This is a proceeding upon habeas corpus. The petitioner states that he was arrested upon a complaint sworn to before one E. C. Rutherford, who claimed to be clerk of the police court of the city of Sacramento, and was thereafter tried and convicted in a pretended police court of said city, which court was presided over by Honorable G-. G-. Davis, who styled himself police judge, and was sentenced in said pretended court by said alleged judge to six months imprisonment in the county jail of Sacramento county, and is now held by Frank T. Johnson, sheriff, by'virtue of said judgment and commitment issued thereon.. It is contended that there is legally no such court and no such judge, and, therefore, the detention is unlawful.
' Sacramento is governed under a so-called freeholders’ charter, which was approved by the legislature by resolution merely. _ It took effect January 8, 1894. (Stats. 1893, p. 547.)
The charter provided (section 50) that the jurisdiction which had previously been exercised by the police court should' be vested in the city justice of the peace, and it was made the duty of such justice to hold a police court. The jurisdiction of the court is provided in the charter. It is made a court of record and provided with a clerk. It is also enacted that certified copies of its records, files, process, and proceedings shall be received in evidence in any court in this state; "and-all warrants and process of said court, and all acts done by said court and certified under its seal, shall have the same force and validity in any part of the state as though issued or done by any other court of record in the state.’’
The police court and the police judge alluded to were constituted by an.act amending the charter of Sacramento, passed in 1878. (Stats. 1878, p. 590.) The former court was not . a court of record. It was presided oyer by a police judge and not by a justice of the peace.
It is practically claimed that in the new charter the old police *397court is simply recognized and continued, and that no different power or jurisdiction is given to it. In this mode it is supposed that the lack of power to establish courts in freeholders’ charters has been overcome—a court has been continued—but no attempt has been made to create a court by the charter. So, too, the presiding judge is a justice of the peace—an officer not created by the charter but by law passed by the legislature.
I do not care to examine the chapter in the new charter defining the jurisdiction of the police court, or to compare its provisions with the former law. I am not able to appreciate the ■difference, under the circumstances, betweén continuing an existing court and the creation of a new one. In fact, the argument against the power to continue in existence an existing court, which would otherwise be abrogated by the adoption of the new charter, is stronger, if there is a difference, than any argument ■that can be made against the power to create a police court by the charter. Until the matter had been decided, it could have been, and was argued with much plausibility that, since municipal courts are usual and even necessary in cities, the express authority to form a charter, in the prescribed mode, necessarily included the power to establish such courts. And that this special mode was made an exception to the general rule. But I am unable to conceive of a plausible argument in favor of the proposition that the people of Sacramento, unaided by a legislative enactment, can continue in force a statute which would otherwise cease to exist. It makes no difference, therefore, whether the police court, recognized and continued in the new, differed from the old court or not.
It is contended, however, that the new charter cannot supersede provisions which could not be contained in the new charter; that since courts could not be created by the freeholders’ charter, it could not supersede the old law'providing for such courts, although they are found in a former charter; that in the light of constitutional provisions, by which it was incompetent for the new charter to legislate upon the subject, they are not to be deemed charter provisions. Therefore, the old court continues undisturbed with all its jurisdiction and with a police judge.
The -language of the constitution is, that the freeholders’ charter, when approved, shall become the charter of such city, *398“and shall become the organic law thereof and supersede any existing charter, and all amendments thereof, and all laws inconsistent with such charter.”
The old charter is not repealed because it is so enacted in the new charter, or because its provisions are inconsistent with those of the new charter. The new charter does not' abrogate the old ex proprio vigore, but because the constitution declares that such consequence should follow.
The reason of this is sufficiently obvious. It is not the passage of an ordinary law, but the establishment of a government. The new is to take the place of the old, however dissimilar, and, although some parts of the old charter have no corresponding provisions in the new, there is no presumption that anything is continued, for the new scheme is deemed complete in itself and to provide all that is desired. That which is omitted is omitted because not desired. The constitution and maintenance of police courts are usual in such charters, and it cannot be said that provisions for them are not parts of the charter. The scope of a charter is very broad and may be made to include anything of interest to the local government.
This charter prescribes a rule of evidence for all the courts of the state, and extends its process throughout the state. It seems necessary that this should be so. In many respects its charter and its ordinances have force outside of the limits of the municipality. Yet it has been said that, in respect to the charter, “the legislature is not the law-maker; it did not frame or pass the law. It was not charged with any duty, and to it was not delegated any power, either in framing or adopting the law.” (People v. Gunn, 85 Cal. 238. See, also, People v. Toal, 85 Cal. 333.) To this conclusion may be traced most of the complications and difficulties in regard to freeholders’ charters, and it constitutes the embarrassment in this case.
These cases were decided under the provisious of the constitution as they then stood. The conclusions were reached after mature deliberation, and for the embarrassments which necessarily resulted ill-advised legislation was solely responsible.
.But the later amendments to the constitution seem to have been adopted with a view to relieve from the embarrassment, so that I think that in the present condition of our state organic *399law the question should he deemed at least an open one. It is now expressly provided that the charter may he approved by concurrent resolution, and that then such charter “shall become the •organic law thereof”—that is, it is a special mode for the enactment of a law by the legislature. It is- clear that it is made a law by the legislature, and becomes a law by this expression of the sovereign will of the state. It prevails and has force as a law of the state, and is not made a law by the people of the municipality by virtue of authority delegated to them. It is proposed by the municipality, and is accepted and passed into a law by the legislature or rejected, as it shall see fit.
The constitution could have ordained any convenient mode for the enactment of statutes. All could have been passed by concurrent resolution and might have become laws without the signature of the governor. This mode is provided for the enactment of this particular law. Nor is this all; an amendment to the constitution was approved by the people in 1896, in which .it is declared that it is competent in freeholders’ charters to provide for police courts and to fix their jurisdiction; and also, in consolidated cities and counties, to provide for the election or appointment and the terms of office of county officers. (Const., art. XI, sec. 8½.) Still, the other provisions are allowed to stand which ordain that such courts shall be established by the legislature. It must be held that the mode provided for the establishment of such courts in the freeholders’ charter is an exception to the general rule. It may as easily be held that the mode provided for the enactment of such a law is also special and an exception to the general rule. County officers in cities and counties perform important functions in the state government. Surely their authority must come from the state government.
This brings me to the only remaining question. It is contended that the provisions in the charter of Sacramento establishing a police court are validated by the amendment No. 13, adding section 8| to article XI, although the charter was passed before the said amendment.
The amendment is a grant of authority. In its very nature it is to be exercised in the future. Until the grant there is no power to be exercised. Such a law is not on a par with those which are declaratory of rights, nor with those which declare a *400certain specified act criminal. Such acts, while with us forbidden, are quite capable of a retrospective operation. To give this amendment such effect something must be added to its terms which -would be repugnant to the natural interpretation of the law itself!
In regard to acts' concerning procedure, the question as to their retrospective operation in general has reference to pending cases. Ho case is cited in which it has been held that such law, in the absence of a declared intent, has rendered valid a proceeding entirely closed before the enactment of the law, and, even could such a case be found, it would fall short of the necessities of this ease.
This case cannot, therefore, be brought under the provisions of the amendment, and as to cases arising before that amendment we are not inclined to overrule People v. Toal, supra. We must, therefore, hold that the judgment and commitment under which petitioner is held is void.
The petitioner is, therefore, discharged from custody.
Henshaw, J., concurred.