State Ex Rel. Visser v. State Fish & Game Commission

437 P.2d 373, 150 Mont. 525, 1968 Mont. LEXIS 411
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1968
Docket11341
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 437 P.2d 373 (State Ex Rel. Visser v. State Fish & Game Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Visser v. State Fish & Game Commission, 437 P.2d 373, 150 Mont. 525, 1968 Mont. LEXIS 411 (Mo. 1968).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE JOHN C. HARRISON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered upon findings of *527 fact and conclusions of law finding that the defendant appellant, State Fish and Game Commission, wrongfully confiscated and sold two elk belonging to plaintiffs and also, from a peremptory writ of mandate which issued, ordering the Commission to pay to plaintiffs the reasonable value of such elk and reasonable attorney’s fees. The lower court proceedings were held in the district court at Bozeman, the presiding judge sitting without a jury.

Early in the morning of January 13, 1967, a hunting party set out from a place known as the Rainbow Ranch in Gallatin County, Montana. The members of the party were the plaintiffs Yisser and Kroon, Floyd Thomas, and a licensed guide known as Duke Hobart. Unknown to the other three men, Floyd Thomas was a game warden in plain clothes sent to the area to investigate suspected illegal hunting practices of the guide Hobart. Hobart was charged with the illegal killing and plead guilty. No charges were filed against either Yisser or Kroon.

This was during a special elk hunting season called by the Montana Fish and Game Commission. Visser and Kroon each had a valid license to kill an elk on that particular day. Hobart did not.

The party hunted, with Hobart on horseback, and the other three men on foot. At about 10:45 a. m., Hobart was over a rise and out of sight of the three other men when they heard some shooting. Almost immediately thereafter, the horse that Hobart had been riding came running, riderless, toward the three men. Visser caught the horse, mounted, and in the company of Kroon and "Warden Thomas, proceeded toward the area of the shooting.

They met Hobart and asked him if he had shot anything. He said that he had dropped one elk and thought he had wounded another. From this point Yisser, who was on the horse, proceeded to circle the area where the elk were believed to be. The other three men proceeded on and came upon the animal *528 Hobart had dropped. Its back was broken, but it was still alive. Hobart shot it again from close range and killed it. The three men then field-dressed the animal and Mr. Kroon placed his elk tag on the carcass.

While the three were cleaning the first elk two more appeared. The guide, Hobart, picked up his rifle and dropped one of these about 250 yards from the first elk he had killed. This elk also had its back broken, it was alive but could not move. Visser came upon this animal and cut its throat. The animal was field-dressed and Visser placed his tag on the carcass.

The party then set out in pursuit of the elk Hobart had wounded at the time he killed the first elk. Hobart, being on horseback, got to the animal first and killed it at about 1:00 p. m. Meantime, unknown to the others, Warden Thomas confiscated each elk by placing a confiscation tag on each carcass. The party then returned to the Rainbow Ranch.

The next day the plaintiffs learned that Floyd Thomas was a game warden and that the Fish and Game Commission had confiscated the two elk which they had tagged. Representatives of the Commission arranged for the bringing of the elk down from the mountain. The carcasses were then sold as confiscated meat as is provided by law.

• On February 7, 1967, the plaintiffs filed a petition for a writ of mandate, alleging that the Montana Fish and Game Commission had wrongfully confiscated the elk, that they belonged to plaintiffs and praying that the Commission be ordered to pay the value of the elk, plus attorney’s fees to the plaintiffs. After notice and hearing, the district court found in favor of the plaintiffs and issued a writ of mandate commanding the Commission to pay to plaintiffs $65 for the elk each had tagged, and $500 as reasonable attorney’s fees. From this determination the Commission has appealed.

The appellant Commission set forth eight issues that the District Court:

(1) Erred in finding that Warden Floyd Thomas “con *529 sented” to the taking and tagging of the elk by Visser and Kroon;

(2) Erred in finding that Duke Hobart wounded the second elk he shot, when in fact, the evidence shows that the second elk was so mortally wounded that it was deprived of its liberty and reduced from the wild state, and no further act on the part of anyone was required to capture it;

(3) Erred in finding as a fact that 'Warden Floyd Thomas “appropriated to the use of the defendants and respondents both of the elk” claimed by plaintiffs, when in fact, the illegally taken elk were confiscated pursuant to section 26-110, subd. (4), R.C.M.1947;

(4) Erred in finding that the illegally taken and confiscated elk were the property of Visser and Kroon;

(5) Erred in concluding that Visser and Kroon had a right to possess or did possess the elk which were illegally taken and confiscated;

(6) Erred in concluding that the tagging by Visser and Kroon divested the State of Montana of the right to confiscate the elk, when in fact, the illegally taken and confiscated elk were not tagged in accordance with section 26-202.2, subd. (3), R.C.M.1947, in any event;

(7) Erred in issuing its peremptory writ of mandate herein commanding the Commission to pay to plaintiffs the sum of $130 plus attorneys’ fees in the sum of $500 and court costs;

(8) Erred in denying the Commission’s consolidated motion for new trial, for amendment to findings of fact and conclusions of law, for alteration or amendment of judgment, and for vacation of peremptory writ of mandate, and entry of judgment for the commission.

These issues will be combined and covered in our discussion of what appears to us to be the major objections of appellants to the findings of the trial court which we believe are: Does the assumption of possession and the placing of a valid elk tag on the carcass of an elk killed by another divest the State of *530 Montana of its ownership and must a validly issued elk, deer or antelope tag be completely filled out and attached to legally taken game before the same may be possessed?

Kroon and Visser allege that Game Warden Thomas consented to the tagging of the two elk. Whether he did or did not makes no difference. If game animals are killed and taken contrary to law, any consent given by a game warden is outside the scope of his authority and has no effect whatever in law. R.C.M.1947, § 26-110, subd. (6).

The ownership of wild animals is in the state, and these animals are not subject to private ownership except insofar as the State shall choose to make them so. So long as constitutional limitations are not infringed, the Legislature may impose such terms and conditions as it sees fit on the acquiring of ownership of these wild animals. Rosenfeld v. Jakways, 67 Mont. 558, 216 P. 776. It is the plaintiff’s contention that the requirements of the law were met when they tagged the elk.

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Bluebook (online)
437 P.2d 373, 150 Mont. 525, 1968 Mont. LEXIS 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-visser-v-state-fish-game-commission-mont-1968.