Lead Opinion
On December 30, 1966, petitioner David Oliver Hayes drove a motor vehicle for some 13 blocks in violation of Vehicle Code section 14601 (with knowledge of a suspended license) and Vehicle Code section 23102 (while under the influence of intoxicating liquor). He pleaded guilty to and was sentenced for both offenses. Petitioner now asserts that imposition of sentences for both violations is contrary to the proscription against multiple punishment contained in Penal Code section 654. We have concluded that petitioner’s contention lacks merit.
Section 654 provides that “An act or omission which is made punishable in different ways by different provisions of this code may be .punished under either of such provisions, but in no case can it be punished under more than one. . . .” The interdiction is not limited to the provisions of the Penal Code, but embraces penal provisions in other codes as well, including those found in the Vehicle Code. (Neal v. State of California (1960)
The key to application of section 654 is in the phrase ‘1 act or omission ”: a defendant may be punished only once for each distinct 11 act or omission ’ ’ committed. There have been numerous attempts in the cases to define a single:“act,” with varying degrees of clarity. Section 654 has been held--to apply, for example, where the- multiple violations are “'necessarily included offenses” (People v. Knowles (1950) 35 Cal.
To put petitioner’s entire adventure into a few words: he drove his car with an invalid license and while intoxicated. Initially, it is temptingly easy to extract, as petitioner urges us to do, the single act of “driving,” obviously common to both of the charged offenses, and to apply section 654 to this ease on the theory that “driving” was petitioner’s only “act or omission.” However, to do so would be no more justified than to extract the act of “possession” from a charge of possessing two different items of contraband, an approach long rejected by our courts. (E.g., People v. Schroeder (1968)
• The proper approach, therefore, is to isolate the various criminal acts involved, and then to examine only those acts for identity. In the instant case the two criminal acts are (1) driving with a suspended license and (2) driving while intoxicated; they are in no sense identical or equivalent. Petitioner is not being punished twice—because he cannot be punished at all—for the “act of driving.” He is being penalized once for his act of driving with an invalid license and once for his independent act of driving while intoxicated.
Moreover, we must not confuse simultaneity with identity: in both of the above situations—driving as in this case and possession of contraband in the cited eases—the defendant committed two simultaneous criminal acts, which coincidentally had in common an identical noncriminal act. The two simultaneous criminal acts of possessing substance X and possessing substance Y share the common, “neutral” act of possessing, just as they necessarily share the common factor of lack of a valid prescription for the drugs. Likewise, the two
In attempting to equate simultaneity with identity, peti-. tioner argues that “There was no evidence his driving without a, license preceded the commencement of the driving while
Nor can we subscribe to a contention that because petitioner may have had only one “intent and objective”—driving— when he committed the two violations, he comes within the ambit of the test established in Neal v. State of California (1960) supra,
Here neither of the two violations can realistically be viewed as a “means” toward the other and as such a part of a single course of criminal conduct, in the sense that the arson in Neal was committed not to burn property but only as a
Petitioner relies heavily upon People v. Morris (1965)
The order to show cause is discharged, and the petition for writ of habeas corpus is denied.
McComb, J., Peters, J., and Burke, J., concurred.
Notes
Our analysis herein is in no way intended to preclude application of the above tests where appropriate, any more than those tests themselves are mutually exclusive. It is only because we find all the fbregoing formulae inapplicable that we resort to the present approach. If under any of the enunciated tests the proscription of section 654 applies, a contrary result under another test is irrelevant.
The language in Johnson is typical: ‘ ‘ The basic principle that forbids multiple punishment for one criminal act [citations] precludes infliction of more than one punishment for [a] series of acts directed toward one criminal objective. ...” (Italics added.) (
Compare former section 1938 of the New York Penal Law, referred to in Neal as “identical with” section 654, which uses the specific language, “An act or omission which is made criminal and punishable. . . (Italics added.)
On the other hand, the single criminal act of driving with knowledge of an invalid license is arguably “made punishable” by both Vehicle Code section 14601 (driving with a suspended or revoked license) and Vehicle Code section 12500 (unlicensed driving) ; and section 654 would therefore preclude multiple punishment under both sections.
As a further illustration of the analogy: Petitioner could be said to have driven in possession óf a suspended license and in “possession” (in his system) of intoxicating liquor. Again, possession is the neutral or noncriminal identical factor; but the criminal acts are distinctive.
Petitioner attaches significance to the fact that driving was an essential element in both of his offenses, citing a statement first made in In re Chapman (1954)
To the possession and driving examples might well be added the cases which permit multiple punishment where a single criminal act has more than one victim. (See Neal v. State of California (1960) supra,
The Attorney General, in apparent answer to petitioner’s argument, has made a belated attempt to establish that petitioner may have been observed by the arresting officer at two different times, so that technically the offenses charged were not “simultaneous.” It is just such strained rationale that a test dependent on simultaneity would engender. As stated in People v. Pater (1968) supra,
Thus had the defendant there had the completely independent criminal objectives of murder (perhaps for vengeance) and burning the house (to collect fire insurance), or had he attempted to kill his victims with a gun and then set fire to their house as an afterthought, he would have been punishable for both arson and attempted murder. (See People v. Massie (1967)
A majority of the Morris court, given substantially the same argument presented to us, rejected the “criminal act” definition for section 654 and appeared to apply the Chapman test of “ essentiality. ’ ’ (But see dissent by Whelan, J., id., p. 777.)
We note that even where the issue is multiple prosecution, the provisions of section 654 cannot be employed to mislead the court. Thus if a
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent.
Section 654 of the Penal Code provides that “An act or omission which is made punishable in different ways by different provisions of this code may be punished under either of such provisions, but in no case can it be punished under more than one.” Underlying this deceptively simple language is a legislative determination that essentially unitary criminal activity shall not be punished more than once regardless of how many distinct crimes it may comprise. The statute “has been applied not only where there was but one ‘act’ in the ordinary sense . . . but also where a course of conduct violated more than one statute and the problem was whether it comprised a divisible transaction which could be punished under more than one statute within the meaning of section 654.” (People v. Brown (1958)
Thus, in People v. Logan (1953)
Moreover, there is no requirement that the act common to both crimes be punishable before section 654 comes into play. In Neal v. State of California, supra,
The foregoing eases control this case, for petitioner’s single act of driving was an essential element, indeed the only active element, of the two crimes charged, namely, driving with knowledge that his driving privilege was suspended (Veh. Code, § 14601) and driving while under the influence of intoxicating liquor. (Yeh. Code, § 23102.)
Cases involving simultaneous possession of different items of contraband are obviously not to the contrary (e.g.. People v. Schroeder (1968)
Of course, had petitioner been convicted of a “crime” of being intoxicated and a “crime” of knowing that his driving privilege was suspended, the possession eases would be in point, and section 654 would not preclude punishing petitioner for both offenses even though he committed them simultaneously. In such a case there would be no act of petitioner common to the two crimes. Petitioner, however, was not convicted of being intoxicated and knowing that his driving privilege was suspended but of a single act of driving while intoxicated and while his driving privilege was suspended. It is the singleness of that act that is determinative.
The Attorney General contends, however, that Vehicle Code sections 14601 and 23102 have different public purposes directed at distinct evils, and that the driver who violates both statutes simultaneously should be doubly punished because he is invading two social interests that the Legislature had designated for distinct protection by the enactment of two different statutes. In a jurisdiction without a multiple punishment rule like that of Penal Code section 654, this “distinct evil” test might aid 'the courts in ascertaining whether the Legislature intended cumulative punishments for simultaneous violations of statutes like Vehicle Code sections 14601 and 23102. (See Twice in Jeopardy (1965) 75 Yale L.J. 262, 320; Kirchheimer, The Act, the Offense, and Double Jeopardy (1949) 58 Yale L.J. 513, 523.) In California, however, when the rule of section 654 precluding multiple punishment applies, the courts cannot invoke the “distinct evil” test to evade that statutory rule. (But see People v. Winchell (1967) 248 Cal.
Moreover, any notion that a California court can multiply sentences because defendant’s single act violates statutes that, in the court’s view, vindicate different societal interests should have been dispelled by decisions such as People v. Brown, supra,
The Attorney General contends that multiple punishment should be allowed in accord with the statement in Neal v. State of California, supra,
The Attorney General also contends that petitioner’s unin
Tobriner, J., and Sullivan, J., concurred.
For example, a single a?t of statutory rape would in every case also constitute contributing to the delinquency of a minor, and the latter offense is therefore necessarily included in the former. (People v. Greer (1947)
Both Winchell and Wasley correctly upheld dual sentences for simultaneous but different “acts.” In Winchell the defendant simultaneously violated Penal Code section 12021, forbidding possession by an ex-convict of a pistol capable of being concealed on his person, and Penal Code section 466, forbidding possession of “a picklock, crow, keybit, or other instrument or tool with intent feloniously to break or enter into any building. ’ ’ In Wasley the defendant simultaneously violated section 12021, proscribing possession of a eoneealable pistol by an ex-convict, and section 12020, proscribing possession of a sawed-off shotgun by “any person. ’ ’ The decisions mention the different public purposes served by the two statutes violated by the respective defendants, but they do not purport to announce a “distinct evils” test contrary to section 654.
Since possession of a physical object is an “act” within the meaning of section 654, the defendant who possesses two different kinds of contraband in violation of two different statutes is committing two different “acts” of proscribed possession.
The Poe case, supra,
It is a legislative, not a judicial, function to fix the extent of punishment that can be imposed for any particular crime or group of crimes.
''A defendant who commits an act of violence with the intent to harm more than one person or by a means likely to cause harm to several persons is more culpable than a defendant who harms only one person.” (
"Section 654 is not . applicable Tvhere . . . one act has two results each of which is an act of violence against the person of a separate, individual. ’ ’ ’ (55 Cal.2d at pp. 20-21, quoting from People v. Brannon (1924)
The Neal opinion stated its “intent and objective” test immediately after it had quoted from People v. Brown, supra,
Neither Neal nor Brown presented any question of a “divisible” transaction. In each of those eases one factually indivisible act was a common element of defendant’s violation of two statutes. In Neal the defendant threw and ignited gasoline with intent to and did commit both arson and attempted murder. In Brown the defendant’s act that was intended to abort L also killed her. In both eases section 654 forbade sentencing the defendant for the two crimes committed by the one act, and there was no occasion to inquire whether his offenses were or were not ' ‘ incident to one objective. ’ ’
Other decisions cited in Neal and Brown, however, show that Neal’s 11 intent and objective” test should guide the sentencing judge in eases presenting a “course of action” or “transaction” that, by oversubtle division of the evidence of acts and intents, could be split into a series of discrete crimes proscribed by different statutes directed against basically the same kind of criminality. (See, e.g., People v. Kehoe, supra,
Neal’s ‘intent and objective” test also governs sentencing in eases of multiple convictions for both an inchoate crime (e.g., burglary, conspiracy, solicitation, and like offenses that in fact and by definition are committed not as ends in themselves but as preparation for the consummation of a further criminal purpose) and substantive crimes committed in execution of the inchoate purpose. There may be no single external “act” necessarily common to the preparatory offense and the ultimate offense to bring the case precisely within the preclusion of section 654, but by application of the “intent and objective” test the legislative purpose expressed by that section is effected. Illustrating this application of Neal are People v. McFarland (1962)
