Thomson v. Dana

52 F.2d 759, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1695
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedAugust 31, 1931
Docket9217
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 52 F.2d 759 (Thomson v. Dana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomson v. Dana, 52 F.2d 759, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1695 (D. Or. 1931).

Opinion

FEE, District Judge.

Plaintiffs are owners of a hotel on the MeKenzie river, in Oregon, and engaged in the business of renting boats with oarsmen to persons who fish in that river. Defendants are public officers of the state, charged with the duty of enforcing chapter 185 of the General Laws of Oregon for 1931 (page 295) which regulates fishing on this stream.

Plaintiffs sued to enjoin the enforcement of this act on the ground that its provisions are in conflict with tho Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution, and thereupon filed a motion for temporary injunction, based upon the allegations of the complaint, and defendants a motion to dismiss. Hearing was had before the court organized as required by section 266 of the Judicial Code, U. S. C., title 28, § 380 (28 USCA § 380).

A resume of the allegations of the complaint follows: Plaintiffs are citizens of Oregon, and defendants are the game commission and game supervisor, respectively, of that state, whose duty it is to administer and enforce all the laws of the state respecting protection, preservation, and propagation of game fish therein.

Plaintiffs have for many years operated “Thomson’s Resort” on the McKenzie, a navigable liver, and at this hotel engaged in the occupation of entertaining and providing for tourists and guests induced thereto, by the fishing in this stream. A lucrative business has been built up by the expenditure of a large amount of money in procuring a number of rowboats, which plaintiffs have rented, together with oarsmen to operate same on the nver, to tourists and guests for the purpose of angling.

The fishing in the McKenzie below its confluence with Blue river is not good after June 15th of each year, and for many years plaintiffs have transported patrons and boats to a point on the McKenzie a number of miles above tbe mouth of Blue river, and thence rowed their guests down tho McKenzie so that the patrons could fish from the boats on the passage. This was a principal inducement to patronize the resort, and a source of great profit to plaintiffs, who themselves for many years fished from rowboats on tbe McKenzie.

The Legislature of the state passed chapter 185 of the General Laws of Oregon for 1931, an alleged law, which provides that after the passage of the act it shall be unlawful to fish with hook and line from any boat or other floating device in tbe waters of the McKenzie river above the confluence of Blue river therewith, and provides a penalty for violation.

The defendants threaten to enforce this statute and will prevent plaintiffs from carrying on their business above set out, and it will be destroyed, to plaintiff’s irreparable injury exceeding $3,000.

This statute, plaintiffs claim, is in violation of tbe Federal Constitution because it abridges “the privileges and immunities of plaintiffs, and is unreasonable and arbitrary and deprives them of liberty and property without due process of law, and denies them the protection of the law.”

Plaintiffs conclude “that also by the provisions of said alleged law, persons owning property along or upon the banks of the McKenzie River, above the mouth of the Blue River, are given a monopoly of the fishing in the river adjacent to their said lands, and plaintiffs and their guests are excluded and prevented from fishing in said river at said points, and the owners of land along the banks of said river, as aforesaid, are thereby granted rights and privileges that are denied to these plaintiffs.”

It is a well-established rule that a state by virtue of residuary sovereignty controls the fish and game within its boundaries, as representative of its people and for the common benefit of all its citizens, and to that end it may regulate or prohibit fishing within its borders. Manchester v. Massachusetts, 139 U. S. 240, 11 8. Ct. 559, 35 L. Ed. 159; Lawton v. Steele, 152 U. S. 133, 14 S. Ct. 499, 38 L. Ed. 385.

*762 Until actual capture has been effected no property is acquired in the denizens of the wild. Except by legal fiction, Oregon has not, strictly speaking, a proprietary right in the fish in its streams. See Missouri v. Holland, 252 U. S. 416, 434, 40 S. Ct. 382, 64 L. Ed. 641, 11 A. L. R. 984. Supervision of wild life is exercised, moreover, as a trust for the people of the particular state, not as a “prerogative for the advantage of the government as distinct from the people, or for the benefit of private individuals as distinguished from the publie good.” Geer v. Connecticut, 161 U. S. 519, 529, 16 S. Ct. 600, 604, 40 L. Ed. 793.

The privileges and immunities guaranteed to the citizens of the United States by the Fourteenth Amendment do not include a right to share in the heritage of the people of Oregon, by fishing in the McKenzie river or any other stream within that state. Nor may any person fish in any such bodies of water solely by virtue of his citizenship in the United States. A right to take from the fisheries held in common by the citizens of Oregon is acquired only through membership in that body.

The Supreme Court of Oregon, in passing upon this subject, has said: “Before such privileges can be infringed it must satisfactorily appear that the authority of a person to take and catch salmon in the Columbia river is a right which is guaranteed to, and may be exercised by every citizen of the United States, though he may be a nonresident of the states of Oregon and Washington.” State v. Catholic, 75 Or. 367, 373, 147 P. 372, 374, Ann. Cas. 1917B, 913.

Especially if it appear that reasonable classifications have been made in an effort to protect the fish, the property of plaintiffs has not been taken. For, in the enforcement of statutes looking toward the conservation of the food fish in a particular state, special instruments of violation may appropriately be outlawed, regardless of the time of acquisition. Miller v. McLaughlin, 281 U. S. 261, 50 S. Ct. 296, 74 L. Ed. 840; Lawton v. Steele, supra. In the statute here under consideration, no attempt is made to confiscate the boats belonging to plaintiffs, since the Legislature probably recognized these articles might well be used for purposes entirely innocuous, but the operation thereof in the depletion of the supply' of fish in the. McKenzie was forbidden. Full dominion over these boats still remains to plaintiffs; they may sell or dispose of them, or they may row their patrons over any of the waters in the state therein, or fish therefrom in any streams except prohibited portions of the McKenzie, and portions of two other rivers protected by similar laws. It is true the particular business of rowing boahfishermen down the McKenzie for hire has been de^ stroyed, but the state has always held the power to close the stream entirely to angling, and all must have realized that any business so built up was transacted at sufferance and subject to destruction whenever the policy of conservation of fish in the stream required. Bohman v. Gould, 169 Minn. 374, 211 N. W. 577.

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Bluebook (online)
52 F.2d 759, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomson-v-dana-ord-1931.