In Re Hayes

25 P.2d 230, 134 Cal. App. 312, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 48
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 25, 1933
DocketDocket No. 253.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 25 P.2d 230 (In Re Hayes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Hayes, 25 P.2d 230, 134 Cal. App. 312, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 48 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

BARNARD, P. J.

Upon application of the petitioner a writ of habeas corpus was issued by the Supreme Court and made returnable before this court.

It appears that petitioner was arrested and is being detained under a warrant based upon a complaint filed in the Justice Court of Riverside Township, County of Riverside, in which he is charged in four separate counts with violations of section 11 of The California Fruit, Nut and Vegetable Standardization Act of 1931 (Stats. 1931, p. 1459). In two counts he is charged with mislabeling certain grapefruit by marking the wrappers thereof with the word “Coachella” and by stamping the word “Coachella” upon each individual grapefruit and thereafter offering the same for sale, thereby representing the same to be grapefruit that had been grown and raised in the Coachella Valley when in truth and fact said grapefruit had been grown in San Bernardino County. In the other two counts he is charged with mislabeling certain containers of grapefruit by the repeated use of containers which were labeled “Pure Gold-Coachella Valley Grape Fruit—Sweet Seedless—Grown and packed by Coachella Valley Citrus Association—Thermal, Riverside County, California,” without, completely removing, erasing or obliterating said markings, it being further charged that he then and there offered for sale grapefruit in such mislabeled containers, well knowing that said markings did not properly or accurately apply to the fruit repacked therein, in that the said fruit was grown in *314 San Bernardino County and not in the Coachella Valley and that the same was not packed by the Coachella Valley Citrus Association.

The pertinent portion of section 11 of this act, under which petitioner is charged, reads as follows:

“Sec. 11. It is unlawful to prepare, deliver for shipment, load, ship, transport, offer for sale or sell a deceptive pack, bulk lot, bulk load, load, arrangement or display of fresh or dried fruits, nuts or vegetables, or to mislabel any container of fresh or dried fruits, nuts or vegetables, or the label or lining of any such container, or the wrapper of any fruit, nut or vegetable, or any fruit, nut or vegetable, or any placard used in connection therewith having reference to such fresh or dried fruit, nuts or vegetables. This provision shall be construed to prohibit the repeated use of any container or subcontainer of fruits, nuts or vegetables, bearing any markings, or any designations of brand, quality or grade, unless all such markings which do not properly and accurately apply to the products repacked or replaced therein shall first be completely removed, erased or obliterated. ...”

The first point raised by petitioner is that section 11 of this act is unconstitutional and void as being arbitrary and unreasonable. This argument is based upon the contention that the mislabeling provisions of that section are not thereby limited in their application to such fruit as is offered for sale or sold or marketed; that the same are made applicable to all fruit without regard to its actual or intended use or disposition; and that the same apply equally to fruit intended for sale and to fruit intended and destined for the private use of the one doing the labeling. It is urged that the act in this respect is too broad in that it forbids such mislabeling and such misleading statements without regard to whether the same are intended or used for the purpose of deceiving others.

The petitioner relies upon Ex parte Haydan, 147 Cal. 649 [82 Pac. 315, 317, 109 Am. St. Rep. 183, 1 L. R. A. (N. S.) 184], In ra Fujii, 189 Cal. 55 [207 Pac. 537, 539], Mattei v. Hecke, 99 Cal. App. 747 [279 Pac. 470], and In re Mefferd, 110 Cal. App. 1 [292 Pac. 988, 6 Pac. (2d) 71]. None of these cases are decisive of the question now before us. In the last-named case, the provisions of the Fruit, Nut and *315 Vegetable Act as amended in 1929, with the violation of which the petitioner there was charged, were held unconstitutional. While the charges in that case included one of mislabeling under section 10 of that act, the opinion is based largely upon the proposition that no natural or reasonable basis existed for a discrimination said to be contained in section 20 of that act, relating to the matter of proper maturity of grapefruit offered for sale. A hearing was granted in the Supreme Court and an opinion filed (which was later set aside for another reason) in which the Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of section 10 of the act as amended in 1929, the opinion observing that the legislature had precisely followed the court’s suggestion in the case of Ex parte Hayden, supra, in which case the court said: “If it were a question merely of deception in the label, the direct and efficacious method would be for the legislature to'prohibit false labeling.”

The essence of petitioner’s claim is that under section 11 of the act now under consideration, the provisions against mislabeling are not confined in their application to fruit offered for sale or placed upon the market. While section 11 of the present act is more comprehensive than the similar section 10 of the prior act as amended in 1929, in the respect now under consideration the language used in the former section 10 was not more favorable to the petitioner than is the language of the present section 11.

As was said in Ex parte Hayden, supra: “The scope, the meaning and intent of an act must be gathered from its title and from its body.” The title of the present act is as follows:

“An act to prevent fraud and deception and to protect the general welfare by establishing standards and standard containers for certain fruits, nuts and vegetables; and to that end regulating the sale, offer for sale, shipment, transportation, loading, packing, marking and disposal of fruits, nuts and vegetables; and repealing certain acts therein named. ’ ’

Section 7 of this act, enumerating what fruit shall conform to the act, makes the same applicable to all fruits that are packed or delivered for shipment or shipped or offered for sale or sold in bulk or otherwise. The plain meaning of the first part of section 11 is that it is unlawful to prepare *316 for market, offer for sale, or sell a deceptive parcel of fruit, following which, in the same sentence, it is made unlawful to mislabel any fruit, its label or container. The latter provision is then construed to prohibit the repeated use of containers in such a manner as to constitute mislabeling. In our opinion, the fact that the matter of shipping, offering for sale or selling is not repeated in that portion of the sentence relating to mislabeling is not fatal to the act in the respect here claimed. Not only the entire sentence but the entire section must be read together, and so read the highly technical construction contended for seems neither necessary nor proper. As was said in In re Fujii, supra:

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Bluebook (online)
25 P.2d 230, 134 Cal. App. 312, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hayes-calctapp-1933.