have been natural oyster beds, if such designation is in other respects legal.”

The statute forbidding the designation of any natural clam bed was not passed until 1878. Public Acts of 1878, Chap. 100. The opinion in the case of State v. Simpkins is as follows:—

“During more than thirty years the legislature has encouraged the cultivation of oysters, by vesting in individuals the right of private, exclusive ownership of grounds suitable for that purpose. The Revision of 1875 went into effect on the first day of that year. Prom that date the law, as therein found, has been the law concerning that subject, except as [221]*221modified by subsequent statutes. By Chapter 4, Part 1, Article 1, Section 1, p. 218, of the Revision of 1875, power was conferred on the selectmen of East Haven, to designate for the planting and cultivation of oysters, ground in a certain specified portion of the navigable waters within the limits of said town ; and upon the selectmen of Orange, a like power in reference to all grounds within the navigable waters of that town, not occupied under any previous designation ; and by § 2, p. 214, a like power was conferred upon a committee of electors to be appointed in every town, in reference to like ground within said town. Thus these two sections make provisions for the designation, either by the selectmen, or by some committee, for all ground in the navigable waters, within all towns, except for that portion of the town of East Haven not included within the boundaries of the territory placed in the jurisdiction of the selectmen thereof. Doubtless the omission to provide for this by the continuation of the power to appoint a committee was an oversight.

“Notwithstanding this omission, the town upon due warning for that purpose, at its annual town meeting holden in October, 1875, appointed a Committee of Electors to make designation of the ground in the navigable waters within its limits, and on October 27th, 1875, that committee designated to B. N.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 A. 471, 64 Conn. 217, 1894 Conn. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bassett-conn-1894.