Opinion
Defendant had been charged with one count of petty theft with a prior (Pen. Code, §§ 484, 666) and one count of burglary (Pen. Code, § 459).
On March 13, 1980, the criminal proceedings were suspended and a hearing to determine defendant’s mental competency pursuant to Penal Code sections 1368 and 1369 was ordered. Ultimately, there was a jury trial on the issue. The defendant called no witnesses. The People called two psychiatrists who testified defendant was not mentally competent to stand trial. Over defendant’s objection, the jury was instructed the burden of proof was the “preponderance of the evidence,” the standard prescribed in Penal Code section 1369, subdivisiоn (f). The jury found defendant not competent to stand trial and the court ordered defendant committed to Patton State Hospital, where he remains.
Penal Code section 1368 et seq., constitute a comprehensive scheme for dealing with criminal defendants whose mental competency is suspect.
Section 1368 provides thе court may order a hearing to establish the mental competence of defendant; when such a hearing has been ordered, the criminal proceedings are suspended.
Section 1369 provides either counsel for the defendant or the prosecution may offer evidence in support of the allegation of mеntal incompetence.
*572 Section 1369, subdivision (f) provides the defendant is presumed competent unless he is proved mentally incompetent by a “preponderance of the evidence.”
If the issue is tried to a jury, section 1369, subdivision (f) requires the verdict be unanimous.
Section 1370 provides if the defendant is found to be mentally compеtent, the criminal process resumes. If the defendant is found to be mentally incompetent, the criminal process is suspended until he becomes mentally competent. In the meantime, the defendant shall be committed to a state hospital or other treatment facility or shall be ordered to undergo outpatient treatment. If the defendant is charged with certain crimes enumerated in section 1370, he must be confined in a mental health facility for a minimum of 90 days before he may be released on outpatient treatment. (Id.)
Section 1370 further provides that within 90 days of a commitment, the superintendent of the treatment facility shall report to the court conсerning the defendant’s progress toward recovery of his mental competence. If the defendant has not regained his competence, but there is a substantial likelihood that he will in the foreseeable future, the defendant is to remain in the treatment facility. Subsequent reports are submitted at six-month intervals, with another section 1369 hearing after eighteen months, if the defendant is still hospitalized. (Id.)
The maximum period of commitment under this scheme is three years or the maximum sentence provided for by law for the most serious offense with which the defendant is charged, whichever is shorter. (Id.)
At the end of that period, or whenever the superintendent reports there is no substantial likеlihood the defendant will regain his competence in the foreseeable future, the defendant is to be returned to the court. If it “appears to the court” that the defendant is “gravely disabled” as defined in the Lanterman-Petris-Short (LPS Act) Act (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 5000 et seq.) conservatorship proceedings shall be commenced. (Id.)
These сonservatorships are for one year and are renewable on a showing that the person remains “gravely disabled.” (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 5361.)
*573
Finally, continuing incompetence for purposes of section 5008, subdivision (h)(2) may be established by a preponderance of the evidence
Conservatorship of Hofferber
(1980)
The statutory scheme set out above can serve two purposes. In its usual application, the defendant seeks to avoid the penal consequences of a criminal conviction by establishing his incompetency. As an incompetent, he cannot be tried and convicted. The procedures seem reasonably calculated to protect mentally disordered defendants from the unfair burden of defending a criminal charge when they are unable to understand the charges against them or to assist counsel in their defense. The burden of proof established by the statute (a preponderance of the evidence) is necessary to overcome the presumption of competеncy.
But the application of section 1368 et seq., is not restricted to incompetency claims pressed by the defense. Section 1369 provides if the defense declines to present evidence in support of the allegation of mental incompetence, the prosecution may do so. As the outline of the statutоry provisions above makes clear, a determination of mental incompetency can lead to commitment in a state institution for up to three years followed by an LPS Act conservatorship of indefinite duration.
The defendant attacks this procedure as unconstitutional under the due process clause of the California Constitution (art. I, § 7, subd.(a)) and the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. These are issues of first impression in California.
Defendant first argues the section 1369 hearing should be considered a criminal proceeding involving the “beyond a reasonable doubt” standard of
In re Winship
(1970)
*574 Finally, his period of commitment as an incompetent may not exceed the maximum sentence provided for the offense charged (Pen. Code, § 1370 subd. (c)(1)). Therefore, the prоceeding is criminal in nature and due process requires proof beyond a reasonable doubt, argues defendant.
People
v.
Fields
(1965)
We find no basis to support defendant’s contention that the jury will necessarily have to pass upon the guilt of defendant in the proceeding. Nor does it necessarily follow that commitment of the incompetent will stigmatize him as having committed a crime. The state’s beneficence in reducing a prisoner’s sentence by the period which he spent before conviction in a treatment facility hardly stamps the latter as penal in nature. Clearly defendant’s situation is distinguishable from a conventional criminal proceeding contemplated by the U.S. Supreme Court in
In re Winship, supra,
In
Addington
v.
Texas
(1979)
*575
In California,
Conservatorship of Roulet
(1979)
In
People
v.
Burnick
(1975)
Defendant contends thesе California precedents require the same “beyond a reasonable doubt” standard of proof in the section 1368 proceeding, based upon stigma and loss of liberty.
Two cases cited by respondent,
People
v.
Superior Court
(Campbell) (1975)
*576 “. . . No purpose seems served by requiring a more stringent proof of the underlying condition in order to establish an LPS Act conservatorship. ”
It is clear, then, that no subject, having been found incompetent in a section 1368 proceeding, will be committed, under the LPS Act, to one or more one-year conservatorship terms without his "grave disability" being determined beyond a reasonable doubt. In other words, unless the subject is proved to fit the categories set forth in Welfare and Institutions Code sections 5008, subdivision (h)( 1) or 5008, subdivision (h)(2), 1 beyond a reasonable doubt, he cannot be subjected to long-term conservatorship proceedings as a result of thе initial section 1368 finding of incompetence.
Turning back to the initial section 1368 proceeding, are its immediate consequences such as to require the more stringent standard of proof in order to insure due process?
The purpose of the proceeding is different from those compared above in that proteсtion of society in general is not a consideration for the section 1368 inquiry. The law seeks only to protect the accused. It is unfair to subject any defendant to criminal prosecution when he cannot understand the nature of the charges pressed against him or cannot assist in his own defense. Even when a defendant resists this protection by oppоsing the evidence of incompetency, it would be unfair to deny him the benefit of treatment for his condition before subjecting him to a potential loss of life or liberty in the criminal proceeding.
Once incompetency is established, the statutory scheme is replete with mandatory reviews to insure a subject will not be warehoused *577 unduly in а mental institution. He may not even leave the local community if outpatient therapy is deemed sufficient (Pen. Code, § 1370). Whether hospitalized or not, his progress toward competence must be reported to the court within 90 days (Pen. Code, § 1370, subd. (b)(1)). Reports must be submitted at six-month intervals and another section 1369 hearing must be held eighteen months after the initial hearing (Pen. Code, § 1370, subds. (b)(1) and (2)). In no event can any defendant be committed longer than three years under this statutory scheme and where the maximum lawful term of incarceration for the original offense charged is less than three years, such time period becomes the maximum period of confinement under this procedure (Pen. Code, § 1370, subd. (c)(1)). Such limits are in great contrast to the indefinite involuntary commitment addressed in Addington, the year-long conservatorship terms under the LPS Act in Roulet, or the indeterminate period under the MDSO procedure.
Since the section 1368 proceeding is designed
only
to protect the accused, the procedure should be designed to afford this protection when needed. As stated in
Addington
v.
Texas, supra,
A more stringent standard of proof would decrease the likelihood that an incompetent or accused would receive the benefit of the section 1368 procedure. “Whether the individual is mentally ill ... and is in need of confined therapy turns on the
meaning
of the facts which must be interpreted by expert psychiatrists and psychologists.”
(Addington, supra,
at p. 429 [
In the best of all worlds the state would be required to prove criminal “guilt beyond all doubt. However, ‘due process does not require that every conceivable step be taken, at whatever cost, to eliminate the possibility of convicting an innocent person.’ [Citation.] Nor should the state be required to employ a standard of proof thаt may completely undercut . . . the legitimate interests of both the state and the patient that are served by civil commitments.”
(Addington, supra,
p. 430 [
Having considered the scope of the section 1368 procedure, having contrasted it with the more stringent potentiаl results of the EPS Act (involuntary civil commitment) and MDSO procedures, and having recognized the significant difference in purpose between the section 1368 procedure and those procedures compared, we hold appellant has been afforded due process of law under both article I, section 7, subdivision (a) of thе California Constitution and the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. The statutory “preponderance of the evidence” standard of section 1369, subdivision (f) is approved.
Brown (Gerald), P. J., and Work, J., concurred.
Notes
Assigned by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
For purposes of article 1 (commencing with § 5150), article 2 (commencing with § 5200), and article 4 (commencing with § 5250) of chapter 2 of this part, and for the purposes of chapter 3 (commencing with § 5350) of this part, “gravely disabled” means:
(1) A condition in which a person, as a result of a mental disorder, is unable to provide for his basic personal needs for food, clothing, or shelter; or
(2) A condition in which a person, has been found mentally incompetent under Section 1370 of the Penal Code аnd all of the following facts exist:
(i) The indictment or information pending against the defendant at the time of commitment charges a felony involving death, great bodily harm, or a serious threat to the physical well-being of another person.
(ii) The indictment or information has not been dismissed.
(in) As a result of mental disorder, the person is unable to understand the nature and purpose of the proceedings taken against him and to assist counsel in the conduct of his defense in a rational manner.
