This is an application for a writ of
habeas corpus.
It rests on the following facts. After the judgment of the trial court was entered in
Gould and Kane, Incorporated,
v.
Valterza et al.,
Civil No. 11122 the case this day filed
(ante,
p. 678 [
The next point made by the petitioner is that Gould and Kane, Incorporated, v. Valterza et al., supra, was, in effect, an attempt to enforce the penal provisions of the ordinance and therefore the judgment in that action was void. The courts have held otherwise on several occasions. (20 Cal. Jur. 309.)
The petitioner contends that Ordinance 351 is unconstitutional because its provisions are “arbitrary and unreasonable”. He contends that because the ordinance prohibits the slaughter of chickens and' rabbits and does' not *685 prohibit the slaughter of other fowl and animals it is unreasonable. That contention has been made on many occasions but the courts have uniformly answered that all ordinances need not be embodied in one. Again he asserts that the ordinance is void because it does not sufficiently define the criminal offense of wrongful “chicken or rabbit keeping or raising”. (Sec. 5, subd. (a), par. 6.) The first answer is that the commission of a criminal offense is not involved in this proceeding. The second answer is that the trial court apparently had no trouble, and this court has no trouble, in ascertaining what the legislative department had in mind when it enacted said provision. In other words, we are unable to say said provision is void because it is too indefinite.
The trial court did not act in excess of its jurisdiction. The writ is discharged and the prisoner is remanded.
Nourse, P. J., and Spence, J., concurred.
