Opinion
Appellant Robert Sechrist seeks review of a judgment discharging his petition for a writ of prohibition which was filed in an effort to halt the prosecution of a misdemeanor complaint charging him with several violations of the Los Angeles County zoning ordinance.
*742 In the criminal action now pending before the Municipal Court of the San Antonio Judicial District, appellant stands charged, in three separate counts of violating thrеe sections of Los Angeles County Ordinance Number 1494—the zoning ordinance. Count I charges that the defendant violated section 202 by “unlawfully [storing] inoperable motor vehicles, commercial vehicles, and junk on [his] property, zone R-l [single-family residential property], in the unincorporated area of Los Angeles County.” Count II accuses the defendant of violating section 742 1 by rendering his garage “inaccessible for automobile parking by the storage of inoperable vehicles and junk.” The final count of the complaint alleges violations of sections 706 and 202 for the storage Of “commercial and military type trailers, a commercial and military type generator, and a military type vehicle on [his] premises ....”
The appellant’s primary contention on appeal is that sections 202 and 706 of the Los Angeles County Zoning Ordinance are vague and uncertain in violation of the constitutional guarantee of due process of law and should therefore be held invalid. This attack is twofold. First, it is claimed that these sections fail to provide specific guidelines as to which uses are prohibited in an R-l residential zone. Second, it is argued that the permitted use of property in an R-l zone for “single family residences” is a vague and undefinable criterion which fails to meet constitutional muster. Appellant also contends that the complaint fails to charge any acts made criminal by the zoning ordinance. We disagree with both of appellant’s contentions, and, based upon our construction of this ordinancé, uphold its constitutional validity and the sufficiency of the charges in the complaint.
I
The Los Angeles County zoning ordinance contains two general use restrictions which subject violators to penal sanctions. 2 Section 706 *743 proscribes the use in any zone of any structure or premises “contrary to the provisions of [the] ordinance.” Section 202 more particularly proscribes the use in a residential zone of any premises “except as hereinafter specifically permitted . ... ” (Italics added.) Appellant’s first complaint is directed at the form of these proscriptions. He contends that they lack the requisite certainty under due process standards insofar as they require a prospective user of property tо search all 809 sections of the ordinance to discover if a particular use is permitted, and to ascertain whether a particular use is forbidden. A closer examination of this ordinance and the applicable due process standards of certainty in penal statutes reveal the shortcomings of these claims.
The form which this zoning ordinance takes, in listing
permitted
uses within given zones and prohibiting other uses within those zones, is quite common. (See Hagman, Larson & Martin, Cal. Zoning Practice (Cont. Ed. Bar 1969) § 6.5, pp. 200-201 [hereinafter CEB, Zoning].) The restriction of a single-family residential zone, in particular, to specified types of uses deemed to be compatible in such an area, is unquestionably a valid exercise of the police power. (See
Euclid
v.
Ambler Realty Co.,
Three basic types of uses, universal among zoning regulations, are set forth in this zoning ordinance for property situated in any given zone—primary, accessory, and conditional uses. (See CEB, Zoning, § 6.6, p. 201.) The appellant’s property is located in a zone designated as R-l—the Single-Family Résidential Zone. The three types of pеrmissive uses in R-l zones are set forth in the ordinance as follows: (1) primary uses are for single-family residences, family-home day care for children, and foster family homes for children and aged persons (§ 207); (2) *744 accessory uses are for the storage of construction materials, the rental of rooms in a house, the maintenance of signs, and the erection of accessory buildings, detached living quarters, and attached servants’ quarters (§ 207.3); (3) conditional uses, which are subject to prior approval, or permit, range from temporary carnivals to riding and hiking trails (§§ 207.7,208). These uses are restricted and regulated by various provisions in the ordinance relating to: the keeping of certain animals (§§ 205, 205.5, 206); height limits (§ 208.5); front and side yard setbacks (§§ 209, 210, 210.2; § 451 et seq.); area requirements (§§ 210.4, 211.2, 211.4, 211.6; § 721 et seq.); vehicle storage (§§ 211, 742); and the display of signs (§ 785 et seq.). The foregoing regulations contained within the zоning ordinance clearly mark out the basic parameters of permitted use of property within a single-family residential zone and, concomitantly, make reasonably clear the range of uses which, under sections 202 and 706 of the ordinance, would be prohibited.
Appellant’s objection to the form of this ordinance relates also to the myriad of activities intimately associated with maintaining a home, such as the cultivation of a lawn or garden, the maintenance of a swimming pool or a hobby, or the storing of the family automobile, are not expressly permitted. Often such activity is characterized as an “accessory use” of residential property and is deemed to come within the general accessory use provision which typically allows uses “customarily incidental” to primary use of the property. (See CEB, Zoning, §§ 8.2, 8.3, pp. 320-322.) 3 Yet this ordinance has no such residuary clause within its accessory use provision. From our subsequent interpretation of the residential use clause this vagary in form cannot be deemed, however, to foreclose such uses.
II
Appellant challenges the constitutional sufficiency of the language in section 207 of the zoning ordinance, which permits the use of property in an R-l zone “for . . . residences, single family,” сontending that such language, standing alone, is too vague to apprise a potential user of those uses which are necessarily proscribed. He claims that such terminology fails to provide an ascertainable standard of conduct, and that there *745 exists no outside source—either the dictionary, common law, case law, or common understanding which can clothe the language with the requisite certainty. In еssence, then, appellant is arguing that sections 202 and 706 of the ordinance, insofar as they punish “non-residential” uses of property located in a residential zone, fail to comport with due process standards of certainty.
It is well settled that “ ‘a statute which either forbids or requires the doing of an act in terms so vague that men of common intelligence must necessarily guess at its meaning and differ as to its application, violates the first essential of due process.’ ”
(People
v.
McCaughan,
In construing the “residential use” terminology in this ordinance we need not reach a comprehensive definition; rather, we need only establish a practical construction of the language based upon “our common sense, judicial and personal knowledge of what [single-family] dwellings are customarily and ordinarily used for—what the ordinary man of the street would consider a one-family dwelling to be.”
(City of
*746
Knoxville
v.
Brown
(1953)
Zoning laws such as the instant ordinance, establishing exclusive residential zones, are enacted for the general health, safety and welfare (see
Miller
v.
Board of Public Works, supra,
Apart from those activities deleterious to the purposes behind the establishment of an exclusive residential zone, the residential use of property must be deemed to include the broad sphеre of home activities as they existed at common law. These activities include much more than the simple use of a house and grounds for food and shelter, but extend to the use of a home as a social institution, for the
private religious, educational, cultural and recreational advantages of the family. (Thomas
v.
Zoning Board of Adjustment
(Tex.Civ.App. 1951)
Our own Supreme Court, in construing a Beverly Hills zoning ordinance, has sаid that the restrictions on uses of property in a residential zone as a protective measure for the individual owner, are also “included to insure that
a homemaker would not be deprived of the reasonable use of his
premises.”
(City of Beverly Hills
v.
Brady, supra,
It is evident, then, that the use of property for a single-family residence includes those customary activities which make the home more comfortable and enjoyable, such as gardening, cеrtain recreational activity, and the enjoyment of certain hobbies. The scope of such activity is circumscribed only insofar as it may not assume a commercial or public character, or constitute a health or safety hazard to the neighborhood. (See
Hardy
v.
Calhoun
(Tex.Civ.App. 1964)
Given the broad but definable range of activity which is included within the use of property “for a [single-family] residences” it cannot be said that the activities incidental to the maintenance of a single-family residence need to be specified separately. In order for a statute to meet the certainty required under due process standards, it is not necessary that it furnish detailed plans and specifications of the acts or conduct prohibited.
(Lorenson
v.
Superior Court, supra,
III
Lastly, appellant seems to contend that the complaint does not sufficiently advise him of what illegal acts he has performed. But an accusatory pleading is sufficient if it is cast in any words sufficient to give the accused notice of the charged offense. (Pen. Code, § 952;
Patterson
v.
Municipal Court,
The judgmеnt of the superior court dismissing the petition for a writ of prohibition is affirmed.
Kaus, P. J., and Hastings, J., concurred.
Notes
Appellant does not contest this count of the complaint or the validity of section 742. That section of the Los Angeles County Zoning Ordinance provides as follows: “Every single-family residence on a lot or parcel of land having an area of less than one acre per dwelling unit, shall have ... one or more garages ... with a capacity fоr not less than two passenger automobiles, conveniently accessible. ..(Italics added.)
The penal provision in the ordinance, section 113, provides, in pertinent part, as follows: “Every person violating any provision of this ordinance ... is guilty of a misdemeanor . . . punishable by a fine not to exceed Five Hundred Dollars or by imprisonment in the County Jail for not to exceed six months, or by both such fine and imprisonment. Each separate day or any portion thereof during which any violation of this ordinance occurs ... constitutes a separate offense____”
The instant ordinance provides a general definition of what constitutes an “accessory use,” as follows: “ ‘Accessory Use’ shall mean a use customarily incidental to, related and clearly subordinate to a principal use established on the same lot or parcel of land, which accessory use does not alter sаid principal use.” (Los Angeles County Ordinance No. 1494, § 120.)
Section 101 of the ordinance provides that uses in various zones are restricted “for the general welfare of the County of Los Angeles....” (Italics added.)
“The primary purpose of a residence district is safe, healthful, and comfortable family life rather than the development of commercial instincts and the pursuit of pecuniary profits.” (People v. Gold, supra.)
The doctrine of Ejusdem Generis—that the expression of one thing is the exclusion of another (of the same kind)—would sеem to support this conclusion. (See, e.g., City of Knoxville v. Brown, supra.)
“Junk” is defined in the ordinance as: “old, secondhand, or scrap ferrous and non-ferrous metals, paper and paper products including roofing and tar paper, cloth and clothing, wood and wood products, manufactured rubber products, rope, manufactured plastic products, paint, manufactured clay and porcelain products, trash, and similar materials, and shall include dismantled machinery, equipment and parts. Junk and salvage shall also include the baling of cardboard boxes, paper and paper cartons.” (Los Angeles County Ordinance No. 1494, § 139.33.)
We do not mean to imply that the storage of “junk” in a residential garage is prohibited by the ordinance. While the garage must remain accessible for the parking of a vehicle (§ 742) temporary blockage of the garage or storage of paraphernalia which allows vehicular access would appear to be permissible as a “residential use.” Garages have come almost universally to be used as an all purpose storage facility for such things as household items, tools, automobile parts, items related to the carrying on of various hobbies, and innumerable discarded or forgotten items or memorabilia which could only be classified as “junk.”
