Lockhart v. State

WALKER, P- J.-

In support of the charge made in the indictment that the defendant “hunted on the lands of Curtis McCorquodale, without first having obtained from the owner or agent thereof a written permission to do so,” evidence ivas offered which tended to prove that the defendant hunted on lands known as McCor- $ quodale’s woods pasture without having obtained written permission of Curtis McCorquodale to hunt on said land. Over objections of the defendant said McCorquodale was permitted to testify as a witness for the state that the land mentioned was in his possession, and that he was in control of it for himself and his brother and sister; the witness stating on cross examination that he did not own the entire interest in said land, and only claimed an undivided one-third interest in it. One of the grounds of objection to the questions eliciting this testimony was that the offense charged is one against the ownership and not against the possession of land. The statute under which the charge was made (Code, § 6971) provides that “any person who hunts on the lands of another, without first having obtained from the owner or agent thereof a written permission to do so, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor,” etc.

The words “the lands of another” are comprehensive enough to include lands possessed or occupied by one who is not the holder of the fee, and the word “owner” is not infrequently used to describe one who has dominion or control over a thing, the title to which is in an*63other. — Johnson v. State, 1 Ala. App. 148, 55 South. 268; 6 Words & Phrases, p. 5148. In view of the manifest purpose of the statute to limit the hunting privilege to authorized persons, we are of. opinion that the provision in question is not to he so narrowly construed as to exclude from its protection the possessor or occupant of land having actual dominion over it, though the title is in another, or in others jointly or in common with him. We find nothing in the terms of the statute to warrant the conclusion that the offense which it creates is one against the ownership or title, as contradistinguished from one against the possession or actaul dominion, of the land. The conclusions follow that the testimony mentioned was not subject to the objection interposed to it, and that the court was not in error in the part of its oral charge to which an exception was reserved.

The court was justified in refusing to give written charge 2, requested by the defendant, by the fact that, in view of the evidence as to interest in the land held by persons not in possession, that charge might have been understood as requiring the state to prove that neither of such persons had given the written permission mentioned, or to go further than to prove that such permission had not been given by the one holding possession and dominion.

Affirmed.