Opinion
In this appeal and consolidated habeas corpus proceeding by Randall Lynn Bess relative to his conviction for armed robbery (Pen. Code, §§ 211, 12022.5), we are asked to resolve three issues. Was it ineffective assistance of counsel to: fail to pursue discovery, bring out Bess’ invocation of Miranda, and fail to interview eyewitnesses to the robbery.
At trial, Bess was represented by retained counsel. Bess was identified as entering the Capistrano National Bank and obtaining cash at gunpoint. Included in the money were marked bills (bait money). A teller described the assailant as bearded and stocky. He was dressed in faded blue jeans and a blue shirt. A ski mask covered his face. A bystander outside the bank testified he saw the robber enter and leave the bank and followed him to a van. His description matched the one provided by the teller.
Deputy Sheriff Kent soon spotted the van and pulled it over. Bess, the only occupant, was arrested and the van was impounded. The teller was brought to the scene. She told police Bess was not the robber, based upon his not having the robber’s distinctive, multicolored beard, and because Bess’ beard was not as full as the robber’s. A search of the van, however, disclosed a large amount of cash secreted in a golf bag and a gun in a box. The cash included the bait money and the gün matched descriptions given by the two witnesses.
At trial the teller again failed to identify Bess. The bystander testified that when arrested, Bess was not wearing the same shirt the robber wore. The record is silent as to whether the blue shirt and ski mask were ever found. Bank photos of the robbery showing the robber and gun were also admitted. 1
Bess and numerous character witnesses testified. Bess denied committing the robbery. He described a practice of dumping debris from his gardening business in a trash bin next to the bank, and at the same time searching for “sellable” trash. On the day of his arrest he found the cash in the bin, ran *1057 to his van fearing someone would see him, and placed the money in his golf bag along with the rest of his savings. 2 Bess testified to keeping a gun in the van to prevent his children from finding it at home and hurting themselves.
Following his conviction, Bess retained new counsel who sought a new trial alleging ineffective assistance of counsel.
3
(People
v.
Pope
(1979)
When the defense rested, the prosecution called trial counsel as a witness. He admitted being aware of the identity of the above witnesses, but did not interview them or hire an investigator to interview them. He was unaware of the information contained in the affidavits, including the destroyed photographs, did not determine if a discovery order had been served on the prosecution, and did not subpoena bank records showing Bess had previously maintained an account at the Capistrano National Bank.
Counsel testified the above fit the strategy he intended to employ at trial. Specifically, he chose to rely on cross-examination to impeach the two prosecution eyewitnesses and expose factual inconsistencies. He did not attempt to interview other eyewitnesses feeling he would either drive them to the prosecution or confuse the jury. Thus his preparation for trial consisted of interviewing Bess, reading police reports, representing Bess at the preliminary examination, and expecting Bess to provide corroborative documents.
*1058 I
Bess first asserts failure to properly file and serve the prosecution with a discovery order
4
resulted in ineffective assistance of counsel. We begin with the axiom the burden is on the defense to show ineffective assistance of counsel. Thus the appellant must “show that trial counsel failed to act in a manner to be expected of reasonably competent attorneys acting as diligent advocates. In addition, appellant must establish that counsel’s acts or omissions resulted in withdrawal of a potentially meritorious defense”
{People
v.
Pope, supra,
Bess argues counsel’s failure to obtain formal
5
discovery deprived him of an opportunity to present a
Hitch
motion.
People
v.
Hitch
(1974)
First, there simply is no requirement counsel obtain a formal discovery order in every case. We recognize a defendant has a
right
to obtain court supervised, formal discovery
{Holman
v.
Superior Court
(1981)
Bess fails to point out how a successful Hitch motion would have changed the verdict. Since the evidence suggests the film was negligently destroyed, the remedy would have been an instruction informing the jury of its destruc *1059 tion. As the prosecution points out, there were numerous photographs admitted at trial which were not subject to the Hitch motion. Only speculation suggests the film from the second camera would have been more helpful to the defense than the first.
II
During direct examination of sheriff’s investigator Carlander, the prosecution sought to introduce evidence of an overheard postarrest telephone conversation between Bess and his wife. During voir dire before the jury, counsel asked Carlander if Bess had been advised of his
Miranda
rights and the content of Bess’ response. Carlander testified to advising Bess and being told “. . .he did not want to say anything.” Bess argues counsel’s decision to elicit this clearly inadmissible testimony
(Doyle
v.
Ohio
(1976)
At Bess’ motion for a new trial, trial counsel was questioned extensively on the tactical basis for his other decisions. Appellate counsel never asked what his reason, if any, was for eliciting this testimony. We will not presume error.
Ill
Bess’ final argument presents a thornier issue. Did trial counsel render ineffective assistance of counsel in failing to interview eyewitnesses to the robbery?
7
Pope
and
Fosselman
hold where the trial record is silent as to the reasons for particular actions of trial counsel, habeas corpus or a new trial motion is the proper vehicle for determining whether counsel acted as a reasonably competent attorney. A post-trial hearing is where it may be determined whether “. . . counsel’s omissions resulted from an informed tactical choice within the range of reasonable competence . . . .”
{People
v.
Pope, supra,
The record developed at the new trial motion demonstrates numerous witnesses (1) claim to have observed the robbery in a light which casts doubt *1060 upon the prosecution theory and enhances the defense; (2) were willing to be interviewed by the defense; (3) were not interviewed nor called at trial. Assuming in hindsight, their individual or cumulative testimony would have affected the verdict, is trial counsel’s professed decision not to interview or call the witnesses a tactic within the range of reasonable competence? We must say no.
Although “. . . the choice of which, and how many, of potential witnesses [to call at trial] is precisely the type of choice which should not be subject to review by an appellate court,”
(People
v.
Floyd
(1970)
Shaw involved facts nearly identical to those present here. Shaw was on probation for robbery in addition to being charged with a new robbery of a grocery. At his probation revocation hearing, held prior to trial on the new charges, the preliminary examination record was admitted showing Shaw had been located a few blocks away and identified as the robber. When stopped, Shaw was out of breath and sweating. Two witnesses at the preliminary examination also identified him as the robber.
Although Shaw told counsel he did not commit the robbery, and counsel knew of the existence of information suggesting alibi and mistaken identification, counsel decided not to interview numerous witnesses who supported Shaw’s claim of innocence. In reversing the trial court’s finding Shaw violated his probation, the Supreme Court held, “ ‘[i]t is sufficient for the present purpose to observe that the defense was
potentially
meritorious, and that petitioner was denied an adjudication on the matter because of his counsel’s inadequate factual and legal preparation. ’
(In re Hall
(1981)
In a similar circumstance, the Supreme Court in
People
v.
Frierson
(1979)
The conclusion to be reached from Floyd, Jackson, Shaw and Frierson is clear. Failure to investigate a defense, while not per se ineffective assistance of counsel, still requires the basis for the tactical choice be within reasonable competence. “[E]ven tactical decisions may demonstrate incompetence if made without benefit of ‘substantial factual inquiry.’ ” {People v. Frierson, supra, 25 Cal.3d 142, 163.) We therefore examine the reasons for Bess’ attorney’s tactical choice not to investigate.
Counsel gave two reasons for not investigating; he feared the witnesses would be driven to the prosecution and would be impeached by previous statements contained in police reports. Neither justification is supported. We can only ask why the prosecution would not, in a weak identification case, call additional witnesses when they were identified in the police reports, unless they were not helpful. Further, why would interviewing witnesses already known to the prosecution cause them to go to the prosecution? A decision not to interview witnesses, as opposed to not calling them, is precisely the type of decision made “without benefit of substantial factual inquiry.”
The second reason provided has less support than the former. How counsel, prior to trial, could determine the witnesses would be impeached without having first interviewed them, needs no further discussion. In the present context, we must conclude counsel failed to act as a reasonably competent attorney acting as a diligent advocate.
Having determined counsel’s assistance does not meet the first test of Pope, we now must consider whether such actions withdrew a potentially meritorious defense or if it is reasonably probable a result more favorable would have been reached in its absence. The defense was misidentification. In its support, counsel effectively cross-examined the two witnesses produced by the prosecution and argued a reasonable doubt existed as to the accuracy of their identifications. Clearly the stumbling block to the defense was the discovery of the money and gun in Bess’ van. It is for that reason the failure to investigate was critical.
One witness interviewed by appellate counsel’s investigator, an individual who claims to have been with the bystander at the time of the robbery, disputes the testimony the robber left the bank and was followed without interruption to Bess’ van. If it is true the robber was not continuously in *1062 view, Bess’ version he found the money in a trash bin becomes more credible. When considered in light of the additional information discovered by appellate counsel; the ring discrepancy, eye color, gun color, and a similar looking bank robber with connections to the vicinity of the Capistrano National Bank, we must conclude a more favorable result would have been reached had counsel acted in a reasonably competent manner. The jury was in effect prevented from considering Bess’ potentially meritorious defense.
It may be true an able attorney can pick up police reports, interview his client, take a moment to reflect and competently try a serious felony. But where counsel is on notice potential exculpatory evidence exists, a decision not to investigate cannot be countenanced.
The judgment is reversed. The petition for writ of habeas corpus is dismissed.
Trotter, P. J., and Wallin, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied April 16, 1984.
Notes
Trial counsel never caught the fact the bank photos show the robber not having a ring, while Bess was wearing a ring when arrested.
Bess maintained he did not keep his money in banks, although he did have a business account at the Capistrano National Bank three years earlier.
At the time of the motion for new trial it was not clear Penal Code section 1181 would permit a trial court to grant a new trial based upon ineffective assistance of counsel.
People
v.
Fosselman
(1983)
It appears counsel was unfamiliar with the practice in Orange County Superior Court with regard to the “standard” discovery order. For brevity’s sake, we only note attached to each information is a presigned, stipulated discovery order. Counsel merely serves it upon the prosecution and files it with the court. Trial counsel did neither.
Of course, there is informal discovery which merely involves contacting the prosecutor. Similarly, there are constitutional protections requiring prosecution disclosure of exculpatory evidence.
{Brady
v.
Maryland
(1963)
One possible explanation was to underscore Bess’ expectation the police would not eavesdrop on his telephone conversation, a tactical choice we would not question.
We assume, in the context of this case, interviewing the witnesses could have been accomplished by counsel or an investigator.
