This is an application for a writ of habeas corpus. Thе petitioner, an employee of a drugstore, was arrested, together with his employer, and charged with violating the provisions of section ■ 2 of an act of the legislature regulating the working hours of employees engaged in selling, at retail, drugs and medicines, compounding physicians’ prescriptions, and providing a penalty for its violation and the acts amendatory thereof. (Stats. 1905, p. 28, as amended by Stats. 1907, p. 273; Stats. 1921, p. 1323.) His contention on this application is that the police court of the city of Los Angeles, out of which the warrant for his arrest was issued, had no jurisdiction in the matter, in that the complaint does not state facts constituting a public offense undеr the statute, and that the act is unconstitutional.
The contention of the petitioner that po public offense is pleaded in the complaint, on which he was arrested, prеsents the meritorious point in the case. Section 2 of the act, which was passed “as a measure for the protection of public health,” provides that “no person employed by any person, firm or corporation, shall for more than nine hours during any one day of twenty-four hours, or fifty-four hours a week of six days a week, perform the work of selling drugs or other medicines, or compounding рhysicians’ prescriptions, in any store, establishment or place of business, where and in which drugs or medicines are sold at retail, and where and in which physicians’ prescriptions are compounded.” The answering of and attending to emergency calls shall not be сonstrued as a violation of the act. Violation of the statute is, by its terms, made a misdemeanor.
According to the allegations оf the complaint, the petitioner, a duly licensed pharmacist, was employed in a store in which drugs and other medicines were sоld, and physicians’ prescriptions were compounded, and in which store stationery, cigars, candies, ice-cream, soft drinks, and оther articles of general merchandise were regularly kept for sale. His duties were to generally attend the store and wait on customers. On a given day, in the course of his employment, he worked a total of ten hours, during which period it is alleged that “intermittently and аccording to the run of trade, and in the aggregate for two hours, . . . the said
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Jesse Twing was actually engaged in the work of selling drugs and other mеdicines and of compounding physicians’ prescriptions, and during the balance of said ten hours, to wit: for eight hours the said Jesse Twing was engaged in the work of selling stationery, cigars, candies, ice-cream, soft drinks and other articles of general merchandise there regularly kept for sale and of attending said store and waiting on customers.” In other words, it is in effect alleged that, although the petitioner worked ten hours in the store on the day given, only two hours of that time, at intervals during the day as occasion demanded, were aсtually devoted to the work of selling drugs and medicines and in compounding physicians’ prescriptions.
It results that the complaint states no offense, and the petitioner must be discharged. It is so ordered.
Shaw, C. J., Wilbur, J., Shurtleff, J., Lawlor, J., Richards, J., pro tem., and Sloane, J., concurred.
