Parrish v. Municipal Court

258 Cal. App. 2d 497, 65 Cal. Rptr. 862, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 2437
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 31, 1968
DocketCiv. 793
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 258 Cal. App. 2d 497 (Parrish v. Municipal Court) 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
Parrish v. Municipal Court, 258 Cal. App. 2d 497, 65 Cal. Rptr. 862, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 2437 (Cal. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

. CONLEY, P. J.

People appeal from a judgment granting a writ of prohibition which forbids the Municipal Court of the Modesto Judicial District to prosecute Benny Max Parrish any further for the alleged violation of section *499 602, subdivision (o), of the Penal Code. * That provision of law was enacted by the Legislature to protect public buildings from trespass during closing hours and, incidentally, to preserve the customary routine of caretakers in maintaining them. The subdivision reads as follows:

“Every person who wilfully commits any trespass by either.
(o) Refusing- or failing to leave a public building of a public agency during those hours of the day or night when the building is regularly closed to the public upon being requested to do so by a regularly employed guard, watchman, or custodian of the public agency owning or maintaining the building or property, if the surrounding circumstances are such as to indicate to a reasonable man that such person has no apparent lawful business to pursue; is guilty of a misdemeanor. ’ ’

While engaged in a general mission, which most citizens would approve, by aiding poor people to realize in timely fashion the benefits of a charitable provision for their welfare, the respondent, Benny Max Parrish, doubtless believing in the correctness of what he did, was accused of violating the above subdivision of the Penal Code. A complaint, later amended, was filed against Mr. Parrish alleging that on or about the 25th day of August, 1966, at and in Modesto Judicial District in Stanislaus County he “. . . wilfully and unlawfully refused and failed to leave a public building or a public agency, to wit, the County of Stanislaus Welfare Department, 1030 Scenic Drive, Modesto, California, during those hours of the day and night when the building was regularly closed to the public upon being requested to do so by the custodian of the public agency owning and maintaining the building in violation of Section 602 (o) of the California Penal Code,” and that when he did so the surrounding circumstances were such as to indicate to a reasonable man that he had no apparent lawful business to pursue.

Mr. Parrish went with other interested persons to the Stanislaus County Welfare Department on a week day at about 4:30 in the afternoon to urge immediate help to an impoverished family; at 5 o ’clock the building was locked pursuant to customary procedure, but Parrish and other interested per *500 sons continued to confer with those in charge of the agency until about 8:30 p.m., at which time he and the others present on the same mission as himself were ordered to leave the building by the proper officials. Everybody eventually did so except Mr. Parrish, who resolved to stand his ground and remain in the building. He was thereupon arrested and was charged, in due course, as above stated, with breach of subdivision (o) of section 602 of the Penal Code.

The date of the filing of the complaint was August 31, 1966. The defendant’s demurrer was overruled as to all counts; the district attorney then filed an amended complaint, which carried the additional allegation as provided by the code that the defendant at the time had no apparent lawful business to pursue. Mr. Parrish entered a plea of not guilty to the amended complaint.

On October 17, 1966, the petitioner filed a petition for a writ of prohibition in the Superior Court of Stanislaus County, including a prayer for declaratory relief and a request for a stay of trial proceedings in the municipal court. The superior court issued an alternative writ of prohibition staying the municipal court jury trial which had been set for November 9, 1966, while the hearing on the writ was pending ; the district attorney filed a demurrer to the petition together with a memorandum of points and authorities. After the hearing, the superior court issued a permanent writ of prohibition on February 1, 1967, permanently staying all further trial proceedings in the municipal court. The People filed a timely notice of appeal to this court on February 6,1967.

In a memorandum containing an extended treatment of the question before him, the trial judge stated that the petitioner, Benny Max Parrish, since May of 1966, had been a field supervisor for the California Center for Community Development and that the organization in turn was a nonprofit California corporation supported by the Office of Economic Opportunity. Petitioner’s employer aimed to develop and administer community action programs for the poor, including help to indigent or impoverished people to aid them in applying for assistance pursuant to Public Law 88-452 of the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964; in pursuance of such employment, petitioner engaged in self-help projects for the poor in Stanislaus County, one of his activities being the insistence that specific indigent people should avail themselves of economic help furnished by the government; as one of the persons selected to help the poor, he, with members of a Wei- *501 fare Eights Organization, went to the Stanislaus County Welfare Department in Modesto to protest the apparent county policy of denial of aid to some, at least, who were presumptively eligible f. r it, and to seek immediate financial help for a destitute family.

Once before this occasion, on June 30, he had gone to the welfare department under similar circumstances and had persisted in demanding payment of an immediate nature for the people then involved. On this former occasion, the petitioner and other citizens with him did leave the building without demand after the welfare director had agreed in a late session after 5 o’clock to give immediate aid on the following morning.

On August 25, 1966, from about 4:30 in the afternoon, he and others conferred with the assistant director of the welfare department; they continued their session in the building until about 8:30 p.m. but did not secure a promise in this instance for the advancement of aid on the following day. The watchman assigned to the building, the District Attorney of Stanislaus County, the Acting Chief of Police of Modesto, and the County Administrator of Stanislaus County at that time demanded that petitioner and the other members of the Welfare Eights Organization leave the building, and told them that if they did not do so they would be arrested pursuant to section 602, subdivision (o), of the Penal Code. Petitioner and one other member elected to stay unless they were promised a welfare payment to the eligible family the next morning. The department officials refused to make such an agreement and petitioner again refused to leave the building. He was then arrested, and, as above stated, was subsequently charged with violation of section 602, subdivision (o), of the Penal Code.

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California Attorney General Reports, 1988
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
258 Cal. App. 2d 497, 65 Cal. Rptr. 862, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 2437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parrish-v-municipal-court-calctapp-1968.