Waiste v. State

808 P.2d 286, 1991 Alas. App. LEXIS 21, 1991 WL 45671
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedApril 5, 1991
DocketNo. A-3401
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 808 P.2d 286 (Waiste 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
Waiste v. State, 808 P.2d 286, 1991 Alas. App. LEXIS 21, 1991 WL 45671 (Ala. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinions

OPINION

Before BRYNER, C.J., COATS, J., and ANDREWS, District Judge.*

ANDREWS, District Judge.

John M. Waiste appeals from his conviction after a trial by jury of the misdemean- or offense of operating a drift gill net in a manner not conforming to its basic design. 5 AAC 39.105(a)(3). We reverse.

On August 9, 1989, Waiste was arrested while commercially fishing for salmon using drift net gear on the Egegik River. Alaska State Trooper Robert Mumford and Fish and Game Technician Tory Oleck were on the river in the Fish and Wildlife patrol vessel, Public Safety No. 1, when they observed Waiste’s boat, the F/V Phoenix, approximately two- to three-hundred yards away. They saw a drift gill net being deployed off the stern of the Phoenix. The Phoenix was drifting westward with the tide. The drift net gear was still being deployed when the Phoenix ran aground on a sandbar on the west bank of the river. Mumford boarded the Phoenix and served Waiste with a summons and complaint charging that he “[d]id unlawfully and negligently commercial fish a drift gill net in a manner not conforming to its basic design. To wit: did fix the net to an exposed sandbar by allowing his fishing vessel to go aground and go dry, thus ceasing the net from drifting.” The complaint cited 5 AAC 39.105(a)(3) as the regulation that had been violated.

Waiste argues that the trial court erred in rejecting his proposed jury instruction setting forth the elements of the offense as including a mens rea of intent, and instead instructing the jury that the mens rea for the offense was negligence.

The regulation under which Waiste was convicted, 5 AAC 39.105, provides in part:

TYPES OF LEGAL GEAR: (a) All gear shall be operated in a manner conforming to its basic design.
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(d) Unless otherwise provided in this title, the following are legal types of gear:
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(2) a set gill net is a gill net that has been intentionally set, staked, anchored, or otherwise fixed;
(3) a drift gill net is a drifting gill net that has not been intentionally staked, anchored, or otherwise fixed....

Waiste proposed a jury instruction setting forth this regulatory language, and another instruction listing the essential elements of the offense as:

(1) That the defendant on or about the date and time charged
(2) was commercial fishing
(3) with a drift gill net
(4) which had been intentionally set, staked, anchored or otherwise fixed.

The trial court rejected these instructions, ruling that the legislature had recently established negligence as the mens rea [288]*288applicable to all commercial fishing misdemeanors. The court instructed the jury that the essential elements of the offense were:

(1) that the defendant on or about the date and time charged
(2) was commercial fishing
(3) with a drift gill net
(4) and was negligently not drifting.

Waiste argues that 5 AAC 39.105(d)(3) establishes a mens rea of intent for the offense of using a drift gill net while not drifting. He asserts that the trial court erred in ruling that the legislature had established negligence as the mens rea for all fish and game misdemeanors, regardless of the language of individual regulations.

Prior to 1983, the Alaska Statutes and the Board of Fisheries regulations were silent as to the culpable mental state required for conviction under many fishing regulations. See former AS 16.05.720 (repealed by ch. 46, § 5, SLA 1988); Reynolds v. State, 655 P.2d 1313, 1314 (Alaska App.1982). In 1983, the Board of Fisheries enacted 5 AAC 39.002, which provides:

Liability for Violations. Unless otherwise provided in 5 AAC 01-5 AAC 41 or in AS 16, a person who violates a provision of 5 AAC 01-5 AAC 41 is strictly liable for the offense regardless of his intent.

We considered the effect of this regulation in Beran v. State, 705 P.2d 1280 (Alaska App.1985). The appellants in Beran had been convicted of violating Fish and Game regulations on a strict liability theory. Each appellant received a suspended sentence of imprisonment and each was ordered to pay a fine. Id. at 1291. The appellants argued that 5 AAC 39.002 was both unconstitutional and outside the scope of the authority granted to the Board of Fisheries by the legislature. We held:

[FJirst, that the legislature has authorized the Board of Fisheries to make a breach of a regulation a “violation” and a strict-liability offense which would be punishable by a noncriminal fine. Second, we are satisfied that the legislature has authorized the Board of Fisheries to constitute the breach of a regulation a crime which would be punishable by imprisonment, but only if a mens rea is required. Where a higher degree of mens rea is not specified in a regulation we will continue to infer a negligence requirement as a predicate to a sentence of imprisonment.

Id. at 1283-84 (footnotes omitted). We were able to give effect to the Board of Fisheries’ intent to make fishing regulations strict liability offenses to the extent possible under law by interpreting 5 AAC 39.002 as “in effect serving to separate each affected regulation into two offenses: a crime requiring a negligence mens rea punishable by possible imprisonment and a violation satisfied by strict liability but only punishable by a noncriminal fine or possible forfeiture.” Id. at 1285 (footnote omitted).

Two years later, in Constantine v. State, 739 P.2d 188 (Alaska App.1987), we were presented with the question of exactly what penalties the legislature had authorized for noncriminal violations of Board of Fisheries regulations. We concluded that the legislature had not addressed the question. In the absence of statutory authority for the imposition of more substantial penalties, we held that the courts were authorized in cases of noncriminal fish and game violations only to order the forfeiture of any fish or game obtained in violation of the regulation, and to impose a maximum fine of $300.1 Id. at 190.

In 1988, the legislature enacted AS 16.05.722, which provides in part:

Strict Liability Commercial Fishing Penalties.
(a) A person who without any culpable mental state violates AS 16.05.440 — 16.-05.690, or a regulation of the Board of Fisheries or the department governing [289]*289commercial fishing, is guilty of a violation and upon conviction is punishable by a fine of not more than
(1) $3,000 for a first conviction; and

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Bluebook (online)
808 P.2d 286, 1991 Alas. App. LEXIS 21, 1991 WL 45671, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waiste-v-state-alaskactapp-1991.