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The beach is more like state land/parks/blm. Do they not have that in Europe?
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I also should have added American Landowners would make it difficult. It's not just American "Roamers" that would keep this from working. American views on land ownership, property rights, and individualism would keep this from working here.And there you have it… everyone wants to be like Europe now… but they either are unaware or knowingly leaving a few crucial details out.
Are you sure about thisAre you sure about this?? If you go by a strict originalist interpretation of US law (often asked/promoted by Supreme Court candidates), trespassing is a quite modern invention (I forget the details, but I don't think trespassing laws existed until after the Civil War) and thus unlawful with respect to original intent. Most all early court decisions and precedents long established that nothing was "taken" by people passing over the land, therefore nothing was owed to any private parties and no rights of exclusion by property owners existed.
My family owns a decent piece of land in NH that has long remained unposted and traversed by others, hunted on, etc. When I see how trespass laws have been strengthened and abused to exclude people from land, rivers, etc in so many places, I still wish early U.S. law had better codified common law practices of the time when the concept of trespassing was basically unthinkable. We may have even developed better cultures of care and respect and use around roaming wild lands without the fences and signs..
I agree with the above. European right to roam culture, history and traditions (unwritten rules?) are very different from North American "spread westward, occupy the unused land and put it to productive use" tradition culture and history . These are two traditional mindsets that are mutually exclusive even though they can be appealing.I also should have added American Landowners would make it difficult. It's not just American "Roamers" that would keep this from working. American views on land ownership, property rights, and individualism would keep this from working here.
Aren't we all?Are you sure about this? Trespass was well established in English common law before the revolution. American common law is derived from English common law.
As to "most all early court decisions and precedents long established that nothing was 'taken' by people passing over the land," please meet William Blackstone: Trespass, according to William Blackstone, is “an entry on another man’s ground without lawful authority, and doing some damage, however inconsiderable, to his real property. …every such entry or breach of a man’s close carries necessarily along with it some damage or other: for, if no other special loss can be assigned, yet still the words of the writ itself specify one general damage, vis. the treading down and bruising his herbage.” 3 WILLIAM BLACKSTONE, COMMENTARIES 209-10.
Blackstone was bummed by bruised herbage.
I think he might be right actually, I found this article in the Atlantic talking about how trespassing laws only became ubiquitous post civil warAre you sure about this? Trespass was well established in English common law before the revolution. American common law is derived from English common law.
As to "most all early court decisions and precedents long established that nothing was 'taken' by people passing over the land," please meet William Blackstone: Trespass, according to William Blackstone, is “an entry on another man’s ground without lawful authority, and doing some damage, however inconsiderable, to his real property. …every such entry or breach of a man’s close carries necessarily along with it some damage or other: for, if no other special loss can be assigned, yet still the words of the writ itself specify one general damage, vis. the treading down and bruising his herbage.” 3 WILLIAM BLACKSTONE, COMMENTARIES 209-10.
Blackstone was bummed by bruised herbage.
Blackstone was bummed by bruised herbage.
Trespassing may be been made a crime in the US after the civil war, but it was a common law tort since the founding of the country (and back to England).I think he might be right actually, I found this article in the Atlantic talking about how trespassing laws only became ubiquitous post civil war
Do you know if in a typical tort case a landowner would have to prove damages to successfully sue? The article I was reading made it sound like many activities like hunting and fishing were typically allowed on private land even when the trespassers were taken to court.Trespassing may be been made a crime in the US after the civil war, but it was a common law tort since the founding of the country (and back to England).
Indeed...as evidenced by how people often treat public lands.Freedom to roam only works among civilized people. Clearly, it couldn't possibly work in the U.S.
I’d love to see Puget Sound’s tidelands made free to roam. Sure, jackasses would occasionally make a mess, but the nice thing about tide fluctuation is that it’ll quickly wash away any attempted squatters!
According to the Restatement (Second) of Torts, “[o]ne is subject to liability to another for trespass, irrespective of whether he thereby causes harm to any legally protected interest of the other, if he intentionally (a) enters land in the possession of the other, or causes a thing or a third person to do so, or (b) remains on the land, or (c) fails to remove from the land a thing which he is under a duty to remove.”Do you know if in a typical tort case a landowner would have to prove damages to successfully sue? The article I was reading made it sound like many activities like hunting and fishing were typically allowed on private land even when the trespassers were taken to court.