Erickson v. Municipal Court , 219 Cal. 737 ( 1934 )


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  • This is an appeal by the petitioner from a judgment of the superior court in a certiorari proceeding affirming an order of the municipal court denying a motion to quash an execution.

    In October, 1931, a judgment for $1117.35 was rendered in the Municipal Court of the City of Los Angeles against the petitioner and in favor of one Shane. In March, 1932, Shane filed an abstract of said judgment in the office of the clerk of the Municipal Court in San Francisco, where the petitioner resided. Based upon said abstract an execution was issued by the clerk of the Municipal Court in San Francisco and a levy thereof was made upon an automobile owned by the petitioner. Thereupon the petitioner presented a formal motion to the Municipal Court in San Francisco to quash the writ of execution on the ground that said municipal court was without jurisdiction to issue said writ and that the same was void. The motion was denied. No appeal from that order to the superior court was taken or attempted. The petitioner applied to the superior court for a writ of review, which was granted. Upon a return to the writ the order of the municipal court was affirmed. Hence this appeal.

    In his opening brief the petitioner-appellant states as the legal questions involved: "Did the municipal court of San Francisco have any jurisdiction whatsoever in the cause; and, secondly, was its jurisdiction properly invoked and exercised?"

    Following the question propounded there is much discussion upon the question of the jurisdiction of the municipal court with reference to issuance and enforcement of an execution on a judgment rendered in another county. Considerable confusion has resulted because of the failure to distinguish the question of jurisdiction of the municipal court to entertain and pass upon the motion to quash and the power of the clerk of the municipal court to issue the execution. This appeal involves the former question, namely, Had the municipal court jurisdiction to entertain the motion to quash and dispose of the same? We conclude that it had for two reasons: *Page 739

    First, the respondent Municipal Court, as a court, took no part in and had nothing to do with the issuance of said writ of execution. The writ was issued by the clerk of the court, without an order of court directing the same to issue, and the same was issued by the clerk in the exercise of a ministerial function. (Santini v. Justice's Court, 218 Cal. 671 [24 P.2d 761];Adams v. Bell, ante, p. 503 [27 P.2d 757].) [1] The municipal court has the general and inherent power to control its process and to correct on a motion to quash any errors or unauthorized acts of its ministerial officers. This power does not depend on statutory enactments and a motion to quash is the proper remedy as well when the process is void as when it is merely voidable. (23 Cor. Jur., p. 535, and cases there cited.)[2] The respondent court had jurisdiction of the subject matter of the motion and of the parties to the same. In fact the petitioner himself invoked the power of the court to pass upon the validity of the issuance of the execution. If his motion to quash had been granted he would have obtained the relief which he sought. The action of the court in granting or denying the motion could have been attacked by an appeal to the superior court, a question which will be later discussed. The court had the power to pass upon the motion, whether its decision was correct or erroneous. The decision of this court in Matter of Hughes,159 Cal. 360 [113 P. 684], with reference to the power of the court in certiorari is here applicable. On page 363 it is said: "The Supreme Court has jurisdiction in certiorari to review a judgment of the superior court only in a case where that court has exceeded its jurisdiction (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1068), and in such cases only for the purpose of inquiring whether or not the judgment sought to be reviewed was in excess of jurisdiction . . . (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1074). If such tribunal has regularly pursued its authority, our inquiry stops. We cannot consider or correct errors of law committed by the inferior court in the exercise of its authority on the merits of the cause it has jurisdiction to entertain and decide. No matter how erroneous that decision may be, even on the face of the record, we have no power to change, annul, or reverse it in this proceeding, if that court had jurisdiction to act in the matter before it. This has been repeatedly stated in *Page 740 former decisions of this court." (See, also, 4 Cal. Jur., Certiorari, p. 1022 et seq.) The present case is not one wherein the court has without authority in law assumed jurisdiction to order the issuance of an execution. In such a case the court would be without jurisdiction of the subject matter andcertiorari would lie. (Buell v. Buell, 92 Cal. 393 [28 P. 443].) Here the respondent court had jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the parties, and the superior court properly affirmed the order for that reason.

    Secondly, certiorari is not the proper remedy when the aggrieved party has a remedy by appeal, even though the inferior tribunal was without jurisdiction to make the order. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1068; Helbush v. Superior Court, 99 Cal. App. 501 [278 P. 1062].) In other words, certiorari cannot be made a substitute for an appeal. (Seaboard Surety Corp. v. SuperiorCourt, 112 Cal. App. 248 [296 P. 633]; Los Angeles SuretyCo., Inc., v. Municipal Court, 111 Cal. App. 133 [295 P. 591]; 4 Cal. Jur., p. 1037, and cases there cited.) This rule has been subjected to certain exceptions (see Grinbaum v. SuperiorCourt, 192 Cal. 528 [221 P. 635]), but the present case does not fall within the ruling in that case nor within any other exception known to us or pointed out by counsel. The remedy by appeal to the superior court was available to the petitioner herein as an appeal from a special order made after final judgment as provided in section 983 of the Code of Civil Procedure. In order that said section in this respect be applicable it was not necessary that the court which rendered the judgment be the same court that made the order. (Wells Fargo Co. v. Anthony, 35 Cal. 696.) The superior court would have had jurisdiction on an appeal from the order of the respondent court complained of, and even if the superior court on such appeal had decided erroneously, certiorari would not lie. (Roberts v. Police Court, 185 Cal. 65 [195 P. 1053].) For this additional reason the ruling of the superior court herein was legally justified.

    From what has been said it follows that we may not, on this appeal, properly pass upon the question of the power of the clerk of the municipal court to issue an execution on said abstract of judgment. A determination thereof *Page 741 one way or the other could not affect the result of this appeal.

    The judgment is affirmed.

    Seawell, J., Thompson, J., Curtis, J., Langdon, J., and Waste, C.J., concurred.