Maine's Beaches are Public Property
About In nearly 35 years of research and writing on the ownership of, and public rights in/on, Maine’s intertidal lands, Delogu's focus has been on cases, laws and legal principles affecting Maine’s intertidal land law. The premise of this volume is that the Bell cases, insofar as they define ownership of and public rights on intertidal lands, were wrongly decided. This volume, after exploring many of the errors in the Bell cases, urges Maine’s highest court (or the U.S. Supreme Court) to reexamine the rationale and holding of both Bell cases. Judicial errors, whether of short- or long-standing, can and should be corrected. Delogu firmly believes that a reexamination of the errors and the issues ignored by the Bell courts will lead a reexamining court to conclude that title to intertidal lands in Maine is held by the state in trust for the public, except for small areas addressed in an amendment to Maine’s Submerged Lands Act—areas actually filled at some time in the past pursuant to