Reynolds v. State

655 P.2d 1313, 1982 Alas. App. LEXIS 366
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedDecember 10, 1982
Docket6432
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 655 P.2d 1313 (Reynolds v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reynolds v. State, 655 P.2d 1313, 1982 Alas. App. LEXIS 366 (Ala. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

OPINION

PER CURIAM.

David Reynolds was convicted of fishing in closed waters in violation of 5 AAC 06.-350(b). He appeals, contending that the trial judge’s failure to require a showing of mens rea was error. We agree, and therefore reverse Reynolds’ conviction.

Reynolds is a commercial fisherman in the Bristol Bay area. On July 21, 1981, his boat drifted up the Kvichak River with the tide past two shore markers beyond which gill net fishing is prohibited. Reynolds had *1314 one drift gill net in the water. Two Fish and Wildlife Protection officers observed Reynolds’ boat as it drifted past the markers. The officers then approached the craft, asked Reynolds to pull in his net, and eventually issued a uniform summons and complaint. One of the officers testified at trial:

When we approached the boat ... we called out ‘hello’ and there was no response, so we pounded on the side of the boat, and Mr. Reynolds came out groggy and said he’d been sleeping.

Reynolds appeared pro se at trial, and he testified on his own behalf that he had no intention of drifting into the closed area. He was very tired on the evening of July 21 and decided to get some sleep. Before setting his alarm clock and lying down, Reynolds calculated his position and estimated that the boat would not drift into closed waters. His particular fear was that he might drift into the set net sites located in those waters and tangle his gear; it was this fear which caused him to make the calculations with some care.

It was not developed at trial whether Reynolds’ calculations, his fatigue, his alarm clock or some combination of these factors accounted for this somnolent transgression. The judge’s response to Reynolds’ testimony and argument was succinct:

Thank you. Fish and Game laws are just like traffic laws. It doesn’t require an intention to violate them, and so if one violates them, they’re guilty. And therefore you’re found guilty.

Reynolds was assessed a fine of $5,000 with $3,000 suspended on condition that he violate no similar laws for one year. His nets and the six fish found in them at the time of the offense were forfeited, pursuant to AS 16.05.190 and AS 16.05.195. The trial judge remarked at this time:

Now you’ve gotten a better deal than anyone else has from this court because I believe that you did it completely unknowingly. I believed you.

AS 16.05.251(2) authorizes the Board of Fisheries to promulgate regulations establishing “open and closed seasons and areas for the taking of fish.” Pursuant to this authority, the Board designated the particular waters of Kvichak Bay in which Reynolds was found as “closed waters.” 5 AAC 06.350(b). Violation of a regulation pertaining to commercial fisheries is a misdemeanor punishable by a fine of not more than $5,000 or one year’s imprisonment or both. AS 16.05.720(a). Despite the substantial nature of the penalty to which an offender is thus exposed, the regulation does not, on its face, require any accompanying mental state or criminal intent. 1 Thus, according to the view apparently held by the trial judge, proof that a defendant was in a prohibited area and that he had a net in the water 2 would make out a prima facie case that the regulation had been violated.

However, the Alaska Supreme Court has repeatedly expressed its aversion to the imposition of criminal sanctions against one who has no “awareness or consciousness of some wrongdoing.” Speidel v. State, 460 P.2d 77, 78 (Alaska 1969); see also Morissette v. United States, 342 U.S. 246, 250, 72 S.Ct. 240, 243, 96 L.Ed. 288, 293 (1952). The statute in Speidel made it a felony to wil-fully neglect to return a rented motor vehicle to the owner and included within the definition of wilful neglect an “indifference whether a wrong is done the owner or not.” Id. The court held that:

Although an act may have been objectively wrongful, the mind and will of the doer of the act may have been innocent. In such a case the person cannot be pun *1315 ished for a crime, unless it is one such as the “public welfare” type of offense, which we have discussed, where the penalties are relatively small and conviction does no great damage to an offender’s reputation. Under the terms of AS 28.-35.026 there is no escape from a felony conviction and a possible five-year prison term for simple neglectful or negligent failure to return a rented automobile at the time specified in the rental agreement. To make such an act, without consciousness of wrongdoing or intention to inflict injury, a serious crime, and criminals of those who fall within its interdiction, is inconsistent with the general law. To convict a person of a felony for such an act, without proving criminal intent, is to deprive such person of due process of law.

Id., 460 P.2d at 80. Thus, “public welfare offenses,” described earlier as those in which health, safety or welfare of the general public is involved, and for which no great penalty is generally imposed, were expressly reserved by Speidel as special cases in which strict criminal liability might be imposed.

Hentzner v. State, 613 P.2d 821 (Alaska 1980), relied on Speidel to impute knowledge of wrongdoing as an element of a securities offense. A distinction was made for mens rea purposes between offenses which are mala in se (those “which reasoning members of society regard as condemnable”) and those which are mala prohibita (where “there is no broad societal concurrence that [the proscribed conduct] is inherently bad”). Id. at 826. The fact that the crime in Hentzner was essentially malum prohibitum militated in favor of requiring mens rea. Moreover, the court felt impelled to remove the offense from the “public welfare” category because of the possible penalty involved (a maximum term of five years’ imprisonment), a collateral rationale in Speidel. 613 P.2d at 826-27.

The contours of strict criminal liability were further defined in State v. Rice, 626 P.2d 104 (Alaska 1981). Rice dealt with a regulation providing that, “No person may possess or transport any game or parts of game illegally taken.” 626 P.2d at 106, n. 2. Rice was convicted in district court, but the superior court overturned the conviction on the basis that it was error for the trial judge to refuse to instruct the jury that it must find beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant “knew or should have known” the meat was illegally taken. Id. at 106. The supreme court affirmed, relying on Speidel

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Bluebook (online)
655 P.2d 1313, 1982 Alas. App. LEXIS 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-v-state-alaskactapp-1982.