8 P.2d 140 | Cal. | 1932
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[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *671 THE COURT.
Contending that the act is unconstitutional, the appellant, Pacific Coast Dairy, petitioned the superior court for a writ of prohibition restraining the respondent Police Court of San Francisco from proceeding to try it upon the charge of having violated section 18 (b) of the General Dairy Law. The trial court denied the writ, and the District Court of Appeal, First Appellate District, Division Two, in an exhaustive opinion, prepared by Mr. Presiding Justice Nourse, affirmed the lower court. The cause was transferred here for further consideration of the contentions raised by the appellant, but, after such consideration, this court is satisfied with the opinion written by Mr. Justice Nourse, and it is adopted as follows:
"The complaint upon which the petitioner was charged alleged that it `did wilfully and unlawfully use, fill and traffic in, and did fail and refuse to restore and return to the owner thereof two certain quart-sized glass milk bottles . . . duly registered by the department of agriculture of the state of California, as required by law on the application of the owner thereof, to-wit: The Milk Dealers Association of San Francisco, an association whose members are engaged in receiving, producing . . . handling, and selling milk . . . and such facts being then and there known to said defendants, and said defendants having then and there failed and refused to make diligent or any effort to find such owner.' *672
"Subdivision (b) of section 18 of the General Dairy Law (Stats. 1929, pp. 1353, 1354) provides, in part: `It shall be the duty of every person who finds or receives in the regular course of business or in any other manner any container marked with a brand registered under the provisions of this section to make diligent effort to find the owner thereof and to restore or return the same.'
"It is the contention of the appellant that the foregoing provisions of the General Dairy Law are unconstitutional as violating sections 11 and 21 of article I, and section 25, subdivisions 2 and 33 of article IV of the state Constitution. The two sections of article I referred to require laws of a general nature to have a uniform operation and prohibit laws granting special privileges or immunities. The subdivisions of section 25 of article IV referred to prohibit the legislature from passing local or special laws for the punishment of crimes and misdemeanors, or in any case where a general law can be made applicable. All these attacks upon the constitutionality of the provisions of the Dairy Law are treated under a single heading, and in the argument supporting the attack the appellant relies upon Horwich v. Walker-Gordon Laboratory Co.,
[1] "On principle the General Dairy Law is manifestly a constitutional enactment, as it is designed to protect the traffic in milk and cream. The universal use of these products as food and their peculiar liability to contamination and adulteration supports the strictest regulation in the interest of public health and safety, and statutes which tend to that protection are wholly within the proper exercise of the police power of the state. (Shelton v. City of Shelton,
[3] "In placing upon the dealer or distributor of dairy products the duty to provide sanitary cans, bottles and other receptacles the legislature has clearly acted within the scope of its police power for the benefit of the public at large. As a convenient method of enforcing these sanitary requirements the legislature deemed it necessary to provide for the branding of these receptacles by a registered brand or mark filed with the department of agriculture. This registration of the brand of the dealer or distributor would naturally facilitate the work of the enforcement officers in placing the responsibility upon the dealer or distributor where dairy products were sold or delivered in violation of the sanitary provisions of the act. In this connection the legislature may have found it necessary to enact the concluding portions of section 18 (b) which places the duty upon every person who finds or receives any such branded container to make diligent effort to find the owner and to restore or return the same to him. [4] It is of no moment that some court or judicial body may deem that some of the provisions of a statute are unnecessary or unimportant `the general power of the legislature to determine what is necessary for the protection of the public interests being clear, judicial inquiry is necessarily limited to determining whether a particular regulation is reasonable, impartial and within the limitations of the Constitution'. (Renner Brewing Co. v. Rolland,
[6] "Assuming as we must that the legislature deemed it necessary to enact the latter part of this section in order to effectually enforce the sanitary provisions of the act, and reading this portion (as we must) as merely a part of the whole statute designed to regulate the traffic in dairy products we are unable to find in the legislation a lack of uniformity of operation or a grant of special privileges or immunities to any special class of citizens. In this respect we are controlled by the uniform rule of decision that statutes of this character do not offend against these provisions of the Constitution when they operate uniformly to all those of a designated class. (Barbier
v. Connolly,
[7] "It need hardly be said that the class of citizens engaged in the manufacturing, producing, buying and selling of dairy products is not a special class but is one of state-wide operation, while the purchasers of those products include practically every citizen of the state. Such being the case, the statute under consideration is in no sense a local or special law, but is one of general state-wide operation designed to protect the health of every citizen of the state.
[8] "The appellant launches his next attack upon the statute upon the ground that it is too vague, indefinite and uncertain to be enforceable as a penal statute. In this connection numerous authorities are cited to the general proposition that the terms of a penal statute creating a new offense must be sufficiently clear to explain to those who are subject to it what conduct on their part will render them liable to its penalties. Among these are In re Peppers,
[11] "Here the basis of appellant's attack is that it cannot be ascertained from the statute what the legislature meant when it required the finder of a branded container `to make diligent effort to find the owner thereof and to restore or return the same'. This language is not new in legislative enactments relating to lost property. Section
[13] "Finally it is argued that the amendment to the General Dairy Law in 1927, whereby section 18 (b) was added to the act is unconstitutional because it is not embraced within the title. The title of the act, among other things, provides that it is enacted to prevent the manufacture and sale of unwholesome dairy products, to prevent deception and fraud in the production and sale of dairy products, to regulate the business of producing, buying and selling dairy products, and to provide for the enforcement of its provisions and the punishment of violators thereof. As we have heretofore said, we must assume that the legislature determined the necessity of the provisions of section 18 (b) for the purpose of enforcing the sanitary provisions of the General Dairy Law. In Estate of Wellings,
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The judgment is affirmed.