Court Opinion

ID: 4724922
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-08-12 02:50:51.567318+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:07:47.546228
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered hy
Dunbar, J.
The agreed statement of facts in this case discloses that the jurors were on the regular panel duly and regularly summoned and qualified during the years 1897 to 1899, inclusive, and were subject to serve as jurors on Saturdays, hut had not received pay from the county for their attendance on the Saturdays when they had been excused hy the court, it appearing that, it had been the custom ordinarily to excuse the jurors from attendance upon the court from Rriday evening until Monday morning at 9:30 o’clock. On the 7th day of January, 1901, the court directed the county clerk to issue certificates to the jurors in question for services rendered in attending upon the court for the Saturdays in question. These certificates were transferred hy the jurors to the respondent, who presented the same to the auditor for the purpose of having warrants drawn in payment of the same. The auditor refused to draw the warrants. A writ *280of mandamus was applied for, which was issued by Judge Bell of the superior court of King county, and upon the trial of the cause the peremptory writ was ordered by Judge Tallman of the same county. From the judgment of the court in this particular this appeal is taken.
It will thus be seen that the question presented is whether jurors are in attendance, within the meaning of the law, on Saturdays, when they are not physically present, or about the court, by reason of having been excused the evening before from attendance on said Saturdays, and when it was their duty to report again the following Monday. The statute provides what each grand and petit juror shall be allowed for each day’s attendance on a court of record. We do not think it can be said that a juror is in attendance on a court of record on a day when he is not subject to jury duty, or not subject to the call of the court, but is by order of the court entirely relieved from the performance of his duty in this respect. The court finds that the time mentioned in said clerk’s certificates is for Saturdays, on which said jurors were excused from service from Friday night to Monday morning at 9:30 o’clock, by reason of the court being engaged in hearing motions. It would seem that, if the jurors were excused from service from Friday night to Monday morning, they could not, in any sense, be said to be in attendance on the court. It is true that the finding further is to the effect that none of said jurors were informed, nor could they possibly determine previous to the adjournment of said court on Friday evening, whether or not they would be required to serve as jurors in the trial of causes on the following Saturday, and that one half of said jurors resided in the country, and, by reason of the distance, were unable to reach their homes and return during the short time for which they were so excused. But, while this state *281of facts may indicate to' a certain extent the imposition of a hardship on the jurors, we do not think it justifies the conclusion of law made by the court that all of said jurors were in attendance on said superior court as petit jurors therein at all times mentioned in said' certificates. The finding of fact seems to be inconsistent with the conclusion of law.
A case largely relied upon by the respondent is Woffenden v. Board of Supervisors of Pima County, 1 Ariz. 237 (25 Pac. 647), where, under a statute similar to ours, it was held that mandamus would issue to compel the commissioners to allow claims similar to the claims presented in this case. There is no discussion, however, in that case of the'point under discussion here, but the contest seemed to be over the right to issue the writ of mandamus to control the action of the board. It was held, however, that the admission by respondents of the facts set up in the petition was equivalent to an admission that the clerk’s certificate was properly issued, and left no discretion in the board to reject the claim, — a question which is not raised or discussed in this case. We have examined all the other authorities cited by the respondent, but thev do not seem to us to be directly in point. It is insisted by the respondent that the cases cited by counsel for appellant show an entirely different state of facts from those shown by the statement accompanying this case, and 'are, therefore, not in point. But while the facts are to a certain extent different, and the length of time for which the jurors were excused was much greater, than in the case at bar, the principles announced were not based upon the length of time, and are conclusive on the proposition under discussion. In Jacobs v. Elliott, 104 Cal. 318 (37 Pac. 942)f it was held that, under a statute providing that jurors sháll receive a certain sum per diem for attendance upon court, *282a juror was not- entitled to fees for the time during which he was dismissed from attendance on the court before his final discharge. In that case it was said:
“The compensation comes, not by virtue of the quasi office, but as so much per diem for attendance on the court. it is not doubted but that the superior court may, in furtherance of the public interest, dismiss from attendance upon it for a limited and specified time the jurors in attendance, without finally discharging them from their duties; and as their compensation is only given for attendance, they are not entitled, when so excused, to the per diem fixed by the statute.”
The same rule was announced in Mason v. Culbert, 108 Cal. 247 (41 Pac. 464),“where the ease of Jacobs v. Elliott, supra, was cited with approval, and the rule extended to apply to a case where the jurors were excused from attendance after they had been impaneled to try a cause. In that case it was said:
“After he has been drawn as a juror he may be excused from attendance for a definite period, and, after a juror has been impaneled and sworn, the remaining jurors may be excused from attendance until some future day. In such cases they are not ‘in attendance upon the court’ during the period for which they are excused.”
Many other California cases have followed the rule announced in the cases above cited, and we think it is the rule that must be applied in this cause. The statute prescribes the compensation for services of a juror, and his compensation cannot be extended beyond its terms, even though some slight inconvenience or actual hardship may be visited upon the juror. Jury duty might be imposed, and is in some jurisdictions, without compensation at all, and, construing- the statute in this instance as we would in any other, we are unable to conclude that it has application beyond the actual physical attendance of the juror on a court of record.
*283The judgment will therefore be reversed, with instructions to deny the writ asked for.
Reavis, C. J., and Anders, Fullerton, White and Mount, JJ., concur.