Willadsen v. Justice Court
Decision Date | 04 January 1983 |
Citation | 188 Cal.Rptr. 488,139 Cal.App.3d 171 |
Court | California Court of Appeals |
Parties | Milton Lawrence WILLADSEN, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. JUSTICE COURT OF the OROVILLE JUDICIAL DISTRICT, Defendant, PEOPLE of the State of California, Real Party in Interest and Respondent. Civ. 21184. |
Minasian, Minasian, Minasian, Spruance, Baber & Meith and M. Anthony Soares, Oroville, for plaintiff and appellant.
No appearance for defendant.
George Deukmejian, Atty. Gen., Robert H. Philibosian, Chief Asst. Atty. Gen., Arnold O. Overoye, Asst. Atty. Gen., Gregory W. Baugher and Jana L. Tuton, Deputy Attys. Gen., for plaintiff and respondent.
In this appeal from denial of a petition for a writ of prohibition, plaintiff challenges a Fish and Game Department regulation designating all state bodies of water as subject to the provisions of Fish and Game Code section 1603. (All further statutory references are to sections of the Fish and Game Code.) He also challenges the arbitration provisions of section 1603. We reject those challenges and shall affirm the judgment.
Plaintiff faces a misdemeanor charge of violating section 1603 in justice court. His motion to dismiss on constitutional and other grounds was denied in the justice court, as was his petition for a writ of prohibition from the superior court. This appeal followed from that denial.
Section 1603, added in 1976, provides:
The Fish and Game Department's implementing regulation, effective January 18, 1977, reads:
"For the purpose of implementing Sections 1601 and 1603 of the Fish and Game Code which requires [sic] submission to the department of general plans sufficient to indicate the nature of a project for construction by or on behalf of any person, governmental agency, state or local, and any public utility, of any project which will divert, obstruct or change the natural flow or bed of any river, stream or lake designated by the department, or will use material from the streambeds designed by the department, in the State of California, including all rivers, streams and streambeds which may have intermittent flows of water, are hereby designated for such purpose." (Cal.Admin.Code, tit. 14, § 720.)
Records of the Fish and Game Department (Department) of which we take judicial notice on plaintiff's request, show plaintiff notified the Department on May 27, 1981, of his intention to reroute a stream for winter runoff. A Department representative inspected the site on June 16 and determined the project would affect "various game and nongame animals." The Department proposed several measures to protect the stream environment, including preservation of woody vegetation in the area. The proposed agreement is dated June 20, 1981. The citation issued to defendant, for "altering stream without an agreement," is dated June 16, the same day the Department's inspection was made.
I
Plaintiff's first argument is that the first sentence of section 1603 demonstrates an intent by the Legislature that some, but not all, state waterways be governed by the notification and approval requirements of the statute. He contends that the Department has exceeded its authority by designating all rivers, streams and lakes as subject to the requirements. 1 Noting that the Supreme Court has repeatedly "held that administrative regulations which exceed the scope of the enabling statute are invalid and have no force or life" (Woods v. Superior Court (1981) 28 Cal.3d 668, 680, 170 Cal.Rptr 484, 620 P.2d 1032), plaintiff argues that the Department's implementing regulation is void. The argument is premised on a 1976 revision of chapter 6, division 2, of the Fish and Game Code. (Stats.1976, ch. 603, §§ 1, 2, p. 1447.) In that revision, current section 1603 replaced former section 1602, which required "Any person who substantially diverts or obstructs the natural flow ... of any river, stream, or lake," to notify the Department. (See Stats.1970, ch. 1357, § 2, p. 2524; emphasis added.)
Plaintiff reads too much into the change in language. The legislative history of sections 1600 through 1603 belies his claim. Sections 1600 to 1602 were added to the code in 1961 as new chapter 6. (Stats.1961, ch. 909, § 2, p. 2532.) Section 1600 then provided (as it does now): Section 1601 required all governmental agencies to submit general plans for any project "which will divert, obstruct or change the natural flow or bed of any river, stream or lake designated by the department." (Ibid.; emphasis added.) The Department was then to propose, and the submitting agency to consider, plan modifications to protect fish and game. (Ibid.) By regulation, the Department designated all state rivers, lakes and...
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