The case was heard in Fort Nelson court.
A judge in Fort Nelson decided Dec. 15 to overturn a man’s conviction for hunting a thinhorn ram mountain sheep in 2022 outside of open season.
BC Supreme Court Justice Matthew Taylor ordered a new trial for James Dylan Massey, but stopped short of acquitting him.
Massey, licensed in the Omineca Peace region, was found guilty in August 2024 by a Provincial Court judge, but he appealed the verdict, arguing that the judge’s interpretation and application of the law and regulation was errant.
Taylor’s decision said that, when Massey brought the ram for compulsory inspection, authorized inspector David Maurice Jenkins deemed it to be less than eight years of age and reported to the BC Conservation Officer Service.
The Provincial Court judge found that Massey had not shown, on a balance of probabilities, that he acted with due diligence or took reasonable steps to avoid the wrongful act.
Taylor concluded that the lower court judge “never made a clear factual finding that the Crown had failed to prove that the horn curl test was not met beyond a reasonable doubt.”
“Further,” Taylor said, “sitting as an appellate court it would not be appropriate for me to make my own factual findings with respect to whether the evidence at trial was sufficient to meet the horn curl test, or to reweigh the credibility and reliability of the testimony of the different expert witnesses, particularly in light of the Provincial Court judge’s decision to limit his factual findings.”
After hearing the case on Oct. 30 in Dawson Creek, Taylor decided to vacate the conviction and remit the matter to Provincial Court for retrial. But he declined to acquit Massey.
“It is not the role of appellate courts to substitute their own findings of fact on these issues, or to reweigh the evidence, absent a palpable and overriding error,” he wrote. “I have found no such error with respect to these factual issues.”
Massey had argued he should be acquitted, because the Crown expert used the wrong measuring equipment and that the Crown was responsible for detaching the horns. Taylor said the factual matters were already considered in Provincial Court.
According to the B.C. government, B.C.’s northern third is home to approximately 12,250 thinhorn sheep.
-Bob Mackin/Prince George Citizen
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