One Glenn Downing is here charged with a. violation of section 2, chapter 1039, Statutes of 1933 (commonly referred to as the California Recovery Act), in that on November 1, 1934, as a person engaged in intrastate commerce in a business and transaction affecting intrastate commerce, subject to the provisions of the Code of Pair Competition for the Petroleum Industry, approved by the President of the United States by a purported authority conferred by the National Industrial Recovery Act, passed June 16, 1933, he did violate the provisions of such Code of Pair Competition by producing oil from Wil-Daw No. 1 oil well in excess of the quota assigned to him by order of the Administrator of said Code of Pair Competition for the Petroleum Industry, and specifically a violation of section 5 of article III of said code. He was tried on November 23, 1934, found guilty, sentenced to pay a fine or go to jail, and elected to do the latter. On the same day that he was delivered to the custody of the sheriff, a petition for a writ of habeas corpus was filed, a writ issued, and Downing was released on $500 bail.
The decisive question is the validity of the statutes, both state and national, and the effect of the codes promulgated pursuant thereto, and the orders issued by the administrator pursuant to the codes.
Since the arrest of petitioner, the cases of
Panama Refining Co.
v.
Ryan,
Accordingly, it is ordered that petitioner be and he is hereby discharged from custody and his bond exonerated.
Houser, Acting P. J., and York, J., concurred.
