People v. International Steel Corp.

Decision Date25 January 1951
Citation102 Cal.App.2d Supp. 935,226 P.2d 587
CourtCalifornia Superior Court
Parties102 Cal.App.2d Supp. 935 PEOPLE v. INTERNATIONAL STEEL CORP. et al. C. A. 2654. Appellate Department, Superior Court, Los Angeles County, California

Henry C. Huntington and Max Tendler, Los Angeles, for appellants.

W. E. Simpson, Dist. Atty., Jere J. Sullivan, Deputy Dist. Atty. and Ralph F. Bagley, Deputy Dist. Atty., Los Angeles, for respondent.

Harold W. Kennedy, County Counsel, Andrew O. Porter, Deputy County Counsel, Los Angeles, amicus curiae.

SHAW, Presiding Judge.

The defendants, a corporation and two natural persons, were convicted on charges of violating section 24242 of the Health and Safety Code, which is a part of the law for the formation of air pollution control districts, enacted in 1947 (Stats.1947, Chap. 632, pp. 1640-1651) as an addition to the Health and Safety Code, for the purpose of reducing air contamination, popularly known as 'smog.' Defendants appeal from the judgments, and in support of the appeals contend that the prohibitory provisions of this law are unconstitutional and void for various reasons, that the evidence does not support the findings of guilt, and that the court erred in rulings on evidence. We have concluded that the control of 'smog' is a proper subject of the police power, that the prohibitions of the statute herein mentioned violate none of the constitutional provisions referred to, that the evidence supports the finding of guilt, except as to the secretary of the corporation, defendant Olmstead, that no errors in ruling on evidence appear, and the judgments must be affirmed except as to Olmstead.

The general purpose of the law above mentioned, as appears from sections 24198 and 24199 of the Health and Safety Code, is to reduce air contamination where it exists, 'in order to safeguard life, health, property and the public welfare and to make possible the comfortable enjoyment of life and property.' Section 24253 makes it a misdemeanor to violate any part of the article which contains section 24242, and the latter section provides that: 'A person shall not discharge into the atmosphere from any single source of emission whatsoever any air contaminant for a period or periods aggregating more than three minutes in any one hour which is: (a) As dark or darker in shade as that designated as No. 2 on the Ringelmann Chart, as published by the United States Bureau of Mines, or (b) Of such opacity as to obscure an observer's view to a degree equal to or greater than does smoke described in subsection (a) of this section.'

This provision is attacked on the ground that it sets forth no ascertainable standard of guilt and is fatally uncertain, by reason of its reference to the Ringelmann Chart for the description of the forbidden air contaminant. The complaint here specified smoke as the air contaminant discharged, so we limit our further discussion to smoke.

The term 'air contaminant' is defined by section 24208 to include smoke and a variety of other specified emanations. All that is needed further for certainty in section 24242, as it applies here, is some means of determining the density or opacity of smoke that is forbidden. 'That is certain which can be made certain' (Civil Code, sec. 3538). This rule is as applicable to statutes as to other expressions of ideas. A statute may refer to and adopt, for an expression of the legislative intent, a statute, or rules or regulations of another state or of the United States. In re Burke, 1923, 190 Cal. 326, 328, 212 P. 193; Brock v. Superior Court, 1937, 9 Cal.2d 291, 297, 71 P.2d 209, 114 A.L.R. 127; In re Kinney, 1921, 53 Cal.App. 792, 794, 200 P. 966; Greene v. Town of Lakeport, 1925, 74 Cal.App. 1, 9, 239 P. 702. In Arwine v. Board of Medical Examiners, 1907, 151 Cal. 499, 503, 91 P. 319, and Ex parte Gerino, 1904, 143 Cal. 412, 419, 77 P. 166, 66 L.R.A. 249, the court upheld a provision of statute adopting as the standard of efficiency to which medical schools should conform the standard prescribed by an association of such schools--even an after-adopted standard.

We think it is equally permissible for a statute to refer to and adopt, for description of a prohibited act, an official publication of any United States board or bureau established by law, such as the United States Bureau of Mines. The publications of that bureau are as readily available for examination by those seeking information on the effect of the statute as were the statutes and regulations, references to which were approved in the cases just cited. It is no more necessary here than it was in those cases that provision by made for free or other public distribution of the matter refererd to. The courts take judicial notice of the official acts of the Bureau of Mines Code of Civil Procedure, sec. 1875, subd. 3; see also Livermore v. Beal, 1937, 18 Cal.App.2d 535, 540-542, 64 P.2d 987; Williams v. City & County of San Francisco, 1938, 24 Cal.App.2d 630, 633, 76 P.2d 182; Arnold v. Universal Oil Land Co., 1941, 45 Cal.App.2d 522, 529, 114 P.2d 408, and private citizens who are concerned with them are also charged with notice of them. Arnold v. Universal Oil Land Co., supra, 45 Cal.App.2d at page 530, 114 P.2d at page 412.

While, as already stated, the courts take notice of the Ringelmann Chart, our notice in this case is fortified by a copy which was introduced in evidence and is in the record. It is a plain white piece of paper divided into four sections, numbered from 1 to 4 and each about 5- 3/4 X 8- 3/4 inches in size. On each of these sections is printed a series of intersecting heavy black lines of uniform width for each section, with the lines growing progressively wider from section 1 to section 4, until on section 4 the black covers much more than half of the surface. This chart refers to Bureau of Mines Information Circular No. 6888, a copy of which is also in the record. From the chart and this circular, it appears that the chart is to be posted at a distance of 50 feet from the observer. When so posted the black lines and the white spaces merge into each other, by a process of optical illusion, so as to present the appearance of a series of gray rectangles of different color densities, No. 4 being the densest. Estimates of the density of smoke may be made by glancing from this chart so displayed to smoke, and picking out the section on the chart which most nearly resembles the smoke. This mode of measuring the density of smoke has been in use, it appears, for over fifty years. This affords a reasonably certain mode of determining and stating the density and opacity of smoke, and we think that the statute adopting it is not lacking in certainty.

It is also urged that the statute is unreasonable and discriminatory because under it one who discharges an air contaminant only slightly below the prescribed limit of color or opacity is exempt from the prohibition even though if he continues his operation long enough he will discharge more contaminant into the air than one who continues for only a short time beyond the three-minute minimum. This is only another way of saying that the line between permission and prohibition is drawn in the wrong place or that no such line can be drawn. But the drawing of such a line is very largely a matter of legislative discretion, the exercise of which will not be reversed by the courts unless abused. As the court said, upholding a statute against a similar attack, in Ferrante v. Fish & Game Comm., 1946, 29 Cal.2d 365, 374, 175 P.2d 222, 227, 'the line must be drawn somewhere or there can be no classification and the courts have recognized that if the classification is reasonable in its over-all operation it is not to be stricken down because of its application to a particular case that may lie just inside its borders.' Upholding a city ordinance establishing a district in which undertaking establishments were permitted and prohibiting them elsewhere, the court said, in Brown v. City of Los Angeles, 1920, 183 Cal. 783, 789, 192 P. 716, 718: 'The mere fact that outside of the permissive district there was other property similar in nature and character would not justify the court upon ascertaining that fact to substitute its judgment for the legislative judgment. The boundary line of a district must always be more or less arbitrary, for the property on one side of the line cannot, in the nature of things, be very different from that immediately on the other side of that line.' See also In re Herrera, 1943, 23 Cal.2d 206, 213, 143 P.2d 345. The principles declared in these cases are applicable here and impel us to uphold the statute against this objection.

Further objection to the statute is based on section 24251, Health and Safety Code, which provides that section 24242 does not apply to certain agricultural operations or the use of orchard heaters not producing more than a specified amount of smoke. It is contended that this provision prevents the law from having a uniform operation, makes it a special law and constitutes an arbitrary discrimination, in violation of several constitutional provisions referred to. The decisions on these and cognate questions are well nigh innumerable, and we do not find it necessary to review them here. We have, however, considered those cited by defendants, and...

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