44 Cal. 555 | Cal. | 1872
The prisoner was arrested upon a charge of attempting to murder one Brown, a policeman. An examination had before the Police Court resulted in his being held to answer the charge, bail being fixed at fifteen thousand dollars. The Grand Jury subsequently found a true bill against Mm for an assault with an attempt to commit murder—a felony punishable by imprisonment in the State Prison for a term of not less than one nor more than fourteen years—and upon this indictment, pending in the municipal Court, he is held to answer.
1. It appears by the petition for the writ that, after the indictment had been transmitted to the latter Court, an application to admit the prisoner to bail was denied by the Court, by reason of a supposed absence of power to hear the application. The order of the Court declining to fix the amount of bail upon the indictment pending before it was placed upon the ground “that the said bail had been fixed by the committing magistrate.” With much respect for the expressed views of the learned Judge of the Municipal Court, I find myself unable to give them my assent in this instance. It cannot be correctly affirmed that the action of the Police Court upon the charge before it necessarily oper
2. I have looked into the evidence given before the Police Court. I was informed at the argument that none had then been offered upon the part of the prisoner, and certainly none was offered before me. Allusions were made by the prisoner’s counsel to the supposed bad character of some of the Avitnesses upon whose testimony the prisoner is held, but in a proceéding of this nature I cannot enter into a consideration of such matters. I see in the evidence, as reported, nothing inherently improbable in itself. Had the case been brought before me anterior to the action of the Grand Jury
The prisoner must be remanded, and it is so ordered.