Opinion
This appeal by the People is taken from a superior court order setting aside (pursuant to Pen. Code, § 995) counts one, four, seven, and nine of a grand jury indictment returned against defendant Nathan Ellis. Each of the dismissed counts stated a charge of kidnaping for purpose of robbery, a violation of Penal Code section 209.
As relevant here Penal Code section 209 provides: “[A]ny person who kidnaps or carries away any individual to commit robbery, ... is guilty of a felony. . . .”
The term “kidnaping” as used in Penal Code section 209, and as perti
*68
nent here, is defined by section 207 of the same code in this manner: “Every person who forcibly steals, takes, or arrests any person in this state, and carries him into another country, state, or county, or into another part of the same county, ... is guilty of kidnaping.” (See
People
v.
Daniels,
We have concluded that the superior court’s order rests upon a misapplication of the rule announced in People v. Daniels, supra, and that the order must therefore be reversed. Our reasons follow.
Daniels (p. 1139) holds: “[T]hat the intent of the Legislature in amending Penal Code section 209 in 1951 was to exclude from its reach not only ‘standstill’ robberies . . . but also those in which the movements of the victim are merely incidental to the commission of the robbery and do not substantially increase the risk of harm over and above that necessarily present in the crime of robbery itself.” Elsewhere the court, referring to the section 207 definition of kidnaping, stated (p. 1130): “ ‘[T]he Legislature could not reasonably have intended that such incidental movement be a taking “. . . from one part of the county to another.” ’ ”
The term “incidental” is ordinarily defined as “subordinate, nonessential, or attendant in position or significance. . . .” (Webster’s New Internal. Diet. (3d ed.)); and as “Depending upon or appertaining to something else as primary” (Black’s Law Dict. (4th Ed.)). But if this broad meaning be given the term “incidental” as used in Daniels, it must have the effect of nullifying section 209, for by definition a kidnaping for the purpose of robbery is subordinate, secondary and ancillary, and therefore incidental, to the intended crime.
In Daniels the court reversed three section 209 (kidnaping for the purpose of robbery) convictions. In that case on three occasions one or both of the defendants gained entrance to residential quarters occupied by a lone woman. In the course of ensuing robberies and rapes the victims, under compulsion, moved respective distances within their living areas of 18 feet, 5 or 6 feet, and 30 feet. The court pointed out (p. 1140): “. . . that the brief movements which defendants Daniels and Simmons compelled their victims to perform in furtherance of robbery were merely incidental to that crime and did not substantially increase the risk of harm otherwise present. Indeed, when in the course of a robbery a defendant does no more than move his victim around inside the premises in which he finds him—whether it be a residence, as here, or a place of business or other enclosure—his conduct generally will not be deemed to constitute the offense proscribed by section 209. Movement across a room or from one room to another, - in short, cannot reasonably be found to be asportation ‘into another part of the same county.’ (Pen. Code, § 207.)”
*69 A reading of Daniels will indicate no intent to emasculate the kidnaping for the purpose of robbery statute, but rather to prevent its application under inappropriate factual circumstances. Its holding will only be applied, the court indicated, where the asportative acts are “integral to other crimes and are not essentially kidnaping” (p. 1136), or where they “ ‘played no significant role in the crimes’ ” or where they occurred “as a subsidiary incident,” or did not facilitate “the commission of a felony.” (Pp. 1137-1138.) And the court expressed agreement with the drafters of the proposed Model Penal Code for the need to make “clear the purpose to preclude kidnaping convictions based on trivial changes of location having no bearing on the evil at hand.” (P. 1138.)
In
Daniels
the court appears to have relied substantially on
People
v.
Levy,
In People v. Levy, supra, as a couple were about to emerge from their automobile two men entered. One took control of the vehicle and drove aimlessly for a considerable distance around city streets while the other, in the back seat, robbed the victims. The men were convicted of kidnaping and other offenses. The appellate court reversed the kidnaping convictions, concluding that the car’s movement in no way facilitated the robberies since they could as well have been committed in the parked car. The court said (p. 165): “In the case before us the movement of the automobile, which was itself the situs of the robbery, was not essentially different in relation to the robbery than would be the tying up of a victim in a bank and his movement into another room. In essence the crime remained a robbery although some of the kidnaping statutory language might literally also apply to it.”
In
People
v.
Lombardi, supra,
We advert to the holding of the
Daniels
court, stated
ante,
that “ ‘the Legislature could not reasonably have intended that such
incidental
movement be a taking “. . . from one part of the county to another.” ’ ” (Italics added; p. 1131.) It becomes clear from a reading of
Daniels,
and the authority there relied upon, that the term “incidental” was used in the sense that the asportation play no significant or substantial part in the planned robbery, or that it be a more or less “ ‘trivial changes of location having no bearing on the evil at hand.’” (
It thus appears to be the rule of Daniels that where “the movements of the victim are merely incidental to the commission of the robbery [i.e., playing no significant or substantial part in the attempt to accomplish that crime], and do not substantially increase the risk of harm over and above that necessarily present in the crime of robbery itself” (see p. 1139), the strictures of Penal Code section 209 are not applicable.
Such appears to be the interpretation given Daniels by several post Daniels cases of the Courts of Appeal of this state.
In
People
v.
Ross,
In
People
v.
Ramirez,
*71
People
v.
Thomas,
In
People
v.
Schafer,
We note that the court in People v. Schafer, supra, by way of dictum stated (p. 560): “It is clear from the record that the movements of [the girls] were solely to facilitate the commission of the rapes,” thus implying contrary to Daniels, that such a purpose also precluded a kidnaping conviction. (Italics added.) Such, we think, is clearly not the law. If it were, *72 it would operate as a grant of immunity from the kidnaping law to one whose asportative acts, regardless of their substantiality, or the distance or time involved, were solely for the purpose of rape or some other felony —while one whose asportative acts were purposeless and otherwise without felonious or other criminal intent would be guilty of kidnaping, punishable by a maximum of 25 years’ imprisonment. (See Pen. Code, §§ 207, 208.)
In the recent case of
People
v.
Shirley,
We now apply the rule of Daniels to the facts of the case before us.
Count One: A young lady entering the street door of her apartment house was accosted by two men armed with knives who demanded that she take them to her upstairs apartment. She followed orders, taking the men to her living quarters where upon closing the door they proceeded to take money and property from her person and from the premises.
Count Four: Two days later another girl walking up the outside steps of her apartment building, was confronted by the same men, one armed with a knife and the other with a gun. They told her that they wanted to go to her apartment which was two and one-half flights upstairs. Upstairs, among other crimes, they took property from the girl’s person and apartment.
Count Seven: On the same evening another girl emerged from her car and walked toward her apartment house. Outside the street door a man armed with a knife came up to her demanding that she take him to her apartment and show him her valuables. A second man then appeared and the three entered the apartment house door and started for the apartment. At the next floor level the victim started screaming loudly. After unsuccess *73 fully trying to stop her by choking and hastily trying to remove her ring the men fled.
Count Nine: About two weeks later two men confronted a woman as she stepped out of an automobile. Her money was taken, after which one of the men said, “Let’s go up to your place and see what there is worth taking.” Under threats she took them to her apartment which was ransacked by the men, who in addition to other crimes, stole more money and property.
Defendant Nathan Ellis was identified by each of the victims as one of the robbers. As previously indicated he was charged, along with other crimes, with four counts of kidnaping for the purpose of robbery. (Pen. Code, § 209.) Thereafter Ellis, relying on
People
v.
Daniels, supra,
Here, in each case, the intent of Ellis and his companion, among other things, was to rob their victim of valuable property which they hoped to, and in three of the cases did, find in her apartment. The asportation of the girls from the street to their upstairs apartments was essential to the accomplishment of the criminal purpose. Adopting language used by the Daniels court, the movement of the victims did play a “significant role in the crimes of robbery” and certainly did “facilitate the commission of a felony.” Here it cannot reasonably be said that the girls’ asportations were inconsequential or “trivial changes of location having no bearing on the evil at hand.”
Furthermore, the asportation of the female victims from the public street to their confined upstairs apartments fulfilled the second requirement of
Daniels;
such movement did “substantially increase the risk of harm over and above that necessarily present in the crime of robbery itself.” (
There is no merit to the contention that whether a kidnaping occurred depends on the
distance
covered by the asportation. The test is whether the asportation was
substantial
which in turn depends upon the circumstances of the case.
(See Daniels,
pp. 1131 (fn. 5), 1138 (fn. 11), and 1138-1139.) Obviously a heinous kidnaping might occur in the seizure of a victim and his forcible detention unknown to family or friends in the
*74
house next door but a few feet away. On the other hand, as in
People
v.
Levy, supra,
In the circumstances of the instant case we hold that it may not be said, as a matter of law: (1) that the asportation of Ellis’ victims was not substantial, or (2) that it did not facilitate the commission of the upstairs robberies, or as with count seven tend to facilitate such criminal purpose, or (3) that the probability of harm to the victims was not substantially increased thereby.
It follows that the determination of the grand jury that there was reasonable and probable cause to believe Ellis guilty of the kidnaping for purpose of robbery charges must be respected and upheld. (See
Lorenson
v.
Superior Court,
The order dismissing counts one, four, seven and nine of the indictment is reversed.
Molinari, P. J., and Sims, J., concurred.
