Both parties appeal from portions of a judg-
ment relating to the validity and enforceability of statutory provisions regulating the training and furnishing of guide dogs for the blind. A hearing was granted by this court, after decision by the Court of Appeal, Second Appellate District, Division One, for the purpose of giving further study to the problems presented. After such study we have concluded that the opinion of the Court of Appeal, prepared by Justice Lillie, correctly treats and disposes of substantially all of the issues involved, and it is therefore, with certain further discussion and disposition of the final contention presented, adopted 'as and for the opinion of this court. Such opinion (with appropriate deletions and additions as indicated) is as follows : 1
Plaintiff corporation, engaged in the training of seeing eye dogs for blind persons and of blind persons to use said dogs, sought a declaratory judgment that sections 7200 through 7217 of the Business and Professions Code, covering the entire chapter on the subject “Guide Dogs for the Blind,” are unconstitutional on their face and as applied to plaintiff. It also sought an injunction prohibiting defendants from enforcing the above statutes and interfering with plaintiff in the operation of its business or school. The trial court determined that all of the above sections are reasonable and, therefore, constitutional save and except section 7210.5 which makes it unlawful to solicit funds for any person purporting to provide guide dogs for the blind unless such person (for whose benefit the solicitation is made) holds a valid and “unimpaired” license from defendant board. As to plaintiff, whose license was suspended because it had no licensed trainer, such section was concluded to be unreasonable because without funds it cannot pay for the salary of a new trainer and without a trainer it cannot recover its license. For a “reasonable period,” fixed by the court at 120 days, defendants were accordingly enjoined from enforcing the provisions of section 7210.5. Defendants appeal from that portion of the judgment *541 partially invalidating section 7210.5; plaintiff, in turn, has appealed from the remaining portions of the judgment upholding the constitutionality of the statutes challenged.
On December 10, 1965, several months after the entry of judgment herein (April 28. 1965), plaintiff’s license was formally reinstated by appellant board; such action followed plaintiff’s employment of a duly licensed trainer who, it is asserted, was hired away from one of the two other licensed schools. Accordingly, the general rule immediately suggests itself that " ‘ the duty of this court, as of every other judicial tribunal, is to decide actual controversies by a judgment which can be carried into effect, and not to give opinions upon moot questions or abstract propositions, or to declare principles or rules of law which cannot affect the matter in issue in the ease before it.’ ”
(Consolidated Vultee etc. Corp.
v.
United Auto. etc. Workers,
*542
With respect to the proposition last stated, both sides agree that the instant judgment necessarily affects their rights in the future. Thus, if the entire legislation should be stricken down, defendant board would be powerless to enforce its provisions against plaintiff Foundation or any other entity similarly engaged; plaintiff, in turn, would be deprived of the grace period (120 days ) during which it could solicit funds if the validity of section 7210.5, as presently worded, is sustained on appeal. There is also agreement between the parties that in the event of a dismissal for mootness plaintiff, in light of its past history in that regard, will again find itself without a trainer; it will thus be relegated to the very situation which precipitated the present litigation, a development creating “a continuing controversy ripe for decision.”
(DiGiorgio Fruit Corp.
v.
Department of Employment,
Too, since at least one of the statutes in controversy regulates the public solicitation of funds (Bus. & Prof. Code, §7210.5), a question of general public interest is presented.
(County of Madera
v.
Gendron,
Plaintiff’s constitutional attack on the entire legislation is based on the several grounds set forth in its complaint as amended; generally, it is alleged to be unreasonable and arbitrary and violative of due process. On appeal, however, plaintiff directs the major part of its argument to the invalidity of sections 7214 and 7209, as well as section 7210.5 which was only partially invalidated. Thus, section 7214, requiring the automatic suspension of a school’s license if there is no licensed trainer in charge, is said to violate due process in that no provision is therein made for a hearing before an appro
*543
priate department or agency; according to plaintiff, there is no “compelling public interest” justifying the harshness of this enactment such as confronted the court in
Escobedo
v.
State of California,
Where an administrative remedy is provided by statute, this remedy must ordinarily be exhausted before the courts will act.
(Abelleira
v.
District Court of Appeal,
We first determine the claim of plaintiff corporation that certain key sections of the subject chapter invalidate the legislation in its entirety, bearing in mind (what courts have repeatedly declared) that every intendment is in favor of the constitutionality of the legislative act.
(Lockard
v.
City of Los Angeles,
First, it is contended that section 7214 exceeds constitutional limits by providing for the automatic suspension of plaintiff’s license without a hearing “if there is no licensed trainer in charge. ...” Statutes of the kind here in suit should be construed to require a hearing unless the legislative enactment expressly provides otherwise—and that is the situation here. Both sides rely on
DiGenova
v.
State Board of Education,
Plaintiff seeks to distinguish DiGenova with the statement that neither the school nor the trainer (unlike plaintiff DiGenova) has been convicted of, or even charged with, any public offense; too, in the present case two licenses are in *546 volved, that of the school and the trainer, and the former becomes suspended upon the suspension of the latter. The statute upheld in Escobedo, however, does not make conviction of a crime a condition precedent to the summary result enacted, and sometimes vicarious liability will be imposed when the circumstances fairly warrant such a consequence. 3 Since both cases, above cited, concededly turn upon the finding of a compelling public interest, plaintiff argues that no such finding can here be made. Thus, thousands of uninsured motorists having been involved in accidents, the impracticability of requiring a hearing in each ease justified the legislation challenged in Escobedo. According to plaintiff, defendant board has hardly a minimal percentage of the business which would have engaged the appropriate agency if Escobedo had reached a contrary conclusion; specifically, plaintiff was only one of three licensed schools in California at the time of the trial. But this argument is wholly out of harmony with plaintiff’s contentions against the mootness of this appeal; in that connection it is said that the determinations made below " affect more than the rights of this particular respondent and, in effect, affect all schools engaged in the training of seeing eye dogs and blind persons, and affect all of the people of the State of California.” Continuing, “Such determinations are a matter of general public interest and survive the existence of the particular facts that may have prompted the initiation of the lawsuit. ’ ’
Solely in view of the above concession, possibly we would be justified in rejecting the proposition presently contended for; but there are other considerations militating against the instant claim for unconstitutionality. Citing
Carroll
v.
California Horse Racing Board,
Mindful of the state’s interest (as already noted) in the blind and their problems, we think that the dangers immediately incident to the operation of plaintiff’s school without a licensed trainer justifies the summary suspension provided for in the challenged statute. Certainly it may not be said that there is no rational connection between circumstances sought to be avoided and the subject legislation. Even so, “As individuals, we might find the theories supporting the law insubstantial and inacceptable. As a court, pursuing judicially established standards, we may invalidate the statute only if these theories are devoid of any rational connection with public interest objectives as the Legislature may have conceived them. We are not able to say that the law is irrationally conceived, that the Legislature could not have accepted the board’s present arguments as the basis for finding that this statute serves a public interest.”
(Doyle
v.
Board of Barber Examiners,
The next key statute criticized, section 7209, provides in part that “A person to be eligible for examination as a trainer of guide dogs for the blind must ... (2) have a knowledge of the special problems of the blind and how to teach them, ...” and “(4) be suited temperamentally and otherwise to train blind persons in the use of guide dogs, ...” The above provisions, says plaintiff, are both vague and indefinite and arbitrarily vest in defendants, without any adequate yardstick or guideline, an unlimited discretion to determine the applicant’s eligibility. Other subdivisions of the same section [requiring a background of experience on the part of the applicant] are criticized because they assertedly work a personal hardship on plaintiff and other schools in view of the “paucity” of available personnel interested in this form of endeavor. These arguments must be tested by the principle that “When the state sees fit to regulate upon a matter which is within its police power, its an
*548
thority over the subject is plenary and can be reviewed by the courts only to the extent of determining whether the regulation is reasonable. ’ ’
(Sandstrom
v.
California Horse Racing Board,
We also take notice of the fact that section 7209 was amended in 1953 after its original enactment in 1947, presumably after further legislative study of the qualifications required for the subject occupation.
In re Porterfield,
Little need be said about plaintiff’s next point, which is only briefly discussed in its brief, that the entire act offends the equal protection clause of both state and federal Constitutions by selecting guide dog charities for special licensing procedures, thus favoring other charities which are not similarly regulated. It is a fundamental rule of constitutional law recognized in all jurisdictions in this country that legislation is not discriminatory if it relates to and operates uniformly upon the whole of a single class properly selected. (11 Cal.Jur.2d, § 273, pp. 719-720.) “There is no constitutional requirement of uniform treatment but only that there be a reasonable basis for each classification.”
(Bilyeu
v.
State Emp. Retirement System,
Section 7210.5, the final statute in the chapter singled out for attack, prohibits the solicitation of funds unless the person concerned holds a valid and unimpaired license issued by defendant board; and, as shown above, such license becomes ineffective immediately upon the trainer’s separation from service. That reasonable regulation of charitable organizations is within a government’s police power has long been established; such regulation does not intrude upon the right of free speech.
(Gospel Army
v.
City of Los Angeles,
Defendants correctly note that without a trainer the school cannot accomplish its charitable purpose and that to permit it to solicit funds for a purpose it may find impossible to achieve can result in a fraud on the public, however unintentional on the part of the school. The conceded facts that it is very difficult to obtain a trainer, that few people are qualified and few are licensed, and that the trial court found on substantial evidence that plaintiff made a bona fide attempt during the period in question to secure a licensed trainer, are of no assistance to plaintiff in the light of the applicable principles set forth hereinabove. The determination of the Legislature that solicitation of funds for an express purpose should be permitted only by those who are qualified and who currently possess the ability to carry out the purpose is obviously not unreasonable. The very paucity of licensed trainers, cited by plaintiff, may well have been a motivating factor to the Legislature. It follows that the trial court erred in its view that the proscription of solicitation of funds set forth in the statute is unreasonable and arbitrary, and that a “reasonable period,” fixed by the court at 120 days from the date of entry of judgment, should be accorded plaintiff within which to solicit funds even though still without the services of a licensed trainer. 4
*551 That portion of the judgment which declares section 7210.5 unconstitutional and which enjoins defendants from enforcing or threatening to enforce it for the 120-day period is reversed. In all other respects the judgment is affirmed.]
Traynor, C. J., McComb, J., Peters, J., Tobriner, J., Mosk, J., and Sullivan, J., concurred.
Notes
Brackets together, in this manner [ ], are used to indicate deletions from, the opinion of the Court of Appeal; brackets enclosing material (other than editor’s added parallel citations) are, unless otherwise indicated, used to denote insertions or additions by this court. We thus avoid the extension of quotation marks within quotation marks which would be incident to the use of such conventional punctuation, and at the same time accurately indicate the matter quoted.
(Simmons
v.
Civil Service Emp. Ins. Co.
(1962)
‘ ‘ Thus, while it has been said that the declaratory judgment acts necessarily deal with the'present rights, the ‘ present right ’ contemplated 'is the right to have immediate judicial assurance that advantages. will be enjoyed or liabilities escaped in the future.” (15 Cal.Jur.2d 116, citing Borchard, Declaratory Judgments (2d ed.) pp. 927-929.)
''Inasmuch as the Legislature of this state has seen fit, in the exercise of its power, to impose upon petitioner criminal liability for the offense which was committed by his employee, we cannot, in the light of the authorities above cited, hold that the statute as mitten, or as applied here, invades a constitutional right of the petitioner. ’ ’
(In re Marley,
Also, see
Estate of Simmons
(1966)
