Piscataqua River border dispute

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The Piscataqua River border dispute was a dispute between the US states of Maine and New Hampshire over ownership of Seavey’s Island in the Piscataqua River, which forms the border between Maine and New Hampshire. The dispute was settled in 2002 by the US Supreme Court.

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[edit] Background

Seavey’s Island lies in the northern side of the Piscataqua River, between the cities of Kittery, Maine and Portsmouth, New Hampshire. The island was originally five separate islands which were conjoined between 1800 and 1866 in order to build a naval shipyard. The State of Maine asserts that the boundary between the states runs along the middle of the river to the south of Seavey’s Island, which places the island within Maine. The State of New Hampshire asserts a historical claim to ownership of the river up to the shoreline on the Maine side, which would place the island within New Hampshire.[1]

The United States government owns the island, which is the site of the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard. For many years the US Navy regarded the shipyard as belonging to New Hampshire (whence the name Portsmouth Naval Shipyard after the city of Portsmouth, New Hampshire). Later the Navy adopted a neutral position in the dispute.[1]

The political importance of the dispute is based on an income tax imposed on workers at the shipyard, many of whom live in New Hampshire and commute to work in the shipyard in Maine. New Hampshire contends that since the workers live in New Hampshire, paying taxes to Maine amounts to “taxation without representation.”[2] Maine receives an estimated $4–6 million per year in taxes from the shipyard workers.[2][3]

[edit] Supreme Court case

In March 2000 New Hampshire filed a lawsuit in the Supreme Court against Maine, claiming ownership of the island. The case was docketed as New Hampshire v. Maine, No. 130 Original (532 U.S. 742 (2001))[4]. According to the US Constitution, the Supreme Court has original jurisdiction in cases “in which a State shall be a Party”.

In 1977, New Hampshire had sued Maine (see New Hampshire v. Maine) over lobster fishing rights in the littoral waters off the Piscataqua River. In that case the Supreme Court entered a consent degree between the states, in which they agreed that the “middle of the river” was defined as the “the middle of the main channel of navigation of the Piscataqua River.”[5] The settlement was based on a 1740 decree by King George II, defining the border between the states as the middle of the main navigation channel. However, the 1977 case was concerned only with the “lateral marine boundary” (littoral waters) between the mouth of the river and the Isles of Shoals, and did not strictly address the inland boundaries between the states.[4][6][7]

Maine responded to the 2001 suit with a request to dismiss based on the principle of res judicata, arguing that the 1740 decision and the outcome of the 1977 case barred New Hampshire from filing another border complaint. Thus the question to be decided in this (2001) case was: Did New Hampshire’s 1977 suit against Maine, and its outcome, bar New Hampshire from this further action?

The case was dismissed on procedural grounds rather than being decided based on the arguments. On May 29, 2001, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg delivered the 8–0* decision of the Court, which held that "judicial estoppel bars New Hampshire from asserting that the Piscataqua River boundary runs along the Maine shore." Under the judicial estoppel doctrine, “Where a party assumes a certain position in a legal proceeding, and succeeds in maintaining that position, he may not thereafter, simply because his interests have changed, assume a contrary position, especially if it be to the prejudice of the party who has acquiesced in the position formerly taken by him...” Put simply: Since New Hampshire had agreed in 1977 that the border runs along the middle of the river, New Hampshire may not now claim that the border runs along the Maine riverbank. Wrote Justice Ginsburg: “New Hampshire’s claim that the Piscataqua River boundary runs along the Maine shore is clearly inconsistent with its interpretation of the words ‘Middle of the River’ during the 1970s litigation.”

*Justice Souter recused himself from the decision, most likely because he had been the Attorney General of New Hampshire and later an associate justice of the New Hampshire Supreme Court in the 1970s and 1980s.[2]

New Hampshire appealed the dismissal and requested the Court to reconsider its dismissal, but the Court denied the motion reconsider.[8]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b The New York Times, June 30, 2000: “Supreme Court Roundup; Border Dispute Will Get a Hearing”
  2. ^ a b c Northwestern University, Medill Journalism: “New Hampshire v. Maine”, by Dave Clark, Medill News Service
  3. ^ Portsmouth Herald “Taxation without Representation”
  4. ^ a b Oyez.org: New Hampshire v. Maine Note this is not the New Hampshire v. Maine case of 1977.
  5. ^ Findlaw.com: New Hampshire v. Maine, 426 US 363 (1977)
  6. ^ AdmiraltyLawGuide, New Hampshire v. Maine (PDF)
  7. ^ Portsmouth Herald: “Border dispute is back on local agenda”
  8. ^ New Hampshire Department of Justice News Release, August 6, 2001]

[edit] See also

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