*571 Opinion
This case presents a question of first impression: Does Penal Code section 647, subdivision (b), which defines “disorderly conduct” as including “[e]very person . . . [w]ho solicits . . . any act of prostitution,” apply to a “customer” of a prostitute, or is the statute limited in its application to solicitation by the prostitute?
Statement of the Case
Appellant was arrested and charged with disorderly conduct in violation of Penal Code section 647, subdivision (b). At the arraignment he demurred to the complaint on the grounds, among others, that the facts alleged failed to state a public offense and that the court had no jurisdiction because the complaint violated his right to due process. Appellant also moved to dismiss the charge.
At the hearing on the demurrer, it was agreed between appellant and the district attorney that appellant was not a prostitute and had not engaged in an act of prostitution.
The municipal court overruled the demurrer and denied the motion to dismiss.
Appellant then filed a petition for writ of prohibition in the Fresno County Superior Court asking that court to restrain the municipal court from taking any further action in the case other than to order a dismissal of the action. The superior court issued an alternative writ and ordered the municipal court to show cause why it should not be restrained from taking further action in the case. After a hearing on the petition the superior court denied a peremptory writ because “it takes two to tango.” Appellant timely filed a notice of appeal.
Interpretation of Statute
Penal Code section 647 provides in part:
“Every person who commits any of the following acts shall be guilty of disorderly conduct, a misdemeanor:
*572 “(b) Who solicits or who engages in any act of prostitution. As used in this subdivision, ‘prostitution’ includes any lewd act between persons for money or other consideration.” (Italics added.)
While quantitatively the words, “every person,” would include the customer as well as the prostitute, male or female, appellant nonetheless contends that by reason of the legislative history of section 647 and prior judicial interpretation of the meaning of the words, “soliciting for prostitution,” the statute applies only to solicitation by a prostitute and not by a customer.
As a general rule courts are precluded from interpreting a statute unless the statutory language is uncertain or there is doubt regarding the legislative intent.
(County of Sacramento
v.
Superior Court
(1974)
Appellant relies on
Barrows
v.
Municipal Court
(1970)
*573
Assuming a degree of uncertainty in the language, “every person,” we are not helped by the legislative history of the statute. Section 647, subdivision (b), was revised in 1961 primarily because then section 647, subdivision (10), which declared every “common prostitute” to be a vagrant, punished status rather than acts and because of its probable unconstitutional vagueness. (See Sherry,
Vagrants, Rogues and Vagabonds—Old Concepts in Need of Revision
(1960) 48 Cal.L.Rev. 557, 563-564, 566-567, 570; see also
In re Newbern
(1960)
Appellant cites the 1971 draft of the Criminal Code prepared by the staff" of the Penal Code Revision Project for the Joint Legislative Committee which suggests that section 647, subdivision (b), does not include the customer within its ambit. Respondent rebuts by citing the 1968 committee draft which suggests that the customer is included within the statute. While committee reports proposing subsequently adopted statutes are entitled to substantial weight in construing a statute
(Keeler
v.
Superior Court
(1970)
Appellant cites
In re Carey
(1922)
“It is true that the statute provides that every woman carrying on the business of prostitution may be committed to the farm; but the statute would have meant exactly the same had it in terms applied to every person. The fact that the fallen woman carries on the business of commercialized vice justifies whatever discriminations may be found in the statute. The act of her partner in vice, while equally as nefarious, is neither commercialized nor continuous. It is proper enough to send him to jail for his offense, but it is doubtful if the scheme of impounding him for purposes of reformation would commend itself to the lawgiver. The conditions surrounding the two classes of offenders are so unlike that different methods of treatment are fully justified.
“The specific charge against the petitioner is . . . that ... of .. . soliciting for prostitution .... The ordinance, it is true, applies to ‘every person.’. . . But a man can no more commit the offense of soliciting for prostitution than that of carrying on the business of prostitution.. . . The words ‘soliciting for prostitution’ have a well understood and distinct meaning. They are held to mean the act of a fallen woman in hailing passers-by and soliciting them to patronize her business.” (57 Cal.App. at pp. 306-307.)
Carey
is not persuasive authority in the present case for several reasons. First, the issue in
Carey
was not whether the customer was punishable under the ordinance, but whether the state act prescribing the punishment was discriminatory since it applied only to women. (
*575
Thus, the language to the effect that “soliciting for prostitution” can only mean the act of the female prostitute in soliciting patrons for her business is dictum and not binding as precedent.
(People
v.
Handley
(1970)
Second, the language in Carey indicates that the ordinance was designed to punish the female prostitute solely because of her status as a prostitute rather than for a specific act of prostitution. (57 Cal.App. at pp. 304-306.) Penal Code section 647, subdivision (b), is clearly designed to punish specific acts without reference to the status or sex of the perpetrator.
Third, because of the preemption by state law in the area of criminal sexual activities
(Spitcauer
v.
County of Los Angeles
(1964)
Because of the absence of extrinsic interpretive aids, we must return to the language of the statute to ascertain the legislative intent.
(Moyer
v.
Workmen’s Comp. Appeals Bd.
(1973)
Furthermore, this interpretation is consistent with the legislative purpose and policy behind the statute. (See Pen. Code, § 4;
Freedland
v.
Greco
(1955)
We construe the statute to apply to the customer as well as the prostitute.
No Denial of Due Process
Appellant contends that if the statute is judicially interpreted to include a customer who solicits an act of prostitution his prosecution under the statute would work a denial of due process because he had no fair warning that his act was a crime.
Keeler
v.
Superior Court, supra,
“The first essential of due process is fair warning of the act which is made punishable as a crime. ‘That the terms of a penal statute creating a new offense must be sufficiently explicit to inform those who are subject to it what conduct on their part will render them liable to its penalties, is a well-recognized requirement, consonant alike with ordinary notions of fair play and the settled rules of law.’ [Citation.] ‘No one may be required at peril of life, liberty or property to speculate as to the meaning of penal statutes. All are entitled to be informed as to what the State commands or forbids.’ [Citation.] The law of California is in full accord. [Citations.]
“This requirement of fair warning is reflected in the constitutional prohibition against the enactment of ex post facto laws [citation]. When a new penal statute is applied retrospectively to make punishable an act which was not criminal at the time it was performed, the defendant has been given no advance notice consistent with due process. And precisely the same effect occurs when such an act is made punishable under a preexisting statute but by means of an unforeseeable judicial enlargement thereof. [Citation.]” (2 Cal.3d at pp. 633-634.)
Because section 647, subdivision (b), includes “every person” who solicits an act of prostitution, the statute itself gives fair notice that customers are included. Moreover, our interpretation of the statute to include a customer within its ambit was reasonably foreseeable.
*577
In
People
v.
Sobiek
(1973)
Sobiek
distinguished
Keeler
v.
Superior Court, supra,
In the present case, appellant must have realized that his conduct was not entirely innocent. He presumably was aware that prostitution was *578 illegal and that his actions with the prostitute could result in her prosecution. Any past reluctance on the part of public authorities to arrest and prosecute the customer cannot rescue appellant from his presumed knowledge that what he was doing was wrong; hence, our interpretation that customers áre within the ambit of section 647, subdivision (b), was foreseeable.
The order denying the petition for writ of prohibition is affirmed.
Gargano, Acting P. J., and Thompson, J., * concurred.
Notes
Retired judge of the superior court sitting under assignment by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.
