Petitioner was charged and acquitted of the violation of section 311, subdivision 3, Penal Code (selling and distributing obscene and indecent writings, papers and books). At the time of his arrest, the arresting officers seized certain publications in petitioner’s possession which they delivered into the custody of the municipal court, and which were used as exhibits at defendant’s trial. After his acquittal petitioner filed in the superior court a petition for writs of prohibition and mandate against the municipal court, alleging that the latter has threatened to make an order that said publications be destroyed. The petition alleges that the municipal court claims jurisdiction to proceed to destroy said publications under the authority of sections 312 and 313, Penal Code. 1 The petition then alleges that these sections *326 are unconstitutional as depriving petitioner of his property without due process of law; that petitioner made such objection in the municipal court; and that the municipal court has no jurisdiction to make the threatened order.
The superior court denied the petition on the ground that petitioner “has a plain, speedy and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law, to wit, an action for claim and delivery.” 2 Petitioner appeals from the judgment of denial.
Adequate Remedy
The basic question here is whether the superior court abused its discretion in denying issuance of either writ.
The issuance of prohibition and mandamus lies within the sound discretion of the court, even where questions of constitutionality are raised. It will be denied if the applicant has a plain, speedy and adequate remedy at law. (See 3 Witkin, Cal. Proc., 2472;
Rescue Army
v.
Municipal Court,
The remedy referred to by the trial court, namely, a claim and delivery action, is open to petitioner. See
Modern Loan Co.
v.
Police Court,
“ ‘The question whethеr there is a “plain, speedy and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law,” within the meaning of the statute, is one of fact, depending upon the circumstances of each particular case, and the determination of it is a matter largely within the sound discretion of the court . . .’ ”
(Glasser
v.
Municipal Court,
27 Cal.App.2d
*328
455, 458 [
Petitioner has not met the burden of showing that his remedy by claim and delivery is not plain, speedy and adequate. It should be pointed out that before the remittitur can go down to the superior court, 30 days must elapse after final determination of this appeal, during which time petitioner is protected by the stay order of the superior court. Obviously that gives ample time for petitioner to bring a claim and delivery action.
Ross
v.
O’Brien,
Petitioner contends that a claim and delivery action could not be brought in the municipal court against the municipal court. This is probably true. However, the action would not be against the municipal court. It would be against the judgе or the clerk of that court. The publications being no longer in custodia legis would be in the hands of the individuals of the court, again, assuming that the publications are not obscene or indecent. Their character in this respect would have to be determined by the court on the trial of the claim and delivery action.
There is nothing in the authorities cited by petitioner contrary to our holding herein.
Boland
v.
Cecil,
Willis v. Warren, 1 Hilt. (N.Y.) 590 (Court of Common Pleas, N.Y., 1859) likewise is of no help to petitioner. There the plaintiff brought an action for claim and delivery against the propеrty clerk of the Board of Police Commissioners for the return of certain alleged gambling apparatus and obscene pictures claimed to have been illegally seized. The court recognized the propriety of the form of action, for it examined the circumstances of the seizure and held that the seizure was legal. It then stated that the property was in custodia legis and would so remain until the trial of the charges against the plaintiff. In so doing it stated that as to the gambling devices “The owner of the property thus held is not without a remedy. He may apply to the court, in which the charge of gambling is pending, for the restoration of the property, or he mаy urge his trial, and thus acquire it, if the complaint be not established. It is clear, however, that he has no remedy by action against a person holding the property as the custodian of the law, while the charge remains undisposed of:—he must await its determina tion.” (P. 594; emphasis added.) As to the lewd pictures the court pointed out (pp. 594-595) : “The public exhibition of them is an offence against society, and punishable (Sharfles v. Carn, 2 S. & R. 91), and the pictures, being regarded as a common nuisance, may and should be destroyed in the administration of the law, when the charge of publication or exhibition is established.” 3
Heiser
v.
Severy
(1945),
“Generally speaking, actions against public officers to recover possession of property are within the class last mentioned above, and, while casеs involving such actions have aided in the development of the principle that suits against individual defendants are not suits against the sovereign even though the defendant, as a defense to the suit, claims to act or to have acted in his official capacity where such acts *332 unconstitutionally violate or invade the pеrsonal or property rights of the plaintiff ...”
Petitioner argues that a right of action against the officers of the municipal court for a return of his property is not an adequate remedy for the reason that he may not recover damages for its detention, or its value, if the property cannot be restored. That remedy is as adequate in that respect as the one sought here, because in this proceeding, if it would lie, damages could not be recovered either.
The judgment denying the petition for writ of mandate and for writ of prohibition is affirmed.
Peters, P. J., and Wood (Fred B.), J., concurred.
Notes
Section. 312 provides: "Every person who is authorized or enjoined to arrest any person for a violation of’’ the above mentioned section 311, subdivision 3, "is equally authorized and enjoined to seize any obscene or indecent writing" etc. Section 313 provides that any magistrate *326 to whom any obscene or indecent writing, etc., is delivered pursuant to section 312 “must, upon the examination of the accused, or, if the examination is delayed or prevented, without awaiting such examination, determine the character of such material or article, and if he finds it to be obscene or indecent, he must deliver one copy to the district attorney . . . and must at once destroy all the other copies.”
The court ordered a stay of any proceedings in the muneipal court pending appeal.
For some reason petitioner calls attention to the fact that subsequent to Ms acquittal, he was again arrested on a similar charge. He was convicted on this second charge. Inasmuch as the publications involved in the second charge were entirely different from those with which we are concerned here, we fail to see that Ms second arrest has any bearing on the matters before us.
There is language in
Modem Loan Co.
v.
Police Court, supra,
