Nugent v. McCurdy

6 La. App. 615, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 197
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 28, 1927
DocketNo. 2881
StatusPublished

This text of 6 La. App. 615 (Nugent v. McCurdy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nugent v. McCurdy, 6 La. App. 615, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 197 (La. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

Plaintiff owned a 600-foot seine which was destroyed by William O. McCurdy and A. B. Burns, agents of the Conservation Commission of Louisiana.

Plaintiff brought this suit to recover of the defendants the value of the property destroyed, plus damages resulting from the loss of the use of the seine.

Doctor V. K. Irion, Conservation Commissioner, was also joined as a party defendant. However, he has dropped out of the case, and the suit is not now being prosecuted against him. '

McCurdy and Burns admit that they destroyed a seine on the banks of Little River in Grant parish, but allege that at the time the seine was destroyed they did not know who owned it. However, the proof makes it perfectly clear that the seine destroyed by them was the property of this plaintiff.

The main defense is that a seine such as was destroyed by defendants was of the kind which the law prohibits and declares to be a public nuisance; that it was unicensed, had been used in closed or prohibited waters; and that under the law they had a right not only to seize but to destroy it.

The lower court found for plaintiff, givng him damages for the value of the seine and rejecting his other demands.

The defendants have appealed.

[617]*617OPINION

The plaintiff was, at the time this controversy arose, and for a number of years prior thereto, engaged in commercial fishing and had always procured a license from the Department of Conservation for carrying on that business. He bought a new seine, 600 feet long, which, he swears, was of the kind which he and others in that locality had been using and which had been licensed and permitted by the Conservation Department of the state; which, he says, had a three-inch mesh. As' to the kind of seine purchased, the mesh, etc., his testimony is corroborated by J. E. Ray, who ordered the seine for him.

On August 15, 1925, Nugent, the plaintiff, made the usual application to the Department for permission to use a seine. The application is on a printed form furnished by the Department, and was made out, that is, the blanks filled in, by Mr. T. C. Lincecum, who is connected with the Department, and was signed by Nugent, the plaintiff. The application as made out by Lincecum and signed by Nugent specified that the seine might be used in “Little River above Thompson’s Ferry, Catahoula Lake, and all other permitted waters of the state”.

When the application was signed by Nugent it was delivered to Lincecum who forwarded it to the New Orleans office in order that a permit might be issued. When the application was inspected at New Orleans it was discovered that the words, “above Thompson’s Ferry”, had been written in whereas it should .have been written “below Thompson’s Ferry”, for the reason that under the rules of the Department the waters above Thompson’s Ferry on Catahoula Lake were closed or forbidden waters; whereupon someone in the office at New Orleans drew a mark through the word “above” and wrote above it the word “below”.

In the meantime Nugent, having observed that Lincecum, who represented the Department, had made out the application specifying that the seine might be used above Thompson’s Ferry in Catahoula jake, proceeded to use the seine in those waters, assuming, as he testified, that the Department had changed its rules, as it had a right to do, and intended to permit him to seine in those waters.

A similar permit had been granted to Mr. Gibson, another fisherman, who was at the same time seining above Thompson’s Ferry.

It would therefore seem that Nugent was in good faith in using his seine above Thompson’s Ferry, although he knew that theretofore the waters above the ferry were closed.

It may be well here to state that it was a custom, sanctioned by the Department, for those who made application for permits to seine to begin using the seine as soon as the application was made out and sent in before the final permit was issued; which accounts for the fact that Nugent began using the seine at once. Nugent later learned in some way that Lincecum had made an error which had been corrected in the New; Orleans office. He testified, and his testimony on that point is not disputed, that as soon as he learned that his application had been changed and that there was some doubt as to whether he would be permitted to seine above [618]*618Thompson’s Ferry, he took his seine out of those waters and dragged it up on the hank and left it there to await developments.

McCurdy and Burns, the defendants, while patroling the waters, discovered the seine lying out on the bank. There were evidences that the seine had been used above Thompson’s Ferry and as there was no one in charge of it at the time they waited for someone to appear and claim it with a view of arresting and prosecuting the owner. They watched it for some two or three days. No one appearing to claim it and they not knowing to whom it belonged and therefore not able to make an arrest, seized and burned it where they found it.

As to their reasons for burning the seine, McCurdy says (page 14, evidence):

“Q. You burned it simply because you found it above Thompson’s Ferry on Little River?
“A. Because I found it above Thompson’s Ferry on Little River I burned it, and because of the fact that I had no means of transportation to bring it out; and for the further reason that there was no one in possession of it and I had no evidence as to whom it belonged, and there was no real reason why I should put myself to the trouble of bringing it out, as I had no case against anyone at the time for having that seine.”

In that connection he was asked if he knew that Gibson, another fisherman, was seining at the same time above the ferry under a permit, and he said that he did:

Previous to giving the above testimony he was asked (page 13, evidence):

“Q. Mr. McCurdy, I believe you allege in your answer that that seine was an illegal seine; do you still persist in saying that?
“A. Under the strict construction of the law, it was. The law requires that the mesh of a seine be three (3) inches, and this was only 2% inches.”

On page 48 of the evidence he was asked:

“Q. Then, as I understand it, you burned the seine up because you found it above Thompson’s Ferry instead of below.
“A. I burned it because I found it being operated above Thompson’s Ferry, and the physical evidence showed that it was being operated there. I had no evidence against any party, and I did not consider it worthwhile for me to go off and hire a truck to haul that seine out and put the state to that expense just in order to get an order from the court to destroy it, which would have been the final result in the end.
“Q. Now, suppose you had found this seine below Thompson’s Ferry, would you have burned it?
“A. I would not.”

From the foregoing testimony it is clear that the question whether the seine was of a legal or illegal mesh had nothing t,o do with defendants’ conduct in destroying it; therefore that question is eliminated from consideration.

Both McCurdy and Burns say they acted in good faith in destroying the seine.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 La. App. 615, 1927 La. App. LEXIS 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nugent-v-mccurdy-lactapp-1927.