This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of plaintiff and an order denying a new trial in an action to recover a liquor license imposed by an ordinance of the board of supervisors of the plaintiff county.
1. It is claimed that the court below erred in admitting in evidence the ordinance under which the action is prosecuted, and holding that it was regularly adopted, because it was not shown that it was adopted at a regular session of the board. The regular ordinance book of the board was produced from the qustody of the clerk, the official in whose keeping it belonged, and duly identified, and the ordinance in question was found therein regularly and properly recorded; it contained the recital at the end thereof: “ The foregoing ordinance was passed and adopted by the board of supervisors of said Merced county, at a regular session of said board, this, *49the eleventh day of January, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and ninety-five, by the following vote: Ayes, supervisors C. C. Nelson, G. P. Kensey, J. H. Edwards. Noes, J. W. Haley, B. Shaffer.” This was followed by a proper authentication by the signature of the chairman of the board and attestation of the clerk. Evidence was also introduced showung the due publication of the ordinance. This was sufficient to establish a prima facie case of regularity in the adoption of the ordinance and entitle it to be admitted in evidence. That the ordinance was passed at a regular session was one of the presumptions afforded by the prima facie showing made, and, if defendant desired to overcome that presumption by showing that in fact it was not so passed, the burden was upon him. (San Diego County v. Seifert, 97 Cal. 599; Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1963, subd. 15; sec. 1918, subd. 5; sec. 1920; Dillon on Municipal Corporations, 3d ed., sec. 422.) "Proof of the existence and identity of the ordinance offered should by rights be all that is required of the prosecution in any case until some showing has been made that there was irregularity in the enactment of the ordinance, in which case it becomes necessary to prove that it was properly enacted, in order to sustain a conviction or judgment. If no such question is raised, the presumption that the ordinance was properly passed becomes conclusive.” (Horr and Bemis on Municipal Police Ordinances, 161.) No attempt was made to rebut or overcome the prima facie showing by plaintiff in this case. The regularity of the proceedings for the adoption of the ordinance was denied in the answer, but this did not shift the burden of proof in relation thereto, and no evidence was offered to establish anj^ irregularity. The validity of the ordinance was therefore sufficiently shown. There is nothing in the case of People v. Dunn, 89 Cal. 228, contravening this doctrine.
The foregoing suggestions and authorities answer alike the kindred objection that it was not made to ap~ *50pear that in passing the ordinance the ayes and noes were entered in the minutes of the hoard.
2. It is further objected that the court erred in excluding the evidence offered by defendant to show that the effect of the ordinance in question if enforced is virtually to prohibit the retail traffic in liquors in the county of Merced.
It is perfectly true that the power to license and regulate for the purposes of revenue is not the power to prohibit, and that an attempt to accomplish the latter object under a pretense of regulation cannot be upheld; in other words, the right to prohibit the sale or traffic in intoxicating liquors is entirely separate and distinct from the power to regulate and impose a license tax thereon for revenue purposes; and an ordinance which in terms proceeds under the latter power, but in its effect amounts to an exercise of the former, will not stand. (Merced County v. Helm, 102 Cal. 159; Black on Intoxicating Liquors, sec. 227.)
But the question here is, How is such effect to be determined? It cannot be that this question can be made to depend upon the effect of the regulation on the business of the defendant, as was the purport of the evidence offered in this case. That could afford no proper or reasonable test as to the general effect of the regulation. We think the answer is well stated in the opinion of the learned judge of the court below, wherein it is said: “ There are many objections to the admission of such evidence. The discretion is committed to the board of supervisors, and they are presumed to act with good motive, and it is not to be supposed that, while pretending to fix the tax for revenue, they will make it so large as to prohibit the business. So soon as the courts hear evidence to decide whether a license tax be so high as to be prohibitory, they take upon themselves the exercise of a discretion which the laws have confided to the legislative body. If evidence is to be heard, the court might find the facts to be prohibitive to some dealers in the county by reason of the small amount of *51business done by them, and not prohibitive to their better patronized competitors. I find a practical unanimity of opinion that whether an ordinance be reasonable or not is a question for the court, and it seems that the same rule should apply to an ordinance claimed to be prohibitory.”
Such an objection is, like any other directed to the reasonable character of the regulation, a question to be ■determined from the face of the ordinance, and the provision miist be upheld, unless as matter of law the court ■can say that it is so unreasonable in character as to transcend the proper exercise of the right by the lawmaking power. It is not a question of fact to be determined upon the varying circumstances of each particular case. (Ex parte Guerrero, 69 Cal. 88.) “ Whether -an ordinance be reasonable and consistent with the law or not, is a question for the court and not the jury, and evidence to the latter on the subject is inadmissible.” (Dillon on Municipal Corporations, sec. 327. See, also, Ex parte Frank, 52 Cal. 610.)
.We think the evidence was properly excluded.
The judgment and order are affirmed.
Garoutte, J., and Harrison, J., concurred.