Wiegardt v. Brennan

73 P.2d 1330, 192 Wash. 529, 1937 Wash. LEXIS 674
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1937
DocketNo. 26476. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 73 P.2d 1330 (Wiegardt v. Brennan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wiegardt v. Brennan, 73 P.2d 1330, 192 Wash. 529, 1937 Wash. LEXIS 674 (Wash. 1937).

Opinion

Geraghty, J.

This appeal is from a judgment of the superior court of Pacific county enjoining B. M. Brennan, state director of fisheries, and certain officials of Pacific county from enforcing, as against the plaintiffs, the provisions of Rem. Rev. Stat., § 5750 [P. C. § 2508], establishing a closed season within which the digging of razor clams for commercial purposes on the beaches of the Pacific Ocean, Grays Harbor, and Willapa Harbor is forbidden.

In their complaint, the plaintiffs alleged that they are the owners in fee of a tract of tide or beach land lying within the entrance to Willapa Harbor; that, at the time of the commencement of the action in September, 1936, there existed upon this land a large quantity of razor clams, the exclusive property of the plaintiffs by reason of the ownership of the beach.

*531 “That said lands and premises are exposed to the severe weather and storms and subject to the overflow of the tides and the winds and storms cause said lands [sands] upon said tide lands to shift and change, and as soon as the same are changed said clams will be washed away or driven to some other locality and that said plaintiffs will be wholly deprived of their property of said razor clams.”

It was alleged that the plaintiffs were fully equipped for the immediate harvesting and canning of these clams for commercial purposes, but that the defendants were threatening to arrest the plaintiffs if they attempted to enter upon their premises to harvest them, except as authorized by Rem. Rev. Stat., § 5750, which restricts the harvesting of razor clams to the months of March, April, and May on the beaches of Willapa Harbor; that the provisions of this section do not apply to the plaintiffs’ premises, but that, if its language be held to embrace their premises, the law is unconstitutional, as violating the due process clauses of § 1 of the fourteenth amendment to the constitution of the United States and § 3 of Art. I of the constitution of the state of Washington.

After the court overruled a demurrer interposed by them, the defendants declined to plead further, and the court set the cause for hearing.

At the hearing, over the objection of the defendants, the plaintiffs were permitted to introduce testimony in support of the allegations of their complaint. At the conclusion of the case, the court made findings of fact substantially in accordance with the allegations of the complaint, and entered judgment enjoining the defendants from molesting or interfering with the plaintiffs in the harvesting of the clams upon their land between the first day of September, 1936, and the first day of March, 1937, and for a like period of *532 every year thereafter as long as the plaintiffs remained the owners of the described premises.

The defendants appeal.

The appellants contend here, as they did in the trial court, upon a special appearance, thát. the superior court of Pacific county was without jurisdiction to entertain this action, as being one against the state of Washington, which is required to be brought in the superior court of Thurston county. We think, however, this objection is not well taken. The action must be considered as one against the named appellants individually, since the complaint alleged that the operations of the respondents were not within the terms of the statute, but that, if its provisions embraced them, it was unconstitutional.

Under our holding in State ex rel. Robinson v. Superior Court, 182 Wash. 277, 46 P. (2d) 1046, and cases therein cited, this is not an action against the state of Washington, but one against the appellants individually, who were alleged to be, without authority, attempting to act in the name of the state.

Rem. Rev. Stat., § 5750, as far as here pertinent, follows:

“It shall be unlawful for any person or persons whomsoever to take or dig any clams, except mud clams, from the beaches of the Pacific Ocean in this state or from the beaches of Grays Harbor or Willapa Harbor, or to have in their possession if the same have been taken for the purpose of canning or for sale between the first day of June of each year and the first day of March of the following year, both dates inclusive; or to take or dig any mud clams upon the beaches of the Pacific Ocean in' this state or from the beaches of Grays Harbor or Willapa Harbor, or to have in their possession if the same have been taken for the purpose of canning or for sale, between the first .day of May and the thirty-first day of October, both dates inclusive, of each year; ... ' "
*533 “Nothing in this section shall prevent the taking of clams for the consumption of the taker or his family or guests at all times without a license, ...”

This section as first enacted — § 99 of chapter 31, Laws of 1915, p. 108 — established the closed season for digging clams on the beaches of the Pacific Ocean, Grays Harbor, and Willapa Harbor between the first day of June and the thirty-first day of August of each year.'

In 1917, the closed season for digging clams on the ocean and harbor beaches was established as between the first day of June of each year and the first day of March of the following year. While this section has been amended in other respects by several succeeding legislatures, the closed season has remained as established in 1917.

We are of the opinion that the principles announced in the case of State v. Van Vlack, 101 Wash. 503, 172 Pac. 563, are controlling here. That case arose under Rem. Rev. Stat., § 5751 [P. C. § 2509], fixing a closed season for the digging of clams from the tide lands abutting on Puget Sound. The appellant there had been convicted of a violation of the section, in that he had in his possession for the purpose of sale during the closed season clams taken from tide lands abutting on Puget Sound. He contended that the statute had no application to him for the reason that the clams were taken from tide lands by the owner of the lands, who, by reason thereof, had the unqualified ownership of them and sold them to the appellant; that the statute did not restrict the rights of private owners of clam beds in the tide lands abutting on Puget Sound, but that, if the statute applied to the facts of the case, it was in contravention of the Federal and state constitutions. ,

It was held by the court that while clams, because *534 of their fixed habitation in the soil, became the sub<-ject of private ownership when title to the clam beds passed from the state, nevertheless the legislature could, in the exercise of the police power and in furtherance of the general welfare by the conservation of a valuable food product, restrict the taking of clams for sale to a specified open season.

Adverting to the rule that courts will take judicial notice of scientific facts and natural laws as expounded in publications of authority, the court said that it appeared from the investigation of scientists that the spawning season of clams extends throughout the latter part of May, the whole of June, and in many cases during the entire summer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 P.2d 1330, 192 Wash. 529, 1937 Wash. LEXIS 674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiegardt-v-brennan-wash-1937.