The petitioner is charged in said superior court with the crime of driving a motor vehicle upon a public highway within the city of Sacramento while under the influence of intoxicating liquors. Said of *141 fense is made a felony or, in the discretion of the court, a high-grade misdemeanor, by section 17 of the Motor Vehicle Act. Section 20 of Ordinance No. 282 of said city prohibits the same act but makes of it only a misdemeanor. Said city is governed by a charter adopted'in the year 1911. Petitioner insists that the provisions of said ordinance prevail over the Motor Vehicle Act and that, if he is prosecuted at all, it should be under the provisions of the ordinance. Said respondent has overruled his several objections to the proceedings in said superior court and proposes and intends, unless restrained by this court, to proceed with the trial of the charge against him.
This constitutes the only question to be determined in the case.
The earlier cases holding that cities may pass local and police regulations governing motor traffic are of little value in this connection, since it is clear that, in the absence of a Motor Vehicle Act, a city has such power under the provisions of the constitution.
Since the advent of motor vehicles in such vast numbers and the passage of the Motor Vehicle Act, a number of cases have been decided by our state courts involving traffic regulations of the state and of chartered cities, and it is a persuasive fact that in no case has it been held that the city
*143
ordinance is supreme. The contrary assumption appears to have been universal. It is insisted that
Ex parte Snowden,
Petitioner cites
City of Los Angeles
v.
Central Trust Co., supra,
as sustaining his position. But that case involved neither speed limits nor intoxication and concerned only the opening of a street. The question as to the paramount effect of the Motor Vehicle Act was in no way involved. The case is not authority in this connection. Petitioner relies mainly, however, upon the more recent case of
Muther
v.
Capps,
The Motor Vehicle Act was devised to meet a new and extraordinary condition, and it demands such a construction in view of the facts which, brought it into existence as will maintain its symmetry and integrity unimpaired, if this can be done under established canons of adjudication.
There are, it happens, two California eases, which, by the strongest implication, if not in direct terms, uphold the position of respondents. The first of these is
Mann
v.
Scott,
And the following language, quoted from the same ease, is particularly in point and may be cited as a distinct recognition by the court of the turning point in conditions which have made the regulation of auto traffic a matter of state and general concern: “Upon a careful analysis of the Motor Vehicle Act of 1913 and of its purpose viewed in the light of the traffic conditions upon which it was intended to operate, we are of the opinion that the reasoning of the court in the case last quoted is decisive of the question now presented. In other words, we believe that by extending the operation of the act in terms to the traffic upon city streets, the legislature did no more than to prescribe obviously necessary safeguards for travel upon such streets viewed as a part of the public highways of .the state in which all the people of the state are interested, and that it did not thereby intend to prohibit the enactment of such new and additional police regulations in furtherance of the purposes of the act as might appear reasonable and proper in a given locality. It is true that the Motor Vehicle Act of 1915 expressly limited the scope of such police regulations. (Stats. 1915, p. 409, c. 188, sec. 22d.) It may, perhaps, be open to question whether the ordinance here in controversy falls within the prohibition of that act, but it is sufficient for the purposes of this case to say that the Motor Vehicle Act as in force at the time of the plaintiff’s injury did not contain a clause prescribing limitations upon the local regulation of traffic. ’ ’
In view of this language, it is impossible to avoid the conclusion that the court would have sustained the supremacy of the Motor Vehicle Act of 1915 as against a repugnant city ordinance.
*145
The second case above referred to is that of
Ham
v.
County of Los Angeles,
(3) But viewed from another angle, the supremacy of the provision making the act a felony must be sustained.
Section. 17, so far as pertinent, reads as follows: “17. No person who is under the influence of intoxicating liquor and no person who is an habitual user of narcotic drugs shall operate or drive a motor or other vehicle on any public highway within this state.” It is true that the ordinances of a city are supreme in “municipal affairs.” But the act-charged against petitioner is not a “municipal affair.” This is so, even if the claim is sound that ordinances designed to control the use of streets prevail over general laws. The act of driving a motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquors is of no immediate or special concern to the city as such. It is of general concern to the inhabitants of a city in common with all other residents of the state. There exists a doubtful or twilight zone separating those matters that are clearly of municipal concern from those that are not. This doubtful zone is of greater or less width, according to the viewpoint of the observer, but there seems to be no satisfactory reason for assigning the act in question to this doubtful zone. It is not a “municipal affair.” Section 17, although it forms a part of the Motor Vehicle Act, is not a traffic ordinance. It makes no provision of any kind whatsoever as- to the method of driving, the rate of speed, the side of the road to be traversed, the giving of proper signals nor, in fact, any sort of provision or condition having reference to the use of the roadway in any given manner. It relates wholly to the person himself and his then present condition, and without reference to the effect of his acts upon the roadway itself or of other persons making use thereof.
*146 The interdicted act relates to traffic no further than that a person in the prescribed condition may not avail himself of the use of the streets whereon traffic exists. A person discharging firearms or spreading poison gases while driving an auto on the highway would be a menace, much as the drunken driver is, but in no sense, would his act be a matter of municipal concern as distinguished from the general concern of the people of the state. Regulations as to speed have reference to both time and place. That which would be a reckless rate of speed in a crowded city during busy hours would entail little or no danger on a remote roadway or during slack hours. The act charged against petitioner has no reference either to time or place.
While it is more dangerous in a crowded street, it is so only because there are more persons to be injured, but as to each person it is but slightly more dangerous than to one of the smaller number in a less crowded locality. Speeding is dangerous because of the locality. The drunken driver is a danger in any locality, if there are persons present to be injured.
The fact that he is a menace to life and to private property justifies the state in prescribing penalties for the act, just as it may do for violations of general sanitary, health and comfort laws. A manslaughter committed by an intoxicated driver in driving his vehicle over a victim is as much punishable by the state when committed on the streets of a city as if committed elsewhere. A vast number of acts are made punishable by the Penal Code because their commission involves a general menace to the public, even though in their commission, no person is injured. It is a felony for an intoxicated trainman to run a railroad train. A druggist must take certain precautions in selling poisonous drugs; it is a misdemeanor to carry concealed weapons or to leave a campfire burning and unattended. These cases and dozens of others that could be enumerated demonstrate that the state, in the exercise of its sovereign power and for the protection of its people, has authority to interdict on the public highways in every part of the state the driving of a motor or other vehicle by an intoxicated person.
Our conclusion is that the act charged against the petitioner is punishable under section 17 of the Motor Vehicle Act.
The - petition is dismissed.
Hart, J., and Burnett, 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 August 9, 1920.
All the Justices concurred, except Sloane, J., who was absent.
