Bulcke v. Superior Court

94 P.2d 1006, 14 Cal. 2d 510, 1939 Cal. LEXIS 353
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1939
DocketL. A. 16804
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 94 P.2d 1006 (Bulcke v. Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bulcke v. Superior Court, 94 P.2d 1006, 14 Cal. 2d 510, 1939 Cal. LEXIS 353 (Cal. 1939).

Opinion

EDMONDS, J.

The petitioner in this proceeding sent a telegram to Judge Ruben S. Schmidt protesting against the decision which occasioned the controversy in the case of Bridges v. Superior Court, ante, p. 464 [94 Pac. (2d) 983], and was adjudged guilty of contempt. Upon his petition a writ of review was issued by this court.

It appears that on the day before that set for hearing a motion for a new trial and a motion to vacate the judgment which had been rendered in the litigation concerning the affiliation of union longshoremen at Los Angeles harbor, petitioner, as vice-president of the International Longshoremen’s and Warehousemen’s Association, sent Judge Schmidt, before whom the motion was pending, the following telegram:

“Five thousand members and permit men International Longshoremens and Warehousemens Union Local 1-10 have accepted National Labor Relations Act Guaranteeing right of American workers to select own union and sole collective bargaining agency as boon to labor. We believe such rights in best American tradition. Appointment of administrator for handling union affairs International Longshoremens and Warehousemens Union Local 1-13 nullifies intent Labor Relations Act and is severe injustice to members that local. We urge such appointment shall not be made.’’

This telegram was received by the judge in his chambers and later shown by him to a committee of the Los Angeles Bar Association.

Thereafter, affidavits made on behalf of the association were filed in the superior court. According to one of them, the telegram sent by the petitioner was calculated and intended by him to interfere with and influence the actions and decisions of Judge Schmidt in the matters then pending before him; interfere with the due and orderly administration of justice; and bring about the vacation of the order theretofore made by causing him to grant a new trial. Upon these affidavits Judge Schmidt issued an order requiring the peti *512 tioner to show cause why he should not be adjudged guilty of contempt and punished therefor.

When the petitioner appeared before the court in response to the order to show cause, his counsel offered a peremptory challenge to the judge under the provisions of section 170.5 of the Code of Civil Procedure. This challenge was properly denied. (Austin v. Lambert, 11 Cal. (2d) 73 [77 Pac. (2d) 849, 115 A. L. R. 849].) There was also presented a written “motion” to disqualify Judge Schmidt for cause. This was accompanied by an affidavit stating facts allegedly showing bias and prejudice.

Declining to consider the “motion” or the supporting affidavit, the court sustained an objection to their being filed upon the ground that the contempt charged against the petitioner was a direct and not a constructive one. The prosecution then withdrew the objection to the filing of the documents and asked that the court allow them to be filed and then deny the motion, but Judge Schmidt ruled: ‘ ‘ The Court on its own motion will deny the request to have the motion filed.”

Counsel for petitioner then requested a jury trial, which request was likewise denied. A trial of the issues followed, ,and upon its conclusion judgment was rendered that the action of the petitioner in sending the quoted telegram was a contempt of the court and that he should be punished accordingly.

In contending that this judgment should be annulled, the petitioner, in addition to other objections made by him, insists that it is void because Judge Schmidt refused to follow the requirements of section 170 of the Code of Civil Procedure which provide for the hearing and determination of challenges for cause. The point relied upon in this regard is that when the petitioner filed his written statement under oath, objecting to the hearing of the contempt matter by Judge Schmidt and setting forth the grounds for the disqualification in the form required by the statute, Judge Schmidt lost jurisdiction to proceed further. The answer to this question depends upon whether the sending of a telegram to a judge under the circumstances here shown is a direct contempt of court. For if the act charged against the petitioner was a constructive contempt, then Judge Schmidt had no authority to hear or pass upon the question of *513 disqualification raised by the petitioner. (Briggs v. Superior Court, 211 Cal. 619 [297 Pac. 3].)

Apparently the appellate courts of this state have not heretofore been called upon to decide whether one who sends to a judge a communication concerning a pending case commits a direct or a constructive contempt of court although by each of three decisions the writer of a letter was found guilty. However, in each of these cases, the writer, after having sent his letter, offered it as evidence in the pending proceedings.

In the case of Ex parte Ewell, 71 Cal. App. 744 [236 Pac. 205], the petitioner sent a contumacious letter to the judge and was later found guilty “upon the ground that said letter was an attack upon the honor and integrity of the court; that petitioner’s part in dictating said letter, having it written by said witness, presenting it through the mail, and afterward injecting it into proceedings on the hearing of said motion, coupled with the language used by petitioner during the hearing of said motion was contemptuous”. So, also, in Blodgett v. Superior Court, 210 Cal. 1 [290 Pac. 293, 72 A. L. R. 482], the contemner, who wrote a grossly contemptuous letter to the judge, later filed an “Answer to Contempt Proceedings” in which he asserted that the judge was disqualified because of bias, and in support of this claim attached a copy of the letter. At the contempt proceeding the judge denied his disqualification and found Blodgett guilty of contempt in respect to the matter contained in the “Points and Authorities’’ and also guilty of a further contempt consisting in the sending of the letter and its presentation in open court at the hearing. This court in affirming the judgment held that the filing of the “Points and Authorities” was a contempt “committed in the presence of the court within the meaning and intent of section 1209 of the Code of Civil Procedure” and was “a direct, as distinguished from a constructive, contempt”. As to the second charge, based upon the contemner’s production in open court of the scandalous letter which he had sent to the judge, the court held that the production and offer of this letter in open court “could not but constitute another and more flagrant contempt”.

A case where the facts are more directly in point is In re Arnold, 204 Cal. 175 [267 Pac. 316], which was an original *514 proceeding in this court. The contemner, who was not an attorney in nor a party to a pending election matter before the court, addressed a letter to the justices which, it was held, constituted “an unlawful interference with the proceedings of the court and an attempt to obstruct the course of justice, and, therefore, a contempt of court”. Although cited in the Blodgett case, supra, as one of direct contempt, the opinion does not classify it as such and the procedure which was followed does not determine how the court defined the offense.

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Bluebook (online)
94 P.2d 1006, 14 Cal. 2d 510, 1939 Cal. LEXIS 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bulcke-v-superior-court-cal-1939.