This is a petition for a writ of prohibition to restrain the superior court from proceeding with the hearing and determination of a case appealed to it from the justice’s court upon the ground that the superior court had never acquired jurisdiction of the cause upon appeal.
In support of his application petitioner contends that the undertaking given on appeal is so radically defective as to be a nullity, wherefore the superior court never acquired jurisdiction
(McCracken
v.
Superior Court,
Under section 90 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the ease in the justice’s court was assigned for trial to Justice A. B. Treadwell. Subsequently the sureties justified before Justice Isadore Golden, another justice of the same justice’s court. This was after due notice to the defendant. It is contended that this justification was a nullity, but section 92 of the same code expressly provides that “sureties on appeal, or on any bond, or undertaking given in any cause or proceeding in said court, when required to justify, may justify before any one of the justices.” The justification, therefore, was not a nullity.
It is made to appear that a corrected undertaking, by leave of the court first had, was filed in the superior court before which the appeal was pending. This was permissible procedure and cured the error complained of
(Coulter
v.
Stark,
Wherefore, the relief prayed for is denied and the writ discharged.
