117 P. 553 | Cal. | 1911
Lead Opinion
This is an appeal from a judgment of the superior court awarding a peremptory writ of prohibition. An action was commenced in the police court of the city of Riverside by E. Carlin against A. Simpson (respondent herein), to recover one hundred and twenty-five dollars alleged to be due upon a promissory note. Simpson appeared and demurred to the complaint, upon the ground that the police court had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the action. The demurrer being overruled, this proceeding was instituted in the superior court to prohibit the police court and the judge thereof from proceeding further in the cause.
The charter of the city of Riverside provides for the creation of a police court, and undertakes to vest in that court jurisdiction, concurrent with that of the justices' court, "of all civil actions and proceedings arising within the corporate limits of the city and which might be tried in said justices' court." (Sec. 193, Stats. 1907, p. 1330.) The contention of the respondent is that this provision is ineffectual as a grant of jurisdiction in cases of the kind here involved. Regardless of the merits of this contention, we think the writ of prohibition should have been denied in the court below, for the reason that the petitioner Simpson had a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law for any act to be done in excess of the jurisdiction of the police court. (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 1102, 1103.) An appeal may be taken to the superior court on questions of law or fact, or both, from a judgment rendered in a civil action in the police court. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 974.) That such appeal is a plain and speedy remedy is not questioned. We think it clear, too, that the remedy is entirely adequate.
In support of this conclusion it will not be necessary to do more than to refer to the recent decision of the district court of appeal for the first appellate district in Hamburger v. PoliceCourt of City of Fresno,
The court below therefore erred in granting the writ, for the reason that the plaintiff had a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law. This being so, we will not enter into any examination of the question of the jurisdiction of the police court of the city of Riverside. Even if we should upon such an examination conclude that that court was without jurisdiction, it could not be said that the error of the superior court in granting a writ of prohibition was without prejudice to the appellant. The appellant is the police court. It is not a party to the action of Carlin v. Simpson, and has no direct interest in the outcome of that action. It has, however, a right to appeal from any judgment against it prohibiting it from proceeding in that action, and has a right to be relieved from any writ improperly issued so prohibiting it. Whether acting within or without its jurisdiction, it is subject to prohibition only in cases where, under the statute, prohibition will properly lie. It is as much injured by a writ of prohibition granted at the suit of one having a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law, as by a writ granted in a case where it is acting within its jurisdiction.
The judgment is reversed, with directions to the superior court to dismiss the proceeding.
Shaw, J., Lorigan, J., Melvin, J., and Henshaw, J., concurred.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent. I am in entire accord with the views expressed by the district court of appeal *533 in deciding this case, to the effect that the police court of the city of Riverside is without jurisdiction of the civil case, action in which by said police court it was sought to restrain by this proceeding in prohibition. Under such circumstances, I quite agree with the district court of appeal that a reversal of the judgment of the superior court granting a writ of prohibition should not be had, even if we assume, in accord with some of the decisions, that the writ might have been denied upon the ground that the parties seeking it had a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy by appeal. No good purpose can be subserved by permitting the police court to hear and determine the case on its merits, with the consequent expense and inconvenience to both parties, if the decision of that court ought to be set aside on an appeal to the superior court, on the ground of want of jurisdiction. (SeeCampbell v. Durand (Utah), 115 P. 986, 990.) Further, the question whether a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy by appeal exists in any particular case is, to my mind, one largely within the discretion of the court to which the application for prohibition is made. The mere fact that there is an appeal given by the law is not necessarily sufficient to bar the remedy by prohibition. The remedy by appeal must always be plain, speedy, and adequate, and whether it is of such a nature must depend on the facts of each particular case. We have nothing in the record of this case that compels the conclusion that there was an abuse of discretion on the part of the court in determining that the remedy by appeal was not a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent. No effort is here made to refute the proposition which I attempted to sustain by my opinion in Hamberger v. PoliceCourt (reported in
Finally, I am obliged to say that the reason assigned for setting aside the judgment of the district court of appeal in this case appears to me to be scarcely adequate. The appeal from the superior court was properly taken to that court. There the question as to the jurisdiction of the police court was carefully considered and the conclusion reached, in accordance with that of the superior court, that it had no jurisdiction of civil actions — and although they agreed with the appellant that prohibition was not the appropriate remedy, they nevertheless affirmed the judgment of the superior court upon the ground that the error in issuing the writ was without prejudice. I quote the last paragraph of their opinion: —
"While we concur with appellant in his contention that the court below erred in granting a writ of prohibition where the *536
right of appeal afforded a complete and adequate remedy, nevertheless, under section
This reason for refusing to reverse the judgment of the superior court is deemed insufficient by this court because, however just and sound that judgment may be upon the substantial merits of the controversy, it stands in the form of a writ "improperly" issued, and the police court's right of appeal is infringed unless it is relieved from it. It cannot, of course, be denied that the police court has the right of appeal from an adverse judgment in prohibition; the constitution secures it in that right by the same clause that secures the right to one who invokes the remedy to protect him against judicial usurpation — the right pertains to the remedy and is not secured to one party to the exclusion of the other. This solicitude for the right of a tribunal asserting a questionable jurisdiction to prosecute its appeal to this court from a judgment which rightfully restricts it to its proper functions seems somewhat excessive when compared with our indifference to the practical nullification of the right of appeal accorded by the same provision of the constitution to one who justly complains that he is threatened by the process of a judicial usurper. He, it is held, in cases similar to this, can never get to this court on that question. His only remedy is an appeal to the superior court — an appeal which can be carried no farther.
And this scrupulous regard for the defendant's right of appeal from an adverse judgment in prohibition — in which I cordially sympathize — suggests a further consideration. Suppose the respondent had appealed to the superior court from the judgment of the police court, Judge Densmore would have *537 reversed the judgment for the same reason that led him to issue the writ of prohibition, and the result would have been that the police court would have found itself practically divested of its jurisdiction in civil cases by a judgment in a collateral proceeding from which it would have had no appeal. If, therefore, it has a rightful claim to the disputed jurisdiction, the remedy elected by the respondent has preserved to the police court a right of appeal which otherwise it would have lost. Where, then, is the prejudice resulting from the improper issuance of the writ? The idea seems to be that strict regularity of procedure must be adhered to at all hazards, and that a court whose claims to civil jurisdiction can only be drawn in question secundumartem in a proceeding which it cannot defend, has a real grievance if attacked in a proceeding which it can defend to the last ditch.