118 Me. 233 | Me. | 1919
A complaint under Sec. 35, Chap. 45, R. S., charging the respondent with having in possession one hundred and nine lobsters of less than lawful length, the language of the complaint is, “unlawfully did have in his possession one hundred and nine lobsters, each of said lobsters being then and there less than four and three-quarters inches in length measured in manner as follows: . . . and none of said lobsters were liberated alive at the risk and cost of the parties taking them or at the risk and cost of Hiram W. Chadwick.”
It will be noted that the complaint does not set forth whether the lobsters when found in the possession of the respondent were alive or dead, or whether the measurement was taken “when caught,” or while alive, or after they were dead.
The respondent has demurred on the ground that since the lobsters may have been dead and cooked, under the decisions of this court in Thompson v. Smith, 79 Maine, 160, and State v. Brewer, 102 Maine, 293, it is 'necessary to allege either that the lobsters were alive or that the measurements were taken when caught.
When Thompson v. Smith was decided it was no doubt a correct interpretation of the statute as it then stood. Numerous revisions and amendments have been made to this statute since the decision in 1887, the most radical one being made in 1901, Chap. 284, which, we think, indicated an intent on the part of the Legislature to change the entire effect of the statute so far as the grounds for imposing penalties are concerned.
Prior to 1901 the penalty was imposed for catching, buying, selling or exposing for sale or having in possession lobsters shorter than the prescribed length that were not liberated as required by law. It was the failure to liberate them alive that rendered them contraband and illegal to buy, sell or possess, and hence it could well be said that if there was a difference in measurement between a lobster alive and a lobster cooked, it was only those that were shorter than the required length when caught or alive that it was illegal to hold.
■The statute as it has since been amended now declares it unlawful to buy, sell, give away, expose for sale or have in possession lobsters either dead or alive, cooked or uncooked, less than four and three-quarters inches in length measured according to the statute, and
The statute still requires that any lobster less than the prescribed length when caught shall-be immediately liberated alive by the'party taking it and at his risk and cost. There appears to have been a changed attitude in the intent of the Legislature as to the manner by which it proposed to accomplish the purpose of protecting young lobsters from destruction. In the early statute, Chap. 138, Laws of 1883, and until the revision of the laws applying to Sea & Shore Fisheries in 1901, the method by which the Legislature proposed to secure this result was to require all young lobsters less than a prescribed length to be liberated alive, and impose a penalty for buying, selling, or having in possession any lobsters that-were “not so liberated.” The failure to liberate alive was the essence of the offense. If therefore they were of lawful length when alive, it mattered not what their condition was after being cooked. The purpose of the statute was secured by requiring their liberation, if of unlawful length when caught, and by making it unlawful to deal in them, whatever their condition might be, if they were not so liberated.
Under the present statute instead of making the failure to liberate the basis of the offense, it is now unlawful and an offense to have lobsters of less than lawful length in possession or to deal- in them in any way, without regard to whether they should have been liberated or not, hence it now matters not what their measurement may have been when alive or when caught — if there is any change by cooking under the present method of measurement — except when the charge is for catching.
It will be noted that it is not now unlawful to catch ‘ ‘short lobsters”, but the statute does enjoin upon every person catching theni the immediate liberation of them alive, and imposes a penalty for every lobster “so caught”, that is, caught and not immediately liberated.
We are therefore of the opinion that under the present statute in the case of a charge of buying, selling, giving away, or exposing for sale, it is sufficient to allege simply that the lobsters were of less than
In the case of a charge of catching or having in possession, however, we think it is still necessary to set forth that they were not immediately liberated alive at the risk and cost of the party taking them. In the case of catching it is a necessary element of the offense. By the terms of the statute the penalty is imposed when they are “so caught,” that is, caught and not liberated. sIn case of a charge of having in possession, it is also necessary to allege that they were not immediately liberated alive at the risk and cost of the party taking them, in order to negative the lawful possession that is incident to catching by the present methods prior to liberation in accordance with the statute. As the complaint in this case meets thesé requirements we must overrule the exception.
We have considered carefully the decision in State v. Brewer, supra, cited by the respondent, and while this case was decided since the change in the statute in 1901, the views therein expressed, following the doctrine laid down in Thompson v. Smith, supra, are not wholly in accord with what seems to us the clear intent of the Legislature under the present statute, and to that extent it must be regarded as modified.
Entry will be,
Exceptions overruled.