The appellant was indicted in the Criminal Court of Baltimore City for unlawfully having oysters in his possession which contained more than five per cent of shells, and oysters less than two and one-half inches from hinge to mouth. The indictment was found under section 8 of chapter 380 of the Acts of 1900, which provides that "Any person who shall have oysters in his possession which contain more than five per cent of shells, and oysters less than two and one-half inches from hinge to mouth, which for the purpose of this article are declared to be unmerchantable oysters, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and in ascertaining such percentage the officers of the oyster police force, and the measurers and inspectors are hereby authorized and directed to select such amount of oysters from any pile, hold, bin, house or other place as he may think proper, and to require the same to be culled and disposed of as provided in section 9 of this article, and any person violating the provisions of this section shall be subject to the penalties and fines as provided in section 9 of this Article in precisely the same manner as if he were a captain of a boat."
Section 9 makes it unlawful for any person to receive a cargo or any part of a cargo of oysters unless an inspector or measurer shall be present who shall determine whether the oysters have been properly culled and prescribes penalties to be imposed upon the captain, master or person in charge of the oysters for a violation of its provisions. These penalties consist of the payment of a fine and the return by the captain or person in charge of the cargo of such portion of the oysters as are under the merchantable size to the beds from which they were taken and the scattering of them upon such beds under the direction of a deputy commander of the oyster police.
The appellant demurred to the indictment and the Court *Page 311 overruled his demurrer. He then filed a special plea asserting as his defense that the oysters, for the possession of which he had been indicted, formed part of the cargo of a schooner of which he was the captain, and that the oysters had been taken from the waters of the State of Virginia by citizens of that State who had complied with its laws as to the taking of oysters in its waters, and had been sold to him by such citizens of Virginia at Manchodoc creek in that State and there put upon his boat and from thence brought by him to Baltimore. To this plea the State filed a demurrer which was sustained pro forma by the Court. The case was then submitted under a plea of non cul to the Court which found the traverser guilty and imposed a fine upon him and he appealed.
The important issue in the case is the one raised by the special plea to the indictment which presents for our consideration the question whether the statute under which this indictment was found makes it unlawful to have in possession unculled oysters which were not taken from the waters of this State but were lawfully taken from the waters of another State by its citizens and afterwards brought into Maryland.
We recently held in Stevens v. The State, 89 Md. 669, that it is entirely within the power of the State to prohibit the having in possession or exposing to sale in this State within the closed season game which has been taken either within the State or elsewhere. The same principle would apply to a prohibition against having in possession oysters of which more than a specified portion were of a size declared by law to be unmerchantable. The real question, therefore, to be determined is whether the law now under consideration was intended to apply to oysters lawfully taken from waters outside the limit of this State.
A careful examination of the law satisfies us that it was intended to apply only to oysters taken from Maryland waters. The law does not in express terms apply to oysters taken from waters outside of the State. In that respect it differs from the Act of 1898, ch. 206, passed for the better protection of birds and game animals which was upheld by us in Stevens' case, *Page 312 and which by its terms makes it unlawful to have in possession or expose for sale during the closed season birds or game animals shot or killed in this State "or in any other State, territoryor country."
Before the passage of the Act of 1898, the game laws of the State prohibited in broad terms the catching, killing or having in possession "any rabbit" during the closed season. Under the law as it then stood, a dealer in game in Baltimore City was indicted for having rabbits in his possession during the closed season and it appearing that the rabbits had been lawfully killed in West Virginia, we held that the traverser was not liable.Dickhaut v. State, 85 Md. 451. In that case after a careful review of the decisions in other States upon similar statutes we came to the conclusion that as the purpose of the statute was to protect the game in this State, its prohibition must be construed to relate only to such game. We further held that "only the plainest and most mandatory language of the lawmakers would justify any Court in holding that the mere possession of game lawfully killed would constitute an offense."
The Act under which the indictment was found in the present case was passed as an amendment to Art. 72 of the Code, the obvious purpose of which was to so regulate the taking of oystersfrom the waters of this State as to preserve for the benefit of its citizens the oyster beds which have proven to be a most valuable source of both food and occupation to the inhabitants of the counties bordering on the Chesapeake bay and its tributaries. Experience in this field demonstrated the fact that taking from the beds the small oysters which were not fully matured, tended to the early exhaustion of the sources of supply of oysters and the ultimate destruction of the important industries depending upon a continuance of the supply. Accordingly, we find that from 1880 down to the present time, a series of laws have been passed commonly designated as Culling Acts, requiring oysters of small size to be separated or culled from the cargoes of the vessels employed in oyster fishing and returned to the beds from which they *Page 313 were taken. These laws in order to effectuate the purposes for which they were enacted contain various provisions as to handling and dealing in the oysters and to that end the Acts of 1890, ch. 602 and 1894, ch. 380, like the one now under consideration, prohibit having unculled oysters in possession.
If we turn now to Art. 72 of the Code, as amended by the Act of 1900, chap. 380, we find that sec. 1, which provides for issuing licenses to tongers, refers by express terms only to taking oysters "in any of the waters of this State." Sec. 19, which authorizes the licensing of dredgers, goes further and specifies the particular waters in this State in which the dredging may be done. Sec. 7, which provides for culling the oysters and returning the small ones to their natural beds, affects by its express terms only "oysters taken from any of the waters of this State." Now sec. 8, under which the present indictment is found was obviously intended to more effectually secure the culling of the oysters mentioned in sec. 7, which were those taken from the waters of this State. This is made still more manifest by the provision in sec. 9, requiring the captain or person in charge of the cargo containing the excessive proportion of small oysters to take them back to their natural beds and there scatter them under the direction of an official of this State who could have neither power nor jurisdiction beyond the limits of the State. The just and rational inference, therefore, is that the unculled oysters referred to in sec. 8, were those taken from the waters of this State.
The Attorney-General contended that sec. 8, intended to prohibit the mere having in possession unculled oysters from whatever source obtained as a necessary means of enforcing the culling of oysters taken in the waters of this State. It would certainly have been an appropriate and efficient aid to the effectual enforcement of the culling of the oysters taken in this State to have prohibited having in possession unculled oysters of any kind or taken from any source and under the rulings of this Court in Stevens' case it would have been within the power of the State to have done so. But any such prohibition to have been effectual must under the rulings in Dickhaut's *Page 314 case have included in plain and distinct terms all unculled oysters from whatever source obtained and that has certainly not been done in sec. 8.
The learned Judge below erred in sustaining the demurrer to the special plea of the traverser and for that reason the judgment appealed from must be reversed.
The appellant also contended that the law now under consideration was unconstitutional because it imposed different penalties upon the several classes of persons who were prohibited from having unculled oysters in possession and that the classification thus made was unreasonable, and that for that reason the demurrer to the indictment should have been sustained.
As we have determined that the judgment must be reversed for the reason already stated we deem it unnecessary to pass upon the constitutionality of the law which this Court has determined should not be done unless it is necessary for the decision of the case before it. State v. Insley, 64 Md. 30.
Judgment reversed with costs, without ordering a new trial.
(Decided April 17th, 1901.)