People ex rel. Field v. Turner

1 Cal. 152
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 1 Cal. 152 (People ex rel. Field v. Turner) 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
People ex rel. Field v. Turner, 1 Cal. 152 (Cal. 1850).

Opinion

By the Court.

Bennett, J.

At a term of the district court of the eighth judicial district for the county of Yuba, held on the Bli day of June last, the following order was made: “ Ordered, that Stephen J. Field be imprisoned forty-eight “ hours and fined five hundred dollars for contempt of court.” An application is now made for a mandamus to vacate this [153]*153order, “ or for an order perpetually staying the execution of " said order, or for such other or further order as may be just.” Notice of the application has been duly given, and copies of the papers upon which it is founded, served.

We have determined, in the case of Mulford, that this court has the power to issue the writ of mandamus to a district court. The point for our present consideration, therefore, is whether this case be a proper one for the exercise of that power. The order now under review shows upon its face that it was intended as an adjudication for a contempt, and this raises the question of the extent of the power of punishment for contempt, and the rules which should be observed in enforcing it.

By the common law every court has, while engaged in the performance of its lawful functions, as an incident to its judicial character, the authority to preserve order, decency and silence, without which no court could vindicate or support the laws intrusted to its administration. The power thus vested in a court is necessarily of an arbitrary nature, and should be used with great prudence and caution. A judge should hear in mind that he is engaged, not so much in vindicating his own character, as in promoting the respect due to the administration of the laws;, and this consideration should induce him to receive as satisfactory any reasonable apology for an offender’s conduct. The case of Lining v. Bentham, in the constitutional court of appeals of South Carolina, (2 Bay's Rep. 1,) contains an accurate-exposition of the light in which this power is viewed. Bentham, a justice of the peace, had committed Lining for a contempt for the use of insulting and abusive language in open, court. Lining sued the justice for false imprisonment and proved upon the trial that the facts set forth in the commitment were untrue, and a verdict was taken for the plaintiff. But the court of appeals set aside the verdict and determined that the commitment drawn up by the justice was conclusive evidence in his favor, and that the justice was not amenable in an action for a judicial act of this nature, but only on an indictment for oppressive or corrupt conduct. And the court remark, that one general principle, incidental to all courts, as well inferior as su[154]*154perior, was a power to commit for contempt, either by word or deed, offered in the presence of the judge and in the face of the court, and that this power was not against magna diaria or the law of the land, but formed a part of the common law.

But whilst the power to punish for contempt is thus arbitrary and conclusive, it by no means follows that every act which a court declares to be a contempt is in reality one. Thus in ex parte Thatcher, (2 Gil. Rep. 167,) the clerk of the court had been removed, and another person appointed in his place, and the one removed had appealed from the order depriving him of the office. The court thereupon made another order requiring the first clerk to give up the books of his office to his successor. To this order obedience was refused, and the court thereupon adjudged the offender guilty of a contempt and committed him to prison. But it was held, that the appeal taken from the order of removal operated as a supersedeas; that the second clerk was improperly appointed ; that there could have been no contempt in refusing obedience to the order requiring a delivery of the books; and that, although the court had power to punish for a contempt in proper cases, yet the facts not being such as could constitute a contempt, the order of commitment and the imprisonment under it, were both illegal and void.

The case of Lining v. Bentham, in no respect conflicts with Thatcher's case. In the former, the subject matter was such that, the power of the court to punish for contempt could properly attach. Its judgment was, therefore, final and conclusive, not only as to the truth of the facts, but as to the construction to be placed upon them. In the latter, the facts upon which the order of commitment was based, were of such a nature as to preclude the idea of a contempt being predicated of them; and, therefore, the judgment was not conclusive, but was subject to be reviewed. It would, indeed, be a monstrous proposition, that a court could, by adjudging an innocent and legal act to be a contempt, thereby preclude the possibility of review, and fine and imprison acl libitum., A distinction exists between the two classes of cases, and a distinction should be made in the applica[155]*155tion to them of the rules of law in relation to the conclusiveness of adjudications for contempt.

The 13th section of the act organizing the district courts, which is but declaratory of the common law, enacts “ that such “ courts shall have power to punish in a summary manner, by “ fine and imprisonment, or either, for contempts offered to them “ while in session, or to any process, writ, rule, or order of said “ courts issued and made, or for disobeying any writ, process “ or order thereof, or for obstructing or preventing the execu- “ tion of the same, and that the judgments, decrees, and de- “ terminations of said courts in such cases shall be final and “ conclusive.” It will be observed that this statute, in carrying out the doctrine of the common law, provides for two different classes of contempts; the one class, consisting of such con-tempts as are committed in the presence of the court during its session ; and the other class, of such contempts as are committed out of court. The method of proceeding in the punishment of these two classes of contempts is different. In the former, the offender may be instantly apprehended and punished without any further examination or proof. But in the latter, which consist of matters arising at a distance, and of which the court cannot have a perfect acquaintance, or take judicial knowledge, the proceeding must be in a different way, and the party accused is entitled to be heard in his defence. (4 Black. Comm. 286.)

We think it follows from the distinctions above considered, that the final order of the court, by which a party is adjudged to have been guilty of a contempt, .should always show, upon its face, the facts upon which the exercise of the power is based, and the adjudication made. This is certainly the general, if not the uniform practice. But the order in question does not set forth any facts, nor even show whether the proceeding was for an offence committed in the presence of the court, or at a distance from it. We are under the impression that it is, in this respect, imperfect; but it is unnecessary to express, at the present time, a definitive opinion upon this point; for we do not conceive that a mandamus would, in any event, be a proper [156]*156remedy. This case differs from Mulford's case. In that, the applicants having been “ expelled from the bar,” asked to be restored. In this, it is sought merely to reverse a judgment of the court. The mandamus must, therefore, be refused.

But the applicant asks, in his notice of motion, for such other order as may be just.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Cal. 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-field-v-turner-cal-1850.