Sierra County Superior Court | |
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39°33′32″N120°49′49″W / 39.55886°N 120.83023°W | |
Established | 1852 |
Jurisdiction | Sierra County, California |
Location | Downieville |
Coordinates | 39°33′32″N120°49′49″W / 39.55886°N 120.83023°W |
Appeals to | California Court of Appeal for the Third District |
Website | sierra |
Presiding Judge | |
Currently | Hon. Charles H. Ervin [1] |
Assistant Presiding Judge | |
Currently | Hon. Yvette Durant [1] |
Court Executive Officer | |
Currently | Ann Mendez [2] |
The Superior Court of California, County of Sierra, also known as the Sierra County Superior Court or Sierra Superior Court, is the California superior court with jurisdiction over Sierra County.
Sierra County was partitioned from Yuba County in 1852; the county seat was Downieville. [3] Because Yuba County was so large, a satellite court was established at Downieville, with justice administered by Richard Galloway, succeeded by Thomas Graham in 1851. After Sierra County was formed, the first County Judge elected in June 1852 was Ferdinand J. McCann. [4] : 423–424 Judge McCann organized the Court of Sessions in July and appointed associate judges H.G. Brown and A.S. McMillen. [4] : 428 The first session of the County Court was held on March 7, 1853. [4] : 429 McCann later resigned in 1854, and S.J. Pettibone was appointed by Governor John Bigler to serve the remainder of the term, but Pettibone resigned in October 1854 and was succeeded by P.C. Schaffer. Judge Alanson Smith won the office in the election of 1855, and served until 1860, when he was succeeded by Judges William Campbell (1860–63), Samuel B. Davidson (1863–68), Garland Harris (1868–72), D.H. Cowen (1872–75), and A.J. Howe (1875–79). The new California constitution was adopted in 1879 and the superior court replaced both the district and county court system. [4] : 429–430
Sierra County was placed in the tenth judicial district in 1853 along with Yuba, Nevada, and Sutter counties, with Judge William T. Barbour holding the first district court session in Downieville on July 5, 1853; in succeeding years, Sierra would be moved to the fourteenth (1855; Nevada, Sierra, and Plumas counties), then the seventeenth (1859; Sierra and Plumas) judicial districts. The fourteenth district held court in Nevada City; when Sierra moved to the seventeenth, the district court returned to Downieville and Governor John B. Weller appointed Judge Peter Van Clief to the bench. He was succeeded by Hon. Robert H. Taylor, who won the election in 1859; he was succeeded in turn by Hon. L.E. Pratt (1862). In April 1863, the districts were again reorganized, with Sierra joining Yuba, Sutter, and Colusa counties in the tenth judicial district, and the district court did not return to Downieville until that organization was abolished in favor of the current Superior Court system in 1879. [4] : 427
A committee of three was appointed by the Court of Sessions on August 3, 1853, to prepare specifications for the county jail; their report, submitted on August 18, was subject to further changes because of "the numerous criminals whom it was highly important should be temporarily deprived of their liberty" and on October 14, the court tabled the plans and appropriated $500 for a temporary jail. Deliberations resumed on a new courthouse and jail on March 14, 1854, which was designed by a committee of H.B. Cossitt, Benjamin Hall, Alanson Smith, and D.G. Webber. The contract for the new justice buildings was awarded to D.G. Webber for $12,975; [4] : 437 the jail was completed by August and the courthouse by December, [5] but it was not occupied until May 6, 1855, when the county board of supervisors accepted the buildings. [4] : 437 The Sierra County Sheriff's Gallows was erected next to the courthouse for the hanging of James O'Neal on November 26, 1885, then dismantled and stored in the attic until 1927, when it was rediscovered and reinstalled despite not being "conducive to happy thoughts". [6]
The 1854 courthouse was destroyed by a fire on September 20, 1947; it was first discovered half an hour after midnight by the sheriff, who had living quarters in the south end of the building. By the time firefighters were able to get their pumps working, the building was completely engulfed in flames, and the efforts were aimed at limiting the spread of the fire to adjacent buildings. The cause was attributed to defective wiring. A fireproof safe was saved after employees poured water over it; the safe is on display at the Kentucky Mine Museum in Sierra City. [7] The county's cash was saved because the clerk, Margaret Elaine Blasdell Lambert, put it in the safe each night; the county records were also saved as they were stored nightly in a vault with rock walls two feet thick. [8] A replacement courthouse, which is still in use, was completed in 1953 by Paul I. Jenks to a design by architect George Sellon. [9] [10]
On December 7, 2009, the Plumas/Sierra Regional Courthouse was opened in Portola, replacing part-time courthouses in that city and Loyalton. It is the first California courthouse jointly operated by two superior court jurisdictions: those of Sierra and Plumas counties. [11]
Sierra County is a county located in the U.S. state of California. As of the 2020 census, the population was 3,236, making it California's second-least populous county. The county seat is Downieville; the sole incorporated city is Loyalton. The county is in the Sierra Nevada, northeast of Sacramento on the border with Nevada.
Downieville is a census-designated place in and the county seat of Sierra County, California, United States. Downieville is on the North Fork of the Yuba River, at an elevation of 2,966 feet (904 m). The 2020 United States census reported Downieville's population was 290.
The United States District Court for the Eastern District of California is a federal court in the Ninth Circuit.
Superior courts in California are the state trial courts with general jurisdiction to hear and decide any civil or criminal action which is not specially designated to be heard in some other court or before a governmental agency. As mandated by the California Constitution, there is a superior court in each of the 58 counties in California. The superior courts also have appellate divisions which hear appeals from decisions in cases previously heard by inferior courts.
Sierra City is a census-designated place in Sierra County, California, United States. The elevation of Sierra City is 4,147 feet (1,264 m), and the town is situated in the canyon of the North Yuba River on California State Route 49, twelve miles northeast of the county seat of Sierra County, Downieville. The population was 221 at the 2010 census.
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The Sierra County Sheriff's Gallows, at Galloway Rd. and Courthouse Sq. in Downieville, California in Sierra County, California, was built in 1885. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1990.
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