Thе trial court denied appellant’s motion to strike his prior Texas murder conviction. We hold that a defendant may not collaterally attack a prior out-of-state conviction on Boykin/Tahl 1 grounds in the absence of evidence that the convicting jurisdiction required Tahl-like procedural formalities.
Statement of the Case
On April 29, 1996, appellant Donald J. Green was charged by informatiоn filed in Stanislaus County Superior Court with a violation of Vehicle Code section 20001 (failure to stop at the scene of an accident resulting in injury or death). The information further alleged that, during the commission of the offense, appellant inflicted great bodily injury (Pen. Code, § 12022.7). In addition, the information alleged appellant had suffered a 1978 serious felony conviction for murder in the state of Texas, within the meaning of Penal Code sections 667, subdivision (d) and 1192.7, subdivision (c).
On June 21, 1996, appellant’s motion to strike the great bodily injury allegation was granted. On May 2, 1997, appellant’s motion to strike the prior felony conviction, on the ground it was obtained in violation of Boykin/Tahl, was heard and denied. Thereafter, appellant admitted the prior conviction allegation and the matter proceeded to jury trial on the charged offense. The jury returned with its verdict of guilty on May 9, 1997. Appellant was sentenced on July 24, 1997, to a total term of four years (the midterm doubled) in state prison.
Statement of Facts
Charged Offense:
The facts of the charged offense are uncontested on appeal. In brief, on February
Prior Conviction:
In 1978, when appellant was 17 years old, he entered a plea of guilty to the murder of Larry Walker. Walker was stabbed to death during a gathering in a trailer house. Appellant and Walker had been socializing with friends and both had been drinking. Earlier, the two had exchanged “words.” Appellant was very angry with Walker, although the reason is not disclosed in the record. Walker was extremely intoxicated, to the point where he could not defend himself, when he was killed. There were several eyewitnesses tо the murder. Appellant left the scene and was picked up by law enforcement shortly thereafter. He had blood all over him and carried a buck knife, which later proved to be the murder weapon.
Appellant was represented in the Texas proceeding by counsel who, in a declaration filed in this case by the Peоple in response to the motion to strike, stated that appellant had been advised of his constitutional rights. Appellant entered a plea of guilty and then, according to Texas procedure, the case was submitted to the jury for the purpose of imposing a penalty. The jury heard the testimony of the witnesses and other evidence before settling on a term of 60 years. The reporter’s transcript of the plea proceeding does not show that the Texas trial court obtained knowing and intelligent waivers from appellant of the constitutional rights enumerated in
In re Tahl, supra,
Discussion
Appellant claims his motion to strike the prior conviction should have been grantеd because the Texas conviction is constitutionally infirm and because equal protection requires he be permitted to attack that prior conviction collaterally. Respondent argues the language in
People
v.
Allen
(1999)
A brief background is helpful. In
Boykin, supra,
The application of
Boykin
to prior convictions under federal law arose in
Custis v. United States
(1994)
“We think that since the decision in
Johnson
v.
Zerbst
[(1938)
“Ease of administration also supports the distinction. As revealed in a number of the cases cited in this opinion, failure to аppoint counsel at all will generally appear from the judgment roll itself, or from an accompanying minute order. But determination of claims of ineffective assistance of counsel, and failure to assure that a guilty plea was voluntary, would require sentencing courts to rummage through frequently nonexistent or difficult to obtain state-court transcripts or records that may date from another era, and may come from any one of the 50 states.
“The interest in promoting the finality of judgments provides additional support for our constitutional conclusion. . . . [This principle] bear[s] extra weight in cases in which the prior convictions, such as one challenged by Custis, are based on guilty pleas, because when a guilty plea is at issue, ‘the concern with finality served by the limitation on collateral attack has special force.’ [Citation.]” (Custis, supra, 511 U.S. at pp. 496-497 [114 S.Ct. at pp. 1738-1739].)
Thus, there is no right to collaterally challenge a prior conviction on federal constitutional grounds except in cases involving Gideon error. 2
Many have argued that
Garcia
implicitly overruled
Sumstine.
Others have taken a contrary position. The Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Allen
ended the debate. According to the
Allen
court,
Sumstine
“. . . permits a criminal defendant to challenge the validity, in his present trial, of a prior felony conviction on
Boykin-Tahl
grounds. Although to enhance a criminal defendant’s sentence with a prior conviction that was itself obtained in violation of the Constitution is unconstitutional
(Burgett
v.
Texas
[(1967)
Thus, the requirement of an express waiver of the enumerated constitutional rights established by
Tahl
and the procedure for proving an invalid prior cоnviction announced in
Sumstine
serve to encourage the earliest possible review of constitutional challenges and eliminate the need for lengthy evidentiary hearings, and their concomitant delays, during the trial of the current offense.
(Allen, supra,
21 Cal.4th at pp. 429-430.) The premise in
Allen
is that, after November 7, 1969, the date
Tahl
was decided, evidence of a knowing and intelligent waiver of the identified constitutional rights will apрear on the record in all California cases and the existence of such a record will eliminate the need for a protracted inquiry into the voluntariness of the plea on which the prior conviction rests.
(Allen,
at p. 438.) The expectation that evidence of the waivers will show on the
This case, obviously, cannot accurately be characterized as either pre- or post
-Tahl
because it involves a conviction in the state of Texas, a jurisdiction which has never been bound by the rule announced in
Tahl.
We therefore cannot expect evidence pertinent to the concerns addressed in
Tahl
to appear on the face of the Texas record. However, the absence of such a record does not establish conclusively that no advisements were given or that appellant’s
wаivers were involuntary or unknowing, realities appellant fails to appreciate. The absence of compliance with
Tahl
does not mean the prior conviction was procured in violation of federal constitutional standards; it means instead that reversal is required only if consideration of the total circumstances establishes constitutional error.
(Allen, supra,
Where does this leave this defendant? The question remains unanswered by the majority in
Allen.
However, application of the reasoning of the majority in
Allen,
read in light of the cases cited above, leads to what we believe is the correct result. We agree with Justice Baxter’s view, in his concurring opinion in
Allen,
about prior
out-of-state
convictions. Justice Baxter states in pertinent part: “The majority aсknowledge that the
Sumstine
rule, as applied to
Boykin-Tahl
issues, is tolerable only insofar as we can expect the record of the challenged prior guilty plea readily to show, on its face, that the defendant knew and waived his rights. For this reason, only priors governed by Tahl’s requirement of
express
admonitions and waivers may be the subject of a
Sumstine
motion. Just as this principle eliminates
Boykin-Tahl
challenges to
California
priors that predate
Tahl,
so must
Boykin-Tahl
challenges to non-California priors be excluded, except where it aрpears beyond doubt that the guilty pleas underlying such convictions were subject, under the law of the convicting jurisdictions, to
Tahl-like
procedural formalities.”
(Allen, supra,
We conclude that, in the absence of the expectation that the advisements and waivers
We do not single out for different treatment those defendants suсh as appellant who seek to challenge out-of-state rather than California prior convictions. Our holding puts out-of-state prior convictions on a par with California prior convictions. Thus, if a Tahl-like policy of requiring preplea advisements and waivers on the record was in effect in the state court where the plеa was taken, we will allow a collateral attack on the ensuing conviction. If no such policy operated at the time or place of the prior plea, in the interests of finality of judgments recognized in Custis and judicial efficiency, we will not allow collateral challenges to the subsequent conviction.
There is nothing in the record to indicate Texas required Tahl-like admonishments when appellant’s plea was taken. Therefore, the trial court did not err in denying appellant’s challenge to the constitutionality of his 1978 Texas conviction for murder.
Disposition
The judgment is affirmed.
Harris, J., and Wiseman, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied September 20, 2000.
Notes
Boykin
v.
Alabama
(1969)
For this reason, appellant’s contention he has been denied equal protection under federal constitutional standards fails.
Does this determination not require an evidentiary hearing of the sort declared “unduly burdensome” in Allen?
In addition to the concerns of possible lengthy delays caused while evidence and witnesses are procured to prove the invalidity of a prior out-of-state conviction, it is obvious that, in order to evaluate the evidence presented, California trial courts will be required to acquaint themselves with the law of criminal procedure operative in any one of the other 49 states. This case provides a perfect example. Here the trial court was asked to consider Texas statutes аnd rules of procedure and the declaration of a Texas attorney about how these rules affected the proceedings leading to the prior conviction. In addition, the trial court was asked to draw certain inferences from the Texas jury’s finding under a sentencing procedure which has no counterpart in California.
