In substance, the essential facts which appear in a petition that has been presented to this court for the issuance by it of a writ of certiorari are that in a criminal action that was pending against one Yuen, and others, in the Superior Court of this State, in and for the County of Nevada, in accordance with an order theretofore made by said court, the petitioner herein deposited with the sheriff of that county the sum of $500 cash bail for the sole purpose of insuring the appearance in court of one Circle, who was one of the defendants in the action. Circle did appear at the trial of the action and was convicted of the commis *264 sion of the offense of which he had been charged. Thereafter, in due course, on his appearance before the court for the special purpose of having sentence pronounced against him, and before judgment was so rendered, in part the following colloquy occurred in open court between the judge of the court and Mr. Andersen, who was counsel for defendant Circle, and who also represented the several bondsmen:
“Mr. Andersen: Before the Court formally pronounces judgment, I desire to have the bail exonerated, your Honor. The Court: Mr. Circle,— Mr. Andersen: Will the Court direct a minute order to that effect? The Court: Tour motion is not made in the proper form. Mr. Andersen: Representing the bondsmen, I desire, on their behalf, to have the bail exonerated. The Court: That is not a proper motion, not in the proper form. . . •. ”
After pronouncing judgment in the action, the judge continued as follows: “It is further ordered, that the County Clerk, in respect to each defendant, apply the money on deposit as bail in satisfaction of each of said fines, and refund the surplus, if any, to the defendants or other person who made such deposit, as provided in Section 1297 of the Penal Code of California. The defendants are ordered into custody.”
Thereupon the following respective statements and conduct occurred in open court:
“Mr. Andersen: May I direct the Court’s attention to the order of the Court made with respect to the bail in this of People v. Yuen case? Tour Honor is probably not familiar with the amendment to section 1297 of the Penal Code, under which the Court would probably want to amend its own order. The Court: With respect to Tuen? Mr. Andersen: With respect to Tuen and all of the defendants. The bail receipts here are not in the name of any of the defendants. The Code provides that in any such case the bail may not be forfeited. The Court: I have the latest Code in there (indicating the Judge's chambers). Mr. Andersen: I think if the Court would look at it, the Court would change the order. The Court: I believe it provides that the surplus is to be returned. Mr. Andersen: None of the bail will be forfeited, your Honor. The Court: I will look at that. Mr. Andersen: May we do that now? The Court: Very well, we will take a recess. [Thereupon, the Court, the District Attorney and Mr. Andersen retired to the Judge’s chambers, *265 thereafter returned and the following proceedings ensued:] The Court: There may be some merit in your contention with reference to the amendment of Section 1297, Mr. Andersen, but I will not decide that at this time; that is, with reference to the forfeiture of the money. ’ ’
The lawfulness of the order, by which the fine that was imposed upon the defendants in the criminal action was directed to be paid out of the money that had been deposited by third persons as bail for the appearance in court of the said defendants, is the subject of these proceedings.
However, preceding a determination of the question of whether the trial court was possessed of authority to direct the disposition of the money that had been deposited by a bondsman as bail for the appearance of Circle, it would seem advisable that attention should be directed to each of several minor points which has been advanced by the respondents :
It may be remembered that at the time when the petitioner herein presented to. the trial court his request or motion that the bail be “exonerated”, the response which was made thereto by the trial judge was that the “motion is not made in the proper form”. That was the sole reason assigned by the trial court for its refusal to “exonerate” the bail; and, in this proceeding, the respondents re-assert that position, and urge that it should prevail as a sufficient reason for a refusal of this court to make an order by which an annulment of the order here in question would result. In that connection, it first may be not inappropriate to again suggest the application of the rule that in the administration of justice, substance, rather than mere form, should be regarded. In this state, the common-law forms of procedure have been either abandoned or, at least, have suffered a considerable modification in their strictness, with the consequence that their importance even in matters of pleading has been greatly decreased; and, with reference to statutory procedure, by constitutional provision, ordinarily no error “as to any matter of pleading, or . . . procedure” constitutes a sufficient ground even for the granting of a new trial. (See. 4%, art. VI, Const.) Other than that the request or the motion should have been preceded by an offer on the part of the bondsman to surrender the defendant into court, no suggestion is here made as to the
*266
“form” which should have been observed.
(Mundell
v.
Wells,
On the part of the respondents, it also is urged that at the time when the order here in question was made, no evidence was introduced in behalf of the bondsman “showing that the bail money had actually been deposited by third parties”, and that as a consequence thereof, “the court could do nothing other than order the forfeiture”. In that regard, it need only be said that such contention is lacking in substantial merit. Prior to the institution of the instant proceeding, the record of the proceedings herein discloses the undeniable fact that no question with respect to the facts was ever suggested either by the judge of the trial court or by any interested person. Apparently everyone that was at all connected with the matter was thoroughly conversant with all the facts; and, as hereinbefore has been stated, the only ground upon which reliance was placed by *267 the trial judge for his refusal to make the requested order was that the motion was “not made in the proper form”.
Regarding the merits of the motion, it appears that in criminal cases, with respect to “deposit instead of bail”, section 1297 of the Penal Code provides as follows:
“When money has been deposited, a receipt shall be issued in the name of the depositor. If the money remains on deposit at the time of a judgment for the payment of a fine, the county clerk must, under the direction of the court, apply the money in satisfaction thereof, and after satisfying the fine and costs, must refund the surplus, if any, to the defendant. If the person to whom the receipt for the deposit was issued was not the defendant, the deposit after judgment shall, upon surrender of the receipt, he returned to the holder thereof.” (Emphasis added.) The italicized portion of the law just quoted constitutes a part of an amendment that was enacted by the legislature in 1937. Furthermore, section 1302 of the Penal Code provides as follows:
“If money has been deposited instead of bail, and the defendant, at any time before the forfeiture thereof, surrenders himself to the officer to whom the commitment was directed, in the manner provided in the last two sections, the court must order a return of the deposit to the defendant or to the person or persons found by the court to have deposited said money on behalf of said defendant upon the production of the certificate of the officer showing the surrender, and upon a notice of five days to the district attorney, with a copy of the certificate.”
From a casual reading of those statutes, it would seem manifest, considering the facts of the instant case, that the deposit not having been made by the defendant, but by a bondsman, eventually the latter was entitled to have his money returned to him. However, it is contended by the respondents that the provisions of section 1295 of the Penal Code qualify that which would seem to be the plain language of section 1297. But this court is unable to agree with the respondents in that regard. All that the pertinent language of section 1295 purports to provide is that after a defendant has been admitted to bail, either he or any other person may deposit the required amount of the cash bond with the clerk of the court; thereupon “upon delivering to the *268 officer in whose custody defendant is a certificate of the deposit, defendant must be discharged from custody”.
The decision in the case of
Mundell
v.
Wells, 181
Cal. 398 [
Finally, as an objection to a determination of the legality of the order in question, the respondents herein urge the point that a “writ of review is not a proper proceeding in this case”. In that regard, the respondents contend that, even if it be admitted that section 1297 of the Penal Code requires the trial court to pay the deposited bail to the person holding the receipt therefor, certiorari will not lie to review the action of the trial court in erroneously ordering it applied in satisfaction of a fine, for the asserted reason that at most the action of the trial court was simply an error in the exercise of jurisdiction and was not in excess of its jurisdiction. In other words, the respondents rely on the well-settled rule that before a writ of certiorari may be granted, it must be shown that the inferior court acted in excess of its jurisdiction, and that the writ may never be granted where the inferior court merely commits error in the exercise of its jurisdiction (see cases collected 4 Cal. Jur., sec. 4, p. 1022). However, an examination of the facts of the instant case leads to the conclusion that a proper situation is presented which will justify the issuance of the writ.
Primarily, it should be noted that courts possess no inherent power to appropriate to the payment of a fine that has been imposed on a defendant, any money that theretofore may have been deposited by a bondsman for the purpose of insuring appearance of the defendant for trial in the action in which such fine has been imposed. Such authority is of purely statutory origin, and necessarily is limited by the terms of the enabling statute.
(Isbell
v.
Bay
*269
Circuit Judge,
If it be assumed that the statute—section 1297 of the Penal Code—limited the court’s authority to paying the deposited bail to the petitioner, it is obvious that such statute limits the jurisdiction of the court, as that term is used in the rule hereinbefore stated, and that the court’s action in ordering the bail applied in satisfaction of the fine was in “excess” of jurisdiction, and was not merely an error in the exercise thereof. An examination of the numerous cases which deal with this problem impels the conclusion that some confusion exists with reference to what constitutes an excess, and what constitutes an error, in the exercise of jurisdiction. However, it seems well settled (and there appears to be no case holding to the contrary) that when a statute authorizes prescribed procedure, and the court acts contrary to the authority thus conferred, it has exceeded its jurisdiction, and
certiorari
will lie to correct such excess. In
Spreckels S. Co.
v.
Industrial Acc. Com.,
Substantially the same rule was announced in
Baker
v.
Superior Court,
The very point involved in the instant case was considered by the District Court of Appeal in
Hudson
v.
Police Court of Oakland,
Prom the foregoing it follows that, since the statute herein involved limits the power of the trial court, the action of that court contrary to such limitation was in excess of its *271 jurisdiction, and that certiorari is the proper remedy to secure a review of such action.
The order in question is annulled.
Edmonds, J., Curtis, J., Langdon, J., Shenk, J., Seawell, J., and Waste, C. J., concurred.
