239 P. 381 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1925
Prohibition. Petitioner seeks to prohibit the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the City and County of San Francisco, Department 12 thereof, and the Honorable J.J. Trabucco, judge presiding, from further hearing or determining a proceeding in habeas corpus now pending before said Superior Court, involving the custody of Shirley Cooke, a minor child of the age of five and one-half years.
The facts are as follows: James H. Cooke and Hilda Betty Cooke are husband and wife and are the parents of said Shirley Cooke, all of whom are subjects of Great Britain, and, until recently, resided in the province of Ontario, Canada.
It is in substance alleged by the father of said child, in his petition for the writ of habeas corpus, that under Canadian law he has been declared the custodian of said child, and that during the month of January, 1925, the mother kidnaped said child, in said province of Ontario, Canada, and unlawfully brought her to the United States.
In the return to said writ of habeas corpus, filed by the mother of said child, it is, in effect, alleged that on June 7, 1925, at the instance of the father, in the city of Reno, state of Nevada, she and the child were arrested pursuant to a federal warrant issued by the immigration service of the department of labor of the United States government; that after certain proceedings were had in the state of Nevada (the purpose and effect of which are unimportant here), and in order to expedite the matter of the hearing of said immigration proceedings, she surrendered herself and child into the custody of the immigration officials of San Francisco, where said immigration proceedings were made returnable *746
and were required to be heard and determined. Later she and the child were releasd on bail, and while at liberty on bail awaiting the hearing and determination of said immigration proceedings, this writ of habeas corpus was applied for and issued, upon the petition of the father, who seeks thereby to regain the custody of said child. All of these facts and circumstances are in detail set forth in said return, and upon these facts thus alleged, and the evidence adduced in support thereof, the mother of the child claims that she and the child were immune from the service upon them of process issued out of the state courts (Fox v. Hale Norcross,
[1] The sole question presented by this proceeding in prohibition, however, is one purely of jurisdiction, that is, whether or not, on account of said claim of immunity having been made in said habeas corpus proceeding, and (we will assume) having been established by evidence, said Superior Court is now proceeding without or in excess of jurisdiction. Our conclusion is that the question must be answered in the negative. It has been uniformly held in apparently all of the jurisdictions wherein this question has arisen, that if such immunity be seasonably and properly asserted it serves as sufficient grounds for abatement of the proceeding, or upon which the service of the process may be set aside (Thornton v. American Writing MachineCo.,
There can be no doubt but that the Superior Court, upon the filing of the father's petition in habeas corpus, the legal sufficiency of which petition is not questioned, was clothed with full and complete power to hear and determine the proceeding initiated by it — indeed it was its duty to do so; and it is manifest from the rule established by the numerous authorities hereinabove cited that the mere assertion of a claim of immunity did not ipso facto stay the proceeding or divest said court of jurisdiction, but, being in its nature a plea in abatement, said claim of immunity simply raised before said Superior Court an issue of fact as to the matters therein pleaded, and which, if established, would doubtless operate to abate the proceeding. But jurisdiction to hear and determine that issue was necessarily retained by the tribunal to which the plea was addressed and before which the issue was pending. It follows that prohibition does not lie to prevent that tribunal from exercising, in that respect, its lawful jurisdiction. Moreover, the petition in the instant proceeding does not allege that the court before which said issue is pending has even indicated that it is going to decide said issue adversely to the mother's claim, the allegation of the petition in this respect being: "That said Superior Court intends to proceed further with said habeas corpus
proceeding; that unless this Honorable Court arrests said proceeding of said Superior Court the petitioner and her said child and said Anna Bowman (the grandmother of said child) will be irreparably injured." (Italics ours.) However, it appears that petitioner having urged upon said Superior Court a plea, founded upon allegations of fact, which, if true, would, it is claimed, operate to abate the proceeding filed against her, now seeks by this proceeding to prohibit said court from giving its decision upon the very issue of fact thus presented for decision. The inconsistency of petitioner's position seems self-evident. Even though it were alleged that said Superior Court had declared its intention of deciding adversely upon that issue and that such decision, if so rendered, would be in contravention of the law, it would not furnish grounds for interference on prohibition *748
for the reason that said Superior Court would still be acting entirely within its jurisdiction in determining an issue legally within its power to determine, and which had been properly brought before it. [2] Prohibition is not available to restrain a subordinate court from deciding erroneously (Van Hoosear v.Railroad Com.,
The writ is denied.
Tyler, P.J., and Cashin, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the district court of appeal on August 26, 1925, and a petition by petitioner to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on September 24, 1925.