DocketNumber: Crim. No. 1774.
Judges: Henshaw
Filed Date: 6/14/1913
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The undisputed facts are that petitioner is under arrest by virtue of a warrant issued by a justice of the peace of the county of Sonoma, charging him with the criminal violation of the ordinances of the county of Sonoma regulating the traffic in alcoholic liquors. In June, 1912, the supervisors of the county of Sonoma passed their ordinance No. 89 for the licensing of saloons and other places where alcoholic liquors were vended or given away, and regulating the conduct of this business. Petitioner maintains a saloon in the county of Sonoma without the corporate limits of any municipality. He paid for and procured the license contemplated by ordinance 89, and by virtue of this ordinance and of his license thereunder insists that he has violated no law. Ordinance 89, it should be added, makes it a misdemeanor to sell or give away alcoholic liquors "without first having procured a license so to do from the tax-collector of Sonoma County, as required by this ordinance."
In November, 1912, an initiative ordinance was voted upon by the electors of the county, including those electors resident within municipalities, and upon the fourteenth day of November, 1912, the board of supervisors of Sonoma County duly declared this ordinance to have been passed and adopted. This initiative ordinance is here quoted in full:
"An Ordinance of the county of Sonoma, state of California, relating to the Retail Liquor Business of Sonoma County, and limiting the issuing of licenses to bona fide hotels.
"The People of the county of Sonoma do hereby ordain as follows:
"No person, corporation, firm or association shall sell, or engage in the business of selling, offering for sale or giving away distilled, fermented, malt, vinous or other spirituous or intoxicating liquors, wines or beer, in any portion of Sonoma County lying without the corporate limits of any city or town of said Sonoma County, except such person, corporation, firm *Page 680 or association engaged in the business of conducting a bona fide hotel, having at least thirty-five separate sleeping apartments properly furnished for the accommodation of guests, and having a dining room at which meals are served at regular hours to boarders and the traveling public; and except physicians, surgeons or chemists, selling distilled, malt, vinous or other spirituous liquors to be used in the due course of medicine; and except manufacturers or producers of such distilled, malt, vinous or other spirituous liquors, selling their own manufacture or production in quantities of not less than one gallon."
At a glance it will be observed that this initiative ordinance neither declares the violation of any of its terms to be a misdemeanor, nor provides any punishment for such violation. The theory of the respondent answering to this writ is, as is evidenced by the criminal complaint lodged against petitioner; that the earlier ordinance No. 89 was not repealed in toto by the initiative ordinance and that the penalties prescribed by ordinance No. 89 may be lifted bodily from that ordinance and inserted in and made applicable to the initiative ordinance. And therefore, so runs the argument, as petitioner is admittedly not conducting a hotel of thirty-five guest-rooms, and is not a person who comes within any of the other exceptions of the initiative ordinance, he is guilty of a violation of the provisions of the initiative ordinance and may be punished therefor by force of the penalty prescribed for a violation of ordinance No. 89. This fairly states the situation touching this particular matter. Other of petitioner's points and arguments attacking the validity of the initiative ordinance and the answers made thereto will be set out in due course.
The effort to transport the penal provisions of ordinance 89 into the initiative ordinance, or, conversely, the attempt to treat the initiative ordinance as but amendatory of ordinance 89, so that the penal provisions of ordinance 89 may be still made to apply, cannot be sustained. So far as the construction of the two ordinances is concerned, one or more of three things must be true (1) that the later ordinance is amendatory of the earlier, (2) that the two ordinances dealing with the same subject matter are to be construed together and harmonized if possible, and (3) that the later ordinance, if *Page 681
repugnancy exists, repeals the earlier. As to the first to these, the initiative ordinance does not in terms purport to be amendatory of ordinance 89. Excepting in its title it makes no reference to licenses, it fixes no fee and does not exact or even contemplate the exaction of a license from those persons whom it permits to vend or give away alcoholic liquors. It declares simply that no person shall give or sell such intoxicants unless he is either conducting a hotel or is a physician or surgeon or chemist or a manufacturer who sells his own product of quantities of not less than one gallon. It does not say that these persons so exempted from the inhibition of the statute must procure a license before they sell, nor does it declare or even intimate that if they do so sell without a license they have in anywise committed a crime. The same is true of all others who are forbidden to sell. The declaration is that they shall not sell. If they do sell their acts are illegal, but their acts are not denounced as criminal. It should be unnecessary to point out the tremendous distinction that exists between acts which are simply illegal and for which therefore a civil liability alone results, and those which are criminal, for which penal as well as civil liability arises. A crime is an act committed or omitted in violation of a law forbidding or commanding it, "and to which is annexed, upon conviction, either of the following punishments: death, imprisonment, fine, removal from office, or disqualification to hold and enjoy any office of honor, trust or profit in this state." (Pen. Code, sec. 15.) A description, definition, and denouncement of acts necessary to constitute a crime do not make the commission of such act or acts a crime, unless a punishment be annexed, for punishment is as necessary to constitute a crime as its exact definition. (People v. McNulty,
What has been said disposes of the criminal charge against this petitioner. But, as has been intimated, the defect may be cured in future proceedings by the adoption of a suitable ordinance by the supervisors. In view of other objections advanced by petitioner and going to the validity of the initiative ordinance as a whole, a consideration of these propositions may be advantageously had, for the disposition of questions which are not only in this case but which are certain, if not disposed of, to arise in other cases.
It appears that in the May preceding the November at which the initiative ordinance was adopted, an election was held under the Wyllie law in that part of the first supervisorial district outside of the municipalities therein, and at such election the district voted in favor of licensing the sale of liquors in the district. In the succeeding June a similar election was held in the second supervisorial district, which voted against the licensing of liquors. It is urged and argued that the people of the entire county could not adopt the initiative ordinance which here they did adopt under section 4058 of the Political Code. The argument in this behalf is that as the first supervisorial district had voted in favor of licensing the sale of liquors, its determination in this respect could not be controlled or modified by any general county ordinance; that the second supervisorial district having voted against the sale of liquors, no county ordinance could authorize the sale of liquors within this territory, either with or without license. *Page 684
And, finally, it is argued that under the Wyllie law the supervisorial districts without the limits of municipal corporations are made the units for the exercise of local option, and that it does violence to this general state law to permit the county at large, and in particular the electors of the county residing within municipalities, to control these units by such an initiative ordinance. Support for this view is sought in Ex parteZany,
The force of petitioner's objections really rest upon a construction of the Wyllie Act — its meaning and its scope. InEx parte Beck,
The same may be said of the argument that it is unreasonable to permit the electors of a municipality, having at the most but very limited and indirect interest in the liquor question of the outlying supervisorial districts to control by their votes the question of regulating and prohibiting that traffic when these regulations in no way affect them, their municipality, or the liquor traffic conducted therein. It is quite true as urged, that the electors in the outlying portions of supervisorial districts have quite as much concern with the liquor *Page 686 traffic of municipalities as the electors of municipalities have with the liquor traffic in the outside districts, and it is foreign to the conception of autonomous government and home rule that electors not interested should be permitted to have a voice in and to a great extent control such a matter of purely local concern. But the same answer must be made to this argument, that it is addressed to what is conceived to be the unjust operation of the law and not to the validity or invalidity of the law itself. Supervisors elected from municipalities within a county have the same power of control over the districts outside of their municipality, and under the initiative the only change wrought is that, that which the supervisors, representing the whole county could do, it is now permitted the electors of the whole county themselves to do.
It follows herefrom that the first supervisorial district which voted in favor of licensing the sale of liquors will be subject to the terms of such regulatory or prohibitory ordinance as the county of Sonoma may adopt; that the second supervisorial district, which voted against the licensing the sale of liquors, cannot be subjected to the terms of any regulatory license. But this fact, of course, does not render the ordinance void as to such other parts of the county as are subject to its operation.
One or more matters of minor consequence still merit consideration. It is pointed out that the initiative ordinance is vague and uncertain in this, that it authorizes keepers of hotels having at least thirty-five guest-rooms to sell liquor within the county, but does not attempt to say that the hotels themselves shall be within the county, so that under the terms of the ordinance one who keeps such a hotel in the city and county of San Francisco is thereby authorized to vend liquors in Sonoma County. Such of course was not the meaning of the ordinance, though it must be conceded that in this respect it is inartificially drawn.
The objection that the ordinance is unreasonable in limiting the right to sell liquors to the managers of hotels containing thirty-five guest-rooms and upward cannot be sustained without a clear showing of the absolute unreasonableness of the limitation.(Grumbach v. Lelande,
For the reasons herein given the prisoner is discharged.
Angellotti, J., Shaw, J., Lorigan, J., Melvin, J.,and Sloss, J., concurred.