State v. Guidry

76 So. 843, 142 La. 422
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 15, 1917
DocketNo. 22346
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 76 So. 843 (State v. Guidry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Guidry, 76 So. 843, 142 La. 422 (La. 1917).

Opinion

O’NIELL, J.

The defendant was convicted of the offense of willfully and knowingly taking and carrying away, without the consent of the owner, oysters, shells, and cultch bedded or planted by a lessee, under the provisions of the statute regulating the oyster industry of this state. The offense being a misdemeanor, he was tried by the district judge without a jury. On conviction he was sentenced to pay a fine of $301, and has appealed from the verdict and sentence.

The bill of information charged that the defendant did unlawfully, willfully, and knowingly take and carry away, without the consent or permission of the owner, certain oysters, cultch, and shells bedded and planted by the A. St. Martin Company, Limited, on certain oyster bedding grounds or water bottoms leased to the said A. St. Martin -Company, Limited, by the oyster commission, now called the department of conservation, of Louisiana. It was alleged in the bill of information that the leased bedding grounds from which the oysters and shells and cultch were taken by the defendant had been surveyed and marked as required by the statute authorizing the lease of the-oyster bottoms.

The offense of which the defendant was accused and convicted is denounced by section 18 of Act No. 54 of 1914, in these words:

“That it shall be unlawful for any person to knowingly or willfully take oysters, shells or cultch, bedded or planted by a lessee under this Act.”

Section 24 of the statute declares that the penalty for a violation of any of the provisions of the act shall be a fine not less than $100 nor more than $5,000, or imprisonment in the parish jail for a term not less than 90 days nor more than 2 years, or both fine and imprisonment, at the discretion of the court.

The lease of the oyster bed from which the defendant was accused of taking the oysters, shells, and cultch was made by the oyster commission to Ovide Guidry on the 12th of October, 1905, under the provisions of Act No. 52 of 1904, entitled “An Act to encourage, protect, regulate and develop the oyster industry,” etc. The lease, together with the oysters, shells, etc., placed thereon by Ovide Guidry, and subject to his obligations as lessee, was transferred by him to the A. St. Martin Company, Limited, on the 20th of July, 1909, and the transfer was approved by the oyster commission of Louisiana.

The Act No.- 52 of 1904, as amended from time to time, was repealed and superseded by the Act No. 54 of 1914, on the same subject. But the latter statute expressly declared that all leases of oyster bedding grounds made in pursuance of the Act No. 52 of 1904 (and other statutes on the same subject) should continue in force and effect until their expiration, provided the lessees should pay the rental and comply with the regulations imposed by the conservation commission.

The facts proven on the trial and found by the district judge are set forth in tho statements per curiam, and are conceded to be substantially as follows:

The defendant did on the 24th of October, 1909, the date stated in the bill of information, willfully and deliberately take oys[427]*427ters from the bedding ground or oyster bottom which he knew was embraced within the area held and cultivated by the A. St. Martin Company, Limited, under the lease made by the oy'ster commission to Ovide Guidry and by him transferred to A. St. Martin Company-The bedding ground was surveyed by the engineer or surveyor of the oyster commission on the 12th of October, 1905, and staked or marked out and delivered to Ovide Guidry when the lease was made. Hence it is conceded that the oyster commission, under the authority conferred upon it by the Act No. 52 of 1904, found and ruled that the water bottoms covered by the lease were not natural oyster reefs, as defined in that statute. Ovide Guidrjf remained in possession of the leased bedding grounds and planted and cultivated oysters thereon continuously until the year 1909, when he transferred the lease to A. St. Martin Company, Limited; and the latter has been in possession, cultivating the bedding grounds continuously, since the lease was transferred. At the proper season in each of the seven years immediately preceding the trial of this case, the lessee scattered oyster shells and seed oysters over the leased oyster beds, and fished oysters therefrom every year with oyster tongs. It was proven and conceded to be impossible by that method to gather all of the oysters from a reef in a fishing season. It is admitted that enough oysters were always left on the reefs by the lessee to reproduce the quantity gathered. In fact, there is a limit to the number of layers of oysters that will grow annually if the top layers are not removed to prevent those underneath from smothering and dying. Hence the annual thinning out of the oysters in the bed and scattering or spreading the culls, shells, and cultch is the method of cultivation. The evidence showed, however, to the satisfaction of the district judge, that the leased oyster bottoms were originally natural oyster reefs, where oysters had grown naturally and without cultivation from time immemorial, 'and where they would have continued to grow without cultivation up to the date of the trial. The evidence did not show what quantity of oysters would have grown on the reefs if they had not been cultivated.

In section 10 of the Act No. 52 of 1904 the oyster commission was forbidden to lease any natural oyster reef; and in section 25 of the statute a natural reef (within the territory in which the lease in question is located) was defined as any area equaling not less than 10,000 square feet of the bottom of any body of water where oysters are found growing naturally at the time and in sufficient quantities to make their fishing profitable by means of hand tongs, provided no break of continuity in any reef of less than 25 feet should be considered. It was provided further in that section of the statute that the oyster commission should be the judge as to whether any, particular bottom was or was not a natural reef, and that, when any particular locality should be declared open for lease for oyster bedding or propagation, by a resolution of the oyster commission', the correctness of the ruling should be subject to review by the judge oí the district court, as provided in section 19 of the statute. That section (19) provided merely that it should be unlawful to take or catch oysters on a natural reef, or to have such oysters in one’s possession for sale, between the 1st day of May and the 1st day of September, of each year, except from private leased grounds, and that the possession of oysters during the closed season should be prima facie evidence of the violation of the act, and the onus should be upon the accused to establish that the oysters were from private leased grounds. Prom those provisions of the statute making it unlawful to catch oysters on the natural oyster reefs, or [429]*429to have such oysters in one’s possession for sale, during the closed season, except from private leased grounds, it is plain that the Legislature 'contemplated that the oyster commission might make an error in ruling that any particular bottom was not a natural oyster reef.

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Bluebook (online)
76 So. 843, 142 La. 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-guidry-la-1917.