139 Cal. App. 380 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1934
In an information filed on July 10, 1930, the defendant was charged with the crime of burglary. After a plea of guilty judgment was pronounced and he was ordered confined in a state penitentiary. On October 28', 1933, he filed a motion to vacate the judgment on the ground that the same was void and that the court had no jurisdiction to make and enter the same for the reason that the trial court, without any evidence before it to show the degree thereof, fixed the crime as burglary in the first degree. From an order denying this motion, this appeal is taken.
The sole contention here made is that the judgment was void and the court was without jurisdiction to enter the same for the reason given above, and that as a result thereof the appellant has been sentenced without due process of law and has been given a punishment greater than that warranted by the facts.
It may be conceded that where a judgment is void upon its face, it may be attacked by a motion to vacate the same and that under such circumstances an appeal will lie from an order refusing to set the same aside (People v. Bowles, 135 Cal. App. 514 [27 Pac. (2d) 411]). A similar procedure was followed and approved in the ease of People v. Paraskevopolis, 42 Cal. App. 325 [183 Pac. 585], where it was held that judgment had not been legally pronounced since the court took no evidence as to the degree of the crime and made no determination thereof. A somewhat similar holding is found in People v. Stratton, 133 Cal. App. 309 [24 Pac. (2d) 174], where it appeared that no evidence was before the court upon the question of the degree of the crime, and none to show whether the offense was committed through torture or at a time when the defendant was armed with a deadly weapon.
The record now before us fails to disclose a situation coming within the scope of the cases just mentioned. The judgment here was not void on its face, and there is nothing to substantiate the claim that the degree of the crime
“ ‘I have gone through the record of both the preliminary and the record as taken here in court and I find that the building was not an inhabited building and the defendant was not armed with a dangerous weapon, either when he entered the building or during the time when he was in the building, and that no assault was made and nothing was taken. The entry was made probably, the evidence shows, during the night time just before daylight, just before sun-up, on or about June 27, 1930. . . . My attention has been called to this by a letter from the defendant himself, who is serving time in Folsom, and after receiving the letter I went through the records and I am satisfied the court was wrong in making the findings of burglary in the first degree; it should have been burglary in the second degree, and for that reason the record will be amended and changed so as to show the finding of burglary in the second degree, and the sentence will be amended. so that there will be stricken out the words “burglary in the first degree” and substituted therefor “burglary in the second degree”. And an amended commitment will be issued and sent to the authorities at Folsom.’ ”
While the record before us is most unsatisfactory, the situation appears to be that judgment was pronounced upon the appellant in July, 1930, at which time the court fixed the crime as burglary in the first degree and that in
A further consideration is that where a judgment is not void or illegally entered, but is merely erroneous, an order denying a motion to vacate the same is not reviewable when the same points might have been presented upon an appeal from the judgment (De La Montanya v. De La Montanya, 112 Cal. 101 [44 Pac. 345, 53 Am. St. Rep. 165, 32 L. R. A. 82]; People v. Davis, 187 Cal. 750 [203 Pac. 990]; People v. Brattingham, 91 Cal. App. 527 [267 Pac. 120]; People v. Van Buren, 134 Cal. App. 206 [25 Pac. (2d) 32]; People v. Bowles, 135 Cal. App. 514 [27 Pac. (2d) 411]). "While at first blush it may seem unjust to refuse to consider an appeal where a mistake has apparently been made, it must also be remembered that opportunity existed for an appeal from the judgment and that the orderly administration of justice requires that the time for taking an appeal be limited and that judgments should eventually become final. And a defendant is not without other remedies where the circumstances warrant other relief.
A motión to dismiss this appeal was heretofore denied (People v. Rameriz, 137 Cal. App. 472 [30 Pac. (2d) 577]) for the reason that the form of the motion, as noticed, was not then considered sufficient to warrant that action, and because we were then under the impression that the record
The order appealed from is affirmed.