The soil below low water mark in the Chesapeake Bay, within the
boundaries of Maryland, belongs to the state, subject to any lawful
grants of that soil by the state or the sovereign power which
governed its territory before the Declaration of Independence.
But this soil is held by the state not only subject to, but in
some sense in trust for, the enjoyment of certain public rights,
among which is the common liberty of taking fish, as well shellfish
as floating fish.
The state has a right to protect this fishery by making it
unlawful to take or catch oysters with a scoop or drag, and to
inflict the penalty of forfeiture upon the vessel employed in this
pursuit.
Such a law is not repugnant to the Constitution of the United
States, although the vessel which is forfeited is enrolled and
licensed for the coasting trade under an act of congress.
Neither is it repugnant to the Constitution as interfering with
the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction of the judicial power of
the United States.
Nor is the law liable to an objection that no oath is required
before issuing a warrant to arrest the vessel. That clause of the
Constitution refers only to process issued under the authority of
the United States.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 59 U. S. 72
Mr. Justice CURTIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a writ of error to the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel
County, in the State of Maryland, under the 25th section of the
Judiciary Act of 1789. It appears by the record that the plaintiff
in error, being a citizen of the State of Pennsylvania, was the
owner of a sloop called
The Volant, which was regularly
enrolled at the port of Philadelphia and licensed to be employed in
the coasting trade and fisheries; that in March, 1853, the schooner
was seized by the Sheriff of Anne Arundel County while engaged in
dredging for oysters in the Chesapeake Bay, and was condemned to be
forfeited to the State of Maryland
Page 59 U. S. 73
by a justice of the peace of that state, before whom the
proceeding was had; that on appeal to the circuit court for the
county, being the highest court in which a decision could be had,
this decree of forfeiture was affirmed; and that the plaintiff in
error insisted, in the circuit court, that such seizure and
condemnation were repugnant to the Constitution of the United
States.
This vessel being enrolled and licensed under the Constitution
and laws of the United States to be employed in the coasting trade
and fisheries, and while so employed having been seized and
condemned under a law of a state, the owner has a right to the
decision of this Court upon the question whether the law of the
state by virtue of which condemnation passed was repugnant to the
Constitution or laws of the United States.
That part of the law in question containing the prohibition and
inflicting the penalty which appears to have been applied by the
state court to this case is as follows: 1833, ch. 254:
"
An Act to Prevent the Destruction of Oysters in the
Waters of this State"
"Whereas, the destruction of oysters in the waters of this state
is seriously apprehended from the destructive instrument used in
taking them, therefore:"
"SEC. 1.
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of
Maryland that it shall be unlawful to take or catch oysters in
any of the waters of this state with a scoop or drag or any other
instrument than such tongs and rakes as are now in use and
authorized by law, and all persons whatever are hereby forbidden
the use of such instruments in taking or catching oysters in the
waters of this state, on pain of forfeiting to the state the boat
or vessel employed for the purpose, together with her papers,
furniture, tackle, and apparel, and all things on board the
same."
The question is whether this law of the state afforded valid
cause for seizing a licensed and enrolled vessel of the United
States and interrupting its voyage and pronouncing for its
forfeiture. To have this effect, we must find that the State of
Maryland had power to enact this law.
The purpose of the law is to protect the growth of oysters in
the waters of the state by prohibiting the use of particular
instruments in dredging for them. No question was made in the court
below whether the place in question be within the territory of the
state. The law is, in terms, limited to the waters of the state. If
the county court extended the operation of the law beyond those
waters, that was a distinct and substantive ground of exception, to
be specifically taken and presented on the record, accompanied by
all the necessary facts to enable this Court to determine whether a
voyage of a vessel,
Page 59 U. S. 74
licensed and enrolled for the coasting trade, had been
interrupted by force of a law of a state while on the high seas and
out of the territorial jurisdiction of such state.
To present to this Court such a question upon a writ of error to
a state court, it is not enough that it might have been made in the
court below; it must appear by the record that it was made and
decided against the plaintiff in error.
As we do not find from the record that any question of this kind
was raised, we must consider that the acts in question were done,
and the seizure made, within the waters of the state, and that the
law, if valid, was not misapplied by the county court by extending
its operation, contrary to its terms, to waters without the limits
of the state. What we have to consider under this writ of error is
whether the law itself, as above recited, be repugnant to the
Constitution or laws of the United States.
It was argued that it is repugnant to that clause of the
Constitution which confers on congress power to regulate commerce
because it authorizes the seizure, detention, and forfeiture of a
vessel enrolled and licensed for the coasting trade under the laws
of the United States while engaged in that trade.
But such enrollment and license confer no immunity from the
operation of valid laws of a state. If a vessel of the United
States engaged in commerce between two states be interrupted
therein by a law of a state, the question arises whether the state
had power to make the law by force of which the voyage was
interrupted. This question must be decided in each case upon its
own facts. If it be found, as in
Gibbons v.
Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1, that the state had not power to
make the law under which a vessel of the United States was
prevented from prosecuting its voyage, then the prevention is
unlawful and the proceedings under the law invalid. But a state may
make valid laws for the seizure of vessels of the United States.
Such, among others, are quarantine and health laws.
In considering whether this law of Maryland belongs to one or
the other of these classes of laws, there are certain established
principles to be kept in view which we deem decisive.
Whatever soil below low water mark is the subject of exclusive
propriety and ownership belongs to the state on whose maritime
border, and within whose territory it lies, subject to any lawful
grants of that soil by the state, or the sovereign power which
governed its territory before the Declaration of Independence.
Pollard's Lessee v.
Hagan, 3 How. 212;
Martin v.
Waddell, 16 Pet. 367;
Den v.
Jersey Co., 15 How. 426.
But this soil is held by the state not only subject to, but in
some sense in trust for, the enjoyment of certain public
rights,
Page 59 U. S. 75
among which is the common liberty of taking fish, as well
shellfish as floating fish.
Martin v. Waddell; Den v. Jersey
Co.; Corfield v. Coryell, 4 Wash. 376;
Fleet v.
Hagemen, 14 Wend. 42;
Arnold v. Munday, 1 Halst. 1;
Parker v. Cutler Milldam Corporation, 2 Appleton (Me.)
353;
Peck v. Lockwood, 5 Day 22;
Weston v.
Sampson, 8 Cush. 347. The state holds the propriety of this
soil for the conservation of the public rights of fishery thereon,
and may regulate the modes of that enjoyment so as to prevent the
destruction of the fishery. In other words, it may forbid all such
acts as would render the public right less valuable or destroy it
altogether. This power results from the ownership of the soil, from
the legislative jurisdiction of the state over it, and from its
duty to preserve unimpaired those public uses for which the soil is
held. Vattel, b. 1, c. 20, s. 246;
Corfield v. Coryell, 4
Wash. 376. It has been exercised by many of the states.
See Angell on Tide Waters, 145, 156, 170, 192-193.
The law now in question is of this character. Its avowed and
unquestionably its real object is to prevent the destruction of
oysters within the waters of the state by the use of particular
instruments in taking them. It does not touch the subject of the
common liberty of taking oysters, save for the purpose of guarding
it from injury, to whomsoever it may belong, and by whomsoever it
may be enjoyed. Whether this liberty belongs exclusively to the
citizens of the State of Maryland or may lawfully be enjoyed in
common by all citizens of the United States; whether this public
use may be restricted by the state to its own citizens, or a part
of them, or by force of the Constitution of the United States must
remain common to all citizens of the United States; whether the
national government, by a treaty or act of congress, can grant to
foreigners the right to participate therein; or what, in general,
are the limits of the trust upon which the state holds this soil,
or its power to define and control that trust, are matters wholly
without the scope of this case, and upon which we give no
opinion.
So much of this law as is above cited may be correctly said to
be not in conflict with, but in furtherance of, any and all public
rights of taking oysters, whatever they may be, and it is the
judgment of the Court that it is within the legislative power of
the state to interrupt the voyage and inflict the forfeiture of a
vessel enrolled and licensed under the laws of the United States
for a disobedience, by those on board, of the commands of such a
law. To inflict a forfeiture of a vessel on account of the
misconduct of those on board -- treating the thing as liable to
forfeiture because the instrument of the offense -- is within
established principles of legislation which have been applied
Page 59 U. S. 76
by most civilized governments.
The
Malek Adhel, 2 How. 233-234, and cases there cited.
Our opinion is that so much of this law as appears by the record to
have been applied to this case by the court below is not repugnant
to the clause in the Constitution of the United States which
confers on congress power to regulate commerce.
It was also suggested that it is repugnant to the second section
of the third article, which declares that the judicial power of the
United States shall extend to all cases of admiralty and maritime
jurisdiction. But we consider it to have been settled by this Court
in
United States v.
Bevans, 3 Wheat. 386, that this clause in the
Constitution did not affect the jurisdiction nor the legislative
power of the states over so much of their territory as lies below
high water mark, save that they parted with the power so to
legislate as to conflict with the admiralty jurisdiction or laws of
the United States. As this law conflicts neither with the admiralty
jurisdiction of any court of the United States conferred by
congress nor with any law of congress whatever, we are of opinion
it is not repugnant to this clause of the Constitution. The
objection that the law in question contains no provision for an
oath on which to found the warrant of arrest of the vessel cannot
be here maintained. So far as it rests on the constitution of the
state, the objection is not examinable here under the twenty-fifth
section of the Judiciary Act. If rested on that clause in the
Constitution of the United States which prohibits the issuing of a
warrant but on probable cause supported by oath, the answer is that
this restrains the issue of warrants only under the laws of the
United States, and has no application to state process.
Barron v. Mayor of
Baltimore, 7 Pet. 243;
Lessee of
Livingston v. Moore, 7 Pet. 469;
Fox v.
Ohio, 5 How. 410.
The judgment of the Circuit Court of Maryland in and for
Anne Arundel County is affirmed, with costs.