Conard v. State

Citation16 A.2d 121
PartiesCONARD v. STATE.
Decision Date28 October 1940
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
16 A.2d 121

CONARD
v.
STATE.

Superior Court of Delaware. Kent.

Oct. 28, 1940.


16 A.2d 122

[Copyrighted material omitted.]

16 A.2d 123

John Conard, Jr., was convicted by a justice of the peace with having engaged in the business of carrying fishing parties for hire in a boat not propelled exclusively by oars, for the purpose of fishing in the waters of the Delaware River, Delaware Bay, and that part of the Atlantic Ocean under the jurisdiction of the State of Delaware, without first having obtained a license, and he brings certiorari.

Judgment affirmed.

RODNEY and SPEAKMAN, JJ., sitting.

James M. Tunnell, Jr., of Georgetown, and Percy Warren Green, of Wilmington, for the defendant below.

16 A.2d 124

James R. Morford, Atty. Gen., and William J. Storey, Deputy Atty. Gen, for the State.

Superior Court, Kent County, July Term, 1939.

Certiorari to review a judgment of conviction by a Justice of the Peace.

On June 23, 1939, John Conard, Jr., a resident of Delaware, was charged before a Justice of the Peace for Kent County with having engaged in the business of carrying fishing parties for hire in a boat not propelled exclusively by oars, named "Miss Fortescue", for the purpose of fishing in the waters of the Delaware River, Delaware Bay, and that part of the Atlantic Ocean under the jurisdiction of the State of Delaware, without first obtaining an annual license for said boat from the Board of Game and Fish Commissioners of the State of Delaware, in violation of the statutes of the State. Section 2884 of the Revised Code of 1935, 40 Del.Laws, Chap. 202, provides, in part, as follows:

"It shall be unlawful for any person, firm or corporation to engage in the business of carrying fishing parties, for hire, in any boat or boats for the purpose of fishing in the waters of the Delaware River, Delaware Bay, and that part of the Atlantic Ocean under the jurisdiction of the State of Delaware, without first obtaining an annual license for each boat from the Board of Game and Fish Commissioners of the State of Delaware; provided, however, nothing in this Section shall apply to boats propelled exclusively by oars."

The boat license for a resident of the State was fixed at $10, and for a non-resident $50. With respect to a resident the minimum fine for a violation of the act was fixed at $50, and forfeiture of the boat or boats, while in the case of a nonresident the minimum fine was fixed at $100.

The defendant was convicted of the offense charged, and was sentenced to pay a fine of $100 and costs and to suffer the forfeiture of the boat, "Miss Fortescue."

Some ten exceptions have been filed which may generally be considered as raising three questions, as follows:

1. That the quoted statute is void by reason of the exemption therefrom of persons who carry fishing parties for hire, in boats propelled exclusively by oars, it being claimed that such exemption is in violation of.

(a) the 14th Amendment of the Constitution of the United States;

(b) of Article 8, Sec. 1 of the Constitution of Delaware, providing that all taxes shall be uniform upon the same class of subjects within the territorial limits of the authority levying the tax.

2. That the statute is void because of the discrimination in favor of residents and against non-residents with respect to the license fees and the pecuniary penalties, such discrimination being invalid under the 14th Amendment.

3. That the statute is void because its subject comes within the contemplation of the Compact of 1905 entered into between the States of Delaware and New Jersey and approved by Congress and is in violation of the uniform laws passed pursuant to such Compact.

RODNEY, Judge, delivering the opinion of the Court:

Some preliminary and passing attention should be accorded the question as to whether the pertinent statute is an exercise of the police power of the State, or whether its main purpose is the raising of revenue. While not of primary importance, the question has materiality as touching the question of classification of the subjects of the license and of discrimination, for under the police power, the legislative control is not concerned with the identical rules as in the imposition of taxes. In Yourison v. State, 3 W.W.Harr. 577, 33 Del. 577, 140 A. 691, the court construed a statute, substantially the same as the one now under consideration, and reached the conclusion that it was not a revenue measure. That court recognized that the statute there considered, like the present, contained no express words giving any authority to refuse a license; that court, unlike ourselves, felt that the authority to grant a license implied the power to formulate governing standards and to refuse to issue a license for a boat which the issuing authority considered unsafe, or which was owned by a person whom it considered unfitted to have charge of its operation.

It is frequently difficult to determine whether the imposition of a charge or fee by the government is an exercising

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of the police power or of the taxing power. If the imposition has for its primary object the discouragement of dangerous employments, the protection of the safety of the public, or of citizens, or the regulation of relative rights, privileges or duties as between individuals, then the legislation may fairly be regarded as an exercise of the police power for the public welfare. A fair test may be that when a fee is exacted and something is required or permitted in addition to the payment of the sum, either to be done by the licensee, or by some regulation or restriction imposed upon him, then the fee is...

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