Cohen v. Gould

225 N.W. 435, 177 Minn. 398, 1929 Minn. LEXIS 1056
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 10, 1929
DocketNo. 27,019.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 225 N.W. 435 (Cohen v. Gould) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cohen v. Gould, 225 N.W. 435, 177 Minn. 398, 1929 Minn. LEXIS 1056 (Mich. 1929).

Opinions

1 Reported in 225 N.W. 435. Replevin for 680 muskrat skins which in December, 1926, were seized by defendants as game wardens of the state of Minnesota. Defendant Gould was at the time the acting commissioner of game and fish. A verdict was directed for defendants, and plaintiffs appeal from the order denying their motion for a new trial.

Plaintiffs are engaged in the fur business at Duluth as copartners under the name of Hudson Bay Fur Company. They have a branch office across the Saint Louis river in Superior, Wisconsin, which is operated under the name of Lake Superior Fur Company. The furs in question were purchased by one Symons at the latter place. December 15, 1926, during a closed season on muskrats in Minnesota, they were shipped to the Superior Fur Dressing Company in Minneapolis. There the shipment was seized by defendants. The furs were in two bags. They bore no official tags or seals of the commissioner of game and fish of this state and nothing to show the legality of their original taking or of the then possession of them by plaintiffs. In that situation there was a statutory presumption that the skins had been unlawfully taken. G. S. 1923 (1 Mason, 1927) § 5512. In one sack there were ten and in the other 12 pelts showing that the animals from which they were taken had been killed by shooting or spearing, methods which were then and for some time had been prohibited in Wisconsin (Wisconsin St. 1927, c. 29, § 29.24) where the skins had been taken and where they were purchased by plaintiffs. Under the statutes hereinafter to be considered, particularly G. S. 1923 (1 Mason, 1927) § 5633, the presence in the shipments of the skins of muskrats which had been shot or speared made the whole consignment prima facie contraband and subject to seizure. *Page 400

1. It is argued for plaintiffs that G. S. 1923 (1 Mason, 1927) § 5547, is unconstitutional. It provides in part as follows:

"Nothing in this act [L. 1919, c. 400] shall be construed as prohibiting the buying, shipping or having in possession at any time, of the skins of fur-bearing animals legally killed within or without the state * * * upon proof that the hides were so taken."

This should be read in connection with portions of §§ 5541, 5631, and 5633. Under G. S. 1923, § 5541 (as amended by L. 1925, p. 489, c. 380, § 1) 1 Mason Minn. St. id. "any person desiring to retain in possession during the closed season the skins of protected fur-bearing animals" may obtain from the commissioner distinctive tags known as retaining tags for the pelts so to be retained, and "such pelts lawfully tagged may be bought and sold at any time." Section 5631 authorizes the seizure and confiscation in the name of the state of any wild animal or part thereof "caught, killed, taken or had in possession or under control, or sold or transported in violation of this chapter." By § 5633 it is declared that "confiscation of any part of a shipment shall include the entire shipment, and whenever two or more wild animals, carcasses or parts thereof, are packed, stored or contained in the same * * * receptacle, or are otherwise commingled and one or more thereof are contraband, then and in such case the whole shipment or parcel shall be deemed contraband."

The title of L. 1919, p. 427, c. 400 (of which the sections just referred to are a part) is an act to amend "and codify the laws of this state relating to the preservation, protection and propagation of wild animals, including quadrupeds, birds and fish of both this and other states, and to repeal certain laws relating thereto." The reference to the wild life of other states and the protection thereof is not an attempt to give to Minnesota law extraterritorial effect. The intention is rather and only to extend to the game laws of other states that consideration and such co-operation by the officials enforcing the laws of Minnesota as is demanded by comity for the purpose of giving all such laws their intended and proper local *Page 401 effect. To that end § 5547 legalizes the possession in this state of the skins of fur-bearing animals legally killed in other states.

The thing of which present complaint is made upon the ground of unconstitutionality is that the burden is put upon the possessors of skins brought from other states of producing proof that the hides were legally killed therein. That requirement, it is argued, is beyond the scope of the title of the act and its subject matter not expressed therein as required by art. 4, § 27, of the state constitution. State v. Chapel, 63 Minn. 535, 536, 65 N.W. 940. In that case a statutory provision the only purpose of which was to furnish aid in the enforcement of the laws of other states and the protection of wild life therein was held unconstitutional because the title was narrowly restricted to the purpose of the protection of "the game and fish of the state of Minnesota." Plainly the reference in the title above quoted of L. 1919, p. 427, c. 400, to the wild life "of both this and other states," prevents any such objection to the provisions thereof now in question. The provision putting upon the possessor of imported furs the burden of proof that they were legally taken is in § 53 of the original act. Plainly, it is within the enlarged reach of the title, which includes the "quadrupeds, birds and fish" of this and other states.

2. The imposition of the burden of proof of legality upon the possessor of imported furs is next objected to upon the ground, as we understand it, of its being so arbitrary and unreasonable as to deny due process and the equal protection of law. The attack is not upon the manner in which the law was attempted to be enforced in the instant case but upon the statute as it stands. Plaintiffs construe it as requiring "one who buys furs in the open markets of other states to submit more proof in this state of the legality of the skins than is necessary to legalize the sale of the skins in those states." We find nothing to indicate that any such extreme construction is warranted or attempted. The record shows only that plaintiffs' entire shipment was considered contraband because each of the two parcels contained a number of pelts which had been taken from animals killed by shooting or spearing, which is prohibited in Wisconsin. Wisconsin St. 1927, c. 29, § 29.24. *Page 402

Recently, in Waldo v. Gould, 165 Minn. 128, 206 N.W. 46, we had occasion to consider generally the result and purposes of the statute now drawn in question. It is not necessary to reiterate the conclusions then reached, except to repeat that the theory of the statute is that the state in its sovereign capacity and in trust for its people has the title to the wild game therein and that it may be reduced to the possession and ownership of individuals only as permitted by and subject to the conditions imposed by the statute.

Such police measures as our game laws would be futile indeed if they did not provide measures of enforcement adequate to oppose successfully the devices of those whose interest it is to violate them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
225 N.W. 435, 177 Minn. 398, 1929 Minn. LEXIS 1056, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cohen-v-gould-minn-1929.