Petitioner seeks a peremptory writ of mandate to compel the respondent court- “to make, enter, give and file an order and judgment dismissing and denying” a certain appeal from an order of the police court of the city of Burlingame.
A complaint was originally filed in said police court charging Paul P. Bid with the commission of a misdemeanor. He entered a plea of guilty and was thereafter sentenced to be imprisoned in the county jail for a term of ninety days and to pay a fine of $100. While so imprisoned, said Paul P. Bid filed a document in said police court entitled “Petition for Writ of Error Coram Nobis”. He sought thereby to have the judgment set aside and to obtain leave to change his plea from guilty to not guilty for the purpose of having *444 a trial upon the merits. His petition was denied and he appealed from the order of denial. The appeal was heard by the respondent court and the order was reversed. Petitioner then filed this proceeding seeking a writ of mandate as above indicated.
We are of the opinion that the writ should be denied. As we understand the main contention of petitioner, it is that the police court had no jurisdiction to entertain said petition of the defendant in the criminal action and that the respondent court therefore “was without jurisdiction to do other than enter an order dismissing the appeal” from the order denying the petition. In our opinion, this contention cannot be sustained.
The place of the so-called writ of error
coram nobis
in the jurisprudence of this state has been clarified by several recent decisions. Said writ was originally a common law remedy which was used under certain exceptional circumstances. The nature of the writ and its survival in modified form in this state is exhaustively discussed in
People
v.
Reid,
The use of said writ is limited in this state to those situations where the right to appeal and the right to move for a new trial as provided by statute do not afford a remedy
(People
v.
Reid, supra ; People
v.
Superior Court,
4 Cal. (2d) 136 [
Our search has not brought to our attention any ease directly holding that a police court
m&y
entertain such a motion under the precise circumstances before us, but we are of the opinion that a police court has jurisdiction for that purpose. The authorities do not indicate that such jurisdiction is vested only in courts of record. In
People
v.
Campos,
3 Cal. (2d) 15, the court said at page 17 [
We conclude that the defendant’s petition filed in the police court was in substance and effect a motion to vacate the judgment previously entered by said court; that said court had jurisdiction to entertain said motion; that the order denying said motion was an appealable order (Pen. Code, sec. 1466) ; and that the respondent court had jurisdiction to "reverse, affirm or modify the . . . order appealed from”. (Pen. Code, sec. 1469.) In view of these conclusions, it becomes unnecessary for us to determine whether mandamus would have been an appropriate remedy in the event that the trial court had exceeded its jurisdiction.
The alternative writ is discharged and the peremptory writ is denied.
Nourse, P. J., and Sturtevant, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the District Court of Appeal on October 15, 1938, and an application by petitioner to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on November 14, 1938.
