Lezinsky v. Superior Court
Before: McFarland
Synopsis
Application for a writ of review. The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
McFarland, J. Proceedings on certiorari to review the orders of the Superior Court in and for the county of Contra Costa, adjudging the petitioners, Lezinsky and Mason, guilty of contempt of said court, and punishing them therefor by fine. The facts are these: In a certain action pending in said Superior Court, the plaintiff therein served a notice upon the defendants therein that the deposition of the petitioner John Mason would be taken at a certain time and place before a certain notary public. The notary issued a subpoena requiring said Mason to appear before him at said time and place, and depose and testify as a witness. This subpoena of the notary was served on Mason, who appeared at the time and place mentioned; but upon the advice of the other [511]petitioner, Lezinsky, who is an attorney at law, and was attorney for an intervenor in the action, and who contended that plaintiff in said action had no right to proceed with it or to take testimony therein, Mason refused to testify or to be sworn. The notary certified these facts to the Superior Court, whereupon the court adjudged both of the petitioners guilty of contempt,—one for refusing to testify before the notary, and the other for advising him to refuse,—and imposed a fine upon each. And the question to be determine is, Was such action beyond the jurisdiction of the court?
Proceedings in contempt, being in their nature arbitrary, can be upheld only in a case which comes within “the provisions of the law by which such proceedings are authorized; for mere presumptions and intendments are not to be indulged in their support.” (Batchelder v. Moore, 42 Cal. 414.) And we are not able to find any “provisions of the law” which authorize a Superior Court to punish a person for contempt because he has refused to obey a subpoena issued by a notary public, before whom his deposition was to have been taken upon notice.
In such a case, there is certainly no actual contempt of the court, because the party has committed no act in the presence of the court, nor has he, without the presence of the court, disobeyed any of its judgments, orders, or processes. Section 1986, Code of Civil Proceedure, provides that when a subpoena is issued to require attendance “before a court,” it must be under the seal of the court; and that when the attendance is to be “ out of court, before a judge, justice, or other officer,” the subpoena must be issued by such judge, justice, or other officer; and section 1991 provides that disobedience to a subpoena may be punished by “the court or officer issuing the subpoena.” This means — construed with the context—by “the court issuing the subpoena,” or by “the officer issuing the subpoena”; it does not mean
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