The Supreme Court ruled in favour of two Michigan land
owners who maintained that fish had no right to swim in the water on their
property and, as a result, the developers should be able to grace the wetlands
with a shopping mall and a condominium.
Until now, the courts had generally maintained that fish
have certain inalienable rights and that among them is the right to swim in and
out of any waterway they can navigate.
The ruling was, however, not the resounding victory the land
owners had hoped for because it only applied to newly arriving fish; the ones
already located in the wetlands could continue to swim there.
The splintered outcome opened the dam to more litigation in
the lower courts and attorneys for the ACLU vowed to defend the rights of all
fish to enter and exit any wetland at will.
The ruling also muddies the Clean Water Act and may spur
debate on whether or not fish should be permitted to swim in water at all,
since their presence may shock people who look into a glass of water before
they drink it.
Coming down solidly against the fish, Justice Scalia
maintained that fish rights had gone "beyond parody," because, they
now seemed to cover even "man-made drainage ditches and dry arroyos in the
middle of the desert."
Justice Stevens, however, wrote that the wetlands "had
surface connections to tributaries of traditionally navigable waters" and
so the fish should be able to swim there without undue hindrance.
Justice Souter wondered why Congress would permit fish in rivers
but rule them out of waterways and wetlands that feed them, maintaining,
"All you've got to do is let a fish swim into a tributary before you can
arrest it for trespassing."
But Justice Scalia shot back that such logic would grant
fish the right to swim in "a storm drain because during heavy rains it
could be considered navigable." He
went on to say, "I suggest it's absurd to call storm drains 'waters of the The United States.' They're drainage ditches. When it comes to waters of such
magnitude, we should confine the swimming rights of fish to goldfish
bowls."
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