87 P. 211 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1906
Petition for writ of prohibition.
Petitioner and one Frank A. Edinger, are rival applicants for letters of administration of the estate of William Johnston, deceased. The petition of Edinger was first filed and it is therein alleged that the sole heirs at law of said deceased are two daughters and one son, all of whom have signed and filed a written request that he be appointed administrator. The petitioner, however, in her answer to Edinger's petition, and in her application for letters, alleges that she is the surviving wife of decedent, having been married to him about two months prior to his death. Edinger, in his answer to her petition for letters of administration, denies that petitioner was ever married to decedent, or is one of his heirs at law, and further denies that she is a competent or proper person to have charge of his estate. The denials are specific, and are followed by affirmative allegations to the effect that petitioner, since 1893, has been and now is the lawful wife of one J. West Goodwin, and that decedent for more than one year prior to his death was mentally incompetent, and being entirely without understanding or capacity to comprehend or enter into any contract was incapable of entering into the marriage relation with petitioner.
Upon the issues thus made the cause came on for hearing before the respondent court, and petitioner seeks, through the medium of the writ here applied for, to restrain the trial court from hearing, determining, or receiving evidence relating to the competency of decedent to enter into the marriage contract with the petitioner.
It is well settled that the writ of prohibition will not issue to arrest the proceedings of an inferior tribunal, unless such proceedings are without or in excess of the jurisdiction of *92
such tribunal, and there is no plain, speedy and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law. (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 1102, 1103; Maurer v. Mitchell,
One of the pertinent questions involved in the contest between petitioner and Edinger is the relationship of the former to the decedent. If she was decedent's wife at the time of his death, and is otherwise competent, then she is entitled to letters, and if she was not his wife then she is a mere intermeddler. This specific question was before the court for trial and solution, and if the court erred in refusing to strike out that portion of Edinger's answer relating to the mental incompetency of the decedent at the time of the alleged marriage, and is likely to make similar rulings in passing upon the admissibility of evidence relating to such incompetency, we can see no reason for holding that these particular errors of law cannot be as readily and adequately dealt with on appeal as other errors committed during the course of the hearing. The court having jurisdiction to make the rulings, the fact that it may have ruled erroneously does not oust it of jurisdiction. Such errors can be reviewed at the same time and in the same manner as ordinary errors in ordinary cases, and the fact that petitioner elected to base her objections on jurisdictional grounds cannot change the well-settled rule regulating the review and correction of errors of law occurring during the course of a trial. The writ of prohibition will not be issued except in cases of extreme necessity, and it certainly cannot be used for the purpose of regulating the issues in a pending cause and confining them to a particular scope, or to test the correctness of rulings on motions to strike out the whole or any part of a pleading filed in a cause over which the court has complete and unquestioned jurisdiction. To tolerate such a practice would be subversive of the purpose of the writ which is to restrain inferior tribunals and bodies from inflicting wrong under the guise of jurisdiction or authority which has no potential existence. It would invite intolerable delay and annoyance in every case where a jurisdictional question might perchance be incidentally involved, and make this prerogative writ the medium through which appellate courts could exercise supervisory control over inferior tribunals acting within the scope of their legitimate powers. We are not unmindful of cases holding that prohibition will issue even where an appeal lies, if the *94 delay incident to an appeal will result in irreparable injury or great and useless expense for which petitioner cannot be compensated. But in the case at bar none of these conditions are shown. The court has jurisdiction of the persons of the contending applicants for letters, and of the subject matter of the contest, and even grossly erroneous rulings during the progress of the hearing cannot oust it of jurisdiction nor vest this court with arbitrary power to interfere with and direct the course of such proceedings. The contest must proceed even if the objectionable defense be eliminated, for the propriety and relevancy of other questions raised by Edinger's answer stand unchallenged. The delay incident to such contest, and a probable or possible appeal from the order the court may make at its close, cannot be avoided, and there is no apparent reason for holding that this case falls within the exception to the general rule forbidding interference by prohibition unless urgent necessity demands such course.
The writ is denied.
Chipman, P. J., and Buckles, J., concurred.