State v. Prince

53 P.3d 157, 2002 Alas. App. LEXIS 161, 2002 WL 1880534
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedAugust 16, 2002
DocketA-7681
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 53 P.3d 157 (State v. Prince) 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
State v. Prince, 53 P.3d 157, 2002 Alas. App. LEXIS 161, 2002 WL 1880534 (Ala. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Under Alaska's "local option" law, AS 04.11.491, the voters of a municipality may choose to prohibit the sale, the importation, or even the possession of alcoholic beverages within their city. The voters of St. Mary's have exercised this authority; it is unlawful to bring alcoholic beverages into St. Mary's or to possess alcoholic beverages within its boundaries.

The question presented in this appeal is whether this ban on aleoholic beverages can be enforced on state-owned land that lies within the boundaries of St. Mary's. The answer is yes. Enforcement of the municipal ban on the importation and possession of alcoholic beverages is fully consistent with state law. Indeed, it is state law that authorizes local voters to restrict or ban alcoholic beverages within their communities, and it is state law that defines and punishes the offense of violating such local bans. Accord *159 ingly, the ban on alcoholic beverages applies to state-owned property lying within the municipal boundaries of St. Mary's.

Underlying facts, and explanation of our map

The municipality of St. Mary's lies on the Andreafsky River in western Alaska, about three miles upstream from where the An-dreafsky flows into the Yukon River. As authorized by AS 04.11.491, the voters of St. Mary's have approved a ban on the importation and possession of aleoholie beverages within their municipality.

On the night of June 28, 1999, the St. Mary's police received a tip from the Alaska State Troopers that someone was bringing alcoholic beverages to St. Mary's by boat via the Andreafsky River. The boat described by the troopers arrived in St. Mary's early the next morning. The St. Mary's police found the boat with its bow on the beach and its stern in the river. Two men-David T. Prince and a co-defendant-were lying in the boat, either asleep or passed out from intoxication.

The officers observed cartons of three different brands of beer in the boat. A subsequent search of the boat yielded 119 bottles of whiskey, 12 bottles of rum, and 8 bottles of liqueur. Prince was charged with two felonies under state law: importation of 12 liters or more of distilled spirits into a municipality that has prohibited importation of alcoholic beverages, and possession of alcoholic beverages for sale in a municipality that has prohibited sale of alcoholic beverages. 1

The attached map will help readers understand the discussion that follows. 'This map depicts the portion of the Andreafsky River and adjacent river bank where Prince's boat landed and was seized. The dark black lines show the pertinent municipal boundaries of St. Mary's as certified in March 1981 by the Alaska Department of Community and Regional Affairs. (This department has since been renamed the Department of Community and Economic Development.) 2

The Department used a metes and bounds description when it certified the boundaries of St. Mary's; but in this case, a picture is easily worth the 468 words of that verbal description.

The "X" and the accompanying initials were placed on the map by St. Mary's city manager Walton Smith, who appeared as a witness at the evidentiary hearing in this case. Smith drew the "X" to mark the spot where he observed Prince's boat on the morning in question.

The scale of this map is approximately 1% inch = 1 mile. (The numbered boxes represent sections within Range 76 West, Township 28 North, Seward Meridian. These see-tions are slightly less than 1 mile on each side.)

*160 160 Alaska

53 PACIFIC REPORTER, 3d SERIES

The superior court’s dismissal of the indictment

Following his indictment, Prince asked the superior court to dismiss the charges. He

contended that he had committed no punishable act within the municipality of St. Mary’s.

Prince conceded that he had brought liquor with him in the boat, but he claimed that neither he nor his boat had ever been

*161 within the boundaries of St. Mary's. Specifically, Prince pointed out that the State of Alaska owns the portion of the river and the river bank where his boat landed, and he argued that a municipality can not assert Jurisdiction over land owned by the State of Alaska.

Prince acknowledged that the State had leased this river land to St. Mary's (for construction of dock improvements), but he contended that this land could not be part of the city itself because the State remained owner of the land in fee simple. Prince's attorney summarized his argument as follows:

Defense Attorney: A conviction for importation [or possession] requires, by definition, that the accused actually enter the community in which possession of alcohol has been banned.... A person may stand, or float, outside a municipality where possession [of alcoholic beverages] is banned by local option till doomsday and still not commit a crime. The actus reus of the crime is crossing the municipal boundary. As Mr. Prince did not cross the boundary, he did not commit the crime.

In response to Prince's motion, the State asked the superior court to hold an evidentia-ry hearing so that the State could establish that the municipal boundaries of St. Mary's encompassed the portion of the Andreafsky River and adjacent shore where Prince's boat was found. The State did, in fact, present testimony and exhibits to this effect.

In particular, the State introduced the official "Certification of Boundaries [of the] City of St. Mary's"-a document issued by the Department of Community and Regional Affairs in 1981, which gives a metes and bounds description of the municipal boundaries. The State also introduced two section maps that physically depict these boundaries. Finally, the State presented two witnesses who identified the spot where Prince's boat landed on the north bank of the Andreafsky River-a spot well within the municipal boundaries. Indeed, as shown in our accompanying map, the city of St. Mary's extends south across and beyond the Andreafsky River for more than another mile.

But Prince's attorney declared that all this evidence was "ultimately irrelevant":

Defense Attorney: The issue here is quite simple.... [The Submerged Lands Act of 1958 ... ceded to the states ownership of, and title to, all lands beneath navigable state waterways. The Submerged Lands Act was made applicable to Alaska at the time of statehood.... The City of St. Mary's may define its borders to include the [Andreafsky River], but it cannot annex what it does not own. The boundaries of the City may extend over the river, but they do not include the river [itself] and the lands below [the] mean high water [line].

In other words, Prince argued that even though state-owned land may lie within the ostensible boundaries of a municipality, the state-owned land constitutes an enclave where municipal laws-and, in particular, municipal bans on aleohol-hold no sway.

After considering this matter, Superior Court Judge Dale O. Curda agreed with Prince.

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Related

Dominguez v. State
181 P.3d 1111 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 P.3d 157, 2002 Alas. App. LEXIS 161, 2002 WL 1880534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-prince-alaskactapp-2002.