Paladini v. Superior Court of San Francisco

173 P. 588, 178 Cal. 369, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 484
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1918
DocketS. F. No. 8697. In Bank.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 173 P. 588 (Paladini v. Superior Court of San Francisco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paladini v. Superior Court of San Francisco, 173 P. 588, 178 Cal. 369, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 484 (Cal. 1918).

Opinion

WILBUR, J.

Petitioners seek a writ of prohibition to prevent the carrying out of an order of the superior court requiring them to. produce before the respondent, Harris Weinstock, state market director, their ledger and sale account for the week February 20 to 28, 1918, and to prohibit the superior court from punishing petitioners for contempt of court in failing to comply with said order.

*371 The respondent, Harris Weinstock, as state market director, is attempting to carry out the procedure provided in the law enacted by the legislature of this state in 1917 (Chap. 803, p. 1673, sec. 26), providing for the licensing of fishermen and those who sell fish, and authorizing the state market director to fix ivholesale and retail prices of fish. It is first contended that the statute is unconstitutional and void, as being in violation of section 25, article I, of the constitution. This section reads as follows:

“The people shall have the right to fish upon and from .the public lands of the state and in the waters thereof, excepting upon lands set aside for fish hatcheries, and no land owned by the state shall ever be sold or transferred without reserving in the people the absolute right to fish thereupon; and no law shall ever be passed making it a crime for the people to enter upon the public lands within this state for the purpose of fishing in any water containing fish that have been planted therein by the state; provided, that the legislature may by statute, provide for the season when and the conditions under which the different species of fish may be taken.”

The petitioners claim that by this section “the people are given the constitutional right to fish in the navigable waters of the state. ’ ’ If there were no such constitutional provision, petitioners state the rule thus: ‘1 The fish belong to the people of the state of California. This is conceded. It must be so, that Avhat they own, they may give away absolutely, or conditionally, with or without reservation.” The rule with reference to the private ownership of fish and game is thus stated in the late case of In re Frank Phoedovius, 177 Cal. 238, [170 Pac. 412] : Pish and game “can only become the subject of ownership in a qualified way, and which can never be the subject of commerce except with the consent of the state and subject to conditions which it may deem best to impose for the public good.” (See, also, Ex parte Bailey, 155 Cal. 472, [132 Am. St. Rep. 95, 31 L. R. A. (N. S.) 534, 101 Pac. 441] ; Ex parte Fritz, 86 Miss. 210, [109 Am. St. Rep. 700, 38 South. 722] ; Ex parte Kenneke, 136 Cal. 527, [89 Am. St. Rep. 177, 69 Pac. 261].) It is, therefore, evident that what the people of the state own they can alienate on such terms as they choose to impose, and that this power of regulation continues so long as such fish or game are the subject of trade or transfer. This legislative power was in no wise modified by the addition *372 of section 25, article I (supra), to the constitution. It is apparent- that the principal purpose of this amendment, as stated in the Matter of Application of Parra, 24 Cal. App. 339, [141 Pac. 393], “was to preserve to the people the right to fish upon the public lands of the state, and to require that grants of land by the state should not be made ‘without reserving to the people the absolute right to fish thereon.’ ” The proviso in the section authorizing the legislature to fix “the season when and the conditions under which the different species of fish may be taken” was evidently intended to leave the matter exactly as it was before the adoption of this amendment in November, 1910, except as it restricted the power to alienate public land without such reservation, or to create private fisheries thereon. This section gave no right to the people which they did not already have. We conclude, therefore, that the legislature had the right to provide a system for fixing the wholesale and retail prices for the sale of fresh fish, allowing “a reasonable compensation or profit to those engaged in the catching or selling of fish, ” as in the act provided.

Amici curiae call attention to the new section of the constitution (section 25%, article IV) adopted in November, 1902, to wit: “The legislature may provide for the division of the state into fish and game districts, and may enact such laws for the protection of fish and game therein as it may deem appropriate to the respective districts,” and claim that the effect of this provision is to limit the power of the legislature to the “protection of fish and game.” The obvious purpose of this amendment was to remove the former restriction of article IV, -section 25, subdivision 33, which prohibited the enactment of a local law “where a general law can be made applicable, ’ ’ and in no wise limits the sovereign power of the state over fish and game, or of the legislature to legislate concerning the same. On the contrary, it increases the legislative discretion by authorizing local laws on the subject.

Petitioners claim that the right to fish is a property right, granted by license; that to take away such license is tó deprive the petitioners of a property right, and therefore a proceeding looking to that end is in its nature criminal, and that to require the petitioners to produce papers containing evidence against themselves in such a criminal action is unconstitutional. It is sufficient to say that the license to fish is a privi *373 lege granted by the state and may be taken away in the exercise of its police power. (See Hevren v. Reed, 126 Cal. 219, 222, [58 Pac. 536] ; Littleton v. Burgess, 14 Wyo. 173, [2 L. R. A. (N. S.) 631, 82 Pac. 864]. See, also, Lanterman v. Anderson, 36 Cal. App. 472, [172 Pac. 625], wherein a petition for a hearing in this court was denied.) The proceeding before the state market director is not criminal in its nature, and the order compelling the petitioners to produce their books before the state market director was not in violation of the constitutional provision which prohibits a court or officer from requiring a defendant in a criminal case to furnish evidence against himself.

It is also claimed that the order to produce petitioners’ books violates the constitutional provision prohibiting unreasonable searches and seizures. (Art. I, sec. 19, Cal. Const.; Fourth Amendment, U. S. Const.) Books and papers containing a record of the purchase and sale of fish, made since the above law of 1917 went into effect, are no longer private. They contain a record of the purchase and sale of the property of the state, by those having a qualified or conditional interest therein. By engaging in the fish business and applying for a license therefor petitioners, in effect, consented to the inspection of their books as in the law provided. To require the production of such books is not a violation of the constitutional provision in question.

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Bluebook (online)
173 P. 588, 178 Cal. 369, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paladini-v-superior-court-of-san-francisco-cal-1918.