*1195 Opinion
At a preliminary hearing, a magistrate found probable cause to hold Rogelio Manon Herrera to answer for conspiracy to manufacture methamphetamine and other crimes. Herrera successfully moved to dismiss the conspiracy count under Penal Code section 995 1 on the basis there was no evidence of conspiracy other than his own extrajudicial statements. The People appeal the order granting the motion to dismiss, arguing primarily that the corpus delicti rule does not apply to preliminary hearings. Herrera asserts this appeal is moot because he pleaded guilty to two necessarily included offenses, and may not be tried on the conspiracy charge even if we were to agree with the People’s argument.
The appeal is not moot. Herrera pleaded guilty to charges that are not necessarily included offenses of conspiracy under the so-called elements test, and the accusatory pleading test is not applicable for double jeopardy purposes, or for deciding whether multiple convictions of charged offenses is proper. On the merits, however, the corpus delicti rule continues to apply to preliminary hearings. Applying the corpus delicti rule to the preliminary hearing testimony, we agree with the trial court’s analysis, and affirm the order dismissing the conspiracy charge.
FACTS
A complaint charged Herrera with conspiracy (§ 182, subd. (a)(1)), possession of pseudoephedrine with intent to manufacture methamphetamine (Health & Saf. Code, § 11383, subd. (c)(1)), and petty theft with a prior conviction (§§ 484, 666). The People also alleged a prior prison term sentencing enhancement (§ 667.5, subd. (b)).
At Herrera’s preliminary hearing, two members of the Orange County Methamphetamine Laboratory Investigative Task Force testified for the People as follows: Pseudoephedrine or ephedrine, found in cold and allergy medications, is a necessary ingredient in producing methamphetamine. Other necessary chemicals include hydriodic acid, usually obtained from a “chemical broker” in a “black market type operation.” In July of 2004, at a Target store, Herrera shoplifted pseudoephedrine—he removed blister packs from several boxes of cold and allergy medicine, put the blister packs in his pocket, and discarded the empty boxes on various shelves. Although he purchased other items at the checkstand, he did not buy the cold and allergy tablets. Additional blister packs were found in Herrera’s car, bringing the *1196 total number of pills to 456, enough to make between three-quarters of an ounce to one ounce of methamphetamine.
After the detective read Herrera his rights under
Miranda v. Arizona
(1966)
The magistrate held Herrera to answer as charged in the complaint. The ensuing information mirrored the complaint and charged Herrera in count 1 with conspiracy to commit the crime of manufacturing a controlled substance, in count 2 with possession with intent to manufacture, in count 3 with petty theft with a prior conviction, and with a prior prison term as a sentencing enhancement.
Herrera invoked the corpus delicti rule and moved to dismiss the conspiracy charge (count 1) pursuant to section 995. Herrera argued that conspiracy under section 182, subdivision (a)(1) requires at least two people conspiring to commit a crime, and, absent his own statements about Borazo, there was no evidence of a coconspirator. 2
The People opposed the motion, contending “the circumstantial evidence elicited at the preliminary hearing (aside from [Herrera’s] admissions) supports an inference that he conspired with at least one other person to manufacture methamphetamine.” Specifically, the People argued: “[T]he conversion process that takes place[] in a clandestine methamphetamine laboratory involves specialized equipment and numerous chemical agents, at least one of which (hydriodic acid) is usually obtained on the black market. But during the search of [Herrera’s] residence following his arrest at Target, officers found no indicia that [he] was involved in the methamphetamine manufacturing business. This supports an inference that [Herrera] was a middleman, obtaining the [pseudoephedrine] for one or more other individuals.”
*1197 At the outset of the section 995 hearing, the court tentatively opined the corpus delicti rule applies only to trial convictions, not to probable cause determinations. But because the People acknowledged current law bound the court to accept the rule’s applicability to a preliminary hearing, the court granted Herrera’s section 995 motion and dismissed count 1, finding no inference from the record “to support . . . conspiracy absent [Herrera’s] statements.” The court further found that had the corpus delicti rule not been applied, “there [was] ample and sufficient evidence to deny [Herrera’s] motion.”
The People filed a notice of appeal from the court’s order granting Herrera’s section 995 motion and moved for a stay of trial on count 2 (possession with intent to manufacture) pending the appeal (Code Civ. Proc., § 916, subd. (a)). The court ruled it did not have “jurisdiction to stay the proceedings on count 2” and therefore denied the People’s motion.
Herrera subsequently pleaded guilty to counts 2 and 3 and was sentenced to the low term of two years in state prison for possession of pseudoephedrine with intent to manufacture methamphetamine, and to a concurrent middle term of two years in state prison for petty theft with a prior. The prison prior enhancement was stricken for purposes of sentencing.
DISCUSSION
The Appeal Is Not Moot
Herrera argues this appeal is moot because he pleaded guilty to count 2 (possession of pseudoephedrine with intent to manufacture methamphetamine) and count 3 (petty theft with a prior conviction)—crimes he contends are lesser included offenses of count 1 (conspiracy). He contends a trial on the conspiracy charge is barred by section 1023, which “implements the protections of the state constitutional prohibition against double jeopardy, and, more specifically, the doctrine of included offenses.”
(People v. Fields
(1996)
The People argue the appeal is not moot because, in opposition to their motion to stay trial pending appeal, Herrera argued that a trial on counts 2 and 3 would “in no way impact[] the appeal itself . . . .” The People assert
*1198
defendant’s assurances, given to the trial court, that proceeding to trial on counts 2 and 3 would not moot the appeal, authorizes this court to decide the court’s order dismissing count 1. We disagree with that rationale. Herrera’s “assurances” to the trial court do not compel us to decide a moot appeal. “A court may decide a moot case under recognized exceptional situations, but the court acts as a matter of judicial discretion, and not through any compulsion or direction by the parties.”
(Cramer v. Gillermina R.
(1981)
“An action that involves only abstract or academic questions of law cannot be maintained. [Citation.] And an action that originally was based on a justiciable controversy cannot be maintained on appeal if all the questions have become moot by subsequent acts or events. A reversal in such a case would be without practical effect, and the appeal will therefore be dismissed.” (9 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (4th ed. 1997) Appeal, § 642, p. 669.) Herrera asserts reversing the order dismissing count 1 would be without practical effect because under section 1023 his convictions on the lesser included offenses alleged in counts 2 and 3 bar a subsequent prosecution on count 1. (See
Fields, supra,
“To determine whether a lesser offense is necessarily included in the charged offense, one of two tests (called the ‘elements’ test and the ‘accusatory pleading’ test) must be met. The elements test is satisfied when ‘ “all the legal ingredients of the corpus delicti of the lesser offense [are] included in the elements of the greater offense.” ’ ”
(People
v.
Lopez
(1998)
Herrera concedes that possession of pseudoephedrine with intent to manufacture methamphetamine and petty theft with a prior conviction are not necessarily included offenses of conspiracy under the elements test. (See, e.g.,
People v. Campbell
(1955)
In
People v. Pearson
(1986)
More recently, the Supreme Court again declined to decide whether the accusatory pleading test could be used in the context of multiple convictions because application of the test would not have assisted the defendant.
(People v. Montoya
(2004)
*1200
We find persuasive the clear weight of authority in the Courts of Appeal: For purposes of analyzing whether section 1023 bars multiple convictions, the “elements test based on statutory comparison of the crimes” is the correct (and only) test to apply when determining whether one crime is a necessarily included offense of another crime.
(People v. Scott, supra,
The Corpus Delicti Rule Applies to Preliminary Hearings
The corpus delicti rule requires the prosecution to prove the corpus delicti—i.e., that a crime actually occurred—by evidence other than the defendant’s own out-of-court statements.
(People
v.
Alvarez
(2002)
Prior to Alvarez, the rule had two aspects: (1) an evidentiary function barring the admission of a defendant’s extrajudicial statements without first introducing independent proof of the corpus delicti, and (2) a substantive role imposing a burden upon the People to present corroborating evidence of such out-of-court statements, and requiring a jury instruction prohibiting a conviction based on those statements alone. (Alvarez, supra, 27 Cal.4th at pp. 1177-1178.) In Alvarez, our Supreme Court considered the effect of Proposition 8 on the rule. Proposition 8 “added section 28(d), entitled Right to Truth-in-Evidence, to article I of the California Constitution” declaring that with certain exceptions, “ ‘relevant evidence shall not be excluded in any *1201 criminal proceeding.’’ ” (Id. at pp. 1172-1173.) Because “an incriminatory statement by the accused himself is relevant evidence” (id. at p. 1174), the Alvarez court held “that section 28(d) did abrogate any corpus delicti basis for excluding the defendant’s extrajudicial statements from evidence.” (Id. at p. 1165.) But the court reached the opposite conclusion as to the rule’s substantive component, holding that “section 28(d) did not abrogate the corpus delicti rule insofar as it provides that every conviction must be supported by some proof of the corpus delicti aside from or in addition to such statements, and that the jury must be so instructed.” (Ibid.)
Thus, it is clear the substantive aspect of the corpus delicti mle remains viable as to trial
convictions.
But in the wake of
Alvarez,
and what the People characterize as “modem limitations to the scope of preliminary hearings,” we are asked to be the first court to hold the mle inapplicable to probable cause determinations at preliminary examinations. The People note our Supreme Court has never addressed this issue. In
People v. Jones, supra,
Recently,
Rayyis v. Superior Court
(2005)
The
Rayyis
court was also careful to note, however, the Supreme Court “has not endorsed the numerous decisions . . . applying the rule to [preliminary] hearings.”
(Rayyis, supra,
We find the Rayyis reasoning to be persuasive, and we likewise are unwilling to blaze a new trail after the courts have followed a single path for decades. If appropriate, any such change of direction is better left to the Supreme Court. We will nevertheless address the People’s specific arguments.
The People correctly point out “less evidence is required to support a determination of probable cause for a commitment than a determination of guilt for a conviction.”
(People
v.
McRae
(1947)
*1203
But, the People argue, in addition to the lesser
quantum
of evidence required for probable cause determinations, more
types
of evidence are admissible at preliminary examinations than at trial. Hearsay statements have been admissible at preliminary hearings since the 1990 adoption of Proposition 115, which amended the Penal Code “to provide that a probable cause determination at a preliminary examination may be based on out-of-court declarants’ hearsay statements related by a police officer with certain qualifications and experience.”
(People v. Miranda
(2000)
While the scope of modem preliminary hearings has been circumscribed, and the evidentiary rales relaxed, nothing in Proposition 115 suggests the substantive aspect of the corpus delicti rule no longer applies to probable cause determinations. The People rely on
Miranda, supra,
The People also rely on
People
v.
Monette
(1994)
Finally, the People point us to contrary decisions of two sister states. (See
State v. Jones
(Ariz. Ct. App. 2000)
In
Alvarez,
our Supreme Court did not address the broader question of whether the corpus delicti rule in general continues to be useful: “We stress the narrow nature of our proposed holding. The matter before us is limited to the direct effect of
Proposition 8
on the California rule requiring independent proof of the corpus delicti. We do not otherwise consider the parameters of the independent-proof rule, for such broader issues are not presented. We are aware of various policy criticisms of the rule (see, e.g., [law review citations]; but see
People v. Jones, supra,
17 Cal.4th at pp. 321-325 (conc. opn. of Mosk, J.)), but we express no view on that subject, for it is beyond the scope of the questions framed by this appeal.”
(Alvarez, supra,
There Was Insufficient Evidence of Conspiracy
The People argue the “circumstantial evidence elicited at [Herrera’s] preliminary hearing (aside from his admissions) supports an inference that he
*1205
conspired with at least one other person to manufacture methamphetamine.” It is true the additional evidence need only be “slight”; “[t]he independent proof may be circumstantial and need not be beyond a reasonable doubt, but is sufficient if it permits an inference of criminal conduct, even if a noncriminal explanation is also plausible.” (Alvarez,
supra,
Although the trial court found insufficient evidence of a conspiracy (absent Herrera’s out-of-court statements), “in proceedings under section 995 it is the magistrate who is the finder of fact; the superior court has none of the foregoing powers, and sits merely as a reviewing court; it must draw every legitimate inference in favor of the information, and cannot substitute its judgment as to the credibility or weight of the evidence for that of the magistrate. [Citation.] On review by appeal . . . the appellate court in effect disregards the ruling of the superior court and directly reviews the determination of the magistrate holding the defendant to answer.”
(People v. Laiwa
(1983)
The magistrate found sufficient evidence of a conspiracy. It is unclear, however, whether the magistrate’s finding was based solely on Herrera’s extrajudicial statements; Herrera did not raise the corpus delicti rule at the preliminary hearing. Although “it is the ‘general rule’ that the magistrate ‘is presumed to have applied the law correctly in the absence of a clear indication to the contrary’ ”
(People v. Konow
(2004)
*1206
The People rely on
Salazar v. Superior Court
(2000)
DISPOSITION
The order is affirmed.
Rylaarsdam, Acting P. J., and Moore, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied June 14, 2006, S142322.
Notes
All further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise stated.
Herrera alternatively argued that supplying goods to a person, without a specific intent to commit the charged crime of producing methamphetamine, “does not give rise to a conspiracy.”
The
Rayyis
court collected “cases in which appellate courts have granted relief because the requirements of the corpus delicti rule were not met at the preliminary hearing,” “decisions affirming orders setting aside an information because the corpus delicti rule had not been satisfied at the preliminary hearing,” and “numerous decisions applying the corpus delicti rule to preliminary hearings, only to conclude that the rule had been satisfied.”
(Rayyis, supra,
We note the Supreme Court had earlier held that section 1111 does not prohibit commitments by a magistrate based solely on the uncorroborated
testimony
of an accomplice.
(People
v.
McRae, supra,
Although not at issue in this case, the corpus delicti rule also applies in grand jury proceedings. (See, e.g.,
Simmonds v. Superior Court
(1966)
Of course, if the conduct that constituted the violation of a probation condition also constituted a separate crime, the corpus delicti rule would apply in a prosecution for that separate crime.
