147 P. 372 | Or. | 1915
Opinion by
The printed abstract, referring to the trial in the Circuit Court and to the agreed statements of facts,
“It shall be unlawful for any person or persons to take or fish for salmon fish or sturgeon in any of the waters of this state, or in any of the waters upon which this state has concurrent jurisdiction, by any means whatever, except with hook and line, commonly called angling, without first having obtained a license therefor, as in this act hereinafter provided.”
Another clause of the statute is as follows:
“It shall be unlawful for any person to take or fish for salmon, sturgeon, or other anadromous fish in any waters of this state unless such person be a citizen of the United States; or has declared his intention to become such, and has been a bona fide resident of the State of Oregon, or the States of Washington or Idaho, for the period of six months; provided, that a license issued by the State of Washington, such state having concurrent jurisdiction on the Columbia River with this state shall be deemed valid as to gill nets, and as to gill net fishermen, for use on the Columbia River, as though issued by the fish warden of this state. Any person desiring to fish for salmon, sturgeon, or other anadromous fish in any such rivers or waters, may go before any county clerk of any county in this state and furnish satisfactory evidence of his citizenship, or of*372 the fact that he has declared his intention to become snch one year prior thereto, and file his own affidavit and the affidavit of two other persons to the effect that he is and has been for six months prior thereto an actual bona fide resident of this state, and thereupon such recorder or clerk shall issue to him a certificate briefly reciting these facts, and thereafter in any prosecution against such person for a violation of the provisions of this act, such certificate or duly authenticated copies of the record in the office of the clerk or recorder relative thereto, shall be prima facie evidence of his citizenship and residence as in this act required. But in all prosecutions under this act the burden of proof shall be on the defendant to establish the facts of his citizenship and residence”: Section 5298, L. O. L.)
It is maintained that the latter enactment, thus attempting to exclude nonresidents of Oregon from the right to take or fish for salmon in the Columbia Elver with a gill net, violates section 20 of Article I of the Organic Act of this state, which reads:
“No law shall'be passed granting to any-citizen or class of citizens, privileges or immunities which, upon the same terms, shall not equally belong to all citizens. ’ ’
This clause of the fundamental law was evidently designed to protect the rights of citizens of Oregon only. The section of the statute last quoted guarantees to each resident of Oregon, who is also a citizen of the United States, the right to fish for salmon in the waters of this state upon making the required proof and securing the necessary license, and, this being so, there is no discrimination as to such citizens. The evident object of the enactment was to protect Oregon fishermen from men engaged in that business who came to this state when the season opened, pursued their calling, and
The qualified ownership of roving fish in navigable waters within a state is in that sovereignty in trust for its citizens alone: State v. Hume, 52 Or. 1, 5 (95 Pac. 808). Therefore, a state in exercising a measure of its police power may, by an enactment, protect such fish by prohibiting for a time their taking, or it may impose upon their catching such reasonable regulations as may be deemed proper, and for that purpose it may wholly exclude persons who are not residents from catching or taking fish in its waters by any means. In Barbier v. Connolly, 113 U. S. 27, 32 (28 L. Ed. 923, 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 357, 360), Mr. Justice Field, discussing the restriction of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Federal Constitution as to the facts of that case, says:
“Class legislation, discriminating against some and favoring others, is prohibited, but legislation which, in carrying out a public purpose, is limited in its application, if within the sphere of its operation it affects alike all persons similarly situated, is not within the amendment. ’ ’
To the same effect, see Jones v. Union County, 63 Or. 566, 575 (127 Pac. 781, 42 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1035), where will be found a number of cases deciding this question in the same manner. Nonresidents of Oregon who may be citizens of the United States and of another state have no inherent right to take or catch migratory fish in the navigable waters of Oregon after a statute has been enacted by this state prohibiting the exercise of the privilege. Plence Section 5298, L. O. L., does not contravene the amendment of the Federal Constitution invoked to annul it.
“It shall hereafter be unlawful to operate or maintain within any of the rivers of this state or of the Columbia River, * * any purse net or other like seine for the purpose of catching or taking salmon.”
By another section of the act any person convicted of violating any of its provisions was guilty of a misdemeanor and subject to a prescribed penalty: Gen. Laws Or. 1907, p. 154. The law in force in the State of Washington at the time Nielsen was thus convicted, as far as important, reads:
*376 “The use of * * purse nets * * for catching salmon is hereby authorized in all the waters of this state * * subject to the regulation and license hereinafter provided for or otherwise required by law”: Sess. Laws "Wash. 1899, p. 194.
The laws of Oregon then in force prohibited the use of such a net. The judgment rendered by this court against Nielsen was reversed by the Supreme Court of the United States, which held that where two states have concurrent jurisdiction over the same territory, which is partly located in one state and partly in the other, one state cannot prosecute a person for an act malum prohibitum by its own laws, and which was committed within the other state by authority of the latter, and that a person who held a purse-net license from the State of Washington could not be prosecuted for using such net on the Washington side of the Columbia Eiver in the courts of Oregon for violating the statutes of the latter state prohibiting the use of a net of that kind.
In Re Mattson (C. C.), 69 Fed. 535, the petitioner for a writ of habeas corpus in the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Oregon showed that he was imprisoned upon a conviction in the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Clatsop County of fishing for salmon in the Columbia Eiver on Sunday, within the territorial limits of the State of Washington, in violation of the laws of the State of Oregon, which enactment established a weekly close season for that river and made the taking of such fish in that stream on the first day of the week a misdemeanor: Section 5237, L. O. L. The laws of the State of Washington in force when Mattson was imprisoned permitted the catching of salmon in the Columbia Eiver upon Sunday. Based upon such statement of facts the petitioner was dis
“It is clear, therefore, that this right in each state is not subject to control or regulation by the other, unless there is mutual agreement to that end. ’ ’
In Ex parte Desjeiro and Ex parte Furia (C. C.), 152 Fed. 1004, each petitioner had been convicted in a Justice’s Court for Clatsop County, Oregon, of unlawfully fishing for salmon in the Columbia River without first having been a bona fide resident of the States of Oregon, Washington, or Idaho for a period of six months prior thereto, and in violation of what is now practically Section 5298, L. O. L. The facts disclosed at their trial were that Desjeiro was, at the time, charged in the complaint upon which he was convicted an actual resident and inhabitant of the State of California and a subject of the King of Italy. Furia was an actual resident of the same state and a naturalized citizen of the United States. The laws of the State of Washington, then in force, authorized the issuance of fishing licenses. Another clause of the statute of that state then and now in force, reads:
“No license shall be issued to any person who is not a citizen of the United States, unless such person has declared his intention to become such one year prior thereto, and is and has been for one year immediately prior to the time of the application for license an actual resident of the State of Washington. * * Provided, licenses issued by the State of Oregon shall be deemed valid as to gill nets for use on the Columbia River as though issued by the fish commissioner of this state”: Laws Wash. 1899, c. 117, § 2; Pierce’s Wash. Code, 1912, tit. 191, § 65.
“If the act was void as it respects a citizen of the State of Washington, being general, it is void as to every other citizen, whether of the State of Washington or California, or elsewhere. It is the act of concurrence between the two states, in the exercise of legislative authority, that validates the act and gives it the force of law, and unless there is a concurrence or assent by both states to the enactment, it cannot have that force. This is the doctrine of the Mattson case, and it has direct application to the case at bar. Now, Section 4092, as amended, makes it a misdemeanor for any person not a resident of the state for the period of six months preceding to take or fish for salmon fish in any of the waters of the state. This is a specific offense within itself. An examination of the laws of the State of Washington will disclose the fact that there is no such offense established within that state, and hence there is no concurrence in the laws of the two states as to the offense. In each state, however, it is required that parties desiring to fish with gill nets shall take out a license, and in each a violation of any of the provisions touching the occupation of fishing within the waters thereof is made a misdemeanor, so that it may be said, perhaps, that the states have legislated concurrently upon that subject. By the Washington act a person must be a resident of the state for one year next preceding before a license can be issued to him; in Oregon the time is fixed at six months; but this is a matter of minor importance, and it may be said that the laws in that regard are in all material respects concurrent. But it is not the offense of fishing without a license that is complained against. It is the offense of fishing without being a resident of the state; and, the State of Washington not having concurred in this legislation, the act is void as to all persons, whether they be citizens of Washington or California, and is within the doctrine of the Mattson case”: 69 Fed. 535.
Sections 12 and 16 of the act last referred to were amended by Sections 31 and 32 of the act of February
Construing together Sections 4089, 4092, 4093 and 4113 of B. & C. Comp, shows that the offense of catching salmon by a person who did not possess the requisite qualifications of citizenship and residence was merged into the crime of taking such fish from the waters specified without first having obtained a license therefor.
In selecting and arranging the parts of L. O. L., the compilers evidently thought the amendment of Section 4092, B. & C. Comp., made February 25,1909, impliedly repealed the next section, and for that reason they did not include in the later work Section 4093, B. & C. Comp. But however this may be, it is believed that the unlawful fishing for salmon in the waters of Oregon is the gravamen of the offense, and not the fishing in such waters by a person who is not. a resident of the state.
The law of the State of Washington in force when this action was instituted, as far as essential to a consideration of this cause, reads:
“That no fishing appliances shall be constructed, operated or maintained upon any of the waters of this state or the Columbia River or its tributaries by any person whomsover, without such person shall have first obtained a license so to do from the fish commissioner of this state, who is hereby authorized .to issue said license under the regulations provided by law. * * No license shall be issued to any person who is not a citizen of the United States, unless such person has declared his intention to become such one year prior thereto, and is and has been for one year immediately prior to the time of the application for license an actual resident of the State of Washington”: Section 2.
“Any person violating any of the provisions of this act, * * shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and shall upon conviction therefor for each and every offense, be subject to a fine * * ”: Section 20, Laws Wash. 1899, p. 194.
Although the State of Washington in its sovereign capacity holds the title to salmon swimming in the Columbia River in trust for its own citizens, if no law of that state prohibited the catching of sucb fish, it is
If, however, the catching of salmon by means of a gill net in the Columbia River by a person who is not a resident of Oregon be regarded as constituting a distinct offense, upon a conviction for which a penalty may legally be imposed, it is believed that the judgments' rendered herein can be sustained, though the statute of Washington prohibits the taking of such fish by a person without first having obtained a license, and also makes a residence in that state for one year a condition precedent to securing such authority. With respect to the statues of these states, assuming that our enactment is as last hereinbefore stated, there would be a diversity as to the essential facts constituting the crime, the time of residence in the respective states, and possibly as to the degree of punishment
“Any person desiring to obtain a license to take or catch salmon fish or sturgeon in any of the waters of this state, in any manner whatever, either working upon as employer or employee of any * * gill net, * * whether such person is the owner of such application or otherwise, shall present in writing to the fish warden his application. ’ ’
This section was amended February 24,1903, and the words, “either working upon as employer or employee,” etc., were omitted: Laws Or. 1903, p. 218.. A further amendment of the section was made February 10, 1905, but the words so omitted were not reincorporated: Laws Or. 1905, p. 115. Notwithstanding the exclusion of the words referred to, we believe the language is reasonably implied in Section 5293, L. O. L., which makes it unlawful for any person to take or fish for salmon without first having obtained a license therefor, and that this provision of the statute applies to the person in charge of a fishing boat and a gill net used for that purpose, though the owner of such appliances may have secured a license authorizing him to
It follows that the judgment in each case should be affirmed, and it is so ordered. Affirmed.