Appeal by defendant in propria persona from a superior court order correcting an abstract of judgment.
Questions Presented
1. Should the appeal be dismissed for alleged failure to file notice of appeal in time and to cite authorities in opening brief ?
2. Power of court to correct an abstract of judgment.
1. Should Appeal Be Dismissed f
No. It appears that while defendant’s notice of appeal did not reach the county clerk’s office until 4 days after
Defendant’s opening brief cites no authority to support his contention that the trial court had no power to correct the judgment (possibly, because there is none). As stated in
People
v.
MacArthur
(1954),
2. The Court Had Power to Correct the Abstract of Judgment.
August 29, 1958, after conviction by a jury of two felonies (1) violation of section 211, Penal Code (robbery), and (2) violation of section 4532, Penal Code (escape), defendant, together with his counsel, was present for sentence. The court then denied defendant’s application for probation on the first count and then pronounced judgment, sentencing defendant to the state prison for the term prescribed by law and ‘ Ordered, Adjudged and Decreed . . . that the terms herein provided shall run Consecutively as to the two offenses set forth in said information, but Concurrently with any other sentence heretofore imposed upon this defendant." The rough minutes of the clerk for that date noted: “Probation denied— 1st count. State
Prison—consec.
as to two offenses charged and
concurr.
with any other term now obligated to serve." (Emphasis added.)
*
However, the abstract of judgment, entered August 29, ordered: “That the term of imprisonment imposed on the second count of the information shall run
concurrently
with the term imposed on the first count thereof." (Emphasis added.) May 18, 1959, the trial court entered an order correcting the abstract of judgment. This order recites: “It appearing to the Court that a clerical error exists in the abstract of
Defendant contends that as the judgment has become final, the trial court lacked jurisdiction to correct it. In the first place, the judgment itself was not corrected. It was only the abstract of that judgment which was corrected to conform to the judgment as pronounced. The judgment is made by the court; the abstract of judgment is made by the clerk. Secondly, a court always has the inherent power to correct clerical errors in its records and in its judgments, and here it clearly appears from the judgment as pronounced and the rough minutes that the error in the abstract of judgment was clerical and inadvertent.
Independently of statute and on its own motion or on ex parte applications without notice, and regardless of time elapsed, the court may exercise its power to correct clerical errors.
(Krouzian
v.
Hagopian
(1959),
In
LaMar
v.
Superior Court, supra,
The order is affirmed.
Tobriner, J., and Duniway, J., concurred.
Notes
Defendant appealed from this judgment hut dismissed Ms appeal.
