Maine Code § 12-1841

Timber trespass on nonreserved public lands
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
1. Director to prosecute trespass cases. The director shall prosecute cases of trespass on
nonreserved public lands under the care, custody, control or management of the bureau.
[PL 1997, c. 678, §13 (NEW); PL 2011, c. 657, Pt. W, §7 (REV); PL 2013, c. 405, Pt. A, §24
(REV).]
2. Liability of trespassers. If any person unlawfully enters or trespasses upon nonreserved public
land while that land is under the care, custody, control or management of the bureau by cutting,
destroying, taking or carrying away any trees, timber, wood, grass or other materials under or upon
those lands without the express written consent of the bureau, that person and all persons participating
in those actions are trespassers, jointly and severally liable in damages for such trespass, and they may
be sued for trespass in any county. The measure of damages is the highest price those materials would
bring at the usual place of sale of the materials. If the trespass is willful, the court shall assess treble
damages and the costs of maintaining the action. For the purposes of this section, a trespass is willful

if the land upon which the materials were cut, destroyed or taken, or from which the materials were
carried away, was posted with conspicuous notices of state ownership at or near the point where roads
entered into the state-owned land; if the land is otherwise posted or identified in a manner reasonably
likely to come to the attention of intruders; or if the intruder had actual knowledge of the fact of state
ownership.
[PL 1997, c. 678, §13 (NEW); PL 2011, c. 657, Pt. W, §7 (REV); PL 2013, c. 405, Pt. A, §24
(REV).]
3. Title to materials illegally taken to remain in State. Title to all materials taken in violation
of this section must remain in the State, and the State may seize and sell all such materials. At such a
sale, no person who was connected in any way with committing such a trespass or who aided those who
committed it may become a purchaser directly or indirectly.
[PL 1997, c. 678, §13 (NEW).]
4. Penalty.
[PL 2001, c. 604, §9 (RP).]

‹ Prev All Maine sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.