Court Opinion

ID: 3288737
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 17:04:02.052874+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:18:57.347913
License: Public Domain

Application for an order admitting defendant to bail pending appeal.
Petitioner was informed against by the district attorney of Alameda County with the crime of felony, to wit, embezzlement.
He was tried and found guilty.
Thereafter on March 7, 1925, an appeal was duly taken from such conviction and on March 9, following, the superior court made and filed its certificate of probable cause. Thereafter application was made to the superior court for an order of bail pending the appeal. The petition alleges that the court denied the application upon the sole ground that it was not the practice of said court to allow bail in cases where the matter was one of discretion with the court.
Assuming that the motion was properly presented to the lower court, the denial thereof was in effect an exercise of this discretion. Section 1272 of the Penal Code declares when a defendant, after conviction and pending appeal, may be admitted to bail; that section provides that bail may be allowed (1) As a matter of right, when the appeal is from a judgment imposing a fine only; (2) As a matter of right, when the appeal is from a judgment imposing imprisonment in cases of misdemeanor; (3) As a matter of discretion in all other cases.
[1] The defendant having been convicted of a felony, the application was one within the sound discretion of the court, and there is nothing in the record before us to show that the discretion vested in the court was in any manner abused or arbitrarily exercised. [2] The mere issuance of a certificate *Page 481 
of probable cause is not alone sufficient grounds for admission to bail, pending the appeal, as such certificate has become such a matter of common occurrence that the appellate court would not be warranted in considering it either as evidence of illegal conviction or of the existence of reversible errors. (People v.Cornell, 28 Cal.App. 654 [153 P. 726].) [3] It is a settled rule in this state that the appellate court ought not to admit to bail after a conviction of a felony and pending appeal, except where circumstances of an extraordinary character have intervened since the conviction. (Ex parte Turner, 112 Cal. 627
[45 P. 571].) No such circumstances here appear.
[4] Moreover, applications of this character are, as above indicated, addressed to the sound discretion of the trial court, and its determination should not be disturbed or ignored except in an instance of manifest abuse, and no such abuse here appears. (In re Preciado, 30 Cal.App. 323 [158 P. 1063].)
The application is denied.
Knight, J., and Cashin, J., concur.