— Petitioners were convicted in the Justice’s Court of Riverside County under two counts of a complaint charging them with violating the provisions of Ordinance No. 248 of that county. The judgments of conviction were аffirmed on appeal by the superior court. A writ of certiorari, which was sought to annul the judgments, of conviction, was denied by this court upon the ground that no excess of jurisdiction was present.
(Portnoy
v.
Superior Court,
The first count of the complaint is founded upon section 2 of the ordinance which provides: “It shall be unlawful for any person, either as owner, lessee, principal, agent, employee, servant, clerk, waiter, cashier or dealer to establish, lease, open, maintain, keep, carry on or work in any building, house or room or any other place where any game, dеvice, scheme, gaming or gambling is permitted, allowed or carried on in violation of any of the provisions of this Ordinance or in violation of the law of the State of California.” Count two of the cоmplaint was subsequently dismissed. The third count is based upon section 4 of the ordinance which reads: “. . . it shall be unlawful for any person to own or have in his possession or under his custody or control any slot maсhine, upon the result of the action of which money or other valuable thing is staked or hazarded and which is or may be operated or played by placing or depositing therein any coins, checks or slugs, or as a result of the operation of which any money or other representative of value is or may be won or lost, when the result of the action or operation of said slot mаchine is dependent in whole or in part upon hazard or chance.”
Petitioners contend that sections 2 and 4 of the ordinance are unconstitutional in that they constitute a duplication of existing provisions of the Penal Code, a duplication which creates a conflict between the state and the local law necessitating the invalidation of the latter. The control of gambling activities is a matter concerning which local governments possess power to enact and enforce local regulations not in conflict with general laws, for the purpose of suрplementing those laws. (Canst., art. XI, § 11;
In re Murphy,
Insofar as the provisions of Ordinance No. 248 purport to prohibit acts which already are made сriminal by the Penal Code, it is clear that they exceed the proper limits of supplementary regulation and must be held invalid because in conflict with the statutes which they duplicate.
(Pipoly
v.
Benson, supra,
p. 370;
In re Sic,
Respondents urge, however, that certain of the language used in section 4 of the ordinance is broader than the language used in the Penal Code, and it is suggested that the ordinance can be sustained insofar as its provisions can be said to supplement, rather than duplicate, existing statutes. Thus, it is pointed out that the ordinance, unlike the statute, is so worded as to prohibit the possession of any slot machine upon the actiоn of which money is hazarded and which “is
*241
or
may be operated
or played by placing or depositing therein any coins ... or as a result of the operation of which any money ... is or
may be won
or lost. ...” Assuming for the purposes of this proсeeding the validity of respondents’ contention that there is a substantial difference between prohibiting the possession of slot machines upon which money
is hazarded
and prohibiting the possession of machines upon which money
may be hazarded (see Chapman
v.
Aggeler,
Similar considerations are controlling with respect to a portion of the activities prohibited by section 2 of the ordinance. Penal Code, section 331, provides: ‘1 Every person who knowingly permits any of the games mentioned in section three hundred thirty and section three hundred thirty a of this code to be played, conducted, or dealt in any house owned or rented by such person, in whole or in part, is punishable as provided in the preceding sections.” It is apparent that section 2 of the ordinance is a duplicаtion of Penal Code, section 331, insofar as it purports to prohibit an
owner
or
lessee
from establishing, leasing, opening, maintaining, keeping, or carrying on a house in which any of the gambling activities covered by the Penal Code are permitted to be conducted. Partial invalidity of section 2 of the ordinance must therefore be conceded. Respondents contend, however, that the languáge of sectiоn 2 includes activities which are not prohibited by the Penal Code. Thus, the prohibitions of the ordinance apply to a “principal, agent, employee, servant, clerk, waiter, cashier or dealer” as well as to an owner or lessee, and the ordinance includes “building, room, or any other place” as well as a house. Relying upon section 20
*242
of the ordinance, which provides that if “any section, subdivision, paragraph, sentence, clause or phrase of this Ordinance is for any reason held to be unconstitutional, such decision shall not affect the remaining portions of this Ordinаnce. . . .”, respondents argue that section 2 must be sustained insofar as it prohibits acts in addition to those prohibited in the Penal Code. The rule is well settled, where such a severability clause is included, that the valid portions of a statute or ordinance which is partially unconstitutional will be upheld if the remaining portion is severable and constitutes a completely operative expression of the legislative intent.
(Bacon Service Corp.
v.
Huss,
In the instant case the provisions of section 2 are so inseparably connected that it is impossible to sustain any part of the section after the invalidation of the part in conflict with thе provisions of the Penal Code. This conclusion becomes apparent upon examining the language of the section, because the question of a conflict between the ordinance and the Penal Code depends upon which combination of the various individuals and activities specified is involved in a particular case, Nothing less than a complete rewriting of this sectiоn could make it consistent with the provisions of the Penal Code and accomplish its true function as supplementary legislation. Since the invalid portions of section 2 cannot be severed from the rest of the section, it must be declared wholly invalid.
Sections 2 and 4 of Ordinance No. 248 are unconstitutional. The judgments of conviction thereunder and petitioners’ present detention are therefore unlawful. Petitioners are discharged.
Shenk, J., Curtis, J., Edmonds, J., Carter, J., Traynor, J., and Spence, J. pro tern., concurred.
Respondent’s petition for a rehearing was denied December 14, 1942. Curtis, J., and Carter, J., voted for a rehearing.
