63 Cal. 581 | Cal. | 1883
1. It is urged that the Act of April 1,1878, creating the municipal court of appeals in San Francisco, was violative of the former Constitution. (Stats. 1877-78, p. 947.) Since the organization of the present Supreme Court it has been repeatedly held that we would follow, as authoritative, the construction placed upon any provision of the Constitution of 1849, by the highest judicial tribunal created by and under that Constitution. By parity of reasoning we are bound by the views of the former Supreme Court, with reference to the mode in which the invalidity of a legislative act, or its repugnancy to a clause of the then existing Constitution could be presented or insisted upon.
In Fraser v. Freelon, 53 Cal. 644, it was held that the invalidity of the statute in question could not be determined upon the return to a writ of certiorari. It was there said the “ people ” wore interested in the question whether the statute ¡ire-scribing the jurisdiction of the court was constitutional; that the question could only be decided in an appropriate form of action brought in the name of the people, or to which- the people were made a party. It is manifest that every consideration which induced the former Supreme Court to refuse to inquire into the question of the constitutionality of the statute in a proceeding by writ of review, applies with redoubled force to the present, which is a proceeding by mandamus, by one of the parties to an action originally brought before the justices’ court, to compel the Superior Court—as successor of the county court—to try the action, notwithstanding the same ivas transferred to the municipal court of appeals, and tried de nova in that court prior to the adoption of the present Constitution.
2. It is urged that the municipal court never acquired juris
Fraser v. Freelon, above referred to, has sometimes been supposed to hold that.the order of the county court transmitting a cause pending when the municipal court was created was necessary to give the latter court jurisdiction. But such supposition is based upon an erroneous interpretation of the language of the opinion in Fraser v. Freelon. It is there said: “Section 12” (of the act to create the municipal court) “provides that the court may hear and determine civil appeal cases which are directed to be transferred to it from the county court. It does not appear from the transcript returned Avith the Avrit that the action in controversy was either transferred to it from the county court, or brought up on appeal to that court..... The transcript fails to show that the defendants in that action either were served with process, or that a notice of appeal Avas served by or upon them; and, therefore, the transcript does not show that the court acquired jurisdiction of the defendants.”
The plain meaning of the language employed in Fraser v. Freelon is that by section twelve of the act referred to, the municipal court acquired jurisdiction of the causes directed, not by any order of the county court, but by the twelfth section of the statute, to be transferred to the municipal court. The transfer by the common clerk from one department of his office to another is not indicated by any record Avhich would constitute a portion of the return to certiorari. Nevertheless, as the municipal court was an inferior court, the record required to be returned should show it had jurisdiction. Whether an appeal Avas taken first to the county court, and the case was thence transferred to the municipal court, or the appeal was taken
There is no pretense here that the action of which it is claimed the municipal court never acquired jurisdiction was not regularly appealed from the justices’ court to the county court. The county court had jurisdiction, and the papers were before the municipal court when the case was there tried, as appears from the transcript.
Writ denied and proceedings dismissed.
McKee, J., and Thornton, J., dissented.
Petition for a rehearing denied.