The petitioner was convicted under section 1 of Ordinance No. 188 of the city of Marysville, and he seeks his discharge from the imprison *466 ment which followed such conviction. Section 1 requires that every person carrying on certain specified callings shall, before commencing the same, procure a license therefor, and section 80, so far as pertinent to this inquiry, reads as follows: “Section 80. Every person engaged in business as a lawyer, maintaining - an office in said city, shall pay a license of $2.50 per month. ’ ’ The petitioner, a lawyer by occupation, maintains an office in said city and he neglected to take out the license demanded by said section 1. No point is made as to sufficiency of the judgment in mere matters of form.
(1) It is contended that the ordinance in question is regulatory in its nature and therefore beyond the powers of the municipality. It is conceded that the business in question is not one that can be “regulated” under the police powers of cities and counties. Unless, therefore, the ordinance is a revenue measure, it cannot be upheld.
This section covers a violation of an ordinance.
(Ex parte Lawrence,
The petitioner is not charged with a failure to pay his license tax. The charge is that he carried on a certain business without first procuring the necessary license. The section of the Penal Code above cited does not purport to fix a license fee nor does it provide for the issuance of a license. It would be unprofitable to multiply authorities to show that our courts have again and again upheld the power of the legislature to prescribe a punishment for failure to procure a license before carrying on certain lines of business.
Hart, J., and Burnett, J., concurred.
