Ross, J., dissenting. I dissent. The gist of the charge against the respondent, Buckley, is, that in the evening of the tenth day of May, 1884, he undertook for a money consideration to be paid to him by one Bonnet, to procure the judgment of this court favorable to the plaintiffs in two certain actions entitled respectively Bonnet v. The City and County of San Francisco and Parker v. The City and County of San Francisco, at the time representing that he possessed such influence with the justices of the court as would enable him to procure such judgments as he desired. As a matter of fact, the cases referred to were decided at the city of Sacramento, shortly after 10 o’clock A. m. of the tenth day of May, 1884, but of that fact Bonnet was ignorant, and the respondent Buckley claims to have been ignorant until some time after the expiration of the day mentioned. In his answer respondent explicitly denies that he ever, at any time or under any circumstances, undertook to procure any decision in the cases referred to, or in any other case or cases, or that he ever represented that he had, or pretended to have, any influence with this court or with any justice thereof; but that the consideration, and the sole consideration, for the money Bonnet agreed to pay him, was certain services that he, respondent, agreed to render Bonnet in expediting the disposition of his claims by the board of supervisors of the city and county of San Francisco.
While strenuously contesting the truth of the charge against him, respondent claims that even if it should be [17]found to be true, it does not constitute a contempt of court, for which offense the present proceeding is prosecuted.
It is contended that the legislature has defined con-tempts, and the punishment thereof, and that the charge in question does not come within the statute, the provisions of which, it is claimed, are exclusive. I am inclined to think that the charge in question is embraced by the ninth subdivision of section 1209 of the Code of Civil Procedure, but assuming that it is not, I am of opinion that this court has the inherent power to punish for con-tempts. It is true that the power to punish for con-tempts may be limited and defined by the authority creating the court (Ex parte Robinson, 19 Wall. 510); but can the power of a court created by the constitution to punish for contempts be limited and controlled by an act of the legislature? I think not. While every court should be very careful not to assume to itself powers it does not possess, it is no less its bounden duty to exercise its powers in all proper cases. The Supreme Court of this-state was created by the constitution, and exists by virtue-of its provisions. It not only has the right of existence-by virtue of the constitution, but it is thereby charged: with the performance of important functions. Its jurisdiction cannot be diminished by legislative enactment.. Every power necessary to the due and proper performance of the duties with which it is charged is impliedly conferred by the organic act creating it. ‘ Certain implied powers,” said the Supreme Court of the United States, in United States v. Hudson, 7 Cranch, 32, “must necessarily-result to our courts of justice, from the nature of their-institutions.....To fine for contempt, imprison for contumacy, enforce the observance of order, etc., are-powers which cannot be dispensed with in a court, because they are necessary to the exercise of all others; andi so far our courts, no doubt, possess powers not immediately derived from statute.”
[18]In the case of the State v. Morrill, 16 Ark. 384, where ' it was contended, as it is here, that the court was controlled by the statute and could not go beyond its provisions, the Supreme Court in holding against the proposition asked these pertinent questions:—
“Had the legislature never passed the act above quoted, or any act at all on the subject, could it be doubted that this court could possess the constitutional power to preserve order and decorum, enforce obedience to its process, and maintain respect for its judgments, orders, and decrees, and as a necessary consequence, punish for con-tempts against its authority and dignity, without which it could never accomplish the useful purposes for which it was established by the framers of the constitution?
“If the general assembly were to repeal the act, would any lawyer seriously contend that the courts were thereby deprived of the power to punish contempts? One of the counsel of the defendant frankly admitted that they would not, and the admission concedes the position to be true, that the power of this court to punish contempts is inherent, springing into life along with, and as an incident to, those great judicial powers carved out for its exercise by the constitution.”
My conclusion on this branch of the case is, that as this court has the constitutional right of existence it has the constitutional right of self-protection, which cannot be taken away or abridged by legislative enactment.
The next inquiry to be made is, whether the act charged against the respondent, if true, constitutes a contempt of court ? This question cannot admit of any sort of doubt. Ho stream can be pure whose source is tainted. There can, therefore, be no greater or fouler 'blow at the administration of justice than for one to falsely and fraudulently pretend and undertake, for a ■.money consideration, and by means of a pretended influence with the judge, to procure a particular decision,, .Such ^practice, if allowed to prevail, would destroy all [19]confidence in courts, and sap the very foundation upon which society rests. It would therefore be a most fatal and dangerous interference with the administration of justice, and in every instance where it is shown should be visited with severe and summary punishment, not, as said by an English judge, for the sake of the judges as private individuals, but because they are channels through which justice is conveyed to the people.
It remains to consider whether the evidence establishes the fact charged, that respondent did undertake for a money consideration, to be paid him by Bonnet, to procure the judgment of this court favorable to the plaintiffs in the suits mentioned,—at the time representing that he possessed such influence with the justices of the court as would enable him to procure such judgments as he desired.
In respect to this question the testimony is very conflicting, but there are certain facts about which there can be no doubt. One is, that the cases referred to were decided by this court in Sacramento, in favor of the respective plaintiffs therein, shortly after 10 o’clock A. m., of the tenth day of May, 1884. Another is, that within a few minutes after the opinions in the cases were filed with the clerk, a telegram was sent by a deputy clerk, in the name of his principal, to the respondent Buckley, advising him of the decisions, and delivered to an employee of respondent at his place of business on Bush Street, in the city of San Francisco, before 11 o’clock A. m., of the same day. Another is, that about 8 o’clock in the evening of the same day Buckley, Bonnet, and one Taylor met in the private room of Buckley, at his place of business, and there Bonnet promised to pay Buckley a certain sum of money for some purpose, and as an evidence of his promise executed to Buckley his promissory note for five hundred dollars. The consideration for the note is the subject-matter of the present inquiry, and in respect to that, the testimony of Bonnet, [20]on the one side, and of Buckley and Taylor on the other, is in direct conflict. According to his own testimony, Bonnet was a party to the offense, and therefore, apart from the further facts that the testimony tends to show that his character for truth, honesty, and integrity is bad, and that a part of his testimony in the case is contradicted by that of other and third parties, we ought not to find against Buckley, unless there are other facts and circumstances in the case that satisfy us of the truth of Bonnet’s statement of the transaction. Buckley’s version of it is here given in his own language: “My recollection of the affair is, that Mr. Taylor called upon me at my place of business that evening, in May, with a gentleman he said was Mr. Bonnet, and asked me if he could see me privately for a few moments. I went with him into a room in my saloon. Mr. Taylor introduced me to Mr. Bonnet, and said that he was very anxious to see me in relation to the matter of these claims that were coming up before the board of supervisors; was very anxious that I should interest myself for him in trying to have these matters brought before the board. Some conversation in relation to the matter took place.”
Being asked to state what it was as near as he could recollect, the witness replied: “As near as my recollection serves me it was this: Mr. Taylor told me that in matters of this kind, that before obtaining their money, they had to go before the board of supervisors, and recited some cases, and, among others, the name of Phelan, that was adjudicated by the court and went to the board of supervisors, and there remained some four or five years, going over from one board to the other, and the object of my assistance was to have this matter brought up and acted upon by that board of supervisors, and he asked me if I would not interest myself. I told them I did not know what I could do. I had known Mr. Taylor for a long time, and was willing to do anything I could for him, so Mr. Taylor and this other gentleman had a con[21]versation between themselves, and they afterwards returned to me and said: ‘We do not want your services for nothing. We are willing to pay you for it, if you will assist us to have this matter brought up. We will pay you five hundred dollars, and to secure you payment of it, will give you a note,’ which they did, and I agreed to assist them and do what I could in the matter. That is about the conversation as I recollect it.”
Now, in considering this testimony it must be borne in mind that Taylor denied on this hearing that he knew, and Buckley testified that he had no recollection of knowing, at the time of making the agreement, that the cases had, in fact, been decided by the court, although it was shown that Taylor had previously stated before a committee of the Bar Association that he was, at the time, aware of the fact. There is no pretense that Bonnet knew of the decisions at the time of the arrangement in the room of Buckley’s saloon in the evening of the 10th of May, or that Buckley or Taylor informed him of them. If none of these parties knew that the cases had been decided, the inquiry naturally arises, Why should they at that time be arranging for a prosecution of the claims before the board of supervisors? Until the plaintiff’s judgments should be affirmed by the court, there was nothing to be presented to the board. An affirmance of the judgments by this court was a condition precedent, without which there was nothing for the board to act on. From the stand-point of ignorance of the fact that the cases had been decided by the court, there was therefore no occasion whatever for any arrangement for the prosecution of the claims before the board of supervisors. But for another reason I cannot accept as true the statement that Buckley and Taylor had no notice of the decisions in the cases of Bonnet and Parker at the time of the arrangement with Bonnet in the evening of the tenth day of May.
As has been, said, it was shown on the hearing of this [22]matter that Taylor admitted before the committee of the Bar Association that he had such knowledge, but he attempted to explain away that fact in his testimony here by saying that he did not understand the questions asked him on those proceedings. An examination of the reporter’s notes, however, shows that he could not have misunderstood the questions in that behalf, for they were perfectly simple and direct, and were several times repeated and answered. Nor is ignorance on Buckley’s part of the fact that the cases referred to had been decided by this court at the time of the arrangement in question consistent with Taylor’s knowledge, or the still more pregnant fact that a telegram from the clerk’s office of this court, advising him of the decisions, was delivered to one of his employees at his place of business prior to to 11 o’clock A. m. of the tenth day of May. Apart from the presumption that a telegram so delivered reached him, all of the circumstances of the case point to the fact that it did. I must therefore find that both Taylor and Buckley knew of the decisions of this court, in the cases of Bonnet and Parker, at the time of the interview between Taylor, Bonnet, and Buckley, about 8 o’clock in the evening of the tenth day of May. Knowledge of that fact on the part of Taylor and Buckley, and ignorance of it on the part of Bonnet, is consistent with the statement of Bonnet, as to what the agreement between the parties really was, while it is inconsistent with Buckley’s and Taylor’s statement of it. Then, again, the acceptance of Bonnet’s promissory note by Buckley is consistent with Buckley’s and Taylor’s knowledge of the decisions; for Taylor held an assignment of Bonnet’s interest in the actions to secure the payment of certain advances he had made him. In case of the affirmance of the judgments in the cases of Bonnet and Parker, Bonnet would have money and the note would be good. But except his interest in these actions, the testimony shows Bonnet to have been wholly impecunious,—so [23]much so, indeed, that about the time of the transaction in question he borrowed fifty dollars of Taylor, for which he gave him his (Bonnet’s) note for one hundred and fifty dollars, and which was subsequently, and within a short time, paid out of the amounts collected upon the judgments in the actions of Bonnet and Parker; and for the sum of forty-five dollars borrowed of one Long, he executed to the latter his promissory note for three hundred dollars, which was also paid out of the proceeds of the same judgments. Still another consideration points to the same conclusion, and it is this: Buckley testified that shortly after Bonnet gave him the five-hundred-dollar note, he (Buckley) left California for the East, but before doing so he turned the note over to his friend, M. J. Kelly, whom he said could do as much with the supervisors as himself. But it is not pretended that either Buckley or Kelly ever did or attempted to do anything in the matter before the board of supervisors, but it does appear that after the money had been collected from the city upon the settlement between Taylor and Bonnet, Taylor deducted from Bonnet’s portion two hundred and fifty dollars, which he paid to Kelly on the note.
The fact that Taylor, who had in his hands all of the money collected on the judgments, only paid one half of the five-hundred-dollar note given by Bonnet to Buckley, strongly corroborates Bonnet’s statement that at the time the note was given the agreement was that Taylor should pay one half of it and he (Bonnet) the other half.
I cannot at all agree to what is said in the prevailing opinion with respect to the five hundred dollars paid to Buckley by Taylor in the matter of procuring the advancement of the cases of Bonnet and Parker on the calendar of the court. In so far as that matter has any bearing upon the charge in question, it strengthens the conclusion to which I have come. To believe that Taylor paid Buckley five hundred dollars simply to go to some attorneys and ask if they had a case they did not [24]wish to try, and in lieu of which they would agree that the Bonnet and Parker cases might be placed, requires more credulity than I possess.
As a matter of fact the Bonnet and Parker cases were advanced on the calendar by stipulation of the attorneys in the respective cases. Taylor, who was a real party in interest in the Bonnet and Parker cases, and who, as appears, had frequent interviews with the attorney in them, either communicated the proposed arrangement with Buckley to the attorney, or he did not. If he did not, that circumstance of itself would strongly strengthen the suspicion that the arrangement was not of the peculiar character stated by Buckley and Taylor. If he did communicate the proposed arrangement to the attorney, can it be believed the latter would have advised or permitted his client to pay five hundred dollars to effectuate an advancement of the cases on the calendar,—an advancement which if practicable at all could have been legitimately secured by the attorney. While, as has been said, the testimony is very conflicting, the circumstances corroborate the statement of Bonnet as to what the agreement was, and satisfies me that he told the truth about it. I therefore think the respondent should be adjudged guilty of the contempt charged, and should be punished accordingly.
McKinstry, J., concurred with Mr. Justice Ross.
McKee, J., dissenting. This is a proceeding to punish Christopher. A. Buckley and J. W. Taylor for contempt.
The charge is that, on the 10th of May, 1884, Buckley represented to one B. Bonnet,—a party to a cause then pending in this court, that he could influence the court and the members thereof to give a favorable decision in the cause; and that he undertook and agreed, for a large sum of money to be paid to him by Taylor and Bonnet, [25]to influence the judges of the court to render a decision in the cause in favor of Bonnet.
The charge rests upon the testimony of Bonnet, Taylor, and Buckley, who were the principal parties to the transaction, which gave occasion for the charge. The testimony is very conflicting; but after a careful sifting of the testimony I find that the following constitute the facts and circumstances of the transaction:—
In the year 1884 two cases were pending in this court, viz.: B. Bonnet v. The City and County of San Francisco, and C. H. Parker v. The City and County of San Francisco, in which appeals had been taken from judgments rendered in the Superior Court of said city and county. On the morning of Saturday, the 10th of May, 1884, Opinions in both cases, affirmatory of the judgments, were sent down by the court, then in session at Sacramento. Immediately after the opinions were filed in the clerk’s office, a telegraphic dispatch, in the name of the clerk of the court, was sent to the respondent, Buckley, as follows:—
“ Sacramento, 10 th.
“To Chris Buckley, Bush Street, San Francisco: Parker and Bonnet v. San Francisco, judgments affirmed.”
At 10:48 o’clock of the same day the dispatch was delivered at respondent Buckley’s saloon.
The only unusual thing in connection with the transmission of such a dispatch from the clerk’s office of this court is, that neither of the respondents was an attorney or counselor, or party in either of the two cases; but both had connections with them. Taylor was assignee of the judgment appealed from in the Bonnet case, as security for payment of a large sum of money, bearing interest at a high rate, which he had advanced'to Bonnet; and Buckley in his testimony states: “About a year before .... I was asked by Taylor to do something about the eases.....Taylor called upon me at my place of [26]business, and stated that he had an assignment, I think Bonnet against the city, and wanted me to procure some information for him from the city and county attorney’s office, in relation to the trial of this case, and also to see if I would go among my friends here—attorneys—and see if we could get a place on the calendar; get them substituted for the case that they might have on the calendar.....
“Q,.—Did you get any money for that service?
“A.—I did, sir.
“Q,.—How much money ?
“A.'—Five hundred dollars.
“Q,.—Who paid it to you?
“A.—Taylor.....
“Q.—You say that you went to the- office of the Supreme Court for a calendar ?
“A.—Yes, sir.
“Q,.'—Did you tell the clerk for what you wanted it?
“A.—I might have told him so; I might have mentioned the circumstances to him.
“ Q. —You cannot tell whether you mentioned these two cases ?
“A.'—I presume I did. I do not know.”
Both Buckley and Taylor were therefore financially connected with the cases, and from that connection and the testimony of Buckley I think it fairly deducible that Buckley arranged in the clerk’s office to receive immediate information of the filings of opinions in the cases when the court decided them; and that pursuant to such an understanding the dispatch of Saturday, the 10th of May, 1884, was promptly sent to him from the clerk’s office. In his condition, being blind, he did not see or read the dispatch, but it was received and read; and I have no doubt that the person who received it informed Buckley of the fact of the affirmance of the judgments in the cases. Both Buckley and Taylor therefore knew, on Saturday morning, that the judgments of the Superior [27]Court in the cases had been affirmed. In fact, Taylor admits that on his examination before the Bar Association he confessed that on Saturday he “knew all about the affirmance of the judgments.” Subsequently, it is true, on his examination before the court, he tried to break the force of his confession by saying that he was confused by the questions which were asked him. But it is also a fact that on Saturday, about 12 o’clock m., Taylor met Bonnet on Montgomery Street, and conveniently arranged with him for a secret interview with Buckley about the cases.
For what purpose? Bonnet testifies that on Saturday he was utterly ignorant of the fact that the cases were decided; and intensely anxious to have them immediately decided; for, as Taylor testifies, Bonnet was complaining that the interest which he had to pay on the claims was “eating him up.” In his necessity, and believing that Buckley had succeeded in getting the cases advanced on the calendar,—although Buckley confesses “that the cases were, in fact, advanced without his aid or assistance,” — Bonnet corruptly conceived the idea that Buckley had personal and political influence enough to secure a speedy decision of the cases in his favor. This he believed until it became in his mind a fixed idea. And when he met Taylor, on Saturday at noon, he readily proposed or consented to an arrangement for an interview with Buckley, for the purpose of putting that idea into operation. Upon the subject and object of the interview, both Taylor and Bonnet were of one mind, for it is a fact that Taylor, before starting prepared himself with the printed form of a promissory note; and in going to the interview encouraged Bonnet by telling him as they went: “Buckley can get a judgment for you right away.”
They got to Buckley’s place of business about eight or half-past eight o’clock at night. Bonnet testifies: “When we got there, Buckley invited us inside his private place, and there he said to me, ‘You got a case in the Supreme [28]Court? ’ I told him yes. He then said: ‘I can get judgment for or against you in the cases/ .... Then Taylor said: ‘I suppose the judges will be down here to-night or to-morrow/ and Buckley said, ‘ 0 yes, there is two already here/ ” At this point in the conversation, Bonnet and Taylor retired to a corner of the room, where Taylor drew from his pocket the promissory note for five hundred dollars, which Bonnet had signed, or then signed, ! with the understanding that Taylor was to pay half of it; and they then returned and delivered it to Buckley, say- i ing: “We do not want your services for nothing. We are willing to agree to pay you for it, if you will assist us to have this matter brought up. We will pay you five hundred dollars, and to secure your payment of it will give you a note,” which, says Buckley, they did, “ and I agreed to assist them, and do what I could in the matter.”
The fact is then fairly established that, on Saturday, the day the telegraphic dispatch from the then clerk of the court was delivered at Buckley’s place of business, the secret interview took place at the room and place testified; and that the result of the interview was the execution and delivery to Buckley of a note for five hundred dollars, for personal or political services to be rendered by him in the cases. So far, not the slightest conflict exists in the testimony. The three men agree that' a night conference was held, and that a corrupt arrangement was made for securing Buckley’s services for some purpose in connection with the cases. But Buckley testifies that the statements of Bonnet as to the services to be rendered are wholly false, and so Taylor testifies.
Both tell the same story, namely, that the note was given to secure the personal services of Buckley for the purpose of influencing members of the board of supervisors to pay the claims. Is that true ?
I find the story improbable, because there is one thing beyond controversy, and that is, that Buckley and Taylor on Saturday knew or did not know of the decision of [29]the cases. If they did not know, then they did know, or had every reason to believe, that the cases were still pending and undetermined, and that the claims involved in them were not collectible from the city, or enforceable against it; Bonnet did not know that the cases were decided. That is manifest from the circumstance that the fact of filing the opinions in the cases on Saturday was not publicly announced until the following Monday, when it was published, for the first time, in the San Francisco Evening Bulletin. Being alike ignorant that any decisions had been rendered in the cases, it follows that none of these parties could have been actuated by any motive to meet together to make a corrupt arrangement for the collection of claims which the city was contesting in the courts, and there was no reason why either Bonnet or Taylor should attempt to bring personal or political influences to bear upon members of the board of supervisors to pay claims upon which they could not then act.
On the other hand, if Buckley and Taylor knew that the cases were decided, then they used their knowledge as a veil to cover the pretense held out to Bonnet that Buckley could get a decision of the court in his favor “right away”; and in either case, I think the truth of Bonnet’s testimony as to what transpired at the private interview on Saturday night is substantially proved,— proved, not only by all the circumstances of the interview itself, but by the subsequent conduct of the parties to it.
Taylor admits that, upon a division of the spoil, among the persons who had become, one way and another, interested in the cases, he applied two hundred and fifty dollars of Bonnet’s portion to the payment of the note, and that he himself refused to pay any part of it. And although Buckley testifies: “I was to receive five hundred dollars to aid these gentlemen in bringing these matters up before the board of supervisors,—that is my understanding of it,”—yet he virtually admits no such
[30]understanding, expressed or implied, existed at the interview, by confessing that he neither took action nor thought of acting upon such an understanding. On his examination upon that subject, he answered as follows:—
“Q,.—You were to go to them—the members of the board of supervisors—privately?
“A.—I presume so.
“Q.—To speak to each member?
“A.—I should judge so.
“Q.—And ask them to pay these claims?
“A.—No, sir; to ask them to bring bills up and act upon them.
“Q.—Did you make any request of any supervisor?
“A.—No, sir; I did not.
“ Q.—Did you go before any committee of the board, or to any member on this subject?
“A.—I did not.
“Q.—Did you go to the board in session?
“A.—No, sir.
“Q.—Did you go to any member of the board?
• “A.—No, sir.
“Q.—What did you do for this $500?
“A.—Nothing.”
From the conduct and acts of the men, I therefore deduce the fact that the note was not given to pay Buckley for influencing the members of the board of supervisors, but that it was given for the purpose testified to by Bonnet.
I do not overlook the fact that Bonnet is an- accomplice to a corrupt transaction, and that his testimony is tainted, and needs corroboration, but I find it corroborated, not by words, but by the acts and deeds of Buckley and Taylor as they themselves have testified.
The question then remains: Is one who falsely holds himself out as a court broker to a suitor in a cause pending in the court, and agrees for a large sum of money to procure for him a favorable decision in the cause, by his [31]professed personal or political influence with the members of the court, guilty of contempt of court?
I think it needs neither argument nor authority to show that such an act is a contempt of court. The thing is evil, immoral, invalid, and criminal; any contract founded upon such a transaction would be illegal and void, and unenforceable in the courts; and under the codo law of this state, it is, in itself, and independent of any attempt at fulfillment, a contempt of court. The law declares: “Any interference with the . . . . proceedings of a court is a contempt of court.” (Code Civ. Proc., subd. 9, sec. 1209.)
To dissuade a witness in a cause from attending court to testify in the case is an unlawful interference with the proceedings of the court; to threaten, by letter or otherwise, a suitor in a cause pending in court, against prosecuting it, is an unlawful interference with the proceedings of the court; to falsely pretend to a suitor in a cause that jurors trying it can be corruptly influenced with money to return a favorable verdict for him is an unlawful interference with the proceedings of the court; and a fortiori is it, when such corrupt pretense is held out to a suitor about the judges of the court, for the purpose of extorting money from the suitor for such a purpose.
In support of these propositions numerous cases might be cited. All the authorities, indeed, tend to the same point; they show that it is immaterial what measures are adopted; if the object is to taint the source of justice and to obtain, or profess to be able to obtain, a result of legal proceedings different from that which would follow in the ordinary course of proceedings, it is a contempt of the highest order.
“One,” say the Supreme Court of Indiana, “who does .a wrongful act for the purpose of bringing unmerited disgrace upon the officers of the court, or the members of the jury, is guilty of a contempt. One who, for the [32]purpose of securing money for himself, falsely pretends to another, interested in the result of the cause, that he can corruptly influence with money the jurors trying the cause to return such a verdict as he desires, is guilty of a contempt. Such an act tends to disgrace and degrade the jury in the mind of the person to whom the corrupt proposition is submitted. No man has a right to falsely insinuate that he can, by corrupt means, influence jurors in the performance of their duty. It would be a reproach to the law, if shameless men were permitted to slander honest officers and jurors by vile insinuations.” (State v. Little, 90 Ind. 338.)