United States v. Maine

United States v. Maine, 469 U.S. 504 (1985), also known as the Rhode Island and New York Boundary Case, was a decision by the U.S. Supreme Court, which held that Long Island Sound and Block Island Sound in part constitute a juridical bay under Article 7(6) of the Convention on the Territorial Sea and the Contiguous Zone, Long Island being an extension of the mainland and the southern headland of the bay, and (b) that the bay closed at the line drawn from Montauk Point at the eastern tip of Long Island to Watch Hill Point on the Rhode Island shore, the waters of the bay west of the closing line being internal state waters, and the waters of Block Island Sound east of that line being territorial waters and high seas. Maine is named in the title of the case because it is the northernmost of the thirteen defendant states with coastline on the Atlantic Ocean in a series of cases related to overlapping claims of state and federal jurisdiction over seas and the seafloor.

United States v. Maine
Argued November 26, 1984
Decided February 19, 1985
Full case nameUnited States v. Maine, et al.
Citations469 U.S. 504 (more)
105 S. Ct. 992; 83 L. Ed. 2d 998; 1985 U.S. LEXIS 47; 53 U.S.L.W. 4151
Case history
PriorOn Exception to Report of Special Master
Holding
Long Island is an extension of the North American mainland and surrounding waters may therefore be controlled by the states.
Court membership
Chief Justice
Warren E. Burger
Associate Justices
William J. Brennan Jr. · Byron White
Thurgood Marshall · Harry Blackmun
Lewis F. Powell Jr. · William Rehnquist
John P. Stevens · Sandra Day O'Connor
Case opinion
MajorityBlackmun, joined by unanimous

The federal government and the states did not agree on who controlled the Long Island and Block Island sounds. The states wanted control to regulate shipping and commerce on the sounds. The key to the case was if Long Island was, for legal purposes, an extension of the mainland or by the Convention an island. If it were considered an extension of the mainland, as the states argued, then the sounds would legally be inland bays controlled in relevant parts by the states, New York, Connecticut, or Rhode Island. If it were, for the Convention's purposes, an island, then the sounds would be considered open waters and be under federal control.

The court ruled in favor of the states, determining that the East River, which separates Long Island from the mainland at the Bronx, was too small for modern navigation until humans altered it. Thus, it was decided that Long Island is not a natural island under the law. Long Island and the adjacent shore also share a common geological history.

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