108 F. 623 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon | 1901
The petitioner was convicted in the state court: of having in his possession trout lor sale, in violation of the game laws of Oregon, and was sentenced to pay a ñne of $35. In default of ‘payment, he has been imprisoned by the sheriff of the county. He therefore makes this application for a writ of habeas corpus, and this hearing is for an order upon the sheriff to show cause why the writ should not be granted. The facts in the case, briefly, are that the i>et.itioner is the manager of the Chlopeck Fishing Company, doing business in Portland, Or.; that said company conducts a retail fish market in Portland; that the trout in question were purchased in the city of Beattie, in the state of Washington, where they had been lawfully caught, and were shipped from that state to the market of the company in Portland, for sale here.
It is contended for the petitioner that the law of Oregon which makes the possession of trout for sale, lawfully caught hi another state, unlawful, is a restraint of interstate commerce, and is therefore void. In the case of Geer v. Connecticut, 161 U. S. 519, 16 Sup. Ct. 600, 40 L. Ed. 793, it is held that a law of Oonnecticut-which provides that no person shall at. any time kill any woodcock, ruffed grouse, or quail for the purpose of conveying the same beyond the limits of the state, or shall transport or have in possession, with intent to procure the transportation beyond such limits., any such birds killed within sucli state, is legislation which it is within the constitutional power of the staff' to enact. In that case, as in this, it was contended that the act of the state of Connecticut was in restraint of interstate commerce, since it made the possession of the birds in question for the. purpose of conveying the same beyond the state illegal, notwithstanding the fact (hat said birds were lawfully killed in the state of Connecticut. The decision is based upon the fundamental distinction that exists between the qualified ownership in game and the perfect nature of ownership in other property. If game when reduced to possession became an article of property, in the ordinary sense of the word, it would belong to commerce; otherwise, it is a subject of control by the state, in the exercise of its police power. There, is,