37 Cal. 454 | Cal. | 1869
The appellant was convicted before a Justice of the Peace of a misdemeanor, alleged to have been committed by him in obstructing a highway, and was fined fifty dollars and costs of the prosecution. Eo costs were taxed, however, nor was any sum specified as costs in the judgment. From this judgment he appealed to the County Court, upon questions of both law and fact. For the purposes of the appeal, however, he prepared no statement embodying the evidence and such rulings of the Court as had been excepted to by him; on the contrary, he furnished no papers, except the docket of the Justice. In consequence of his failure to furnish a statement, the County Court, upon the motion of the District Attorney, first dismissed the appeal, with costs; and then, upon the further motion of the District Attorney, modified the judgment of the Court below by directing the Court to tax the costs of the trial below, and include them, together with the costs of the appeal, in the judgment. The appellant then applied to the District Court for a writ of certiorari to review the judgment of the County Court. The writ was granted, and at the hearing the District Court affirmed the judgment of the County Court. The case has been brought here by appeal from the judgment of the District Court.
The respondent makes the point that no appeal lies from the judgment of the District Court to this Court in cases of certiorari The point is answered by the four hundred and sixty-fifth section of the Practice Act, which provides: “If the proceeding be had in any other than the Supreme Court, a-n appeal may be taken from the judgment in the same manner and upon the same terms as from a judgment in a civil action; ” and, also, by the case of Winter v. Fitzpatrick, 85 Cal. 269.
If the County Court, as it seems to have done, considered that no appeal can be heard unless accompanied by the statement for which the statute provides, it was in error. The statute must receive a sensible construction. There may be cases in which no statement is needed for the purposes of the appeal. Suppose a Justice of the Peace should sentence a defendant to the State Prison for petit larceny or assault and battery, or should try him without a jury, notwithstanding one was demanded, and it so appeared by his docket, what need would there be for a statement in order to get these questions before the County Court ? Or suppose the defendant should demur to the complaint upon the ground that the facts stated do not constitute a public offense, and the Justice should sustain the objection, and the People should appeal, what occasion would there be for a statement? The statute must be understood as requiring a statement only where the record fails to disclose the error upon which the appellant relies. We have so held expressly in People v. Maguire, 26 Cal. 640.
The appellant claims that no statement was needed in this case, for the reason that the errors upon which he relied appeared upon the face of the record. If so, the Court erred in not giving him hearing; but it was error within, and not an excess of jurisdiction for which relief can be had by certiorari. (People v. Burney, 29 Cal. 459.)
It is a little surprising, however, that, after holding that the appeal could not be heard for the want of a statement, the Court should proceed to hear and determine errors on the part of the People, who had not appealed at all. As to errors which the Justice may have committed to the preju
The judgment of the District Court affirming the judgment of the County Court is reversed, and the District Court is directed to enter a judgment modifying the judgment of •the County Court so as to leave it merely a judgment affirming the judgment of the Justice with costs.
Mr. Justice Rhodes expressed no opinion.