Opinion
Introduction
This appeal challenges the California felony-murder rule as it applies to an unintentionally caused death during a high speed automobile chase following the commission of a nonviolent, daylight burglary of an unattended motor vehicle. Solely by force of precedent we hold that the felony-murder rule applies and respondents can be proseсuted for first degree murder.
Statement of the Case and Facts
Respondents were charged by information with murder (Pen. Code, § 187) and several counts of burglary. In response to a Penal Code section 995 motion to set aside the information, the trial court dismissed the murder charge and amended the information to substitute a vehicular manslaughter charge under Penal Code section 192, subdivision 3, paragraph (a). The People have appealed.
The pertinent facts are as follows: On Sunday, February 20, 1977, at about 8:30 a.m., uniformed Cadet Police Officer Guy Ballesteroz was on routine patrol in his vehicle, proceeding southbound on Blackstone Avenue in the City of Fresno. As the officer approached the Fresno Dodge car lot, he saw an older model Plymouth parkеd in front of the lot. He also saw respondents rolling two tires apiece toward the Plymouth. *622 His suspicions aroused, the officer radioed the dispatcher and requested that a police unit be sent.
Officer Ballesteroz kept the respondents under observation as he proceeded past the car lot and stopped at the next intersection. As he rеached that point he saw the respondents stop rolling the tires and walk to the Plymouth on the street. Ballesteroz made a U-turn and headed northbound on Blackstone. The respondents got into the Plymouth and drove away “really fast.” Thereafter, a high speed chase ensued which eventually resulted in respondents’ car running a red light at the intersection of Blackstonе and Barstow Avenues and striking another automobile which had entered the intersection. The driver of the other automobile was killed. Respondents were arrested at the scene. The chase from the car lot covered some 7 miles and lasted approximately 10 to 12 minutes. During the chase the respondents’ car narrowly missed colliding with several other cars including two police vehicles that were positioned to block their escape.
Later investigation revealed that four locked Dodge vans at the car lot had been forcibly entered and the spare tires removed. Fingerprints from both of the respondents were found on the jack stands in some of the vans.
Respondents May Be Prosecuted for First Degree Felony Murder
Penal Code section 189 provides, in pertinent part: “All murder . . . which is committed
in the perpetration of,
or attempt to perpetrate, arson, rape, robbeiy,
burglary,
mayhem, or [lewd acts with a minor], is murder of the first degree; . . .” (Italics added.) This statute imposes strict liability for deaths committed in the course of one of the enumérated felonies whether the killing was caused intentionally, negligently, or merely accidentally.
(People
v.
Cantrell
(1973)
*623
Burglary falls expressly within the purview of California’s first degree felony-murder rule. Any burglaiy within Penal Code section 459 is sufficient to invoke the rule.
(People
v.
Talbot
(1966)
The meaning of murder committed “in the perpetration of’ a felony within Penal Code section 189 also is сlear. The Supreme Court has stated that this language does not require a strict causal relation between the felony and the killing; it is sufficient if both are “parts of one continuous transaction.”
(People
v.
Welch
(1972)
Respondents argue that although California has applied the felony-murder rule to escaping robbers no case has applied the rule to escaping burglars. They cite dicta in
People
v.
Boss, supra,
This distinction does not withstand analysis. A burglary predicated on theft can be committed with equal or greater violence than a robbery, and leaving the scene with the stolen property is equally important. Moreover, the
Boss
dicta has not been cited to support such a distinction in any other California case. Furthermore, other states do not draw a distinction
*624
between burglary and robbery flight. To the contrary, the felony-murder rule has been applied to unintended deaths in the course of burglаry flight. (See, e.g.,
People
v.
Hickman
(1973)
We deem it appropriate, however, to make a few observations concerning the irrationality of applying the felony-murder rule in the present case. In
People
v.
Washington, supra,
The Supreme Court has recently reaffirmed its dislike of the felony-murder rule in
People
v.
Henderson
(1977)
In
People
v.
Satchell
(1971)
Satchell
also considered the propriety of a felony-murder instruction based upon a violation of Penal Code section 12020. This section provides that any person in possessiоn of certain weapons, including a sawed-off shotgun, is guilty of a felony. The court concluded that this offense abstractly viewed also is not inherently dangerous to human life since it makes no distinction between the innocent gun collector and the hardened criminal. Again the court noted that if such possession was of an extremely reckless nature indicating a “conscious disregard for human life,” malice could be imputed via ordinary murder principles. (
In
People
v.
Lopez
(1971)
And in
People
v.
Morales
(1975)
Finally, the grand theft of an automobile in violation of Vehicle Code section 10851 followed by a high speed chase resulting in an unintended death does not constitute the commission of a felony inherently dangerous to human life so as to support the felony-murder doctrine
(People
v.
Williams
(1965)
Therefore, оne may cogently ask: If possession of a concealed weapon by an ex-felon, escape from a county jail, and grand theft of an automobile are not felonies per se dangerous to human life so as to provide a basis for the felony-murder rule, how may the theft of personal property from an unattended vehicle without the use of weapons be deemed inherently dangerous? Furthermore, if such a burglary will not support a second degree felony murder, how can it rationally be used to support a first degree felony murder?
If we were writing on a clean slate, we would hold that respondents should not be prosecuted for felony murder since viewed in the abstract, an automobile burglary is not dangerous to human life. The present case *627 demonstrates why this is so. Respondents committed the burglary on vans parked in a dealer’s lot on a Sunday morning. There were no people inside the vans or on the lot at the time. The respondents were not armed and presumably had no expectation of using violence during the burglary.
Furthermore, treating the flight as part of the burglary to bootstrap the entire transaction into one inherently dangerous to human life simply begs the issue; flight from the scene of any crime is inherently dangerous. So, if a merchant in pursuit of a fleeing shoplifter is killed accidentally (by falling and striking his head on the curb or being hit by a passing automobile), the thief would be guilty of first degree felony murder assuming the requisite intent to steal at the time of the entry intо the store. (Cf.
People
v.
Earl, supra,
As was pointed out in
People
v.
Earl, supra,
*628 Nonetheless, as previously explained the force of precedent requires the application of the first degree felony-murder rule to the instant case.
Respondents Also May Be Prosecuted for Second Degree Murder
For the guidance of the trial court, we observe that respondents may also be prosecuted for ordinary second degree murder. Second degree murder is an unlawful killing with malice aforethought but not willful, premeditated or deliberate.
(People
v.
Jeter
(1964)
In People v. Pulley, supra, 225 Cal.App.2d 366, the defendants stole an automobile and got involved in a 75- to 80-mile-per-hour chase with the police. They ran through a red light and caused a multi-car collision, killing one of the drivers. The court stated: “By any reasonable standard, stealing and driving a stolen car аnd endeavoring to escape pursuing officers with the stolen car, entering an intersection against all rules of the road at 70 to 80 miles per hour and crashing with other cars lawfully proceeding therein, are highly dangerous. Violence in evading the police is within the ambit of risk. Death here was not a freak coincidence, but an expectable incident of thе felony, part of the risk that is set in motion by the original crime.” {Id., at p. 373.) The court upheld the application of the second degree felony-murder rule based upon the automobile theft.
The Supreme Court subsequently disapproved
Pulley
on the ground that the court erroneously looked to the particular facts of the case in determining whether it was “inherently dangerous” so as to support a second degrеe felony murder conviction.
(People
v.
Williams, supra,
*629
Respondents contend that their conduct falls within a specific proscription of Penal Code section 192, subdivision 3, pаragraph (a), vehicular manslaughter, the unlawful killing by a grossly negligent use of the automobile. They argue that where general and specific statutes both punish the same conduct, the specific must control. This argument is unavailing. The respondents’ conduct was more than grossly negligent. The conduct clearly presents an issue of fact as to whether or not respondents еxhibited a wanton and reckless disregard for human life. Respondents drove at high speeds through main thoroughfares of Fresno in an attempt to elude Officer Ballesteroz. At one point in the chase they drove on the wrong side of Herndon Avenue and caused oncoming cars to swerve off of the road to avoid a head-on collision. They then made a U-turn and sped back to Blackstone Avenue, ran a red light and caused other traffic to stop to avoid a collision. Respondents then drove down Blackstone at speeds estimated between 60 and 75 miles per hour and headed straight at two oncoming police vehicles which were attempting to block their flight. Respondents did not reduce their speed as they aрproached the officers’ vehicles, and only a last minute maneuver by the officers avoided a possible fatal collision. At the next intersection respondents’ vehicle which “hadn’t slowed down very much” ran the red light and struck and killed the driver of the other car. Under these facts the foreseeability of serious injury or death was apparent to respondents. (Cf.
People
v.
Pulley, supra,
The judgment is reversed.
Hopper, J., concurred.
Ginsburg, J., * concurred only in the reversal of the judgment of dismissal.
Respondents’ petitions for a hearing by the Supreme Court were denied February 8, 1979. Bird, C. J., Tobriner, J., and Mosk, J., were of the opinion that the petitions should be granted.
Notes
Retired judge of the superior court sitting under assignment by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
