Lead Opinion
The petitioner, being imprisoned on the charge of violating the act of 1919 (Stats. 1919, p. 89), regulating the sale of substances designated therein as “imitation milk,” seeks his discharge upon a writ of habeas corpus. He was arrested upon a warrant issued upon a complaint filed in the policе court of San Francisco.
The complaint alleges that “the crime of misdemeanor, to wit, selling and offering for sale imitation milk, without first obtaining a license therefor, was committed by E’. B. Reineger, who did then and there willfully and unlawfully engage in the business of selling, dealing in and furnishing imitation milk, namely, a compound composed of evaporated skim milk and seven and eight-tenths per cent of edible vegetable fat, without any other ingredient or ingredients, without first having applied for and obtained a license so to do, and *100 did unlawfully sell, other than for cooking purposes, at one time, and in the same transaction, sixty cans of such imitation milk, each can containing one pound avoirdupois, which said imitation milk was not of a separate and distinct character not resembling milk or condensed or evapоrated milk, nor colored nor containing any color or any ingredient or ingredients that caused it to look unlike pure, whole cow's milk or the condensed or evaporated product made therefrom. ’ ’ It further alleged that each can was labeled to show that it was a compound of evaporated skim milk and vegetable fat containing seven and eight-tenths per cent vegetable fat and twenty-five and five-tenths per cent total solids.
It is claimed on behalf of the respondent that the complaint charges two offenses, the first under section 2 of the act and the second under section 6 of the act. Section 2 has no reference to the obtaining of a license while section 6 forbids the sale of milk by any person who has not obtained a license therefor аs therein provided. We are satisfied that no offense is charged under the provisions of section 2, the material parts whereof are as follows:
1‘ Sec. 2. No person by himself, his agents or servants shall render, manufacture, sell, offer for sale, expose for sаle, or have in his possession with intent to sell or to use, or to serve to patrons, customers, boarders or inmates of any hotel, dwelling-house, restaurant, public conveyance or boardinghouse, any article, product or compound made wholly or in part, out of any imitation milk; provided, that nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit the manufacture or sale, under regulations hereinafter provided, of imitation milk, of substances or compounds that may be used as imitation milk, of a separate and distinct character not resembling milk or condensed or evaporated milk, and in such a manner as will advise the purchaser and consumer of its real character, colored or containing ingredients that cause it to look unlike pure whole cow’s milk or the condensed or evaporated produce made therefrom; . . . and provided, further, that nothing in this act shall be construed to prevent or prohibit the manufacture, sale, or use, for cooking purposes, of imitation milk as defined by section one of this act.”
The first clause of the complaint manifestly was intended to charge the selling of such milk without license and that offense only. The claim that an offense is charged under sec
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tion 2 is based on the second clause of the complaint. Upon the general frame of the complaint it would appear thаt this clause was intended merely as an additional definition of the offense of selling without license. The claim is that it was not so intended but that it is a charge of an offense under section 2. Its language follows closely the language of the provisions of section 2.
Section 6 declares that no person shall engage in the business of selling imitation milk without first having obtained a license so to do. For such license it provides that wholesale dealers shall pay a fee of fifty dollars and retail dealers a fee of five dollars. The petitioner concedes that the complaint charges that he did engage in the business *102 without having obtained a license, but he claims that the section is void because of the uncertainty of its definitions of dealers, the uncertainty being of such a character, so it is argued, that no person in the business could determine from such definitions whether he was a wholesaler or a retailer. The two definitions in question are as follows: “The term .‘wholesale dealer’ as used in this section includes all persons, firms or corporations who sell any of said substances in quantities of one full case or more at a time or in the same transaction. The term ‘retail dealer’ includes all persons who sell in quantities of less than one ease.”
It is contended that the question whether a person carrying on the business is a “wholesale dealer” or a retail dealer depends entirely on the meaning of the word “case,” that its meaning is altogether uncertain and indefinite, that, consequently, no one can determine the question, or ascertain from the section what sort of license a particular dealer must have or what amount he must pay as a license fee, and hence that the provisions requiring licenses to such dealers are incapable of enforcement and void.
The word “case,” when used in that connection, is defined as “a box, sheath, or covering of any kind; . . . a box and its contents; ... as a ease of goods” (Webster’s Diсtionary, and also as “anything intended to enclose or contain something.” (Standard Dictionary.)
If, as suggested, imitation milk were sold by wholesalers in bulk, as in barrels or carboys or large creamery cans, without being put in small cans or bottles for the retailer, and the retailer should adopt the custom of selling to consumers in pint or quart vessels brought in by the consumer or furnished by the retailer and filled from such bulk containers, no difficulty need arise in applying the law.
The complaint does not purport to charge a violation of sections 4 and 5 of the act, or of either of them. It is therefore unnecessary to consider the objections urged to the validity of those sections.
It may be that the complaint is uncertain because it does not state whether the petitioner is a wholesale dealer or a retail dealer as defined in the act. It does not allege whether the sixty cans sold amounted to one full case or not.
Habeas corpus
lies in such cases only when the magistrate is without jurisdiction to issue the warrant of arrest.
The writ is discharged and the petitioner is remanded to the custody of the proper officer.
Olney, J., Lennon, J., Angellotti, C. J., and Lawlor, J., concurred.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent from that portion of the main opinion construing section 2 of the act. In my judgment it was clearly the intention of the legislature to prohibit the sale of imitation milk. I concur in the rest of the opinion.
Wilbur, J., concurred.
