*1007 Opinion
Penal Code section 987.9 (section 987.9) provides that in “the trial of a capital case . . . [an] indigent defendant . . . may request the court for funds for . . . investigators, experts, and others for the preparation ... of the defense.” Apparently for years, the Contra Costa County Superior Court entertained section 987.9 requests by indigent defendants charged in special circumstances murders even when the requests were made before the preliminary hearing. Petitioner Raymond Gardner, charged with special circumstances murder, moved in 2009 for section 987.9 funds, a request the court denied solely because the district attorney had not announced that he was seeking the death penalty and, until he did, petitioner’s case was not “presently a capital case.”
We conclude this was error, as a “capital case” as used in section 987.9 means one where the defendant faces the possibility of the death penalty, where the defendant “actually risks death.”
(Sand v. Superior Court
(1983)
BACKGROUND
On April 17, 2009, petitioner Raymond Gardner was charged with a violation of Penal Code section 187, subdivision (a),
1
for the willful, deliberate, and premeditated murder of Bruce King, with two “special circumstances,” that the murder was committed during the commission or attempted commission of a robbery and burglary.
2
(§ 190.2, subd. (a)(1).) After arraignment but before the preliminary hearing, petitioner’s counsel filed a motion entitled “Request for Investigative Funding (Capital Murder Case—Penal Code § 987.9),” requesting funds for a second counsel (under
Keenan v. Superior Court
(1982)
Petitioner renewed his request, citing
Abernathy
v.
Superior Court
(2007)
DISCUSSION
1. The petition is moot, but we decide the issue anyway
In the course of the briefing here petitioner was advised by the District Attorney of Contra Costa Cоunty that he would not seek the death penalty in this case. Because of this decision, real party in interest and the district attorney argue the petition is moot, relying on the California Supreme Court decision in
Sand, supra,
As a general rule “[a] writ of mandate will not issue to enforce an abstract right, when the occurrence of an event subsequent to the commencement of the proceeding makes the issuance of the writ of no practical benefit to the petitioner.”
(Clementine v. Board of Civ. Sen Commrs.
(1941)
*1009
the case presents an “important question affecting the public interest that is ‘ “ ‘capable of repetition, yet evading review.’ ” ’ ”
(NBC Subsidiary (KNBC-TV), Inc.
v.
Superior Court
(1999)
Before 2009, the policy of the Contra Costa County Superior Court was to rule on requests for section 987.9 funds on the merits, even when the funds were sought before the preliminary hearing. However, sometime in 2009 the presiding judge apparently instituted a new policy, to deny requests for ancillary funding made prior to an announcement that the district attorney would seek the death penalty. Since then at least two other petitions for mandate have been filed in this court arising from this policy: Burris v. Superior Court (Oct. 23, 2009, A126366) in Division Three, and Miranda v. Superior Court (Dec. 18, 2009, A127054) in Division Five, both of which petitions were denied. While Miranda was uneventful, with no petition for review filed after the denial. Burris was not. In that case, after Division Three denied the petition, the Supreme Court granted defendant’s petition for review and transferred the case back to Division Three “with directions to vacate its order denying the writ of mandate and to issue an alternative writ.” 5 Division Three issued the alternative writ and later dismissed the petition as moot when the superior court decided the motion on its merits and “granted funds pursuant to Penal Code section 987.9.”
While the superior court complied with the alternative writ in Burris, it is far from clear that the issue has gone away: nothing in the record оr anything said at oral argument indicates that the superior court has changed its policy. Absent such a policy reversal, the ancillary defense funding in every special circumstance case in Contra Costa County is affected. It is, in short, an important issue. And unquestionably one capable of repetition. And of evading review. The petition here was filed on August 25, 2009, more than a month before the petition in Burris, filed on October 9, 2009. Yet, Burris was able to wend its way through this court, up to the Supreme Court, get transferred back to this court, and then be rendered moot by thе superior court—all before our case was even set for oral argument.
*1010 2. The superior court must hear the request on the merits
California law has long provided for imposition of the death penalty. The 1849 Constitution “recognize[d] the existence of capital punishment,” a recognition carried over into the 1879 version.
(People v. Anderson
(1972)
Section 987.9 was part of that 1977 statutory scheme, and provides in pertinent part that in “the trial of a capital case ... the indigent defendant, through the defendant’s counsel, may request the court for funds for the specific payment of investigators, experts, and others for the preparation or presentation of the defense.” (§ 987.9, subd. (a).) These funds are “to supplement preexisting provisions for employment of defense counsel at public expense by making provision for services ancillary to those of counsel.”
(Keenan
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Against this background, the substantive question before us is straightforward: Does section 987.9 apply in a special circumstances murder case where the district attorney has not announced that he or she will seek the death penalty? The superior court answered in the negative and refused to hear the motion on the merits, primarily relying on
Sand, supra,
Sand
is noteworthy as the lеading case on eligibility for section 987.9 funding issues, but it dealt with the inverse of the situation here. There, the defense requested section 987.9 funding
after
the prosecution had elected
not
to seek the death penalty—in other words, in a setting where Sand was facing a maximum possible sentence of LWOP. The Supreme Court concluded that
*1011
because Sand “does not risk capital punishment, his is not a ‘capital case’ within the meaning of section 987.9.”
(Sand, supra,
The analysis leading to the conclusion in
Sand
began with the Supreme Court observing that “capital case” is ambiguous: it “might be understood either to define the nature of the offense charged—i.е., murder with special circumstances—or to describe the permissible punishment—i.e., that the death penalty may be imposed.”
(Sand, supra,
Importantly, the court repeatedly used the term “aсtually risks death” or similar terms in describing a “capital case.” For example, in discussing the history of section 987.9, the court observed that “the Legislature has expressed its intention that the defense services funding provision apply in those cases in which
death remains a possible
punishment.”
(Sand, supra,
Like the superior court, real party in interest here also relies on
People
v.
Ward
(2005)
Nonetheless, the superior court held, and real party in interest vigorously argues, that section 987.9 dоes not apply unless the district attorney makes a formal declaration that he or she is seeking the death penalty. Such vigor is misplaced. Under the 1977 statutory scheme, unless the district attorney declines to pursue the death penalty, the only legal impediment between a defendant in a special circumstance case and a judgment of death is the trier of fact. The Penal Code provides that once special circumstances are alleged, the trier of fact is then to determine whether the defendаnt should serve LWOP or face death. (§§ 190.3, 190.4, subd. (a).) Put otherwise, when the district attorney has filed a complaint alleging a charge of murder and special circumstances, the district attorney has effectively—albeit impliedly— “elected” to seek the death penalty, an “election” in force unless and until the district attorney stipulates otherwise. Simply, there is nothing in the Penal Code requiring an express “election” by the district attorney to seek the death penalty, as held in
Abernathy, supra,
In
Abernathy
our colleagues in Division One were faced with the issue— coincidentally arising out of the same superior court as here—whether a defendant in a special circumstance case was entitled to daily preliminary hearing transcripts under section 190.9, subdivision (a)(1), which provides that in “any case in which a death sentence may be imposed,” a court reporter is to “prepare and certify a daily transcript of all proceedings commencing with the preliminary hearing.” The magistrate “read subdivision (a)(1) [of section 190.9] to require distribution of daily preliminary hearing transcripts only in those cases in which the prosecutor has announced a decision to seek the death penalty”
(Abernathy, supra,
Division One reversed, holding that the requirement for daily preliminary hearing transcripts in a special circumstances case did not hinge on an affirmative act by the prosecutor: “As Abernathy correctly argues, the plain language of subdivision (a)(1) is unambiguous. It makes no mention of the prosecutor’s decision to seek the death penalty, nor any requirement of a holding order. (§ 872.) Instead, subdivision (a)(1) expressly requires preparation of a daily preliminary hearing transcript ‘[i]n any case in which a death sentence may be imposed.’
Moreover, no statute or case law requires the prosecutor to give a notice of the intention to seek the death penalty.
Nothing in section 190.9 requires a holding order and the setting of a trial date as prerequisites to the requirement of daily preliminary hearing transcripts.”
{Abernathy, supra,
The footnote referenced in the quotation above supports our conclusion. Discussing
Sand,
the footnote observes that “[s]ection 987.9 (requiring funds for indigent defendants in capital cases), for example, does not require notice from the prosecutor. But the district attorney’s
voluntary
formal notice declining to seek the death penalty precludes authorization of such funds.”
(Abernathy, supra,
A 1981 California Attorney General’s opinion construing the definition of “capital case” in section 987.9 is also instructive. The question there was whether a minor not eligible for the death penalty was entitled to section 987.9 funds. (
*1014 The California Code of Regulations also recognizes that a special circumstances case is a “capital case” unless the prosecutor stipulates otherwise. Title 2, division 2, chapter 2, subchapter 2.5, article 5 of that code sets forth guidelines for the controller to reimburse counties under section 987.9, one of which allows for reimbursement in a special circumstances case unless it “no longer involves the death penalty.” (Cal. Code of Regs., tit. 2, § 1026.2.) The regulation goes on to define a case as no longer “involving the death penalty” as one “where either the allegations of special circumstances have been dismissed or the prosecution has formally elected not to seek the death penalty.” (Ibid.)
Ignoring what had been the procedure in Contra Costa County before 2009, the district attorney argues that criminal defendants are not entitled to seek section 987.9 funds before the preliminary hearing, noting that the section provides for ancillary funding “[i]n the trial of a capital case.” (§ 987.9, subd. (a).) From this, the district attorney extrapolates that section 987.9 could not apply before the preliminary hearing because the case is not in trial posture. This argument is myopic. The purpose of section 987.9 is to provide for ancillary funds “for the preparation or presentation оf the defense” in a capital case. (§ 987.9, subd. (a); 5 Witkin & Epstein, Cal. Criminal Law, supra, Criminal Trial, § 174, p. 272.) Such defense necessarily includes the preliminary hearing. 8
In sum and in short, a murder case in which special circumstances are alleged is a “capital case” within the meaning of section 987.9, unless and until the prosecution expressly indicates that the death penalty will not be sought. Since it is, the superior court must hear section 987.9 requests on the merits.
Whether an otherwise eligible defendant has made the necessary showing for such ancillary funds is left to the sound discretion of the court.
(People
v.
Box
(2000)
Finally, the amici curiae spare no ink arguing how the trial court’s discretion should have been exercised here—indeed, how it should be exercised in the future. These issues are not before us, and we decline to issue an advisory opinion on them, especially as the exercise of discretion is based on the particular facts of the individual case, with the trial court to “balance ... the interests of the state and those of the defendant.”
(Keenan, supra,
3. Some closing observations
Without conceding a capital defendant is entitled to request section 987.9 funding before the preliminary hearing, the district attorney attempts to narrow the funds the defendant should be entitled to receive at that point in the proceeding. Arguing that a capital defendant “enjoys no constitutional right to chase mitigation, before preliminаry hearing and before the People have elected to seek death,” the district attorney asserts that such a defendant “enjoys a limited right, pre-prelim and pre-election, for investigators and experts,” and should only be allowed funds for “negating] probable cause at preliminary hearing” and not to “chase mitigation.” Implicit in the district attorney’s argument is that mitigation preparation before the preliminary hearing is a waste of public funds. Such argument ignores the statutory language.
To begin with, section 987.9 does not contain some hidden mandate that preparation must begin after the preliminary hearing, precluding early mitigation investigation. To the contrary, it provides for ancillary funding for “preparation or presentation of the defense” in a capital case. (§ 987.9, subd. (a).) Nor do we agree with the implication that prepreliminary hearing funding is never efficient. Early investigation is key for both sides, including *1016 defense investigation into mitigating factors. Capital defense often includes an attempt to convince the district attorney to forgo the dеath penalty, often accomplished by presenting mitigation evidence as early as possible—a strategy, not incidentally, recognized by objective standards for defense representation in capital cases. The comments to the 2003 American Bar Association Guidelines for the Appointment and Performance of Defense Counsel in Death Penalty Cases are illustrative, explaining that “[investigation and planning for both [trial and penalty] phases must begin immediately upon counsel’s entry into the case, even bеfore the prosecution has affirmatively indicated that it will seek the death penalty.” They also counsel that “[c]omprehensive pretrial investigation is a necessary prerequisite to enable counsel to negotiate a plea that will allow the defendant to serve a lesser sentence, to persuade the prosecution to forego seeking a death sentence at trial, or to uncover facts that will make the client legally ineligible for the death penalty.” (ABA Guidelines for the Appointment аnd Performance of Defense Counsel in Death Penalty Cases (2003) pp. 5-6.)
It is true, as the district attorney counters, that the American Bar Association guidelines are not controlling; they are, after all, just guidelines. But, they also are, as the Supreme Court has noted, “guides” as to what “reasonably diligent attorneys” should do in capital cases.
(Bobby v. Van Hook
(2009) 558 U.S._,_[
Finally, the district attorney informs us that he is in the process of modifying his internal death penalty review procedures. Previously, the district attorney made a decision on whether to stipulate to LWOP after his оwn internal investigation into the case and reviewing defense mitigation evidence. The new procedure will be to consider defense mitigation evidence only after he has made a tentative decision whether or not to stipulate to LWOP. In his words, “I will revise my procedures so that I will not consider any mitigating evidence from any defendant or from any defense attorney, privately retained or appointed, until after I have reached my initial tentative decision to seek the death penalty. I will endeavor to make the election, whether or not to seek the death penalty, before or upon invoking the superior court’s trial jurisdiction, in every special circumstance case.” This change, the district attorney argues, eradicates the need for early mitigation investigation.
This change may or may not have an impact in individual cases. But we decline to make blanket pronouncements based on an untested procedure applied in the hypothetical. Ancillary funding in capital cases is both serious business and one based on the individual request and the individual situation, to be addrеssed in the exercise of the trial court’s discretion.
(People
v.
Box, supra,
*1017 CONCLUSION AND DISPOSITION
A special circumstances case is a “capital case” within the meaning of section 987.9 until the district attorney announces he or she will not seek the death penalty. Since it is, the superior court should have decided petitioner’s motion on its merits. But because the death penalty is no longer a possibility for petitioner, the court need not do so in this case, and the order to show cause is dischargеd and the petition is denied.
Kline, P. J., and Lambden, J., concurred.
Notes
All further statutory references are to the Penal Code.
Petitioner was also charged with six other counts, none of which is relevant to this petition.
We do not know the details of the request, as petitioner has provided only the motion’s cover sheet, presumably to maintain its confidentiality. The content of such a request—indeed, the request itself—is confidential by statute. (See § 987.9, subd. (a) [“The fact that an application has been made shall be confidential and the contents of the application shall be confidential.”].) In limited circumstances, the Attornеy General is allowed access to the otherwise confidential application “when the defendant raises an issue on appeal or collateral review . . . [that] relates to the issue raised” in the section 987.9 application. (Id., subd. (d).) This provision is not applicable here.
The petition named the People of the State of California as the real party in interest and at different times the Attorney General and the district attorney have appeared as real party in interest. However, in his informal reply the Attorney General acknowledged that “[t]he People, real party in this matter, do not have an overriding interest in the outcome of this writ proceeding since the issue primarily concerns not the merits of the underlying criminal prosecution, but whether petitioner is entitled to funds from the public fisc.” On December 23, 2009, we replaced the People as real party in interest with the County of Contra Costa, because section 987.9 funds are paid by it (see § 987.9, subd. (b)(1)), and thus it is the entity with a “direct interest” in the outcome of the proceeding.
(Waste Management of Alameda County, Inc. v. Cоunty of Alameda
(2000)
This order directing issuance of an alternative writ “does not stand for the proposition that the Supreme Court has determined that petitioner was correct on the merits, or justified, but merely that extraordinary relief is the only adequate avenue for review.”
(Bridgestone/Firestone, Inc.
v.
Superior Court
(1992)
Williams v. Superior Court
(1983)
The cоurt also concluded that without “ ‘a holding order the superior court does not have jurisdiction to conduct a capital trial.’ ”
(Abernathy supra,
Case law supports this self-evident maxim. In
Anderson
v.
Justice Court
(1979)
