pro tern. * —Application on behalf of James J. Brumbaek for issuance of writ of habeas corpus for admission to bail upon appeal from conviction of two felonies.
Brumbaek and others were charged with conspiracy to receive stolen property (Pen. Code, §§ 182, 496) and with buying and receiving stolen property (Pen. Code, § 496). Two trials resulted in jury disagreements, but in the third Brumbaek was convicted on both counts; he was sentenced to state prison for the terms prescribed by law, same to run concurrently. He appealed and promptly obtained from the trial judge a certificate of probable cause and a stay of execution pending appeal, it being ordered that he be confined in the county jail during that period (Pen. Code, §§1243, 1244). Application for bail on appeal was made; it was denied on the day following the issuance of the stay. In making that ruling, the trial judge voiced opinions indicating that he would grant the bail application if authorized to do so but “stated that under prior decisions ... he had no discretion to allow bail on appeal and had to deny bail pending appeal where no extraordinary circumstances had arisen since the verdicts finding appellant guilty and the pronouncement of judgment and that the only time he had power and discretion to allow bail on appeal was when circumstances of an extraordinary character had intervened between the verdict of the *813 jury and the pronouncement of sentence and judgment.” 1
Appellant’s counsel, as petitioner herein, asserts that this was a refusal to exercise a discretion reposed in the trial judge (Pen. Code, §1272, subd. 3).
2
The argument is sound. The judge merely made an erroneous determination that he had no discretion in the premises. That was the equivalent of the familiar refusal to exercise jurisdiction because of a mistaken view that same does not exist; in such case the error does not divest jurisdiction and its exercise can be compelled by an appropriate proceeding such as mandamus (13 Cal.Jur.2d § 56, p. 551; 1 Witkin California Procedure, § 163, p. 430.) A refusal to exercise an existing judicial discretion falls in the same category
(Crocker
v.
Conrey,
The trial judge erroneously applied to his court, by way of restriction upon its power, a rule that has been promulgated principally as an aid to the exercise of the discretion of an appellate tribunal. It is settled that the primary discretion belongs to the trial judge and that it is a sound legal discretion to be exercised in the light of all attending circumstances. (See
Ex parte Hoge,
In the following cases the rule was announced and applied in reviewing the quality of the discretion actually exercised by the lower court:
Ex parte Turner, supra,
There appears to be no case in which it has been held *815 that this test limits the discretion of the trial judge. Were that rule applied as the trial judge did in this instance it would virtually nullify section 1272, subdivision 3, for it would preclude a successful early application for bail and necessitate defendant’s serving part of his term in the penitentiary or sojourning in jail until some new and untoward and unexpected circumstance, like illness or discovery of new and convincing evidence, should eventuate. Absence of intervening extraordinary circumstances cannot prevent the trial judge from acting or excuse his failure to act, although their presence properly may influence his discretion. It follows that the judge in the present instance mistakenly declined to exercise his discretion.
It is true that the primary discretion in the matter of bail on appeal resides in the trial court but it is not correct to say that “ [i]t always has been the law in this state that the discretion referred to in section 1272 of the Penal Code ... is not a discretion conferred upon the appellate courts,” as stated in
People
v.
Davis,
The petition discloses that application “for a similar writ” was made to the District Court of Appeal, First Appellate District (the court in which defendant’s appeal is pending), “on the same grounds as herein alleged”; that same was denied on May 28, 1956, through a minute order reading: “Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus denied with leave to petitioner or appellant to again apply for bail before the Superior Court. Bail to be granted or denied in the Superior Court’s discretion.” Petitioner did not follow the course suggested by the District Court of Appeal. His explanation of failure to make a new application to the superior court is “that application had already been made to the Judge thereof who refused to exercise his discretion in the matter upon the ground, as alleged in the petition, that he was without power to grant bail on appeal in the absence of extraordinary circumstances having arisen since the verdicts of guilty that would justify such action. That to apply to the Superior Court for bail would have been a futile and useless act. That pursuant to the rules of said Superior Court a new application for bail would have had to be made before the same Judge who heard the original application.” This explanation is not sufficient. The district court plainly ruled that the trial judge does have discretion in the matter and the language of the order, read in the light of the expressed basis for the trial judge’s ruling, means that the criterion of intervening extraordinary circumstances does not bind him. If the district court had considered that test to be controlling in the trial court it would have denied the petition and would not have given leave to apply again, nor would it have stated that the superior court was to grant or deny the application in its discretion. Petitioner’s belief that the trial judge would not get the point or would not conform to the order is not sufficient reason for his foregoing the suggested remedy and applying directly to this court.
Since 1874, when
People
v.
Perdue, supra,
“The motion made here must, therefore, be denied, with leave to the prisoner to renew the application to the Judge of the Court below.” Accord:
People
v.
January, supra,
The order to show cause is discharged and the petition for habeas corpus is denied without prejudice to renewed application to the superior court for bail on appeal.
Gibson, C. J., Shenk, J., Carter, J., Schauer, J., Spence, J., and McComb, J., concurred.
Notes
Assigned by Chairman of Judicial Council.
The foregoing quotation from the petition fairly summarizes the ruling of the trial judge as shown by the return.
Pen. Code, § 1272. “After conviction of an offense not punishable with death, a defendant who has appealed may be admitted to bail:
“1. As a matter of right, when the appeal is from a judgment imposing a fine only.
“2. As a matter of right, when the appeal is from a judgment imposing imprisonment in eases of misdemeanor.
“3. As a matter of discretion in all other cases.”
This section has not been superseded by rule 32(b) of the Buies on Appeal. The code section and the rule provide parallel and consistent remedies.
