Herbert Hallner was charged in three counts of an indictment with having offered bribes to certain officers of the city of Los Angeles in violation of section 67 of the Penal Code. 1 The People have appealed from an *717 order granting Hallner’s motion to set the indictment aside.
The named officers were the president of the hoard of police commissioners, the city attorney and the executive assistant city attorney. It was alleged that Hallner offered the bribes with intent to influence the officials in their “acts, decisions, votes, opinions and proceedings” with respect to certain pending applications for permits to “conduct games of skill and science business” within the city. As stated by the trial judge in his memorandum opinion, the order was based upon the conclusion that “executive officers of the City of Los Angeles are not executive officers of this state as defined in section 67 of the Penal Code.”
It is undisputed that the evidence presented to the grand jury establishes reasonable and probable cause to believe that the city officials were executive officers and that Hallner offered bribes to them to influence their official determinations. The sole question is whether the term “executive officer of this state,” as used in section 67, includes an executive officer of a city.
The People rely upon prior decisions of the District Court of Appeal construing the phrase “of this state” as being the equivalent of “in this state.” As Hallner reads the statute, it applies only to an offer of a bribe made to an officer of the State of California.
In 1883, this court in dictum said that section 67 was all inclusive. “The sixty-seventh section of the Penal Code provides that any person who gives or offers a bribe to any executive officer, with intent to influence him in respect to any act, etc., as such officer is punishable. By the sixty-seventh section the offense defined is that of one- who
offers;
by the sixty-eighth, that of one who
receives
a bribe. ’ ’
(People
v.
Markham,
Many years later, one Singh, who had been charged with offering and giving a bribe to a district attorney, applied to the District Court of Appeal for a writ of prohibition to stay all proceedings upon the indictment. In denying Singh relief, the court referred to section 343 of the Political Code, as then in effect (see Gov. Code, § 1001) which classified the district attorney as “a civil executive officer.” It also said: “ [T]here is no other section in the Penal Code which makes it a crime to give or offer a bribe to an executive officer, either county or state, for the purpose of corruptly influencing his official action than section 67, and we shall not commit ourselves to the belief . . . that the legislature has either
*718
intentionally or inadvertently omitted to pass a law authorizing the punishment of a person for corrupting or attempting to corrupt a county executive officer.”
(Singh
V.
Superior Court,
Hallner argues that, after the court determined the status of the' district attorney, further discussion of the questions presented constitutes dictum. But the holding that section 67 includes any executive officer “in the state” was expressly made the ground of decision. At the least, it was an alternative one. Dictum in
Gayer
v.
Whelan,
Hallner next contends that if the Singh case is more than dictum, it should be overruled. He argues that section 67 is not ambiguous, hence not subject to interpretation. But the word “of” has different meanings. It may be used in its possessive sense or to indicate geographic location. “Land of the state” means “land within the state.”
(Sisson
v.
Board of Supervisors of Buena Vista County,
At the time the Singh case was decided, section 68 of the Penal Code, enacted at the same time as the preceding section, declared it to be unlawful for any “executive officer or person elected or appointed to an executive office” to accept a bribe. By the judicial construction of section 67, that enactment and section 68, as then in effect, were complementary statutes insofar as they concerned executive officers. Bach of these statutes made the defined crime a felony and prescribed punishment of imprisonment for from one to 14 years with the additional penalty of disqualification from holding any office in this state.
*719 In 1929, by the enactment of section 67% of the Penal Code, the Legislature made it unlawful for any person to give or offer any bribe “to any ministerial officer, employee, or appointee of the State of California, county or city therein or political subdivision thereof. ’ ’ One who violated the statute was guilty of a misdemeanor. In 1939, the punishment was increased by providing that, if the theft of the thing given or offered as a bribe would be grand theft, the offense is a felony.
Section 68 was enlarged by the Legislature of 1933 to make it unlawful for any “executive or ministerial officer, employee or appointee of the State of California, county or city therein, or political subdivision thereof,” to ask for, agree to receive, or receive a bribe. The amendment made no change in the prescribed punishment.
It is significant that since the decision in the Singh case, although the Legislature has considered the subject of bribery of public officers and made a number of statutory changes, it has not amended section 67. Where a statute has been construed by judicial decision, and that construction is not altered by subsequent legislation, it must be presumed that the Legislature is aware of the judicial construction and approves of it.
(Slocum
v.
Bear Valley Irr. Co.,
The legislative intent should be ascertained not alone from the literal meaning of the words of the statute but upon a consideration of all of the law relating to the same subject matter.
(Stafford
v.
Realty Bond Service Corp.,
Since the decision in the Singh case, five convictions for violation of section 67, or for conspiracy to violate it, have been upheld although the person bribed was not a state officer.
(People
v.
Jackson,
Hallner contends that to construe section 67 as applicable to any executive officer in the state makes the statute so uncertain as to give him inadequate notice of the offense of which he might be charged and thus deny him due process of law. However,
‘ ‘
[r] easonable certainty, in view of the conditions, is all that is required, and liberal effect is always to be given to the legislative intent when possible.”
(People
v.
Kennedy,
Furthermore, even if prior to the judicial decisions construing it section 67 might have been subject to attack upon the ground of uncertainty, such an objection no longer is tenable. The construction of a statute by judicial decision becomes a part of it, and the standard thus established may be sufficient to satisfy the requirement of due process of law that one be given adequate warning of an offense with which he may be charged. (See
Lanzetta
v.
New Jersey,
The order is reversed.
Gibson, C. J., Shenk, J., Schauer, J., and Spence, J., concurred.
The majority opinion interprets the phrase ‘1 executive officer
of
this state” to mean, not what it says, but 11 executive officer
in
this state, ’ ’ and therefore to include an executive officer of a freeholder-charter city despite the settled law that an executive officer of such a city is not an executive officer of the state.
(Civic Center Assn.
v.
Railroad Com.,
There is no substance to the,court’s argument in
Singh
v.
Superior Court,
That the Legislature did not mean “in” when it used “of” is also made clear by the language of former section 74a of the Peiial Code,
1
which was added in 1905 to the same title of the code in which section 67 appears (Stats. 1905, p. 646), 14 years before the decision in the Singh case. In that section the phrase “every officer of this state” was set off from the phrase “or of any county, city and county, city, or township therein,” thus demonstrating that “officer of this state” meant an officer of the state as distinguished from an officer “of any county, city and county, city, or township therein.” But, according to the majority opinion herein, it was an idle act to separate these phrases, and despite an established rule of construction
(County of Los Angeles
v.
Frisbie,
Even if we believed, as the court apparently did in the Singh case (
Nor is there any substance to the argument that the Legislature’s failure to amend section 67 after the decision in the Singh case constitutes a legislative approval of the interpretation of the section in that case. As the Supreme Court of the United States said in
Helvering
v.
Hallock,
The doctrine that legislative silence constitutes approval of judicial construction “must be derived by a form of negative inference, a process lending itself to much guesswork. . . . There are vast differences between legislating by doing nothing and legislating by positive enactment, both in the processes by which the will of Congress is derived and stated and in the clarity and certainty of the expression of its will. And there are many reasons, other than to indicate approval of what the courts have done, why Congress may fail to take affirmative action to repudiate their misconstruction of its duly adopted laws. Among them may be sheer pressure of other and more important business. See
Moore
v.
Cleveland Ry. Co.,
6 Cir.,
If, despite its plain wording, section 67 includes officers of a freeholder-charter city, it will, when read with section 77 6 , overlap section 67%. Thus, one who offers as a bribe a thing, the theft of which would be petty theft, to an administrative or ministerial officer of a freeholder-charter city will be punishable either as a misdemeanant under section 67% (imprisonment in the county jail not exceeding six months, or a fine not exceeding $500, or both) or as a felon under section 67 (imprisonment in the state prison for one to fourteen years and disqualification from ever holding any public office) in the discretion of the grand jury or district attorney that returns the indictment or information against him. Such a result subverts the legislative purpose of providing a lesser penalty for the less heinous offense.
*726
Since there was no evidence before the grand jury either that the persons to whom defendant allegedly offered the bribes were “executive officers of this state” or that the bribes were allegedly offered with intent to influence their actions in any capacity as such officers
(Greenberg
v.
Superior Court,
Carter, J., concurred.
Notes
" Every person who gives or offers any bribe to any executive officer of this state, with intent to influence him in respect to any act, decision, vote, opinion, or other proceeding as such officer is punishable by imprisonment in the state prison not less than one nor more than fourteen years, and is disqualified from holding any office in this state.”
§ 74a. ‘' Every officer of this state, or of any county, city and county, city, or township therein, who accepts, keeps, retains or diverts for his own use or for the use of any other person any part of the salary or fees allowed by law to his deputy, clerk, or other subordinate officer, is guilty of a felony.” (Italics added.) This section was transferred to section 1195 of the Government Code in 1943, the language being changed to conform to the usage in that code.
§ 67%. "Every person who gives or offers as a bribe to any ministerial officer, employee, or appointee of the State of California, county or city therein or political subdivision thereof, any thing the theft of which would be petty theft is guilty of a misdemeanor; if the theft of the thing so given or offered would be grand theft the offense is a felony.” (Italics added.)
§ 68. "Every executive or ministerial officer, employee or appointee of the State of California, county or city therein or political subdivision thereof, who asks, receives, or agrees to receive, any bribe, upon any agreement or understanding that his vote, opinion, or action upon any matter then pending, or which may be brought before him in his official capacity, shall be influenced thereby, is punishable by imprisonment in the State prison not less than one nor more than fourteen years; and, in addition thereto, forfeits his office, and is forever disqualified from holding any office in this State.” (Italics added.)
§ 70. "Every executive or ministerial officer, employee or appointee of the State of California, county or city therein or political subdivision thereof, who knowingly asks, receives or agrees to receive any emolument, gratuity or reward, or any promise thereof excepting such as may be authorized by law for doing an official act, is guilty of a misdemeanor.” (Italics added.)
This court’s denial of a hearing does not commit it to the propositions of law laid down in an opinion of a District Court of Appeal.
(Western L. Co.
v.
State Board of Equalization,
§ 77. “The various provisions of this chapter apply to administrative and ministerial officers, in the same manner as if they were mentioned therein.”
