The People appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Siskiyou County dismissing an indictment. On February 14, 1963, the Grand Jury
Respondent herein moved for dismissal upon the ground that the evidence before the grand jury did not disclose probable cause for the indictment. That evidence, stated briefly, was as follows:
Shortly prior to January 30, 1963, a complaint had been sworn to by Robinson before the judge of the judicial district court in Redding, charging one Charles O’Donnell with a felony. Upon warrant, O’Donnell was arrested. His preliminary hearing was set for January 31. O’Donnell retained respondent here, whose business was that of private investigator, to aid him in the matter of the charge against him. Respondent, the day before the preliminary hearing, visited Robinson, who was in jail under a petty theft charge, and then proceeded to post bail for him and secure his release. Respondent then transported Robinson from Yreka to Red-ding, where he purchased a bus ticket to Reno for him and gave him $20 in money. He saw Robinson on board the bus bound for Reno and told him to get out of California and stay out. It is certain from the record that respondent gave the bus ticket and the money to Robinson upon Robinson’s agreement to absent himself from the preliminary hearing on the following day. It is also readily inferable from the evidence before the grand jury that the understanding between respondent and Robinson was to the further effect that Robinson would stay out of California until the felony charge against O’Donnell had been disposed of. It appears that the superior court’s order dismissing the indictment was based upon the proposition that a preliminary hearing was not a “trial” within the meaning of that word as used in the statute and, since the charge in the indictment was specifically directed to the bribing of Robinson to stay away fromthe preliminary examination, no crime had been charged and the indictment ought to be dismissed.
We agree that a preliminary hearing is not a trial within the meaning of that word as used in the statute. And further that since the charge was specifically directed at that one hearing, no public offense was charged and the order appealed from should be affirmed.
Although the indictment charged that the proceeding against O’Donnell was an action pending in the Yreka Justice Court, such was not the case. While it appeared that the judge of the judicial district would officiate at the hearing, he could not do so as a judge of a court for the reason that his entire authority arose because, by virtue of his office, he was a magistrate. Magistrates presiding at preliminary hearings do not sit as judges of courts, and exercise none of the powers of judges in court proceedings. Justices of appellate courts, judges of superior courts, justices of the peace and police magistrates in cities and towns are each and all by the statute made magistrates. The office is purely a statutory one and the powers and duties of the functionary are solely those given by the statute; and those powers are precisely the same whether exercised by virtue of one office or that of another.
(People
v.
Cohen,
Section 136% of the Penal Code is one of a number of code sections having to do with acts interfering with the administration of justice. The section is found in
The text of section 136% as it stood at the time of the
“Every person who gives or offers or promises to give to any witness or person about to be called as a witness, any bribe upon any understanding or agreement that such person shall not attend upon any trial, or every person who attempts by means of any offer of a bribe to dissuade any such person from attending upon any trial, is g3iilty of a felony. ’ ’
In charging an offense against this statute, it is essential that the accusatory pleading state what was the understanding or agreement in consideration of which the bribe was given. Here the indictment charged that the bribe was given “upon an understanding and agreement that said Ted Haley Robinson would not attend upon the trial and hearing of said action & proceeding.” (Italics added.) These closing words refer to that part of the indictment which described the action and proceeding as being a certain action 1 ‘ entitled The People of the State of California v. Charles O’Donnell, then pending in the Yreka Justice Court, in and for the County of Siskiyou, State of California.” Under the facts before the grand jury this language, though inept and mistaken in material part, could only refer to the proceedings pending before the magistrate. That was the extent of the understanding and agreement alleged to have existed between respondent and Robinson and upon which the bribe was charged to have been given. In short, the charge is that Robinson was bribed to absent himself from the preliminary hearing. Reading these things into the indictment as we must, in view of the testimony before the grand jury, no public offense was charged.
It appears that when the motion to dismiss was presented to the trial court, the position of the assistant district attorney opposing the motion was that Robinson had been bribed by respondent to absent himself from the preliminary hearing and that the preliminary hearing constituted a trial within the meaning of that word as used in the section; that therefore the indictment stated a public offense. Said the assistant district attorney to the trial court, “At the time the matter first came to my attention I read the code section and then I wondered, as co3insel has also, whether the word trial as used in section 136% means among other things a preliminary examination, ... we came to the conclusion that the word trial as used in section 136% of the Penal Code does
We have no quarrel with the rules announced in these eases but they have no application here. The indictment cannot be read as charging that Robinson was bribed upon an understanding and agreement that he would not testify in any proceeding or trial against O’Donnell arising out of the matters referred to in the complaint before the magistrate. On the contrary, as we have said, the understanding and agreement alleged to have been made in consideration of the bribe were that Robinson would absent himself from the pre
For the reasons given, the order appealed from is affirmed.
Pierce, P. J., and Schottky, J., concurred.
Notes
Retired Presiding Justice of the District Court of Appeal sitting pro tempore under assignment by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.
