This is а petition for writ of review, which we shall treat as a proceeding in mandate.
Pacts : Petitioner, Burton Marks, is an attorney at law. On or about December 24, 1965, he was appointed by respondent *781 court (Appellate Department of the Superior Court, County of Los Angeles, State of California) 1 as attorney for Henry A. Mangaser, an indigent, with respect to Mangaser’s appeal to the appellate department of the superior court from a conviction 2 in the municipal court. Although the appointive order stated the appointment was “without compensation,” petitioner accepted said order with the understanding he could proceed to apply for fees.
During the pendency of the appeal petitioner moved for an award of compensation for his services. The motion was denied by respondent. This petition seeks a review of the appellate department’s action of denial, which we treat as an application for a writ of mandate to compel the respondent to grant in some reasonable amount the application of petitioner for attorneys’ fees.
The petition alleges, and it is conceded by respondent, the denial for an allowance of attorneys’ fees was premised on the belief the respondent court had no authority to award compensation to an attorney for his services on an appeal in the appellate department of the superior court. 3
Question : When an attorney at law has been assigned by three superior court judges sitting as an appellate department of the superior court to perform services for an indigent appellant in that court, does section 987a 4 of the Penal Code authorize an allowance of compensation to him?
*782 Our answer is “Yes. ”
Respondent contends “Section 987a Penal Code expressly provides for compensation of counsel assigned in the Superior Court to defend a person who is charged therein [Superior Court] with the com mission of a crime. That in the Mangaser case attorney Burton Marks was not appointеd to defend a person charged in the Superior Court with the commission of a crime.’’ (Italics added.)
In its return the respondent traces with scholarly exactness the history and development of the compensation of assigned counsel theory. Respondent supports its contentions and theory of the interpretation of Penal Code section 987a by reference and analogy to the provisions of Penal Code sections 859,
5
987,
6
and
7
the opinion of the Attorney General (
*783
With respect to the construction of the word “defend,” Black’s Law Dictionary (citing
Boehmer
v.
Big Rock Irr. Dist.,
An appeal is merely a continuation of the earlier proceedings, and the judgment of conviction is “not final” while an appeal is pending.
The services performed by assigned counsel on behalf of a client in an appellate court do not, by the sole factor of a transfer of jurisdiction to a higher court, become any less defensive than the services discharged in the lower court. In a сriminal action we assume the attorney assigned to represent a defendant is at all stages of the trial proceedings and appellate proceedings representing and defending his client. Whether we use the terms “defending in the trial court” or “prosecuting an appeal,” it would appear, under the common and usual meaning of thе word “defend,” that assigned counsel in the appellate department of the superior court is “defending” his client within the provisions of section 987a.
While the composition of section 987a may be awkward, it is our opinion that it cannot be taken to be so restrictive in meaning as to exclude counsel assigned to represent an indigent defendant before the appellate department of the superior court. In criminal proceedings the word “charged” may have different meanings according to the subject matter and the context. It is frequently used in a limited sense as referring to a formal complaint, information, or indictment.
(People
v.
Garnett,
We do not give to the phrase in Penal Code section 987a “charged therein with a crime” the same significance the respondent does. These words are the equivalеnt of “who is a defendant in a criminal ease in that court.” The word “therein” is used in that phrase simply to designate which court shall have jurisdiction to appoint counsel at a particular stage of the criminal proceedings.
“ [S] ection 987a must be read in the light of related statutes, and of the history of the development of the statutory provisions for the payment of compensation to appointed counsel.”
(Hill
v.
Superior Court,
At an early date (1860) it was held, in the absence of statute, county funds could not be expended for the compensation of court-appointed counsel for their professional services to indigent persons accused of crime, and it was the duty of counsel to serve without compensation.
(Rowe
v.
Yuba County,
From the foregoing it is apparent at that time the Legislature had no intent to authorize compensation for counsel assigned to represent an indigent defendant charged with a misdemeanor in the municipal court. In fact, there was no authority for the appointment of counsel in such a ease. A subsequent amendment in 1955 extended the scope of the section to allow compensation to counsel in counties which had public defenders but where a public defender, because of a conflict of interest or other reason, had properly refused to represent the defendant. In 1955 the Legislature also enacted Penal Code section 1241, which providеs for compensation from the general fund of the state to attorneys appointed by the District Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court “to represent a party to any appeal or proceeding in a criminal matter ...”
In 1963 the Legislature again amended section 987a by striking out the words “on a preliminary examination.”
9
It has been held that this amendment to the statute requires the determination, order, and payment of reasonable compensation to counsel appointed by the court in misdemeanor cases.
(Avan
v.
Municipal Court, supra,
In
In re Henderson
(July 9, 1964),
In 1965 the Legislature added a paragraph to section 987a in which it expressly authorized the appointment of counsel in municipal or justice courts “when it appears that such appointment is necessary to provide an adequate and effective defense for defendant.” It did not otherwise revise the statute. In view of the fact that the language of the statute may be read broadly to require compensation for such counsel, we believe that the Legislature read the statute as the Supreme Court did in
Avan
v.
Municipal Court, supra,
Let a writ of mandate issue directing respondent court to comply with the requirements of section 987a of the Penal Code and to determine and award to petitioner a reasonable sum for compensation and necessary expenses for petitioner’s representation of the appellant in the case of People v. Mangaser, CR A 6634, Appellate Department of the Superior Court of the State of California in and for the County of Los Angeles.
Files, P. J., and Kingsley, J., concurred.
Notes
Assigned by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.
Hеreinafter referred to as respondent unless otherwise indicated.
Henry A. Mangaser was convicted of a violation of section 11721 of the Health and Safety Code (using or being under the influence of narcotics).
It was conceded here that both petitioner and respondent court understood that petitioner intended to apply for fees and that he would be given them if legally permissible, but that, if the law did not permit respondent to grant a fee, petitioner’s basic professional responsibility obligated him to serve when ordered by respondent court so to do. The form of the order of appointment, thus, does not bar the present proceeding.
Section 987a, in pertinent part, provides: “In any ease in which counsel is assigned in the superior court to defend a person, including a person who is a minor, who is charged therein with the commission of a crime, or is assigned in a municipal or justice court, to represent such a person in such a court and who desires but who is unable to employ counsel, such counsel, in a county, or city and county, in which there is no public defender, or in a ease in which the court finds that because of conflict of interest or other reasons that public defender has properly refused to represent the person accused, shall receive a reasonable sum for compensation and for necessary expenses, the amount of which shall be determined by the court in accordance with this section, to be paid out of the general fund of the county.”
"When the defendant is charged with the commission of a public offense, over which the superior court has original jurisdiction, by a written complaint subscribed under oath and on file in a court within the county in which the public оffense is triable, he shall, without unnecessary delay, be taken before a magistrate of the court in which such complaint is on file. The magistrate shall immediately deliver to him a copy of the complaint, inform him of his right to the aid of counsel, ask him if he desires the aid of counsel, and allow him a reasonable time to send for counsel; and the magistrate must, upon the request of the defendant, require a peace officer to take a message to any counsel whom the defendant may name, in the judicial district in which the court is situated. The officer must, without delay and without fee, perform that duty. ...” (Pen. Code, § 859.)
“ If the defendant appears for arraignment without counsel, he must be informed by the court thаt it is his right to have counsel before being arraigned, and must be asked if he desires the aid of counsel. If he desires and is unable to employ counsel, the court must assign counsel to defend him.” (Pen. Code, § 987.)
‘‘In any ease in which counsel has been appointed by the Supreme Court or by a district court of appeal to represent a party to any appeal or proceeding in a criminal matter, such counsel shall receive a reasonable sum for compensation and necessary expenses, the amount of which shall be determined by the court and paid from any funds appropriated for that purpose. ...” (Pen. Code, § 1241.)
" (a) Upon request of the defendant or upon ordеr of the court, he shall defend, without expense to the defendant, any person who is not financially able to employ counsel and who is charged with the commission of any contempt or offense triable in the superior court, municipal or justice courts at all stages of the proceedings, including the preliminary examination. The public defender shall, . . . prosecute all appeals to a higher court or courts of any person who has been convicted, where, in his opinion, the appeal will or might reasonably be expected to result in the reversal or modification of the judgment of conviction.” (Gov. Code, § 27706.)
The 1963 amendment also authorized the appointment of counsel in such eases to represent a minor defendant.
