247 P. 205 | Cal. | 1926
Appeal from an order of the superior court made in proceedings supplemental to execution. The defendant Sichofsky was prosecuted and convicted in the superior court of Los Angeles County on a charge of grand larceny and felony embezzlement. He appealed from the judgment of conviction, which was subsequently affirmed. (
From the authorities upon the subject it may be gathered as a general rule that if money on the person of a prisoner when outside the prison walls is not subject to seizure, it is not subject to attachment or garnishment when it passes involuntarily from his possession to the custody of the officer appointed by law to take it into possession, when such person enters as a prisoner within the walls. Public policy requires the adoption and maintenance of this rule. Were it otherwise it would lead to a grave abuse of criminal process. It would tempt creditors whose debtors keep their funds upon their persons, and thus beyond the reach of civil process, to make unfounded criminal charges against their debtors, and bring about their arrest and the transfer of their funds to the custody of the arresting officers, in order to make them reachable by the process of garnishment. It needs no citation of the cases to show that the general rule, as thus broadly stated, is supported by the preponderance of authority. Appellant's position is that the rule finds expression in the section of the Penal Code (sec. 1587) wherein it is provided that the warden of the prison shall keep a correct account of all money and valuables upon the prisoner when delivered at the prison, and that each convict, when he leaves the prison, shall be supplied with the money taken from him, and which he has not disposed of. Assuming that to be so, it does not follow that the rule must be applied in every case. In Coffee
v. Haynes,
Respondent earnestly contends, and with much reason, that the rule should be confined in its application to cases where money or property of the prisoner has been taken from his person by the arresting officer in connection with his arrest upon a criminal charge, and before his conviction. It is argued that where the reason for the rule ceases the rule itself should cease, and the reason for the rule is not applicable at all to the present case. The arrest of Sichofsky, when the money was found on his person, was not made as the result of any criminal charge filed against him, either by procurement of this plaintiff or of anyone else. It was because he was a fugitive from justice and, in a sense, an escaped convict. His conviction may well be regarded as conclusive evidence that the charge against him was not "trumped up," and that his arrest after conviction did not involve an abuse of process. It seems to us that it does no violence to the application of the rule in question to hold that it may properly be limited to those cases where the money or property is taken from the person of the prisoner in connection with his arrest upon a criminal charge, and may as properly be held inapplicable to cases like this, arising after his conviction upon the charge. A person sentenced to imprisonment in the state prison for life is civilly dead (Pen. Code, sec. 674), but the forfeitures and disabilities imposed by the common law upon persons attainted with felony are unknown to the laws of this state. No consequences follow a conviction of felony except such as are declared by statute. The convicted person is not dead in law. His civil rights in some matters are suspended, but the rights of his creditors are not suspended. (Pen. Code, sec. 673; Estate of Nerac,
The order of the lower court is affirmed.
Seawell, J., Shenk, J., Curtis, J., Richards, J., Lennon, J., and Finlayson, J., pro tem., concurred.