Opinion
I
Introduction
In
People
v.
Goodner
(1990)
II
Facts
Defendant pleaded guilty to robbery and admitted two prior serious felony allegations; he does not challenge the legal sufficiency of the plea or those admissions. He does challenge the result of the trial on remand, which concerned the truth of two other prior serious felony allegations. The relevant evidence as to the challenged priors is summarized below.
In 69112 the evidence showed that defendant indicated a willingness to enter a plea to second degree burglary and that as to this stipulated charge, defendant entered a guilty plea, in that “on or about the 7th day of April, 1978, [he] entered a house located at 644[1] Mt. Willington (sic), San Jose, California with intent to commit theft therein.” In the portion of the report labeled “Defendant’s Statement: (Attached)” the probation officer summarized defendant’s statement regarding several burglaries, including the one underlying 69112. As to that offense, the probation officer recounted defendant’s statement as follows: “On April 11, 1978, after the defendant consumed a six-pack of beer and smoked a marijuana cigarette, he chose to burglarize a home with James Douglas Ward. While inside the victim’s residence, for approximately five minutes, the defendant poured some vodka into a flask, while Ward ransacked the home. They later purchased food with the money Ward stole and as to the jewelry, Ward threw it away because it was of little value.” In addition, the trial court read into the record a statement “purportedly [from appellant] Goodner” in 69112 1 in which defendant said his friend Ward told him “he knew of a house where nobody was home” where they could get either some beer or “booze” and that once they had broken into the house, “Doug went through the bedroom. I went and got some booze from a cabinet. Doug got some pot and $20.00 and some earrings from the bedroom. We then left the house and went back to the donut shop.”
*1328 In 76965 the preliminary examination transcript contained uncontradicted testimony of the victim, Leland Evans, that on August 22, 1980, he lived in a “single family ranch style home” at 19731 Almadén Road, San Jose. The probation report included a summary of facts describing the premises entered and burglarized as the residence of Leland Evans and defendant’s statement to the probation officer agreeing with the probation officer’s summary and admitting that he burglarized the Evans residence.
Ill
Discussion
A. Admissibility of Defendant’s Statements in Probation Report in 69112
With regard to 69112, defendant contends the trial court erred in relying upon his statements to his probation officer, which are contained in the probation department report, to establish that he had been convicted of a prior residential burglary for the purpose of sentence enhancement under Penal Code section 667.
2
In arguing that his statements to the probation officer in 69112 are inadmissible against him in this subsequent criminal proceeding, defendant claims that, because the statements were “legislatively compelled,” their introduction into evidence violates his privilege against self-incrimination. Nothing in defendant’s argument convinces this court that defendant’s statements in the probation report could not be used to prove the elements of the prior conviction. (See
Goodner I, supra,
226 Cal.App.3d at pp. 613-616; accord,
People
v.
Garcia
(1989)
Section 667, subdivision (a) imposes a five-year sentence enhancement for each proved prior conviction of a serious felony identified in sections 667, subdivision (d) and 1192.7, subdivision (c)(18). The latter section includes as a serious felony “burglary of an inhabited dwelling house ... or inhabited portion of any other building.” The People sought to prove that defendant’s prior conviction in 69112 was indeed a residential burglary by offering that portion of the probation report in which the probation officer reports that the defendant said he went to the victim’s “residence," “burglarize[d]” it and took some vodka and some jewelry and defendant’s attached statement in which he admitted that his accomplice took some “pot and $20.00 and some earrings from the bedroom.”
In
Goodner I,
we held that “where the nature of the proceeding is ‘to determine whether a defendant has suffered a prior serious felony conviction
*1329
(not to determine whether he is guilty of that earlier offense)’ ...[,] the defendant’s statements contained in the probation report . . . , albeit hearsay, are . . . admissible as an exception to the hearsay rule to explain his admissions.” (
This conclusion was based on the Supreme Court’s ruling in
People
v.
Guerrero
(1988)
Since
Guerrero,
several courts have found a variety of items from the file of a prior conviction proper for consideration. In defendant’s first appeal, for example, we held the trial court erred in striking two prior serious felony allegations by refusing to consider the probation report in 69112 and the preliminary examination transcript in 76965 in order to determine the nature of the burglaries.
(Goodner I, supra,
*1330 Upon remand in the case at bar, the probation report was admitted pursuant to our holding in Goodner /; the trial court allowed as admissions only defendant’s statements regarding the nature of the prior offense while other hearsay in the report was excluded. Defendant, however, claims the introduction of the admissions violates his “federal and state constitutional rights.”
The federal Constitution does not necessarily require exclusion of defendant’s prior admission to a probation officer.
(Minnesota
v.
Murphy
(1984)
In
People
v.
Hicks
(1971)
In
People
v.
May
(1988)
The
May
court reasoned that “[g]iven the probable aim of the voters in adopting section 28(d), namely, to dispense with exclusionary rules derived solely from the state Constitution, it is not reasonably likely that the California voters intended to preserve, in the form of a ‘statutory’ privilege, a judicially created exclusionary rule
expressly rejected
by the United States Supreme Court under the federal Constitution. (See
Harris
v.
New York
[1971]
*1332
In reaching this conclusion,
May
distinguished
Ramona R.
v.
Superior Court
(1985)
Our Supreme Court has rejected the argument that using the record of conviction to prove priors is unfair because it allows enhancements to be based on statements “whose future significance the accused was not aware of at the time of the prior proceedings.” The court explained, “The law regularly requires persons to suffer the consequences of their actions, even though they had not or could not foresee those consequences.”
(People
v.
Guerrero, supra,
We conclude that, given defendant Goodner was not compelled to make a statement to the probation department as part of the preinvestigation report which is mandated by section 1203 or pursuant to rule 411.5 of the California Rules of Court and that he was not facing a rebuttable presumption of a more severe sentence absent submission of such a statement, his statements to the probation department were not legislatively compelled by section 1203. We also conclude that Evidence Code section 940 does not preserve the judicially created exclusionary rule set forth in
Hicks,
in light of both the holding in
Minnesota
v.
Murphy, supra,
As for any due process claim, the case law clearly establishes that “ ‘[i]f a defendant contends the hearsay information is unfair or untrue[,] he is given an opportunity to refute it. [Citation.]’ ”
(Goodner I, supra,
The trial court properly admitted defendant’s admissions to establish whether 69112 was in fact a residential burglary.
*1333 B. Insufficiency of the Evidence in 69112
Defendant claims the evidence presented as to 69112 was legally insufficient to show that the structure he burglarized was an inhabited residence. We disagree.
Evidence can be held sufficient to support a finding that a prior burglary conviction involved an “inhabited dwelling” if the record of the prior conviction identified the structure as a “residence.”
(People
v.
Garcia, supra,
216 Cal.App.3d at pp. 237-238;
People
v.
Harrell
(1989)
In the instant case, the probation report from 69112 contains defendant’s admissions that he and his accomplice chose to burglarize a “home” and that they were inside the “residence” for about five minutes when defendant poured some vodka from a flask while his accomplice ransacked the home, from which they then stole money and jewelry.
In a statement from the 69112 report, which the trial court noted was “purportedly [from appellant] Goodner,” defendant said he and his accomplice burglarized the house in question because his accomplice said “nobody was home” and that, while inside, defendant “got some booze from a cabinet” while his accomplice “got some pot and $20.00 and some earrings from the bedroom.”
The statements of defendant as recited by the trial court were not made inadmissible under the hearsay rule. (Evid. Code, §§ 1271, 1280, 1220; see also 1 Witkin, Cal. Evidence (3d ed. 1986) § 637, p. 625.)
Defendant’s admissions of what he did in the house, what was inside the house, including the fact that there was an identifiable “bedroom,” and what he and his accomplice took from the house, provided evidence from which a rational trier of fact could make an inference of residence. The evidence was sufficient to support the trial court’s finding that 69112 was a serious felony.
C. Imposition of a Five-year Rather Than a One-year Enhancement for 76965
With regard to 76965, defendant contends the trial court failed to exercise its discretion to sentence defendant to either a five-year term for the prior serious felony enhancement or a one-year term pursuant to section 667.5, subdivision (b) based on the same underlying offense. We agree with the People that, despite this court’s pronouncement in footnote 6 of Goodner *1334 I, the trial court was correct that it had no discretion to strike the five-year enhancement.
In footnote 6 of our first opinion in this case, we stated: “We note that, in the event the prior serious felony conviction allegation based upon 76965 is subsequently found true, the sentencing court could impose either a five-year term for that enhancement or the one-year term pursuant to Penal Code section 667.5, subdivision (b) based on the same underlying offense; the term not imposed would then be stricken. (See Pen. Code, § 654,
People
v.
Hopkins
(1985)
On May 6, 1986, the Legislature enacted legislation intended to overrule
People
v.
Fritz
(1985)
D. Double Jeopardy
Lastly, defendant renews his double jeopardy argument that this court rejected in its earlier published opinion.
(Goodner I, supra,
IV
Disposition
The judgment is affirmed.
Capaccioli, J., and Bamattre-Manoukian, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied October 22, 1992. Mosk, J., and Kennard, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
We infer, as do the People, that the statement read into the record was defendant’s “[attached” statement referred to in the probation report in 69112.
Further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise specified.
Evidence Code section 940 states: “To the extent that such privilege exists under the Constitution of the United States or the State of California, a person has a privilege to refuse to disclose any matter that may tend to incriminate him.”
