Key v. State

384 S.W.2d 22, 215 Tenn. 136, 19 McCanless 136, 1964 Tenn. LEXIS 545
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 384 S.W.2d 22 (Key v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Key v. State, 384 S.W.2d 22, 215 Tenn. 136, 19 McCanless 136, 1964 Tenn. LEXIS 545 (Tenn. 1964).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Holmes

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The plaintiffs in error, hereinafter referred to as defendants, were convicted of the offense of hunting during the closed season. Each defendant was fined $50.00 and •costs by the Trial Judge, who heard the case without the intervention of a jury. Defendants’ motions for new trial were overruled by the Trial Judge and they have perfected their appeals to this Court.

Since assignments of error 1 and 2 relate to the evidence, it is necessary briefly to review the facts. The record shows that on the evening of August 9, 1963. State Game & Fish officers went into the Walland and Townsend area of Blount County. When they arrived at the Laurel Late property, which belongs to the State and is used as a youth camp, they found two trucks parked thére with a dog chained in the back of one of the trucks. Officers remained in the vicinity of these trucks all night. While there, they “heard dogs back in towards the mountains, in behind Laurel Lake, barking and running”. The next morning between eight and nine o’clock the two de[138]*138fendants and two other men came out of the woods towards the trucks leading dogs. The defendant Key was carrying his fully loaded 30-30 rifle. One of the officers went back up the trail from which the men had come and found another 30-30 rifle, which the defendant Holland admitted was his. When asked what they were hunting, the defendants stated they were hunting feral hogs.

The top of-the mountain where the defendants stated they camped during the night, according to the testimony of the defendant Holland, is about two miles from the boundary of the Smoky Mountain National Park. The record shows that Russian boar are found in Smoky Mountain National Park as well as in the Tellico Wildlife Area and that the Russian boar in the National Park “come out of the park quite a bit” in the vicinity where defendants were hunting.

When asked how he could tell the difference between, a Russian boar and a feral hog, the defendant Holland testified:

“The general way, most general way, is color. That’s one. And generally the Russian hog is either black or brindled colored or gray. Once in a while they will be mixed enough to where there will be some white in them, at Tellico.”

This defendant testified a feral hog may be any color. He further stated that a feral hog will:

“just be fat and ugly. * * * He don’t have any streamlined form to him at all like a Russian hog does.”

This defendant admitted that the tracks made by a Russian boar and those made by a feral hog are the same. He further testified that the bay or bark of the dogs was [139]*139the same whether they were pursuing Russian boar or feral hogs. This defendant, in his testimony, contended there is a difference in the rooting habits of Russian boar and feral hogs, that a feral hog will only root in damp, soft earth, but a Russian boar will root in any kind of earth. When asked what a domestic hog would do in a turnip patch, he responded that a turnip patch would be a soft, damp place.

When apprehended on the Laurel Lake State property, the defendants were allowed to remain there sufficient time to recover their dogs, some of which had become lost from them during the night, and were instructed to then report to the proper authorities, which they did.

The record does not show that the defendants killed any game of any sort on this occasion. “Hunting” is defined by T.C.A. sec. 51-403, as follows:

“Hunting includes pursuing, shooting, killing, capturing, and trapping wild animals, wild fowl, wild birds, and all lesser acts such as disturbing, harrying or worrying, or placing, setting, drawing or using any device used to take wild animals, wild fowl, wild birds, whether they result in taking or not, and includes every act of assistance to any person in taking or attempting to take wild animals, wild fowl, or wild birds.”

There can be no doubt defendants were hunting on this occasion. They contend they were hunting feral hogs and that feral hogs are not protected by the laws of this State and that, therefore, they had a legal right to hunt feral hogs at any time and at any place other than in wildlife management areas or on State owned property. They deny they did any hunting on the Laurel Lake State [140]*140property, but asserted they were beyond its limits while hunting.

While we, as did the Trial Judge, find it difficult to understand how the defendants could know their dogs were on the trail of a. feral hog- and not a Russian boar, we will follow the reasoning of the Trial Judge when hé stated:

“I suppose if they,say they, were hunting feral hogs, they were hunting feral hogs, as far as I’m concerned.”

.This leaves the question of whether or not there was a-closed season on ferahhogs ;at thk time- -and place defendants; WeréCxunting ón this occasion.

By T.C.A. secs. 51-401 .and 51-402, “ [t]he ownership of and title to all forms of wildlife within the jurisdiction of the state, as are not individual property under the laws of the land, is hereby declared to be in the state ’ ’ and wildlife is defined “to be all wild animals,■ wild birds, wild fowl, fish,"frogs and other aquatic animal life.”

T.C.Á. sec. 51-408 provides:

“There"is hereby declared a closed season upon all hunting and fishing in the state of Tennessee upon all game and fish protected by the laws of the state.”

By T.C.A. sec. 51-409, upon a determination by the State Came & Fish Commission that the supply of game in a given area is adequate .to allow the taking thereof without danger .of extinction or undue' depletion, the Commission is authorized to announce such fact by proclamation, in which the'Commission is required to state the' species of game which- may be taken and announce the dates between which such game may- be taken. Upon [141]*141such announcement by the Commission, it is made lawful for any person within the area designated by the Commission to take game or fish of the species mentioned by the Commission. Under these statutes the season for hunting all game protected by the laws of the State is closed except as the season on certain species of game may be declared open in a given area at a given time by proclamation of the Game & Fish Commission issued pursuant to T.C.A. sec. 51-409.

The defendants contend that feral hogs are not wildlife or game within the meaning of these statutes. Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary, 1950 Edition, defines the word “feral” as follows:

■“a. (From L. ferns, wild) 1. A term applied to wild animals descended from tame stocks, or to animals having become wild from a state of domestication, or plants from a state of cultivation; as, feral pigs. 2. Wild by nature; untamed; savage; ferine; existing in a state of nature.”

In this- same work, among the definitions of the word “game” are the following:

“Animals which are pursued or killed in the chase or "in the sports of the field, either for the use of man, or for pastime; as the northern forests are rich in game. * * * Pertaining to such animals and birds as are hunted either for the use of man or for the sport of the hunt.”

In 3.8 C.J.S. Game sec. 1, it is stated:

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Bluebook (online)
384 S.W.2d 22, 215 Tenn. 136, 19 McCanless 136, 1964 Tenn. LEXIS 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/key-v-state-tenn-1964.