168 P. 390 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1917
It is conceded that the judgment in this case awarding the plaintiff the sum of $540 was made in accordance with the provisions of section 629 of the Civil Code. That section imposes a penalty upon corporations engaged in supplying illuminating gas or electric light (of which the defendant is one) for a failure to comply with its terms when a demand under certain conditions is made upon them to furnish such gas or electric light; but it will be observed that the section leaves free from such penalty natural persons and copartnerships conducting the same business who may be chargeable with a like omission. It was contended in the lower court and is contended here upon behalf of the defendant that because of this discrimination between corporations and natural persons and copartnerships the section of the code in question is repugnant to section 11 of article I of the Constitution, which provides that "All laws of a general nature shall have a uniform operation."
We think this contention must be sustained. The state has no more power to deny to corporations the equal protection of the law than to individual citizens; and there is no reason in law or in the nature of things why a natural person or firm engaged in the business of supplying to the public artificial light should not be subjected to exactly the same penalties as corporations so engaged. This proposition is supported, we think, by the cases of Johnson v. Goodyear Min. Co.,