This Article provides a summary of the Maine common law of riparian boundaries. It is geared toward practitioners who practice or provide counsel in the area of real property law or who must litigate boundaries and title rights involving water bodies. This Article also includes recommendations for fixing previously undefined boundaries across water. However, readers should be aware that this Article does not attempt to provide an exhaustive survey of all riparian law. In recent years state and federal legislation has further limited or restricted specific landowner common law rights along water bodies
Getting to coastal waters in Maine can sometimes be a challenge, for despite the state’s 5,400 miles...
The public trust doctrine generally guarantees the public access to the shoreline, which is held in ...
The basis of public and private rights in the waters of the State of Michigan is grounded principall...
This Article provides a summary of the Maine common law of riparian boundaries. It is geared toward ...
Waterfront property, though extremely popular in Washington, presents problems of ownership with whi...
There is no particular policy reason why the same line should be used for both the upland boundary o...
A discussion about the private ownership of intertidal lands in Maine and what activities the public...
The determination of the boundary between public and private areas of the shoreline can be a topic o...
Historically, water consumption in the eastern United States has been governed by the common-law rip...
States East of the Mississippi River have long relied on the traditional common law of riparian righ...
Maine Perspectives piece on the stormwater rules proposed by the Maine Department of Environmental ...
Escalating use conflicts, the inertia of federal agencies, and a growing appreciation of the value o...
While Maine boasts thousands of miles of coastline, only a small portion of the state\u27s beaches i...
States rely on state ownership of the beds of streams, rivers, and lakes for various regulatory and ...
Evidence advanced for the proposition that “governments and legislatures cannot ignore the fundament...
Getting to coastal waters in Maine can sometimes be a challenge, for despite the state’s 5,400 miles...
The public trust doctrine generally guarantees the public access to the shoreline, which is held in ...
The basis of public and private rights in the waters of the State of Michigan is grounded principall...
This Article provides a summary of the Maine common law of riparian boundaries. It is geared toward ...
Waterfront property, though extremely popular in Washington, presents problems of ownership with whi...
There is no particular policy reason why the same line should be used for both the upland boundary o...
A discussion about the private ownership of intertidal lands in Maine and what activities the public...
The determination of the boundary between public and private areas of the shoreline can be a topic o...
Historically, water consumption in the eastern United States has been governed by the common-law rip...
States East of the Mississippi River have long relied on the traditional common law of riparian righ...
Maine Perspectives piece on the stormwater rules proposed by the Maine Department of Environmental ...
Escalating use conflicts, the inertia of federal agencies, and a growing appreciation of the value o...
While Maine boasts thousands of miles of coastline, only a small portion of the state\u27s beaches i...
States rely on state ownership of the beds of streams, rivers, and lakes for various regulatory and ...
Evidence advanced for the proposition that “governments and legislatures cannot ignore the fundament...
Getting to coastal waters in Maine can sometimes be a challenge, for despite the state’s 5,400 miles...
The public trust doctrine generally guarantees the public access to the shoreline, which is held in ...
The basis of public and private rights in the waters of the State of Michigan is grounded principall...