Court Opinion

ID: 3673458
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:21:04.801236+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:20:42.577155
License: Public Domain

This was an action on the case brought by the plaintiff for the purpose of recovering damages which he alleged he had sustained by the interference of the defendant with his seine whilst he was enjoying his exclusive right of fishing in the waters of Albemarle Sound. The plaintiff proved and read in evidence a lease of an undivided half of the premises from Benbury, one of the defendants, to H. W. Collins. He then showed a conveyance of the term from H. W. Collins to Josiah Collins, and a conveyance from Josiah Collins to the plaintiff. The plaintiff then called upon Joseph B. Skinner, who stated that in 1807 he, in connection with another gentleman, established the first large fishery on the waters of Albemarle Sound; that at the place which the plaintiff fished a small seine was employed in 1798, but was after that time discontinued; that in 1817 a company of gentlemen (119)  ememployed [employed] a seine at the same place about 1,300 yards long, but which was small in comparison with the length of the seines now used on the waters of the Albemarle; that a seine of about the same length was employed at this beach for several years in succession, but how many he could not state; that for several years no person fished, with a seine, the waters opposite this beach, when another seine was hauled there; but whether a seine had been regularly hauled at that place since, he could not state. The witness further stated that he had always understood that the owners of the land upon the Albemarle Sound had the exclusive right to fish the waters opposite the land, but he did not know whether they proceeded out, at right angles to the shore, to the channel or not; that many years ago a difficulty arose between *Page 91 
several fishermen on the Chowan River about the rights of fishing, which was adjusted between them, but in what way he did not state.
Upon cross-examination Mr. Skinner stated that according to the usage by which the right of fishing was enjoyed on the Albemarle Sound, if the owner of any part of the land on the sound wished to establish a fishery, and he found it necessary to his interest to fish water opposite the lands of the next proprietor, he had a right to do so, provided the fishery was then established and used by such proprietor. But if the owner of the adjacent lands afterwards established a fishery on his lands, then the owner of the land had the right to fish the water opposite his lands, though the water had been before occupied by the seine of another person; that in the case of two fisheries established near the line dividing two tracts of land, each one of them had a right to shoot his seine into and fish the water opposite the lands of the other whenever it became necessary to do so by reason of the current running up or down; that in the case last mentioned, when the current was running down, the owner of the lower fishery would shoot his seine into and fish the water opposite the land of the owner next above; and, also, when the current was running up the owner of the upper fishery would shoot his seine into and fish the water opposite the land below; that until the owner of land lying on the Albemarle Sound established a fishery by building the necessary houses, clearing      (120) the water of stumps, logs, etc., and providing a seine, every citizen of the State had a right to fish the water opposite the land, and betwen [between] the shore and the channel; and after a fishery had been thus established, whenever the owner ceased to fish it the citizens of the State had a right to fish the waters which had been occupied by the seine. The witness was inquired of if he knew any custom regulating the rights of fishing where two fisheries were so situated upon an indented position of the shore of the sound that each would be obliged to occupy the same water in fishing the water opposite their respective shores. He said he did not know of any custom regulating the rights of fishermen whose fisheries were so situated, as he knew of no fisheries so situated. In such a case he supposed they would have to come to some understanding. He further stated that many years ago, during a very dry summer, the waters of Albemarle Sound at the Edenton bay were so brackish that stock would not drink it; that about 22 miles below Edenton, on the Albemarle Sound, where he was born, he knew the waters of the sound were quite brackish, and they then afforded an abundant supply of sea fish and oysters; but whether the water at that point ebbed and flowed at regular intervals of time he did not know; that since his recollection several inlets through which the water flowed from the sea into the sound had closed up. The plaintiff then *Page 92 
read to the witness part of the lease from Benbury to Collins, and which has been made a part of this case, and inquired of him whether the words in that lease do or do not include the privilege of using the the houses and the beach, and the exclusive right of fishing in the waters opposite the beach, and whether fishermen do not so understand them ex vi termini. The defendant's counsel objected to the question, and his Honor ruled that the question was improper.
Cullen Capehart proved that he was and had been a fisherman for many years upon the Albemarle Sound; that his fishery was so situated that no seine would interfere with his, and that, as respects (121)  seines, he knew of no usage except that the owner of the land fished the water opposite his land; that many years ago he had some acquaintance with the custom of fishing in the Cashie River; that on that river the owners fished the waters opposite their lands, but when the current was running down, as it sometimes did in that river with considerable rapidity, then the fishermen would shoot their seines up the river, so as to draw them by the time the current would drift them down to the place of landing; that in thus shooting them up, each would sometimes go above the land line dividing the fisheries; that on one occasion he knew of a person who was about to establish a seine on Salmon Creek, which is a narrow stream emptying into the Albemarle Sound, and that Mr. Tredwell, who owned the land opposite the shore, and who himself had a fishery already established where the fishery was about to be established, objected to it, and the business was abandoned.
John H. Leary stated that he had been a fisherman on the Albemarle Sound for several years; that one of his fisheries was just above a fishery owned by the defendant Benbury; that when the water was calm, and there was little or no current, both he and Benbury shot their seines in the water directly opposite their land; but if the current was running up, he, the witness, would lay out his seine in water opposite Benbury's land, and Benbury would lay out his seine below his landing; and so, when the current was running down, the witness would shoot his seine higher up the sound, and Benbury, whose fishery was below that of the witness, would shoot his seine up the sound and opposite the land of the witness. His testimony as to the time when Sandy Point fishery was established, and the years for which it has been occupied as a fishery, was the same with that given by Joseph B. Skinner.
The witness further stated that he had no doubt that the establishment of the fishery by the defendant injured the value of the fishery at which the plaintiff fished, as the establishing a fishery just below another must in all cases have the effect to divert the fish in (122)  greater or less quantities from the fishery next above it; that *Page 93 
there was a fishery still lower down than the fishery occupied by the defendant, which was established by Mr. H. W. Collins whilst he occupied the fishery of the plaintiff, which the witness thought injured the Sandy Point fishery; that it was usual for persons owning land on the waters of the Albemarle to fish the water opposite their land; that he knew of no particular custom regulating the rights of fishing where from the indented form of the shore each one would necessarily, in fishing the water opposite his land, be obliged to fish the same water.
The witnesses all proved that when a fishery was established on the shore of the Albemarle Sound the value of the land was greatly increased; that the fishing beaches when rented out yielded large rents to their owners, and were valued at high prices upon the tax list. One of the witnesses purchased a farm on the Albemarle Sound for $22,000, upon which there was a fishery, and he stated he would not have given more than half that sum if it were not for the fishery. The witness also stated that in consequence of the facility of shipping produce, all the lands on the Albemarle Sound were more valuable than lands of the same fertility at a distance from the sound. Exum Newby proved that he had made a survey of the beaches occupied by the parties to this suit, and stated that if Collins' seine was to be laid out in the most direct course for the channel of the sound it would not occupy the water which the defendant fished with his seine, but that in laying it out in this direction it would reach, and probably cross, a sandbar, and that they would take very few fish; that from the form of the shore of the Sound where these two fisheries were, it was impossible for them to shoot their seines at right angles with their beaches without intersecting before they reached the channel of the sound; that the shore of the sound upon which the fisheries were established was curved, and that the water fished by the plaintiff lay opposite the defendant's land, as did the water fished by the defendant lay opposite the plaintiff's land.
The evidence proved that the plaintiff laid out his seine in the same direction in which the seines used at that fishery had    (123) been laid out by the persons who had occupied the same fishery previously, except that the plaintiff had increased the length of the seine at that place to 1,800 yards, and that the fishery occupied by the plaintiff had been occupied by Benbury immediately before his lease to H. W. Collins. The evidence proved that the defendant sometimes shot his seine in a portion of the water which the plaintiff fished, and that the plaintiff was thereby hindered in laying out and hauling in his seine, whereby his number of hauls were lessened. There was no evidence that the defendant occupied the water for any other purpose than that of fishing, or that he interfered with the plaintiff's seine when it was in the water. *Page 94 
The plaintiff's counsel here closed the case, and a motion of nonsuit was submitted. It was insisted on the part of the plaintiff:
1. That though the waters of the Albemarle Sound have sufficient depth to float sea vessels, yet it is not navigable in the common-law sense of that term.
2. That as the defendant leased the fishery to the plaintiff, he has no right to diminish the value of it by his own acts.
3. That there was evidence to be left to the jury from which they might infer a legislative grant.
4. That the evidence of Messrs. Skinner, Capehart, and Leary should be left to the jury as tending to show the universal usage of the fishermen upon the waters of the Albemarle Sound, and that such universal usage has the force of law.
His Honor expressed an opinion against the plaintiff upon the questions raised; whereupon the plaintiff submitted to a nonsuit, and judgment was rendered in favor of the defendant, from which the plaintiff appealed to the Supreme Court.
This case, which was before the Court at (124)  December Term, 1842, Collins v. Benbury, 25 N.C. 277, has been brought up again, with some additional facts which came out on a second trial. But they do not seem to vary the case materially.
It was not competent to examine a witness as to the meaning of a plain word in the contract; for that is a question of law determinable by the court.
There are no sufficient grounds for the presumption of a grant by either the executive officers of Government or by the Legislature; even if one could be presumed under any circumstances. To say nothing more, the present plaintiff has much enlarged his seine, so that his use and that of his grantors is not the same. But there really has been no continued and exclusive use of the fishery, as claimed by the plaintiff. He and those under whom he claims fished the waters at this place, it is true. But in so doing they only exercised a right which, prima facie, belonged to them in common with all other citizens; and their fishing is referable to that right, and cannot, of itself, be a ground for presuming an exclusive right. To this latter purpose it is necessary it should appear that all other persons have been kept out by the plaintiff and his grantors, not only from fishing with seines, but fishing in any manner in the waters to which the plaintiff lays claim. In that respect the case is not made out at all. It appears that it has been the common habit of those who chose to fish in any waters of the Albemarle Sound *Page 95 
before a seine ground was cleared and "a fishery established," as it is called, by the owner of the beach; and it has never been thought that such fishing was an usurpation. Now, the owner of a several fishery has the property in the fish, and may maintain trespass for taking them. Smith v. Kemp, 2 Salk., 637. Yet it does not appear that any one was ever sued by any owner of his land for catching fish there, nor, indeed, that such an action was ever brought by any owner of land on Albemarle Sound, either before or after he began to fish the waters to which his land was adjacent. The fact seems to be nothing more than that there has been some kind of understanding among contiguous riparian proprietors, for their own convenience, how they could and would exercise the right of fishing to the greatest advantage      (125) of, and with the least likelihood of interfering with, each other. But the interference which they contemplated was not an interference with a right, which one of them had as an exclusive right against all the world, but only an interference with his practical operations in the exercise of the public right of fishing in this great water. The rest of the community has had very little to say or do in the matter, because, as they had no beach, they could fish to little profit, and did not fish to the detriment of the riparian owner to any serious extent. But it is clear that the public at large have not yielded up the sound to the owners of the shore. The universal custom of fishing in any part of the sound before the owner of the adjacent shore had there cleared out fishing ground, and doing so without a single action being brought, demonstrates that everybody considered the right of such owner to the land to be stopped at the water's edge; and the forbearance, after the establishment of such fishery, to disturb the operations during the fishing season is thus shown to be merely the deference of one neighbor to the convenience and greater interest of another; for it is impossible that any one could think that one who did not, as owner of the adjoining land, also own the land covered by the water, and, consequently, have the right at all times to exclude persons from fishing within his waters, could, long after his grant for the shore,acquire the right to the land covered by the water, or the right of fishing there, by merely clearing out a bottom for the more speedy and secure fishing by a seine to be hauled up to his own beach. Such a mode of acquiring a several fishery is novel and untenable. The case, therefore, is, as it was before, dependent upon the question whether the plaintiff is the owner of the land over which he hauls his seine, by virtue of his property in the shore adjoining.
That is the proposition laid down in the case before, and we endeavored to show that the plaintiff was not such owner, because both the common law forbade the grant of property in land covered by a stream *Page 96 
(126)  of water which in that law was called navigable, and the statutes of this State, in like manner, forbid a grant of land covered by water which in those statutes is denominated navigable, and because Albemarle Sound must certainly be deemed navigable in the sense of either the one or the other of those laws, if not of both of them. It has been argued that the court reasoned illogically by treating things essentially different as having the same incidents merely because they have the same name, though the name has different significations. But that is a misapprehension of the argument on which the judgment rests. It did not turn on the force and effect of the term "navigable" alone and standing by itself; but upon the fact that at common law the land covered by navigable water, that is to say, an arm of the sea, or a river in which there is a flow and ebb of the tide, could not be granted, and that by the statute law of North Carolina the same rule was enacted in respect to streams that were actually navigable by sea vessels, though they might not have a tide. In other words, our judgment was given and plainly expressed to be given because, to constitute a several fishery, there must be right of soil, and that no person has in Albemarle Sound. There are rights of fishery without a right of soil. There is a right of fishery upon the high seas; but that is public, and belongs equally to all nations, and can be granted or restrained by no one in particular. There is also the right of fishing in navigable waters within the jurisdiction of a particular nation; and this right is prima facie public and common to all people of that nation. But it seems that in England exclusive rights of fishery (merely, and without the right of soil) might be granted in such waters by the king at one time; but it is said, not since Magna Carta. Duke of Somerset v. Fogwelt, 5 Barn. and Cres., 875. But the right of several fishery, not derived by a special grant from the crown as above, or by prescription (which supposes a grant), cannot exist independently of the right of soil. It was for that reason that at common law there could not be a several fishery in a navigable stream.
Lord Male makes the right of fishing the consequence of (127)  "the propriety of the soil," and Coke and Blackstone agree therewith. This plaintiff does not show a grant either for the fishery by itself or for the land over which he fishes. He shows only a grant for the land up to the water's edge, as we must take it. Now, if there be a tide in the sound, the grant confessedly cannot be carried into the water beyond the special butts and bounds mentioned in the grant. That there is a tide from the sea into the sound and back is extremely probable, nay, mathematically speaking, is certain, upon the evidence of the respectable gentleman who was called by the plaintiff to testify on this point. He proves the water to have been salt at Edenton, *Page 97 
and that at a short distance below, within his memory, it was commonly so. Though not ordinarily perceptible to a common observer, it is unquestionable that those must have been the effects of some tide; and any is sufficient within the rule of the common law. Tide is the ebb and flow of the sea; then, as high as salt water is found, so high the tide, the flow of water from the sea, ascends. It could get there in no other way but from the sea. Indeed, we know that although the rise of the water on the bars of our inlets is comparatively much less than in many other parts of the globe, yet there is a regular alternation of high and low water at all of them, varying at different inlets. That water, by the law of nature which makes it seek its level, will pursue its interior course until it meets with land of an elevation greater than its own at crossing the bar. Its flow through narrow and shallow inlets may not always or generally be obvious, because, before it reaches its final obstruction, it may be, and, it seems, is merged from observation in the contrary currents in these immense masses of waters produced by winds and large quantities of water discharged by long rivers with considerable descent. But the fact that the salt water from the ocean sometimes reaches Edenton, without an eastern storm, shows mathematically that that point is not above, but is below, the level of the rise of tide at the bar over which the waters of the ocean and of the sound intermingle. We say this is sufficient within the rule of the common law, which only requires a regular ebb and flow        (128) of tide, without distinguishing between the greater or less rise; as of 100 feet in the Bay of Fundy, 25 or 30 at Bristol, or of 4 to 6 over the bars of North Carolina, or any less rise and fall. But we do not deem it important to insist on that point, because the statute of this State enacts "that the water shall form one side of the survey," when an entry is made on a navigable water; and, therefore, the same effect follows as to the right of soil, as if the sound were navigable in the sense of the common law, provided it be such a water as is called navigable in the statute. That it is navigable, as that term was used by the Legislature, is beyond doubt; for if it be not, then, as was asked in Wilson v. Forbes,13 N.C. 30, what navigable waters have we which the Legislature could have meant? The act prohibits the entry and survey of the land covered by the sound; and if it cannot be included in the survey and expressly granted, it must follow that it will not pass as an incident to the ownership of the adjacent soil. Therefore, it is not the court that has transferred to waters in which there is no tide a quality or incident that at common law only attached to waters in which there is a tide; but it is the statute itself which affixes to the waters which it deems navigable, and the land covered by them, the quality of not being grantable as private property. But it was said at the bar *Page 98 
that the Legislature only meant by this provision to prevent an entry of land covered by such a water, by itself, and not to interfere with the principle that the owner of the adjoining land goes to the thread of a stream in which there is no tide. But that is clearly wrong; for the very subject of the enactment is the survey of land lying on navigable streams and "running back from the water," and Wilson v. Forbes, supra, was that of a survey of a tract of land which called for a navigable creek as a boundary, and for that reason it was held that the land stopped at the water's edge, or did not go to the thread of the stream.
Whether, then, Albemarle Sound have or have not a regular tide, or whether we be guided by the rule of the common law or by the (129)  injunction of the Legislature, we must say that there is no exclusive property in that great water, or in the land under it; and, therefore, that the plaintiff cannot recover, and the judgment must be
PER CURIAM.                                                Affirmed.
Cited: Fagan v. Armistead, 33 N.C. 434; Lewis v. Keeling, 46 N.C. 306;S. v. Dibble, 49 N.C. 110; S. v. Glen, 52 N.C. 325; Skinner v.Hettrick, 73 N.C. 58; Hettrick v. Page, 82 N.C. 68; S. v. Baum,128 N.C. 605; Land Co. v. Hotel, 132 N.C. 535.