Thе People appeal from an order by the superior court granting defendant’s petition for writ of error coram nobis and vacating that court’s previous judgment convicting him of a felоny. Before applying for the *319 coram nobis relief granted, defendant had filed a notice of appeal from the judgment of conviction. The question presented on the appеal is whether a trial court has jurisdiction to vacate a judgment of conviction in coram nobis proceedings commenced while an appeal from the judgment is pending. We have concluded that the trial court has no such jurisdiction, and that the order challenged must be reversed.
Defendant was charged by information with a violation of section 10851 of the Vehicle Code (auto theft) and with four prior felony convictions. He admitted the priors, and was tried by a jury on his plea of not guilty to the auto theft charge. The jury found him guilty. Judgment was pronounсed on April 28, 1966, when he was sentenced to state prison for the term prescribed by law. On May 3, 1966, defendant filed a notice of appeal from the judgment. This appeal has sinсe been pending in this court (1 Crim. 6026).
The proceeding which produced the present appeal commenced in November 1966, when defendant (at first appearing in proрria persona) applied to the trial court for coram nobis relief. His original application has not been included in the record on appeal. The application, however, and some of the events which followed, are summarized in a memorandum opinion which the trial court set forth in the order granting coram nobis relief. Pertinent portions of the memorаndum opinion are set forth in the margin. 1
As its quoted language suggests (fn. 1, ante), the trial court vacated the judgment on grounds related to defendant’s sanity. In the memorandum opinion the court reviewed evidence adduсd at the trial on this subject, which consisted of various accounts of defendant’s erratic behavior before, at *320 and after the time of his arrest; psychiatric opinion that he had taken the automobile in question while under the paranoid delusion that he was escaping imagined pursuers; and further expert opinion, based upon psychiatric exаmination two months prior to the trial, that he was then “a paranoid schizophrenic with very serious thought disturbances.” The trial court concluded in its memorandum opinion that “sufficient evidеnce of the defendant’s insanity at the time of the offense was presented in the trial to place an obligation on the trial court to inquire into the matter of a pleа of not guilty by reason of insanity before pronouncing judgment.” Based upon this conclusion, the trial court ordered the judgment of conviction vacated and directed defendant to appear for re-arraignment on the information, “with the opportunity to plead anew thereto, and for such inquiry as to his present sanity as the Court might then deem apрropriate. ’ ’
The question here is not whether the trial court’s action in vacating the judgment is supported by the evidence it thus reviewed in retrospect, but whether the court had jurisdiction to take such action during the pendency of the appeal from the judgment. The trial court concluded that it had jurisdiction. We hold to the contrary.
The only statutory provision pertaining to post-judgment
coram nobis
jurisdiction is Penal Code section 1265. As amended in 1949, the statute provides that in the event of an appeal, only the appellate court has jurisdiction after the judgment has been affirmed.
2
Defendаnt asserts that, from the statute’s silence as to where jurisdiction reposes while the appeal is pending, we should conclude that the trial court retains it. But, according to сase law, the appellate court
does
have jurisdiction during that interval.
(People
v.
Mort
(1963)
A petition for a writ of error
coram
nobis—upon grounds such as defendant, so far as the record shows, asserted here— is in legal effect a motion to vacate the judgment of conviction.
(People
v.
Painter
(1963)
The Legislature’s purpose in enacting the 1949 amendment of Penal Code section 1265 was to eliminate the delay which had theretofore attended the execution of criminal judgments that had been affirmed on appeal.
(People
v.
Allenthorp
(1966)
Defendant, arguing that the general rule does not apply to
coram nobis
proceedings, cites
People
v.
Gilbert
(1944)
Defendant also relies upon a statement by the Supreme Court in
People
v.
Wadkins
(1965)
“In this state a motion to vacate a judgment in the nature of a petition for
coram nobis
is a remedy of narrow scope. [Citations.] Its purpose is to secure relief, where no other remedy exists, from a judgment rendered while there existed some fаct which would have prevented its rendition if the trial court had known it and which, through no negligence or fault of the defendant, was not then known to the court. [Citations.]”
(People
v.
Adamson
(1949)
This court—the Court of Appeal—has jurisdiction to act upon post-appeal applications for
coram nobis
relief from a judgment of conviction.
(People
v.
Mort, supra,
The order granting coram nobis relief and vacating the judgment of conviction is reversed.
Devine, P. J., and Christian, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied March 28, 1969, and respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied April 29, 1969. Peters, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
"Petitioner was found guilty by a jury of the crime of auto theft and was sentenced to the State prison for the term prescribed by law. After he filed a notice of appeal, but before the record wаs certified, he filed a ‘Petition for Writ of Error Coram Nobis; Motion to Vacate judgment,’ requesting that the judgment be vacated on various grounds, including the contention that his rights were denied by rеason of the failure to determine his sanity at the time of the offense.
“After the Court had raised the question of whether the trial court had jurisdiction to consider the coram nobis petition in view оf the pendency of the appeal, petitioner filed another document requesting that his appeal be dismissed if that should be necessary to give the trial court jurisdiction. Thereafter, counsel was appointed to represent Petitioner, and his counsel has stated on the record, in response to inquiry from the Court, that Petitioner does nоt wish to abandon his appeal and, further, that Petitioner contends that the trial court has jurisdiction during the pendency of the appeal.
‘1 As indicated below, the Court is of the opinion, on the merits of the Petition, that the judgment should be vacated. ...”
As pertinent (and as amended in 1949 [Stats. 1949, ch. 1309, p. 2297, § 2]), section 1265 provides that . . [I]f a judgment has been affirmed on appеal no motion shall be made or proceeding in the nature of a petition for writ of coram nobis shall be brought to procure the vacation of said judgment, exceрt in the court which affirmed the judgment on appeal. When a judgment is affirmed by a . . . court of appeal and a hearing is not granted by the Supreme Court, the application for the writ shall be made to the . . . court of appeal. ’ ’
It may be noted that both decisions preceded the 1949 amendment of Penal Code section 1265.
