Opinion
Defendant conspired with two others to commit arson of his truck for purposes of insurance fraud. All three conspirators were present at the scene of the burning. While committing the arson, one of the conspirators caught fire and burned to death. We must decide whether defendant is guilty of murdering that coconspirator under the felony-murder rule. We conclude, as did the Court of Appeal, that the felony-murder rule applies to all arsonists at the scene of the arson. In so doing, we distinguish
People
v.
Ferlin
(1928)
I. THE FACTS
The prosecution presented evidence from which the jury could reasonably find the following. Defendant purchased a truck and insured it for physical damage. On August 26, 1997, defendant and two others, including Manoj Bhardwaj, drove from Yuba City towards Sacramento, with defendant and Bhardwaj in defendant’s truck and the third person following in a car. They intended to bum defendant’s track and obtain the insurance proceeds. Near Wheatland, defendant drove his truck onto a gravel road and stopped about two-tenths of a mile down the road around a bend. There the three set the truck on fire, using either kerosene or diesel fuel.
During these events, Bhardwaj’s clothing somehow became saturated with the fuel. It is not clear exactly what happened, but evidence suggested he might have held a leaky canister of the fuel on his lap during the drive. While the three were setting the truck on fire, Bhardwaj’s clothing caught fire, and he was severely burned. He died later of his injuries.
A jury convicted defendant of the second degree murder of Bhardwaj (Pen. Code, §§187, 189), 1 arson causing great bodily injury (§ 451, subd. (a)), and making a false or fraudulent insurance claim (§ 550, subd. (a)(4)). The trial court had instructed the jury solely on the felony-murder rule as a basis for finding defendant guilty of murder. The Court of Appeal modified the judgment and affirmed it as modified. It held that defendant was properly convicted of Bhardwaj’s murder under the felony-murder rule. We granted *1068 defendant’s petition for review to decide whether the felony-murder rule applies on these facts.
II. DISCUSSION
“All murder . . . which is committed in the perpetration of, or attempt to perpetrate, [specified felonies, including arson] ... is murder of the first degree.” (§ 189.)
2
This felony-murder rule covers “a variety of unintended homicides resulting from reckless behavior, or ordinary negligence, or pure accident . . . .”
(People v. Dillon
(1983)
Two overarching principles guide us. First, “we are not concerned here with the wisdom of the first degree felony-murder rule itself, or with the criticisms—and defenses—directed at it by judicial and academic commentators; section 189 is the law of California, and we are not free to ignore or alter it if we would.”
(People v. Pulido
(1997)
Analysis of this question must begin with
Ferlin, supra,
*1069
Several Court of Appeal cases have followed
Ferlin
under similar facts. In
Woodruff
v.
Superior Court
(1965)
In
People v. Earnest
(1975)
We have not confronted similar facts since
Ferlin, supra,
Defendant argues primarily that
Ferlin, supra,
The felony-murder rule applies to the death of a cohort as much as to the death of an innocent person.
(People
v.
Johnson
(1972)
One rationale of
Ferlin
and its progeny is that the accomplice’s death “was not in furtherance of the conspiracy, but entirely opposed to it.”
(Ferlin, supra,
Another rationale of
Ferlin
is that the victim killed himself. Defendant would distinguish
People v. Johnson, supra,
We agree with the Court of Appeal’s assessment: “In this case, Bhardwaj did not act alone in perpetrating the arson that was the cause of his death. Defendant was present and an active participant in the crime. And his active conduct was a direct cause of Bhardwaj’s death. In short, regardless of whether the death was accidental or not, defendant’s act of arson killed Bhardwaj. Under the circumstances, Ferlin is inapposite, and the felony-murder rule may be applied to defendant’s conduct.” As the court pointed out, even if “there is no killing ‘of another’ when an accomplice acts alone in causing his own death, there is a killing upon which murder liability may attach when the defendant or other accomplices actively participate in the events causing death.” We conclude that felony-murder liability for any death in the course of arson attaches to all accomplices in the felony at least where, as here, one or more surviving accomplices were present at the scene and active participants in the crime. We need not decide here whether Ferlin was correct on its facts.
Defendant argues that “any retroactive weakening of the
Ferlin
rule to expand felony-murder liability would be unconstitutionally ex post facto.” We
*1073
disagree. “[A]n unforeseeable judicial enlargement of a criminal statute, applied retroactively, operates in the same manner as an ex post facto law.”
(People v. Davis
(1994)
III. CONCLUSION
We affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeal.
George, C. J., Kennard, J., Baxter, J., Werdegar, J., Brown, J., and Moreno, J., concurred. 6
Notes
All further statutory references are to the Penal Code.
Although the prosecution proceeded on a felony-murder theory with arson the underlying felony, it only sought conviction for second degree murder, possibly, as the Court of Appeal suggested, “out of a belief that a charge of first degree murder would be unduly harsh under the circumstances . . . .”
People
v.
Cabaltero, supra,
Ferlin, supra,
In People v. Pulido, supra, 15 Cal.4th at pages 721-722, we identified two somewhat different lines of authority regarding the exact scope of accomplice liability. As in Pulido, we need not reconcile or choose between these lines because the result here would be the same under either.
We note that Chief Justice George was outside California (attending a board meeting of the national Conference of Chief Justices, of which he is currently president) when he communicated his concurrence in this opinion by transmitting to the Clerk of the Court (at the court’s chambers in San Francisco), by facsimile, a signed copy of the signature page of this opinion indicating his concurrence. We conclude that the Chief Justice’s concurrence in the opinion in this manner is valid, and that prior decisions of this court indicating that appellate justices may participate in a decision only if they are physically within California at the time they formally sign an opinion or order (see
Cothran
v.
San Jose Water Works
(1962)
Under the California Constitution, absent a waiver by the parties, appellate justices must be present at oral argument in order to participate in the appellate decision and judgment (see Cal. Const., art. VI, §§ 2, 3;
Moles v. Regents of University of California
(1982)
Contemporaneously with the filing of the decision in this case, we shall amend the Internal Operating Practices and Procedures of the California Supreme Court to clarify the procedures justices may utilize to communicate their vote on a matter pending before the court.
