Opinion
Defendant went to trial on charges of second degree murder of Devone Lee McMurray (a child of 13 months) and of abusing the child under circumstances likely to produce great bodily harm or death. (Pen. Code, § 273a, subd. (1).) The jury returned a guilty verdict on the latter charge but deadlocked on the first. A mistrial was declared as to the first charge. Defendant appeals from the judgment.
In brief summary, the prosecution evidence showed that defendant lived with the child’s mother and was frequently left alone with the child; on various occasions in September, October and November 1975, the child suffered scratches, scalds, burns and bruises which defendant attributed to accident or carelessness. On November 10, 1975, the child was brought to a hospital exhibiting head bruises and suffering from three separate subdural hematomas, one of which proved fatal. The attending doctor found evidence of other wounds and of several burns. He and another doctor discounted accident as an explanation for the injuries. Both doctors testified to “a reasonable medical certainty” that the child was a victim of the battered child syndrome.
*717 The information charged that defendant had inflicted or caused the child to suffer great bodily harm between July 1, 1975, and November 10, 1975.
A prime issue on appeal is whether the trial court should have given a sua spontejury instruction declaring that a finding of guilt would require the jurors to agree that defendant committed the same act or acts. (See, e.g., CALJIC No. 17.01.)
“If a defendant has been prosecuted for violation of a statute under which any one of several different acts could constitute the offense, the jury must be told that a verdict of guilty must be supported by a unanimous finding that one of the acts was committed.”
(People
v.
Heideman,
Penal Code section 273a is a statute of the latter variety. It punishes the acts generally classed as child abuse.
(People
v.
Wright,
*718
Defendant charges lack of substantial evidence to support the verdict. As is usual in these cases, the defendant was alone with the child much of the time; his denials of guilt formed the only direct evidence; the incriminatory evidence was entirely circumstantial. The test on appeal is whether the verdict is supported by substantial evidence; the reviewing court views the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution and presumes in favor of the verdict every fact which the jury could reasonably deduce from the evidence; if circumstantial evidence reasonably supports the verdict, the appellate court will not reverse.
(People
v.
Mosher,
Defendant charges that section 273a is void for vagueness. That claim has been settled adversely to defendant.
(People
v.
Harris,
Judgment affirmed.
Puglia, P. J., and Janes, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied October 13, 1977.
