Opinion
Don Ceballos was found guilty by a jury of assault with a deadly weapon (Pen. Code, § 245). Imposition of sentence was suspended and he was placed on probation. He appeals from the judgment, contending primarily that his conduct was not unlawful because the alleged victim was attempting to commit burglary when hit by a trap gun mounted in the garage of defendant’s dwelling and that the court erred in instructing the jury. We have concluded that the former argument lacks merit, that the court did not commit prejudicial error in instructing the jury, and that the judgment should be affirmed.
Defendant lived alone in a home in San Anselmo. The regular living quarters were above the garage, but defendant sometimes slept in the garage and had about $2,500 worth of property there.
In March 1970 some tools were stolen from defendant’s home. On May 12, 1970, he noticed the lock on his garage doors was bent and pry marks were on one of the doors. The next day he mounted a loaded .22 caliber pistol in the garage. The pistol was aimed at the center of the garage doors
The damage to defendant’s lock had been done by a 16-year-old boy named Stephen and a 15-year-old boy named Robert. On the afternoon of May 15, 1970, the boys returned to defendant’s house while he was away. Neither boy was armed with a gun or knife. After looking in the windows and seeing no one, Stephen succeeded in removing the lock on the garage doors with a crowbar, and, as he pulled the door outward, he was hit in the face with a bullet from the pistol.
Stephen testified: He intended to go into the garage “[f]or musical equipment” because he had a debt to pay to a friend. His “way of paying that debt would be to take [defendant’s] property and sell it” and use the proceeds to pay the debt. He “wasn’t going to do it [i.e., steal] for sure, necessarily.” He was there “to look around,” and “getting in, I don’t know if I would have actually stolen.”
Defendant, testifying in his own behalf, admitted having set up the trap gun. He stated that after noticing the pry marks on his garage door on May 12, he felt he should “set up some kind of a trap, something to keep the burglar out of my home.” When asked why he was trying to keep the burglar out, he replied, “. . . Because somebody was trying to steal my property . . . and I don’t want to come home some night and have the thief in there . . . usually a thief is pretty desperate . . . and . . . they just pick up a weapon ... if they don’t have one . . . and do the best they can.”
When asked by the police shortly after the shooting why he assembled the trap gun, defendant stated that “he didn’t have much and he wanted to protect what he did have.”
As heretofore appears, the jury found defendant guilty of assault with a deadly weapon. (Pen. Code, § 245.) An assault is “an unlawful attempt, coupled with a present ability, to commit a violent injury on the person of another.” (Pen. Code, § 240.)
Defendant contends that had he been present he would have been justified in shooting Stephen since . Stephen was attempting to commit burglary (Pen. Code, § 459), that under cases such as
United States
v.
Gilliam,
The issue of criminal liability under statutes such as Penal Code section 245 where the instrument employed is a trap gun or other deadly mechanical device appears to be one of first impression in this state, 1 but in other jurisdictions courts have considered the question of criminal and civil liability for death or injuries inflicted by such a device.
At common law in England it was held that a trespasser, having knowledge that there are spring guns in a wood, cannot maintain an action for an injury received in consequence of his accidentally stepping on the wire of such gun. (Ilott v. Wilkes (1820) 3 Barn. & Aid. 304.) That case aroused such a protest in England that it was abrogated seven years later by a statute, which made it a misdemeanor to set spring guns with intent to inflict grievous bodily injury but excluded from its operation a spring gun set between sunset and sunrise in a dwelling house for the protection thereof. (7 & 8 Geo. IV, ch. 18; see Bohlen & Burns,, The Privilege to Protect Property by Dangerous Barriers and Mechanical Devices, 35 Yale L.J. 525, 538, 539.)
In the United States, courts have concluded that a person may be held criminally liable under statutes proscribing homicides and shooting with intent to injure, or civilly liable, if he sets upon his premises a deadly mechanical device and that device kills or injures another.
(Katko
v.
Briney
(Iowa)
Allowing persons, at their own risk, to employ deadly mechanical devices imperils the lives of children, firemen and policemen acting within the scope of their employment, and others. Where the actor is present, there is always the possibility he will realize that deadly force is not necessary, but deadly mechanical devices are without mercy or discretion. Such devices “are silent instrumentalities of death. They deal death and destruction to the innocent as well as the criminal intruder without the slightest warning. The taking of human life [or infliction of great bodily injury] by such means is brutally savage and inhuman.” (See
State
v.
Plumlee, supra,
It seems clear that the use of such devices should not be encouraged. Moreover, whatever may be thought in torts, the foregoing rule setting forth an exception to liability for death or injuries inflicted by such devices “is inappropriate in penal law for it is obvious that it does not prescribe a workable standard of conduct; liability depends upon fortuitous results.” (See Model Penal Code (Tent. Draft No. 8), § 3.06, com. 15.) We therefore decline to adopt that rule in Criminal cases.
Furthermore, even if that rule were applied here, as we shall see, defendant was not justified in shooting Stephen. Penal Code section . 197 provides: “Homicide is . . . justifiable ... 1. When resisting any attempt to murder any person, or to commit a felony, or to do some great bodily- injury upon any person; or, 2. When committed in defense of habitation, property, or person, against one who manifestly intends or endeavors, by violence or surprise, to commit a felony . . . .” (See also Pen. Code, § 198.) (2) Since a homicide is justifiable under the circumstances specified in section 197, a fortiori an attempt to commit a violent injury upon another under those circumstances is justifiable.
By its terms subdivision 1 of Penal Code section 197 appears to
Jones
involved subdivision 1 of Penal Code section 197, but subdivision 2 of that section is likewise so limited. The term “violence or surprise” in subdivision 2 is found in common law authorities (see
Flynn
v.
Commonwealth,
Examples of forcible and atrocious crimes are murder, mayhem, rape and robbery. (See
Storey
v.
State, supra,
Burglary has been included in the list of such crimes. (See, e.g.,
United States
v.
Gilliam, supra, 25
F.Cas. 1319;
Scheuermann
v.
Scharfenberg, supra,
• Where the character and manner of the burglary do not reasonably create a fear of great bodily harm, there is no cause for exaction of human life
(State
v.
McIntyre,
In the instant case the asserted burglary did not threaten death or serious bodily harm, since no one but Stephen and Robert was then on the premises. A defendant is not protected from liability merely by the fact that the intruder’s conduct is such as would justify the defendant, were he present, in believing that the intrusion threatened death or serious bodily injury. (See
State
v.
Green,
We thus conclude that defendant was not justified under Penal Code section 197, subdivisions 1 or 2, in shooting Stephen to prevent him from committing burglary. Our conclusion is in accord with dictum indicating that there may be no privilege to use a deadly mechanical device to prevent a burglary of a dwelling house in which no one is present. (See
State
v.
Green, supra,
In support of his position that had he been present he would have been justified in shooting Stephen, defendant cites
Nakashima
v.
Takase,
Several cases contain broad language relating to justification for killing where a person acts in defense of his habitation or property to prevent “a felony” (see, e.g.,
People
v.
Hecker,
We recognize that our position regarding justification for killing under Penal Code section 197, subdivisions 1 and 2, differs from the position of section 143, subdivision (2), of the Restatement Second of Torts, regarding the use of deadly force to prevent a “felony ... of a type . . . involving the breaking and entry of a dwelling place”
5
(see also Perkins
Defendant also argues that had he been present he would have been justified in shooting Stephen under subdivision 4 of Penal Code section 197, which provides, “Homicide is . . . justifiable ... 4. When necessarily committed in
attempting,
by lawful ways and means,
to apprehend
any person for any felony committed . . . .” (Italics added.) The argument cannot be upheld. The words “attempting ... to apprehend” contain the idea of acting for the purpose of apprehending. An attempt to commit a crime includes, inter alia, the specific intent to commit a particular crime
(People
v.
Welch,
People
v.
Lillard,
Defendant does not, and could not properly, contend that the intrusion was, in fact, such that were he present, he would be justified under Penal Code sections 692 and 693 in using deadly force. By its terms section 692 authorizes merely “lawful” resistance to an offense by the party about to be injured. The circumstances in which resistance by such party
Defendant also does not, and could not properly, contend that the intrusion was in fact such that, were he present, he would be justified under Civil Code section 50 in using deadly force. That section provides, “Any necessary force may be used to protect from wrongful injury the person or property of oneself . . . .” This section also should be read in the light of the common law, and at common law in general deadly force could not be used solely for the protection of property. (See Model Penal Code,
supra,
§ 3.06, com. 8; Perkins on Criminal Law,
supra,
p. 1026, fn. 6; 13 Stan.L.Rev. 566, 575-576.) “ ‘The preservation of human life and limb from grievous harm is of more importance to society than the protection of property.’ ”
(Commonwealth
v.
Emmons,
The opinion of Justice McKee in
Dinan
v.
Fitz Gibbon,
At common law an exception to the foregoing principle that deadly force could not be used solely for the protection of property was recognized where the property was a dwelling'house in some circumstances. (See
Simp
Here we are not concerned with dispossession or burning of a dwelling, and, as heretofore concluded, the asserted burglary in this case was not of such a character as to warrant the use of deadly force.
People
v.
Corlett, 61
Cal.App.2d 33, 50-53 [
We conclude that as a matter of law the exception to the rule of liability fpr injuries inflicted by a deadly mechanical device does not apply under the circumstances here appearing.
Defendant also contends that the court erred in giving certain instructions regarding his defense of justification and in failing to give an instruction he requested concerning that defense. Since, as heretofore concluded, as a matter of law that defense cannot be sustained, defendant was not prejudiced by the alleged errors. (Cal. Const., art. VI, § 13;
People
v.
Watson, 46
Cal.2d 818, 836 [
Defendant further argues that he was committed without probable cause because no showing was made at the preliminary hearing that he set up the trap gun or was the sole occupant of the house. However, since the preliminary hearing transcript was not made part of the record on appeal, on the present record it is impossible to decide the question. Furthermore, it is undisputed that defendant did not make a Penal Code section 995
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
The parties have cited no California statute specifically dealing with trap guns, except Fish and Game Code section 2007, which provides: “It is unlawful to set, cause to be set, or placed any trap gun. [¶] A ‘trap gün’ is a firearm loaded with other than blank cartridges and connected with a: string or other contrivance contact with which will cause the firearm to be discharged.” Even if the Legislature in enacting this section intended merely to regulate the taking of wild life, defendant’s attempt to commit a violent injury upon Stephen, as we shall see, was unlawful.
At common law burglary was the breaking and entering of a mansion house in the night with the intent to commit a felony.
(People
v.
Barry,
Restatement Second of Torts, section 85, comment d, states. “The user of a device likely to cause death or serious bodily harm is not protected from liability merely by the fact that the intruder’s conduct is such as would justify the actor, were he pres
Nakashima
cited
Brooks
v.
Sessagesimo,
Section 143, subdivision (2), of Restatement Second of Torts, reads, “The use of force . . . intended or likely to cause death or serious bodily harm, is privileged if the actor reasonably believes that the commission or consummation of the felony cannot otherwise be prevented and the felony for the prevention of which the actor is intervening is of a type threatening death or serious bodily harm or involving the breaking and entry of a dwelling place." (Italics added.)
The comm.ent to that subsection states: “The Statement in this Subsection permits
Defendant made a section 995 motion, but it was on a different ground from the above.
