In Re Pierce

107 P. 587, 12 Cal. App. 319, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 4
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 30, 1909
DocketCrim. No. 120.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 107 P. 587 (In Re Pierce) 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 Pierce, 107 P. 587, 12 Cal. App. 319, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 4 (Cal. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

HART, J.

The petitioner was convicted in the justice’s court of the fourth judicial district of Glenn county of a misdemeanor,'under a complaint charging him with “commencing and conducting the business of retailing and selling spirituous liquors” within said county of Glenn, without .first obtaining a license for that purpose, in violation of certain provisions of Ordinance No. 62 of said county. The *321 petitioner, upon his conviction, was sentenced by the court to a term of ninety days’ imprisonment in the county jail of O-lenn county, and, in addition thereto, to pay a fine of $200.

The only point originally made by the petitioner was that the complaint upon which he was prosecuted and convicted does not state facts constituting an offense under the ordinance whose provisions the complaint purports to accuse him of violating; but in their brief, filed subsequently to the hearing before this court, counsel for the petitioner claim that those provisions of said ordinance relating to the business of retailing spirituous liquors are void, for the alleged reason that they seek “to impose a license tax upon individual sales and not upon the business of selling.” {Merced Co. v. Helm, 102 Cal. 159, [36 Pac. 399].)

The first point relied upon by the petitioner for his release rests upon the determination of the question of fact whether the charging part of the complaint, as filed, reads as indicated by the copy thereof annexed to the petition herein, or reads as the district attorney contends that he originally prepared and filed said complaint.

The contention of the district attorney is that the complaint was altered in a material particular—that is, by substituting the word “for” for “or” in the charging part of the document, so that it would fail to charge the accused with an offense under the terms of the ordinance—after he had filed the pleading with the justice of the peace. The petitioner claims that the complaint, as indicated by a copy thereof attached to and made a part of the petition herein, is an exact copy of the complaint as it was filed, although it is conceded by counsel for petitioner that a change was made in the instrument, but the intimation is that such change was attempted for the purpose of obliterating the letter “f ” so that what appears to be the word “for” would read “or.”

To determine this controverted question of fact this court received evidence offered by both the people and the petitioner, and, as we have stated, the proposition whether the complaint states an offense under Ordinance No. 62 must depend upon what, from the evidence, we find the ultimate fact to be.

A copy of the complaint in. the language in which the petitioner claims the pleading was prepared and filed is, as stated, *322 made a part of the petition, and so much of the charging part thereof as is of interest to this inquiry reads as follows: “ . . . That prior to said time said' Samuel Pierce had not procured an order from the board of supervisors of the county of Glenn for a license from the license tax collector of said county to so commence, conduct or carry on said business, as. required by the provisions of said Ordinance 62,” etc.

The district attorney insists that that portion of the complaint which we have quoted as personally prepared and filed by him read as follows: “. . . That prior to said time said Samuel Pierce had not procured an order from the board of supervisors of the county of Glenn, or a license from the license tax collector of said county to so commence, conduct or carry on said business, as required by the provisions of said Ordinance No. 62,” etc.

Section 1 of article X of said ordinance provides: “No-license shall be issued for the sale of spirituous or fermented liquors or wines until after the applicant shall have procured an order of the board of supervisors of the county of Glenn for the issuance of the same.”

The penal clause of the ordinance provides that ‘ ‘ every person who commences and carries on any business or calling, for the transaction or carrying on of which a license is required by this ordinance, without procuring a license as prescribed herein, is guilty of a misdemeanor,” prescribing and authorizing to be imposed upon conviction a penalty by way of a fine-of not less than five dollars nor more than three hundred dollars, or by imprisonment in the county jail for a period not exceeding ninety days, or by both such fine and imprisonment.

Readily it will be observed that the only act, under the provisions of the penal clause or section of the ordinance, which can become a misdemeanor, is the commencement and carrying-on of the business of selling the liquors mentioned in said ordinance without first procuring a license therefor. In other words, the ordinance does not denounce as a misdemeanor a failure on the part of a person commencing and carrying on the retail sale of liquors to procure an order from the board of supervisors for a license. The misdemeanor consists of the-act of carrying on such business without having first obtained a license for that purpose. Therefore, if the complaint was prepared and filed by the district attorney in the language in *323 which the petitioner claims that the quoted portion of the charging part thereof was expressed, it is very clear that no offense whatsoever was stated therein, and that the judgment of conviction against petitioner is absolutely void.

Now, as to the facts as they were adduced before us: An inspection of the original complaint itself will show, and does show, that it is as plainly manifest as phj^sieal facts can make any proposition that some change or alteration was made or attempted to be made in either the word “or,” as the district attorney contends was the word as the complaint was originally written, or the word “for,” as petitioner contends was the word used originally. We have seen that counsel for petitioner concede that the complaint had been tampered with in the respect referred to, claiming, however, as before stated, that it involved an attempt upon the part of someone to make the word “for” read “or.”

The district attorney testified that he personally drafted the complaint, and in the most positive manner declared that the word “or” was written therein, and that the alteration or attempted alteration had been made after the trial and the conviction of the petitioner. He stated that during the argument of the case to the jury he held the complaint in his hand and commented upon its averments and the proof neeéssary thereunder to justify a conviction, and that at that time the complaint was in the condition in which he prepared it.

Miss Crane, stenographer in the district attorney’s office, testified that, after the case had been appealed to the superior court and all the papers transferred to the clerk of said court, she procured at the office of the last named official the original complaint, from which she made a number of typewritten copies, and then compared the copies with the original; that the original was then in the condition in which the district attorney claims to have written it; that, in other words, the letter “f ” had not at that time been inserted before the word “or” so as to make it read “for.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 P. 587, 12 Cal. App. 319, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-pierce-calctapp-1909.