Court Opinion

ID: 3578433
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:30:04.46562+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:46:42.373269
License: Public Domain

The people in their sovereign corporate capacity own the beds of all navigable waters within the state. They are held for the common benefit, and to promote the convenience and enjoyment of all the citizens, and not in the manner the capitol and public buildings are owned. Thus it is not to be supposed possible that this ownership can be exercised so as to operate injuriously upon private rights, as by authorizing A to erect a wharf in the front of the lands of B lying upon navigable waters, and thus prevent his access to them. One of the purposes for which the people own the beds of such waters is to protect and regulate *Page 474 
the rights of fishing in them. The legislature may make such laws for this purpose as it deems most beneficial to the common enjoyment of the right, in the same manner that it may for the public convenience authorize wharves to be erected upon navigable waters. So it doubtless may for commercial purposes authorize the filling up a part of the bed of a stream or cove which furnished a desirable fishing place. All these powers are within the scope of legislation. The constitution vests the whole legislative power of the state in the senate and assembly. (Art. 3, § 1.) It also authorizes them to confer upon boards of supervisors "such further powers of local legislation and administration as they shall from time to time prescribe." (Id. § 17.) The constitution had expressly conferred upon boards of supervisors certain limited legislative powers, (Id. § 5,) and this provision was obviously meant to authorize the vesting them with other powers in relation to local matters. By the act of April 3, 1849, (Laws of 1849, ch. 194, § 4 sub. 13,) the legislature gave authority to boards of supervisors to make laws and regulations "to provide for * * * the protection of shell and other fish within the waters of their respective counties." Under this authority, the supervisors of Queens county passed the law in question, imposing a penalty of fifty dollars for each offence against it, to be sued for and recovered, "in the name of the supervisor of the town in which the offence shall have been committed."
It is objected in the demurrer, that the plaintiff had not legal capacity to sue, and in the points, that he does not allege that he is supervisor of the town of North Hempstead, It is a sufficient answer, that he describes himself in the title of the complaint as supervisor of North Hempstead, and then commences it by saying, "The complaint of the plaintiff above named as supervisor as aforesaid shows, c." This is a very plain statement of the capacity in which he sues, and would not mislead any person of common understanding. *Page 475 
It is insisted by the defendant that the complaint does not state whether the oysters taken were dredged from their natural bed, or were deposited there by the defendant. This can not be material. The legislature has an undoubted right to regulate the oyster fisheries upon navigable waters, whether the oysters grew there naturally or were planted upon the land belonging to the state lying under water. Indeed, the use of these lands by individuals for their exclusive private benefit, could only be permitted on the ground of its public utility. But a conclusive answer is, that if the oysters were the private property of the defendant he should plead it. The natural and legal presumption is, that oysters in the bed of navigable waters grew there, and belong to those who first reduce them to possession. The law of the board of supervisors was simply intended to regulate the manner of taking them. It can not be objectionable in that view of the subject.
The next objection is, that the act of 1849 does not prescribe and limit the powers of the boards of supervisors, but expressly leaves the powers incident to their legislation unlimited in relation to the particular subjects embraced in them. It is said that they may provide extreme and cruel penalties for the violation of their laws. It is a sufficient answer to the suggestion, that the people have found it both safe and expedient to give a pretty large discretion to the legislature, relying confidently upon the fact that the officers the people select to make their laws will possess some prudence, have some sense of the right, and be guided in some degree by their consciences in discharging their duties.
Again; it is said that the legislation was not local: that oysters were not local, and thus not the subjects of local legislation. Oysters are not very migratory; and Cow Bay is local; and to make a law to regulate the fishing for oysters in Cow Bay, is to legislate for a locality. It is local legislation. It is of no consequence whether the people of the state own the oysters in that locality or not. *Page 476 
If they do, they have a right to preserve them. It was insisted that the people held the lands under water in Cow Bay as tenants in common. This is clearly a mistake. It belongs to the sovereignty. I see no reason why the judgment of the supreme court should not be affirmed.
GARDINER, J., gave no opinion.
All the other judges concurring,
Judgment affirmed.