In Re Avdalas

102 P. 674, 10 Cal. App. 507, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 204
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 4, 1909
DocketCrim. No. 97.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 102 P. 674 (In Re Avdalas) 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
In Re Avdalas, 102 P. 674, 10 Cal. App. 507, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 204 (Cal. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

*509 HART, J.

The petitioner was convicted by a jury in the justice’s court of township No. 9, in Placer county, upon a complaint purporting to charge him with a misdemeanor under the provisions of section 537 of the Penal Code, and was thereupon sentenced to pay a fine of sixty dollars, or, in default of the payment thereof, to be confined in the county jail of said county at the rate of one day for each dollar of said fine.

That portion of the provisions of said section within which it was sought, by the charging part of the complaint, to bring the alleged act of the petitioner, reads as follows: “Any person who obtains any food or accommodation at an hotel, inn, restaurant, boarding-house or lodging-house without paying therefor, with intent to defraud the proprietor or manager thereof, ... is guilty of a misdemeanor.”

It is claimed by the petitioner that the complaint upon which he was convicted does not state a public offense under section 537 of the Penal Code, supra, and that, therefore, the court was without jurisdiction to try him upon the purported charge and that he is now restrained of his liberty under a judgment which is absolutely void.

The charging part of the complaint is in the following language : “The said defendant, at the time and place last aforesaid did willfully and unlawfully defraud the said Theros Theros, keeper of a boarding-house, by leaving and going away from the said boarding-house without first paying his bill, with deliberate intent to defraud the said Theros Theros out of the amount due thereon, to wit: Forty-five dollars. ’ ’

It was admitted at the hearing of this petition that the petitioner had taken an appeal from the judgment of the justice’s court to the superior court of Placer county, but that said appeal is still pending.

It is scarcely necessary to remark that the complaint upon which the petitioner was convicted could not for a moment be regarded as sufficient as an accusatory pleading if tested by a demurrer. It is undoubtedly obnoxious to every criticism to which it is subjected by counsel for petitioner. But the question here is, how far may an inquiry be extended in a proceeding upon habeas corpus in a case like the one here, where, it is manifestly clear, from the averments of the com *510 plaint, that there is thus at least an attempt to charge an offense known to the law, within the jurisdiction of the justice’s court. The question is not altogether free from difficulty in view of the decisions, if we do not misapprehend the full import of some of the more recent ones involving a discussion of the proposition.

In the case of Ex parte Ruef, on Habeas Corpus, 150 Cal. 665, [89 Pac. 605], the claim, on behalf of the petitioner, that the indictment failed to state a public offense was rejected in that proceeding, the court saying: “We think the true rule is that where an indictment purports or attempts to state an offense of a kind of which the court assuming to proceed has jurisdiction the question whether the facts charged are sufficient to constitute an offense of that kind will not be examined into on habeas corpus. Here the indictments clearly attempt to charge extortion, a crime defined by section 518, et seq., of the Penal Code, and within the jurisdiction of the superior court'.” This appears to be only a restatement of the rule as it was applied to cases of misdemeanor in early cases decided by the supreme court. (Ex parte Maier, 103 Cal. 476, [42 Am. St. Rep. 129, 37 Pac. 402]; Ex parte Williams, 121 Cal. 328, [53 Pac. 706].) In the last-mentioned case, in which the petitioner, as is the case here, was restrained of his liberty for an alleged violation of section 537 of the Penal Code, it is said: “While the inquiry on habeas corpus may extend to the question whether the complaint or information charges an offense known to the law, since this objection goes to the question of jurisdiction, the proceeding may not be made to subserve the office of a demurrer; and if the facts alleged squint at a substantive statement of the offense, (italics mine) no matter how defectively or in artificially they may be stated, or however confused and beclouded they may be rendered through intermingling them with immaterial or unnecessary averments, the writ will not lie”; citing Ex parte Whitaker, 43 Ala. 323, and Matter of Prime, 1 Barb. (N. Y.) 340.

But my attention is called to the recent case of Ex parte Greenall, 153 Cal. 767, [96 Pac. 804], in which the court appears to extend the doctrine as to misdemeanors and accords to it much wider scope than it has ever before been given in any other case which I have yet seen, as I understand the

*511 decision. The petitioner in that case had been convicted in a justice's court on a complaint charging him Avith an infraction of the provisions of a statute passed by the legislature of 1907 designed for the regulation of the practice of medicine and surgery, osteopathy, and “other systems or modes of treating the sick or afflicted,” etc. The complaint in that ease seems to have attempted “to state an offense of a kind of Avhieh the court assuming to proceed has jurisdiction,” as the court said Avas enough as to an indictment in the case of Ex parte Ruef, 150 Cal. 665, [89 Pac. 605], or, as Avas said in Ex parte Williams, 121 Cal. 328, [53 Pac. 706], squinted “at a substantive statement of the offense.” In the Green-all case the question of the sufficiency of the complaint to state a public offense under the statute involved therein is treated as though arising on a special demurrer. But the court ansAvers the contention of the respondent in that case “that if there is in this state such an offense as that of which petitioner was convicted, the sufficiency of the complaint is immaterial on hateas corpus,” as follows: “The rule of the Ruef case has never been applied by this court to proceedings in courts of inferior, as distinguished from courts of general, jurisdiction. To the contrary, it has been the uniform practice to consider on hateas corpus the question of the sufficiency of the complaint in such inferior courts, and to discharge the prisoner where such complaint failed to show a public offense under the laws of the state.”

I frankly confess that I am unable to perceive any logical ground for drawing a distinction between felony and misdemeanor cases, where, in either case, the accusatory document fails to state facts sufficient to show the commission of a public offense known to the law, unless it is intended to arbitrarily declare that, because the law furnishes no method by which misdemeanor cases may be carried to the higher courts for the correction of errors, the writ of hateas corpus may be extended in its scope, in such cases, and made to perform practically the office of a writ of error. I see no serious objection to thus enlarging the scope of the writ, in which event there would then appear a valid reason for the distinction which appears to have been established in the Greenall case.

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Bluebook (online)
102 P. 674, 10 Cal. App. 507, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-avdalas-calctapp-1909.