The defendant was convicted of murder in the first degree, and judgment was pronounced against him imposing the penalty of death. He appeals from the judgment.
The appellant had been convicted of the crime on a former trial, and upon appeal to this court the judgment then rendered and the order denying his motion for a new trial then made were reversed, and the court below was directed to sustain appellant’s demurrer thereto.
(People
v.
Lee Look,
There is no contention that any error was committed in the conduct of the said trial; but appellant contends that for certain reasons there should have been no second trial, and *218 that he should have been discharged. This contention is not maintainable.
1. The appellant moved to set aside the information on the ground “that before the filing thereof said defendant had not been legally committed by a magistrate”—in accordance with the procedure prescribed in section 995 of the Penal Code; and he contends that the court erred in denying the motion. This motion was based on the contention that a certain document—whether it be called an “information,” a “deposition,” or a “complaint”—which was originally lodged with the committing magistrate, and upon which the warrant of arrest was issued and the preliminary examination instituted, was defective in that it did not contain a legal charge of murder, or of any other crime. This document is in the form of an affidavit, in which the deponent states that a felony had been committed by appellant at a certain time and place, and proceeds to state facts evidently intended to show that the felony charged was murder. It is contended that the facts stated do not constitute a legal definition of murder; but, assuming that to be so, the appellant could have availed himself of the defect only while he was held under the warrant of arrest founded on the affidavit. And then the objection to the document would have been, not that it was defective as a pleading, but that it did not contain sufficient evidence to justify a warrant of arrest; for the latter must be founded on evidence showing, or tending to show, the commission of a crime. Sections 811, 812, and 813 of the Penal Code, provide that when an information is laid before a magistrate of the commission of a public offense he must examine on oath the informant and such witnesses as he may produce, and take their depositions, and if he is satisfied “therefrom” that the offense has been committed, and that there is reasonable ground to believe that the defendant committed it, he must issue the warrant of arrest; and in
Ex parte Dimmig,
2. It is contended that, under section 1262 of the Penal Code, the defendant should have been discharged, because on the former appeal a new trial was hot expressly ordered by this court; but that rule applies where there is only a reversal of the judgment. On appeal from an order denying a new trial a judgment here reversing the order is in effect the ordering of a new trial.
(People
v.
Hardisson,
3. Appellant objects to the second information upon the ground that it is an “amended information,” and that there is no room for such a document in our system of criminal pleading. But the pleading in question is not an amended information. It is true that the pleader wrote above the commencement of the document the words “Amended Information,” but it was in fact a “new” information, and its character would not have been changed by any name with which the fancy of the pleader might have labeled it.
4. The appellant was not injured by the refusal of the court to allow him to interpose the pleas of “former acquittal” and “once in jeopardy”; there was no foundation *221 for either of such pleas. There is nothing in the point that the second information was not filed within thirty days after appellant was held to answer. The provision of section 809 of the Penal Code has no reference to the new information which may be directed by the court after a demurrer sustained to the first information. The demurrer to the new information was properly overruled, and there are no other points which need discussion.
The judgment appealed from is affirmed.
Shaw, J., Angellotti, J., Van Dyke, J., Henshaw, J., Lorigan, J., and Beatty, C. J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.
