235 P. 458 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1925
This is an application for a writ of habeas corpus. The petitioner is confined in the California state prison at San Quentin under an indeterminate sentence for the crime of murder in the second degree, after having been tried and convicted by a jury in the superior court of San Mateo County. An appeal was taken from the judgment of conviction and the order denying a motion for a new trial, in which all errors alleged to have been committed prior thereto were reviewed, and on February 2, 1920, said judgment and order were duly affirmed. (People v.Northcott,
[1] The petitioner now alleges in this application that the trial court, in receiving the verdict, failed to follow the procedure prescribed by section
[4] Secondly, the petition alleges that said judgment of conviction is void because the magistrate before whom the preliminary examination was conducted held the petitioner for trial without reasonable or probable cause. The point is without merit. It appears that petitioner is now being held as a prisoner in the state prison pursuant to a commitment issued by the superior court, based upon the judgment of conviction obtained therein. [5] Said judgment is not related to, nor is it dependent upon, the order of the committing magistrate holding the defendant to answer for trial, its foundation being in the evidence adduced at the trial and the verdict of the jury, and not in the proceedings occurring before the committing magistrate.
[6] Lastly, it is alleged that the indeterminate sentence law (sec. 1168, Pen. Code), under which petitioner was sentenced, is repugnant to the "equal protection of the law" clauses of the federal and state constitutions (Const. U.S., Amend. 14, sec. 1; Const. Cal., art. I, sec. 13), because it deprives petitioner of "the benefits and privileges which are conferred by section 1588 of the Penal Code. . ." That code section granted to prisoners confined in the state prison a statutory right to credits for good behavior. The supreme court in the case of In re Lee,
The application for the writ is denied.
Tyler, P.J., and St. Sure, J., concurred.