delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 August D. Egdorf (Egdorf), an outfitter, was charged and convicted in the Justice Court of Musselshell County of five misdemeanor offenses involving violations of Montana’s fish and wildlife laws and the laws pertaining to outfitters. Specifically, Egdorf was convicted of two counts of failing to report the unlawful taking of wildlife by a client, in violation of §§ 37-47-344 and 37-47-404, MCA (1999); possession of unlawfully taken game, in violаtion of § 87-3-112, MCA; conspiracy to kill a mule deer without a special permit, in violation of §§ 45-4-102 and 87-2-103, MCA; and solicitation to hunt without a license, in violation of §§ 45-4-101 and 87-2-103, MCA.
¶2 On March 5, 2001, Egdorf timely appealed his convictions to the Fourteenth Judicial District Court, Musselshell County, for
¶3 Egdorf raises two issues on appeal which we combine and restate as follows:
¶4 Does Montanа’s three-year statute of limitations for misdemeanor violations of fish and game laws, set forth in § 45-1-205(5) and (6), MCA (1999), viólate equal protection and due process of law?
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
¶5 At all times relevant to this appeal, Egdorf worked as an outfitter. Defined generally, an outfitter is one who, for consideration, provides facilities or personal services to anyone wishing to hunt game, and who generally accompanies that person on the expedition. See § 37-47-101(11), MCA.
¶6 In April 2000, Egdorf was charged with five misdemeanor offenses involving violations of Montana’s fish and wildlife laws and the laws pertaining to outfitters. The facts giving rise to these charges, misdemeanor violations, took place nearly two years earlier in November 1998.
¶7 Generally, рrosecutions for misdemeanors must be commenced within one year after the offense is committed. Section 45-l-205(2)(b), MCA. However, prosecutions for misdemeanor “fish and game offenses” (offenses defined under Title 87 and Title 37, chapter 47 of the Montana Code Annotated) may be commenced within three years from the date of commission. See § 45-1-205(5) and (6), MCA. Title 87 pertains generally to restrictions and regulations relating to fish and wildlife while Title 37 governs the activities of outfitters.
¶8 Following his conviction in Justice Court, Egdorf appealed to the District Court of the Fourteenth Judicial District, Musselshell County, for a trial de novo. In his motion to dismiss all counts, Egdorf argued that the three-year statute of limitations imposed by § 45-1-205(5) and (6), MCA, when compared to the onе-year statute of limitations for most other misdemeanors, unconstitutionally deprived him of his fundamental rights to pursue basic necessities, enjoy liberties, and seek health and happiness, thereby violating his right to equal protection. In support of his position, Egdorf asserted that he was only able to pursue such basic necessities through employment as an оutfitter.
¶9 Although acknowledging that the right to practice a particular profession is important, the District Court disagreed that the right was a fundamental right. The court therefore employed a rationality review to determine whether the extended time for prosecution beared
“a
reasonable relation to a proper legislative purpоse so as not to be deemed arbitrary.”
State v. Jack
(1975),
¶10 After reviewing the legislative history of § 45-1-205(5) and (6), MCA, the District Court concluded that the extended statute of limitations for misdemeanor violations of fish and game statutes served a reasonable relation to the proper legislative purpose of protecting wildlife, citing the testimony presented by K. L. Cool, Director of the Department of Fish, Wildlife, and Parks, to the Senate Fish and Game Committee on February 12,1991:
Many times investigations into serious wildlife violations take longer than a year to discover or complete and prosecution is not possible within the current one-year limitation. This is compounded by the fact that many sportsmen and sportswomen are from out-of-state.
¶11 The District Court concluded therefrom that in order to effectively enforce fish
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶12 We review a trial court’s denial of a motion to dismiss to determine whether the court’s conclusions of law are correct.
State v. Dixon,
DISCUSSION
¶13 Does Montana’s three-year statute of limitations for misdemeanor violations of fish and game laws, set forth in § 45-1-205(5) and (6), MCA, violate equal protection and due process of law?
¶14 Egdorf asserts that § 45-1-205(5) and (6), MCA, unconstitutionally infringes upon his rights to equal protection and due process of law by expanding the period of time allowed for commencing proseсution of misdemeanor violations of fish and game laws. Egdorf notes that while prosecutions for misdemeanors generally must be commenced within one year after commission, § 45-1-205(5) and (6), MCA, extends this period to three years for prosecutions of misdemeanor fish and game violations under Title 87 and Title 37, chapter 47. Egdorf argues that because these statutes аllow prosecutions for fish and game violations to be commenced within three years, instead of one year, as for other misdemeanors, the statutes violate both principles of equal protection and substantive due process.
A. Equal Protection
¶15 The Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, and Article II, Section 4, of the Montana Constitution guarantee equal protection of the law.
State v. Davison,
¶16 Egdorf correctly notes that the first step in an equal protection analysis is to determine whether similarly situated groups are treated differently. From there he asserts that all misdemeanor offenders form a single similarly situated class for equal protection purposes. However, in
Renee
we noted that “persons convicted of different crimes are not similarly situated and, therefore, may be subjected to different penalties without implicating equal protection concerns.”
Renee,
¶18 Equal protection does not preclude different treatment of different groups or classes so long as all persons within a similarly situated group or class are treated the same.
Powell,
¶ 22. Here, Egdorf has failed to make the necessary threshold showing that the offenses with which he was charged are part of a similarly situated class of misdemeanor оffenses that has subjected him to unequal treatment by the Legislature’s determination that a longer period of time should be afforded to commence prosecution of the fish and game violations. Rather, all persons who are alleged to have violated § 45-1-205(5) and (6), MCA-the proper definition of Egdorfs class for purposes of his challenge- are exposed to the same three-year statute of limitations for prosecution. Thus, the challenged statutes do not lay “an unequal hand on those who have committed intrinsically the same quality of offense,” and do not violate equal protection.
Renee,
¶ 34 (citing
Skinner v. Oklahoma
(1942),
B. Substantive Due Process
¶19 Both the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article II, section 17 of the Montana Constitution provide that no person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law. The guarantee of due process has both a procedural and a substEintive component. The process requirement necessary to satisfy procedural due process comes into play only after
a showing that a proрerty or liberty interest exists.
ISC Distributors, Inc. v. Trevor
(1995),
The theory underlying substantive due process reaffirms the fundamental concept that the due process clause contains a substantive component which bars arbitrary governmental actions regardless of the procedures used to implement them, and serves as a check on oppressive governmental action. ... Substantive due process primarily examines underlying substantive rights and remedies to determine whether restrictions are unreasonable or arbitrary when balanced against the purpose of the legislature in enacting the statute.
Newville v. State, Dept. of Family Services
(1994),
¶20 In this case, Egdorf argues that § 45-1-205(5) and (6), MCA, violates substantive due process by needlessly extending the statute of limitations for prosecutions of misdemeanor fish and game offenses to three years. He asserts that the legislative purpose behind § 45-1-205(5) and (6), MCA- to facilitate the prosecutiоn of misdemeanor violations by out-of-state offenders or those which are not readily apparent within the
¶21
In Raisler v. Burlington N. Ry. Co.
(1985),
A substantive due process analysis requires a test of reasonableness of a statute in relation to the State’s power to enact such legislation. ‘The essence of substantive due process is that the State cannot use its police power to take unreasonable, arbitrary or capricious action against an individual.’... In order to satisfy substantive due process guarantees, a statute enacted under a state’s police power must be reasonably related to a permissible legislative objective.
Raisler,
¶22 Historically, misdemeanor fish and game offensеs were prosecuted under a one-year statute of limitations. In 1991, the Legislature amended § 45-1-205, MCA, providing a three-year statute of limitations for misdemeanor fish and game violations under Title 87. Testimony presented to the Senate Fish and Game Committee identified the special circumstances surrounding prosecution of fish and game offenses. According tо Bob Lane of the Department of Fish, Wildlife & Parks:
These violations, by the nature of hunting and fishing, are not always readily discoverable, undercover operations frequently must span more than one hunting or fishing season, and many suspected violators are from out-of-state. All of these factors make it difficult, and sometimes impossible, to complete investigations and bring charges within a one year period of time.
¶23 Additionally, K.L. Cool, Director of the Department of Fish, Wildlife & Parks, testified before the Senate committee that “many times investigations into serious wildlife violations take longer than a year to discover or complete and prosecution is not possible within the current one-year limitations. This is comрounded by the fact that many sportsmen and sportswomen are from out-of-state.”
¶24 In 1993, with the urging of the Montana Outfitters and Guides Association, the Legislature again amended § 45-1-205, MCA, similarly providing a three-year statute of limitations for commencing prosecution of misdemeanor fish and game offenses under Title 37, chapter 47, which specifically applies to thе activities of outfitters. According to the testimony presented by the Montana Outfitters and Guides Association to the House Fish and Game Committee, the one-year statute of limitations was often inadequate because of the nature of the activities giving rise to the offense. The outfitters explained:
Often it is necessary to extend an investigation well ovеr a year because of additional violations which may also be more severe in nature, such as felony game violations tied to the Lacey Act. The nature of these violations may cause the investigation to be extended to account for all the illegal activities. It was this same logic that enabled the Dept, of Fish, Wildlife and Parks to extеnd their statute of limitations to three years. Game violations are often tied to illegal outfitting activities.
¶25 In this case, Egdorfs act of assisting a client in the unlawful taking and possessing of a mule deer, in violation of Title 87 and Title 37, chapter 47, is precisely the type of offense contemplated by the outfitters and the Department of Fish, Wildlife & Parks, in
¶26 The United States Supreme Court has recognized that “[t]he protection and preservation of the state’s wildlife is peculiarly within its police power and the state has great latitude in determining by what means are appropriate for protecting wildlife.”
Baldwin v. Fish and Game Commission of Montana
(1978),
¶27 We conclude, therefore, that the State has a legitimate governmental interest in preserving its wildlife. Extending the period prescribed for prosecuting misdemeanor violatiоns of fish and game laws to three years is a reasonable exercise of the State’s legitimate police power. The statute of limitations set forth in § 45-1-205(5) and (6), MCA, is reasonably related to a permissive legislative purpose and, accordingly, does not violate principles of substantive due process. Consequently, the District Court did not err in denying Egdorfs motion to dismiss.
¶28 Affirmed.
