State v. Stokes

117 Ark. 192 | Ark. | 1915

Hart, J.,

(after stating the facts). In the case of the State v. Mallory, 73 Ark. 236, it was held that a State can not forbid ia nonresident land owner taking fish and game on his own property within the State while according such privileges to resident land owners, in view of the provision of the Federal Constitution forbidding the denial of equal protection of the law and the taking of property without due process of law. In that case the court said:

“The fullest latitude of power in the State to regulate and preserve the game for the common enjoyment is conceded, and no such private property rights therein which we hold to exist can retard or obstruct the exercise of that undoubted power. But we have another and altogether different question to deal with in this case, that of finding whether land owners have a right to hunt and fish upon their own lands, which is a property right, they iare entitled to equal protection in the enjoyment of that right with other land owners, or whether it be destroyed by a statute passed under the guise of a. police regulation to preserve the fish and game, and the right of enjoyment prohibited for the sole reason that they are non-residents of the State. It is not of the fact that .appellee is excluded from enjoyment of the common right of the citizen to fish and hunt, because of his non-residence, that he may complain, but of the exclusion, by reason of his nonresidence, from such 'special right which he should enjoy in common with other land owners.”

Again in the case of Lewis v. State, 110 Ark. 204, the court said:

“In State v. Mallory, 73 Ark. 236, the court had under review the act approved April 24, 1903, making it unlawful for any person who is a nonresident of the State of Arkansas to hunt or fish in the State at any season of the year. We held under that act that nonresidents of the State who owned land within the State could hunt and fish on their own lands during the open season. But the act, of course, as to nonresidents of the State who are not owners of land within the State, is still in force, and they are prohibited from hunting and fishing at any season of the year. That act involves a discrimination in favor of residents of the State as against nonresidents who are not owners of land in the State. Such discrimination is a valid exercise of governmental power which the sovereign State has over the fish and game, ferae naturae, within its borders to protect and preserve same for the benefit of its inhabitants. ’ ’

(1-2) The effect of these decisions is that a nonresident of the State of Arkansas may not hunt in this State except upon lands which he owns. The right to hunt is merely an incident to his ownership of the lands, and we are of the opinion that the deed copied into the statement of facts does not convey any interest in the lands to the defendants, but only grants them the right to use them as a fish and game preserve.

When the deed is construed from its four corners and especially in reference to language used in the latter part of it, it is evident that there was only an intention to grant the defendants the right to hunt and fish on the land. The deed recites that the property is to be used as a ‘ ‘ fish and game preserve only, ’ ’ and that the grantors reserve to themselves 'the right to cut and remove all the timber on the land and that it is a condition of the conveyance that should the Big Lake Shooting Club abandon the property or the club cease to exist the land should revert to and the title thereto be revested in the grantors. We do not think the deed conveyed any interest in the land separate and apart from the right to use it as a fish and game preserve. .

Under the statute above referred to, the defendants being nonresidents would not be allowed to fish and hunt on the land unless they owned it and had an interest in the land itself.

(3) In short, we hold that the mere grant of the privileges of hunting and fishing does not make a nonresident, to whom such privilege is granted, an owner of the land so that he may escape the provisions of the statute in regard to nonresidents hunting in this State.

We expressly held in the case of the State v. Mallory, supra, that the nonresident could hunt on his own land because of the fact that he owned it and it was a right he might enjoy in common with other land owners.

Deeds from other persons and corporations are set out in the transcript and other reasons assigned by the Attorney General why the judgment should be reversed, but we do not deem it necessary to consider and determine them because the record shows that the defendants hunted on the land embraced in the above described conveyance, and having held that that conveyance did not give them any title to or interest in the land, it necessarily follows that they violated the section of the statute under which they were indicted when they hunted upon the lands.

Therefore the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.

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