The petition for a writ of prohibition alleges in substance that in an action to which petitioner is not a party a certain automobile upon which petitioner holds a $1500 mortgage has been attached under a writ issuing from the Justice's Court of San Diego Township, that petitioner duly filed a third party claim for said property, that the plaintiff in said action filed a bond to indemnify the *Page 744 constable, that the constable now holds said property and that proceedings have been instituted in said Justice's Court to try the title to said automobile under the provisions of Code of Civil Procedure, section 689, that petitioner filed objections in said Justice's Court upon the grounds that said court was without jurisdiction to try said title, that said objections were overruled and that said court will proceed to try said title unless prohibited therefrom.
[1] Petitioner's chief contention is that the Justice's Court is without jurisdiction for the reason that Code of Civil Procedure, section 689, in so far as it provides for a method of trying title to attached property, does not apply to justices' courts.
The article in the Code of Civil Procedure dealing expressly with procedure on attachment in justices' courts is very brief and includes but four sections — 866-869, inclusive — but by the provisions of the last of these — section 869 — certain other sections of that code regarding attachments in the superior court are also made applicable to the justices' courts, among them being section 549.
That section as it has stood since amended in 1891 (Stats. 1891, p. 20), provides: "If any personal property attached be claimed by a third person as his property, the same rules shall prevail as to the contents and making of said claim, and as to the holding of said property, as in case of a claim after levy upon execution, as provided for in section six hundred and eighty-nine of the Code of Civil Procedure."
Turning now to section
As these two sections then stood, the construction of the language of section 549 presents no difficulty, since clearly its language related to and embraced the whole of the then provisions of section
However, in 1929 the legislature amended section
It is under this last-quoted provision that the Justice's Court in the case at bar is assuming to act. The question presented then is, where property has been attached under a writ issued from a justice's court, a third party claim made to said property, and an indemnity bond given the constable by the attaching creditor, does the justice's court have jurisdiction to hear a petition to determine title to the property under the provisions of section
If section 549 stated merely that the same procedure should be followed in attachments, as provided by section
It is ordered that the writ of prohibition issue as prayed for.
Marks, J., and Barnard, J., concurred.
