People v. Cusick

The defendant was informed against by the district attorney of Yuba county for the crime of criminal libel alleged to have been committed upon one W. C. Wilkins. A demurrer upon the ground that the facts stated in the information do not constitute a public offense and that said information "does not substantially or at all conform to the requirements of sections950, 951 and 952 of the Penal Code" was sustained by the trial court, and the defendant ordered discharged and his bondsmen released.

It is from the judgment upon the demurrer that this appeal is taken by the people.

Upon the oral argument of the cause before this court, the point was made for the first time that, as the bill of exceptions does not contain the information and the grounds of the demurrer, the ruling of the court below cannot be reviewed.

The transcript contains the information, the demurrer, minutes of the arraignment and a purported bill of exceptions which, as respondent declares, does not embrace either the information or the demurrer or the grounds thereof. We are therefore without any properly authenticated record from which we can determine whether the court erred in its ruling on the demurrer.

This case is substantially similar in all respects to the cases of People v. Long, 121 Cal. 494, [53 P. 1097], andPeople v. Druffel, 3 Cal. App. 731, [86 P. 907]. In the former case the supreme court says: "Sections 1172 and 1174 of the Penal Code provide for exceptions and for a bill of exceptions to this very ruling. It may well be held that these provisions are exclusive of any other mode of obtaining a review, even when there is a judgment-roll. But however that may be, there can be no possible doubt about it in a case like this, where there is no other mode provided for a record upon appeal."

The attorney general undertakes to differentiate the present case from those we have cited; but we fail to perceive any ground for any distinction between them. In both this case and the cases referred to the appeals are by the people from the order or judgment sustaining the demurrers. The only distinction between the cases, which is no distinction at all so far as the question here is concerned, is that in the cases cited *Page 190 the accusatory pleadings were indictments, and the trial courts, in each case, upon sustaining the demurrer, ordered a resubmission of the case to another grand jury, while here the pleading is an information and the defendant was ordered discharged upon the allowance of the demurrer.

There being no legal record before us from which it can be ascertained whether the order or judgment sustaining the demurrer was erroneous, the judgment appealed from must be affirmed, and it is so ordered.

Chipman, P. J., and Burnett, J., concurred.