6 P.2d 558 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1931
This cause is before us upon motion of petitioner to dismiss the appeal attempted to be taken by the People from an order made and entered in the superior court discharging the petitioner from the custody of the officers of the Mendocino State Hospital.
The record shows that the petitioner, after having been arraigned and tried on a charge of murder, was found not guilty by reason of insanity, the verdict returned on the twenty-eighth day of August, 1930. Thereupon, the petitioner was, by the trial court, committed to the state hospital at Napa for the insane, to be held there as an insane person, pursuant to the provisions of section
It is admitted by both appellant and petitioner that if the proceeding referred to was in fact a proceeding by way of habeascorpus, no appeal lies. The only provision allowing an appeal in criminal cases, from an order granting a writ of habeas corpus,
is found in section
On the part of the appellant it is contended that habeascorpus does not lie under the provisions of sections
[1] Notwithstanding the very respectable authorities and persuasive reasoning to the effect that habeas corpus will not lie, and that the legislature intended by the language of sections
In Lake v. Harris,
While the motion for dismissal does not cover all the grounds considered herein, nevertheless as held in Harpold v. SuperiorCourt,
It necessarily follows from what has been said that the appeal herein should be dismissed. And it is so ordered.
Preston, P.J., and Thompson (R.L.), J., concurred. *451