Western Meat Co. v. Superior Court

99 P. 976, 9 Cal. App. 538, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 90
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 19, 1908
DocketCiv. No. 510.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 99 P. 976 (Western Meat Co. v. Superior 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
Western Meat Co. v. Superior Court, 99 P. 976, 9 Cal. App. 538, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 90 (Cal. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is an application for a writ of prohibition for the purpose of restraining the respondents from trying the petitioner upon an information charging it with the violation of certain provisions of an act of the legislature of 1907 (Stats. 1907, p. 984), 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 free competition in commerce and all classes of business, in the state.”

The petition shows these facts: That the petitioner is a corporation, organized and doing business under the laws of the state of California, engaged in the wholesale meat business; that on the first day of June, 1908, the district attorney of Sacramento county filed an information in the superior court in and for said county, jointly charging petitioner and one J. O ’Keefe with the crime of forming a combination and conspiracy with a certain organization, known as the “Sacramento Butchers’ Protective Association,” for the purpose of circumventing free competition in the business of buying and selling meats in the city of Sacramento; that on the second day of July, 1908, counsel for the petitioner and said O’Keefe appeared before the respondents for the purpose of *540 arguing a “motion to set aside the information and ‘entry of plea’ of Western Meat Company and J. O’Keefe, two of the defendants in the above-entitled cause,” when the court “thereupon ordered a separation of action so far as the Western Meat Company and J. O’Keefe are concerned, and stated it would first consider the plea of the Western Meat Company to the information heretofore filed against it and the other defendants”; that the petitioner, upon being asked by the court to enter its plea to the information through its managing agent, J. O’Keefe, declined to do so, counsel for the latter expressly declaring that they were in court representing 0 ’Keefe individually and that they appeared for no other defendant; that thereupon, after informing petitioner, through its said managing agent, that it was entitled to counsel 'at all steps of the proceeding, and the petitioner “remaining silent and making no response,” the court directed that a plea of “not guilty” be entered by the clerk in behalf of said petitioner ; that thereafter the petitioner, by its attorneys, served upon the district attorney a notice of intention to move to set aside the plea of “not guilty” so ordered by the court to be entered in behalf of petitioner; that said motion subsequently came on for hearing and was denied by the court, and that an order was thereafter made by the court setting the - cause down for trial on the fourteenth day of September, 1908.

It is further alleged in the petition that “neither the respondent, said superior court, nor the Hon. Chas. N. Post, presiding therein, or any other judge of said court, presiding therein, has ever at any time, had any jurisdiction over the person or corporate entity of your petitioner in any manner whatever and is at all the times herein mentioned and has been without any authority to make or enter any of the orders described herein, and your petitioner has never been legally examined before any magistrate upon any charge whatever; neither has your petitioner ever been committed for trial by any magistrate, etc.”

There are some other allegations in the petition to which we do not regard it necessary to refer for any purpose. The simple question presented here, as must always be true in a proceeding of this character, from the very nature of the only remedy afforded thereby, is whether or not the respondents remained within their jurisdiction in the matter com *541 plained of. This question is raised by the demurrer interposed by the respondents to the petition.

The point mainly pressed by counsel for the petitioner, both in their oral arguments and their briefs, grows out of the allegation in the petition that prior to the filing of the information the petitioner had not been legally committed by a magistrate for the crime charged in said information; hence, no valid information could be filed against petitioner. From this follows the argument that the respondents were without authority to order to be entered the plea of “not guilty” for the petitioner, as authorized by section 1396 of the Penal Code, upon its refusal to plead to the information when arraigned thereupon.

We think that the mere statement of the facts, as discovered by the petition, is sufficient to demonstrate that the respondents did not exceed their jurisdiction in the proceeding of which complaint is here made.

The point that the petitioner had not been, previously to the filing of the information, legally committed by a magistrate, proceeds from the alleged fact, as it is made to appear particularly clear from the briefs of counsel, that said petitioner had not been proceeded against and brought before the magistrate purporting to have examined the charge against it in accordance with the requirements of the statute relating to cases in which corporations are charged with the commission of public offenses. (Pen. Code, sees. 1390-1397, inclusive.) Section 1390 of said code provides: ‘ ‘Upon an information or presentment against a corporation, the magistrate must issue a summons, signed by him, with his name of office, requiring the corporation to appear before him, at a specified time and place, to answer the charge, the time to be not less than ten days after the issuing of the summons. ’'

The sections following provide that the summons must be served at least five days before the day fixed for the appearance, by delivering a copy thereof and showing the original to the president or other head of the corporation, “or to the secretary, cashier, or managing agent thereof”; that at the appointed time the magistrate must proceed to investigate the charge in the same manner as in the case of a natural person, so far as the proceedings are applicable; that after hearing the proofs, the magistrate must certify upon the depositions either that there is or is not sufficient cause to believe the *542 corporation guilty of the offense charged, and must return the depositions and certificate, as prescribed by section 883. It is then provided that, upon the return by the magistrate of a certificate that there is sufficient cause to believe the corporation is guilty, of the offense charged, “the grand jury may proceed, or the district attorney file an information thereon, as in case of a natural person held to answer.” Section 1396 reads: “If an indictment is found, or information is filed, the corporation may appear by counsel to answer the same. If it does not thus appear, a plea of not guilty must be entered, and the same proceedings had thereon as in other cases.”

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Related

People v. Williams
19 P.2d 37 (California Court of Appeal, 1933)
People v. Richardson
256 P. 616 (California Court of Appeal, 1927)
People v. McCalla
220 P. 436 (California Court of Appeal, 1923)
People v. Sacramento Butchers' Protective Ass'n
107 P. 712 (California Court of Appeal, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 P. 976, 9 Cal. App. 538, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-meat-co-v-superior-court-calctapp-1908.