Wyman v. Oliver
Wyman v. Oliver
Opinion of the Court
This case has been tried before a jury resulting 'in a verdict for the plaintiff, and comes up upon a motion to set that verdict aside. The only question is as to the title of the premises. The charge in the writ is in substance an invasion of the plaintiff’s fishery, by erecting a weir upon it. The place described is upon the western shore of the Kennebec river, in the town of Phipsburg, where the tide ebbs and flows, and below .high water mark. The plaintiff is the owner of a fishery, some farther up the river, and claims to own the fishing privilege along the shore, down to, and including the place where the defendant, as he concedes, erected the fixtures complained of. No question is raised as to any public right of fishing, but only whether the •defendant has by his weir invaded the private and exclusive rights of the plaintiff. The defendant concedes that he built the weir .as charged, but claims that he did so as the lessee of William H. Higgins, the alleged owner, and thus the question of title is presented. If Higgins is the owner, or if the plaintiff has no title, the verdict must be set aside. If the plaintiff has a title it must stand.
Both parties claim under Mark L. Hill, who formerly owned the upland on the western bank of the Kennebec river, extending three hundred to four hundred rods up and down the river, and ■opposite' to the fishery in question. It is conceded that as riparian owner, under the ordinance of 1641, his title extended ■.to low water mark, subject to the rights of the public, not now
We cannot concur with the counsel that this description referred only to such privileges as were then or had beenin use. It does not use the plural number, but refers to one privilege and one only, and that a continued one from the southerly to the northerly line of the farm. If it were not in use, it ivould nevertheless be a privilege, a right to take fish and use the means necessary for that purpose, and would pass in a conveyance under that name, equally as if in use. This privilege though not then in use, now occupied by the defendant, was included within the limits specified, and must be considered as having passed to the widow by the assignment.
In 1844, but subsequent to the assignment of the dower, the remaining portion of the Hill estate, except the reversion of the dower, was distributed among the heirs. This, too, ivas done by a warrant from the judge of probate. In this distribution, in the assignment of the lots bordering upon the river, with one exception, not material to this case, " the fishing privilege was reserved to the dower.” Thus keeping up the severance between the flats and the upland, and while the latter ivas divided the former was left undivided. Under this division it does not appear that the heirs, or any of them claimed any part of the fishing privilege, or that the commissioners intended to, or did assign it, but the contrary is evident.
Mrs. Morse appears to have retained the title, thus obtained,, until her death, after which in a distribution of her property among her heirs, the commissioners assigned to Jacob G. Morse,, as a part of his share, "all the fishing privileges and flats belonging to said dower lot.” This is substantially the same language used in the assignment to Mrs. Morse, and the connection shows that the dower lot is the same as that there referred to.
By deed dated September 8, 1865, Jacob Gf. Morse conveyed to Christopher Cushing " the fishing privilege east of the dower, set off to. me in the division of the estate of my late mother.”
November 6, 1868, Andrew C. Hewey, as administrator on the estate of said Cushing, conveyed to'John Tucker the "lot or
October 5, 1871, Tucker conveyed to the plaintiff the fishing privilege, " known as the Morse privilege, with all the rights connected therewith, which the said Christopher Cushing bought of Jacob G. Morse, by his deed dated September 8, 1865.”
Thus it appears that the fishing privilege in front of the farm of Mark L. Hill, by the assignment of dower, the several distributions among the heirs, and all the conveyances has been treated as one privilege, extending from his north to- his south line, and by the description and references in these several different conveyances, the title is so clearly traced from the original owner to the plaintiff, as to leave no doubt as to the validity of his claim, or any room for that of the defendant, or his lessor.
An examination of the grounds upon which the defendant places the alleged title, under which he claims, does not change the result.
The lessor certainly has no claims by virtue of his riparian ownership. The first and continued severance of the fishing-privilege from the upland, would preclude this. But his failure to sustain his title on this ground is equally, or more clear, when it is examined more specifically. This claim, if it has any foundation, must rest upon a deed from Almira H. Goss, an heir to Mark L. Hill, and to whom was assigned lot eleven upon the plan, next northerly of the dower lot. The evidence shows that the fishery claimed by the defendant, and where the 'erections complained of are, is situated just above the northerly line of the dower, extended to the river. It is, therefore, opposite to lot eleven, and belongs to that lot, if any. But when that lot was assigned the fishing privilege was " reserved to the dower.” It did not, therefore, pass to Mrs. Goss. There is nothing in the case which tends to show that Mrs. Goss, or any of her successors, subsequently acquired any title to the fishery, and of
Motion overruled.
Judgment on the verdict.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Henry L. Wyman v. Eugene Oliver
- Status
- Published