Thompson v. Smith

Peters, C. J.

This action is instituted to recover penalties incurred for infractions of the lobster law. Several questions are presented under the exceptions and motion.

A question arose, preliminarily, whether this action is barred by a previous criminal prosecution. It appears that, before this action was commenced, the defendant was arraigned, for the same offense, before a trial justice, who bound him over to a higher court, although the trial justice had plenary jurisdiction to try the complaint himself. Those proceedings were a nullity, and cannot operate to discharge this action brought for the same offense. They were an attempted, but not a real, prosecution. The defendant has not been, in the constitutional sense, twice tried for the same offense. Coleman v. State, 97 U. S. 520; Stevens v. Fassett, 27 Maine, 282. In Com. v. Hamilton, 129 Mass. 479, a magistrate made precisely the same mistake that Avas made here, and Avith the same result.

The defendant contends that it was not competent for the jury to find a verdict for a less number of lobsters than the whole *163number declared for. We think a verdict may be for any number from one to the whole number in the declaration, indictment or complaint, — and that the fine is to be proportionate to-the finding.

The defendant takes the position that there should be no-recovery for taking a lobster under nine inches long, unless it be-a "young” lobster, contending that there are old "dwarf” lobsters-less than that length, which can be legally taken. We think the-word "young” in the statute, is used in a presumptive or assumptive sense merely; that the legislature meant to declare that any lobster under nine inches long should be regarded as a young lobster. The inhibition is against taking any under the-prescribed length.

It is contended that it was not illegal to have in one’s possession a dead lobster measuring less than nine inches in length, if the-same lobster was nine inches or more long when taken alive. We concur in that position. The object of the law is to prevent the taking of small lobsters out of the sea. It requires a-restoration into the sea when innocently taken out. In order to-carry the primary design more effectually into execution, it is-declared to be an offense to have in possession any lobster under’ the legal length,— without indicating whether the lobster may be dead or alive. It must mean this : That it is illegal for any person to have in his possession a live lobster less than nine-inches long, or a dead lobster (no matter what the length) which/ was less than nine inches long when alive — that is, when taken/ from the sea. No person can have a lobster in his possession/ which, when alive, was less than nine inches long. But if a-person has in his possession a boiled lobster less than nine inches-long, and the same lobster was nine inches long or more when alive, in such case no offense is committed by the possession.

It would be a strange result, if a person could legally take is lobster alive, and legally keep' him as long as alive, and be guilty of an offense for possessing the same lobster after it is dead ; if a legal catch can thus become illegal.

Evidence of the length of boiled lobsters is no doubt admissible as indicating the length of the same lobsters before they were *164boiled. And the distinction above made becomes immaterial, of course, if boiling a lobster does not in any case diminish its ¡length — does not reduce him from the legal to the illegal length.

Most of the testimony, at the trial of this cause, tended to show that there was no appreciable difference between lobsters when alive and when boiled. The jury, however, made some deduction, evidently, for a supposed difference. Some of the witnesses maintained that, instead of shrinking by boiling, the length of the lobster is increased.

Exceptions and motion overruled.

Walton, Virgin, Libbey, Emery and Haskell, JJ., concurred.