Opinion
Armando Mejias Gallegos, defendant, has appealed from a judgment committing him to prison after a jury found him guilty of at *515 tempted escape in violation of Penal Code section 4532, subdivision (b), and that he had used force and violence in the attempt.
Because of the omission of certain required instructions, the judgment must be reversed.
The evidence was sufficient to support a finding defendant attempted to escape from the Imperial County jail while confined there on a felony charge.
His testimony was that he had no desire to escape, but had left his cell when a jailer had been pushed into the cell by other prisoners, and defendant fеared to be found in a cell with an injured officer; he went to the bottom floor of the jail where the kitchen was because he was hungry.
The following instruction was requested by defendant: “An attempt to commit a crime cоnsists of two elements, namely, a specific intent to commit the crime, and a direct but ineffectual act done toward its commission.
“In determining whether or not such, an act was done, it is necessary to distinguish between merе preparation, on the one hand, and the actual commencement of the doing of the criminal deed, on the other. Mere preparation, which may consist of planning the offense or of devising, obtaining or arranging the means for its commission, is not sufficient to constitute an attempt; but acts of a person who intends to commit a crime will constitute an attempt where they themselves clearly indicate a certain, unambiguous intent to commit that specific crime, and, in themselves, are an immediate step in the present execution of the criminal design, the progress of which would be completed unless interrupted by some circumstance not intended in the original design.”
While refusing that instruction, the court instructed that: “To constitute criminal intent it is not necessary that there should exist an intent to violate the law. Where a person intentionally does that whiсh the law declares to be a crime, he is acting with criminal intent, even though he may not know that his act or conduct is unlawful.”
An attempt is a specific intent to commit a substantive crime, plus a direct, unequivocal aсt toward that end
(People
v.
Camodeca,
An escape is an unlawful departure from the limits of an inmate’s custody
(People
v.
Sharp,
*516
Although an attempt to escape is made punishable under Penal Code section 4532 and not under Penal Code section 664
(People
v.
Siegel,
The argument is unsound that because the punishmеnt for attempted escape is specifically provided for in section 4532, the crime is moved out of the class of attempts of which a specific intent is an element, to the status of a substantive crime that requires only a general intent to commit the act: that act being an attempt to escape. The argument, in opening the possibility that there is such a crime as an attempt to attempt to escape, lеads onto a logical merry-go-round.
It is argued that an attempt to escape in relation to the requirement of a specific intent is analogous to an assault, considered as an attempted battery. There are certain distinctions. Although it is deemed to be an attempted battery, an assault has a statutory definition in different terms: it is an unlawful attempt, coupled with a present ability, to commit a violent injury on the person оf another (Pen. Code, § 240). It is said not to call for a specific intent because all that is required is the doing of an act intentionally whose direct, natural and probable consequence, if successfully completed, would be the infliction of violent injury upon another
(People
v.
Rocha,
In consequence, the only intent required for an assault is the intent to attempt to commit a battery
(People
v.
Rocha, supra,
It does not follow that the only intent required for commission of the crime of attempted escape is the intent to attempt to commit an escape. It is not possible to attempt to escape without intending to escape.
The introduction into the conceрt of attempt to escape of a requirement of intentionally doing an act, the direct, natural and probable consequence of which, if successfully completed, would be an escape, toо narrowly limits the application of the statute. Such an act could be to' pass part way through a door,' window or other opening to the outside of the place of confinement before falling back, being pulled back or disabled.
*517
In
People
v.
Fritz,
The Legislature has not proscribed the doing of any single defined act as an attempt to escape. Many acts, including some non-criminal in themselves, might be conducive toward carrying out an intention to escape, and the scope of the statute proscribing such an attempt should not be limited to specifically designated acts.
Whether an instruction in the exact language of the requested instruction must have been given, it was error not to instruct that the crime of attempt to escape required a specific intent on the part of Gallegos to escape from the jail, plus a direct, unequivocal act to effect that purpose. 1
The case of
United States
v.
Woodring,
In a case involving only conviction of an attempt under the same statute, the court said: “The accused’s enterprise substantially aborted. Gauged by ordinary standards of success, it failed of its purpose. The issue was submitted to the jury in an instruction stating that ‘an attempt is an act tending toward the accomplishment, and done in part execution of the design to commit a crime, exceeding an intent but falling short of an execution of it.’”
(Giles
v.
United States,
Lack of a specific intent to escape is not a valid defense where a completed escape has occurred.
(People
v.
Hayes,
If the crime of escape is completed, it is of no significance that the defendant denies an intent to escape
(People
v.
Hayes, supra,
16 Cal.App.3d
*518
662, 668, 670), so that it is proper to reject evidence showing a lack of motive or intent
(People
v.
Hayes, supra,
The court in the trial of the case at bench properly permitted testimony that defendant did not intend to escape from the jail. Similar testimony has been presented in other trials for attempted escape
(People
v.
Stabler,
202 Cal.App.2d. 866 [
There are no specific acts that constitute an attempt to escape if divorced from a specific intent to do so. Consequently, proof of the essence of the crime, apart from possible declaratiоns, admissions or confessions of a defendant, must depend upon inferences that observable conduct was motivated by an intent to escape.
It is . only to that class of evidence that the instruction given on cirсumstantial evidence could have applied. Having given that instruction 3 in a case wholly dependent upon circumstantial evidence, the court should have instructed further, sua sponte, that such evidence must not only be consistеnt with guilt, but irreconcilable with any other rational conclusion, which is to say no more than that specific intent to escape, provable only by reasonable inference, must be shown to exist beyond a reasоnable doubt.
There is only one crime of escape defined by Penal Code section 4532; if it is done by force and violence it is punishable more severely than if not done with force and violence. (See fn. 9 to
People
v.
Lynn, supra,
It was error, therefore, not to inform the jury they might find the defendant guilty of attempted escape, even though not convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that the attempt to escape was made by force and violence.
We cannot say the refusаl of the trial court to instruct that the jury must find the existence of a specific intent to escape was not reversible error. We might be convinced of the existence of that intent; we cannot say as a matter of law it existed; the question was for the trier of fact.
The judgment is reversed.
Brown (Gerald), P. J., and Cologne, J., concurred.
Notes
In
People
v.
Gibbs, 12
Cal.App.3d 526 [
There was given also the instruction requested and refusеd in the case at bench. The defendants in Gibbs were convicted of attempted escape.
There are nonspecific-intent crimes other than escape,, an attempt to commit which is a crime, e.g., incest. (See
People
v.
Austin,
The instruction given was this: “The testimony of a witness, a writing, a material object, or anything presented to the senses offered to prove the existence or nonexistence of a fact is either direct or circumstantial evidence.
“Direct evidence means evidence that directly proves, a fact, without an inference, and which in itself, if true, conclusively establishes that fact.
“Circumstantial evidence means evidence that proves a fact from which an inferеnce of the existence of another fact may be drawn.
“An inference is a deduction of fact that may logically and reasonably be drawn from another fact or group of facts established by the evidenсe.
“It is not necessary that facts be proved by direct evidence. They may be proved also by circumstantial evidence or by a combination of direct evidence and circumstantial evidence. Both direct evidence and circumstantial evidence are acceptable as a means of proof. Neither is entitled to any greater weight than the other.”
