Bruce v. Dir., Chesapeake Bay Aff.

276 A.2d 200, 261 Md. 585, 1 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20271, 2 ERC (BNA) 1810, 1971 Md. LEXIS 1110
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 16, 1971
Docket[No. 351, September Term, 1970.]
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 276 A.2d 200 (Bruce v. Dir., Chesapeake Bay Aff.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bruce v. Dir., Chesapeake Bay Aff., 276 A.2d 200, 261 Md. 585, 1 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20271, 2 ERC (BNA) 1810, 1971 Md. LEXIS 1110 (Md. 1971).

Opinion

Finan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

*588 On March 9, 1970, this Court issued a per curiam order reversing that portion of the decree of the chancellor in the lower court dated August 26, 1970, wherein he declared §§ 322 and 700 (a), (c) and (i), of Article'66C of the Maryland Code (1970 Repl. Vol.) to be constitutional and dismissed the appellants’ bill of complaint. At that time we stated we would file an opinion setting forth the reasons for this reversal, which we now do. The question before this Court is the constitutionality of the residential requirements and territorial restrictions placed by the State on the licensing of commercial fishermen who engage in crabbing and oystering in the tidal waters of Maryland.

The appellants are residents of Somerset County and are members of the Tangier Sound Watermen’s Association. They are a part of that hardy breed of men who earn their livelihood by seasonally combing the oyster bars of the Chesapeake Bay and its estuaries and following the migration of the elusive crab. They were the complainants below in a bill in equity filed in Somerset County seeking a declaration 1 that Sections 322 and 700 of Article 66C restricting the taking and catching of crabs and oysters in Maryland are illegal, unconstitutional, and void because they violate the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States and of Article 23 of the Declaration of Rights of the Constitution of Maryland.

Defendants in the bill, appellees in this Court, are the Director of the Department of Chesapeake Bay Affairs and the Chairman and members of the Commission of Chesapeake Bay Affairs (Commission). They are charged with the powers and duties of enforcement of the challenged statutes and of licensing persons to take and catch crabs and oysters in Maryland. The bill sought injunc *589 tive relief against appellees because of the invalidity of the statutes in question.

The only testimony was that introduced by the water-men through the persons of Oscar J. Smith, President of the Tangier Sound Watermen’s Association, a resident of Smith Island and a life-long waterman and licensed commercial crabber and oysterman, and that of Carlton Y. Dize, a member of the Maryland House of Delegates from Somerset County. The appellants in their brief presented the following statement of facts which was accepted by the Commission and which we set forth together with the statutes involved.

Crabbing
“§ 322. Crabbers’ Licenses
Any resident of Maryland desiring to take or catch crabs from the waters thereof for market, and each person working on any boat used in taking or catching of crabs for market, shall first obtain a numbered license through the clerk of the circuit court for the county in which he resides or from the clerk of the Court of Common Pleas, if he resides in Baltimore City, and shall pay the sum of $2, and in addition thereto twenty-five cents to the clerk of the court for issuing same, which license shall be good for the year of issuance only and shall entitle the person obtaining same to take or catch crabs by any of the methods now or hereafter authorized to be used, including scrape, nets, dip nets or trotline. Provided, that such license shall not authorize the taking or catching of crabs in any creek, cove, river, inlet, bay or sound within the limits of any county other than that wherein the license shall have been granted; provided that nothing in this section shall be so construed as to prevent the citizens of counties divided by a river from using such dividing river in common. All persons taking or catching crabs under *590 the provisions of this subheading shall exhibit their license for so doing when required by any officer of the Maryland marine police force, or other officers of the State.” Maryland Code (1970 Repl. Vol.) Art. 66C.

Crabs are found in marketable quantities in only 13 of the State’s 23 counties, namely Worcester, Somerset, Wicomico, Dorchester, Talbot, Queen Anne’s, Kent, Baltimore, Anne Arundel, Calvert, St. Mary’s, Charles and Prince George’s.

The migration and movements of crabs and their erratic growth may cause them to be scarce or not to appear at all, or to be too small to harvest until late in the season. Crabs migrate from south to north up the Chesapeake Bay as the weather grows warmer, and this migration takes place annually.

Crabs can move very rapidly when migrating, and be plentiful one day in one place and move from that place overnight. They can be plentiful in the waters of one county and wholly absent from the waters of an adjoining county. This occurred in 1964 when Somerset County had no crabs and Dorchester County had an abundance of them. There can also be, as in 1969, practically no crabs on the eastern side of the Bay and a plentitude of them on the west side and the Potomac River.

There are 530 licensed crabbers in Somerset County and approximately 600 in Dorchester County. These are the professional watermen who work with scrapes, nets and trotlines and do not include pot crabbers who must obtain a license from Annapolis to take crabs and not from the Clerk of the County wherein he resides, as in the case of crabbing other than by pots.

A resident of Dorchester can crab by pot anywhere in Somerset but the latter cannot crab by pot in Dorchester. This is because the Department of Chesapeake Bay Affairs has provided by regulation that areas set aside for oyster dredging are the areas where crab pots may be set in Tangier Sound. These are areas that are thus set aside *591 for dredging, and crabs may be caught by pot in those areas by anyone, not only residents of Somerset. Dorchester has no area set aside for dredging, except for one area in the Choptank River, but nobody is allowed to crab by pot in that area. Dorchester pot crabbers may, however, come into Somerset.

Anywhere from one-half to two-thirds of the entire crab catch in Somerset waters is taken by crab pots by crabbers from other counties. There are more pot crabbers in Somerset than there are netters and scrapers.

Very little crabbing is done in the Chesapeake Bay waters, which are not waters of any county, except by crab pots. This is because of the depth of the water. Crabbers using pots start earlier in the season and go down to the Virginia line to catch the crabs that first come along. There is not any place that a resident of another county cannot crab with pots. There is no discrimination as to crab pots. The law prohibits residents of other counties from taking crabs and oysters in Somerset and the Department has been requested by the appellants to enforce these laws.

The effect of § 322 on a crabber’s living, other than the crab potter, of prohibiting him from crabbing in another county is to reduce his income to the point where his family has a bare subsistence.

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Bluebook (online)
276 A.2d 200, 261 Md. 585, 1 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20271, 2 ERC (BNA) 1810, 1971 Md. LEXIS 1110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bruce-v-dir-chesapeake-bay-aff-md-1971.