We disagree that section 29610 preempts section 25400. We conclude the statutes prohibit different conduct and affirm the juvenile court's findings that Charles violated both statutes. We agree with Charles that there was insufficient evidence that he violated section 148 and therefore reverse this part of the court's ruling.
BACKGROUND
In December 2015, the Contra Costa County District Attorney filed a petition alleging Charles committed a felony violation of section 29610 for possession of a firearm by a minor; a felony violation of section 25400, subdivision (a)(2) for having a concealed firearm on his person; and a misdemeanor violation of section 148, subdivision (a)(1) for resisting, obstructing or delaying a peace officer in that officer's performance of his duties.
In August 2016, the juvenile court commenced a hearing regarding Charles's motion to suppress evidence under Welfare and Institutions Code section 700.1 and regarding jurisdiction. The court denied the section 700.1 motion and sustained all three counts, but subsequently granted Charles's motion to reduce the two firearm felony violations to misdemeanors. At a subsequent disposition hearing, the court committed Charles to Orin Allen Youth Rehabilitation Facility for a six-month regular program.
Charles subsequently filed a timely notice of appeal.
DISCUSSION
I.
Section 29610 Does Not Preempt Section 25400, Subdivision (a)(2).
Charles first argues the juvenile court improperly found he violated both section 25400, subdivision (a)(2), which prohibits a person from carrying a concealed firearm, and section 29610, which prohibits a minor from possessing a firearm capable
A. General Legal Standards
" 'Questions of statutory interpretation are, of course, pure matters of law upon which we may exercise our independent judgment.' " ( In re Tobacco II Cases(2009)
The Williamson rule is triggered "when 'it appears from the statutory context that a violation of the special statute will necessarily or commonly result in a violation of the general statute.' " ( Murphy, supra,
B. Analysis
Charles argues that "[l]ike the Murphy defendant, [he] was prosecuted under two statutes prohibiting similar conduct-the carrying of concealed firearms." This is patently untrue; the plain language of the two statutes makes clear they prohibit distinctly different conduct. Section 29610, states:
On the other hand, section 25400, subdivision (a)(2), states in relevant part: "A person is guilty of carrying a concealed firearm when the person ... [c]arries concealedupon the person any pistol, revolver, or other firearm capable of being concealed upon the person." (Italics added.) Thus, while section 29610 involves a minor's possession of a firearm that is capable of being concealed,
The different conduct prohibited by the two statutes distinguishes the present circumstances from those discussed in Murphy. There, the defendant caused a stolen vehicle report to be filed with law enforcement based on her false report that her car had been stolen. ( Murphy, supra,
The appellate court concluded that section 115 was a more general statute, as it applied "to a broader range of documents that may be filed in any public office" than did Vehicle Code section 10501. ( Murphy, supra,
Here, it is not necessarily the case that section 29610 is the specific statute and section 25400, subdivision (a) the general one. Each addresses specific
Nonetheless, assuming for the sake of argument that, as Charles argues, section 29610 is the more specific statute, the conduct prohibited by that statute and the conduct prohibited by section 25400 are not the same. The "possession" of a firearm by a minor that is prohibited by
Another important difference in the conduct required by the two statutes concerns concealment. Possession under section 29610 does not require concealment, whereas carrying under section 25400 does. To be sure, possession charges may be based on an act that would also constitute carrying, but the crime of possession reaches a considerably broader range of conduct than that of carrying a concealed weapon.
Not only do sections 29610 and 25400 address different conduct, subdivision (a) address different purposes. In People v. Harrison(1969)
Our Supreme Court later disapproved of Harrison's holding that section 654 did not preclude punishments under both of two statutes the defendant violated by the same act. ( People v. Jones(2012)
These cases reflect that possession under section 29610 and carrying under section 25400, subdivision (a)(2) are separate offenses, that the two sections serve different purposes and that where an adult defendant violates both statutes even by the same act or course of conduct, he may be convicted of
Therefore, the juvenile court did not err in finding Charles violated both statutes. In light of this conclusion, we do not address the other arguments by the parties regarding whether section 29610 is a special statute that preempts section 25400.
II.
There Is Not Substantial Evidence That Charles Violated Section 148.
Charles also argues that the juvenile court erred in finding that he violated section 148 by willfully resisting, delaying or obstructing a peace officer in the officer's performance of his duties. Specifically, Charles contends there is not substantial evidence that he "clearly knew that [Officer] Berkley sought to detain him." We agree.
A. The Proceedings Below
We summarize the pertinent evidence presented, and the juvenile court's ruling made, in the course of the August 2016 contested jurisdictional hearing.
1. Officer England's Account
Michael England, a police officer with the City of Oakley, testified that he was on duty in full uniform at approximately 3:22 p.m. on August 4, 2015, in the area of the parking lot of the Oakley Main Street police station. There, a man named Guillermo flagged him down and told him that a woman had approached him and said her home had just been burglarized. Guillermo drove her up the street so she could retrieve her property. When Guillermo approached an intersection on Main Street, the woman got out of the car,
England further testified that he radioed to other Oakley police officers about the incident. He then drove to within 30 yards of the two individuals in a marked patrol car, at which time the two ran into a restaurant. England then heard on his radio that another officer had apprehended one of the individuals near the restaurant. England drove across Main Street to the restaurant, where Oakley Police Officer Logan Cartwright handed him a green backpack with a revolver in it.
England also testified that the Main Street police station had a large parking lot in front of it and was located across the street from a shopping center that contained the restaurant, a grocery store, and various other stores and restaurants. There was a parking lot area for customers around these stores.
2. Officer Berkley's Account
When England made his radio call, Oakley Police Officer Curtis Berkley was on duty, in uniform, inside the Main Street police station. Berkley looked out the window and saw two individuals slowly jog across Main Street, one of whom he identified at the hearing as Charles. The other individual had on a blue backpack. Berkley drove his police car across the street towards the restaurant there. He saw the other individual was detained, but Charles was not. Berkley drove around to the rear of the grocery store next to the restaurant. He saw Charles, without his backpack, look at him and jump over a fence. Other officers later detained Charles.
3. Officer Cartwright's Account
Oakley Police Officer Logan Cartwright testified that he was on duty on August 4, 2015. He was dispatched to the shopping center across from the Main Street police station to assist in a residential burglary investigation, where he observed that Charles and another individual were detained. Based on what officers told him, he searched the parking lot area for a green backpack with cartoon characters on it. He found a green backpack with Ninja Turtles on it in bushes by a dumpster in the parking lot area behind the restaurant. A .22-caliber revolver, some paperwork and clothing were in the backpack. Cartwright gave the backpack and its contents to England.
The juvenile court found the evidence showed beyond a reasonable doubt that Charles had committed the acts alleged in all three petition counts-he had been in possession of a firearm as a minor, carried a concealed firearm on his person, and willfully resisted, delayed or obstructed a peace
B. Relevant Legal Standards
To establish a person has willfully resisted, delayed or obstructed a peace officer in the performance of the officer's duties, the People must prove (1) the person willfully resisted, delayed, or obstructed a peace officer; (2) when the officer was engaged in the performance of his or her duties; and (3) the person knew or reasonably should have known that the other person was a peace officer engaged in the performance of his or her duties. (§ 148, subd. (a)(1); In re Muhammed C.(2002)
We review the juvenile court's decision for substantial evidence of evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that Charles violated section 148. (See People v. Jennings(2010)
"Substantial evidence" means " 'evidence that "reasonably inspires confidence and is of 'solid value.' " ' " ( People v. Marshall(1997)
C. Analysis
The parties appropriately focus their attention on whether there is sufficient evidence to establish the first element of a section 148 violation-that Charles willfully resisted, delayed, or obstructed a peace officer in the performance of that officer's duties and, specifically, whether, as the juvenile court found, Charles resisted Berkley's effort to detain him. The inquiry centers on Berkley's testimony. He testified that he drove his police car past where the other individual was being detained by a restaurant to the parking lot behind the grocery store next door, where he saw Charles look at him and jump over a fence. There was other testimony that Charles was seen earlier wearing a green backpack and that a green backpack was recovered from a dumpster in the parking lot area behind the restaurant, inside of which was a .22-caliber revolver.
The parties interpret this evidence very differently. Charles asserts that Berkley's testimony is devoid of substantial evidence of evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that
The People argue that Charles's claim has no merit because "[n]umerous officers responded to Officer England's report regarding the burglary suspects," and Charles's "flight from the officers and abandonment of his backpack demonstrates his knowledge that they sought to detain him," as does his climbing over a fence when Berkley, dressed in a police uniform, spotted him. According to the People, Charles's "actions clearly demonstrate his awareness that the officer sought to detain him. Officer Berkley was not required to issue verbal commands to [Charles] in the course of the pursuit. In these circumstances, [Charles's] conduct evidenced defiance in the face of the officers' readily apparent desire to talk to him. The record thus establishes
We agree with Charles. Although the People contend that Berkley was "chasing" Charles in the parking lot and that Charles jumped over the fence "to escape apprehension," they cite no evidence to support these specific contentions, and we have not found any in the record. Nothing in the record suggests that Berkley "chased" Charles, said anything to Charles, such as ordering Charles to stop, or flashed his lights, sounded a horn or siren, drove particularly fast or close to Charles or otherwise acted so as to indicate he wanted to detain Charles.
It can be reasonably inferred from the record that Charles abandoned a green backpack with a loaded firearm in it behind a dumpster by the restaurant and sometime later jumped over a fence behind the grocery store when he saw Berkley in his police car. This evidence is not substantial evidence of evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that Charles willfully resisted Berkley's efforts to stop him. A person who seeks to evade police detection does not violate section 148 unless he or she also "willfully resist[ed], delay[ed], or obstruct[ed] a peace officer." (§ 148, subd. (a)(1).) Though Charles's actions may have been suspicious in nature, the juvenile court could not reasonably infer from Charles's abandonment of his backpack that he knew the police were after him. His conduct is just as consistent with a general desire to avoid detection. Individuals in the vicinity of police, including those in possession of potentially incriminating items on their person, are free to go about their business until they understand police are intending to stop them. Charles did not violate section 148 by jogging across the street, abandoning his backpack or jumping a fence to avoid the police unless he knew, or reasonably should have known, the police were pursuing him. The burden was on the People to establish this was the case in the juvenile court below. It did not do so.
There is evidence that Charles's companion was detained outside the restaurant. However, there is no evidence from which it can reasonably be inferred that Charles was with that individual when detention occurred, knew about it or knew police were in the vicinity of the restaurant for the purpose of detaining Charles. Charles and his companion were seen together going into the restaurant; they could have just as easily split up as stayed together after that point and it is speculation to suggest they did one or the other.
Under these circumstances, the paucity of evidence that Berkley took direct action to stop Charles by the fence behind the grocery store is fatal. This is far different from the evidence offered in Muhammed C., relied on by the People. There, the police arrested defendant for willfully delaying the officers' performance of their duties when defendant continued to speak to a suspect in the back seat of a police car after police ordered him away. ( Muhammed C., supra,
In short, there is not substantial evidence of evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that Charles knew police wanted to stop him and therefore, we must reverse the court's sustaining of the petition allegation that Charles violated section 148, subdivision (a)(1).
DISPOSITION
We reverse the juvenile court's ruling that Charles violated section 148, subdivision (a)(1). The court's jurisdictional ruling is otherwise affirmed. The court's disposition order is vacated and this matter remanded to the juvenile court for a new disposition order that is consistent with this opinion.
We concur.
KLINE, P.J.
RICHMAN, J.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise indicated.
Charles did not first present this argument in the juvenile court. Nonetheless, we consider it here because it is of a purely legal nature. Charles may "raise for the first time on appeal a pure question of law which is presented by undisputed facts." (Hale v. Morgan(1978)
Consistent with this additional concealment requirement, another subdivision of section 25400, subdivision (b), states that a person's carrying of a firearm openly in a belt holster is not a violation of section 25400's prohibition against carrying a concealed firearm.
" 'The policy sought to be implemented [by a statute] should be respected [citation], and to this end, titles of acts, headnotes, and chapter and section headings may properly be considered in determining legislative intent.' " (People v. Romanowski(2017)
More recently, "carry" has been defined as "to take or support from one place to another; convey; transport," "to wear, hold, or have around one," or "to contain or be capable of containing; hold." (< http://www.dictionary.com/browse/carry [as of August 24, 2017>].)
A successor statute to section 12021, section 29800, which similarly prohibits a person convicted of a felony from owning, purchasing, receiving or possessing a firearm, is in Division 9 of Title 4 of Part 6 of the Penal Code, the same division as section 29610, which division is entitled, "Special Firearm Rules Relating to Particular Persons."
See also People v. Blakely(2014)
Charles also argues that the reasoning of another "special statute preemption" case involving sections 29610 and 25400, In re M.G.(2014)
The court also rejected Charles's contention that he was unlawfully detained, ruling that Guillermo's information, Charles's fleeing and his discarding of the backpack provided sufficient reason to detain him. Charles argues the court erred, and that his flight from Berkley was not a basis for arresting him under section 148 because Berkley lacked reasonable suspicion to detain him at the time. We do not further address this argument in light of our conclusion that there was not substantial evidence that Charles violated section 148.
