253 P. 948 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1927
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *289 Petitioner was sentenced to confinement in the state prison at San Quentin upon plea of guilty to the crime of robbery committed October 11, 1926. Petitioner is a minor of the age of fifteen years and under sixteen years. At the time he appeared before the superior court he made known to the court his age, but the court nevertheless proceeded with the case as though he were an adult, without determining the defendant's age and without the *290 defendant's offense having been previously submitted to the juvenile court.
[1] Apparently the petitioner passed through the justice's court without the provisions of section 6 of the Juvenile Court Law being invoked. This section would require the magistrate to suspend the proceedings and certify the minor, being under eighteen years, to the juvenile court. There is no similar section of the act prescribing what the procedure shall be in case the question of age is first raised in the superior court instead of the justice's court, but in such case it would seem to us proper that the superior court follow substantially the same procedure as provided for justices' courts in section 6. [2] It is provided in section 4d of this act as follows: "No person under the age of eighteen years . . . shall be prosecuted for crime until the matter has been first submitted to the juvenile court by petition as hereinbefore provided, or by certificate of the lower court as hereinafter provided." This section is not limited to a prosecution for crime in any particular court, and therefore includes the superior court as well as other courts.
[3] The conviction in this case is therefore in violation of the provisions of section 4d. The defendant did not appeal, however, from the judgment and sentence. The matter is brought to our attention only on a writ of habeas corpus. Upon this hearing the court considers whether the petitioner is illegally detained, and it appearing that he is held under a judgment of the superior court, the question is substantially whether the court exceeded its jurisdiction in giving that judgment. [4]
The superior court being a court of general jurisdiction, the presumption is that the proceedings had before that court were regular and that the court acted within its jurisdiction. This presumption, however, is available only where the record is silent upon the question. (In re Eichhoff,
[5] There is some confusion in discussing jurisdiction on account of the fact that there are cases in which the jurisdiction of the court depends upon the existence of certain facts. In that case the court has jurisdiction to determine those facts, even though the determination of those facts in *291
a certain manner ousts it of further jurisdiction to proceed in the case. Where the court has determined those facts in favor of the existence of jurisdiction, its determination, even though erroneous, is binding against a collateral attack. (Ex parteSpencer,
[6] Respondent claims that the violation of section 4d was not jurisdictional and relies upon people v. Oxnam,
The reasoning of that decision suggests to us an analogy between the right of a minor under eighteen years to have his case submitted to the juvenile court first under section 4d, and the right of an adult defendant to have certain actions tried in the court of the county of his residence under Code of Civil Procedure, section
Another case relied on by respondent is In re Northon,
[7] We conclude that while it is true that the superior court has full jurisdiction to try any minor, it having full jurisdiction of the subject matter, that, nevertheless, a defendant under eighteen years has a statutory right that he shall not be prosecuted for crime until the matter has first been submitted to the juvenile court. So far as this relates to the jurisdiction of the court, it relates to jurisdiction of the person and not of the subject matter, and may be therefore waived. But where the defendant asserts his right by suggestion to the court, the court's first duty is then to hear and determine in what court the defendant is entitled to be tried.
The judgment under which petitioner is held having been given in violation of defendant's asserted rights under section *294 4d of the Juvenile Court Act, it is ordered that said defendant be discharged from the custody of the warden at San Quentin prison and that said minor be delivered into the custody of the sheriff of the county of Sacramento, and that he be there dealt with as provided by law.
Nourse, J., and Sturtevant, J., concurred.