Opinion
Roy Boody Cooper appeals from a judgment discharging an alternative writ of mandamus directed against the Justice Court of El Centro Judicial District, which proposed to invalidate the conviction of *288 the appеllant of misdemeanor drunk driving (Veh. Code, § 23102, subd. fa)).
On April 23, 1969, the appellant was arrested in Imperial County for misdemeanor drunk driving. On the following day he was arraigned before Judge Hugh L. Keating in the Justice Court, El Centro Judicial District. At that time he was advised of his constitutional rights and entered a plea of not guilty to the charge.
On May 23, 1969, Judge Keating was disqualified from trying the case and subsequently the appellant, represented by a different attorney, appeared befоre Judge Alfred Dart for trial. At that time he withdrew his earlier plea and entered a plea of guilty.
The record does not indicate that the appellant was advised of his rights in accordance with
Boykin
v.
Alabama,
Appellant was sentenced to pay a fine of $300 ($100 suspended), and to serve 30 days in the county jail (totally suspended). He was placed on probation for a period of two years on. the condition that his license be suspended for six mbnths, thаt after that he drive only to and from work, that he not violate any traffic laws and that he not drink any alcoholic beverages. On April 1, 1971, while still on probation, appellant was once again arrested for violation of Vehicle Code section 23102, subdivision (a). A complaint was filed in the same justice court alleging this violation and further alleging the prior conviction. Based on this charge, a hearing was held to determine whether probatiоn had been violated and should be revoked. At that time the appellant moved to set aside the prior conviction on the theory it was based on a guilty plea accepted in violation of
Boykin
v.
Alabama, supra,
Appellant filed a petition for writ of mandamus on July 8, 1971, asking that the justice court be compelled to set aside the prior conviction. A hearing on the petition for the writ was held on July 22, 1971, in the Superior Court of Imperial County, and the judge dischаrged the alternative writ of mandamus and denied the peremptory writ pursuant to findings of fact and conclusions of law which were submitted by appellant and the district attorney. Significantly, the findings of fact included a determination thаt the writ of mandamus was the only plain, speedy and adequate remedy available to the appellant and that the record of the respondent justice court did not comply with the provisions of Boykin v. Alabama and In re Tahl, in that the recоrd failed to disclose the following: “(a) An indication that the [appellant] understood he had a right against self-incrimina *289 tion; (b) A specific and personal waiver of the right of [appellant] to a jury trial; (c) A specific аnd personal waiver of the right of [appellant] to confront witnesses; (d) A specific and personal waiver of the right of [appellant] against self-incrimination; (e) A specific and personal indication by [appellant] of an understanding of the nature of the charges against him; and (f) A specific and personal indication by [appellant] of an understanding of the consequences of the plea of guilty to the charge.” Thе court discharged the writ on the specific ground that Boykin and Tahl have no application in misdemeanor cases. This appeal followed.
This court denied the People’s request to augment the record on apрeal to include Judge Dart’s nunc pro tunc order correcting the record to show appellant was properly informed of and intelligently waived his rights.
Boykin
v.
Alabama, supra,
was decided on June 2, 1969, three days before appellant entered his plea of guilty in this case.
In re Tahl, supra,
was not decided until November 7, 1969, but did clarify the application of the
Boykin
decision holding it was applicable only where the guilty plea was accepted after
Boykin.
(See also
People
v.
Kirkpatrick,
Boykin held that the voluntary and intelligent chаracter of the waiver of constitutional rights brought about by a guilty plea will not be presumed from a silent record. In re Tahl enumerated those constitutional rights being waived by the defendant which the record should reveal; namely, the рrivilege against compulsory self-incrimination, right to confrontation by accusers and the right to a jury trial.
While Boykin and Tahl dealt with crimes of a felonious nature, they were not expressly limited to that class of offenses. On the contrary, the California Supreme Court expected application of this doctrine to misdemeanors because in the Tahl case, in footnote number 10 at page 135, it indicated retroactive application of Boykin would аffect an unspecified high number of misdemeanor cases.
Respondent cites
Baldwin
v.
New York, 399
U.S. 66 [
Conceding that this is a petty offense with minimal imprisonment as described by the court in
Baldwin,
and there is no right to a jury trial, we are still left with the waiver of the rights of confrontation and against self-incrimination which
Boykin
and
Tahl
say must appear in the record. (See
In re Gannon,
The record in the case before us is devoid of any evidence that the defendant intelligently or voluntarily waived his Boykin-Tahl rights. For these reasons, the judgment of conviction based on the guilty plea сannot stand.
There is no inconsistency in the law by reason of the fact that a defendant may appear by counsel in misdemeanor proceedings (Pen. Code, §§ 977, 1429). Not all appearances involve the waiver of a constitutional right. If such a right is being waived, however, the waiver must be accomplished in the manner prescribed by law.
The People argue mandamus is not the proper remedy to attack collaterally a сonviction which involved the alleged denial of constitutional rights. Historically, either an appeal or a writ of habeas corpus has been considered the appropriate method
to
attack a judgment of conviction.
(In re Spencer, 63
Cal.2d 400 [
In
Thomas
v.
Department of Motor Vehicles,
In the case before us there was a motion to set aside (or more properly “vacate”) the judgment in the justice court and it was denied. The requirements expressed in
Fitch
v.
Justice Court, supra,
The only other basis for denying the use of mandamus suggested by the *292 People is the apparent failure to show that there was no plain, speedy and adequate remedy, in the ordinary course of law. The proposed findings. of fact signed by both parties must be viewed as a stipulation, especially when approved by the court without testimony. It would be improper for us tо demand the record be filled with evidence showing a lack of a plain, speedy and adequate remedy where the parties agree that is a fact. We need not look behind the stipulation.
Whether the apрellant seeks relief through mandamus or one of the other writs he must ultimately achieve the same result and-it would be grossly unjust to require him to begin anew when the use of mandamus has been authorized by the California Supreme Court.
The appellant is entitled to the writ of mandamus directing the justice court to vacate the judgment of conviction and to permit appellant to withdraw his plea of guilty. That matter should be restored to the justice court сalendar to be tried or disposed of in an appropriate manner.
The judgment discharging the alternative writ of mandate is reversed.
Whelan, Acting P. J., and Ault, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied November 13, 1972, and respondents’ petition fоr a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied December 20, 1972.
Notes
Williams
v.
Florida,
In
Argersinger
v.
Hamlin,
“We reject, therefore, the premise that since prosecutions for crimes punishable by imprisonment for less than six months may be tried without a jury, they may always be tried without a lawyer.”
Argersinger
v.
Hamlin, supra,
