*807 Opinion
Defendant was charged in an information in count I with the crime of murder, in count II with forcible rape and in count III with burglary. The superior court granted defendant’s motion pursuant to Penal Code section 995 and ordered count I of the information set aside. The People appeal.
Facts
On March 28, 1974, at about 1 a.m., defendant in company with one Marcelino Perez went to the aрartment of Susan Kirksey. Defendant resided in the same apartment building. Defendant knocked on Mrs. Kirksey’s door and identified himself as a nеighbor. He ascertained from Mrs. Kirksey that her husband was not home. About five minutes later defendant again knocked and identified himself. Mrs. Kirksey opened the door and observed defendant and Perez standing in the hall.
After some, conversation defendant and Perez entered the Kirksey apartment. Defendant exhibited a knife and compelled Mrs. Kirksey to accompany him to his apartment where in the presence of Perez he forced Mrs. Kirksey to engage in sexual intercourse.
After the above events Mrs. Kirksey returned to her own apartment and locked the door. A short time later she heard defendant and Perez arguing in the hall. Mrs. Kirksey obtained a gun from a dresser and stood about 4 or 5 feet from the door. There then came a knock on the door аnd Mrs. Kirksey said “Get away from my door. I have a gun,” to which defendant replied “We’ll see about that.”
Immediately thereafter the dоor was broken open from the outside and Mrs. Kirksey could see Perez, who was apparently unarmed, standing in the door and dеfendant standing to one side. Perez entered the apartment and Mrs. Kirksey ordered him to stop. She pulled the trigger of the gun but it misfired. Perez continued to advance and Mrs. Kirksey again pulled the trigger. This time the gun went off killing Perez. Defendant was still standing by the door of the Kirksey apartment. Defendant was charged in count I of the information with the murder of Perez.
In ruling on the section 995 motion the trial cоurt stated that the facts were insufficient to support the magistrate’s conclusion that defendant *808 aided and abetted the dеceased Perez in breaking into the apartment just prior to the shooting.
The People correctly cite establishеd authority that the question of whether a person is an aider and abettor in the commission of a crime is one of fact,
(People
v.
Herrera,
We agree with the People that there was substantial evidence to support the conclusion that defendant and Perez were at the time of the shooting jointly engaged in a felonious entry of the Kirksey apartment with the purpose of committing forcible rape.
That, however, does not еnd the matter, Though we give the evidence all the force to which it is entitled, we conclude that under the principles of
People
v.
Washington,
In People v. Washington, supra, it wаs established that the felony-murder doctrine cannot be applied to fasten on a participant in the felony, guilt for thе killing of an accomplice by a resisting victim because the malice aforethought which is a necessary ingredient in the crime of murder is not present in such a situation. The killing in such a case is not in furtherance of the object of the felony.
In
Taylor
v.
Superior Court, supra,
citing with approval
People
v.
Gilbert,
The difference between Washington and Taylor-Gilbert is the presence in the lattеr cases of conduct by the defendant or his accomplice, apart from the commission of the felony, which directly and immediately threatens death. In order to invoke the Taylor-Gilbert rationale the defendant must commit an act that in and of itself involves a high probability that it will result in death and be of such a character that malice is implied from the act and not by application of the felony- *809 murder doctrine. The acts of defendant and Perez here fell short of conduct which could be so characterized.
We do not in any way minimize the gravity of the crime of forcible rape by concluding that the conduct of dеfendant and Perez did not carry the threat of or a high degree of probability of death. True, some rapists do kill and some rаpe victims do resist until death. In those situations the killing is made first degree murder by law.
On the other hand, there is always the likelihood, as herе, that a rape victim will resist and kill her assailant. This situation is similar to what can and often does occur in a robbery, but as it was stated in
People
v.
Washington,
62 Cal.2d
111
[
The People argue that we should infer, or more properly that the magistrate сould reasonably infer, that because defendant and deceased advanced against an armed victim, death was highly probable. The suggestion is that the apparent failure of the victim’s display of the gun to deter the defendant • and deceаsed indicated that defendant or deceased would have killed the victim in order to obtain their objective.
The difficulty with that аrgument is that defendant’s liability for the ■ death would rest solely upon the victim’s particular response. While the victim’s response here was a reasonable one under the circumstances, it was not the only one that might have been foreseen.
The еvidence here does not establish the second requirement of Taylor-Gilbert that the act of defendant or his accomplice was one from which malice could be inferred.
The order is affirmed.
Roth, P. J., and Fleming, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied July 9, 1975.
