The Legislature, at the first session held in 1907, enacted a statute, entitled “An act relating to the preservation, propagation and protection of game animals, wild birds and fish; establishing the department of game and fish, creating the office of state game and fish commissioner, and providing for his election and compensation; creating the office of county game and fish wardens, and deputy game and fish warden, and providing for their appointment and compensation; creating a game and fish protection fund and appropriating mon
The affidavit on which this prosecution was commenced in the justice court reads as follows: “The state of Alabama, Bibb County. Personally appeared before me, A. H. Gentry, a justice of the peace in and for said county, O. H. Cole, who, being duly sworn, says on oath that within 60 days before making this affidavit, in said county, John Hyde did hunt on the lands of another without written permission, against the peace and dignity of the state of Alabama.” The jurat and signature are omitted here. It is first insisted, on demurrer, that the affidavit is defective, because it fails to allege that the hunting was of some of the birds or animals protected by the game law, and therefore that no violation of
It is next insisted that, in so far as section 44 is concerned, the act is unconstitutional as embracing a subject not within the police power of the state to deal with or legislate upon. Speaking generally with respect to the act, it may be said that the right of the state, in the exercise of the police power, to make regulations for the preservation of game and fish, restricting their taking and molestation to certain seasons of the year and under prescribed rules and regulations, is recognized and established, not only in the common law of England, but the decisions of the courts of last resort in many of the states, as well as by the Supreme Court of the United States.
In the case of Geer v. State of Connecticut, 161 U. S. 519, 16 Sup. Ct. 600, 40 L. Ed. 793, will be found an
Recurring to the position assumed and the point made by the defendant (appellant) in his brief, he does not, as we understand the point, contend for the general proposition that it is outside of the police power of the state to pass a law relating to the preservation and propagation of game animals, wild birds, and fish, but simply maintains that section 44 of the law here in judgment deals with a subject-outside of legislative competency in respect to the police power. The language of the brief in the statement of the proposition is as follows: “We further suggest that section 44 of the game law, in requiring of the landowner a written, as distinguished from an oral, permission, transcends the power of the state.” The argument in support of the contention proceeds on the theory, not that any right of the hunter is restricted, but that the right of the landowner in the use of his property is unduly restricted. Assuming, from this point of ffiew, that the defendant is in position to bring in question the constitutionality of the act, which right in defendant may well be doubted (8 Cyc. pp. 787-
On the foregoing considerations we hold that the point made by the defendant on the constitutionality of section 44 of the act is not well taken. No other question has been presented, and the judgment of conviction will be affirmed.
Affirmed.