Court Opinion

ID: 5441539
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-08 18:03:55.134557+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:32:01.385341
License: Public Domain

Sharpstein, J.
—There is not in the present, nor was there in the late Constitution, any provision conferring appellate jurisdiction in cases of mandamus, certiorari, prohibition, or quo warranto. And yet this court has repeatedly exercised such jurisdiction. In People v. Carman, 18 Cal. 693, it declined to do so in a case of certiorari. But that case was expressly overruled in Winter v. Fitzpatrick, 35 Cal. 273, which has since been followed in a large number of cases, a majority of which arose under the late Constitution, which in this respect did not differ materially from the present one. And we must presume that the framers of the present Constitution copied into it the provision of the late one on this subject with knowledge of the interpretation which this court had given to it, and thereby adopted such construction. In other words, this court having repeatedly held that it had appellate jurisdiction in such cases under the late Constitution, the framers of the present Constitution, if they had intended to effect a change in that respect, would have made such intention clear.
We are ■ therefore of opinion that an appeal may be taken to this court from a judgment of a Superior Court, granting or denying an application for a writ of mandamus, and that an *475undertaking in the sum of three hundred dollars, executed and conditioned according to the provisions of section 941, Code of Civil Procedure, stays the execution of the judgment pending the appeal.
The application for a writ of mandamus t compel the court to fix the amount of an additional undertaking to be given by appellants is denied, as the undertaking already filed stayed the execution of the judgment pending the appeal.
Morrison, C. J., Thornton, J., McKinstry, J., Myrick, J., and McKee, J., concurred.