DANNY CHARLES BARNES, JR., Petitioner, v. THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE CITY AND COUNTY OF SAN FRANCISCO, Respondent; THE PEOPLE, Real Party in Interest.
No. A034672
First Dist., Div. Four.
Oct. 30, 1986.
186 Cal. App. 3d 969
Jeff Brown, Public Defender, Melody Fujimori and Estella W. Dooley, Deputy Public Defenders, for Petitioner.
No appearance for Respondent.
John K. Van de Kamp, Attorney General, Dane R. Gillette and Ann K. Jensen, Deputy Attorneys General, for Real Party in Interest.
CHANNELL, J.—Petitioner Danny Charles Barnes, Jr., was confined in Atascadero State Hospital after being found not guilty by reason of insanity. In a case of first impression, he seeks a writ of mandate to require respondent superior court to afford him a jury trial on the issue of whether he should be placed in a local mental health program for one year. (
I. FACTS
Petitioner Danny Charles Barnes, Jr., was charged with assault with intent to commit a sex offense (
In 1983 and 1985, Barnes applied for release—contending that his sanity was restored—pursuant to former
II. DISCUSSION
Subdivision (e) of
Initially, we note that
Having determined that the Legislature did not intend that a jury make the initial placement decision, we turn to the question of whether a jury trial of this issue is constitutionally mandated. First, Barnes contends that In re Franklin, supra, 7 Cal.3d 126 compels this conclusion. We disagree. Clearly, Franklin compels a jury trial at the second proceeding, when the issue is whether the applicant has been restored to sanity. (Id., at pp. 148-149.) But the question of suitability for placement in a local mental health program is different from the issue of restoration of sanity. (See
In the alternative, Barnes contends that procedural due process and equal protection require that the issue of suitability for placement be tried before a jury. We find that court trial of the placement question violates neither constitutional principle.
As the California Supreme Court has stated, “[d]ue process is a flexible concept; the precise procedures necessary to prevent the arbitrary
On the equal protection claim, the California Supreme Court has stated that “‘[a]lthough the procedures leading to the commitment of various classes of people for treatment or to protect society from them need not be identical in all respects, none may deny to one such class fundamental rights or privileges accorded to another unless a rational basis for the distinction exists.‘” (In re Franklin, supra, 7 Cal.3d at p. 135.) Franklin and the cases cited in it involve restoration of sanity questions, not placement issues. (Id., at pp. 148-149 [jury trial required at restoration hearing]; see Baxstrom v. Herold (1966) 383 U.S. 107, 110 [15 L.Ed.2d 620, 623, 86 S.Ct. 760] [jury trial required at end of maximum term if state extends commitment pursuant to civil law]; Mills v. State, supra, 256 A.2d at pp. 757-758 [jury trial required at restoration hearing].) To apply these cases in the context of this equal protection argument would be to mix apples and oranges. Placement decisions are routinely made without the assistance of a jury—sometimes, without even a judicial hearing. (See
It can be argued that our decision may prevent an applicant from reaching a jury on the issue of restoration of sanity—if he or she cannot satisfy the court at the initial hearing of his or her lack of dangerousness, the applicant would not be placed into a local program and would not eventually go before a jury. (See In re Reyes (1984) 161 Cal.App.3d 655, 659 [207 Cal.Rptr. 763] [due process demands that applicants not languish in confinement awaiting the date, if ever, that a court deems it appropriate to hold a restoration of sanity hearing].) However, this argument is unsound for several reasons. First, the test to be applied at the initial hearing is less than that applied at the second. One who cannot satisfy the lesser standard cannot reasonably hope to satisfy the second one. Second, a court‘s adverse ruling at the first proceeding would be subject to review. (See In re Slayback (1930) 209 Cal. 480, 492 [288 P. 769] [habeas corpus].) Finally, the situation presented by
There are sound public policy reasons supporting the local placement period for an applicant who contends that his sanity has been restored. The local program provides mental health professionals with a good opportunity to analyze whether the applicant‘s sanity has, in fact, been restored. For those who will be released after the second proceeding, the program provides a bridge between life in a state institution and unsupervised life in the community. This transition period, in turn, should provide for a lower rate of recidivism, to the ultimate benefit of both the applicant and the public.
The petition for writ of mandate is denied and the alternative writ is discharged.
Anderson, P. J., concurred.
What has changed statutorily since Franklin was decided—as the majority opinion accurately describes—is that a committed person cannot be released unconditionally until he or she has successfully completed a one year stint in an “appropriate local mental health program” and the committed person cannot begin such a local mental health program until he or she convinces a “court” at “a hearing” that he or she “will not be a danger to the health and safety of others, including himself or herself, while under supervision and treatment in the community, . . .” (
Thus the essence of the test (whether the committed person will be a danger to the health and safety of others, etc.) that follows the initial examination period has not changed. What has changed is that: (1) the period for initial testing has been increased from 90 to 180 days; (2) following that initial period a hearing is held to determine whether the committed person is fit for treatment in a local mental health facility; and (3) at the end of the one year of treatment in the local health facility a trial will be had to determine whether the person‘s sanity has been restored.
Petitioner challenges neither change one nor change three and thus those portions of the majority opinion finding sound public policy reasons for such procedures are irrelevant to the sole issue squarely presented: who determines whether a committed person ever gets into the local mental
The unanimous holding in Franklin is worth repeating: (1) the commitment period that precedes the constitutionally required jury trial cannot exceed the time reasonably necessary for institutional examination of the person‘s mental condition; and (2) as soon as the institution completes its examination a “reasonable opportunity” must be provided for a jury determination as to whether he or she should be released to society. (Id., 7 Cal.3d at pp. 142-145, 148-149.) Does
But there is no need to declare the statute unconstitutional. All that is necessary is to read
The majority opinion concedes the “ultimate decision whether the applicant has actually been restored to sanity must be made by a jury” (majority opn., ante, p. 975) and candidly admits that this ultimate fact finder may never be reached. (Id., at p. 976.) But that is not improper, we are told, because there are “procedural safeguards“: each time petitioner is turned down by the superior court judge he merely has to wait a year before asking again. And he may do so “for an unlimited time.” (Id., at p. 975.) This procedural safeguard amounts to reminding petitioner that when he is denied his constitutional right he may ask again and again and again. Not unlike the Gulag.
The additional procedural safeguard relied upon by the majority is that the judge‘s factual determination is subject to review by habeas corpus. (Majority opn., ante, p. 976.) So far as I am aware this is the first time in the history of California constitutional jurisprudence that judicial review of a judge‘s factual findings has been equated with a right to trial by jury.
The real predicate of the majority‘s decision is that the only thing being denied petitioner is a jury determination regarding what the majority euphemistically describe as a “placement” decision. (Majority opn., ante, p. 974.) This is also the tack taken by the Attorney General, although the nomenclature used by him is a little different: release to a local mental health program is a mere “treatment choice.” The argument is that one is not entitled to a jury trial on treatment choices or placement decisions.
Viewed in those terms the argument is difficult to counter. Of course petitioner is not entitled to a jury determination on whether an aspirin or an enema is the proper treatment nor should a jury be empaneled to determine whether he should be housed in one wing of a hospital or another. But, those are not the decisions the trier of fact is asked to make under
More critical to our inquiry, however, is that the determination made by the trier of fact at this initial hearing is itself the condition precedent to the right that even the majority opinion recognizes to be of a constitutional dimension: the jury trial at the end of the 12-month period in the local mental health program.
Under the 1984 amendments petitioner has no chance of being restored to society until he has successfully completed one year of treatment in a local mental health program. Getting into that program becomes the sine qua non to freedom—the key to the door. Such questions are thus not merely questions of “treatment” or “placement” although they certainly partake of both. They are questions that condition freedom. As I understand the clear, unmistakable and repeated holding and rationale of Franklin, once the initial treatment and evaluation period has ended—as it has here—petitioner has an unconditional immediate right to have a jury determine such questions.
For these reasons I would construe
Petitioner‘s application for review by the Supreme Court was denied January 22, 1987.
Notes
The Legislature was well aware of the Franklin decision as revealed in the above statement and in the explanation, in the same analysis, that the new statute would codify the Franklin test for restoration of sanity.* Yet with Franklin specifically brought to its attention, the Legislature did not write into section 1026.2 any provision that an applicant for release had no right to a jury trial to determine the question of initial release to a local mental health program.
*The analysis for the Senate Committee on the Judiciary explains: “In In re Franklin, (1972) 7 Cal.3d 126, the court held that the relevant standard for determining whether a person has been restored to sanity is whether ‘he has improved to the extent that he is no longer a danger to the health and safety of others, including himself.’ Recently, in People v. Woodson, (1983) 140 Cal.App.3d 1, the First District Court of Appeal reasoned that the Franklin test applied only to violent offenders, and held that the test for nonviolent offenders
