People v. Sacramento Butchers' Protective Ass'n

107 P. 712, 12 Cal. App. 471, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 332
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 22, 1910
DocketCrim. No. 96.
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 107 P. 712 (People v. Sacramento Butchers' Protective Ass'n) 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
People v. Sacramento Butchers' Protective Ass'n, 107 P. 712, 12 Cal. App. 471, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 332 (Cal. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

HART, J.

The defendant, O’Keefe, was convicted of violating certain provisions of an act of the legislature of 1907 -(Stats. 1907, p. 984, c. 530), entitled: “An act to define trust and to provide criminal penalties and civil damages, and punishment of corporations, persons, firms and associations, or persons connected with them, and to promote full competition in commerce and all classes of business in the state.”

This appeal is by O’Keefe from the judgment and the order of the trial court denying him a new trial.

The information charges that the appellant, as the managing agent of the Western Meat Company, and said company, in pursuance of a combination and conspiracy into which they had previously entered with the Sacramento Butchers’ Pro *476 tective Association and the individual members thereof, to execute and carry out certain contracts and agreements, the effect of the execution of which would be to destroy free competition in the retail meat business in said city of Sacramento, required and compelled one Albert Robinson, who was engaged in carrying on the retail meat business in said city, to pay to the appellant and said Western Meat Company higher prices for meats than the appellant and said company required the members of said Butchers’ Protective Association, each of whom was likewise engaged in the retail meat business, to pay for the same class or character of meats.

The refusal of the court to grant appellant’s motion to set aside the information, the order overruling the demurrer to the information, insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict, alleged errors in admitting and rejecting certain evidence, alleged erroneous instructions given to the jury, and want of jurisdiction in the superior courts of criminal prosecutions under the act upon the provisions of which the information here is based, are the general reasons upon which a reversal of the judgment and the order is urged.

The act concerned here is what is commonly known as the “Cartwright Anti-Trust Law,” and, as its title and provisions clearly indicate, its purpose is to prevent such business combinations as will result in restrictions in trade or commerce, or, in other words, in the destruction of free competition in the manufacture, sale and purchase of merchandise and other commodities for domestic use.

Section 1 of said act reads, in part, as follows:

“Section 1. A trust is a combination of capital, skill or acts by two or more persons, firms, partnerships, corporations or associations of persons, or by any two or more of them for either, any or all of the following purposes: 1. To create or carry out restrictions in trade or commerce. . . . 3. To prevent competition in manufacturing, making, transportation, sale or purchase of merchandise, produce or any commodity. ...”

1. The order denying the motion to set aside the information was proper.

The grounds of the motion, stated in general language, are: That the defendant had not been legally committed by a magistrate; that the alleged offense set forth in the in *477 formation is not the offense stated in the “complaint” filed in the magistrate’s court, in that the offense sought to be charged in said complaint is a misdemeanor, while the information purports to charge a felony, and further, that the “complaint” does not charge the alleged offense to have been committed against any particular person, while the information charges that the purported offense alleged therein was against one Albert Robinson; “that no order has been indorsed on the complaint holding defendant, O’Keefe, to answer to the charge contained in said complaint”; that no evidence was adduced before the magistrate authorizing the order holding O’Keefe to answer to the charge alleged in the “complaint.” In addition to these, the motion advances some other grounds upon which it is claimed the information should be set aside, but they are not, in our judgment, of sufficient importance to require special notice.

The only grounds specified by the code upon which, upon a proper showing, á trial court is authorized to set aside an information are the following: “1. That before the filing thereof the defendant had not been legally committed by a magistrate; 2. That it was not subscribed by the district attorney of the county.” (Pen. Code, sec. 995.)

Under the familiar rule of construction, expressio unius est exclusio alterius, a trial court is without jurisdiction to entertain or to grant a motion to set aside the information upon any ground other than those expressly specified in the designated section of the Penal Code. Assuming, therefore, that the evidence presented to the magistrate was altogether insufficient to establish probable cause for believing that the offense for which the defendant was examined and held had been committed, and that he committed it, that question could not properly be urged and decided on a motion of the character of the one under consideration. Upon the filing of an information corresponding with the terms of the commitment as to the nature of the offense indicated in the latter, the presumption at once arises that the evidence of which said commitment is predicated was in all respects sufficient to justify the magistrate in making the order (Western Meat Co. v. Superior Court, 9 Cal. App. 538, [99 Pac. 976]), and, as the attorney general has very clearly pointed out in his brief, if the evidence taken before the magistrate *478 was not sufficient to warrant the order of commitment, that question should have been inquired into and determined through some other proceeding than a motion to set aside the information. (People v. Beach, 122 Cal. 37, [54 Pac. 369]; People v. Lee Look, 143 Cal. 219, [76 Pac. 1028]; Redmond v. State, 12 Kan. 172; People v. Cole, 127 Cal. 549, [59 Pac. 984]; Ex parte Dimmig, 74 Cal. 164, [15 Pac. 619].)

The point sought to be made by the appellant that there is a variance between the allegations of the “complaint,” so-called, and those of the information, cannot be maintained. The instrument upon which the warrant of arrest is authorized to be issued by a magistrate in the case of an indictable offense is not a “complaint” in the sense that it is a pleading, but is practically a deposition only, setting forth the facts stated by the informant, sufficiently showing the commission of an offense and its perpetration by the defendant to justify the issuance of a warrant of arrest by the magistrate. (Pen. Code, secs. 811, 812.) The commitment is based upon all the depositions and not alone upon the so-called complaint, and the information is in turn founded upon the order of commitment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 P. 712, 12 Cal. App. 471, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-sacramento-butchers-protective-assn-calctapp-1910.