128 P. 949 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1912
The application is to prohibit the superior court from proceeding to try petitioner on an information in which it is charged that on a certain date he did "willfully and unlawfully sell intoxicating liquors, to wit, whiskey, to one Dow Chilson." The prosecution is sought to be upheld by reason of two certain ordinances passed by the board of supervisors of the county of Mendocino. The first is known as ordinance No. 161 and, as far as necessary to quote, is as follows: "It shall be and hereby is made unlawful for any person to sell any alcoholic, spirituous, vinous, malt or other intoxicating liquor within the county of Mendocino, state of California, Provided, that this ordinance shall not apply to sales made at his regular place of business under authority of a license by any person holding *270 a regularly issued city or county retail or wholesale liquor license," etc. The penalty provided for the violation of said ordinance was a fine of not less than one hundred dollars nor more than five hundred dollars or imprisonment in the county jail not less than thirty days nor more than six months. On February 7, 1912, ordinance No. 189 was passed by said board, providing that "Section 3 of ordinance No. 161 is hereby amended to read as follows: Any person convicted of a violation of ordinance No. 161 of the county of Mendocino shall be punished by a fine not exceeding $600.00 or by imprisonment in the county jail not exceeding seven months, or by both such fine and imprisonment." The ordinance as it originally stood carried with it a penalty cognizable only in the justice court; as amended, its infractions are brought within the jurisdiction of the superior court, but it is the contention of petitioner that this amendment increasing the punishment is invalid.
It is admitted that the authority of the board of supervisors to enact such legislation finds its basis in section 11, article 11 of the constitution, providing that "Any county, city, town, or township may make and enforce within its limits all such local, police, sanitary, and other regulations as are not in conflict with general laws." It is not disputed that said ordinance 161 involved the exercise of authority conferred by said section 11 of the constitution, but it is claimed that the purported amendment is invalid by reason of the fact that it is in conflict with a general law. It is asserted that the case is covered by section 435 of the Penal Code, providing that "Every person who commences or carries on any business, trade, profession or calling, for the transaction or carrying on of which a license is required by any law of the state, without taking out or procuring the license prescribed by such law, is guilty of a misdemeanor." It is to be observed that no specific penalty is prescribed therein, but it is supplied by section
Of the ordinance it is to be noticed that the "business" of selling liquor without a license is not, specifically and in so many words, penalized, but this is the effect of the terms employed. In the first place, the ordinance recognizes as lawful the sale of liquor at his regular place of business by one holding a liquor license. In other words, one holding a regular license may conduct the business of liquor selling without incurring the penalty of the ordinance. But if he conducts the business without a license, although at a "regular place of business," he is liable to a fine of six hundred dollars and imprisonment for the term of seven months. This necessarily follows, because a man cannot "carry on" or conduct the liquor business without selling liquor and, under the terms of the ordinance, he is subjected to the penalty if he makes one sale of liquor. A person may sell liquor without engaging in the liquor business but the converse does not follow. The incident does not include the principal but the principal includes the incident. In Merced County v. Helm,
In Ex parte Seube,
But if the sale of liquor should be considered separate and distinct from the liquor business and not a necessary part of said business, still it would seem unreasonable to impose a greater penaty for the former than for the latter. Under the general law, if a person without a license carries on, in Mendocino County, the liquor business for a single day he would be liable to a punishment not to exceed imprisonment in the county jail for six months and a fine of five hundred dollars, but if within that day he should make one hundred sales of liquor he might, under the ordinance, be subjected to one hundred prosecutions with the possibility of the increased penalty for each offense. In this view, accepting the general law as the test, the ordinance would seem to be unreasonable and void.
In Ex parte Solomon,
In the case of In re Sic,
Granting, however, that it is competent for the board of supervisors to so discriminate, the ordinance is so framed that it is impossible to say that the part imposing a penalty for the sale in conducting the business is invalid and for the other sales is valid. The section in that respect is unlike that presented in Ex parte Mansfield,
Of course, what we have said simply applies to the amendment to ordinance 161 increasing the penalty. The amendment being invalid, it would leave unaffected said ordinance 161 as originally passed by the board of supervisors. *274
The cases cited by respondent, it is believed, are not opposed to the views herein expressed.
In Ex parte Snowden,
In re Guerroro,
The ordinance upheld in Ex parte Johnson,
In Ex parte Chong,
Ex parte Hong Shen,
In Ex parte McClain,
In re Berry,
Harter v. Barkley,
If said ordinance 189, increasing the penalty for the violation of ordinance No. 161, is invalid, it follows, we think, that the court is without jurisdiction and prohibition is proper. (Green v. Superior Court,
In Gardner et al. v. Superior Court of Los Angeles Co.,
In Ophir Silver Min. Co. v. Superior Court,
The rule in criminal cases, sanctioned by right, reason and simple justice, as we conceive it, is stated by the supreme court in Terrill v. Superior Court, (Cal.) 60 P. 38, and by this court in Ex parte Hayter,
The demurrer is overruled and the alternative writ is made peremptory.
Chipman, P. J., and Hart, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on December 30, 1912.