Lead Opinion
The above entitled cause was heard and determined by a decision of this court on April 2, 1942 (Natural Milk etc. Assn. v. City etc. of San Francisco,
The instant action is one by plaintiffs seeking to have enjoined the enforcement of an ordinance of the city and county of San Francisco on various constitutional grounds. As evident from the foregoing order of the Supreme Court of the United States the issue of whether or not the ordinance was discriminatory because it permitted the sale of certified milk, a raw milk, was considered moot because since the trial of the action the Milk Commission of the San Francisco Medical Society adopted a resolution requiring certified milk to be pasteurized, and further, that no claim was made by plain
Plaintiffs again advance substantially the same arguments as heretofore made before this court. We adhere to the views expressed in our former opinion and adopt them now as the decision of this court.
Plaintiffs do not desire to sell certified milk in San Francisco. They assert that they should be entitled to sell raw milk. The fact that the Milk Commission made its pasteurization requirement for certified milk does not alter the result. Whether or not it had the authority under the ordinance to require pasteurization of certified milk (the ordinance appears to indicate that certified milk may be raw milk) need not be decided inasmuch as plaintiffs are not interested in selling certified milk, raw or pasteurized. The trial court denied the injunction and as we adhere to our former decision there is no ground for reversing the judgment of the trial court.
For the foregoing reasons we hereby adopt our former opinion and affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Schauer, J., did not participate.
Dissenting Opinion
Dissenting. I was not in agreement with the conclusions stated by my associates in the opinion upon which the former decision was based (
