Under authority of CL 1948, § 300.14 (Stat Ann 1951 Rev § 13.1224) plaintiff filed a complaint in circuit court alleging that a certain fish net of greater value than $300, seized by it and owned by defendants, had been set and used illegally in the waters of Lake Huron, contrary to CL 1948, § 308.5(h) (Stat Ann 1949 Cum Supp § 13.1496[h]), and praying for its condemnation and confiscation. The statutory citation or show cause order issued. Defendants filed an answer and a demand for jury trial, which was denied. On trial plaintiff put in ■proof of the illegal use of the net, at the conclusion *346 of which defendants rested without offering proofs. Prom an order of condemnation and confiscation they appeal, on leave granted.
Did denial of a jury trial constitute error? Plaintiff cites authorities
(e.g., Peoples Wayne County Bank
v.
Wolverine Box Co.,
The statute under which these condemnation proceedings were brought is silent on the subject of a jury. Michigan Constitution. 1908, art 2,. § 13, provides, as did-Michigan’s previous Constitutions, that “The right of trial by jury shall remain.” Thus the right to .trial by jury is preserved in all cases where it existed prior to adoption of the Constitution.
Tabor
v.
Cook,
The precise question presented, then, is whether the proceedings here are of such character that a jury trial would have been available before adoption of the Constitution. Plaintiff says the proceedings .are equitable in nature, as for abatement of a nuisance, and that in such cases juries were not employed prior to the Constitution. The statute under which this suit is brought does not provide, however, for an action in chancery. The procedure therein specified, including appeal in the nature of certiorari, is distinctly foreign to chancery and the proceedings ■are definitely not equitable in nature. Furthermore, the legislature did not declare nets used unlawfully to be a nuisance. Such nets may be put to a lawful ■use. They are not contrabrand. Cases cited holding that a jury trial is not essential in situations involving nuisances or contrabrand are, therefore, not in point.
Defendants do not claim that this is a criminal case, nor is it criminal in nature and for that reason ■entitled to be tried by jury. It is a proceeding
in rem,
to recover a penalty, and has as its purpose prevention of illegal fishing. See,.in this connection,
People
v.
Hoffman,
Defendants cite authorities
(Minnie
v.
Port Huron Terminal Co.,
“Such summary proceedings as were known to the common law were not triable by jury as a matter of right. (4 ,B1. Com. 280.) Summary proceedings of this character authorized by the State in the exercise of its police power and designed to effectually suppress the unlawful traffic in intoxicating liquors were unknown to the common law or to the statutory laws of this territory at the time our Constitution was adopted, and are not comprehended in the guaranty of trial by jury. Upon this question there is some diversity of opinion, but the decided weight of authority and the better reasoning support the view herein indicated. * * *
“It would not he questioned by anyone that if the forfeitures of the liquors were a part of the penalty imposed upon a defendant for a violation of the law, the right of trial by jury would obtain; hut, as observed heretofore, this proceeding is in rem, entirely *349 distinct from, and independent of, the criminal prosecution and having different objects and results in view.”
Defendants fairly and properly state that for collection of forfeiture cases resort should be had to 17 ALB. 568, 50 ALB 97, and 23 Am Jur, p 614. The mentioned American Jurisprudence citation, namely 23 Am Jur, Forfeitures and Penalties, § 18, contains the following:
“While property that is ordinarily used for unlawful purposes and is decreed to be a nuisance per se may be forfeited without a trial by jury under the police power of the State, that is altogether a different proposition than the right to forfeit property that is ordinarly used for lawful purposes, wherein an issue of fact may be joined as to whether or not the property was being used for an unlawful purpose. In trials in the State courts for forfeiture of property capable of lawful use, the position has been taken in some jurisdictions that the statutes must provide for trial by jury, and if they do not do so, they are unconstitutional as violating the provisions of the State Constitution guaranteeing the right to trial by jury. Elsewhere, however, it has been held that a statute may validly prescribe the forfeiture of property ordinarily used in a lawful manner, such as automobiles, without permitting a trial by jury, on the theory that such condemnation is not under a cause of action known to the common law, to which causes the constitutional guaranty of trial by jury extends, but is under a new cause of action created by statute, a statutory proceeding for the forfeiture and condemnation of property which was unknown to the legal system at the time when the State Constitution was adopted.”
We incline to the latter view, believing that these proceedings are not under a cause of action known to the common law, but are under a new cause of action, created by statute, which was unknown to the
*350
legal system of this State when the Constitution was adopted. In
Ball
v.
Ridge Copper Co.,
“It is a different proceeding altogether from any which was known to our jurisprudence in 1850. It is .a new proceeding, and therefore, if jury trial cannot be had in it, that method of .trial is not cut off, but is simpfy not given. There is nothing in the Constitution which renders it necessary to provide for jury trial in new cases. The constitutional provision is, ‘The right of trial by jury shall remain,’ by which we ■are to understand merely that it is retained for the cases in which it existed before.”
We are not persuaded that this is a cause of action known to the common law in which a jury trial was accorded prior to adoption of the Constitution of this •State. Accordingly, we are constrained to hold that Michigan Constitution 1908, art 2, § 13, has no application here.
Defendants contend that the net was illegally ■seized as the result of an illegal search and that the court erred in denying their motion to suppress the evidence thereby obtained. Pertinent facts are that plaintiff’s officers, while patrolling Lake Huron by boat, came upon defendants’ net set about 10 miles from shore in water which their fathometer disclosed was more than 80 feet deep. They then took a sounding by chain which confirmed the depth. The statute (CL 1948, § 308.5[h]. [Stat Ann 1949 Cum Supp *351 § 13.1496(h)]) prohibits the use of such net in the waters of Lake Huron, if set in water of a depth greater than 80 feet. The officers then lifted the net and seized it. These proceedings followed. No illegal search is involved. The officers were within their rights in patrolling the public waters of Lake Huron, measuring their depth, and seeing what was plainly there to be seen, namely, defendants’ nets. This violated no right of defendants. On that basis and without search of defendants’ or anyone’s private property, the officers were able to and did observe- that the net was set and being used, in a public place, in a manner and place violative of the statute. Seizure thereupon became their duty (CL 1948, § 300.11 [Stat Ann 1949 Cum Supp §13.1221]). Defendants say, however, that the subsequent examination of the nets constituted illegal search. They urge that while an arrest for probable cause may be made in cases of felony, in misdemeanor cases an arrest may be made without warrant only when the offense is committed in the officer’s presence and that the right of search without a warrant is coextensive with the right to make an arrest without á warrant. However sound defendants’ theory of the law in this regard may or may not be, suffice it to say that the net was being used unlawfully at the time and place in question in the very presence and view of the officers. The misdemeanor was committed in the presence of the officers. The court correctly denied defendants’ motion to suppress.
Finally, it is defendants’ position that conviction on a criminal charge of illegal use of the net contrary to statute (CL 1948, § 308.5[h] [Stat Ann 1949 Cum Supp § 13.1496(h)]) is a prerequisite to these proceedings. At the time of the hearing below in the instant case, criminal proceedings had not yet reached trial. The statute does not so require in express terms, nor do we discern thereip. any evidence
*352
of a legislative intent to that effect. The case of
Osborn
v.
Charlevoix Circuit Judge,
Affirmed, with costs to plaintiff.
