144 Iowa 492 | Iowa | 1909
At the time of the occurrences in controversy the defendants were deputy game and fish wardens duly appointed under the laws of the state. Acting, as they claim, under the authority conferred upon them by the statute, chapter 15, title 12, of the Code and amendments thereto, they seized, and destroyed a fish net or seine owned by the plaintiff on the ground that the same was being used or kept for use in taking fish unlawfully from the waters of this state. It is not disputed that the net in question was being used, or had recently been used, in seining fish from the waters of what is known in the record as “Running slough” in the east part of Jackson County, but it is asserted that “Running slough” is, in fact, a part of the Mississippi River, and therefore the fishing was not unlawful. This contention suggests the point on which the case turns, and necessitates an examination of the statute in question. Code- Supplement 1902, section 2539, declares any seine, net, trap, or contrivance in use, kept or maintained for the purpose of catching fish contrary to law is a public nuisance, and makes it the duty of wardens, sheriffs and constables to seize and. destroy the same without warrant, and relieves them from liability to any person for damages on such account. Section 2540 of the same statute makes it unlawful'for any one at any season of the year to take any fish, except minnows for bait, from any of the waters of the state by any other means or device than hook and line. Section 2541 is as follows: “Nothing herein shall be held to apply to fishing in the Mississippi or Missouri Rivers nor to so much of the Des Moines River as forms the boundary line between this state and Missouri.” To make clear the geography of the situation, we here insert a plat showing the location of Running slough and other natural features in that vicinity.
Running slough is that stream or body of water opening from the river at “A,” and extending through the point “E” to “B,” where it again connects with the river. The body of water extending west from “E” to “D” is known as Brown’s Lake. The slough is about one hundred feet wide, and is not navigable, but affords passage for rowboats and launches, except in times of low water, and there is some current or movement in the water from north to south. A stream called “Smith’s creek,” originating some four or five iniles south and west of the point “A,” flows northeast, joining the slough just below its point of departure from the river. The land included between the river and slough, and locally known as “Railroad Island,” is somewhat lower than the land to the west of the slough, and is quite heavily timbered. The map in
A proper understanding of the law of the case will be facilitated by noting the circumstances leading to the exception of the Mississippi, Missouri, and (in part) Des Moines Rivers from the operation of our statute regulating the extent to which, and the manner in which, fish may be lawfully taken from the waters of the state. The original act of Congress providing for the organization and admission of Iowa as a state, approved March 3, 1845 (Act March 3, 1845, chapter 48, 5 Statute 142), provides that:
The state of Iowa shall have concurrent jurisdiction on the River Mississippi and every other river bordering on the said state of Iowa, so far as the said rivers form a common boundary to such state and any other state now or hereafter to be formed or bounded by the same; said rivers to be common to both; and the said River Mississippi and the navigable waters leading into the same shall be common highways and forever free as well to the inhabitants of said state as to all other citizens of the United States without any tax, duty, import or toll therefor imposed by the said state of Iowa.
Similar provision is made in the act admitting Illinois as. one of the United States, assuring its concurrent
Appellant bases the claim of jurisdiction upon the language of the acts admitting Illinois and Iowa into the' Union and the provisions of the Constitution and statutes of each in defining their respective boundaries.’ The act of 1818 (Act April 18, 1818, chapter'67, 3 Statute 428), admitting Illinois, gives to said state concurrent jurisdiction on the Mississippi River with any state or states to be formed west thereof so far as they shall form a common boundary. The act admitting Iowa contains the same provision as to concurrence of jurisdiction. The statutes of Illinois recognize the same extent of jurisdiction, and in this state it is declared .that our jurisdiction is concurrent on the waters of any river or lake which forms a common boundary between this and any other state. By our Constitution our eastern boundary is the middle of the main channel of the Mississippi River. Now, while it is, of course, not claimed that the laws of this state would have any inherent authority beyond the jurisdiction of this state, or that our laws can bind or affect property out of or beyond our territorial limits, it is insisted that this property or this alleged nuisance is so situated that either state may direct the manner of its use and order its removal or abatement. That the courts of Illinois might do
We have indulged in this liberal quotation from the precedent cited, not because of any marked parallelism between the facts there considered and those presented by the instant case, but because, as we conceive, it suggests the proper limitations to be placed upon the concurrent jurisdiction of the states, and affords a standard of material value in construing and applying the provisions of the law by which the taking of fish from the Mississippi River is excepted from the prohibitions and regulations which control fishing in other waters of the state. In this
It is very evident from the situation as here presented that the Legislature in enacting this statute recognized the fact that the two states in the exercise 'of their respective sovereignties might adopt materially different policies with respect to their game and fish laws, and that any attempt to enforce the peculiar regulations of one state upon a river which is subject to the concurrent jurisdiction of both would lead to serious complications, and difficulties, and, to avoid this, the exception was ingrafted upon the statute. That such exception must be strictly limited to the area of common jurisdiction is plain, for otherwise it would probably render the statute unconstitutional under the provision requiring that all legislation of a general nature shall have uniform application. What is meant when we speak of the river as a “common boundary” of the two states ? Do we mean the body of the great stream which constitutes the common highway of commerce of which Justice Wright speaks in the Gilbert case, the navigable stream where the citizens of the two states and of other states meet and come in contact, and cfoss and recross each other’s paths in the pursuit of their several lines of business and pleasure? Or do we mean not only this well-defined and unmistakable stream, but include therewith also all the interlacing unnavigable water belts, streams and streamlets which, in the level alluvial bottom lands through which the river flows, emerge here and there from such main body, make their way inland for greater or less distances, and then perhaps reunite with the navigable waters of the river further down its course? In our judgment these minor waters, which constitute no part of the navigable stream, and -do not in any manner or form
This common authority by the very terms of the act of Congress goes only “so far as said river shall form a common boundary.” Can it be said upon any fair construction of this language (and especially if we give any heed to the discussion by the court in the Gilbert case) that this small thread of water supplied in part by an opening or outlet from the river and in part by the waters of- Smith’s creek and such surface waters and drainage as it may receive in its course, and making its' entire course of several miles through lands which are admittedly wholly within the' territorial jurisdiction of Jackson County, constitute any part of the “common boundary” between the states of Iowa and Illinois ? We have no hesitation in answering this question in the negative. To hold otherwise' would lead to a most anomalous condition of affairs. Suppose the other view should obtain, and that two citizens of Jackson County afloat in a rowboat on Running slough, or while bathing in its waters, should engage in a quarrel and one of them assault the other; would it be competent for the injured person to take passage to the Illinois side of the river, and there maintain a criminal prosecution against his assailant? Or suppose these defendants were Illinois fish wardens; and having discovered the plaintiff using his seine on the east side of the river in a slough of the same kind and character as Running slough, and wholly within the territorial jurisdiction of that state, they wrongfully beat and abuse him, would the courts of Jackson County, Iowa, assume jurisdiction to try them for such offense? Clearly not. To so hold is to encounter a sea of troubles never contemplated by the framers of the law upon this subject. A glance at the accompanying map reveals that from ten to fifteen sections of land along the east border of Jackson County are intersected and carved
From the evidence it is clear that Big Lake is not a part of the Mississippi River so far as navigation is concerned. It is not disputed that it lies wholly within the state of Iowa. It follows, then, that Big Lake, lying as it does wholly within the state of Iowa, does not constitute a part of the Mississippi for boundary purposes. We think
It is well in this connection to recall and emphasize the importance of the discussion by Mr. Justice Kinne in the cited case upon the evils which the statute regulating the taking of fish was intended to remedy. He says:
The purpose was to prevent the wanton and unnecessary destruction. of fish in the waters over which the state has exclusive jurisdiction and to preserve the fish in said waters for the use of the people of the state. If it be true that these lakes and streams which, though connected with the main body of water known as the Mississippi Eiver, yet form no part of the river proper, are not waters in which seining is prohibited, then the legislation falls short of remedying the evil which existed, and these waters of the state which constitute the most valuable fishing grounds in the state may be despoiled in this wholesale way of their wealth of fish without let or hindrance. To be justified in reaching such a conclusion, it should appear clearly that such waters were intended to be exempt from the operation of the law. We find nothing in the law to warrant defendant’s contention. . . . The Mississippi Eiver spoken of in the statute is the river as usually referred to. It means the body of water which forms the eastern» boundary of the state, and from the wording of the act it is manifest it was not intended to embrace within the words ‘Mississippi Eiver’ waters entirely within the state, though having connection with the boundary stream.
It follows, therefore, both upon precedent and upon the express language and clear implications of the law,