In Re Garbarini

19 P.2d 27, 129 Cal. App. 618, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 1112
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 15, 1933
DocketDocket No. 1245.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 19 P.2d 27 (In Re Garbarini) 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 Garbarini, 19 P.2d 27, 129 Cal. App. 618, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 1112 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

PULLEN, P. J.

This is a proceeding on hateas corpus. Petitioner was arrested and convicted upon a complaint *619 filed in a justice court which designated the offense as “crime of killing a doe, a misdemeanor”, it being therein charged that defendant at a certain time and place within the jurisdiction of the court “did wilfully and unlawfully kill a doe”.

The defendant was by the court tried and found guilty and a judgment was rendered finding the defendant “guilty as charged”.

Petitioner now urges that the complaint as filed did not state a public offense and that the judgment does not state any offense of which petitioner was found guilty.

It is obvious that the complaint was intended to charge a violation of that part of section 626e of the Penal Code, which provides that ‘ ‘ every person who hunts, pursues, takes or destroys . . . any female deer ... is guilty of a misdemeanor”. Petitioner contends that a “doe” may be—and the word is so defined in all the recognized dictionaries— either a female deer, female antelope, female hare, female rabbit or a female kangaroo, and inasmuch as the allegation of the complaint is consistent with the innocence of the defendant it cannot support the conviction and the defendant should be discharged on habeas corpus.

We are of the opinion that this contention must be held to be well founded. It must first be noted that the complaint was filed in a justice court, a tribunal of limited jurisdiction as distinguished from a court of general jurisdiction. (Robertson v. Langford, 95 Cal. App. 414 [273 Pac. 150].) A distinction was first drawn between these two classes of courts in Ex parte Kearny, 55 Cal. 212, wherein the Supreme Court held a police court to be “a court of limited jurisdiction whose powers are conferred and whose duties and mode of procedure are prescribed by statute, and to which the rule applies that the evidence of its proceedings must affirmatively show jurisdiction of the person of the defendant, and over the subject matter”.

In Ex parte Greenall, 153 Cal. 767 [96 Pac. 804, 806], after conviction and affirmance thereof in the superior court, the Supreme Court, through Mr. Justice Angellotti, discharged the petitioner upon the ground the complaint in the justice court did not state facts required to constitute a violation of the act attempted to be set forth, and that the *620 allegations of the complaint were consistent with the innocence of the accused.

In that case petitioner was charged with the violation of an act (Stats. 1907, p. 252), which made it a misdemeanor for any person to practice medicine without having at the time a valid certificate. The complaint in question failed to show that petitioner was engaged in the treating of the sick as a business or calling, and inasmuch as the allegations of the complaint in the justice court were consistent with the innocence of the defendant, it failed to show a public offense and the petitioner was discharged.

Our attention is called to the case of Ex parte Ruef, 150 Cal. 665 [89 Pac. 605], where the court held, without distinguishing between courts of general and limited jurisdiction, that on habeas corpus it would not inquire into the sufficiency of an indictment if it appeared or purported to show an offense of a kind of which the court has jurisdiction, but in the Greenall case, supra, the court commenting upon the Buef case, said:

“The rule in the Buef case has never been applied by this court to proceedings in courts of inferior as distinguishable from courts of general jurisdiction. ’ ’

In In re Avdalas, 10 Cal. App. 507 [102 Pac. 674], Mr. Justice Hart applied the rule of the Buef case to a court of limited jurisdiction, and in support thereof cited the case of Ex parte Maier, 103 Cal. 476 [37 Pac. 402, 42 Am. St. Rep. 129], and Ex parte Williams, 121 Cal. 328 [53 Pac. 706], and criticised, on the ground of logic, the rule as laid down in Ex parte Greenall, supra, saying:

“I frankly confess that I am unable to perceive any logical ground for drawing a distinction between felony and misdemeanor eases, 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 habeas 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 *621 the distinction which appears to have been established in the Greenall ease.
“Of course, it is only a trite declaration to say that the sole purpose of the writ of habeas corpus is to try and determine questions of jurisdiction in the class of eases to which it is applicable, and, obviously, if either a complaint in a justice’s court or an indictment absolutely fails to state any public offense known to the law, the court in which such accusatory pleading is filed is manifestly without jurisdiction to restrain the liberty of the person so charged or to put him upon trial under such pretended complaint or indictment.
“It does not definitely appear from the opinion in the Greenall case, supra, that the court intends to hold that the writ of habeas corpus, as to misdemeanors of which justices’ and police courts have jurisdiction, shall serve the purpose of a writ or proceeding for the correction of errors, and, therefore, I agree with the court in the case of Ex parte Williams, 121 Cal. 328 [53 Pac. 706], that the writ is not to be made to subserve the office of a demurrer.”

Shortly after this case the Supreme Court in the case of Ah Sing, 156 Cal. 349 [104 Pac. 448], took occasion to reaffirm the rule as expressed in Ex parte Greenall, saying:

“In view of the statement in the petition for the writ to the effect that a difference of opinion exists among the courts of this state as to the right of a court on habeas corpus to determine the question whether a complaint in a court of limited or inferior jurisdiction states facts sufficient to constitute a public offense, it is proper to say that the rule in this state in that regard is correctly stated in Ex parte Greenall, 153 Cal. 767, 770 [96 Pac. 804], in which case it is plainly pointed out that the rule is different from the one applied to courts of general jurisdiction, as in Ex parte Ruef. An examination of the opinion in the case of Tobias Watkins, 3 Pet. (U. S.) 193 [7 L. Ed. 650], cited in the Greenall case, will disclose grounds for this distinction.”

In the case of Hogan v.

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Bluebook (online)
19 P.2d 27, 129 Cal. App. 618, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 1112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-garbarini-calctapp-1933.