Opinion
The issue in this writ proceeding is whether the trial court can lawfully make a discovery order compelling defendant to turn over to the prosecution a weapon he allegedly used to commit the offenses charged. We hold that the trial court may not order such production because there is no legislative authorization for the compelled disclosure and, more fundamentally, because it would violate defendant’s constitutional privilege against self-incrimination.
I
Petitioner Daniel Goldsmith stands charged by an information with three felony counts. Count I charges him with the attempted murder of Keith Johnson (Pen. Code, §§ 664/187) 1 , with the further allegations that he used a firearm, namely, a “9mm automatic,” in the commission of that offense within the meaning of section 12022.5 and that he intentionally inflicted great bodily injury upon Mr. Johnson within the meaning of section 12022.7. Count II charges him with shooting at an occupied motor vehicle (§ 246). Finally, count III charges him with a felonious assault upon Peggy Johnson (§ 245, subd. (a)), with the further allegation that he used the “9mm automatic” firearm in the commission of the assault within the meaning of section 12022.5.
On September 16, 1983, the prosecution moved for pretrial discovery, requesting among other things that defendant and/or his attorney produce for inspection and testing the weapon defendant was alleged to have used, namely, the 9mm pistol. The basis of this discovery request was the unsworn statement of a deputy district attorney claiming that police reports, witness interviews and the testimony at the preliminary examination “demonstrate” that defendant “has had the weapon ... in his personal possession, and continues to be in actual or constructive possession thereof, or has first hand knowledge of its location.” Following a hearing on the issue, the court ordered defendant and/or his attorney to produce the weapon by *79 September 28, 1983, or to show cause why they had not complied with the order.
By September 28, 1983, the weapon had not been produced and, after an in camera hearing 2 requested by defendant’s counsel, the court “found that no justifiable reasons have been given for their refusal to produce the weapon . . . .” The court then issued this order imposing sanctions:
“1. at the trial the defendant will not be permitted to introduce any proffered evidence to establish that the 9mm automatic pistol, further identified as a Smith and Wesson, model 59, serial #A399883, was not the firearm used in the commission or attempted commission of the offenses charged in the information or was not an operable firearm at the time the charged offenses are alleged to have occurred; and
“2. at trial the defendant will not be permitted to introduce any proffered evidence the trial court finds plaintiff may have reasonably rebutted if given the opportunity to inspect, examine and test the pistol before trial.” (Italics in original.)
Defendant sought relief in this court by filing a petition for a writ of mandate. We stayed trial pending further order of this court.
II
In
People
v.
Collie
(1981)
More fundamentally, however, the privilege against self-incrimination, mandated by both the California and United States Constitutions, 4 prohibits the type of compelled discovery ordered in this case.
The California Supreme Court had occasion, in
People
v.
Schader
(1969)
The question here is whether the compelled production of the gun constitutes the type of incriminating testimonial communication barred by the privilege against self-incrimination. The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts addressed this precise issue in
Commonwealth
v.
Hughes
(1980)
Much of the constitutional discussion forming the foundation for the
Hughes
holding was reiterated by our Supreme Court in
People
v.
Rucker
(1980)
Rucker begins: “The privilege [against self-incrimination] is an express mandate of both the California and United States Constitutions. It protects an individual from being compelled to provide ‘testimonial’ evidence which may tend to incriminate him. As a corollary, the privilege precludes the government from using such evidence or its fruits in a criminal proceeding. [Citation.]” (Id., at p. 378, fn. omitted.)
The
Rucker
court then noted that the privilege may be invoked in any setting, including when prosecution seeks discovery against a criminal defendant, and that judicial review of an asserted invasion of the privilege has traditionally focused on whether the claimant was (1) actually
compelled
to disclose (2)
testimonial
communications (3) which tended to incriminate him.
(Id.,
at pp. 378, 379, fn. 8.) As the court had earlier noted in
Prudhomme
v.
Superior Court
(1970)
This case shares with
Hughes
what the Massachusetts court described as a departure from the prototypical case of compelled oral testimony. Both
*82
petitioner and Hughes could have complied with the ordered production of the weapon without uttering a word.
(Com.
v.
Hughes, supra,
We are therefore required, as was the court in
Hughes,
to decide whether the compelled act of producing the weapon has sufficient testimonial aspects to permit Fifth Amendment consideration. If we determine there are testimonial aspects to the ordered production then we must consider whether those aspects have an incriminating tendency.
(Com.
v.
Hughes, supra,
The discussions in
Rucker
and
Hughes
concerning what constitutes testimonial evidence roughly parallel each other.
Rucker
summarizes the law: “In the benchmark decision of
Schmerber
v.
California
[1966]
“Almost six months after
Schmerber,
this court held that an accused had no privilege to refuse to participate in a voice identification procedure.
(People
v.
Ellis
[1966]
*83
“Shortly after this court’s decision in
Ellis,
the Supreme Court handed down its decisions in the companion cases of
United States
v.
Wade, supra,
The
Hughes
court added
Fisher
v.
United States
(1976)
Hughes
analyzed the
Fisher
decision this way: “The
[Fisher]
Court recognized that two kinds of testimonial assertions were implied in the production. First, ‘producing the documents tacitly admits their existence and their location in the hands of their possessor.’ [Citation.] Second, the production implicitly authenticated the papers as being those requested in the summons. [Citation.] Why, then, was the claim of privilege denied? The elements of existence, location, and control of the papers were ‘not in issue’; ‘[t]he existence and location of the papers are a foregone conclusion and the taxpayer adds little or nothing to the sum total of the Government’s information by conceding that he in fact has the papers.’ [Citation.] The information added was trivial. In the circumstances, existence and location of the papers were comparable to the existence and location of the blood
*84
extracted in
Schmerber.
Coming to the element of authentication, the Court said that, while testimonial, it did not incriminate the taxpayer: the implicit assertion that the papers produced conformed to the summons would not serve to authenticate them at trial; it was the testimony of the accountants that would do that. Nor was the government using the taxpayer’s ‘authentication’ to prove that the figures were accurate. [Citation.]” (
The
Hughes
court then reasoned that “The converse inference from
Fisher,
... is that assertions implied from production of things (whether or not documents) are within the Fifth Amendment, and thus justify the refusal to produce, when they are nontrivial and incriminating.”
(Com.
v.
Hughes, supra,
Foundation laid, the
Hughes
court turned to the question of the testimonial nature of the act of producing the pistol sought by the prosecution in that case: “If the defendant should produce the revolver, he would be making implicitly a statement about its existence, location and control to which the Commonwealth says it would allude at trial to show he had possession and control at some point after the alleged crime. The implied statement would also function as an authentication. [Citations.] Nor would the statement amount to a ‘foregone conclusion’ conveying merely trivial new knowledge. On the contrary, it would deal with just those matters about which the
*85
Commonwealth desires but does not have solid information. A search warrant has proved futile. Apparently the Commonwealth does not know whether the gun exists or, if it does, where it is being kept; it has only some evidence to base a suspicion that the defendant may be able to produce it, if he will. In the language of the cases, the Commonwealth is seeking to be relieved of its ignorance or uncertainty by trying to get itself ‘informed of knowledge the defendant possesses.’ [Citation.]”
(Com.
v.
Hughes, supra,
There is only one minor factual difference between Hughes and the present case. In Hughes, as is made clear by the preceding quotation, the authorities had obtained a warrant to search defendant’s car for a pistol and spent shells. (Id., at p. 1240.) When the police executed the warrant, nothing was found. The order to produce the weapon followed. (Ibid.) In contrast, the record here is silent as to whether a search warrant was unsuccessfully executed or was even sought. Be that as it may, the prosecution here as in Hughes was simply using court ordered disclosure to relieve itself of its “ignorance or uncertainty by trying to get itself ‘informed of knowledge the defendant possesses.’” (Id., at p. 1244.)
Moreover, we note that, like Hughes, the prosecution here did not volunteer to limit the use at trial of the fact that defendant produced the gun. The prosecutor could use the fact of defendant’s production as evidence that he had possession and control of the weapon after the attempted murder and assault.
Finally, and crucially, here, as in Hughes, the existence, location, and control of the gun are not a “foregone conclusion.” Unlike the ordered disclosure in Fisher, here the act of defendant producing the gun whose whereabouts is unknown would reveal personal knowledge possessed by defendant and not otherwise available to the prosecution.
We are convinced that the reasoning of Hughes is sound. We therefore join that court in holding that the compelled production of a weapon, alleg *86 edly used to commit the crimes charged, is a testimonial communication within the meaning of the privilege against self-incrimination.
Next, we turn to the question whether the production of the gun would be incriminating. We cannot conceive how it could be otherwise. The Hughes court explained why production of a yet unlocated weapon is incriminating: “The revolver is the supposed instrumentality of the crime, and control or possession after the event, taken together with the earlier ownership attested by the registration, would tend to establish possession at the critical time. It is partially on this declared theory that the Commonwealth has pursued the defendant with its motion to produce. The Commonwealth states that once it has the revolver in hand, it will run ballistics tests, and these may lead to expert testimony, of whatever strength, tying the revolver to the actual assault. This is a step beyond the production sought, but the constitutional privilege ‘does not merely encompass evidence which may lead to criminal conviction, but includes information which would furnish a link in the chain of evidence that could lead to prosecution . . . .’ [Citations.][ 10 ] In reviewing the contempt adjudication, it is right to assume, as the defendant does arguendo in his brief, that he has present possession of the registered gun, which makes very real the factor of self-incrimination that is involved. [ 11 ] [Citation.]” (Id., at p. 1245; fn. omitted.)
Again, only insignificant factual differences distinguish Hughes on this point. In Hughes, defendant had apparently owned the gun, as attested by the registration. Here, according to the deputy district attorney, the police had obtained a “dealer’s record of sale” showing that defendant’s wife had purchased the weapon identified as a Smith and Wesson, model 59, serial #A399883, 9mm pistol. The police, it is asserted, had additional information connecting defendant with the gun: defendant’s son told police that defendant had taken the gun prior to the shooting; on the day of the shooting defendant spoke with police by telephone and indicated that he was going to retrieve the gun from where he had put it; and several months after the *87 shooting defendant informed a police detective that he had a 9mm automatic in his car. As clearly as in Hughes, the prosecution’s access to and use of the gun at trial would go a long way to establishing defendant’s possession of the gun at the critical time. 12
In Hughes, once the gun was produced, the prosecution was going to run ballistics tests in an attempt to tie the revolver to the assault. Here, the court ordered that the gun be produced “for inspection, examination, and testing.” Presumably, the prosecution here would also use evidence derived from the weapon to establish defendant’s guilt for the crimes charged.
The argument for finding that production of the weapon would be incriminating is compelling: no reasonable person could doubt that the weapon itself could serve as a “ ‘link in a chain’ of evidence tending to establish guilt of a criminal offense.”
(Prudhomme
v.
Superior Court, supra,
We address one last issue, namely, whether the restrictions in the discovery order—defendant was not required to provide the prosecution with any information, statements, or discovery of any kind, nor identify the source, prior location or previous testing or examination of the pistol—cured the order.
We have already covered this territory: First, the act itself of producing the gun, without more, has strong testimonial aspects. Second, the gun alone, without more may produce incriminating evidence. Based on these two facts, the order’s apparent respect for defendant’s testimonial privilege after he produces the gun is too little, too late. It is essentially window dressing, albeit transparent, for a blatant constitutional invasion.
*88
We also note that here, as in
Hughes,
the prosecution has
not
attempted to eliminate, as far as it could, the testimonial aspects of defendant’s production of the gun. The prosecution could have undertaken to authenticate the gun at trial using only the serial number and assured that at trial it would not tender the fact that defendant produced the gun.
(Com.
v.
Hughes, supra,
Since the discovery order to produce the pistol lightens the prosecution’s burden and would serve as an evidentiary link in the chain of guilt, it violates defendant’s constitutional privilege against self-incrimination. The order is therefore beyond the court’s jurisdiction, and is void and unenforceable.
*89 III
The instant petition has been served on respondent court and real party in interest. Opposition has been filed. Under these circumstances, this court is empowered to issue a peremptory writ of mandate without first issuing an alternative writ. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1088;
Central & West Basin Water etc. Dist.
v.
Wong
(1976)
Let a peremptory writ of mandate issue directing respondent court to vacate its discovery order requiring defendant and his attorney to produce for inspection the weapon allegedly used in the commission of the crimes with which defendant is charged and to vacate its order providing for sanctions for noncompliance with its discovery order by defendant and/or his attorney. The stay previously issued is vacated effective upon the finality of this opinion.
Puglia, P. J., and Regan, J., concurred.
On March 21, 1984, the opinion was modified to read as printed above.
Notes
Unless otherwise indicated, all subsequent statutory references are to the Penal Code.
At this hearing defense counsel represented to the court that he neither possessed the gun nor had control over it. Counsel respectfully declined, on grounds of attorney-client privilege, to reveal whether he knew where the gun was. In
People
v.
Meredith
(1981)
Of course,
People
v.
Collie, supra,
The privilege against self-incrimination of the California Constitution is found in article I, section 15, which reads in pertinent part: “Persons may not ... be compelled in a criminal cause to be a witness against themselves. ...” The analogous provision of the federal Constitution is found in the Fifth Amendment, which reads in pertinent part: “No person . . . shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself. . . .” The Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination is applicable to the states by virtue of the Fourteenth Amendment.
(Malloy
v.
Hogan
(1964)
The important facts of
Commonwealth
v.
Hughes, supra,
People
v.
Rucker, supra,
In
Fisher,
agents of the Internal Revenue Service, after interviewing certain taxpayers regarding possible civil or criminal infractions of the tax laws, learned that these taxpayers had retrieved some of their accountants’ work papers (which laid out analyses of the taxpayers’ income and disbursements related to the years under investigation), and had passed the papers to their attorneys. Summons was then served on the attorneys to produce the work sheets. Because the client passed the documents to the attorney in a privileged transaction, the court was disposed to analyze the case as if the client had never made the transfer.
(Fisher
v.
United States, supra,
The issue therefore reduced to whether the taxpayers themselves had a Fifth Amendment privilege to refuse production of the papers prepared by their accountants. (See
Com.
v.
Hughes, supra,
Hughes
then cites cases, both preceding and following
Fisher,
which used some form of the
Fisher
implied assertion principle to protect against compelled or coerced discovery:
United States
v.
Campos-Serrano
(7th Cir. 1970)
After our opinion was filed in this case, the United States Supreme Court rendered its decision in
United States
v.
Doe
(1984) - U.S. - [
We note the similarity of the test applied to pretrial interviews in
People
v.
Rucker, supra,
As we have noted, the California formulation of the privilege against self-incrimination, in the context of pretrial prosecutorial discovery, as enunciated in
Prudhomme
v.
Superior Court
(1970)
In a footnote at this point, the court noted that if defendant Hughes failed to produce the gun on request, he might be criminally liable under Massachusetts general law.
(Com.
v.
Hughes, supra,
In the instant case, the court imposed evidentiary sanctions on defendant for his failure to produce the weapon. Presumably, defendant here could also have been held in criminal contempt under section 166 if the order were valid.
Implicit in the prosecution’s position, and the court’s order, is the argument that independent evidence establishes defendant’s possession of the gun at the time of the offense and after. The
Hughes
court addressed the same argument: “The Commonwealth does not simply assert that the evidence to be gained by production is here inconsequential or nonincriminating; rather it says that the evidence is unworthy of Fifth Amendment protection because it merely enhances other persuasive evidence obtained without the defendant’s help. The Commonwealth’s argument is indeed curious. It is as if we were asked to rule that a confession could be coerced from an accused as soon as the government announced (or was able to show) that [in] a future trial it could produce enough independent evidence to get past a motion for a directed verdict of acquittal. This would be to encourage present infringements of the Constitution on the excuse that they might or would be held ‘harmless’ after trial and conviction.” (Com. v.
Hughes, supra,
Hughes
cites two cases for comparison. The first,
United States
v.
Authement
(5th Cir. 1979)
