Opinion
Aрpellant Jennings was a licensed real estate salesman. His license, and all right to renew or reinstate it, were ordered revoked by the state’s Real Estate Commissioner under the authority of Business and Professions Code section 10177, subdivison (b).
Section 10177, subdivision (b), authorizes such a revocation when a licensee has entered a plea of guilty to “a felony or a crime involving moral turpitude, . . .”
The record on which the commissioner’s order was based establishеd the following. Jennings pleaded guilty to a charge of violating Penal Code section 288 a, proscribing oral cоpulation of the mouth of one person with the sexual organ of another. He was thereafter placеd on conditional probation. The subject of the offense was an 8-year-old daughter of Jennings with whom he had committed such offenses over a period of three years.
The instant appeal is from a superior court judgmеnt denying Jennings’ petition for a writ of mandate by which he sought to set aside the commissioner’s order.
*711 The threshold question рresented to us is whether the offense to which Jennings pleaded guilty was a “felony or a crime involving moral turpitude.”
Cеrtainly the offense was a felony. It was punishable by imprisonment in the state prison and it was not reduced to a misdemeanor by any act of the court. (See Pen. Code, §§ 288a and 17, subd. (a).)
An accepted definition of “moral turpitude” is “ ‘an act of baseness, vileness or depravity in the private and social duties which a man owes to his fellowmen, or to society in general, contrary to the accepted and customary rule of right and duty between man and man.’ ”
(In re Higbie, 6
Cal.3d 562, 569 [
Jennings’ main reliance is on certain language of
Tushner
v.
Savage,
But
Tushner
v.
Savage
assigned as authority for its holding,
Buckley
v.
Savage,
*712
Other California cases have held that the Real Estate Commissioner’s licensees may be disciplined for
misconduct unrelated to their activities as such licensees.
License revocation has been upheld, as to such unrelated activities, where the licensee was guilty of “personal dishonеsty”
(Small
v.
Smith,
Similar determinations have been made as to state licensees in other fields of endeavor. Thus, an attorney was suspended upon his plea of guilty to violating the federal marijuana transfer tax law, i.e., smuggling marijuana
(In re Higbie, supra,
Apart from
Tushner
v.
Savage, supra,
Perrine
v.
Municipal Court’s
holding rested principally on First Amendment considerations not present here. The court, however, did say (p. 663); “Even in the absence of First Amendment considerations, an ordinance regulating the right to engage in a lawful occupation or business [there, bookselling] must, bear a rational relationship to a vаlid governmental purpose. . . .” But there is “a valid governmental purpose” in limiting licensees of the Real Estate Cоmmission to persons with the qualifications of honesty, truthfulness and
good
-
reputation (Riley
v.
Chambers,
Also relevant to our problem is the case of
Otash
v.
Bureau of Private Investigators,
For the reasons stated the judgment of the superior court must be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Molinari, P. J., and Sims, J., concurred.
Notes
Business and Professions Code sеction 117 provides: “Notwithstanding any other provision of law, in a proceeding conducted by a board within the department pursuant to law to deny an application for a license or to suspend or revoke a license or otherwise take disciplinary action against a person who holds a license, upon the ground that the applicant or the licensee has been convicted of a crime involving moral turpitude, the recоrd of conviction of the crime shall be conclusive evidence of the fact that the conviction occurred, but only of that fact, and the board may inquire into the circumstances surrounding the commission of the crime in order to fix the degree of discipline or to determine if the conviction is of an offense involving moral turpitude.”
