THE PEOPLE, Respondent,
v.
JOHN SAYRE et al., Appellants.
California Court of Appeals.
Thomas Higgins, Jr., for Appellants. [
Buron Fitts, District Attorney, and Jere J. Sullivan, Deputy District Attorney, for Respondent.
Schauer, J.
Defendants, each of whom was convicted in the justice's court of a misdemeanor (violation of section 1 of the Los Angeles County ordinance number 439 [new series]) and sentenced "to pay a fine of Two Hundred ($200.00) Dollars, or in lieu of payment of said fine, to serve one hundred days in the County Jail, and ... to serve sixty days in addition to the payment of said fine", appeal from the judgment imposing such sentence, contending solely that it is contrary to law in so far as it superimposes upon the straight jail sentence of sixty days coupled with the fine, an alternative jail sentence in the event of failure to pay such fine.
[1] The ordinance prescribes as its penal sanctions punishment "by a fine not exceeding five hundred dollars ($500.00) or by imprisonment in the county jail for a term not exceeding six months, or by both such fine and imprisonment". It does not within its own terms empower the court to impose a jail sentence as an alternative to payment of a fine levied thereunder, as could have been done had the legislative body so desired (Ex parte Green, (1892)
[2] Section 1446 of the Penal Code is relied upon by respondent as furnishing such power; it provides: "A judgment that the defendant pay a fine may also direct that he be imprisoned until the fine be satisfied ..." Said section 1446 is a part of chapter 1, title 11, part 2, of the Penal Code, the subject of said chapter 1, title 11, being "Proceedings in Justices' and Police Courts". In chapter 1 of title 8, part 2, of the same code, which title 8 treats of judgments and executions in the superior court (In re Kennerly, (1923)
In the year 1884 the justices of department two of the Supreme Court, in the case of People v. Righetti, (1884)
In 1889 the Supreme Court in bank, in the case of Ex parte Neustadt, (1889)
Two months after the decision in Ex parte Wadleigh, supra, (1890)
Those portions of the foregoing opinion which we have quoted could all have been said in equal propriety with respect to section 1446 of the Penal Code. The court does, on pages 390 and 391 (83 Cal.), refer to two other sections (1214 and 1215) of the same title (title 8, part 2, Pen. Code) and states that "they strengthen the theory that the legislature did not intend section 1205 to apply to judgments for both imprisonment and fine." The sections so referred to, at the time the decision under discussion was written (1890), read as follows:
Section 1214. "If the judgment is for a fine alone, execution may be issued thereon as on a judgment in a civil action." [
Section 1215. "If the judgment is for imprisonment, or a fine and imprisonment until it be paid, the defendant must forthwith be committed to the custody of the proper officer and by him detained until the judgment is complied with."
In title 11, dealing with proceedings in justices' and police courts, we find a section substantially the equivalent of section 1215; it is section 1456 and reads: "When a judgment is entered imposing a fine, or [sic: and] ordering the defendant to be imprisoned until the fine is paid, he must be held in custody during the times specified in the judgment, unless the fine is sooner paid." There does not appear in said title 11 any counterpart for section 1214 and, while section 1206 is not referred to in Ex parte Rosenheim, supra, it may be remarked neither is there in title 11 any provision similar to that section, which, at the time the decision was written (1890), read: "1206. A judgment that the defendant pay a fine constitutes a lien, in like manner as a judgment for money rendered in a civil action."
Respondent, seeking some means of differentiation between sections 1205 and 1446, in order that it may avoid for the language of said section 1446 the construction placed by the court on the same language in section 1205, seizes upon the fact that the court, in the Rosenheim case (
Furthermore we do not find persuasive respondent's argument in this regard, which is, in effect, that because said title 11 does not contain provisions similar to said sections 1206 and 1214 we are free to, and should, apply to section 1446 (in title 11) a construction opposed to that given to section 1205 (in title 8) by the Supreme Court. If the legislature had intended that section 1446 should create authority in justices of the peace and police judges to impose judgments coupling imprisonment absolute with imprisonment alternative to payment of fine, it does not seem reasonable that it would have cast, and through all the years which have elapsed and the amendments in other respects which have been made, have continued to maintain that section, except for the immaterial interchange of the word "be" for the word "is" (in the part which is material here), in ipsissimis verbis with section 1205, by which, it is so firmly established, it is not intended to authorize judges of the superior court to superimpose a sentence of imprisonment for failure to pay a fine upon a judgment of straight imprisonment. The mere failure to include in title 11 counterparts to sections 1206 and 1214 does not warrant the claimed inference that the legislature thereby intended to give to the language of section 1446 a meaning so essentially different in scope and effect from that possessed by the same words in section 1205. Particularly is this true in view of the fact that to have placed in title 11 a provision similar to section 1206 would have been to give to a judgment of a justice's or police court for a fine in a criminal case the lien establishing status elsewhere then given to superior court civil judgments when properly docketed (sec. 671, Code Civ. Proc., as of year 1890; Eby v. Foster, (1882)
The fact that under the Supreme Court's construction of the language in question no provision is made in either title 8 or 11 for enforcing payment of fines by the method of alternative imprisonment in cases where a sentence of imprisonment absolute is pronounced seems no more remarkable as such than the fact that in title 11 no provision whatsoever is made for collecting fines in any event by execution. The legislature could omit or limit one method as well as the other and it is not unreasonable to assume that its forbearance was intended to be extended to the debtor's personal liberty as well as to his real and personal property.
Finally, in attack upon the decision of Ex parte Rosenheim, supra, (1890)
If there were otherwise any doubt remaining as to the applicability of the ruling in the Rosenheim case--dealing as it does with section 1205 in title 8 of part 2 of the Penal Code--to section 1446 appearing in title 11 of the same code, we think such doubt is removed by the decision in Lowrey v. Hogue, (1890)
The ruling in the Rosenheim case has been followed consistently in California and to some extent in other jurisdictions since its pronouncement. See In re Collins, (1890) (Supreme Court of California),
The judgment appealed from, as to each defendant, is modified by striking out that part thereof which orders him "or in lieu of payment of said fine, to serve one hundred days in the County Jail". (People v. Velarde, supra, (1920)
Shinn, J., pro tem., concurred.
Shaw, P. J.,
Concurring.
I concur, but only by reason of the array of California cases cited in the main opinion following People v. Rosenheim, (1890)
