Opinion
Edward S.
1
appeals from the judgment of the juvenile court sustaining a petition alleging that he comes within the provisions of section 602 of the Welfare and Institutions Code. His court-appointed counsel initially filed a brief raising no legal issues and asking this court to conduct an independent investigation of the record pursuant to
People v. Wende
(1979)
Facts and Proceedings Below
On October 4, 2006, the District Attorney of Mendocino County filed a three-count petition pursuant to Welfare and Institutions Code section 602, alleging that two days earlier appellant attempted to commit a lewd and lascivious act with a child under the age of 14 (Pen. Code, §§ 664, 288, subd. (a)), and on the same day annoyed or molested and made a criminal threat against the same child (Pen. Code, §§ 647.6, subd. (a), 422). Eight days later, the district attorney amended the petition to additionally charge a second attempt to commit a lewd or lascivious act with the same underage child.
Appellant, who was 17 years of age at the time the petition was filed, is a Native American eligible for enrollment in the Yurok Tribe. He had been previously declared a ward of the court in 2004 as a result of his commission of misdemeanor vandalism and, thereafter, battery on school property and theft, both also misdemeanors. The two latter offenses violated terms of the probation appellant was placed on for the vandalism. Appellant was again placed on probation and ordered to participate in the New Horizons program. It was difficult to find a residential placement for appellant because he had been abandoned by his mother in 2002, and his father was confined in the Humboldt County Correctional Facility. Child Protective Services (CPS) was unwilling to place appellant with his grandmother, because her adult son and his four children lived with her, and CPS believed appellant’s claim that he had been physically abused by the son, who had a criminal record. In 2004, appellant was permitted to live with his aunt Sherry S. in Mendocino County. In June 2005, he absconded from that placement and was subsequently apprehended and detained in the Mendocino County Juvenile Hall on February 8, 2006. With court approval, appellant was released from the New Horizons program on August 18, 2006, in order to facilitate another trial relative foster placement with Sherry S. It was shortly after this second placement with Sherry S. that the district attorney filed the petition before us.
On October 25, 2006, the day before the jurisdictional hearing was scheduled to begin, appellant moved for a one-week continuance. In support of the motion, Mendocino County Deputy Public Defender Shane Hauschild filed a declaration stating that he had been informed by a relative of appellant that the alleged victim and her mother “may have made similar accusations of molestation in the past” and that this information may lead to “exculpatory” evidence. Defense counsel also filed a petition pursuant to Welfare and Institutions Code section 827 seeking permission to inspect juvenile court
On October 31, the court conducted a hearing regarding appellant’s motion to inspect juvenile records held by CPS. A representative of the Mendocino County Department of Social Services (Department of Social Services) testified that she had reviewed the CPS records “but I d[on’t] find anything that really addressed the [minor victim’s] honesty, truthfulness, veracity, or credibility.” Defense counsel then pressed the court to allow inspection of reports of suspected child abuse or allegations by others that the minor had been untruthful; that is, anything “that’s clearly relevant to her credibility whether it has to do with child abuse [or] not.” The juvenile court agreed to inspect in camera the juvenile records produced by the Department of Social Services.
The court conducted a hearing the next day at which it stated that the records produced by Department of Social Services in response to appellant’s motion to inspect revealed nothing warranting disclosure. According to the court, the records contain “some matters” regarding the victim but “nothing about any claims or allegations by the victim that she was molested which were either substantiated or not substantiated.” The court ordered a copy of the records produced to “be put in a file and sealed, not to be opened [by county counsel] until further order of the Court so that they’re part of the record in this case.” 2
The Jurisdictional Hearing
The contested jurisdictional hearing held in the Mendocino County Superior Court on November 3, 2006, was exceedingly brief. Four witnesses testified: the victim, T.S., who had just turned 10 years of age; her mother, Sherry S.; Mike Dygert, a detective with the Mendocino County Sheriff’s Department; and appellant.
T.S. testified that on the evening in question she was alone in her house with appellant, who was her nephew, and her two brothers, all of whom lived
Sherry testified that appellant was related to her deceased husband and the nephew of her children, and she had known him since he was two years of age. She was aware he was on probation at the time she left him alone with her children, but knew him to be “[v]ery kind and gentle towards my kids” who “seemed to like his company” and she “had never seen him exhibit any behavior that would give [her] cause for concern.” After she returned home and heard from T.S. what had happened, Sherry called Jason S., “an uncle—or brother of [T.S.], an older brother, and ... an uncle of [appellant],” because she was worried and scared. Jason was not home but Sherry spoke with his wife, Arla S., “another sister of [T.S.]’s and an aunt to [appellant].” Aria said they would call back when Jason returned. A few minutes later, Aria called back and said “they were unwilling to get involved.” Sherry then called the police.
On cross-examination, Sherry said she did not call the police immediately after arriving home and hearing from her daughter what appellant had done because appellant was doing well in school and sports, and thereby turning his life around, and reporting him to the police might set him back. She was also “worried about the repercussions from the relatives because I didn’t want to overreact.” However, because child molestation was prevalent in her family, Sherry believed her daughter’s accusation was truthful and called the police. Sherry testified that molestations had happened “not necessarily to me but to all my cousins, all my siblings, everybody I know. And I’m the only one of two people in my extended family of about three generations that I know wasn’t molested as a child.” When Sherry made this statement, defense counsel said, “Okay. I don’t have any more questions.”
Officer Dygert testified simply that appellant had been asleep when he and another officer arrived at the residence in response to the call from Sherry. After talking to the victim and Sherry, he awakened appellant and arrested him. Because appellant was “groggy” Dygert did not interview him at the scene but took him to the police station. He did not recall whether appellant was wearing a belt at the time he was arrested or later at the police station.
Appellant testified that at the time of the alleged offenses he had been living at Sherry’s house for about six weeks. He was placed there by county officials after being found guilty of “fighting in school and getting caught at school with drugs,” and was still on probation for those offenses, which occurred almost a year earlier. Appellant had good relations with all Sherry’s children. He played football with her sons and helped them with their homework and chores. Appellant stated that Sherry often left him alone with her older son, but except on one occasion she always took the other two children with her. On one occasion, however, Sherry asked him to watch all three children while she was away. Appellant told her he would only watch her older son because the other “was too young and him and his brother fight a lot,” and he wouldn’t watch the daughter “because I didn’t feel, like, right around her.” Appellant said that although he was sometimes “uncomfortable” around T.S., he “did not have any problems with her” on the day in question, during which she played happily with her brothers. Appellant attributed his feeling about T.S. to the fact that Sherry had told him that T.S. had been raped by one of his uncles.
When reminded of Sherry’s testimony, that at the time of the alleged offense he had been trying to “turn [his] life around” and asked why he was doing so, appellant replied: “I was tired of being locked up, and I just wanted to really change my life because I couldn’t—I was just tired of being around walls. I felt like I was taking my father’s footsteps. But after I completed my program, I was, like, really wanting to turn my life around. It was going [in] that direction. But then this crime came up.” Appellant insisted that the charged molestation and threat never occurred. He testified that he went to bed about three minutes after Sherry left the house at 10:00 p.m., fell asleep almost immediately, and stayed asleep until he was “woken up by the cops.” Appellant was sure he went to bed about 10:03 p.m. because when Sherry got off the phone with her boyfriend and went to her room and left, he saw on his computer that it was 10:00 o’clock “[a]nd then three minutes later I just jumped off and went to bed.” When asked whether, as T.S. testified, he had a belt on at the time he molested her, appellant stated that he did not have a belt on at any time during the night in question or during that day. He was at all times wearing the blue pants in which he was sleeping when awoken by Officer Dygert. Appellant’s testimony on direct examination ended with the following short colloquy:
“Q. Did you ever at anytime that night go into Sherry’s bedroom [in which the victim claimed she was sleeping when the molestation occurred]?
“A. No, I did not. [f] . . . [f]
“Q. Did you ever talk to [the victim] that night?
“A. No, I did not.
“Q. And you never woke up that entire night?
“A. Never. The only time I woke up is for the cops.”
On redirect, appellant stated that he had a girlfriend his own age (17) with whom he was still “involved,” and had dated other girls in the past, the youngest of whom was 16.
At the close of the jurisdictional hearing, the court found appellant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt on one of the two alleged attempts to commit a lewd or lascivious act with a child under the age of 14 (Pen. Code, §§ 664, 288, subd. (a)) and on the charge that he annoyed or molested a minor (Pen. Code, § 647.6, subd. (a)). The prosecution thereupon dismissed the allegation of criminal threat. No finding was made with respect to the second alleged attempt to commit a lewd or lascivious act with the same victim.
The juvenile court’s finding rested on the testimony of the victim. As the court stated: “I think fundamentally what it comes down to is whether the child is credible or not. And I’ve had the opportunity to observe her. I didn’t see any signs that she was using language that was the obvious result of coaching. She’s amazingly smart and was a little nervous, but did pretty good in coping with the whole situation. ... I didn’t see any signs that she wasn’t truthful. And I think that I’m satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that she did tell the truth and her testimony . . . clearly establishes that the elements are met. []Q She was under 14, and she was touched . . . and it was with the intent to gratify the minor’s sexual desires.”
At the close of the jurisdictional hearing, the district attorney indicated there was reason to believe appellant was not then residing in Mendocino County, but with his father in Humboldt County, and the court should therefore consider transferring the case to that county. (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 263.) On November 14, 2006, after the probation department had also recommended that the case be transferred, the court ordered appellant’s case transferred to Humboldt County.
The Motion for a New Jurisdictional Hearing
On February 16, 2007, appellant’s newly appointed counsel, Humboldt County Deputy Public Defender Joanne Carter, moved for a new jurisdictional hearing on the ground that appellant had been denied the effective
In her brief in support of her motion for a new jurisdictional hearing, 3 Carter stated that prior counsel was ineffective also because he failed to voir dire T.S. to determine whether she was capable of understanding the duty to testify truthfully, he failed to adequately inquire of T.S. during his nine-minute cross-examination whether she understood the difference between the truth and a falsehood, and whether she had discussed her testimony with others and, if so, what was said during those discussions. He was ineffective also, Carter argued, in failing to require that T.S., on the record, take the oath required by Evidence Code section 710. 4
The motion further alleged that Hauschild was ineffective because there was at the outset a need and good cause for a continuance of more than one week, and his failure to seek an adequate continuance was tactically and otherwise unjustified and based upon an erroneous understanding of the law. Carter urged it was also ineffective and unprofessional for prior counsel to fail to request a continuance after Sherry testified she was “only one of two people in my extended family of about three generations that I know that wasn’t molested as a child.” “Unbelievably,” appellant’s new counsel argued, “after this bombshell of a disclosure, the defense attorney’s response was,
The motion for a new jurisdictional hearing also pointed out that the “[t]he entire contested hearing took less than two hours upon the conclusion of which, the court found the allegations ... to be true.”
Hauschild, appellant’s former attorney, filed a lengthy declaration in support of the motion for a new jurisdictional hearing. He states that (1) he needed more than a week to investigate information he received from appellant’s relatives that might lead to exculpatory evidence, but erroneously believed he was only entitled to a seven-day continuance; (2) his “excessive caseload” made it impossible to “thoroughly review and litigate each and every case” he was then litigating, including appellant’s case
5
; (3) the Mendocino County Public Defender’s Office lacked an investigator and he was expected to conduct his own investigations, which was “all but impossible” in light of his heavy caseload; (4) he considered requesting an evaluation of appellant’s mental condition similar to that authorized by Penal Code section 288.1, but was told by the public defender that his office would
Hauschild’s declaration ends with the statement of his belief “that much more should have been done in defending [appellant’s] case. Specifically, this case required more resources, support from more experienced attorneys, proper investigation, sufficient investigative resources, and assistance with an extremely serious W & I 602 petition[] .... None of these things were possible in light of my fear that I would lose my job if I pushed these issues with the [Mendocino County] Public Defender.” Hauschild stated his investigation of the case consisted only of his conversations with appellant and request that the court inspect T.S.’s confidential juvenile court file, which he was not allowed to personally review. (See Welf. & Inst. Code, § 827.) 6
Humboldt County Superior Court Judge Christopher G. Wilson conducted three hearings on the motion for a new jurisdictional hearing. Jason S., appellant’s uncle and Sherry’s cousin, who was the only witness, testified that he attempted on several occasions to speak with Hauschild before and during appellant’s jurisdictional hearing to provide information he thought Hauschild would find useful to appellant’s defense. Among other things, he thought Hauschild should talk to his wife about her phone conversations with Sherry before the latter called the police. Jason’s father, who was no longer alive, had had an affair with Sherry, who was his niece, and he had fathered two of her children, who were therefore Jason’s stepsiblings. This incestuous relationship was controversial within the family’s tribe and created tension between
Jason also thought it relevant that Sherry’s youngest son was found at a daycare center “kissing on another boy, sucking on the boy’s penis” and T.S. attended the same daycare facility. Jason also wanted Hauschild to know that, though he loved T.S., whom he referred to as his sister, she often lied. Recently, for example, one of Jason’s daughters was upstairs in his house on her birthday, and Jason instructed a nephew named David not to allow other children arriving for the party to go upstairs because they would tell her of the presents downstairs and spoil the surprise. When T.S. began walking upstairs, David tried to stop her and Jason heard T.S. respond that if he did not let her pass she would tell others “ ‘that you pushed me down the stairs and you hit me.’ ”
Finally, Jason thought Hauschild should know that Sherry told him she had initiated sexual intercourse with Jason’s nephew, Josh, who was under 18, and Josh confirmed this. Sherry told Jason that Josh “ ‘wants an older woman’ and stuff.” She also told him that she had sex with many other boys.
Because he thought the foregoing information would help Hauschild defend appellant, Jason repeatedly attempted to discuss it with him, but he “didn’t want to talk to me really.” Jason gave Hauschild his phone number and those of his wife and sister, but none of them were ever called. Jason also gave Hauschild “contact information” for others who could corroborate the information he provided.
On cross-examination, Jason testified that he spoke briefly with Hauschild three times on the phone prior to the jurisdictional hearing and twice in the courthouse on the day it took place. During one of his phone conversations, Jason asked Hauschild “what his background was, what kind of a lawyer he
At the end of cross-examination, Jason acknowledged he had known appellant all of his life and also that he had spent time in prison for assault with a deadly weapon and kidnapping, and the victims of both were other Native Americans but not members of his family. Jason, who worked as a crane operator, had been out of prison for six years.
The arguments of counsel on the motion for a new jurisdictional hearing were separately heard by Judge Wilson on May 10, 2007. Deputy Public Defender Carter argued that Hauschild’s declaration and Jason’s testimony indicated that, despite the information and contacts he was provided by Jason, on which he did not follow up, Hauschild’s defense of appellant consisted of little more than his conversations with appellant and the filing of the petitions asking the court to inspect juvenile court records pursuant to Welfare and Institutions Code section 827. Carter also emphasized Hauschild’s complete failure to respond appropriately to Sherry’s emotional testimony that she was one of only two people in her extended family of about three generations that had not been molested as a child, presumably because this provided an opportunity for Hauschild to explore the level of child molestation within the family and T.S.’s familiarity with forms of child molestation. Carter also called attention to Hauschild’s failure to voir dire T.S. with respect to competency, at which time he could have asked whether she ever lied or threatened to lie in order to get her way, and to subject her to meaningful cross-examination regarding, for example, asserted discrepancies between her direct testimony and her statements to the arresting officer. Citing
In re Marquez
(1992)
Finally, Carter called attention to the statement in Hauschild’s declaration that, despite the fact that “I clearly required more time than a seven day continuance to fully investigate and competently defend the case,” he sought a continuance for only seven days because he understood that under Welfare and Institutions Code section 682 “I was only entitled to a seven day continuance for a juvenile delinquency case.” Carter suggested that Hauschild’s understanding of the law was erroneous.
The district attorney felt it was reasonable for Hauschild to point out the language T.S. used was sophisticated for a child her age; to emphasize how deeply asleep appellant was when he was found by Officer Dygert shortly after the offense was alleged to have occurred; and to also underscore that though appellant had in the past run away from Sherry’s house when he got in trouble, he remained there this time. According to the district attorney, Hauschild “fairly successfully portrayed [appellant] as a nice young man that was on the right path for once and doing fairly well and not someone that would have risked this over engaging in the sort of conduct that was alleged, [f] He clearly had a well-planned and orchestrated defense, and he presented it clearly and concisely to the Court.”
Finally, the prosecutor argued that even if Hauschild’s conduct was not considered objectively reasonable, there would not have been a different outcome even if he had taken all of the courses of action outlined by appellant’s present counsel, because “[i]t seems clear from the trial judge’s ruling . . . that he based his determination upon the believability of the nine-year-old victim. And I think ... we would have seen the exact same outcome.”
In rebuttal, Carter emphasized a criminal defense attorney’s duty to investigate. “I think it’s important that these leads be investigated. I don’t think it was a wild goose chase. . . . But that isn’t our decision to make. I think we have a duty to investigate and that is where Mr. Hauschild failed [a]nd that is what prejudiced [appellant] as he sits here today.”
Judge Wilson took the motion for a new jurisdictional hearing under submission and, at a hearing four days later, issued his ruling denying the
The Dispositional Hearing
On April 25, 2007, a little more than two months after the motion for new jurisdictional hearing had been filed but before the hearing on that motion, appellant’s new counsel filed an ex parte application for an order authorizing funding for expert services to assist her in connection with appellant’s motion for a new jurisdictional hearing. The court granted the request, directing payment from the county general fund to pay Dr. Andrew Renouf $1,500 for his services. Dr. Renouf s report emphasizes that his assessment of appellant was complicated by “the undetermined validity of the charges” against appellant, and the fact that “in many ways Eddy does not fit the typical personality or historical profile for juvenile sex offenders.” The report acknowledges that appellant “comes from an extremely dysfunctional family background and has likely gravitated towards gang-involvement as a way for substituting for his missing family members and helping him survive on the streets,” but at the same time he “was going to school, performing well academically, and participating in team sports. He reportedly was liked by his coach and high-school principal, and is liked by Regional Facility staff. He was described as respectful of authority, a strong participator in treatment groups, and a positive peer leader. In addition, Eddy passed a polygraph test denying he committed the . . . offense, reportedly engaged in age-appropriate sexual activity when he had the opportunity, has generally good impulse control, and no unusual sexual preoccupations revealed by psychological testing results or history.” Dr. Renouf repeatedly points out that appellant “adamantly” and “consistently denied the allegations against him of molest,” and notes “that the abilities to not confess when faced with a polygraph test and to maintain one’s innocence over an extended period of time imply a level of psychological sophistication which test results suggest Eddy does not possess.”
Dr. Renouf concluded that, “fif] the allegations of sexual molest are unfounded, Eddy would not require sex-offending treatment.” However,
At the commencement of the disposition hearing conducted on June 8, 2007, Judge Wilson stated that he had read the original and supplemental disposition reports and, upon counsel’s submission of the issue to the court, he ordered residential treatment and counseling or sex offender treatment. Judge Wilson expressed concern that he did not have a Penal Code section 288.1 evaluation of appellant, but felt “Dr. Renouf’s evaluation suffices in that respect.” Presumably on the basis of that evaluation, Judge Wilson concluded that “I don’t consider [appellant] to be necessarily a danger to the community by way of potential for sexual offense. But I do consider him to be a danger to the community by way of his lack of impulse control and substance abuse and also the unavailability of adequate familial support.” (Judge Wilson noted that Dr. Renouf disagreed with his conclusion that appellant lacked impulse control.)
At that point in the dispositional proceedings, appellant’s counsel sought leave to renew the motion for a new jurisdictional hearing, basing the request on several statements in Dr. Renouf s report, including the statements that appellant “does not fit the typical personality or historical profile for juvenile sex offenders” and lacked the “psychological sophistication” to maintain his innocence in the face of a polygraph test and then pass the test. The district attorney opposed the request to renew the motion for a new jurisdictional hearing, and the court denied it, stating that a different evaluator “might see [appellant] differently, I suppose.” Judge Wilson noted that, although “my experience with Dr. Renouf is that he’s straightforward and objective [and] [t]here’s no reason for me to doubt his evaluation in any respect, [][]... I found the victim’s testimony and recitation to be straightforward [and] I, frankly, agreed with the Judge who presided over the jurisdictional hearing.” Agreeing that appellant’s offense was not “an aggravated, sexual-type assault,” but “an instance of poor impulse control and poor judgment,” Judge Wilson denied the request to renew appellant’s motion for a new jurisdictional hearing.
The court found the maximum time of confinement was seven years three months 19 days, appellant’s continuance at the home would be contrary to his welfare, and reasonable efforts had been made to prevent his removal from that home and enable his return thereto. Accordingly, the court ordered that
Discussion
The principles that guide our analysis were set forth by our Supreme Court more than 20 years ago in
People
v.
Ledesma
(1987)
The test to determine whether a criminal defendant’s claim that counsel’s assistance was so defective as to require reversal of a conviction consists of two prongs. First, the defendant must show that counsel’s performance was deficient in that it “fell below an objective standard of reasonableness ... [][].. . under prevailing professional norms.”
(Strickland
v.
Washington, supra,
We shall conclude that Hauschild’s performance was deficient in that he (1) failed to investigate potentially exculpatory evidence, (2) sought an inadequate continuance based on a mistake of law, and (3) failed to move for a substitution of counsel knowing he was unable to devote the time and resources necessary to properly defend appellant. Further concluding that these deficiencies were prejudicial, we shall reverse the judgment.
I.
Emphasizing the duty of defense counsel “to make reasonable investigations or to make a reasonable decision that makes particular investigations unnecessary”
(Strickland, supra,
It bears emphasizing that appellant was charged with a violation of Penal Code section 288, subdivision (a), a serious and violent felony and a potential strike (Pen. Code, §§ 1192.7, subd. (c)(6), 667.5, subd. (c)(6), 1170.12, subd. (b)(1)), and an offense exposing him to sex offender registration requirements (Pen. Code, § 290.008;
In re G.C.
(2007)
From the police report and his discussions with appellant, Hauschild must have been aware at the outset that the prosecution’s case rested almost
The sexual experiences of not just T.S. but also her siblings could have been used by the defense to advantage if the information Jason provided had been investigated and verified, even in part. For example, T.S.’s prior molestation by an uncle, who allegedly also molested her older brother, and evidence that her younger brother had been found “sucking the penis” of another child, suggest T.S. may have been aware of this form of child molestation. Jason testified that he gave Hauschild the address of the daycare center at which her younger brother was found sucking the penis of another child, and the name of the daycare employee to talk to, but Hauschild never contacted that person because, as he explained in his declaration, he had neither the time nor the investigatory resources.
In
In re Vargas, supra,
Here, the district attorney did not argue that Hauschild would have been unable to corroborate the information Jason provided him and use this evidence to impeach T.S.’s credibility. Her argument was that this would have been a risky strategy and Hauschild had a good tactical reason for not pursuing it. According to the district attorney, pursuing the incest and sexual acts of Sherry and the sexual experiences of her children would have been a strategic mistake, because “it’s reasonable that a trier of fact, perhaps not properly, . . . may, nonetheless, conclude that a young man who is in a family that has multiple incidences of molest may be more likely to himself have committed a molest. I think that was probably a door that, frankly, Mr. Hauschild properly chose not to open . . . .” This argument is self-defeating, for it ignores Hauschild’s duty to anticipate the very danger the district attorney described; namely, that, for the reasons given by the district attorney, the prosecution might introduce the regularity of sexual molestation within appellant’s family—as indeed it did through Sherry’s direct testimony that molestations were commonplace in her extended family, which included appellant.
Hauschild concedes in his declaration, and it seems to us clearly the case, that he had no tactical justification for his failure to investigate and “much more should have been done in defending this case.” As we have seen, the reasons Hauschild offers for the deficiencies in his representation of appellant pertain solely to the magnitude of his caseload, which assertedly made “it
Acknowledging Hauschild made “errors,” the court found the evidence he was ineffective inadequate because it consisted primarily of Jason S.’s testimony that he provided Hauschild information potentially useful to appellant’s defense which Hauschild failed to pursue. The trial judge disregarded Jason’s testimony because he believed it consisted of “multiple layers of hearsay” and was not credible due to the fact Jason is an ex-felon. Jason S.’s testimony cannot be so easily dismissed.
To begin with, Jason’s credibility was not to be measured from the perspective of a trier of fact at a trial on the merits, as the court did, but from that of an attorney charged with the duty to defend a client against criminal charges. The question before the court was not whether Jason’s claims were true, but whether Hauschild’s failure to inquire into their truth was reasonable; that is, would a reasonable attorney in Hauschild’s shoes have felt a professional duty to his client to verify those claims? Given Jason’s long relationship with and knowledge of appellant, Sherry, and T.S. and her siblings, the specificity and facial significance of the information he provided, and his identification of others who would assertedly corroborate his claims and his specifiying how such persons could be contacted, no reasonable defense attorney would have declined to investigate the information he provided simply because it contained hearsay and Jason was an ex-felon (especially one who had been released from custody six years earlier and was presently gainfully employed).
As our Supreme Court has observed, “ ‘ “strategic choices made after less than complete investigation are reasonable precisely to the extent that reasonable professional judgments support the limitations on investigation. In other words, counsel has a duty to make reasonable investigations or to make a reasonable decision that makes particular investigations unnecessary. In any ineffectiveness case, a particular decision not to investigate must be directly assessed for reasonableness in all the circumstances, applying a heavy measure of deference to counsel’s judgments.” ’ ”
(In re Thomas
(2006)
II.
Hauschild states in his declaration that he knew the seven-day continuance he sought and received was inadequate to permit him to fully investigate and competently defend appellant, but he declined to seek a longer continuance because he believed Welfare and Institutions Code section 682 did not permit a continuance longer than seven days. One of the tests of whether counsel has provided effective representation is whether he or she “effectively supplied] to a defendant those skills and
legal knowledge
which we can reasonably expect from any member of the bar.”
(People v. Cook
(1975)
Moreover, even if Welfare and Institutions Code section 682 imposed the time limitation Hauschild erroneously thought it did, he still could have requested a continuance to a jurisdictional hearing date beyond the statutorily prescribed period, which would be deemed a waiver of speedy trial rights. (See, e.g.,
People v. Griffin
(1971)
in.
Even if a request for an adequate continuance would have been denied, or would not have solved the funding problem that apparently prevented Hauschild from competently defending appellant, Hauschild had other means by which to protect appellant’s right to effective representation. A court, before trial, may address a defendant’s claim that he or she is receiving ineffective assistance of counsel and entertain a motion allowing counsel to withdraw from the case and substitute other counsel.
(People
v.
Stankewitz
(1990)
The conduct required of attorneys in this state is determined not just by the Rules of Professional Conduct, the State Bar Act (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 6000 et seq.) and judicial opinions, but also by consideration of “[e]thics opinions and rules and standards promulgated by other jurisdictions and bar associations.” (Rules Prof. Conduct, rule 1-100(A).) The American Bar Association (ABA) has devoted much attention to the obligations of a public defender in the predicament in which Hauschild found himself. 8 On May 13,
Under the Penal Code, a public defender may not be assigned to represent an indigent defendant in a case in which he or she has a conflict of interest (Pen. Code, § 987.2, subds. (a)(3), (d), (e)), and a conflict of interest is inevitably created when a public defender is compelled by his or her excessive caseload to choose between the rights of the various indigent defendants he or she is representing.
(In re Order on Prosecution of Cr. App.
(Fla. 1990)
Hauschild’s declaration makes clear his awareness that his heavy caseload and the inadequate resources of the Mendocino County Public Defender’s
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the representation provided appellant by the Mendocino County Public Defender’s Office was deficient, in that it fell below an objective standard of reasonableness under prevailing professional norms. Thus we turn to the second prong of the applicable test: whether “there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different,” keeping in mind that “[a] reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.”
(Strickland, supra,
IV.
The frailty of the juvenile court’s finding that Hauschild provided appellant effective assistance is reflected in the fact that the court felt it necessary to explain why appellant suffered no prejudice even if the assistance he received from Hauschild was ineffective. With respect to that issue, the court placed special emphasis on the observations in
Ledesma, supra,
The juvenile court failed, however, to consider the
Ledesma
court’s caveat “that deferential scrutiny of counsel’s performance is limited in extent and indeed in certain cases may be altogether unjustified. ‘[Djeference is not abdication’ [citation]; it must never be used to insulate counsel’s performance from meaningful scrutiny and thereby automatically validate challenged acts or omissions. Otherwise, the constitutional right to the effective assistance of counsel would be reduced to form without substance.”
(Ledesma, supra,
Ledesma, supra,
The remaining reason Judge Wilson found appellant was not prejudiced by Hauschild’s representation was that, while Judge LaCasse’s jurisdictional
Nor did Hauschild do anything to buttress appellant’s testimony. The theory of Hauschild’s defense was that appellant had no reason to molest T.S. and was not the sort of person likely to do so. As he emphasized in closing argument, at the time of the alleged molestation appellant was “turning his life around”; he had completed a drug treatment program, ended his past gang involvement, was regularly attending school, playing football, spending time with his 17-year-old girlfriend, and assisting Sherry with the raising of her children and the running of her household. Hauschild also emphasized appellant had never been charged with a sex offense of any sort. However, Hauschild failed to offer any testimonial or other evidence supporting this argument, such as Dr. Renouf’s opinion that appellant “does not fit the typical personality or historical profile for juvenile sex offenders” and “lacked the psychological sophistication” necessary to maintain his innocence in the face of a polygraph test and then pass the test.
Acknowledging that the prosecution’s case boiled down to the question “why would a ten-year-old child make this up?,” Hauschild’s only response was “well, its not the defense’s burden to—to provide an answer to that question. And I don’t think that anyone would have an answer to that question.” But Jason had provided Hauschild several potential answers. First, Hauschild was given information suggesting T.S. may have obtained her knowledge of the sexual act she claimed appellant perpetrated not from his actions but from other sources. As Jason claimed (and Sherry corroborated), T.S. had previously been molested twice by adult members of her
To prevail on his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, appellant must show not just that Hauschild’s deficiencies had some conceivable effect on the outcome of the proceeding, but that “there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different. A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.”
(Strickland, supra,
466 U.S. at pp. 693-694.) Specifically, “[w]hen a defendant challenges a conviction, the question is whether there is a reasonable probability that, absent the errors, the factfinder would have had a reasonable doubt respecting guilt.”
(Id.
at p. 695.) “Finally, the burden of proof that the defendant must meet in order to establish his entitlement to relief on an ineffective-assistance claim is preponderance of the evidence.”
(Ledesma, supra,
Mindful of the foregoing guidelines, we conclude that Hauschild’s deficient performance prejudiced appellant within the meaning of Strickland. First, the case must be considered a close one because there was no eyewitness or physical evidence and the matter turned almost entirely on credibility. Second, the evidence made available to Hauschild by Jason was germane to the central issue of the victim’s credibility. Third, Hauschild failed to produce available evidence indicating that appellant does not fit the typical personality or historical profile for juvenile sex offenders and lacks the psychological sophistication necessary to steadfastly maintain his innocence over a long period of time and in the face of a polygraph test.
We conclude appellant has shown that, as a result of Hauschild’s deficient performance, the jurisdictional proceedings conducted in the Mendocino County Superior Court were fundamentally unfair and unreliable
(Strickland, supra,
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment is reversed and the matter is remanded to the Humboldt County juvenile court with directions to conduct a new jurisdictional hearing.
Haerle, J., and Lambden, J., concurred.
Notes
We are aware that, in order to protect the privacy of minors involved in delinquency, dependency, and family law cases, many courts of appeal have recently adopted the practice of identifying such minors only by their initials, in accordance with an “informal recommendation of the Reporter of Decisions.”
(Adoption of O.M.
(2008)
We use initials to identify the minor victim in this case because, according to statistical information gathered by the Social Security Administration and made available on its Web site (<http://www.ssa.gov/cgi-bin/babyname.cgi> [as of Apr. 27, 2009]), her name is not among the 1,000 most popular names for any year of birth in the last nine years, which is the objective standard used by the Reporter of Decisions to determine whether a particular name is “unusual” within the meaning of California Rules of Court, rule 8.400.
The sealed reports do not shed light on the truthfulness of T.S., the alleged victim, but they paint a picture of Sherry S. very different from that presented at the jurisdictional hearing. As material to the present proceeding, the numerous reports show that complaints were frequently made to CPS that Sherry’s children suffered general neglect and physical abuse, that the children were at risk for “sibling abuse,” that her residence was a “drug house,” and that Sherry “has a known history of selling drugs and sex to men” and was “known to have sex with under age boys.” Some of the investigations of these reports proved “inconclusive,” in others the complaints were unsubstantiated, but many, though it is hard to know exactly which ones, were “substantiated.”
Though motions for a new jurisdictional hearing are not specifically authorized by the Welfare and Institutions Code, they have been deemed tantamount to motions under Welfare and Institutions Code sections 775 and 778 (relating to petitions to change, modify or set aside orders), and courts have in that way subjected them to the same rules as are applicable to motions for new trial in adult criminal cases.
(In re Kenneth S.
(2005)
As material, Evidence Code section 710 states that “[e]veiy witness before testifying shall take an oath or make an affirmation or declaration in the form provided by law, except that a child under the age of 10 . . . may be required only to promise to tell the truth.”
Hauschild states in his declaration that at the time he was representing appellant he was also representing defendants in two other sexual molestation cases, a minor charged in adult court with a serious felony, and he was then “solely responsible for all LPS Conservatorship cases within the Mendocino County Courts” and was engaged in a jury trial of such a case at the time of appellant’s jurisdictional hearing.
Appellant claims Hauschild never disclosed the foregoing information while he was representing him, and, if he had, appellant would have sought other counsel through the filing of a
Marsden
motion.
(People v. Marsden
(1970)
People
v.
Cook, supra,
The ABA’s interest in this issue is long-standing. (ABA Standing Com. on Legal Aid & Indigent Defendants, Gideon Undone: The Crisis in Indigent Defense Funding (Moran ed. 1983) [rep. of 1982 conference hearing]; ABA Standing Com. on Legal Aid & Indigent Defendants, Lefstein, Criminal Defense Services for the Poor (1982).) In 2004, after extensive hearings on the issue, the ABA found that “[f]orty years after
Gideon
v.
Wainwright,
indigent defense in the United States remains in a state of crisis, resulting in a system that lacks fundamental fairness and places poor persons at constant risk of wrongful conviction” and that, as a result, “the integrity of the criminal justice system is eroded and the legitimacy of criminal convictions is called into question.” (ABA Standing Com. on Legal Aid & Indigent Defendants, Gideon’s Broken Promise: America’s Continuing Quest for Equal Justice (2004) p. 38, boldface omitted.) The ABA emphasized that “[fjunding for indigent defense
The Rules of Professional Conduct provide that a member of the California Bar “shall not intentionally, recklessly, or repeatedly fail to perform legal services with competence," which includes the exercise of such “diligence” as is reasonably necessary for the performance of a particular legal service. (Rule 3-110(A)-(B).) Where the member knows or should know that continued representation will result in the incompetent provision of legal services in a case before a tribunal, he or she shall, with the permission of the tribunal, seek to withdraw from such representation, after giving due notice to the client and allowing time for employment of other counsel. (Rule 3-700(A)(2), (B)(2).)
We did not in
Ligda v. Superior Court, supra,
With respect to the responsibilities of a supervising public defender, the ABA Opinion states as follows: “In dealing with workload issues, supervisors frequently must balance competing demands for scarce resources. As Comment [2] to Rule 5.2 [of the Model Rules of Professional Conduct as amended by the ABA House of Delegates through August 2003] observes, if the question whether a lawyer’s workload is too great is ‘reasonably arguable,’ the supervisor of the lawyer has the authority to decide the question.
In the final analysis, however, each client is entitled to competent and diligent representation. If a supervisor knows that a subordinate’s workload renders the lawyer unable to provide competent and diligent representation and the supervisor fails to take reasonable remedial action, under Rule 5.1(c), the supervisor himself is responsible for the subordinate’s violation of the Rules of Professional Conduct.”
(ABA Opinion,
supra,
at p. 8, fn. omitted, italics added, citing, inter alia,
Attorney Grie v. Comm. v. Ficker
(Ct.App. 1998)
