82 Cal. 613 | Cal. | 1890
Alternative writ of prohibition issued by the superior court of the county of Los Angeles, on the petition of appellant, to the respondent, a justice of the peace of Los Angeles City, to prohibit said justice from trying the petitioner on a charge of vagrancy, under section 647 of the Penal Code, without a jury. The appeal is from the judgment discharging the writ.
It appears that the respondent denied the petitioner’s demand for a new trial, properly made, if he was entitled to a jury trial, and that the justice proposed and was about to try him upon said charge without a jury.
Upon the trial the application was opposed on two ■grounds: 1. That prohibition was not the proper remedy; 2. That defendant was not entitled to a jury trial. The court sustained the opposition on the first ground, and declined to consider the second.
I think the court properly sustained the opposition
No point has been made or argued by counsel on this branch of the case, though the decision of it seems to be well sustained by an able opinion of the learned judge of the lower court, brought up with the record. But counsel have stipulated “that if the defendant is entitled to a jury trial in such misdemeanor case in the said justice’s court, the judgment and decision of the superior court herein may be reversed, with the direction to the court below to enter an order that appellant have prohibition directed unto respondent and his said court, to desist from all further proceedings in the case of The People against Powelson, without a jury.” As to this stipulation respondent’s counsel says: “The real issue in this case being as to whether or no the defendant is entitled to a jury trial, and the people, as well as appellant,
Inasmuch as counsel have very ably argued the question wiiich, alone, they have stipulated to submit, I regret to say, that, in my opinion, their stipulation must be disregarded.
I think that the lower court properly declined to consider the question as to whether the justice’s court merely erred in denying a jury trial. The court exhausted its authority on the application for the writ of prohibition, in determining, as it did, that the act sought to be prohibited was not in excess of the jurisdiction of the justice’s court, and that the defendant had a remedy by appeal. It could not, on that application, arrest or review the mere errors of the justice’s court about to be committed within the province of its jurisdiction, and thus make the writ of prohibition, or the application for it, serve the purpose of an appeal. The same rule must be applied to the case here on this appeal; otherwise, this court must exercise mere appellate jurisdiction by means of a writ of prohibition, without any appeal, and °in a case to which the appellate jurisdiction of this court does not extend.
It is, therefore, unnecessary, for any purpose of this appeal, to decide whether or not the appellant was entitled to a jury trial in the justice’s court, and the expression of an opinion upon this question would be improper, notwithstanding the stipulation of counsel, for the reasons that such an opinion would have no bearing upon any material question to be decided, and no proper effect
I think the judgment should be affirmed.
Foote, C., and Hayne, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment is affirmed.