Public trust doctrine

The public trust doctrine is the principle that the sovereign holds in trust for public use some resources such as shoreline between the high and low tide lines, regardless of private property ownership.[1]

Origins

The ancient laws of the Roman Emperor Justinian held that the sea, the shores of the sea, the air and running water was common to everyone. The seashore, later defined as waters affected by the ebb and flow of the tides could not be appropriated for private use and was open to all. This principle became the law in England as well. In the Magna Carta in England centuries later public rights were further strengthened at the insistence of the nobles that fishing weirs which obstructed free navigation be removed from rivers.

These rights were further strengthened by later laws in England and subsequently became part of the common law of the United States as recognized in Illinois Central Railroad v. Illinois, 146 U.S. 387 (1892). In that case the Illinois Legislature had granted an enormous portion of the Chicago harbor to the Illinois Central Railroad. A subsequent legislature sought to revoke the grant, claiming that original grant should not have been permitted in the first place. The court held that common law public trust doctrine prevented the government from alienating the public right to the lands under navigable waters (except in the case of very small portions of land which would have no effect on free access or navigation).

The public trust applies to both waters influenced by the tides and waters that are navigable in fact. The public trust also applies to the natural resources (mineral or animal) contained in the soil and water over those public trust lands.

Application

This doctrine has been primarily significant in two areas: land access and use, and natural resource law.

Access to ocean and ponds

The doctrine is most often invoked in connection with access to the seashore. In the United States, the law differs among the fifty states but in general limits the rights of ocean front property owners to exclude the public below the mean high tide line.

Massachusetts and Maine (which share a common legal heritage) recognize private property ownership to the mean low tide line-- but allow public access to the seashore between the low and high tide lines for "fishing, fowling and navigation," traditional rights going back to the Colonial Ordinance of 1647.[2] Maine's Supreme Court in 2011 expanded the public trust doctrine by concluding fishing fowling and navigation are not an exclusive list; the court allowed the general public to cross private shoreline for scuba diving.[3]

The public trust doctrine also finds expression in the Great Pond law, a traditional right codified in case law and statutes in Massachusetts, Maine, and New Hampshire.[4] The state is said to own the land below the low water mark under great ponds (ponds over ten acres), and the public retains in effect an access easement over unimproved private property for uses such as fishing, cutting ice, and hunting.[5]

In Oregon, a 1967 "Beach Bill" affirmed the state's public trust doctrine, and the right of the public to have access to the seashore virtually everywhere between the low and high tide marks. In California the situation is more complicated: private landowners often try to block traditional public beach access, which can result in protracted litigation.[6] Freshwater use rights have also been subject to litigation in California, under the public trust doctrine.[7]

Natural resources

The doctrine has also been used to provide public access across and provide for continued public interest in those areas where land beneath tidally influenced waters has been filled. In some cases, the uses of that land have been limited (to transportation, for instance) and in others, there has been provision for public access across them.

The doctrine has been employed to assert public interest in oil resources discovered on tidally influenced lands (Mississippi, California) and has also been used to prevent the private ownership of fish stocks and crustacean beds.

In most states in the United States, lakes and navigable-in-fact streams are maintained for drinking and recreation purposes under a public-trust doctrine.

See also

Further reading

Notes

  1. National Working Waterfront Network (July 22, 2015). "Public Trust Doctrine". Wateraccessus.com. Retrieved July 22, 2015.
  2. Dennis W. Nixon (1 January 1994). Marine and Coastal Law: Cases and Materials. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 105–. ISBN 978-0-275-93763-8.
  3. Evan Parrott (October 1, 2011). "Maine's Public Trust Doctrine Continues to Evolve" (PDF). Nsglc.olemiss.edu. Retrieved July 22, 2015. [The] Maine Supreme Judicial Court affirmed . . . that the public has a right to walk across [privately owned] inter-tidal lands to reach the ocean for purposes of scuba diving.
  4. Emory Washburn (1873). A Treatise on the American Law of Easements and Servitudes. Little, Brown. pp. 522–.
  5. William Randall (November 24, 2001). "Great Ponds Act — Archive — BDN Maine archive — BDN Maine". Archive.bangordailynews.com. Retrieved August 12, 2015.
  6. Lee Romney (March 12, 2013). "Dispute heats up over blocked access to Northern California beach - latimes". Articles.latimes.com. Retrieved August 12, 2015.
  7. http://www.monolake.org/mlc/
  8. David Bollier, "Mary Wood’s Crusade to Reinvigorate the Public Trust Doctrine", Resilience, Feb. 12, 2014.


External links

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