Opinion
I. Introduction
Pеtitioner Alfredo Montez (defendant) seeks a writ of prohibition directing the respondent court to set aside an order denying a motion to dismiss pursuant to Penal Code section 995. 1 The motion raised several issues concerning the application of Proposition 115 which was *580 adopted by the voters on June 5,1990, and which went into effect on June 6, 1990. 2 Because the respondent court incorrectly denied the dismissal motion, the petition is granted.
II. Procedural and Factual Matters
Defendant is charged in an information with residential burglary in violation of sections 459 and 462, subdivision (a). The sole witness who testified at the preliminary examination was Detective Eugene Akesson of the Los Angeles Police Department. Detective Akesson was a burglary investigator and had been a police officеr for 22 years. As part of his duties “[a]s a burglary detective” he investigated the incident which gave rise to the filing of the complaint. When he testified, Detective Akesson read from an arrest report prepared by an Officer Reems, who had been a police officer for two years. The report was prepared with the assistance of an Officer Granillo. As part of his investigation, Detective Akesson wrote a report. The arrest report, which was marked People’s exhibit one, contained the circumstances concerning defendant’s arrest along with that of the codefendant Ernesto Rosales on June 17, 1990, shortly after the commission of a burglary on that date. As part of his investigation, Detective Akesson interviewed defendant and the codefendant Rosales in “our jail.” Defendant and his accomplice were booked in the jail where the interview occurred under the same booking number as appeared in the arrest report, People’s exhibit one, which was in the courtroom. Detective Akesson’s testimony was based upon the various written police reports and his interview with defendant and the codefendant Rosales.
The report indicated that an eyewitness, Martha Turchious, saw defendant and the codefendant Rosales knocking on doors of an apartment building where she resided at 1634 6/8 Arapahoe Street in Los Angeles. Defendant *581 and his accomplice attempted to open doors to the apartments. When either defendant or the сodefendant Rosales knocked on her door, one of them asked “for a fictitious person.” Ms. Turchious refused to open the front door and saw that the front door of a neighbor, Erma Dubon, was closed. Approximately two to five minutes after defendant and the codefendant Rosales left her front door, she saw that the door to the apartment belonging to Ms. Dubon wаs open. Ms. Turchious then telephoned the police and gave a description of the two burglars. A police helicopter arrived near Ms. Dubon’s apartment and defendant and the codefendant were observed “immediately outside of the apartment.” Defendant was observed by the occupants of the police helicopter to be holding a radio while the codefendant was holding a bag which later was discovered to contain a video cassette recorder (VCR). The officers in the police helicopter saw defendant and the codefendant drop “the property” in the rear of the apartment complex.
The occupant of the apartment that was broken into, Ms. Dubon, telephoned Officer Reems two hours after defendant’s arrest. She told Officer Reems that she had locked the door to her apartment when she left for work on the morning of the incident. When she returned later in the day on June 17, 1990, a Sanyo radio and a Fisher VCR were gone. The two items dropped by the defendant and the codefendant outside the apartment complex, which were observed by the officers in the helicopter, were a Sanyo radio and a Fisher VCR. Officer Reems and Officer Granillo looked at Ms. Dubon’s door and saw “pry marks.” Ms. Turchious was asked by police officers to identify defendant and the codefendant. She stated that they were the persons who had broken into the apartment.
When cross-examined, Detective Akesson stated thаt he had never interviewed the victim, Ms. Dubon, or the eyewitness, Ms. Turchious, nor had he “gone” to the scene of the incident. His testimony on direct examination was based entirely upon the arrest report and his interviews with defendant and the codefendant. Also, he testified that the officers in the helicopter were “never asked to make an identification of any suspects in custody.” Detective Akesson had not received any fingerprint lifts from inside Ms. Dubon’s apartment. Also, Detective Akesson had not “checked” to determine if Ms. Dubon had “any type of felony convictions” because an effort to verify whether a burglary victim has a prior criminal record was “not a routine check.” Also, the report did not indicate the circumstances under which Ms. IXirchious idеntified defendant and the codefendant.
The magistrate conducted a brief examination of Detective Akesson. The magistrate inquired as to precisely what Ms. Turchious told Officer Reems who prepared the report and the detective responded as follows: “She *582 reported that after—she reported that after the defendants left her door, she was preoccupied for approximately two minutes with her own duties, went out to the front door of her apartment and observed the front door of her neighbor’s apartment, [Ms.] Dubon, to be open. The door was open. Whereas prior to the visit of these two defendants, the door had been closed.” Additionally, when subjected to examination by the magistrate, Detective Akеsson stated that Officer Reems had two years’ experience as a police officer. During a brief redirect examination, Detective Akesson, in response to the prosecutor’s question, stated that Officers Reems and Granillo worked “day watch” and were “approximately halfway through their eight-hour shift” at the time of the arrests.
After the redirect examination, dеfendant’s attorney conducted further cross-examination. Detective Akesson admitted that he did not know where Ms. Turchious was at the time of the preliminary examination. The report did not indicate “whether an admonishment was given prior to the identification” by Ms. Tfrrchious. The report likewise did not state the circumstances under which Ms. Turchious made the identification. The report rеlated that she said in reference to defendant and the codefendant: “Those were the same ones that knocked on my door and I seen the front of that house.” Officer Reems’s report indicated Ms. Turchious was referring to defendant and the codefendant Rosales. No effort was made to take fingerprint lifts to verify whether defendant and the codefendant touched the radio and the VCR.
The magistrate held defendant to answer in superior court on a single charge of residential first degree burglary. (§§ 459, 460.) A timely motion to dismiss pursuant to section 995 was filed and denied. The present petition for writ of prohibition was then filed and we issued a stay order so as to allow us to hear oral argument and to reach the merits of the petition.
(Bay Development, Ltd.
v.
Superior Court
(1990)
III. Discussion
A. Standard of review
The issue in the present case relates to the admissibility of evidence. The standard of review for both this court, and the superior court in
*583
passing upon evidentiary rulings by a magistrate cоnducting a preliminary examination is as follows: “Accordingly, it is settled that in ruling on a motion under section 1538.5 the superior court sits as a finder of fact with the power to judge credibility, resolve conflicts, weigh evidence, and draw inferences, and hence that on review of its ruling by appeal or writ all presumptions are drawn in favor of the factual determinations of the superior court and the appellate court must uphold the superior court’s express or implied findings if they are supported by substantial evidence. [Citation.] By contrast, in proceedings under section 995 it is the magistrate who is the finder of fact; the superior court has none of the foregoing powers, and sits merely as a reviewing court; it must draw every legitimate inference in favor of the information, and cannot substitute its judgment as to the credibility or weight of the evidence for that of the magistrate. [Citation.] On review by appeal or writ, moreover, the appellate court in effect disregards the ruling of the superior court and directly reviews the determination of the magistrate holding the defendant to answer. [Citation.]”
(People
v.
Laiwa
(1983)
In varying circumstances, appellate courts have applied the abuse of discretion standard in reviewing a trial judge’s determinations to admit hearsay evidence when there was conflicting inferences and evidence concerning questions of trustworthiness of hearsay declarations or the existence of elements of a hearsay rule exception.
(People
v.
Edwards
(1991)
B. Admissibility of testimony consisting of multiple hearsay
Defendant argues that even if Detective Akesson was properly qualified to offer hearsay testimony, he could not offer so-called “double or multiple hearsay.”
(Whitman
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Nonetheless, we agree with defendant that our Supreme Court’s decision in
Whitman
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Accordingly, we respectfully determine that the magistrate erroneously overruled the specific objection articulated by defense counsel at the preliminary examination to the multiple level hearsay in the present case. All of the statements related to Officer Reems by Ms. Turchious and Ms. Dubon were inadmissible. These hearsay declarations were essential to a finding that probable cause existed to believe defendant was a burglar. As a result, the magistrate should not have held the defendant to answer in superior court and the motion to dismiss should have been granted.
IV. Disposition
The petition for writ of prohibition is granted and the superior court is directed to dismiss the information.
Boren, J., and Grignon, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied March 31, 1992, and the petition of real party in interest for review by the Supreme Court was denied May 28, 1992.
Notes
Unless otherwise indicated, all future statutory references are to the Penal Code.
In the motion filed in the superior court, defendant presented a series of arguments concerning Proposition 115 which were not raised before the magistrate in municipal court. For example, defendant, in his written dismissal motion filed pursuant to section 995, contended that those portions of Proposition 115 which permittеd the use of hearsay evidence under certain circumstances violated the doctrine of separation of powers, a defendant’s right to equal protection of the laws, article I, section 28 of the California Constitution, as well as section 865. Additionally, defendant argued that when coupled with the limitations on prepreliminary hearing discovery (§ 1054 et seq.) the prеliminary hearing process was a “sham.” Because these contentions were not presented before the magistrate, they could not be raised for the first time in superior court in a dismissal motion pursuant to section 995.
(Robison
v.
Superior Court
(1957)
