Petitioner was charged with obtaining a sum less than fifty dollars by false pretenses. The complaint upon which a warrant was issued from one of the police courts of the city of Oakland charges the commission of the alleged
*587
crime as of a time more than one year before the verification and filing of the said pleading, and the complaining witness swore to the circumstances of the offense “upon his information and belief.” Petitioner contends: 1. That the prosecution is barred by the provisions of section 801 of the Penal Code; and 2. That a complaint on information and belief fails to give the police court jurisdiction of the offense. In support of the first proposition, we are asked to re-examine section 80.1 of the Penal Code in the light of its history, to determine whether or not the legislature intended that section to apply as well to ordinary misdemeanors, cognizable in justices’ and police courts, as to those prosecuted by indictment or information. It is unnecessary to consider petitioner’s argument in detail for several reasons: 1. Because the operation of a statute of limitations is not ground for the release of a prisoner on
habeas corpus;
and 2. Since the filing of the petition herein, the legislative interpretation of the matter has been indicated by the adoption of section 1426a of the Penal Code (approved April 17, 1909, [Stats. 1909, p. 979]), which provides that “a complaint for any misdemeanor triable in a justice’s or police court must be filed within one year after its commission”; and because it has long been the settled law of this state that the provisions of section 801 of the Penal Code do not apply to misdemeanors of the kind embraced within the charge against this petitioner.
(People
v.
Ayhens,
That the statute of limitations is mere matter of defense and is not ground for discharge of a prisoner on
habeas corpus,
has been held in
Ex parte Townsend,
The other branch of this petition presents a more serious question. At first glance it might seem that this matter had been determined by the decision of this court in
Ex parte
*588
Dimmig,
It will be seen, therefore, that there is a wide distinction between the methods of prosecuting charges of felony and those amounting only to ordinary misdemeanors. On the one hand, the magistrate may have opportunity of examining as many witnesses as he desires before issuing the warrant; while in the other case he is limited to the complaint itself as a basis for his action in signing a warrant of arrest. If the rule which petitioner is seeking to have established were adopted, it would be impossible in many cases to prosecute criminals at all. If, for example, each of several people knew a fact or facts, not sufficient alone to justify a conviction, 3ret in combination pointing directly to the defendant’s guilt of a misdemeanor, there could be no prosecution because no one could swear positively to the complaint. We do not think the legislature intended to make such an absurdity possible. There is good reason, too, why the rule with reference to positive pleading should apply more strictly to felonies than to misdemeanors. All misdemeanors are bailable. Some felonies are not. There is little danger of a protracted imprisonment of one charged with misdemeanor. The conviction of a felony carries with it deprivation of citizenship and great lasting disgrace. It is, therefore, proper that one accused of such a crime should be imprisoned only upon positive evidence at least tending to connect him with the crime. No such great odium attaches to a conviction of a misdemeanor. Perhaps these considerations governed the legislature somewhat when the rules of pleading in criminal actions were adopted. But whatever may have been the reasons, the legislature has seen fit to provide these different methods of inaugurating prosecutions for felonies
*590
and simple misdemeanors respectively. We cannot bring ourselves to believe that the purpose was to prevent the prosecution of any person charged with a crime triable in a justice’s or police court, if no one could swear positively that the offense had been committed. This subject has been carefully considered by the supreme court of Wisconsin in
State
v.
Davie,
We are aware of the wide difference of ruling in the courts that have passed upon this subject, but this may be partly explained, at least, by the difference in the statutes construed. In
People
v.
Heffron,
It is ordered that the petitioner be remanded.
Henshaw, J., Sloss, J., Angellotti, J., and Shaw, J., concurred.
