93 P. 1036 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1907
Petitioner is in the custody of the warden of the state prison at San Quentin.
From the return to the writ it appears that he was delivered into the custody of the warden of said state prison in execution of two judgments rendered by the superior court of the county of Alameda, May 31, 1900, the term of imprisonment prescribed in each judgment being fourteen years, and the term in the second one to commence upon the expiration of the term of the first, it being recited that defendant had been convicted upon both charges before judgment was rendered upon either. The only possible criticism of the form of the judgments is that it is recited in each that defendant was convicted of a "felony," the particular *137
felony not being designated. That this form of judgment is sufficient to withstand an attack upon habeas corpus does not admit of discussion. (Ex parte Gibson,
It results that the prisoner must be remanded unless he is now entitled to be discharged by virtue of certain proceedings had in and before the superior court of Marin county.
It appears that the petitioner made application, by petition addressed to and filed in said superior court, for a writ ofhabeas corpus. The court ordered the writ to issue, and in obedience to such writ the warden produced the prisoner before the court on the fourth day of October, 1907, with his return to the writ, setting up that he held him by virtue of the two judgments hereinbefore referred to. The hearing was continued by said court to October 15, 1907, and the presence of the prisoner waived. On the fifteenth day of October, 1907, the court heard the matter, and the judge of the court, in open court, announced that the petitioner was illegally detained by said warden, and ordered that he be discharged from the custody of said warden. No written order for his discharge was made or signed by the judge, and no entry of such order was made in the minutes of the court or in any manner save that the clerk made a memorandum thereof in pencil in a book, manifestly kept by him as a personal memorandum-book in aid of his memory in subsequently making entries in the minutes of the court. The book bore no title, label or other indicia of official character. The entry concerning the order announced by the judge of the court is in pencil, several words are represented by abbreviations, and the whole is manifestly a personal memorandum of the clerk to be used to aid his memory when he should enter the order in the minutes of the court.
Subsequently, on October 17, 1907, the court, in the absence of the prisoner, made and signed in open court a written order, reciting that the previous order had never been entered in the minutes of the court, and vacating and setting aside the same, and in effect reserving the matter of the prisoner's application for further action.
Petitioner now insists that the order made on October 15th was a final adjudication by a court of competent jurisdiction *138 that petitioner should be discharged, and that said court thereby lost jurisdiction to subsequently enter any different order.
We cannot agree with this contention. Until the judgment had been entered in the minutes of the court, or had been in some authentic manner reduced to writing, as by the judge signing a written order, it must be held that the judgment lay in the breast of the judge, and that the court had plenary power thereover.
We have been cited to no case precisely in point, but in jurisdictions where terms of court exist it has always been held that the court had such power during the term.
"A court has plenary control of its judgments, orders and decrees during the term at which they are rendered, and may amend, correct, modify or supplement them for cause shown, or may, to promote justice, revise, supersede, revoke or vacate them as may in its discretion seem necessary." (12 Cyc. 860. See, also, De Castro v. Richardson,
"This power is inherent in all courts of general jurisdiction, and is not dependent upon, nor derived from the statute." (23 Cyc. 902; 1 Black on Judgments, sec. 305.)
The right to revise the judgment during the term is based upon the fiction that the judgment was not entered or the roll made up until the close of the term. The actual want of the entry of the judgment, surely, is a stronger basis for the existence of the right to change the judgment, than the fiction that it has not been entered or the roll made up.
"A judgment must be reduced to writing, and cannot exist in the memory of the officers of the court." (11 Ency. of Pl.
Pr. 925; Davidson v. Murphy,
A judgment can only be proved by the record of its entry, or by parol after proof of the destruction or loss of the record. (Young v. People,
It has been held that the oral announcement of the court's decision is not sufficient basis for the entry of a judgmentnunc pro tunc. (Boyd v. Schott,
We have been cited to no case that holds that an order or judgment in no way reduced to writing, or entered in the minutes of the clerk, may not be revised by the court making the order of judgment — on the contrary, it has been held that at any time before "final judgment signed" it was proper for the court to amend its judgment. (People v. Thompson,
In Niles v. Edwards,
In the case at bar the order relied on by petitioner for his discharge, never having been entered in the minutes of the court, was subject to be vacated and revised by the court, and having been thus vacated affords no warrant for his release from the imprisonment under which he is held by virtue of the judgments of the superior court of Alameda county.
Petitioner is therefore remanded.
Cooper, P. J., and Kerrigan, J., concurred. *140