We have concluded that the admission of evidence of other offenses was not error requiring reversal and the court is not required to give CALJIC 51 (revised), sua sponte.
About midnight, October 17, 1965, Steve Jackson, an employee of “Jack-In-The-Box,” a food dispensing establishment on South Manchester Avenue, County of Orange, was robbed by defendant of $222 at gun point. Defendant was charged and convicted of the crime.
Evidence of other offenses with similar surrounding factors to the charged crime was admitted without objection by defendant. Unless there be an objection by defendant there is no duty upon the trial court to refuse the testimony.
(People
v.
Williams,
Upon certain evidence being admitted as to defendant’s past activities at and during his employment, defendant’s counsel immediately made a motion to strike it from the record with a request for an admonition to the jury. The court granted the motion and fully admonished the jury to disregard the testimony. The evidence in this case is of such quality and quantity that the error in admitting' the evidence could have had no effect upon the jury. We conclude it is not reasonably possible or probable that a different verdict would have been returned by the jury had the excluded evidence not been heard by the jury.
(People
v.
Watson,
The evidence of the guilt of defendant was so compelling that the striking of the evidence together with the admonition
*521
was sufficient to overcome any effect it may have had upon the jury.
(People
v.
Sciterle,
A question arises whether an instruction to the jury is required sua sponte. Defendant offered CALJIC 51 (revised), though it was withdrawn by the defendant after offering it. CALJIC 51 (revised), reads: “Dependant Not Testifying—■ No Inference Of Guilt May Be Drawn.
“It is a constitutional right of a defendant in a criminal trial that he may not be compelled to testify. Thus, the decision as to whether he should testify is left to the defendant, acting with the advice and assistance of his attorney. You must not draw any inference of guilt from the fact that he does not testify, nor should this fact be discussed by you or enter into your deliberations in any way. ’ ’
The “comment’’ and instruction reviewed in
Griffin
v.
California,
We find no California case determinative of this point on the present instruction CALJIC 51 (revised), which contained instructional verbiage somewhat different from that
*522
condemned in
Griffin, supra.
In
People
v.
Graham,
We must disagree with some of the reasoning in Graham, supra, which might be construed as not requiring the giving of the instruction, sua sponte, if the evidence of proof of guilt was "strong” leaving the illation that it might be prejudicial error to fail to give it, sua sponte, when the evidence is less than "strong.”
Many of the vices pointed up in Griffin, supra, and Chapman, supra, remain in CALJIC 51 (revised). Without enumerating the totality of these vices, one paramount evil is the effect in pointing up to the jury the absence of a prime witness from the witness stand. As has been stated in many eases there are numerous reasons why a defendant may exercise his constitutional rights for not becoming a witness. Whatever the jurors may think, without the CALJIC Instruction 51 (revised), or similar instruction, about the absence of the defendant as a witness is too conjectural for consideration here but it is not conjectural as to what they could and probably would think and take into consideration if the judge, without request of defendant, injected this feature into the case by giving such an instruction. The jury, not otherwise focused to a situation, is so directed to it by the instruction given sua sponte by the court. We cannot but formulate a conclusion that this, the giving of such an instruction sua sponte, is a constitutionally proportioned invasion of and a violation of the rights of defendant.
Defendant offered the instruction, then withdrew it and now insists on this appeal that regardless of his offer and withdrawal, it is mandatory for the court to give the instruction.
It is not before us to decide whether defendant may, personally, as he may other rights, waive the right. He has not done so on the facts before us.
In
Bruno
v.
United States,
In Griffin, supra, a state court case, the Supreme Court in a footnote referred to Bruno, supra, stating it reserved decision on whether an accused could require an instruction to the jury that his silence be disregarded.
Thus, it remains undecided whether in California a defendant may require, upon request, CALJIC 51 (revised), or like instruction. Unlike Bruno, supra, wherein there was legislative authority for giving it upon request, no such California authority is known to us.
We here do not decide whether, if the instruction were offered by a defendant and then given by the court, the error, if it be error, is invited and thus excused under the doctrine of
People
v.
Phillips,
It adds nothing to defendant’s position that the trial judge, subsequent to the defendant having withdrawn the instruction, wrote on it “Refused as covered.” None of the other instructions or a combination of them “covered” the subject. The subject matter of defendant’s absence from the witness stand should not have been “covered” at least absent some affirmative act on the part of defendant to personally waive his constitutional right in this particular.
Judgment affirmed.
*524 Kerrigan, J., and Thompson (Raymond), J. pro tem., * concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied October 11, 1967.
Notes
Assigned by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.
