Rea v. . Hampton

7 S.E. 649, 101 N.C. 51
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 7 S.E. 649 (Rea v. . Hampton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rea v. . Hampton, 7 S.E. 649, 101 N.C. 51 (N.C. 1888).

Opinion

Davis, J.,

(after stating the case). By § 3383 of The Code, it is made “ unlawful for any person to set or fish a Dutch net or Pod net in Roanoke River, Cashie or Middle River, or within two miles of the mouth of said rivers, or within one mile of the mouth of any other river emptying into Al-bemarle Sound, * * * * and all persons who shall set or fish any such net in said sound, shall pull up and remove the stakes used for the same by the first day of June next *53 succeeding the fishing season, and if any person shall set or fish any Dutch net or Pod net in said sound, in violation of this section, he shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and be subject to a penalty of three hundred dollars to be recovered by any person in the Superior Court of the County in which the offence shall be committed. And the Sheriff of such County shall, when requested, remove any portion of such nets set or • fished in violation of this section, at the cost of the violators,” &c.

The facts found show that the plaintiffs were fishing in Albemarle Sound with Dutch or Pod nets, and within two miles of the mouth of Roanoke river, in violation of § 3383 of The Code, under which the defendants claimed the authority to have plaintiffs’ nets removed, but counsel for plaintiffs insist that the last clause § 3383 is in violation of section 17 of article 1, of the Constitution, and if so they had a right to enjoin the defendants. This presents the question: Were the defendants threatening or about to deprive the plaintiffs of any liberty, privilege or property contrary to the law of the land ?

Albemarle Sound being navigable, the plaintiffs had no right to a several fishery in its waters, and the State had the undoubted right to regulate the exercise of the common rights of fishing therein, and to impose such limitations and restrictions on the exercise of the rights as it might deem wise and just.

The Constitution of the State, unlike that of the United States, contains limitations on, and not grants of, legislative power. Albemarle Sound being navigable, is not subject to entry, and every citizen of the State has the liberty and privilege of fishing therein, subject to such regulations of the right as the Legislature may establish. Cready v. Virginia, 94 U. S. Reports, 391; Skinner v. Hettrick, 73 N. C., 53; Hettrick v. Page, 82 N. C., 65, and cases cited. Unless the plaintiffs have some right, privilege or property in these *54 waters, or some right to obstruct others in the use of them for fishing purposes, under rules and regulations and by methods allowed by law, we fail to see what right they have to complain, unless that right be to invoke the Constitution as a protection to them in violating the law.

The relief sought in Hettrick v. Page, supra, was not unlike that sought by the plaintiff in this action. It was, like this, an application for an injunction to prevent the removal of stakes or any obstruction of the- plaintisffs’ in their use, which the defendants were threatening to do, under Chapter 115, of the Acts of 1875. (The Code, § 3383.) In that case the stakes were put up for operating pod nets in violation of the Act, and they were required to be removed by the day named. The Chief Justice said: “The presence of them (the stakes) in the sound after that date is a public nuisance, and this Court is asked to assist him (the plaintiff) in maintaining it in violation of his duty under the law, and to prevent its being obeyed. The proposition is a novel one, and no Court will listen to such an application.”

While it is true, as insisted by the plaintiff, that an action will not lie against a person unlawfully obstructing a highway at the instance of one who has sustained no special damage, and redress must be sought for the public wrong on behalf of the public, it by no means follows that a person obstructed, or indeed, any one else, may not himself, remove the impediment to his passing without incurring personal liability to the owner of the property removed.”

The question of the constitutionality of the act was not raised in Hettrick v. Page, as in this, and we are referred by counsel to Hoke v. Henderson, 4 Dev., 1, and to Vann v. Pipkin, 77 N. C., 408. We fail to see the analogy between those cases and this. They only decide that a person holding an office has a property in his office, of which he cannot be deprived while the office remains, without violating the Con *55 stitution — it is property of which he cannot be deprived “but by the law of the land.”

The counsel also cites Cooley Const. Lim., 362, et sequiter Ames v. Port Huron Co., 11 Mich., 139; Rockwell v. Moring, 35 N. Y., 302, and Wynham v. The People, 3 Kernan, N. Y. Court of Appeals, 378. It is said in Cooley Const Lim., “A vested right of action is property in the same sense in which tangible things are property, and is equally protected against arbitrary interference. ********* Nor can a party, by his misconduct, so forfeit a right that it may be taken from him without judicial proceedings, in which the forfeiture shall be declared in due form. Forfeitures of rights and property cannot be adjudged by Legislative Acts, and confiscation without a judicial hearing after due notice, would be void, as not having due process of law. ****** And if the Legislature cannot confiscate property or rights, neither can it authorize individuals to assume, at their option, powers of police which they may exercise in the condemnation and sale of property against their regulations, or for the satisfaction of their charges and expenses in its management and control, rendered or incurred without the consent of its owners. And a statute which authorizes a party to seize the property of another without process or warrant and sell it without notification to the owner for the punishment of a ’private trespass and to enforce a penalty against the owner, can find no justificaron in the Constitution.”

As the Legislature had the undoubted right to regulate the manner in which the right of fishing in Albemarle Sound should be exercised, the plaintiffs had no right to fish in its waters in any mode not allowed by law. The facts found show that they were fishing in violation of law, and it would be singular if they could ask the law to protect them in its violation.

They had put their stakes and used their nets where it *56 was unlawful to put and use them. The stakes and nets were unlawfully there by the act of the plaintiffs, and not against their “consent,” as were the trespassing animals in Rockwell v. Moring, cited by Judge Cooley, and if they did not remove them and thus abate the nuisance themselves, they could be removed and the nuisance abated in the mode prescribed in the act regulating fishing in the sound.

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Bluebook (online)
7 S.E. 649, 101 N.C. 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rea-v-hampton-nc-1888.