delivered the opinion of the court.
1. It is contended that the city of Eugene had no power under its charter to pass the ordinance under which defendant was convicted. Subdivison 8 of section 48 of the city charter of Eugene provides that the city shall have power “to prevent, regulate, prohibit and remove nuisances, and to declare by ordinance what shall constitute the same.” Sp. Laws 1905, p. 251, § 48, subd. 8. Under this power the great weight of authority is to the effect that so long as the definition of a nuisance in a charter is not clearly arbitrary and unjust, and manifestly wrong, the courts will uphold it. 2 Smith’s Modern Law of Municipal Corporations, § 1106, and *106cases there cited. The maintaining in a city of a house for the unlawful sale of liquors or carrying on the business is from its very nature a public nuisance, and the city has a right to so declare it. Meyer v. State, 42 N. J. Law, 145, 156; Hammond v. King, 137 Iowa, 548 (114 N. W. 1062).
2. It is also contended that, the local option law being in force in the city of Eugene, the city has no authority to legislate in any way against the sale of liquor. We have already held that, when local option has been adopted in any city or incorporated town, all laws or ordinances conflicting therewith are suspended.
3. In other words, as long as the State law prohibits an act, the city law previously in force cannot be invoked to permit the same act.
4. There is no conflict between the local option law and the ordinance declaring a place where liquors are sold to be a nuisance. The authorities are conflicting as to whether a municipality can make a crime which is punishable by the laws of the State also an offense against its ordinances; some states — notably Georgia— holding steadfastly that ordinances punishing offenses covered by state laws are inoperative. But there can be no room for doubt that, where the offense against the State is also peculiarly an offense against the peace and good order of the city, ordinances punishing it are valid and will be upheld, if within the terms of the charter. Judge Cooley states the rule as follows: “An act may be a penal offense under the laws of the State, and further penalties, under proper legislative authority, be imposed for its commission by municipal by-laws, and the enforcement of the one would not preclude the enforcement of the other.” Cooley, Consti. Lim. (7 ed.) 279 and notes. This view is controverted in Smith’s Modern Law of Municipal Corporations, but the great weight of authority seems to be with the doctrine enunciated by Cooley. *107Mr. Smith cites Walsh v. City of Union, 13 Or. 589 (11 Pac. 312), as sustaining his contention, and, in fact, gives it the position of a leading case, though a careful reading of that decision indicates that the view of the court was exactly opposite from the view taken by the text-writer. The charter of the city of Union gave the council power to punish any person “who should create any ‘noise or disturbance’ upon any street in the city.” The city passed an ordinance in the following language: “Any person or persons, who shall draw any dangerous or deadly weapon upon the person of another * * shall be punished,” etc. Walsh was arrested upon a complaint charging him with a violation of this ordinance. He was not charged with having made a “noise or disturbance” upon the streets, and the court very properly held that, as the charter had not granted the city power to punish for an assault with a dangerous weapon, the ordinance was void, but they add significantly: “Under an ordinance enacted in pursuance of such power to punish those who should create any disturbance in the streets of the city, etc., it is not doubted but what the conduct alleged in the complaint would be a punishable offense. * * -Nor is this objection made upon the ground that an offense committed against two jurisdictions cannot be punished in each of them.” So the case cited decides these points: (1) That an assault with a dangerous weapon cannot be punished as such under power to punish for “creating a noise or disturbance”; (2) that under a power granted to punish for “creating a noise or disturbance” the city council would have power to include within the matters which go to make such disturbance the act of assaulting another with a dangerous weapon. There is also a distinct intimation that the court did not wish to be understood as holding that a crime could not be committed against two jurisdictions by the same act.
*108Again, it is to be noticed that the local option law is not broad enough to cover the offense for which defendant in this case was tried before the city recorder of Eugene. The offense created by the local option law consists in selling, exchanging, or giving away intoxiinside of a building, is a separate and distinct offense, eating liquors. Each sale, whether upon the street or The ordinance in question goes further, and punishes the carrying on of the unlawful business or devoting any building or premises to that purpose. It is not inconsistent with the State law or subversive to it. It declares the carrying on of the unlawful business a nuisance and punishes it as such.
5. This court will take judicial notice that by the laws of this State the State University is located at Eugene, and while, under all circumstances, ,an unlawful tippling house is undesirable in a community, it is peculiarly so in a college town, where are congregated a large number of young men not under paternal restraint, and separated from • those home influences which make so much for sobriety. A business which might be tolerated in other communities would be an intolerable nuisance in a college town. We conclude, therefore, that the ordinance is authorized by the charter, and, in view of the situation at Eugene, that it is a just and reasonable one.
6. Much of what has been heretofore said applies forcibly to defendant’s next objection, namely, the failure of the court to submit defendant’s plea of former jeopardy to the jury. The offense of making a single sale of liquor-is not identical, and cannot be identical with that of maintaining a nuisance by carrying on the business, and the plea was bad on its face. The intimation in Walsh v. Union, 13 Or. 589 (11 Pac. 312), to the effect that assault with a dangerous weapon might properly be included in an ordinace for making a disturbance on the *109street and punished accordingly is reinforced by the opinion of this court in State v. Stewart, 11 Or. 52, 238 (4 Pac. 128).. Judge Lord, speaking for the court, and quoting from Judge Gray in Morey v. Commonwealth, 108 Mass. 434, says: “The test is not whether the defendant has already been tried for the same act, but whether he has been put in jeopardy for the same offense. A single act may be an offense against two statutes; and, if each statute requires proof of an additional fact, which the other does not, an acquittal or conviction under either statute does not exempt the defendant from prosecution and punishment under the other.” Continuing, Judge Lord says: “The offense charged in the former and in the present case are not only distinct, but the evidence required to support the one would fall far short of establishing the other, and in such a case Mr. Chitty says: Tt is inconsistent with reason, as it is repugnant to the rules of law, to say that the offenses are so far the same that an acquittal of one will be a bar to the prosecution of the other.” So we consider the ruling of the lower court not only in accord with reason and justice, but sustained by the former views of this court, as expressed in the opinion of one of its most able and learned justices.
7. Another objection is that the ordinance was not plead in the manner required by Section 90, B. & C. Comp., which is as follows:
“In pleading an ordinance or enactment of any incorporated city, town or village, or a right derived therefrom, in any action, suit, or proceeding, in any of the courts of this State, including the courts of any such incorporated city, town, or village, it shall be sufficient to refer to such ordinance or enactment by its title and the date of its approval, and the court shall thereupon take judicial notice thereof.”
In Pomeroy v. Lappeus, 9 Or. 363, this court held that in a proceeding begun originally in the circuit court *110it was not sufficient to plead an ordinance by its number, title, and date of enactment, but that the ordinance must be set out in full. The next case was Nodine v. City of Union, 13 Or. 587 (11 Pac. 298), in which the appellant was convicted in the recorder’s court for violation of a city ordinance. The ordinance was described in the complaint by mere reference to its number. The defendant demurred to the complaint as not stating facts sufficient to constitute an offense, and on appeal the demurrer was sustained by the court. It will be seen that that case differs from this, in that in this case the full title of the ordinance is given, the number of the ordinance, and the number of the particular section which the defendant is accused of violating. It .is probable that Section 90, B. & C. Comp., was passed with a view of preventing such failures of justice as arose from the neglect or carelessness of pleaders in the cases above mentioned. Recent decisions of courts of other states, and the better opinion of modern writers, seem to be that, where the complaint sets out the acts declared by the ordinance to be an offense in specific language, no specific reference to the ordinance by title number or recital is necessary, but that the municipal court will take judicial notice of it to the same extent as the other courts of the State take such notice of the general criminal statutes. In Portland v. Yick, 44 Or. 439, 444 (75 Pac. 706, 708: 102 Am. St. Rep. 633), the court says: “The municipal courts will take judicial notice of the ordinances of the municipality and of such journals and records of the law-making body as affect their validity, meaning and construction in like manner and for like purposes as the courts of the State take judicial cognizance of the public statutes of the State, and, in the évent of an appeal to the circuit court, although by the rules of law the case is to be tried de novo, the circuit court will take like judicial notice of such ordinances as the municipal *111courts” — citing City of Soloman v. Hughes, 24 Kan. 211; Downing v. City of Miltonvale, 36 Kan. 740 (14 Pac. 281); State v. Leiber, 11 Iowa, 407; Town of La Porte City v. Goodfellow, 47 Iowa, 572; Town of Moundsville v. Velton, 35 W. Va. 217 (13 S. E. 373). The previous decisions of this court upon this subject are not referred to in the decision nor in the briefs of counsel filed in that case, and an examination of the record shows that the question of the proper method of pleading an ordinance was in no way involved. The question then before the court was whether the court would take judicial notice of the journals and records of a city council in determining whether an ordinance had been regularly passed and this court held that course to be correct. There is nothing in the opinion indicating any intent on the part of the court to overrule its previous holdings in regard to the statutory provisions respecting pleading a municipal ordinance, and they must be assumed still to be the law in this State. But in every case previously decided the sufficiency of the pleading had been challenged by motion or demurrer. In this case no objection was made to the sufficiency of the pleading. The complaint here gives the title of the ordinance in full, and it is sufficiently comprehensive to set forth the general scope of the ordinance. It also gives the number of the ordinance and the number of the particular section which defendant was charged with violating, and sets forth in detail the particular acts committed by defendant which it claimed constituted such violation. The complaint may not be as definite as the statute requires, but mere indefiniteness cannot be a ground for objection after verdict. We think that it is too late to question a complaint as full as this one is after the verdict, and that this objection should be overruled.
8. It is also urged that the court erred in pronouncing sentence within six hours after verdict was rendered. *112We do not think Section 1431, B. & C. Comp., requires two days to elapse between the time of receiving the verdict and pronouncing sentence. Section 2273, which provides the method of procedure in justices’ courts, reads as follows:
“When the defendant pleads guilty, or is convicted, either by the justice or jury, the justice must give judgment thereon for such punishment as may be prescribed by law for the crime.”
The charter of Eugene provides that the proceedings in the recorder’s court shall be governed by the laws controlling criminal actions in the justice’s court. Eugene Charter, c. 4, § 18; Sp. Laws 1905, p. 246. Neither justices’ courts nor recorders’ courts have regular sessions, but proceed according to the exigencies of the.business before them, and it • certainly was never the intention of the legislature that they should be kept in session for 48 hours after the trial of each case for the sole purpose of pronouncing judgment upon offenders.
The judgment of the lower court is affirmed
Affirmed.