Bodega Township Justice Court records, 1911-1934

Collection context

Summary

Creators:
California. Justice Court (Bodega, Calif. : Township)
Abstract:
Collection contains records of cases tried at the Bodega Township Justice Court between 1911 and 1934. Includes the criminal justice docket.
Extent:
2 volumes
Language:
English

Background

Scope and content:

Official records of the Bodega Township Justice Court.

Arrangement of Materials:

Arranged chronologically in a single series.

Biographical / historical:

Prior to June 1998, California's trial courts consisted of Superior and Municipal courts, each with its own jurisdiction and with its number of judges fixed by the Legislature; prior to 1934, the Bodega Township Justice Court was one of fifteen such inferior courts in the County. The Justice Court (also known as the Bodega Township Justice's Court; more formally designated as the State of California's Justice Court for Bodega Township), had jurisdiction over Bodega Township in western Sonoma County, California, which included the towns of Bodega, Occidental, Bodega Bay and other settlements along the Pacific coast.

The Bodega court, like other justice courts, was an inferior local tribunal for the adjudication of minor causes and the preservation of the peace. By the Act of March 16, 1850, which divided up the state into judicial districts, "the term of office of a justice of the peace was fixed at one year. Two justices were allowed to each township, also two constables, the officers who serve the processes of the court. The jurisdiction of a justice extended to the limits of the township for which he was elected. He had cognizance of actions on contract, for damages, and to recover specific property, when the amount or value did not exceed $200. In 1851, his powers were considerably increased. He had jurisdiction of actions to recover money, for damages to personal property, for fines, penalties and forfeitures, actions on bonds, enforcement of lien on personal property, actions to recover personal property and judgment by confession, where the amount in all these cases did not exceed $8,500, and on a bond taken by him if the amount did exceed that sum, cases of forcible entry and detainer, and the trial of the right of mining claims. The criminal jurisdiction embraced vagrancy, disorder, petty larceny, assault and battery, breaches of the peace, and all misdemeanors punishable by a fine of not more than $500 and not more than one year's imprisonment. In 1863, forcible entry and detainer cases were transferred to the county court, and the civil jurisdiction was reduced to amounts not exceeding $300. In 1870, the jurisdiction of cases of misdemeanor was extended to fines of $1,000 and imprisonment for one year: but in 1874 it was reduced to fines of $500 and six months' imprisonment. In 1863, the term of office of justices and constables was increased to two years. The new constitution preserved the justice courts as before." (source: Wells, Harry Laurenz, 1854-1940. History of Butte County. San Francisco : H. L. Wells, 1882.)

The Bodega Township Justice Court was consolidated in 1934 as part of the County's inferior court reorganization program as recommended by the Sonoma County Grand Jury, which combined the Bodega township court with the Analy Township Justice Court (source: Township merger approved. Press Democrat (Santa Rosa, Calif.), May 18, 1934, page 3)

A number of other reorganizations and consolidations of the County's District Courts took place over the next four decades until the various inferior courts were absorbed into the Superior Court following another voter-authorized reorganization in 1998, California Proposition 220.

Rules or conventions:
Finding aid prepared using Describing Archives: A Content Standard, Second Edition DACS

Access and use

Location of this collection:
6135 State Farm Drive
Rohnert Park, CA 94928, US
Contact:
(707) 545-0831