Lead Opinion
In a habeas corpus petition, Leonard James McSherry challenges his conviction in state court for violations of California’s loitering statute. He argues that because the statute is ambiguous and had not been clarified at the time of the conduct for which he was convicted, his conviction under that statute violated due process and must be set aside. McSherry also contends
I
BACKGROUND
On August 4, 1986, appellant was convicted of five counts of loitering about schools in violation of California Penal Code § 653g. That statute provides in pertinent part:
Every person who loiters about any school or public place at or near which children attend or normally congregate and who remains at any school or public place at or near which children attend or normally congregate, or who reenters or comes upon such school or place within 72 hours, after being asked to leave ... is a vagrant.
The evidence at trial consisted of highly incriminatory observations of the appellant at five different schools, other relevant observations of his behavior, and his prior convictions for kidnapping a minor and lewd conduct with a girl under the age of eighteen. However, it was undisputed that appellant was never asked to leave any of the premises in connection with which his conviction was based.
On August 20, 1986, MeSherry filed a petition for habeas corpus in the Superior Court of Los Angeles County attacking the judgment of conviction on the ground that section 653g requires as an element of its corpus delicti that even a loiterer with criminal intent must have been asked to leave the school premises. That petition was denied. Petitions for writs of habeas corpus were subsequently denied by the California Court of Appeal and the California Supreme Court on September 16, 1986, and October 16, 1986, respectively.
Appellant’s conviction was affirmed on direct appeal by the Appellate Department of the Los Angeles County Superior Court in an opinion filed June 10, 1987. The Appellate Department held, inter alia, that although the penal statute under which appellant was convicted was ambiguous, it could be interpreted to prohibit appellant’s conduct. In rejecting appellant’s proposed interpretation of the statute as the sole basis upon which a conviction could be based, the Appellate Department determined that section 653g, as amended in 1979, separately covered both those who lingered with intent to commit crimes and vagrants who remain or re-enter school grounds after being asked to leave. This was the first occasion at the appellate level on which the statute which we consider was so construed.
Appellant thereafter and on the same ground sought relief in mandate or habeas corpus from the California Court of Appeal. That petition was summarily denied on August 4, 1987. A petition for review to the California Supreme Court was granted on October 22, 1987, and the matter was returned to the Court of Appeal without opinion or directions. However, the Court of Appeal again summarily denied the petition on November 4, 1987. Appellant’s second petition for review in the California Supreme Court was summarily denied on November 12, 1987.
On November 13, 1987, appellant filed a petition for federal habeas corpus in the United States District Court for the Central District of California. On February 4, 1988, the magistrate filed his findings and recommendations. He concluded that the jury instruction on the standard of proof required to show an intent to loiter did not deny appellant a fair trial, and that although California Penal Code § 653g was ambiguous, since the Appellate Department of the Superior Court had interpreted that statute to apply to appellant’s conduct, the federal courts must defer to that interpretation. On February 18, 1988, the magistrate’s findings, recommendations, and conclusions were adopted in full by the district court, and appellant’s petition was denied. He timely appeals.
II
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review the district court’s denial of a petition for habeas corpus de novo.
Ill
DISCUSSION
A. Due Process Vagueness
Up until the time appellant’s conviction was affirmed on direct appeal, the California courts never had occasion to construe section 653g, as amended in 1979. In affirming appellant’s conviction, however, the Appellate Department of the Los Angeles County Superior Court held that section 653g had a dual purpose: (1) to protect school children from the loiterer; and (2) to add to those punishable as vagrants, those who remain or reenter school grounds after being asked to leave. Appellant argues that the statute is ambiguous and that the state court’s clarifying interpretation, rendered subsequent to his conduct, amounted to the imposition of punishment without prior fair notice. We find, however, that the very ambiguity that exists in this statute is, in part, what saves appellant's conviction.
It is, of course, a basic tenet оf our jurisprudence that “criminal statutes which fail to give due notice that an act has been made criminal before it is done are unconstitutional deprivations of due process of law.” Jordan v. DeGeorge,
We agree with appellant that, pri- or to the affirmance of his conviction by the Appellate Department, the statute on its face was vague and ambiguous with respect to whether loitering about school grounds, in the absence of a request to leave, was criminal. That facial ambiguity, however, was expressly and unequivocally removed when the Appellate Department held, relying in part on common sense, as well as the legislative and judicial history of the school loitering statute, that the request to leave language applies only to the vagrancy and not to the loitering provision of the statute. We are bound by that state court’s construction of its own penal statute.
While the interpretive gloss on the statute may bind this court as a matter of statutory construction, we are not, however, similarly bound as to the constitutional effect of that construction. See Missouri v. Hunter,
That the statute at issue was imperfectly drafted and in need of syntactical surgery cannot be questioned. That imprecision does not in itself, however, warrant a finding that the state court’s ultimate construction was unforeseeable. As the Supreme Court admonished in Rose v. Locke,
It is settled that the fair-warning requirement embodied in the Due Process Clause prohibits the States from holding an individual ‘criminally responsible for conduct which he could not reasonably understand to be proscribed.’ ... But this prohibition against excessive vagueness does not invalidate every statute which a reviewing court believes could have been drafted with greater precisiоn. Many statutes will have some inherent vagueness, for ‘[i]n most English words and phrases there lurk uncertainties,’ .... Even trained lawyers may find it necessary to consult legal dictionaries, treatises, and judicial opinions before they may say with any certainty what some statutes may compel or for-bid_ All the Due Process Clause requires is that the law give sufficient warning that men may conduct themselves so as to avoid that which is forbidden.
Rose v. Locke,
Bouie v. City of Columbia,
The Supreme Court explained that “[wjhen a statute on its face is narrow and precise ... it lulls the potential defendant into a false sense of security, giving him no reason even to suspect that conduct clearly outside the scope of the statute as written will be retroactively brought within it by an act of judicial construction.” Id. at 352,
The instant case, most assuredly, does not involve judicial expansion of “narrow and precise” statutory language. To this extent, appellant’s situation is unlike Bouie in that it cannot be said that appellant was “lull[edj ... into a false sense of security” in believing that he would receive the benefit of a favorable construction of an admittedly ambiguous penal statute. See, e.g., Knutson,
While persuasive, we do not, however, find this distinguishing factor in itself sufficient to decide whether it was foreseeable that the state appellate court would retroactively interpret the statute as it did, and our analysis must necessarily go further.
The Supreme Court has recognized that an interpretation of a criminal statute does
The very statute upon which appellant was convicted has been held to define the word “loiter” as lingering about schools and public places for the purpose or with the intent of effectuating some criminal act.
“In applying the rule against vagueness or overbroadness something ... should depend on the moral quality of the conduct.” Freund, The Supreme Court and Civil Liberties, 4 Vand.L.Rev. 533, 540 (1951), quoted with approval in Bouie,
The Eighth Circuit was confronted with a similar situation involving a habeas challenge to a retroactive judicial interpretation of a state criminal statute. In Knutson v. Brewer, supra, petitioner had been convicted of kidnapping for ransom under Iowa Code § 706.3. That statute required that the victim be held for ransom, and that ransom could be “any money, property, or thing of value.” Evidence at trial showed that petitioner had kidnapped the victim, forced her to commit sodomy, and released her after a short period of time. The Iowa Supreme Court held that obtaining sexual gratification constituted a “thing of value” within the meaning of the kidnapping for ransom statute, and that petitioner was therefore properly convicted of this crime, instead of the lesser offense of simple kidnapping. On habeas appeal, petitioner argued that the current construction of the Iowa statute was so unexpected as to violate his right to fair notice under the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment. In determining that the state court’s construction was not unforeseeable, and that “[petitioner] took the risk that the [state court] would construe the statute as it did,” the Eighth Circuit stated:
[W]e think it significant that the issue of construction involved here is not the drawing of a line between legal conduct and illegal conduct. What [petitioner] did was unlawful under any interpretation of Iowa law, and he makes no contention to the contrary_ When a person does an act that he well knows to be a violation of some law, and when a statute is later interpreted to cover his conduct in a way that does not do violence to the ordinary understanding of the English language, the Fourteenth Amendment is not offended.
Knutson,
Finally, and perhaps most persuasively, we find that the state court’s interpretation of section 653g was imminently foreseeable in light of the legislative and judicial history of the statute.
The statute upon which appellant’s conviction was based was originally enacted in 1929 as Penal Code § 647a, and stated simply:
“Every person who annoys or molests any school child or who loiters about any school or public place at or near which school children attend, is a vagrant, ...”
By an amendment in 1947, the California legislature divided the section into two subdivisions, the first of which punished as a vagrant every person who annoys or molests any child, and the second whiсh read as follows:
“(2) Every person who loiters about any school or public place at or near which school children attend, is a vagrant, ...”
The constitutionality of Penal Code § 647a(2) was considered in Huddleson v. Hill,
In reviewing various canons of statutory construction, the state appellate court rejected defendants’ contention and upheld the constitutionality of the section, stating:
Guided by these canons of construction we have therefore concluded that the term loiter in the context of the statute under consideration proscribes only that species of ‘lingering’ and ‘idling’ about schools or public places which is engaged in for an evil or sinister purpose. As pointed out above, section 647a was enacted to protect children. Subdivision (1) thereof makes guilty of a misdemeanor or felony as the case may be every person who annoys or molests any child under the age of 18.... Subdivision (2) provides additional protection for children by removing any opportunity for the child molester to carry out his evil purpose. Both subdivisions label the offender a ‘vagrant.’ Nevertheless it is obvious that the purpose of the first subdivision is largely punitive while that of the second subdivision is largely preventive. ... But, as we have said, the loitering condemned by the second subdivision is not loitering in its general sense but in its restricted and sinister sense. It includes lingering, waiting and delaying but only for a sinister or wrongful purpose and therefore excludes such activities for a lawful purpose. ‘Loitering as forbidden includes waiting, but mere waiting for any lawful purpose does not constitute such loitering.’
Therefore as we construe the statute before us, persons who merely sit on park benches, loll on public beaches, pause in the vicinity of schools or linger in the many public areas frequented by children cannot be reasonably considered as loitering within the compass of the statute. It is only when the loitering isof such a nature that from the totality of the person’s actions and in the light of the prevailing circumstances, it may be reasonably concluded that it is being engaged in ‘for the purpose of committing a crime as opportunity may be discovered’ ... that such conduct falls within the statute. We therefore hold that the term loiter has a clear and reasonably definite significance in the context of the statute, that it is not so vague and indefinite as to offend constitutional guarantees and that the statute so construed does not invade, deny or abridge personal rights and liberties.
Huddleson,
Since Huddleson, the interpretation of the word “loiters” has consistently been held by the California courts to embrace a sinister or wrongful implication, excluding mere waiting for any lawful purpose but connoting lingering in a designated place for the purpose of committing a criminal act as opportunity may arise. See, e.g., People v. Superior Court,
In 1967, subdivision (2) was amended to add the phrase “or normally congregate” after the word “attend.” In addition, subdivision (2) was removed from Penal Code § 647a, and separately re-enacted as Penal Code § 653g.
“Every person who loiters about any school or public place at or near which children attend or normally congregate is a vagrant, ...”
In 1970, section 653g was amended by the addition of a second paragraph which defined “loiters” to mean “... to delay, to linger, or to idle about any such school or public place without a lawful purpose for being present.” The constitutionality of the 1970 amendment was challenged in People v. Hirst,
On appeal, the defendants argued that the 1970 amendment rendered section 653g unconstitutional on the ground that it eliminated the connotation of a sinister intent and made punishable otherwise innocent acts.
After reviewing the legislative and judicial history of section 653g, the appellate court determined that the reference to “without a lawful purpose” did not change the construction of the statute. It concluded generally that “[t]he statute as amended is constitutional and its constitutionality is based upon the same meaning of the word ‘loiter’ given to its use in the preceding statute by those decisions that held such former statute to be constitutional.” Hirst,
The evidence in this case shows that all defendants were upon the school ground for the purpose of distributing literature, and in the case of Hirst, also to talk to a student, neither of which is itself for an unlawful purpose; since the statute under which they were prosecuted does not penalize their presence unless it was for an unlawful purpose, the judgments are reversed.
Apparently recognizing the folly of their ways, and obviously in direct response to Hirst, the California legislature, in 1979, amended section 653g, this time inserting the troublesome “and who remains at any school or public place at or near which children attend or normally congregate, or who reenters or comes upon such school or place within 72 hours, after being asked to leave ...”
The unfortunate aspect, of course, of this later amendment was that it made it possible to read the request to leave language as modifying the loitering provision which had been in the statute all along. Neverthelеss, it is abundantly clear to us that such a construction was neither intended by the California legislature nor supported by a cursory reading of the case law on the subject. More importantly, however, the legislative and judicial history of the statute further distinguishes the present case from that of Bouie. The interpretation given section 653g by the Appellate Department cannot be said to have “not the slightest support in prior [state] decisions.” Bouie,
While we need not go so far, we are inclined to say that the state court’s construction of the statute was not only foreseeable, it was inevitable. Since its enactment, Cal.Penal Code § 653g represents a distinct legislative effort to safeguard the well-being of school children. The construction of the statute that appellant expostulates would render free from penаl liability the loiterer who is not discovered by school officials and asked to leave. Such a construction, as pointed out by the Appellate Department, “would provide a privileged sanctuary for those who come onto school grounds, or adjacent areas where children congregate, to reconnoiter for or ‘case’ prospective victims.” Appellant took the risk that the Appellate Department would logically construe the statute as it did, and he had ample warning that the conduct for which he was convicted was a crime.
B. Standard of Proof Instruction
Appellant contends that the trial court committed reversible error by instructing the jury that appellant’s intent to linger for the purpose of committing a crime could be established by “substantial evidence.” The challenged instruction read as follows:
“Evidence need not be presented to show what the crime is that the defendant might commit. It is sufficient if considering all the evidence, there is substantial evidence that the defendant was lingering for the purpose of committing a crime. The fact of the existence of such an intent can be inferred from all the circumstances.”
In re Winship,
However, in dеtermining whether the state has transgressed constitutional bounds, a federal court sitting in habeas exercises a limited role. When, as here, a habeas challenge on a state conviction is premised on an assertedly erroneous jury instruction, “it must be established not
We thus evaluate jury instructions “in the context of the overall charge to the jury as a component of the entire trial process.” Prantil v. California,
We are not persuaded that due process was denied by the instruction here challenged. The word “substantial” was nеver defined for the jury. The jury was never told that the word meant more, less, or the equivalent of “beyond a reasonable doubt.” Moreover, several other instructions given by the trial court served to counteract any tendency to lessen the state’s burden of proof. Prior to instructing the jury, the trial court admonished that “[t]hese instructions are to be considered as a whole and each individual instruction is to be considered in light of all the others.” The trial judge informed the jury of the role of the presumption of innocence:
A defendant in a criminal action is presumed to be innocent until the contrary is proved, and in case of a reasonable doubt whether his guilt is satisfactorily shown, he is entitled to a verdict of not guilty. This presumption places upon the State the burden of proving him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
The term “reasоnable doubt” was defined for the jury, and the term was utilized at several points in the course of the court’s instructions. There is no other reference whatsoever to the “substantial evidence” language, which was employed in only one instruction.
We are confident that the instructions, taken as a whole, effectively neutralized any negative effects of the “substantial evidence” language. It cannot be said under these circumstances that appellant’s guilt was evaluated under a standard below that required by the Constitution.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. A related concern is that vague statutes may unnecessarily inhibit the exercise of first amendment freedoms, because uncertain meanings will lead citizens to "steer far wider of the unlawful zone than if the boundaries of the forbidden areas were clearly marked.” Grayned,
. The construction of a state statute by the Appellate Department of the Superior Court of California is binding on all, including the federal courts, unless it conflicts with decisions of the California Court of Appeal or the California Supreme Court. See In re Wiegand,
We find therefore that we may not summarily disregard the Appellate Department’s construction of section 653g merely on the basis that its construction was rendered in an unpublished opinion. Furthermore, in light of the legislative and judicial history of the statute here in question, we are not "convinced ... that the highest court of the state would decide [to construe the statute] otherwise.” West v. American Telephone & Telegraph Co.,
. On "rare occasions", a federal court may re-examine a state court interpretation of state law “when it appears to be an 'obvious subterfuge to evade consideration of a federal issue.’ ” Mullaney,
. This circuit has in the past held that retroactive application of an interpretation of state law is not prohibited per se; however, "[s]uch a decision may violate due process if the court's interpretation of a criminal statute enlarges its scope to cover behavior not previously considered to be unlawful.” Camitsch v. Risley,
. The Supreme Court, in subsequent cases, has reiterated the importance that clear statutory language has on the foreseeability of a retroactive judicial interpretation. See, e.g., Marks v. United States,
. At appellant’s criminal trial, the pertinent jury instructions as to the elements of the offense defined in section 653g were as follows:
As used in this instruction, the word "loiter” means to delay, linger, or idle about any such school or public place without a lawful purpose for being present for the purpose and with the intent of committing some criminal act as opportunity may be discovered. Merely being on or about school grounds without permission is not loitering within this definition.
The intent to be proved is the intent to commit a crime as the opportunity might present itself. Neither allegation nor proof requires an intent to commit a specific crime, but only a specific intent to commit some crime, the fact of the existence of such an intent to be inferred from all the circumstances.
. The Supreme Court in Bouie specifically noted that “the petitioners' conduct cannot be deemed improper or immoral." Bouie,
. Subdivision (1), pertaining to the annoyance or molestation of any child under the age of eighteen, is presently set forth in Cal.Penal Code § 647.6 (1987).
. The court specifically noted that the legislative intent behind the 1970 amendment was to make available to school administrators a penal statute whose sanctions could be invoked to rid the campus of persons whose presence is not otherwise "unlawful.” As the court put it:
We do not doubt the Legislature, in adopting the amendment, had the laudable and attainable aim of making it possible to penalize persons coming upon or remaining upon school grounds for their own purposes unrelated to school activities without permission of the school authorities or against their expressed request to leave.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
As Judge Trott’s opinion recognizes, the crucial question in this case is whether the California court’s interpretation of the loitering statute “was so unforeseeable as to deprive the defendant of the fair warning to which the Constitution entitles him." Bouie v. City of Columbia,
Every person who loiters about any school or public place at or near which children attend or normally congregate and who remains at any school or public place at or near which children attend or normally congregate, or who reenters or comes upon such school or place within 72 hours, after being asked to leave ... is a vagrant....
Cal.Penal Code § 653g (emphasis added). Whatever the legislature may have intended, it is rather clear what it said. “And who remains” is a conjunctive phrase; the crime that is described in the first part of the statute requires that the offender both loiter and remain. The word “remain” is itself incomplete unless qualified by some additional phrase, such as “remain for more than five minutes” or “remain after being asked to leave.” The legislature specified the latter qualification. If words are given no more than their permissible meaning, a person does not violate section 653g by loitering at a school unless he remains after being asked to leave.
The instant case seems distinguishable, since on its face the language of § 16-386 of the South Carolina Code was admirably narrow and precise.... The thrust of the distinction, however, is to produce a potentially greater deprivation of the right to fair notice in this sort of case, where the claim is that a statute precise on its face has been unforesee-ably and retroactively expanded by judicial construction, than in the typical “void for vagueness” situation. When a statute on its face is vague or overbroad, it at least gives a potential defendant some notice, by virtue of this very characteristic, that a question may arise as to its coverage, and that it may be held to cover his contemplated сonduct. When a statute on its face is narrow and precise, however, it lulls the potential defendant into a false sense of security, giving him no reason even to suspect that conduct clearly outside the scope of the statute as written will be retroactively brought within it by an act of judicial construction.
Id. at 351-52,
The majority opinion distinguishes Bouie partly on the ground that the would-be offenders there were not engaging in clearly immoral or otherwise unlawful conduct. It is certainly true that McSherry was up to no good. It is dangerous to assume, however, that would-be violators should be on notice of the potential unlawfulness of their conduct when the crime in question is such an inchoate one as loitering or vagrancy. Loitering, as California defines it, does require an intent to commit a crime, Huddleson v. Hill,
The intent to be proved is the intent to commit a crime as the opportunity might present itself. Neither an allegation nor proof requires an intent to commit a specific crime, but only a specific intent to commit some crime, the fact of the existence of such an intent to be inferred from all the circumstances.
Loitering, then, is a highly incipient crime, falling far short of an attempt. It establishes the earliest boundary of criminality, and one who approaches its line is not to be compared to the criminal already in the act of kidnapping who is merely quibbling about the nature of ransom. See Knutson v. Brewer,
The majority opinion traces the history of section 653g and the judicial interpretation of its predecessors, making a substantial case that the California legislature intended to do something other than what it did in its last amendment to the statute.
It is true, of course, that citizens do not normally carry statute books around with them, or memorize their contents. There is accordingly a certain degree of fiction inherent in the requirement of due process notice to the potential offender. We adhere, however, to the constitutional imperative that crimes be defined in advance, rather than retrospectively by policemen or judges, as a guarantee against arbitrary and discriminatory government. See L. Tribe, American Constitutional Law 474-77 (1978); Kolender v. Lawson,
Of course, vagrancy statutes are useful to the police. Of course, they are nets making easy the roundup of so-called undesirables. But the rule of the law implies equality and justice in its application.
Papachristou v. City of Jacksonville,
There is a final irony in this case. To the extent that- we do tolerate retrospective judicial interpretation of criminal statutes, we do so out of necessity. Language is incapable of being made perfectly certain in all of its applications. See Robinson v. United States,
In McSherry’s case, however, the California Supreme Court has eliminated any public benefit that might inhere in judicial construction of the statute, because it has ordered depublication of the decision of the Appellate Department that construed the statute. That action wholly undermines the conclusion of the majority opinion that section 653g was ambiguous on its face, but was rendered non-ambiguous by the construction placed upon it by the Appellate Department. That construction binds McSherry, but it binds no one else in the world because the opinion of the Appellate Department cannot be cited or relied upon as precedent. Rule 977(a) California Rules of Court. Under the majority’s view of section 653g, that statute remains ambiguous for everyone but McSherry, and police, prosecutors and courts are free to attempt new interpretations.
For my part, I would hold California to the words of the statute it has enacted, until it adopts another interpretation applicable to all. And if that interpretation is directly contrary to the words of the statute, as in this case, due process requires that it not apply retrospectively. I would grant the writ.
. It is true that McSherry has argued that section 653g is ambiguous, partly because two courts found it so. I do not regard him, however, as having waived the right to claim that the statute clearly requires a request to leave. The whole thrust of his argument is that the California courts unexpectedly and unforsee-ably eliminated that requirement from the statute.
