People Ex Rel. Hill v. . Hesterberg

76 N.E. 1032, 184 N.Y. 126, 22 Bedell 126, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 1346
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 27, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 76 N.E. 1032 (People Ex Rel. Hill v. . Hesterberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People Ex Rel. Hill v. . Hesterberg, 76 N.E. 1032, 184 N.Y. 126, 22 Bedell 126, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 1346 (N.Y. 1906).

Opinion

Cullen, Ch. J.

The relators were arrested on warrants charging them with a violation of the Game Law. They sought discharge from their arrest by writs of habeas corpus. On the return to those wilts they were remanded to custody. On appeal to the Appellate Division the orders of the Special Term were reversed and the relators discharged from custody. From those orders these appeals are taken. As the affidavits on which the warrants for the arrest of the relators were issued differ materially in their statements of facts, we will first consider the one made in the Hill case. The affidavit avers that on the 3rd day of March said John Hill did have in his possession in the Clarendon Hotel, in the borough of Brooklyn, one dead body of a bird known as á golden plover, *130 and one dead body of a fowl commonly called a grouse; that,. as the affiant was informed and believed, the said plover and grouse were taken without the state of New York, to wit, from England and Russia, and thence brought into the borough of Brooklyn.

The Forest, Fish and Game Law (Chap. 20, Laws 1900, amended chaps. 194 and 317, Laws 1902; chap. 588, Laws 1904), by sections 106 and 108, enacts that grouse shall not be taken or possessed from January 1st to October 31st, nor plover from January 1st to July 15th. By section 140 of said act grouse is defined to include ruffed grouse, partridge and every member of the grouseYamily. By section 141 the inhibition enacted by the other sections of the statute is made to apply to fish, game or flesh coming from without the state, as well as to that taken within the state. By section 119 any one violating the provisions of the statute hereinbefore recited is guilty of a misdemeanor and liable to a fine of twenty-five dollars for each bird taken or possessed in violation thereof. The relator was in possession of the birds during the prohibited period, and, hence, was guilty of a misdemeanor, unless he is relieved from the penalties prescribed by the statute by the fact that the birds were imported from foreign countries. We shall not discuss at any length the claim of the relator that the statute contravenes the Constitution of this state as depriving the relator of his property without due process of law. That question has been settled adversely to that claim by the decisions of this court in Phelps v. Racey (60 N. Y. 10) and People v. Bootman (180 N. Y. 1), in which it was held within the power of the legislature, in order to effect the preservation of game within the state, to enact not only a close season during which the possession of such game should be unlawful, but also to enact that the possession in the state during such season of game taken without the state should be equally, unlawful. The Phelps case is cited by the Supreme Court of the United States in Qeer v. Connecticut (161 U. S. 519), in which the validity of a statute of that state was upheld, not only on the ground that the original owner *131 ship of wild game is in the state, but on the farther ground that the preservation of such game is a valid exercise of the police power of the state. To the argument that the exclusion of foreign game in no way tends to the preservation of domestic game, it is sufficient to say that substantially the uniform belief of legislatures and people is to the contrary, and that both in England and many of the states in this country legislation prohibiting the possession of foreign game during the close season has been upheld as being necessary to the protection of domestic game, on the ground that without such inhibition or restriction any law for the protection of domestic game could be successfully evaded. ( Whitehead v. Smithers, L. R. [2 C. P. Div.] 553 ; Ex parte Maier, 103 Cal. 476; Magner v. People, 97 Ill. 320; Missouri v. Randolph, 1 Mo. App. 151; Stevens v. State, 89 Md. 669 ; Roth v. State, 51 Ohio St. 209 ; Commonwealth v. Savage, 155 Mass. 278.) The case of Phelps v. Raeey (supra) has never been overruled by this court. In the opinion delivered in People v. Buffalo Fish Company (164 N. T. 93) Judge O’Brien took two positions: First, that the exclusion of fish taken without the state was invalid as interfering with the power of Congress to regulate foreign and interstate commerce; and, second, that under a proper construction of the Game Law as it then stood the statute was applicable only to fish taken within the state. It was this second ground alone which' received the assent of the majority of judges and on which the decision in the case proceeded. This ground has been removed by the amendment of the statute already cited, which makes it applicable to game taken without the state. People v. Bootman (supra) re-affirmed the doctrine of Phelps v. Racey and the validity of the legislation before us, at least so far as the Constitution of this state is involved. In that case while we affirmed the decision below because the offenses for which the defendant was prosecuted were committed before the amendment to the statute, we felt called upon to express our opinion on the whole subject, so that the citizen might not be misled by the opinion rendered in the court below and thus unwittingly *132 subject himself to severe penalties. If as is claimed the views then expressed by the court on the subject now before us were obiter and not necessary to the decision made, it is sufficient to say that we adhere to them, not on the ground of stare decisis but because they command our approval. Therefore, if the act of Congress, passed May 25th, 1900, commonly termed the Lacey Act,” empowered the state to enact the legislation before us, it is unnecessary for us to enter into any examination of the question of interference with foreign and interstate commerce, discussed, but not decided, in People v. Buffalo Fish Company.

That Congress can authorize an exercise of the police power by a state, which without such authority would be an unconstitutional interference with commerce, has been expressly decided by the Supreme Court of the United States in Matter of Rahrer (140 U. S. 545). The question before'us is merely the interpretation of the Lacey Act, which the learned counsel for the respondents contend applies solely to interstate shipments and not to importations from foreign countries.

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Bluebook (online)
76 N.E. 1032, 184 N.Y. 126, 22 Bedell 126, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 1346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-hill-v-hesterberg-ny-1906.