In Re Culver

202 P. 661, 187 Cal. 437, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 376
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 1, 1921
DocketCrim. No. 2362.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 202 P. 661 (In Re Culver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Culver, 202 P. 661, 187 Cal. 437, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 376 (Cal. 1921).

Opinion

LENNON, J.

In the justice’s court of the city of Berkeley, county of Alameda, petitioner, Laura Culver, was convicted on a complaint purporting to charge her with the commission of a misdemeanor. She was fined, with the alternative of imprisonment, and, accordingly, upon refusing to pay the fine, was taken into custody and imprisoned by the sheriff of Alameda County. Petitioner subsequently applied to this court for a writ of habeas corpus and was released on bail pending a determination of this proceeding.

In his return to the writ the sheriff of Alameda County, the respondent herein, raised several objections to a con *439 sideration by this court of the merits of petitioner’s application for the writ. However, inasmuch as respondent apparently abandoned reliance upon these preliminary objections at the oral argument and counsel for petitioner and respondent addressed their discussion solely to the merits of the case both at the oral argument and in the briefs filed subsequent to the oral argument, any opposition to a hearing on the merits must be held to have been withdrawn. The first point before this court is, therefore, the contention that the imprisonment of petitioner is unlawful for the reason that the complaint does not charge the commission of any act constituting a criminal offense.

The complaint herein alleges that: The state board of health issued an order directing the quarantine of petitioner’s niece, who was a minor child residing at petitioner’s home in Berkeley, for the reason that said child had come in contact with cases and carriers of diphtheria. Upon receiving this order of the state board, a police officer of the city of Berkeley affixed a placard on petitioner’s premises reading:

“Diphtheria Contact.

“These premises are declared to be in a state of quarantine. All persons are forbidden to leave or enter these premises or to remove any article therefrom without the permission of the Health Officer. Persons removing this notice will be prosecuted.”

Petitioner removed the placard from the premises in the presence of the police officer. Such conduct, the complaint charges, constituted a misdemeanor under section 377a of the Penal Code, which provides: “Every person who after notice shall violate, or who, upon the demand of any public health officer, shall refuse or neglect to conform to any rule, order or regulation prescribed by the state board of health respecting the quarantine, or disinfection of persons, animals, things or places shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.”

[1] It is true, as petitioner contends, that it is a settled rule in habeas corpus proceedings that a court may determine whether or not a complaint in a justice’s court in a criminal proceeding states facts sufficient to constitute a public offense. (Ex parte Kearny, 55 Cal. 212; Ex parte Greenall, 153 Cal. 767, 770, [96 Pac. 804]; Matter of Ah *440 Sing, 156 Cal. 349, [104 Pac. 448].) [2] However, the rule is also well established that in determining the sufficiency of such a complaint the greatest liberality of construction must be indulged; if the complaint states facts which constitute a crime, it will not be held insufficient because other facts are stated which are irrelevant or immaterial or because the law violated by the alleged acts is inaccurately described therein. (Ex parte Williams, 121 Cal. 328, 330, [53 Pac. 706].) [3] A court takes judicial notice of the statutes of the state, and it is unnecessary that their titles or terms be set forth in the complaint. [4] If the facts stated constitute a crime under a particular law, an allegation in a complaint that the acts in question are a violation of another and different law may be disregarded as immaterial, for it does not alter the nature of the acts charged nor prevent them from constituting a crime. Consequently, it is not essential that the acts alleged to have been committed by petitioner shall have been violative of a “rule, order or regulation prescribed by the state board of health,” so as to amount to a misdemeanor under section 377a of the Penal Code. If the tearing down of the placard under the circumstances alleged in the complaint constituted a misdemeanor under any statute of the state, the complaint must be held to charge the commission of a public offense.

[5] There can be no doubt but that, by virtue of the broad power conferred by sections 2979 and 2979a of the Political Code and by the “Public Health Act,” the state board of health has power to order the quarantine of persons who have come in contact with cases and carriers of contagious diseases “whenever in the judgment of the said Board such action shall be deemed necessary to protect and preserve the public health. ’ ’

Section 13 of the so-called “Public Health Act” (Stats. 1907, p. 893; amended, Stats. 1911, pp. 565, 568), provides certain rules governing eases of quarantine. Rule 1 provides, among other things, that, with respect to quarantine, the local health authorities must follow all general and special rules, regulations and orders of the state board of health. Rule 3 reads as follows: “When any building, house, structure, or part thereof, or tent or other place, is quarantined because of a contagious, infectious or communicable disease, said local health boards or chief execu *441 tive health officer shall cause to be firmly fastened, in the most conspicuous place upon such house, building, tent or other place, a placard or flag, upon which is printed the name of the disease, in plain and legible letters of at least two and one-half inches in length. This placard or flag must not be removed by any person except the health officer or his deputy and in no case until the premises have been thoroughly disinfected.” Section 21 of the said act provides that “Any person violating any of the provisions of this Act . . . shall be guilty of a misdemeanor . . . ” In the instant case, upon receiving an order from the state board of health directing that petitioner’s niece be quarantined, the local authorities affixed to the place of residence of petitioner’s niece a placard conforming to the provisions of rule 3, above quoted. If the quarantining of these premises was a proper act in pursuance of the order received from the state board of health, then petitioner’s act in tearing down the placard was punishable as a misdemeanor under the “Public Health Act.”

[6] In this connection petitioner points out the distinction between the quarantine of a place and quarantining a person. There may be cases in which buildings are quarantined, as distinguished from persons.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
202 P. 661, 187 Cal. 437, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-culver-cal-1921.