208 P. 690 | Cal. | 1922
The petitioner herein asks that an order be made prohibiting the court below from proceeding to the hearing of an application presented to said court by Emma R. Bradley, praying that the applicant be directed to pay $85 per month to said. Emma R. Bradley in pursuance of a decree theretofore rendered against him by said court.
The petitioner presented his petition, in the first place, to the district court of appeal of the first district, division two, and this petition was denied. He now presents to this court a petition for rehearing of said cause.
The case of Bradley v. Bradley was a divorce proceeding and the judgment contained a clause commanding the defendant *458 Richard Bradley to pay $85 monthly to the plaintiff as alimony. The petitioner claims that the defendant herein is without jurisdiction to hear the said case for contempt, because of the fact that the divorce case aforesaid was heard and determined by the Honorable George H. Cabaniss, judge of the said court, and not by the said Honorable John J. Van Nostrand. He contends that, because no order has been made, either regularly or irregularly, by the Honorable Franklin A. Griffin, who is the presiding judge of said court, that an order transferring the case from department 3, presided over by Judge Cabaniss, in which the judgment was rendered, to department 4, presided over by the defendant, that was given and made by the Honorable Walter P. Johnson, judge of the said court, is therefore void.
[1] The said order is not an excess of jurisdiction. This is expressly decided by the case of Brown v. Campbell,
[2] This does not declare that the order would be void if made by other than the presiding judge. While it may be conceded that it would be irregular, it must be held that it is nothing more. There may have been good cause for the *459 interference, but whether so or not, his action in directing that the cause be heard before department 4 would not have the effect of depriving the court of jurisdiction. It is decided inBrown v. Campbell, supra, that there is but one superior court in the city and county of San Francisco and all actions brought in that court are within the same jurisdiction. Whether it gets into a department of the court regularly or irregularly, after the court has acquired jurisdiction, is not a matter which we can determine in this proceeding, which only goes to the jurisdiction of the court.
The petition for a rehearing is denied.
Waste, J., Myers, J., pro tem., Lennon, J., and Richards, J.,pro tem., concurred.