Connecticut Statutes
§ 26-249 — Private ownership in cultivated shellfish.
Connecticut § 26-249
This text of Connecticut § 26-249 (Private ownership in cultivated shellfish.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Bluebook
Conn. Gen. Stat. § 26-249 (2026).
Text
Each person who plants or cultivates oysters, clams or mussels, in any place lawfully designated, shall own them and also all other oysters, clams or mussels on such place, and have the exclusive right of taking up and disposing of them and of using such place for the purpose of planting or cultivating oysters, clams or mussels therein, which place shall be transferable by written assignment; but nothing herein contained shall affect the rights of any owner of lands in which there may be saltwater creeks or inlets, or which may be opposite or contiguous to such navigable waters; nor authorize any shellfish commission or selectmen to designate, nor any person to mark, stake out or enclose, any natural oyster or clam bed, or infringe upon the free navigation of such waters, or interfere with
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Legislative History
(1949 Rev., S. 5084; P.A. 86-225, S. 9.) History: P.A. 86-225 transferred functions from oyster-ground committees to shellfish commissions. To dig shellfish between high and low water marks is a common right. 5 D. 22. Riparian owner may wharf or channel. 62 C. 139. Cited. 112 C. 214; 177 C. 287. When one has franchise to oyster ground, town liable for damage it causes by laying sewer pipes. 12 CS 135.
Nearby Sections
15
§ 26-1
Definitions.§ 26-100
Posting notices.§ 26-102
Fish spawning areas and refuges.§ 26-104
Bantam Lake sanctuary.§ 26-106
Milford refuge.§ 26-107h
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Bluebook (online)
Connecticut § 26-249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/statute/ct/26-249.