129 P. 128 | Or. | 1913
Opinion by
“It shall be unlawful within the counties of Clatsop, Columbia, and Multnomah of the State of Oregon, at any time between the fifteenth day of January and the first day of September of any year, to take, kill, injure, destroy, or have in possession any mallard duck, wood duck, widgeon, teal, spoonbill, gray, black, sprigtail, or canvasback, or any wild duck.”
It is conceded that the defendant had in his possession, during the time when it was unlawful to kill the same, one wild duck; in other words, that the act committed by him is within the exact letter of the section quoted, but, on account of an alleged injustice which would result from punishing him for having in his possession a bird which was killed when it was lawful to kill it, we are asked to fish through the statute for something that may be construed to modify the section quoted, and to hold that it does not mean what it says, but something radically different.
The case principally relied upon by appellant is State v. Fisher, 53 Or. 38 (98 Pac. 713), which was a case construing the law that prohibited having deer in possession during the closed season. The syllabus in that case states the contention, the statute, and the holding so tersely that we quote: “Section 2010, B. & C. Comp., as amended by Laws 1907, p. 342, makes it unlawful to hunt, kill, or pursue deer within the State during the closed season, and declares that ‘any person having in possession any deer or carcass, or part of a deer during
The objection that the construction of the act insisted on by the State is unjust and absurd is urged with much plausibility, and it is said that it is unjust to permit a man to hunt lawfully on the 29th day of February and to punish him on the 1st day of March for having in his possession the game so lawfully taken the day previous. If the law compelled him to hunt on the 29th day of February, such a proceeding would be unjust, but he is not compelled to kill ducks on the last day of' the open season; neither is he compelled to kill more game in the open season that he and his friends can consume before it closes. He has a choice of mercy to the birds, or of generosity to his friends.
The mischief that this section sought to remedy was the habit that prevailed to some extent among hunters who killed ducks during the closed season, and, when caught with the game in their possession, claimed that it had been killed during the open season. Experience had shown that it was next to impossible, in many instances, to show when the birds were killed, except from the statements of the sportsmen; and, while the veracity of fishermen and hunters is, of course, proverbial, experience had probably demonstrated to the legislative mind that in some exceptional cases a sportsman might possibly prevaricate rather than pay a fine of $50. This section was passed after the opinion in
The judgment is affirmed. Affirmed.