188 S.W.2d 641 | Ark. | 1945
Appellant was convicted by the lower court of violating 5957 of Pope's Digest of the laws of Arkansas, which is as follows: "Hereafter any person fishing for commercial purposes in the waters of this state shall immediately and carefully return to the waters from which the same are taken any game fish *980 commonly known as trout, bass, crappie, bream or perch, goggle-eye, jack salmon, pike or any other fish, the sale of which is prohibited, caught or captured in any type of tackle being used by such person. Persons fishing for or dealing in commercial or rough, saleable fish, such as cat, buffalo, drum, and carp are prohibited from displaying at their fish docks or places of business, or holding in their live boxes, fish that cannot be sold in this state, and commercial fishermen and fish dealers are prohibited from giving away undersized commercial fish or game fish species. Any person violating any provision of this section shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and on conviction shall be fined in any sum not less than twenty-five dollars ($25)."
Appellant, a licensed commercial fisherman, was found in possession of a catfish less than 16 inches long. Sale of a fish of this size is forbidden by law (sub-division K, 13, Act 146 of the General Assembly of Arkansas, approved March 4, 1943), and appellant was required (5957, Pope's Digest) to throw it back into the water as soon as he caught it. It was stipulated in the trial below that the game warden found appellant in possession of a catfish under 16 inches in length, and that appellant did not intend to sell this fish. It is conceded by appellant that he violated the law requiring commercial fishermen to throw such a fish back into the water, but it is argued by him that this law is unconstitutional in that it denies equal rights, privileges and immunities to licensed commercial fishermen and non-commercial fishermen. He contends that, since non-commercial fishermen may catch and consume such fish, the privilege of doing so may not be denied to him simply because he has obtained license to fish for commercial purposes.
Fish and game, except those in privately owned ponds, are the property of the state (5835, Pope's Digest), and it has been universally held that the state may regulate the taking thereof. The state, in promulgating these regulations, may not make any arbitrary discrimination against any class of citizens, but the state, in licensing commercial fishermen, has the power to attach *981
to the license any reasonable condition or regulation as to the manner in which the fishing is to be done or the size and kind of fish to be taken from the waters of the state. Sherrill v. State,
In the case of Tuttle v. Wood,
A question somewhat similar to the one involved in the case at bar was considered by the Supreme Court of Louisiana in the case of State v. Monteleone,
The wisdom and propriety of statutory enactments are matters to be determined solely by the legislative branch of the government. Courts are not authorized to strike down a law enacted by the General Assembly unless it clearly appears that the law contravenes some provision of the constitution; and, in case of doubt as to the constitutionality of a statute, the doubt must be resolved in favor of the validity of the law, Cairo Fulton Railroad Company v. Parks,
We cannot say that requiring commercial fisherman to throw back into the water small fish caught by them is arbitrary — even though the effect of this is to deny to commercial fishermen the right to catch such fish for their own use. Commercial fishermen ordinarily use much more effective tackle and equipment than the non-commercial fishermen, and are generally more skillful fishermen than those who do not fish for gain. They are, therefore, capable of taking fish in much greater quantities than fishermen for sport. Furthermore, if commercial fishermen were permitted to catch and have in their possession these small fish for any purpose, it might be difficult to show that such fish were not caught by the fishermen for their own use. These considerations may well have led the Legislature to conclude that, in the interest of conservation of wild life, it was expedient to enact such a law as the one appellant stands convicted of violating.
We conclude that the statute here challenged did not create such an arbitrary or illegal discrimination *984 against appellant as to violate the provisions of the state and federal constitutions requiring equal rights, privileges and immunities for all citizens.
The judgment of the lower court is accordingly affirmed.