15 Cal. 91 | Cal. | 1860
Field, C. J. and Cope, J. concurring.
This was an application to the Judge of the County Court of Mon terey, for a mandamus to compel the appellant, as County Treasurer, to transfer from the Current Expense Fund to the Sinking Fund, the sum of two thousand one hundred and sixty dollars, alleged to have been in the treasury on the first of July, 1859. To the petition the appellant filed his demurrer, which was overruled; and this order is assigned for error. The ground of the demurrer is, that the County Judge has no jurisdiction. It is argued that section nine of article six of the Constitution, giving to the County Courts " such jurisdiction in cases arising in Justices’ Courts, and in special cases, as the Legislature may prescribe,” does not include proceedings by mandamus ; but that these attach to the jurisdiction of the District Courts under the sixth section of the same article.
If left to our interpretation of these words, uninfluenced. by the previous decisions of this Court, we should be inclined to hold that the intent of the sixth section was to leave to the Legislature the conferring of jurisdiction upon the County Courts in such specially enumerated and defined cases, as, in its discretion, should be confided to these tribunals; that the general mass of litigation should be left to the other Courts, but that in exceptional instances, where it was thought advisable to vest jurisdiction in the County Courts, by special enactment, clearly indicating that purpose, the County Court might be invested with such powers. And such seems to be the conclusion to which the Courts of New York—from the Constitution of which State this provision was taken—have arrived. See 18 New York R., Smith, 66, where the question is discussed with much ability and clearness. In other cases in that State, (People v. Shoemaker, 19 Barb. 657; Kundolph v. Thalheimer, 2 Kernan, 593) a more restricted view seems to have been taken, and “ special cases ” have been defined to be “ special proceedings,” characteristically differing from ordinary suits at the common law; but embracing such matters as writs of quo warranto, mandamus, inquisitions of lunacy, and the like. In Saunders v. Haynes, (13 Cal. 145) we adopted somewhat similar views to those in the two cases just cited.
We think that the County Court, under the Act of the Legislature, could rightfully exercise jurisdiction in this case. This view is opposed to some dicta of this Court, but to no authoritative decision.