White v. Petty

18 A. 253, 57 Conn. 576, 1889 Conn. LEXIS 48
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 5, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 18 A. 253 (White v. Petty) 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
White v. Petty, 18 A. 253, 57 Conn. 576, 1889 Conn. LEXIS 48 (Colo. 1889).

Opinion

Beardsley, J.

The complainant alleges that she is the owner of various oyster lots in the town of Darien, upon which she has in good faith planted large quantities of oysters, and prays for an injunction restraining the defendants from entering upon them, removing the stakes and taking up the oysters. The defendants deny that the plaintiff has any title to the ground, alleging that it is, and for more than ten years past has been, a natural oyster bed. The court decided that none of the ground in question was a natural oyster bed.

The court finds that a part of the ground was, in the summer of 1888, pursuant to the statute (Rev. Statutes of 1875, p. 214, see. 3), designated to the plaintiff and to others who afterwards assigned their rights to her, and the other part of the ground was designated to the plaintiff’s assignors in the months of February and March, 1881.

The court also finds that the ground so 'designated in 1881 was first inclosed by buoys and stakes on the 29th day of September, 1882, and that until then the public had no knowledge of such designation.

Upon the trial the defendants introduced evidence to prove that all the ground in question was, and for ten years before had been, a natural oyster bed. To rebut that evidence the plaintiff offered in evidence the report of a committee appointed by the Superior Court, pursuant to the act of 1881, (Session Laws of 1881, p. 104, sec. 12, now Gen. [578]*578Statutes, § 2326,) to locate, and describe by proper boundaries all the natural oyster beds in the town of Darien, and to make report, etc. The principal report was dated January 16th, 1883, with a supplemental report dated March 26th, and was recorded March 27th, 1883, and it did not describe any part of the ground in question as a natural oyster bed.

The defendants introduced evidence that in May, 1883, certain other parties brought a petition to the Superior Court under the provisions of the act, (Rev. Statutes of 1875, p. 215, sec. 11,) praying the court to declare the designations of all the land in question void, and to order the removal of the stakes inclosing it, upon the alleged ground that it was a natural oyster bed, which action was still pending.

The defendants claimed that the committee- appointed under the act of 1881 had no jurisdiction over ground which had been designated before that act went into effect, and hence that their report, not describing that part of the ground in question which was designated in March and September, 1881, as natural oyster ground, was not evidence that it was not such. And they assign the refusal of the court so to rule as their first specific reason of appeal.

The defendants rely in support of their claim upon the case of The Application of the Clinton Oyster-ground Committee, 52 Conn., 5. That case was a remonstrance against the report of a committee appointed under the act of 1881 to designate the natural oyster beds in the town of Clinton. “Several persons” (in the language of the court) “who had oyster grounds set out to them in severalty prior to the passage of the act, and who had acquired valuable interests therein, and whose interests might be seriously affected if the report of the committee should be accepted, appeared and remonstrated against its acceptance.” The court rejected the report of the committee, saying “that the act of 1881, notwithstanding its general language, does not apply to oyster ground previously designated.”

The case is undoubtedly a decisive authority for the defendants if the word “ designated ” as there used is to be taken as referring merely to the act of the committee au[579]*579thorized to determine and inform applicants what ground they may occupy. Before the applicant can acquire any right to the exclusive occupation of the ground he must “mark and stake out the place.” This he may or may not do after the committee has acted. Until he does it the rights of the public in the ground assigned to him are not affected.

It is apparent from the statement of the case referred to that the remonstrants had perfected rights to the ground in question in that.case and that the word “designated” was used to describe such rights. In the present case the ground was designated to the plaintiff or her assigns by the oyster committee some months before the act of 1881 went into effect, but no steps were taken by her to appropriate it to her use until September 29th, 1882, more than a year after the act took effect, and when the committee for making designations would have been justified in presuming that she had abandoned any claim to it if another application for it had been made.

Of course if the committee appointed under the act of 1881 to investigate the waters of the town had made its investigation during this interval and before the stakes were finally set, it would have taken jurisdiction of this ground and passed upon it as upon the rest of the open ground, and its report of all the natural oyster beds of the town, with the omission of the ground in question', would have been a final determination that, at the return of the report in March, 1883, this ground was not a natural oyster bed. And if the report was thus conclusive as to the character of this ground in 1883, it was clearly admissible as evidence tending to show that the ground was not a natural oyster bed when, two years before, it was designated to the plaintiff’s assignors. It is a matter of common knowledge that oyster beds are of slow growth, and that if certain ground was not such at a particular date, it would not have been such two years before. This is especially so since such oyster beds grow constantly from less to greater, so that, while it might not be certain that oyster ground that was [580]*580not clearly a natural oyster bed to-day would not become such in two years, it would be certain that ground that is not a natural oyster bed to-day was not such two years ago.

The question therefore, whether the report of the committee was admissible as proof that the ground in question as not a natural oyster bed in 1888, must depend mainly upon whether the committee made its investigation before the ground was staked out on the 29th of September, 1882.

Even if the ground had been staked out before the inspection made by the committee, yet as, under the view we have expressed, that oyster grounds designated to individuals before the act of 1881 took effect fell under the jurisdiction of such a committee where not seasonably staked out, it might be regarded as the duty of the committee to ascertain the facts and assume jurisdiction over the ground in question and might be presumed that it did its duty and examined the ground. But we think it more reasonable to infer from the facts found that they visited the ground before the stakes were set, when there would have been nothing to suggest a previous designation and they would of course exercise their jurisdiction over the ground.

All that appears with regard to the time when the committee in fact acted is, that it was appointed by the Superior Court at its February term in Fairfield County in 1882, that it gave public notice on the 14th of April that it would begin its investigation and hearing on the 12th of May, 1882, and that it completed its report on the 16th of January, 1883, except a short supplemental report dated March 26th, which was returned to the court and accepted March 27th, 1883.

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Bluebook (online)
18 A. 253, 57 Conn. 576, 1889 Conn. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-petty-conn-1889.