Ex Parte Fedderwitz

62 P. 935, 6 Cal. Unrep. 562, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 1114
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 26, 1900
DocketCr. No. 636
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 62 P. 935 (Ex Parte Fedderwitz) 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
Ex Parte Fedderwitz, 62 P. 935, 6 Cal. Unrep. 562, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 1114 (Cal. 1900).

Opinions

BEATTY, C. J.

The petitioner was convicted before Robert Edgar, claiming to be justice of the peace of the town of Berkeley, of violating an ordinance of that municipality. On appeal to the superior court the judgment of the justice’s court was affirmed, and in pursuance thereof petitioner is held in custody of the sheriff of Alameda county. He claims that his imprisonment was unlawful: First, because there is no justice’s court of the town of Berkeley; second, because the ordinance defining the offense of which he was convicted is void; and, third, because the complaint upon which he was prosecuted does not charge the offense defined in the ordinance.

It is assumed by counsel for petitioner that the question to be determined in this proceeding under his first point is [564]*564in all respects the same as the question decided in Miner v. Justice’s Court, 121 Cal. 264, 53 Pac. 795, and that it must be decided the same way, unless some legislation subsequent to the decision of that case can be found which leads to a different result. But in this assumption I think counsel are mistaken. The questions are not the same. In the former case the proceeding was by mandamus to compel the issuance of an execution upon a judgment rendered by the justice’s court—consisting of two justices of the peace—which the legislature had attempted to create by the special and local act of March 27, 1895 (Stats. 1895, p. 205). It was claimed on the part of petitioner in that case that there was such a justice’s court for the town of Berkeley created by that act, or, if not, that the court of similar title created by the original act of incorporation (Stats. 1877—78, p. 888) continued in existence notwithstanding the adoption of the freeholders’ charter of March 25, 1895. Both points were ruled the other way, the court holding that the old court was abolished by the adoption of the freeholders’ charter, and that the act attempting to create a new court was invalid because local and special; and, having thus disposed of the only questions presented by counsel for its consideration, the court denied the writ of mandate without considering the question presented by this case, viz., whether there is or can be a justice of the peace for the town of Berkeley. If, by legal possibility, there may be a justice of the peace lawfully exercising the powers of that office for the town of Berkeley, the right of Robert 'Edgar to act in that capacity cannot be drawn in question in this proceeding. If there can be a de jure officer, the right of the de facto officer cannot be collaterally assailed.

That the office of justice of the peace for the town of Berkeley has a legal existence is, I think, very clear. In the first place, it has been the law ever since 1880 that there shall be one justice of the peace in every city having 10,000 and not more than 20,000 inhabitants: Code Civ. Proc., sec. 103. This is part of a general law of the state (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 85 et seq.), the constitutionality of which has been frequently affirmed: Bishop v. City of Oakland, 58 Cal. 572; People v. Ransom, 58 Cal. 558; Coggins v. City of Sacramento, 59 Cal. 599. It will no.t be contended, I suppose, that Berkeley is not a “city,” within the meaning of this act, because it has styled itself in its charter the “town” of [565]*565Berkeley; and, if it is a city, it became entitled to a justice of the peace as soon as the fact was legally established that it had over 10,000 inhabitants, and this fact was legally established in the most solemn and conclusive manner by the preamble to the joint resolution of the legislature of March 5, 1896 (Stats. 1895, p. 409), approving the freeholders’ charter. At the date of that resolution it was necessary that a city should have a population of at least 3,500 before it could frame a freeholders’ charter (Const., art. 11, sec. 8, as amended in 1892), and it was the undoubted right and duty of the legislature to ascertain the population of Berkeley before acting upon the proposed charter. This the legislature did, and in the preamble to the resolution ratifying the charter it recited and proclaimed the fact that the town of Berkeley contained a population of more than 10,000 inhabitants. This resolution with the charter which it establishes is a law of the state, and is conclusive as to the fact so recited in the preamble. If, therefore, the law assigning one justice of the peace to every city with a population of more than 10,000 and not exceeding 20,000 had remained unchanged, I should have no hesitation in holding, upon this ground alone, that the office of justice of the peace for the town of Berkeley has existed ever since the 27th of March, 1895; and, although this conclusion might appear to be at variance with the conclusion reached in Miner v. Justice’s Court, it is not inconsistent with anything actually considered or decided in that case. There the whole contention of counsel was in regard to the validity of the special act of 1895 creating a court consisting of two justices of the peace. It was assumed throughout the argument that, if the act of 1895 was invalid, there was no justice’s court in Berkeley, unless it could be held that the provisions of the old charter of 1878, establishing a justice’s court, remained in force notwithstanding the freeholders’ charter of 1895. The argument of counsel being directed exclusively to these propositions, they alone were considered in deciding the case. If our attention had been called to the provisions of section 85 et seq. of the Code of Civil Procedure, and the population of the city as declared in the resolution of the legislature approving the freeholders ’ charter, we could not have held that the office of justice of the peace of the town of Berkeley did not exist at that time. And in fact we did not so hold. All we decided was that [566]*566the court—consisting of two justices, of which alone Gentry claimed' to be a member—had no legal existence. But since the decision of that case there has been new legislation, or attempted' legislation, affecting the office of justice of the peace in cities and towns. On March 10, 1899, an act was passed to amend section 103 of the Code of Civil Procedure: Stats. 1899, p. 88. Before amendment it was provided in that section that in cities having a population of more than 20,000 and not exceeding 100,000 there should be two justices of the peace, and in cities having a population of more than 10,000 and not more than 20,000 there should be one justice of the peace. By the amendment this classification was discarded, and in place thereof it was provided that in every city or town of the third or fourth class there should be one justice of the peace, and in every city or town of the second class there should be two. Some question is made as to what is meant in this amendment by cities of the second, third and fourth classes, but to this question there can be but one answer. The only classes of cities known to our laws are those defined in the act of March 2, 1883 (Stats. 1883, p. 24), entitled “An act to provide for the classification of municipal corporations,” by which all such corporations in the state were divided into six classes according to population, those having a population of more than 10,000 and not exceeding 15,000 constituting the fourth class. This undoubtedly is the classification to which the amended section refers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 P. 935, 6 Cal. Unrep. 562, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 1114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-fedderwitz-cal-1900.