185 P. 985 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1919
The petition asked for a writ of prohibition restraining and prohibiting respondents from hearing, proceeding with, and deciding any matter in relation to a certain *65 indictment returned by the grand jury of Glenn County against petitioner.
The charging part of said indictment reads as follows: "The said Channan Singh . . . did then and there willfully, unlawfully and feloniously and corruptly, offer and give a bribe, to wit: Five hundred dollars, in currency, lawful money of the United States, to one H. W. McGowan, who was then and there, and on the 6th day of Jan., 1919, and ever since said time has been and now is, an executive officer of the state of California, to wit, the duly elected, qualified and acting district attorney of the county of Glenn, state of California, with the intent then and there willfully, unlawfully, feloniously and corruptly to influence the act, vote, decision and opinion of the said H. W. McGowan, as such officer, in respect to the prosecution of a certain action entitled ThePeople of the State of California v. Santa Singh, Mit Singh andIshar Singh, on the charge of the crime of assault with a deadly weapon with the intent to commit murder, . . . then and there . . . pending in the superior court of the county of Glenn, state of California, contrary," etc.
The indictment herein assailed is based on section
The contention of the petitioner is that a district attorney is neither an executive officer nor an officer of the state.
Waiving consideration of the question, which, under some of the decisions in this state, might arise here, whether the petitioner has available to him for the relief he seeks by this proceeding a plain and an adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law, the real ground of his objection to the indictment being that that document does not state a public offense under any known law of this state, we will proceed to consider the merits of the contention advanced by him.
[1] It may first be conceded that a district attorney is a county officer in at least a geographic sense — that is to say, that the exercise of his powers as such is limited territorially *66
to the county for which he has been elected. But, considering the nature and purposes of county governments, he is also in a sense a state officer, or, perhaps it would be more correct to say, a part of a political organization which is itself an agent of the state. The authorities are quite uniform upon the proposition that all the powers and functions of a county government organization have direct and exclusive reference to the general policy of the state, and are, in fact, but a branch of the general administration of that policy. (Dillon on Municipal Corporations, 5th ed., sec. 35; People v. SacramentoCounty,
[2] As above stated, the petitioner contends that a district attorney is not an executive but a judicial officer, hence that officer does not come within the class of officers mentioned in section
[3] Section
[4] It is a familiar rule of statutory construction that where the language of a statute is, upon its face, ambiguous, or its meaning likewise uncertain or obscure, the consequences of a particular construction or interpretation of such statute may be taken into consideration. If the construction of section
We have carefully examined the very able brief of counsel for petitioner and the authorities cited therein in support of their several contentions here. We have found nothing in the cases or other authorities cited which have tended to lead us from the conclusion herein arrived at.
The alternative writ is discharged and this proceeding dismissed.
Ellison, P. J., pro tem., and Burnett, J., concurred. *69