People v. Schmitz

94 P. 407, 7 Cal. App. 330, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 241
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 9, 1908
DocketCrim. No. 115.
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 94 P. 407 (People v. Schmitz) 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. Schmitz, 94 P. 407, 7 Cal. App. 330, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 241 (Cal. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

COOPER, P. J.

Defendant was tried and convicted of the crime of extortion. After the verdict of the jury, on July 8, 1907, he made a motion for a new trial, which was denied, and thereupon the court pronounced judgment, sentencing him to the state prison for the term of five years. Thereafter, on the same day, the defendant served upon the district attorney a notice of appeal from the judgment and from the order denying the motion for a new trial, and then immediately filed the same with the clerk.

1. The district attorney moves to dismiss the appeal in this court upon two grounds: First, that the notice was served before it was filed; and second, that the appeal was premature because taken before the judgment was entered.

The provisions of the Penal Code applicable to the motion are as follows.

*343 “1239. An appeal from á judgment must be taken within ninety days after its rendition, and from an order within sixty days after it is made.”
“1240. An appeal is taken by filing with the clerk of the court in which the judgment or order appealed from is entered a notice stating the appeal from the same, and serving a copy thereof upon the attorney of the adverse party.”

As to the first ground, the statute provides for filing and serving the notice, and there does not appear to be anything in the statute, and there certainly is no reason for holding that where the filing and serving are contemporaneous, the order in which they are done is material. It is necessary under the statute that the notice be filed and served,, and if on the same day and about the same minute the notice is served and filed, what difference could it possibly make 1 The statute requires certain things to be done with the notice, and the appeal depends, upon doing them. They were done, and the order of doing them under the facts of this case is immaterial. It would strike any fair-minded person as being, not only highly technical, but without reason, to hold that a notice filed at 10 o’clock A. M. on the eighth day of July, 1907, and served a minute later, would be a good notice and give this court jurisdiction, and that a notice served at 10 o’clock A. M., and filed the next minute would be a worthless notice, and would not give the court jurisdiction; and yet this is what the district attorney asks us to hold. Counsel have not been able to cite any ease supporting such contention, and all the cases to which our attention has been called hold that the order of the filing and service, if contemporaneous, is immaterial. It has been so held in civil cases under a section of the Practice Act which required the notice to be filed and served (Buffendeau v. Edmondson, 24 Cal. 94 ; Wright v. Ross, 26 Cal. 262 ; Hewes v. Carville etc. Co., 62 Cal. 516) ; and in criminal cases the rule is the same. (People v. Ah Yute, 56 Cal. 119 ; People v. Jordan, 66 Cal. 10, [56 Am. Rep. 73, 4 Pac. 773].)

Not only this, but the notice of appeal has indorsed upon it: “Due service of the above notice of appeal is hereby admitted this 8th day of July, 1907. W. H. Langdon, District Attorney.” It would have been but fair to defendant to decline to accept “due service” if the district attorney intended in any way to object to such service. Defendant could then *344 have filed and served the notice, but the district attorney v/ill not be allowed to admit due service, and then, contrary to his written admission, claim that there was in fact no service. (People v. Grigsby, 62 Cal. 482.)

The second point is equally without merit. The appeal was taken after the judgment was rendered, and from the order after it was made, and this was sufficient under the language of section 1239 of the Penal Code. It was not necessary for defendant to have waited until the judgment and order were entered. The provisions of sections 1239 and 1240 are almost exactly in the language of the provision of the Practice Act in force before the adoption of the codes with respect to the time of taking an appeal. Section 336 of the Civil Practice Act was as follows:

“An appeal may be taken:
“First, From a final judgment in an action or special proceeding commenced in the court in which the judgment is rendered within one year after the rendition of the judgment.
1 ‘ Second, From a judgment rendered on an appeal from an inferior court within ninety days after the rendition of the judgment.
“Third, From an order within sixty days after the order is made.”

It will be noticed that under the Practice Act the appeal from the judgment must have been taken after the rendition, and so under the provisions of the Penal Code. It will also be noticed that under the Practice Act the appeal from an order must have been taken after the order was made, and so in the Penal Code. It was settled by a long line of decisions under the Practice Act that the time for appeal from a judgment commences to run from and may be taken upon the rendition of the judgment, and before its entry.

In Gray v. Palmer, 28 Cal. 416, it was said: “Section 336 of the Practice Act authorizes an appeal to be taken from a final judgment ‘within one year after the rendition of the judgment. ’ . . . After a careful review of these and other sections of the Practice Act we cannot resist the conclusion that the terms ‘rendition’ and ‘entry’ are used in different senses, and to express the ideas appropriate to those words respectively; and that there is a rendition of a judgment before it is actually entered in the judgment-book. Different stages of the proceeding are recognized by the statute as in *345 itial points from which other proceedings may be taken, or other rights acquired. Thus the right of appeal attaches and time for taking it commences to run from the rendition of the judgment by the court.”

In Peck v. Curtis, 31 Cal. 207, the court said: “The judgment thus rendered on the 22d day of December, 1863, was not in fact entered in the judgment-book by the clerk till July 25th, 1864, some six months after its rendition. But an appeal from a final judgment must be taken ‘within one year after the rendition’ of the judgment. (Prae. Act, sec. 336.) The time begins to run from the time the judgment is rendered, not from the time it is entered. The rendition and entry of a judgment are entirely different acts—one is to be performed by the court, and must be first in order of time, and the other by the clerk.” To the same effect see Genella v. Relyea, 32 Cal. 159 ; Wagganheim v. Hook, 35 Cal. 216 ; Wetherbee v. Dunn, 36 Cal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 P. 407, 7 Cal. App. 330, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-schmitz-calctapp-1908.