Ex Parte Hayter

116 P. 370, 16 Cal. App. 211, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 152
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 10, 1911
DocketCrim. No. 161.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 116 P. 370 (Ex Parte Hayter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Hayter, 116 P. 370, 16 Cal. App. 211, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 152 (Cal. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

HART, J.

The petition alleges that, on the twenty-sixth day of October, 1910, a complaint was filed in the justice’s court of township No. 2, in the county of Merced, jointly charging the petitioner and one Walter Hayter with the crime of obtaining property from one A. Dastrevigne by false and fraudulent representations. A warrant was thereupon issued by the magistrate, and, on the fifth day of November, 1910, said warrant was served on the petitioner, who was brought before said magistrate, by whom petitioner was, on the fifteenth day of December, 1910, preliminarily examined on said charge and an order made holding him to trial in the superior court of said county. Upon said order the district attorney, in due time, filed an information, thereby attempting to inform against petitioner for the crime for which he was ordered held by the magistrate.

After several postponements of the matter the defendant appeared for arraignment upon the information thus filed on the twenty-third day of January, 1911. The petitioner moved to set aside said information on certain statutory grounds. This motion was denied by the court, and thereupon the petitioner interposed to the information a demurrer, *213 which, after argument, was, on the twenty-eighth day of January, 1911, ordered sustained by the court.

The order sustaining the demurrer reads as follows: “The demurrer to the information herein having been heretofore argued and submitted is now ordered sustained.”

The petition further alleges that immediately upon the making of the foregoing order sustaining the demurrer the clerk of said court entered the same upon the minutes of said court “in the minute-book kept by said clerk for recording the proceedings had in said court in such matters as come before said court.”

Immediately after the making of said order sustaining said demurrer, the petition proceeds, “as the defendant, James Hayter, petitioner herein, was leaving the courtroom of said court, he was arrested by the sheriff of said county, without any warrant of arrest being read to him, by order and direction of the district attorney of said county, and immediately taken to and confined in the county jail of said county, wherein he is now and has ever since been confined and restrained of his liberty. ’ ’

The petition discloses that, on the afternoon of the day on which the court made the order sustaining the demurrer to said information, and after the petitioner had been rearrested as described, the district attorney caused another complaint to be verified and filed with said justice’s court of township No. 2, charging the petitioner with the identical offense for which he was informed against by the information to which, as explained, a demurrer was sustained.

The petitioner, claiming,- as he does here, that, since the court, at the time of making the order sustaining the demurrer to the information referred to, did not “direct a new information to be filed,” as required by section 1008 of the Penal Code, the action of the district attorney in causing him to be rearrested and proceedings de novo taken and had before the magistrate upon a complaint filed before said magistrate accusing him of the identical offense with which he was charged by the information that fell under the force of a demurrer, was in excess of his authority and jurisdiction, under the terms of the section of the code just mentioned, petitioned the superior court of Merced county for his restoration to liberty through a writ of habeas corpus. The petition *214 for said writ, as here, stated, as the ground upon which petitioner claimed the right to his release from imprisonment, that, upon sustaining the demurrer to the information, the court did not make an order directing the district attorney either to file a new information or otherwise to proceed de novo, as required by the statute, against the defendant upon the charge alleged against him in said information. Said writ was granted and made returnable before said superior court on the second day of February, 1911, at 5 o 'clock P. M.

Argument upon the petition for said writ was had on the third day of February, 1911, and it appears that the court took the matter, after its submission, under advisement.

On the twenty-fifth day of February, 1911, the matter of petitioner’s application to be discharged from custody being still undecided, the court made an order correcting its minutes of the proceedings had on the twenty-eighth day of January, 1911, on which date the demurrer to the said information was sustained. The proceedings by which said minutes were corrected are recorded as follows in the minute-book kept by the clerk of said court:

“Whereas, the minutes of the superior court of Merced County, State of California, for the 28th day of January, 1911, in the Matter of the Application of James Hayter and Walter Hayter for a writ of habeas corpus read as follows: ‘People vs. James Hayter and Walter Hayter, No. 630. January 28th, 1911. The District Attorney, the defendant, James Hayter and his counsel, B. F. Fowler, Esq., appear in court. ‘The demurrer to the information herein, having been heretofore argued and submitted, is now sustained." And, whereas, said minutes do not fully set forth the actions and judgment of said court had in said matter, said minutes are amended, to read as follows: ‘People vs. James Hayter and Walter Hayter, No. 630. January 28th, 1911. The District Attorney, the defendant and his counsel, B. F. Fowler, Esq., appear in court. The demurrer to the information having been heretofore argued and submitted, the court expressed the opinion that the demurrer should be sustained, and it is so ordered, and the court also expressed the opinion that the defect in said information existing through failure to set forth the intent to defraud might be corrected by properly setting forth said intent in a new information. ’ ’ ’

*215 The minutes disclosing the foregoing correction of the order sustaining the demurrer also show that at the time said correction was made the district attorney declared that “he intended to file immediately a new information and to proceed further against the said James Hay ter by issuance of new process. ’ ’ It also appears from said last-mentioned minutes that counsel for petitioner “requested the court to discharge the prisoner”' upon the showing made on the application for the writ of habeas corpus theretofore issued by said court; but that “the district attorney objected to the making of such order, stating that he intended to file a new information, and the court, upon the objection of the district attorney, refused to order the discharge of the petitioner in order that said new information might be filed.”

Thereafter, the petitioner was preliminarily examined on the second complaint filed before the magistrate, charging him with the crime which was attempted to be stated against him in the first information, and for which he was originally or in the first instance held to trial.

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Bluebook (online)
116 P. 370, 16 Cal. App. 211, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-hayter-calctapp-1911.