Lead Opinion
OPINION
Respondent John M. Colosimo was convicted for refusal to allow inspection of a boat, MinmStat. § 97A.251, subd. 1(3) (2000). Colosimo challenged his conviction arguing he was unlawfully stopped by the conservation officer, the officer did not have probable cause to inspect the boat and the request to inspect the boat was an unlawful seizure. The court of appeals reversed the conviction concluding that the conservation officer was required to have probable cause to request inspection of Colosimo’s boat and that because the officer did not have probable cause to request inspection, Colosimo could not be convicted for refusing inspection. We reverse.
Colosimo was on a fishing trip with four other men on Rainy Lake at Kettle Falls in the Voyageur’s National Park. On the morning of September 18, 2000, the group stowed their personal belongings on Colo-simo’s open bow boat in order to make the trip back to the far shore of Lake Nama-kan where they had left their vehicles. To get from Rainy Lake, where they had been fishing, to Lake Namakan required portage. Colosimo’s boat was being trailored by a truck driven by Shawn Obeson, who was employed portaging boats between the two lakes.
Obeson described the boat as a 19- or 20-foot Crestliner fishing boat, which contained the fishing party’s luggage and a cooler or two. Obeson testified that he had loaded Colosimo’s boat on to his trailer, and portaged the boat, while the entire fishing party rode in the boat. During the portage, as Obeson was about to put the boat in the Lake Namakan side of the portage, he saw Officer Lloyd Steen, a uniformed Department of Natural Resources (DNR) officer, walking towards the truck. Obeson stopped the truck at that point. When asked at Colosimo’s trial the reason he stopped, Obeson testified, ‘Well I stopped to unhook John’s [Colosi-mo’s] boat there.” When asked if Officer Steen did anything to cause Obeson to
Officer Steen testified that he knew where the portage truck operator would stop in order to unhook the boat and receive payment for the portage and he waited in that vicinity. Once the operator had stopped the truck to unhook the boat Officer Steen walked up to the boat and struck up a conversation with Colosimo, who was sitting at the steering wheel of the boat. Officer Steen asked if they had caught any fish. Colosimo responded that they had caught some. Officer Steen asked how many they had; Colosimo responded that they had not been fishing that day and had less than their limit. Officer Steen next asked how they had the fish packaged. Colosimo said they had gutted and gilled the fish in accordance with the regulations affecting Rainy Lake.
Officer Steen eventually asked if he could take a look at the fish; Colosimo refused that request. The refusal to allow the inspection of the fish started an argument between the officer and Colosimo, an attorney, over the officer’s legal authority to board the boat to inspect the catch. Officer Steen told the portage truck driver not to put the boat in the water. Colosimo was equally adamant in telling the driver to put the boat into the water.
Realizing that he and Colosimo were at an impasse and fearing that the argument would escalate into a physical confrontation, Officer Steen issued Colosimo a ticket for failing to present wildlife for inspection, Minn.Stat. § 97A.251, subd. 2, and allowed the group to go along their way. Later, upon reviewing the relevant statutes, Officer Steen sent Colosimo a separate ticket citing him for obstructing an officer in violation of Minn.Stat. § 97A.251, subd. 1, and refusing to allow inspection of a boat being used to transport wild animals, Minn.Stat. § 97A.251, subd. 3.
The parties agreed to a bench trial. A bench trial was held and the court issued findings of fact, conclusions of law, a verdict and memorandum. The district court concluded that the case consisted of two legal issues: first, whether there was a stop, and second, did the officer have the authority to inspect Colosimo’s boat once it had been established that Colosimo had been fishing and was transporting fish. The court held that approaching the boat did not amount to a stop, concluding that once the conservation officer determined the individual had engaged in fishing, the officer had the authority to inspect the boat pursuant to Minn.Stat. § 97A.251. The court then found Colosimo guilty of refusal to allow inspection of a boat, Minn. Stat. § 97A.251, subd. 1(3) and assessed a fine of $100, plus a $37 surcharge. Colo-simo appealed the conviction to the Minnesota Court of Appeals. The court of appeals reversed the district court, concluding that in order to inspect Colosimo’s boat the officer must have probable cause of a violation of a fish or game law. The court held that because the officer did not have authority to inspect the boat, Colosi-mo could not be convicted for refusal to allow inspection of the boat. State v. Colosimo,
I.
Colosimo contends that Officer Steen stopped his fishing party and that the stop was prohibited by the Fourth Amendment. Colosimo testified that he initially objected to the conservation officer’s attempts to converse by asking what the officer’s reasonable articulable suspicion for this “stop” was. However, Officer Steen and members of Colosimo’s fishing party testified that the conversation began with Officer Steen asking about fish and that Colosimo then stated that the group had been fish
Colosimo, in his brief to this court, cites Delaware v. Prouse,
There may be little doubt that after Colosimo admitted to having been fishing and the fact that he was transporting fish, he was seized by Officer Steen. However, the seizure came after Colosimo’s admission to transporting fish and subsequent refusal to allow inspection of the catch or boat where the catch was being transported. At that point the seizure was not suspicionless, but rather, was based on the fact that Colosimo admitted to transporting fish in his boat, but refused to allow inspection of the boat, a violation of Minnesota law. Minn.Stat. § 97A.251, subd. 1(3). Because the parties dispute the constitutionality of this statute, we now turn to that issue.
II.
The remaining question before us is whether Officer Steen had the authority to search Colosimo’s open boat for the purpose of inspecting fish that appellant admitted transporting. The fish that were admittedly in Colosimo’s possession are subject to an array of rules designed to protect recreational fishing against depletion. These rules include licensing, daily and possession limits, size, species, season, location, bait, preparation and fishing method requirements and many other rules established in numerous statutes and regulations. See Minn. R. 6264.0300, subps. 1 & 56 (2001) and Minn.Stat. § 97C (2002).
In a typical Fourth Amendment case, an appellate court has the opportunity to review the specific facts of the challenged search to determine whether the search violated the defendant’s Fourth Amendment rights. In this case, no search occurred. Rather, Officer Steen issued a ticket for refusing to allow an inspection of Colosimo’s motorboat used to transport
The Fourth Amendment prohibits “unreasonable searches and seizures.” U.S. Const, amend. IV. For a search to be held unconstitutional under the Fourth Amendment the one searched must have had an “actual expectation of privacy” in the area searched and that expectation of privacy must be “one that society is prepared to recognize as reasonable.” Bond v. United States,
We must decide whether under these circumstances Colosimo had a reasonable expectation of privacy. We have stated the “existence of probable cause is relevant only when a person has demonstrated a legitimate or reasonable expectation of privacy.” State v. Sorenson,
In determining whether Colosimo’s expectation of privacy was reasonable, we must consider both the nature of recreational fishing and the characteristics of an open boat, as well as the fact that this request occurred in open season near a game fishing habitat. Recreational fishing is a highly regulated and licensed privilege. Those who choose to apply for this privilege accept the conditions imposed, unique to the sport of game fishing. See Minn.Stat. § 97A.015, subd. 25. Among those conditions is allowing conservation officers to inspect their catch and boat or other conveyance used to transport fish. Minn.Stat. § 97A.251, subd. 1(2) and (3). The Montana Supreme Court has also recognized this fact:
In engaging in this highly regulated activity, anglers must assume the burdens of the sport as well as its benefits. Thus, no objectively reasonable expectation of privacy exists when a wildlife enforcement officer checks for hunting and fishing licenses in open season near game habitat, inquires about game taken, and requests to inspect game in the field. In this capacity, game wardens are acting not only as law enforcement officers, but as public trustees protecting and conserving Montana’s wildlife and habitat for all of its citizens.
State v. Boyer,
In Boyer, the Montana Supreme Court held that a fisherman had no reasonable expectation of privacy in the fish he possessed. Furthermore, a Montana Fish, Wildlife, and Parks warden was permitted to step on the transom of a fisherman’s boat to inspect the catch contained in the live well of the boat. The court held that
The important role fishing plays in the fives of many Minnesotans and the corresponding need for effective regulation to protect the viability of our state’s fish and game resources recently inspired an amendment to the Minnesota Constitution. The legislature proposed the amendment in the Spring of 1998. Act of April 20, 1998, ch. 392, § 1, 1998 Minn. Laws 1228. The proposed amendment was then submitted to the citizens of Minnesota, who adopted it in the 1998 general election. The amendment provides, “Hunting and fishing and the taking of game and fish are a valued part of our heritage that shall be forever preserved for the people and shall be managed by law and regulation for the public good.” Minn. Const, art. XIII, sec. 12. This provision of the Minnesota Constitution must be considered in our analysis along with the extensive laws and regulations passed to manage fishing for the public good.
This provision of the Minnesota Constitution recognizes the fink between enforcement of fishing regulations and the preservation of Minnesota’s game and fish resources. We have numerous statutes relating to the taking of game in this state, and numerous regulations implemented by the Department of Natural Resources. See MinmStat. §§ 97A.011-97A.552; Minn. R. 6262.0100 — 6262.3300 (2001) (fishing regulations). These laws work in tandem with the constitutional mandate of Minn. Const, art. XIII, sec. 12. When anglers purchase licenses they also routinely receive pamphlets relating to the limitations and regulations. The widespread knowledge of the restrictions accompanying the privilege of fishing casts doubt on the reasonableness of an expectation of privacy that would allow an angler to refuse inspection of his catch. Those who apply to the state for permission to harvest Minnesota’s natural game are on notice that they are subject to such regulations. Colosimo, who encountered the conservation officer at Kettle Falls, a known fishing destination near the Canadian border, acknowledged not only having been fishing on Rainy Lake, a border water extending into Canada, but also admitted to transporting his catch in his open boat. Accordingly, we hold that because Colosi-mo had no reasonable expectation of privacy, the areas of his open boat or other conveyance used to typically store or transport fish were subject to inspection pursuant to Minn.Stat. § 97A.251, subd. 1(3).
Courts around the country have come to similar conclusions when analyzing searches of those choosing to take game. People v. Perez,
Our decision is consistent with our recent ruling prohibiting the search of a fish
We consider the nature of the premise here — a fish house, erected and equipped to protect its occupants from the elements and often providing eating, sleeping, and other facilities — as providing privacy for activities ‘recognized and permitted by society.’ While clearly not a substitute for one’s private dwelling, during the period of occupancy important activities of a personal nature take place. We therefore conclude appellant had a reasonable expectation of privacy in his fish house.
Id. at 149 (internal citation omitted).
The dissent would have us treat an open fishing boat the same as the “private fish house” from Larsen. We decline to do so. In stark contrast to Larsen, the minimal intrusion involved here is markedly less than that occurring when the privacy of the private, home-like dwelling of a fish house is invaded. Here, we are asked to conclude that an angler has a reasonable expectation of privacy in every area of his open boat, including those areas where fish are normally stored or transported. Under these facts, Colosimo did not have a legitimate expectation of privacy in certain areas of his already stopped open boat, where fish are typically stored or transported.
To conclude otherwise, that police officers require probable cause of any gaming law violation, would prevent the state from meeting its constitutional mandate that it manage and regulate fishing to preserve our natural resources. This is an undeniable fact given that the state would only be able to inspect boats when it observes or has information from a “confidential reliable informant” on the actual catching and keeping of fish in excess of the applicable limits, size, season or species. The idea that officers would be required to personally witness illegal catch activity, coupled with the reality that fishing can take hours or even days, illustrates how absurd it would be to recognize a privacy interest inherent in an angler’s take and only then have probable cause to inspect. Similarly, “informants” would need first-hand knowledge of the violations, as the dissent recognizes, as mere fishing would not constitute probable cause that allows inspection. The only other option would be continued surveillance of one particular angler until a conservation officer had a basis to believe that a law was violated.
The unreasonableness of this expectation can be easily illustrated. Minnesota has specific regulations for the taking of fish on the Minnesota-Canadian boundary waters. Minn. R. 6266.0700. This allows, for example, the taking and daily possession of thirty sunfish per angler. Minn. R. 6266.0200, subd. 2(c). There were five anglers in Colosimo’s fishing party. The dissent would force the game officer to have probable cause to believe that more than one hundred and fifty sunfish had been taken before an inspection can be allowed. Walleye fish have a daily possession limit of six fish in the aggregate, in general. Minn. R. 6266.0700, subd. 2(a). The dissent would restrict inspection until the officer had probable cause to believe the party had thirty-one walleye in their possession. We disagree, and again find persuasive the Montana Supreme Court’s reasoning in Boyer. The Montana court held that:
Montana’s vast geography, the angler’s somewhat uninhibited freedom of movement, and the remoteness from warrant issuing magistrates and law enforcement entities would severely impede game violation investigations. The inevitable result would be the unnecessary depletion of Montana’s wildlife and fish, which*8 we are bound to protect and preserve. We decline to impose this burden.
Boel,
Minnesota’s 10,000 lakes, along with numerous streams and rivers rival Montana’s vast geography and provide anglers largely uninhibited freedom of movement in remote areas in pursuit of our abundant fish resources. In Prouse, Justice Black-mun wrote a concurrence joined by Justice Powell where they highlighted the clear difference between the situation in Prouse and that present in the sport fishing context:
I would not regard the present case as a precedent that throws any constitutional shadow upon the necessarily somewhat individualized and perhaps largely random examinations by game wardens in the performance of their duties. In a situation of that type, it seems to me, the Court’s balancing process, and the value factors under consideration, would be quite different.
Prouse,
III.
Having determined that the Fourth Amendment does not prohibit a limited inspection of Colosimo’s open boat, we must determine whether the statute under which Colosimo was convicted, Minn.Stat. § 97A.251, subd. 1(3), requires probable cause in order to undertake a search. The court of appeals read a probable cause requirement into Minn.Stat. § 97A.251, subd. 1(3). The statute provides:
A person may not:
(1) intentionally hinder, resist, or obstruct an enforcement officer, agent, or employee of the division in the performance of official duties;
(2) refuse to submit to inspection of firearms while in the field, licenses, or wild animals; or
(3) refuse to allow inspections of a motor vehicle, boat, or other conveyance used while taking or transporting wild animals.
Id.
We review questions of statutory interpretation de novo. Burkstrand v. Burkstrand,
When an enforcement officer has probable cause to believe that wild animals taken or possessed in violation of game and fish laws are present, the officer may:
(1) enter and inspect any place or vehicle; and
(2) open and inspect any package or container.
We decline to interject a probable cause requirement into MinmStat. § 97A.251 merely because the legislature in Minn. Stat. § 97A.215, subd. 1(b)(1) granted conservation officers with probable cause the authority to “enter and inspect any place or vehicle.”
Our decision in this case does not grant conservation officers power beyond that of other law enforcement officers.
Reversed.
Notes
. The intrusion here does not raise similar concerns of a "roadblock” that we addressed in Ascher, where a large number of motor vehicle drivers were stopped on the public highways in the hope of discovering evidence of alcohol impaired driving by some of them. Ascher v. Comm'r of Pub. Safety,
. Conveyance: “A means of carrying or transporting something.” See Webster's International Dictionary 499 (3d ed.1993).
. Minnesota Statutes § 97A.205, which sets forth the powers of game and fish enforcement officers, provides, “Nothing in this section grants an enforcement officer any greater powers than other licensed peace officers.”
. Because Colosimo refused any search, we do not need to specifically delineate the limits of a legal search of an open boat.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
[A]s a general rule, the state, having the power to deny a privilege altogether, may grant it upon such conditions as it sees fit to impose. But the power of the state in that respect is not unlimited, and one of the limitations is that it may not impose conditions which require the relinquishment of constitutional rights. If the state may compel the surrender of one constitutional right as a condition of its favor, it may, in like manner, compel a surrender of all. It is inconceivable that guaranties embedded in the Constitution * * * may thus be manipulated out of existence.
Frost v. Railroad Comm’n,
By its decision today, the court permits precisely that which the Supreme Court in Frost prohibited — it grants the privilege of taking wildlife conditioned on the infringement of constitutional rights. By concluding that one who engages in the regulated activity of fishing has no expectation of privacy in the areas of an open boat or other conveyance used to typically store or transport fish,
Under Minnesota law, conservation officers, as licensed peace officers, are the functional equivalent of police officers. See Minn.Stat. § 626.84, subd. 1(c)(1) (2002). As such, the constitutional constraints that limit the ability of a police officer to conduct searches also apply to searches conducted by conservation officers. See State v. Larsen,
Individuals have the right to be free from unreasonable searches under both the United States and Minnesota Constitutions.
While courts have recognized that the privacy expectation in a moving vehicle, including a boat, is less than that of a home, this does not mean that the Fourth Amendment fails to provide any protection. See Carroll v. United States,
In the context of fishing and hunting, a search is “reasonable” when the conservation officer has probable cause to search arising from a belief that the individual to be searched is engaged in or has very recently engaged in either hunting or fishing and that a violation of the fishing or hunting laws may have occurred. See Younger,
The historic protection of an individual’s right to be free from unreasonable searches has been effectively eliminated by today’s decision. The court concludes that Colosimo had no reasonable expectation of privacy in areas of his open boat used to transport or store fish
Today’s decision effectively overturns Larsen. In doing so, the court implicitly concludes that the state’s interest in protecting and regulating its wildlife resource is more important than its interest in protecting human life by deterring drunk driving. See Ascher,
The result is that individuals may be stopped on numerous occasions without a reasonable suspicion of any criminal activity merely because a conservation officer believes that the individuals have been engaged in the regulated activities of hunting or fishing. The court’s interpretation “eliminate^] the constitutional safeguard requiring an officer to have reasonable articulable suspicion of criminal activity before stopping [an individual], but provides no substitute to protect [individuals who appear to have engaged in the regulated activity] from repeated stops at the unchecked discretion of [peace] officers.” Henning,
The court attempts to justify its result by relying on the concurrence in Prouse, which states in part, “1 would not regard the present case as a precedent that throws any constitutional shadow upon the necessarily somewhat individualized and perhaps largely random examinations by game wardens in their performance of their duties.” Prouse,
The presence of extensive regulations does not, as the court concludes, result in the elimination of an expectation of privacy. See Prouse,
Requiring a conservation officer to have probable cause before conducting a war-rantless search of a boat is consistent with the statutory scheme governing the conduct of conservation officers in the field. The legislature does hot have the power to “redefine the constitutional parameters of [peace officer] conduct,” and this court has no authority to ignore clear and unambiguous legislative pronouncements when trying to ascertain the intent of the legislature. Henning,
To the extent that the “inspection” referenced in section 97A.251, subdivision 1(3), is not the “inspection” authorized under section 97A.215, subdivision lb, the court’s expansion of the scope of the inspection to include “areas of an open boat or other conveyance used to typically store or transport fish” goes well beyond that permitted by the express language of section 97A.251, subdivision 1(3). Subdivision 1(3) of section 97A.251 makes it unlawful for a person to “refuse to allow inspection of a motor vehicle, boat, or other conveyance used while taking or transporting wild animals” (emphasis added). The statute does not contain any language authorizing the “inspection” of packages or containers. Thus, the plain language of the statute does not make it unlawful to refuse to allow an inspection of such packages or containers. If the legislature intended for it to be unlawful for a person to refuse to allow inspection of packages or containers found on a boat, it clearly knew how to and could have done so by using the language of section 97A.215, subdivision lb. The legislature, however, did not. Here, there is no evidence in the record that supports a conclusion that probable cause existed; all the evidence shows that the conserva
While a probable cause requirement might make fishing violations more difficult to detect, as we concluded in Larsen, the “ease in enforcing the law has never been a sufficient justification for government intrusion.”
Rather than requiring the state to properly manage Minnesota’s wildlife resources, the court has instead decided to grant the state the power to compel the relinquishment of an individual’s constitu
In upholding Colosimo’s conviction, the court forces individuals to choose between waiving their constitutional right to be free from unreasonable searches in exchange for the “privilege” of hunting, fishing, trapping, or possessing wildlife. If an individual consents to a conservation officer’s requested search, that individual waives the ability to later object to the search. See State v. Harris,
Today’s sweeping decision holding that there is no expectation of privacy in areas of an open boat where fish are typically stored overturns recent precedent and eviscerates the constitutional protection against unreasonable searches. Because both conservation officers and police officers are bound as peace officers by the same constitutional constraints, the court’s decision has now opened the door for war-rantless searches by any peace officer upon the mere suspicion that an individual is, has been, or will in the future engage in hunting or fishing. As the Court said in Frost, “It is inconceivable that guaranties embedded in the Constitution * ⅜ * may thus be manipulated out of existence.”
Therefore, I respectfully dissent.
. While the court’s opinion refers to the expectation of privacy in the areas of an open boat or other conveyance used to typically store or transport fish, it does not define or explain what constitutes these areas. Presumably, the court is referring to packages or containers that are present on the boat. Also, presumably, the court fails to define or explain what constitutes these areas because it wants to avoid the probable cause requirements of Minn.Stat. § 97A.215, subd. lb(2). The expansive language in the opinion makes it apparent that a peace officer, whether a police officer or a conservation officer, will be able to search not only open boats, but any boat, car, or truck on the mere hunch that the occupants have engaged in the regulated activity of hunting or fishing.
. When interpreting a provision of the Minnesota Constitution that contains nearly identical language to a provision in the United States Constitution, decisions from the United States Supreme Court discussing that constitutional provision are "inherently persuasive, although not necessarily compelling.” State v. Wiegand,
. Obviously, to the extent that the boat is open and items are in plain view, there is no reasonable expectation of privacy in those items because the individual has not sought to keep them private. The problem is that the court extends this rationale to any place on the boat where fish are typically stored and to items not in plain view. However, the test is whether there are areas in the boat that the individual has sought to keep private, even though the area might otherwise be accessible to the public. See Katz,
In failing to define "areas of an open boat or other conveyance used to typically store or transport fish,” the court has opened the door to searches of packages and containers present on a boat which are likely to have items that an individual is seeking to keep private. See Ross,
If such containers may be searched without probable cause, what about the same containers found on an enclosed boat when the enclosed boat’s occupants are suspected of hav-mg been fishing? Whether the boat is open or closed cannot be the determining factor. Moreover, under the court's reasoning, there is no basis for treating them differently.
. The court relies on four cases to support this conclusion. That reliance is misplaced. The first case, State v. Boyer,
In this case, the conservation officer testified that he could not determine from what he could see on the boat that the party had been fishing or that they had engaged in any violations of the fishing laws. Because all of Colo-simo's belongings were packed, for the conservation officer to inspect Colosimo's catch, personal belongings would have needed to be rearranged, and coolers or live wells would have had to be opened, all actions that the Boyer court indicated would have required probable cause to conduct a search.
. As noted previously, Boyer did not answer the question of whether the search of a fishing boat for fishing and gaming violations would require probable cause because the Montana Supreme Court found that there was a reasonable suspicion to effectuate the stop and that once stopped the fishing violations were in plain view, thus no search was required.
. The conservation officer admitted that he had no reason to suspect or believe that Colo-simo was engaged in conduct that had violated the fishing and hunting laws or that he had contraband in his vehicle. There were no visual signs, in terms of fishing poles, coolers, or other fishing gear, which would indicate that Colosimo’s party had been fishing that day or any other. According to the conservation officer, the only reason he approached Colosimo's boat was because five men were sitting in a boat, which led him to conclude that they were a fishing party. As the opinion authored by Justice Gilbert so aptly recognized in Henning, it is a violation of our constitution for officers to seize individuals based on their "unchecked discretion,” even when only a small number of individuals are affected and even when the state has given these individuals permission to engage in the regulated activity. Here, the officer acknowledged that had there been children or women in Colosimo’s boat he would not have approached the boat, let alone seized its passengers. It is this type of constitutional infringement that this court has sought to prevent in Ascher, Henning, and Larsen, yet in this case the court is willing to ignore those same constitutional protections.
The court attempts to justify its decision further by relying on the conservation officer's knowledge after he approached Colosi-mo’s boat. However, Colosimo’s responses to the conservation officer’s questions did not create probable cause or even reasonable suspicion of criminal activity justifying the conservation officer’s request that he be able to search the boat. All that was elicited was that Colosimo was engaged in lawful conduct before being approached by the conservation officer, which is not enough to warrant a search. See State v. Harris,
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring in part and dissenting in part).
I concur in part and dissent in part. I concur in the majority’s conclusion that Officer Steen had the right to inspect the open sections of Colosimo’s fishing boat and that Colosimo prevented Steen from doing so; therefore, Steen was justified in issuing Colosimo a citation for violating MinmStat. § 97A.251, subd. 1(3). But, unlike the majority, I would end the analysis at this point. The majority goes beyond what is necessary to decide this case when it holds that Steen had the right to inspect any “other conveyance” used by Colosimo to transport fish.
As a fisherman in an open boat who admitted he had been fishing, Colosimo had no reasonable expectation of privacy to the open sections of his boat even though having an officer look into those sections of the boat is intrusive to some degree. Colosimo improperly refused and hindered Steen when he prevented Steen from conducting an inspection of the open sections of the boat. Accordingly, Colosi-mo violated Minnesota law, and his conviction by the district court should be affirmed.
Affirming Colosimo’s conviction on this basis is sufficient to resolve the case before us. Nevertheless, the majority expands its holding to include any “other conveyance” used to transport fish. This overly broad holding is both unnecessary and inadvisable. Steen was prevented from getting anywhere close to an attempt to search any “other conveyance” used by Colosimo to transport fish, and we do not know what other conveyance, if any, Steen sought to inspect. In the context of the case we have before us today, it is difficult to ascertain with any degree of certainty what other conveyances are subject to a search. Therefore, we should leave to another day the resolution of the question of what right, if any, a conservation officer has to inspect more than the open sections of a fisherman’s boat.
