12 P.2d 1 | Cal. | 1932
Petition for writ of prohibition directed to the Superior Court of the County of Los Angeles to restrain that court from issuing, or causing to be issued, a commitment based upon the conviction of the petitioner herein of a violation of the Corporate Securities Act. Upon conviction of the petitioner, he appealed from the judgment to the District Court of Appeal. That court affirmed the judgment in an opinion in which the facts in the case are set forth in detail. (People v. Leach,
The principle contended for in this proceeding is not a novel one in so far as this court is concerned. In the early case ofBennett v. Wallace,
The case of Faut v. Mason,
In the more recent case of Valentine v. Police Court,
We quote also from the case of Jones v. Police Court ofAlhambra,
[1] It is true that the case of Jones v. Police Court ofAlhambra, supra, and some of the cases cited therein are cases involving the right to the writ of certiorari and not prohibition, but the same principles in the main govern the courts in their right to issue either the writ of prohibition or the writ of certiorari. In neither case should the writ issue where the petitioner therefor has had a right to appeal from the order or judgment in question, and has permitted his time to elapse without perfecting an appeal therefrom. Petitioner herein has cited us to a large number of authorities both from this state and from other jurisdictions wherein the writ of prohibition has been used to arrest an inferior tribunal from enforcing an order in excess of its jurisdiction and where an appeal would lie from said order, but these authorities are all cases in which either there was no appeal from the order complained of, or were cases in which the right to appeal might still be exercised in the future in case the writ were denied. We have been cited to no authority which gives to a party the right to review or restrain the execution of an appealable order after the right to appeal therefrom has expired.
[2] Petitioner contends that as the sentence of imprisonment based upon the charge of violating the Corporate Securities Act must first be served by him before he can begin to serve time upon his conviction for grand theft we should issue the writ restraining the trial court from entering its judgment finding the petitioner guilty of violating the Corporate Securities Act, so that he may have the time served by him applied immediately thereafter upon his judgment of conviction of grand theft. There is no merit in this contention. If the petitioner should be imprisoned under a judgment *536
which is in part void, and in part valid, he would be entitled to his release after he had satisfied the valid portion of said judgment. (In re Morck,
[3] It might be appropriate to here state that petitioner has before this court a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in which he contends that the judgment of conviction against him is void in toto, not only as to the charge of violating the Corporate Securities Act, but also upon the charge of grand theft. In that proceeding it will become necessary for us to pass upon the validity of the judgment under which the defendant is now suffering imprisonment for the violation of the Corporate Securities Act. The fact that the petitioner has this remedy byhabeas corpus is a complete answer to his petition for a writ of prohibition. The latter writ is issued only "where there is not a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law". (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1103.) The writ of habeascorpus is a remedy provided by law and there can be no question but that it meets the requirements of the section in being "plain, speedy and adequate". Upon this ground, as well as those stated in the previous portions of this opinion, petitioner's application for a writ of prohibition is denied.
Preston, J., Shenk, J., Seawell, J., and Waste, C.J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.