94 P. 855 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1908
The petitioner alleges that he is restrained of his liberty by the chief of police of the city of Oakland under and by virtue of a judgment duly given and made by the police court of said city, which judgment was entered upon a plea of "Guilty" to the charge set forth in a complaint in writing, which complaint is annexed to the petition herein. Said complaint states that the prisoner, in the city of Oakland, on the fourteenth day of August, 1907, did maliciously, with intent to injure the integrity and good name of one W. Parker Lyon, publish "certain lewd, obscene, indecent and defamatory pictures" of said Lyon, "then and there, well knowing the same to be lewd, indecent and false, contrary to the statute," etc.
It is claimed that the facts stated in the complaint are not sufficient to constitute a public offense, and hence that the petitioner should be discharged on habeas corpus.
If the complaint is defective in not showing in what way the pictures were lewd or obscene or indecent the prisoner could have raised the question by demurrer to the complaint in the police court. It will be presumed that the court would have ruled correctly upon the point, and if it did not do so the prisoner could have appealed to the superior court of the county in the regular manner provided by law, and there have had the matter determined. Not having done so, having pleaded guilty to the offense charged in the complaint, we will not now on habeas corpus examine as to whether or not the facts were as fully set out in the complaint as they should have been if tested by demurrer, or by appeal in the ordinary way. The complaint purported to and attempted to state an offense of which the police court had jurisdiction. That is sufficient when tested by the writ of habeas corpus after judgment. (Exparte Ruef,
Counsel for petitioner claims that the rule as above stated does not apply to an inferior court such as a justice of the peace or a police court. We see no reason for such distinction. In an inferior court the record or evidence of its proceedings must affirmatively show jurisdiction of the person of the defendant and of the subject matter; but when it is shown that the court had jurisdiction of the person of the defendant and of the subject matter, the rule as to the attempt to state the *533 facts in the complaint is the same as in the superior court. If any distinction should be made it would seem that the pleadings in an inferior court, or in a court of limited jurisdiction, should be less strictly construed, because they are often drawn by justices of the peace or persons not learned in the law or regularly admitted to practice. Here it is not claimed that the police court had no jurisdiction of the person of the defendant, or of the crime of libel, which was attempted to be charged in the complaint.
We are cited by counsel for the petitioner to Ex parteKearney,
In Ex parte Boynton,
We might deny the writ asked for here for the reason that a prior petition for a writ was granted by this court, and heard in December, 1907, and the prisoner remanded. No permission has been obtained to renew the application. After a petition for a writ of habeas corpus has been granted, the matter argued, and the prisoner remanded, to allow here a new petition for another writ by the same defendant for the same offense, but by different counsel, and upon a different ground from that stated in the original petition, is a practice that certainly should not be encouraged. If a case could arise in which it might be deemed advisable to apply for a second writ after a similar application had been denied, the *534 orderly and proper way would be to apply to the court for leave to file a new petition.
The writ is denied.
Hall, J., and Kerrigan, J., concurred.