113 P. 684 | Cal. | 1911
This is a proceeding to review and annul an order of the superior court of Sacramento County discharging from custody one Fred Horning, a convict in the Folsom state prison.
Horning was charged by information in the superior court of Los Angeles County with the crime of assault with intent to commit murder. He entered a plea of guilty and in September, 1908, was sentenced to confinement in the state prison at Folsom for the period of fourteen years. In May, 1910, he applied for a writ ofhabeas corpus, by petition addressed to the superior court of Sacramento County. The writ was issued, a return duly made showing that he was confined in the state prison, under judgment of conviction in the superior court of Los Angeles County. The petition for the writ of habeas corpus alleged that he was imprisoned on said judgment, but that the imprisonment was illegal and said judgment null and void because the information did not state facts sufficient to constitute a public offense. Upon the hearing he was ordered to be released from prison. The attorney-general and the district attorney of Los Angeles County thereupon instituted this proceeding, claiming that the superior court of Sacramento County, in discharging the prisoner, was acting in excess of its jurisdiction.
The information charged that, in the county of Los Angeles, on December 15, 1906, said Fred Horning "did willfully, unlawfully and feloniously and with malice aforethought, assault one Caesar Vervoort, a human being, with a deadly weapon, with intent then and there him, the said Caesar Vervoort to kill and murder," contrary, etc. This was a sufficient description of the offense of assault with intent to commit murder. It was not necessary to further describe the weapon alleged to be "deadly." (People v.Congleton,
But this is not an appeal from the decision in the habeascorpus case. No appeal lies from a judgment given in a proceeding in habeas corpus. (In re Perkins,
"Mere irregularity intervening in the exercise of an admitted jurisdiction — mere mistakes of law committed in conducting the proceedings in an inquiry which the board had power to entertain — . . . are not to be considered here upon certiorari, otherwise that writ is to be turned into a writ of error. . . . Jurisdiction is the power to hear and determine — this is the general definition. Jurisdiction, as applied to a particular claim or controversy, is the power to hear and determine that controversy. The mere grounds upon which the determination is reached may or may not be correct in themselves. These may be supported by evidence inadmissible when tested by the rules governing the introduction of evidence. The reasons given for the conclusion arrived at may or may not be such as address themselves to the judgment of others; but erroneous views entertained, or incorrect reasons assigned, or evidence erroneously admitted in deciding the controversy, *364
do not make a case of want of jurisdiction." (Central PacificR.R. Co. v. Placer Co.,
The constitution gives the superior courts and the judges thereof "power to issue writs of . . . habeas corpus, on petition by or on behalf of any person in actual custody in their respective counties." (Art. VI, sec. 5.) Horning was in the actual custody of the warden of the state's prison in Sacramento County. On his behalf a petition was regularly presented to the superior court of that county for a writ of habeas corpus for his release. The writ was regularly issued, regularly served on the warden and his return thereon was regularly made and filed. The superior court therefore had jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the parties concerned. That jurisdiction was in all respects regularly exercised; the authority was regularly pursued. That court made a mistake of law in holding that the petition stated facts sufficient to justify the release of the prisoner. A copy of the judgment of the superior court of Los Angeles County which was alleged to be void was made a part of the petition. It was valid on its face and the facts stated in the petition did not make it void. It was therefore conclusive as to the legality of the detention and the court erred in holding that it was not. On the hearing an error of law was again committed in deciding that the information was insufficient and that such defect invalidated the judgment of conviction. But the insufficiency of the petition for the writ of habeas corpus was not a defect which destroyed the jurisdiction of the superior court of Sacramento County to entertain the proceeding, issue the writ, and decide the case. It had power to determine whether the petition was good or bad, and its decision that it was good was an error of law and not an excess of jurisdiction. A judgment *365
based on a complaint which does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, is not for that reason a judgment in excess of jurisdiction, or void, if the court rendering it has jurisdiction of cases of the kind which the complaint attempts to allege. Crane v. Cummings,
If that defect did not divest jurisdiction to grant the writ ofhabeas corpus and release the prisoner, certainly it cannot be contended that the ruling that the information was bad had that effect. It is suggested that the Sacramento superior court was attempting to review the judgment of the Los Angeles superior court, which it had no power to do. But that is not an accurate statement of the ruling in question. The court had power, upon the hearing, to determine the legal effect and validity of any judgment offered in evidence. It bad power to err in so doing and its error was an exercise of the power and not in excess of it.
There are cases holding that where a court, even of general jurisdiction, is exercising a limited statutory power, and a statute conferring the power declares that it may be exercised upon the presentation of a petition stating certain facts, the failure to allege such facts is fatal to the jurisdiction of the court and renders its judgment and orders in the proceeding void, even on collateral attack. (Haynes v. Meeks,
The conclusion necessarily follows that we have no power, in a proceeding in certiorari, to annul a judgment of the superior court, or an order of a judge thereof, regularly made after obtaining jurisdiction of the parties, discharging a prisoner lawfully committed to the state prison upon conviction of a crime. There appears to be no lawful method of reviewing such judgment or order, however erroneous it may be. If such review is desired, it can be provided only by legislative act authorizing an appeal by the state or some other mode of annulling such judgment of discharge.
The writ of review is discharged and the proceeding dismissed.
Sloss, J., Angellotti, J., and Lorigan, J., concurred.