247 P. 923 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1926
This is an application for a writ of habeas corpus. The petitioner is held by the constable of Sausalito township, county of Marin, under a warrant of arrest issued out of the justice's court of said township by virtue of a complaint filed in said court which charges that on the twelfth day of March, 1926, the petitioner ". . . did then and there wilfully and unlawfully transport and carry crabs from the Fish and Game District No. 1 1/2 to the County of Marin, State of California. . . ." The petitioner asserts the complaint is based on section
[1] Section
"For the purposes of this act a live car shall be any box, crate or pen in which live crabs are kept."
It will be noted at once that the statute does not directly confer any right or any privilege on anyone. Indirectly it confers the privilege of taking crabs in the seven districts named and the privilege of transportation as therein designated. Those privileges are conferred on all manner of men without limitation as to the residence, citizenship, color, or age of the person doing the taking. It is local and special legislation. But local and special legislation is expressly authorized on the subject. (Sec. 25 1/2, art. IV, Const.) [2] Even before that section was adopted all local and special legislation was not prohibited. If the classification adopted rests on any natural, intrinsic or constitutional distinction it is permissible. Looking at the entire statute it is clear that it was enacted for the purpose of preventing crabs from being totally destroyed. If we assume it is a fact that in the waters located in the seven districts crabs may be found in large quantities, then we may further assume that no one will engage in transporting large quantities of crabs from one place to another place where the same large quantities of crabs are to be found, and we may further assume that the supply of crabs will not be materially lessened by such restricted limitations. If we are otherwise in doubt and such assumptions will sustain the constitutionality of the statute, we must further assume that the legislature heard and determined the facts before it enacted the statute and that it found that the facts existed which were necessary to sustain the statute. (Galeener v. Honeycutt,
[5] We have proceeded as above in reply to the points made by the petitioner. However, it is not clear to us how, in the light of the decisions of this state, that the point discussed is presented by a consideration of the statute in question. The statute expressly prohibits certain acts and by implication grants other rights. It grants limited rights to take certain crabs in certain waters. Theretofore the ownership was in the people of the state. In the case entitled Ex parte Kennke,
The writ is denied and the petitioner is remanded.
Nourse, J., and Langdon, P.J., concurred.