50 Cal. App. Supp. 3d 1 | Cal. App. Dep’t Super. Ct. | 1975
Lead Opinion
The defendant was charged with violation of section 26453 of the Vehicle Code in that he failed to maintain his brakes in good condition. He was arraigned on May 15, 1974, and plead not guilty. On June 10, 1974, he changed his plea to nolo contendere and the court fined him $50 plus $15 penalty assessment. On August 15, 1974, a complaint was filed against the defendant, charging him with three misdemeanor violations of subdivision 3(b) of section 192 of the Penal Code—three deaths had occurred. He plead not guilty and once in jeopardy.
The investigating officer, Tommy Thomas, informed the district attorney concerning his findings, which included evidence that six out of the defendant’s ten brakes were out of the departmental tolerances.
An investigator for the district attorney, Robert Ewen, was assigned to the matter on June 14, 1974, and obtained various items for one Professor Hurt, of the University of Southern California, who utilized computers and drew on his experience and knowledge of physics and engineering. He also used equations, slide rule, microscopic slide rule, calculator, binoculars, and stereoscopic microscopes to analyze tire treads and various minute objects. Investigator Ewen declared that he would not have prosecuted the cause without the professor’s analysis.
Professor Hurt declared that this was the first assignment he had from the district attorney. He reviewed materials supplied by the investigators on May 29, 1974. He later secured additional photographs to assist him in calculating deceleration characteristics. He made speed estimate calculations and speed and trajectory analyses. According to Professor Hurt, only a few persons were capable of doing this work.
The deputy district attorney who filed the infraction complaint had been considering a charge of vehicular manslaughter against the defendant and had asked Thomas to investigate further. The officer furnished such investigation report before the complaint was filed. The deputy concluded that there was insufficient evidence for a successful manslaughter prosecution. He referred the matter to his main office for their review of the facts, probably on May 7, 1974. Before June 10, 1974 (when defendant plead nolo contendere), he was informed that the California Highway Patrol had referred the case to a Sergeant Meyers in its central office and that the sergeant was consulting Dr. Hurt. Before
The attorneys discussed Kellett v. Superior Court (1966) 63 Cal.2d 822 [48 Cal.Rptr. 366, 409 P.2d 206], and the legal implications of a plea; defense counsel then informed the prosecutor that he wished to plead nolo contendere to the infraction charged. The deputy district attorney declared that, “I did have discussions with the judge. I requested of the court that because of the implications of the case that there were deaths involved, that my office was still under investigation—still investigating the case, that the record should be properly preserved and requested of the court that the plea be taken with a full tall [sic, Tahl] waiver even though that is not the normal procedure in the court on an infraction case; this being so, that the court would be protecting the record for defense as well as the people in this matter.” The discussion with the judge was not on the record as no reporter was present—it was, the deputy district attorney stated, a “personal request I made to the judge when we advised him that he (Battle) would be entering a plea ...”
Inapplicability of Kellett to Instant Case
Harassment, in the sense of Kellett, supra, is not present in the instant case; here the defendant (as well as the court) was aware of the prosecutor’s intention to investigate the possibility of charging manslaughter. Here the prosecutor was not deliberately holding back such charge but was simply awaiting the sifting of the evidence by an expert, Professor Hurt. The prosecution was not “aware” in the sense employed by Kellett (supra, 63 Cal.2d, at p. 827) of the existence of a second offense until the expert had completed his investigation. A suspicion as to the existence of the offense cannot constitute “awareness” as the prosecutor could not have charged the crime before such investigation was completed.
These are not the Kellett facts. In Kellett, the defendant stood on a public sidewalk with a pistol in his hand; both offenses charged—possession of a concealable weapon and exhibiting a firearm in a threatening manner—were known (or should have been known) to the prosecution from the outset. Here the prosecutor was only aware of a possibility of an offense in addition to the violation of section 26453 of the Vehicle Code. It cannot be said that he should have been aware, when it took the ministrations of an expert trained in a highly technical field to produce
Inapplicability of Kellett to Infractions
From the following analysis it is concluded that Kellett is not applicable where an infraction is one of the offenses involved. In Kellett the court dealt with facts dissimilar to those of the instant case. Kellett was first charged with exhibiting a firearm, a misdemeanor (Pen. Code, § 417) and, a month later, with possession of a concealable weapon by one who has been convicted of a felony (Pen. Code, § 12021). He pleaded guilty to charges under section 417 and then moved to dismiss the section 12021 count. The court was concerned with the protection of defendant from successive prosecutions for “closely related crimes.” (Italics added; Kellett, supra, 63 Cal.2d 822, 826.) It was not concerned with infractions and misdemeanors but with felonies and misdemeanors. (See Kellett, supra, 63 Cal.2d at pp. 827, 828.) The court declared that “if an act or course of criminal conduct can be punished only once under section 654 [of the Penal Code] either an acquittal or conviction and sentence under one penal statute will preclude subsequent prosecution in a separate proceeding under any other penal statute.” (Italics added; Kellett, supra, 63 Cal.2d 822, 828.) Clearly, the Kellett court was concerned with successive prosecutions for crimes. Here we have an infraction charged for violation of section 26453 of the Vehicle Code and, subsequently, a charge of misdemeanor manslaughter.
The court in In re Hayes (1969) 70 Cal.2d 604, 605 [75 Cal.Rptr. 790, 451 P.2d 430] held that section 654 of the Penal Code applied to acts or omissions not only interdicted by the Penal Code but which also “embrace[s] penal provisions in other codes as well, including those found in the Vehicle Code” (Italics added).
Inconsistency of Sections 19c and 1042.5 vis-a-vis 689 of the Penal Code
Section 16 of the Penal Code declares that “crimes and public offenses” include not only felonies and misdemeanors but also infractions. Sections 19c and 1042.5 of the Penal Code deprive a person accused of an infraction of the right to juiy trial. Yet, section 689 of the Penal Code declares that “[n]o person can be convicted of a public offense unless by verdict of a jury.” (Italics added.) (The 1968 amendment of section 16 of the Penal Code substituted the words “crimes and public offenses include:” for the words “crimes, how defined. Crimes are divided into.”)
If the Legislature intended to treat infractions as public offenses and if the charging of a public offense invokes the right to trial by jury, sections 19c and 1042.5, which deny a jury to one who commits an infraction, conflict with section 689. However, the same (1968) Legislature enacted section 19c, the pertinent amendment of section 16 and section 1042.5. Construing these sections in accordance with the precepts laid down in In re Kay, supra, we must conclude that it was not the intent of the Legislature to enact inconsistent statutes and, further, that when it added the term “public offense” to section 16 it was not so categorizing infractions because if it did so, it would have caused inconsistency between sections 19c and 689 of the Penal Code. Support for this interpretation is found in the language of section 1042.5 which states that a defendant “charged with an infraction and with a public offense for which there is a right to jury trial” (italics added) may be accorded a jury trial. Had the Legislature intended that an infraction be treated as a public offense, it would have worded the statute differently, for example, “an infraction and with some other public offense.”
The court in People v. Oppenheimer (1974) 42 Cal.App.3d Supp. 4 [116 Cal.Rptr. 795], declares that an infraction is a petty offense. A defendant was not historically accorded the right to a jury in trials of petty offenses. Whether an infraction is characterized as a petty offense or a noncriminal offense, an appellate court in the circumstances of the present case should not bar prosecution for manslaughter by reason of an earlier plea of nolo contendere to an infraction. To do otherwise would fly in the face of the legislative adjuration to construe statutory provisions “according to the fair import of their terms, with a view to effect its objects and to promote justice.” (Pen. Code, § 4.)
The judgment of dismissal is reversed.
The gravamen of the Hayes decision, supra, 70 Cal.2d 604 (dealing with divisibility of conduct), is that 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 cases—the defendant committed two simultaneous criminal acts, which coincidentally had in common an identical noncriminal act.” (Italics by Mosk. J.; Hayes, supra, 70 Cal.2d 604, 607.)
Concurrence Opinion
I concur because I do not believe the doctrine of Kellett v. Superior Court, supra, 63 Cal.2d 822, was meant to apply to the kind of offenses presently classified as infractions. (See In re Johnson (1965) 62 Cal.2d 325, 336 [42 Cal.Rptr. 228, 398 P.2d 420]; Mills v. Municipal Court (1973) 10 Cal.3d 288, 303-308 [110 Cal.Rptr. 329, 515 P.2d 273].) In the overwhelming majority of infraction cases the primary interest of the accused will be served by expedition in disposal. Caught up in the crush of traffic court business, the prosecutor is in no position to make the final decision regarding other possible offenses that is required by Kellett. If he later determines to file a new charge the defendant will have to appear again; but this will happen so seldom, relative to the volume of business, that the harassment sought by Kellett to be prevented will not be a significant factor. A contrary rule would impede that swift disposal of infraction cases which is the chief reason for classifying them as such. This view finds support in section 1042.5 of the Penal Code where trial of an infraction and a related misdemeanor in separate proceedings is authorized.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in that portion of the opinion which holds that the Kellett rule is inapplicable under these facts. The results of the scientific research, and the testimony of the expert, interpreting his findings, which was necessary to prove manslaughter, were unavailable and therefore unknown to the prosecution at the time the defendant entered his plea to the infraction.
Prior to the entry of his plea the defendant was fully informed that the investigation concerning the proximate cause of the death of the three victims had not been completed. Rather than request a delay to effect a consolidation should new charges be filed and to avoid the possibility of multiple prosecution, the defendant elected to enter his plea to the infraction. If the defendant is now to be inconvenienced by a second prosecution, it was a predictable if not inevitable consequence of his acquiescence.