99 P. 398 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1908
Petitioner asks for a writ of prohibition, directed to the superior court of Santa Clara county, and to Hon. J. R. Welch, one of the judges thereof, to stay the proceedings and the trial of the petitioner upon an indictment charging him with the crime of embezzlement, committed in the manner and at the time and place stated in the said indictment.
The writ of prohibition will be issued only in cases where the court is exceeding or is about to exceed its jurisdiction, and there is no plain, speedy and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law. (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 1102, 1103;Cross v. Superior Court,
We are asked in this proceeding to investigate and pass upon the question as to whether or not the body of men who found the indictment constituted a valid, constitutional grand jury. It is sufficient to say that such body of men had been drawn by the clerk from the grand-jury box from the list selected and ordered by the court, and that after they were drawn they were summoned, impaneled, sworn and charged with the duties of a grand jury by and under the direction of the court vested with the power to impanel such grand jury. That court was and is a court of record of superior jurisdiction. It is its peculiar function to pass upon all questions that may be legally brought before it as to the regularity or validity of the grand jury that found the indictment in this case. It has the power in a proper case to hear and determine the question as to whether or not the grand jury is a legally constituted body. It has heard the question in this case by a motion to dismiss the indictment; and having jurisdiction to hear such question it had jurisdiction to determine it either way; and it cannot be said that, because the court determined that it was a valid grand jury, it is now proceeding in excess of its jurisdiction. If the court in such determination committed error, that is a matter that can be corrected on appeal, but the jurisdiction of the court continues. It continues for the purpose of deciding all questions, whether it decides them right or wrong. The questions sought to be raised and determined here relate to the method of procedure in impaneling *335 the grand jury. We are asked to consider the sections of the code, and the methods adopted by the court, and determine whether or not the court committed error in the method of impaneling the said grand jury. We are also asked in this proceeding to collaterally determine the question as to whether or not the sheriff, who was recognized as such by the superior court of the county of Santa Clara, and to whom the list of jurors was directed, was the legal sheriff of said county.
It appears plain from the above statement that, if the grand jury was not regularly impaneled and selected, still it would not be an invalid body so as to make an indictment found by it void. Of course, if a body of men, without the sanction of law — such as the members of a baseball team, the directors of a corporation, or any other body of men without the pretense of legal authority, should assume to act as grand jurors, and return an indictment, and the superior court should proceed to the trial of defendant under such indictment, then the question would be quite different. The indictment in such case would be held to be waste paper, and not to vest the court with jurisdiction.
In Levy v. Wilson,
In In re Gannon,
This case was followed and approved in People v. Leonard,
The subject is very fully and ably discussed inPeople v. Petrea,
In Eastham v. Holt,
Petitioner relies upon Bruner v. Superior Court,
Counsel also relies upon Terrill v. Superior Court (Cal.), 60 P. 38. In that case a demurrer had been sustained to an indictment found by a grand jury; and the court made an order resubmitting the matter to the same grand jury which had found the indictment to which the demurrer had been sustained. The case was based upon section
We therefore conclude that the court is not exceeding its jurisdiction, and the writ is denied.
Kerrigan, J., and Hall, J., concurred.