Matter of Application of Wilson
Before: Conrey
Synopsis
APPLICATION originally made to the District Court of Appeal for the Second Appellate District, for a Writ of Habeas Corpus.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
CONREY, P. J.
The petitioner is held in custody by the sheriff of Los Angeles County under a commitment issued out of the superior court. The commitment has been issued pursuant to a judgment pronounced against petitioner in a criminal action, and requiring that he be punished by imprisonment in the state prison. Petitioner’s claim that the commitment is illegal and void is based upon the proposition that the information in the action does not charge a public offense.
The accusation set forth in the information was that the defendant committed the crime of presenting false proofs in support of a claim upon a policy of insurance; the policy in question being one of insurance against accident. If any offense is charged against the petitioner by that information, it must be an offense coming within the terms of section 549 of the Penal Code. If that section does not include the presentation of a false or fraudulent claim, or proofs in support of such claim upon a contract of accident insurance, then the information states no criminal offense. Sections 548 and 549 are contained in chapter XI of title XIII, part I, of the Penal Code. The chapter heading and section headings pertinent to this chapter and these sections have not been changed, nor1 have the sections been amended since the enactment of the code in 1872. The chapter heading is, “Fraudulent destruction of property insured.” The headnote of section 548 is, “Burning or destroying property insured.” The headnote of section 549 is, “Presenting false proofs in support of a claim upon policy of insurance. ’ ’ These are not mere editor’s notes, but are integral parts of the code itself. This will be seen by referring to the commissioners’ certificate following the title page of the Penal Code in its original edition and the statutory provisions therein mentioned. The same situation exists with respect to the other codes of this state adopted at the same time. In
Sharon
v.
Sharon,
75 Cal. 1, at page 16, [16 Pac. 345], referring to the Civil Code, the
[569]
supreme court said: “Each article of the code is preceded by head-notes, numbered to correspond with the sections following, and purporting to give in brief the subject of each of such sections. These head-notes are entitled to more consideration than the ‘title’ to an entire act. They are parts of the statute limiting and defining the sections to which they refer. To refuse to give effect to them according to their import would be to make the law, not to administer it. ’ ’ In
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