159 P. 160 | Cal. | 1916
Petitioner was arrested for violating the terms of the liquor ordinance of the town of Covina. He sued for and obtained this writ of habeas corpus under his contention that the ordinance is void, and that consequently the criminal complaint against him founded upon that ordinance is likewise void.
The ordinance forbids the sale or dispensing of alcoholic liquors saving in designated places and under prescribed restrictions, and then in section 5 declares that "Every person who . . . transports within the city of Covina, spirituous, or vinous, or malt, or mixed, liquors or intoxicating drinks, or vessels for containing the same, to any place, the establishing or keeping of which is prohibited by this ordinance . . . shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor." The complaint against this defendant was framed under this provision of the ordinance and specifically charged him with "willfully and unlawfully" transporting such intoxicants to an inhibited place.
Petitioner does not question but that the intentional transportation to such a place by one knowing the character of it, which intentional transportation may thus be considered to be in aid of the conduct of the illicit and prohibited business, can be denounced as a crime. His contention, argued with great earnestness and presented in many different forms, is that this ordinance has not done that thing, but has attempted to make criminal, acts which any person may do under the sanction and protection of the constitution of the United States and the constitution of the state of California. Herein it is pointed out that the ordinance itself would make guilty of crime any person who, without knowledge of the character of the place and without intent to violate the law, innocently and in ignorance of the character of the place transported to it forbidden liquors. That thus a common carrier would subject itself to punishment, as would also the innocent driver of a delivery wagon who might be called upon to leave intoxicants at such a place, even though he knew not the character of the place nor that the package which he was instructed to deliver contained intoxicants. *764
It is true that the ordinance does not in terms base its punishment upon the knowledge of the defendant of the character of the place, coupled with the intent which may be inferred from the act of delivery when he possesses such knowledge. But we are not greatly concerned with this situation, and need say no more than that if this law deliberately made it a crime for the doing of such an act innocently performed, it would indeed be a harsh one. We say that we are not deeply concerned because the construction which we put upon this ordinance does not compel this harsh construction. It is true that there are some acts made crimes by the very terms of the law where the fraudulent or wicked intent is conclusively presumed from the commission of the act itself or where the act is denounced as criminal without regard to the facinorous intent (2 Wharton on Criminal Evidence, 8th ed., sec. 1695; People v. O'Brien,
Therefore, we do not construe section 5 of the Covina ordinance as designed to inflict punishment upon an innocent person who shall so transport intoxicants. The case comes quite clearly within the reasoning and principle of the English case of Regina v. Tolson, L. R. 23 Q. B. Div. 168, [1889], s. c., 40 Alb. L. J. 250, which case itself receives detailed consideration in 2 Lewis' Sutherland's Statutory Construction, section 527. The case was a criminal charge against a woman for a bigamous marriage. It had been held that one who marries a second time under an honest but an erroneous belief that a decree of divorce which had been granted was valid is afforded no protection by the invalid decree, and that evidence of his good faith will be excluded. (2 Wharton on Criminal Evidence, 8th ed., sec. 1695a.) But in the later Tolson case the woman had married five years instead of *765 seven years after her husband's desertion of her, under the belief held in good faith that her husband was dead. The proposition considered was whether honest belief and good faith constituted a defense. It was conceded that the prisoner "falls within the very words of the statute." Cave, J., said: "At common law an honest and reasonable belief in the existence of circumstances, which, if true, would make the act for which the person is indicted an innocent act, has always been held to be a good defense. . . . So far as I am aware it has never been suggested that these exceptions do not equally apply to the case of statutory offenses unless they are excluded expressly or by necessary implication."
Placing the ordinance under this construction it may be given one of two interpretations, either of which confirms its validity. The first of these is that the law does in general terms denounce the transportation to an inhibited place without making the wrongful intent a declared ingredient of the crime, but always, as in Regina v. Tolson, making the innocent state of mind of the defendant a complete defense. The second construction to which we incline is that the law intends to denounce the act only when accompanied by some evidence of the wrongful intent.
Under either of these, as has been said, the ordinance is not invalid.
Turning next to the complaint: It alleges that the defendant "willfully and unlawfully" transported the intoxicants. "Willfully," of course, imports no more than a design to do the specific act. But the charge is also that the act of transportation was unlawfully performed. This employment of the word is not merely epithetical but is sufficient to charge the defendant with the performance of this act with a wrongful intent, and is thus sufficient to justify his being placed upon trial.
The writ is therefore discharged and the prisoner remanded.
Melvin, J., Shaw, J., Sloss, J., Lorigan, J., Lawlor, J., and Angellotti, C.J., concurred. *766