Opinion
Minors Jose M. and Alan A. appeal from juvenile court judgments following their joint trial on petitions alleging two counts each of rape in concert plus great bodily injury enhancements (Pen. Code, §§ 264.1, 12022.8). 1 The counts represented two assaults on Yahaira P., one of them in which Alan allegedly raped her with Jose aiding and abetting, and the other with the assailants’ roles reversed. The court found true the counts where Alan was the rapist, and found the enhancement true as to Alan only. It found the other counts not .true as charged, evidently based on doubt that Jose achieved penetration. It found true a lesser included offense of assault with intent to commit rape (§ 220), without enhancement. In later proceedings as to Alan, the court made a corresponding petition amendment and finding, on stipulation of counsel, for the lesser offense, also without enhancement. The disposition for Jose was a suspended Youth Authority commitment with ranch placement. Alan was committed to Youth Authority.
Background
The assaults occurred near a San Francisco high school on June 3, 1991. Yahaira and her friend Maria C., 16-year-old students there, cut class after
There was conflicting testimony. The two girls gave inculpatory accounts, and the boys (Jose did not testify) and their friends tended to support misidentification. We briefly summarize the evidence in support of the judgment.
The girls sat with the boys on some rocks, drank from 40-ounce bottles Alan gave them and became drunk. Jose sat by Yahaira hugging her (inappropriately Maria thought) as she got “kind of crazy” and dizzy. The girls were led to a place in the bushes and lay down there. William G. assisted and stayed with Maria, while Alan did so for Yahaira. Maria got up and left, helped by Alan, to go urinate. A while after returning, she saw Alan on top of Yahaira, kissing and hugging her over her protests, as Jose and other boys who had come over watched. Maria left to urinate again, this time apparently with William.
Yahaira passed out and was carried to another spot, near some bleachers. She awoke to find two boys removing her pants and panties. William tried verbally to stop them, but Alan and Jose, who were also there, did nothing to intervene. Alan mounted and raped Yahaira as she pleaded with him not to and the other boys stood around laughing. Yahaira was a virgin, and the assault was very painful for her, leaving her bloodied and numb. Alan would later gloat in a telephone conversation with her (tape-recorded without him knowing it) that seeing her without clothes provoked him, that he was the first of two or three boys and that he had “ ‘[ajbout five minutes[,] fucking nicely.’ ” He added, “ ‘When I got you, you had no blood on you, you were still clean . . . until after I screwed you, when a lot of blood came‘ out
After Alan got off of her, Jose (Hector) got on. Yahaira could not see well but knew him by his Raiders jacket, his size and seeing the side of his face (as he later led her further down the canyon). She could not tell if he penetrated her; she had lost feeling in her vagina. Maria returned to see Yahaira on her back, naked from the waist down, legs wide apart, and bloody in the vaginal area. Jose (Hector) was on his knees between her legs, pulling up his pants. Yahaira was crying and screamed out for Maria to help her. Maria got close enough to grasp her hand but was pulled away. William took Maria aside and tried to calm her.
The next thing Yahaira remembered was Jose carrying her away to a part of the canyon about “half a block” distant, where there was no one else. He
Three days later, on the morning of June 6, Yahaira was called in by an assistant principal. She initially denied but then admitted that an assault occurred. A sexual assault examination that afternoon revealed serious vaginal trauma consistent with her report of multiple rape.
At the urging of a police inspector, Yahaira telephoned Alan on June 10 and tape-recorded their conversation. Alan made the admissions already noted. He also said that Hector “wanted to” but did not do anything, that Armando (“Broncas”) “gave it to you from the front and the back” while the others watched and that Yahaira’s missing gold chain must have been taken by Hector because he saw that she had it on when Hector took her further down into the canyon.
Alan testified that his references to “Hector” were to Jose or Armando. He denied any assault, said he made up the conversation to get Yahaira to stop calling and insisted that he and Jose had left the canyon.
The minors relied on various inconsistencies, alibi and the possibility that Yahaira, in her inebriated condition, mistook someone else wearing a Raiders jacket that day for Jose.
Discussion
I
Jose contends that the court lacked jurisdiction to find that he committed assault with intent to commit rape, the offense not being necessarily included within the charge of rape in concert. We disagree.
Adult criminal law principles of due process notice apply to juvenile proceedings in this context.
(In re Alberto S.
(1991)
Jose’s contention rests mainly on the premise that because rape in concert may be committed by aiding and abetting rather than personally committing the rape, one can commit rape in concert without necessarily having the specific intent to rape required by assault with intent to commit rape. The flaw in this premise is that in count I, the one at issue here, he was specifically charged with “personally” committing the rape while Alan “aided and abetted” him. He was thus on notice that he was being charged only as the direct perpetrator.
Moreover, rape in concert requires a rape “by force or violence,” the alternative means of duress, menace or fear allowed for ordinary rape (§261, subd. (a)(2)) being unavailable.
2
One charged with rape by force or violence may be found guilty of assault with intent to commit rape
(People
v.
Ramirez
(1969)
Alan raises the same root issues. Because his trial counsel
stipulated
to amending the petition and finding assault with intent to commit rape, however, he cannot complain of it directly.
(People
v.
Calder
(1970)
Count II, the relevant count in his petition, had mirrored Jose’s count I, charging that Alan aided and abetted a rape perpetrated directly by Jose. Alan incorporates Jose’s arguments that assault with intent to commit rape
We have held as to Jose that section 220 was merely an aggravated form of
attempt
applicable to one charged as a direct perpetrator under section 264.1. It would seem to follow that one charged as aiding and abetting the greater offense may be found to have aided and abetted the lesser. In the context of Alan’s ineffective assistance claim, it is enough to note that we are cited no contrary authority of which counsel should have been aware
(People
v.
Pope
(1979)
II
Jose raises numerous claims based on
People
v.
Aranda
(1965)
Jose now contends that the court inadequately assessed the
Aranda
motion, joined later in a breach of agreement, denied him full cross-examination of Alan and should have excluded the evidence for risk of undue
We find this case controlled by recent authority in
People
v.
Walkkein
(1993)
Jose acknowledges that
Aranda,
to the extent that it went beyond
Bruton
to hold that exclusion may be required even though the declarant testifies and thus affords his inculpated codefendant the right to cross-examine, was abrogated by the adoption of Proposition 8 in 1982, which added section 28, subdivision (d) (section 28(d)) to article I of the California Constitution, requiring conformance to federal law exclusionary rules. This abrogation of
Aranda
has been settled since 1990.
(People
v.
Boyd
(1990)
A second abrogation flowing from section 28(d) was noted more recently in
Walkkein.
It had long been intimated by our Supreme Court that
Aranda
might apply in cases tried to the court rather than a jury, the theory being that while a judge, as opposed to a jury, was better able to consider extrajudicial statements solely as to the declarant defendant and not his inculpated codefendant, it might be advisable to insulate a judge as well.
(People
v.
Charles
(1967)
Jose contends that we cannot deny
Aranda's
application to his trial because it was held before
Walkkein
was decided and that the court in
Walkkein
was powerless to “overrule” contrary Supreme Court precedent. The argument fails. The precedent he cites was dictum
(People
v.
Charles, supra,
Jose sees a denial of equal protection in the fact that adult criminal defendants, unlike juveniles in delinquency proceedings, have the option of demanding a jury trial and thus securing the benefits of
Aránda/Bruton.
This in essence argues that denying juveniles a jury denies them equal protection. Juveniles enjoy no state or federal due process right to a jury trial
(McKeiver
v.
Pennsylvania
(1971)
Jose also claims error independent of
Aranda/Bruton,
but unconvincingly. His claim that severance was alternatively compelled under ordinary severance criteria
(People
v.
Massie
(1967)
His claim that the prosecutor violated an agreement to sanitize (regardless of Aranda) raises in essence prosecutorial misconduct. While one court has suggested in dictum that this ground of error might be viable where the declarant’s decision to testify makes
Aranda
sanitizing unavailable to a codefendant
in a jury trial (People
v.
Boyd, supra,
Similarly flawed are Jose’s interwoven claims that (1) the court should have excluded inculpatory matters under Evidence Code section 352 or (2) ineffective assistance resulted if trial counsel failed to adequately raise the issue. The code section concerns probative value being substantially outweighed by danger from “undue prejudice” or “confusing the issues” or “misleading the jury” (Evid. Code, § 352)—dangers which a court trial either minimizes or, in the case of jury confusion, cannot pose. Jose does not show that the court prejudged him or his case based on extraneous factors
(People
v.
Zapien
(1993)
The last claim is that the court denied Jose’s right to confront and fully cross-examine Alan by limiting the use of leading questions. This fails because the court acknowledged counsel’s right to use leading questions on cross-examination (Evid. Code, §§ 764, 767, subd. (a)(2)) and did not, except perhaps in one egregious instance (objection as to form), sustain objections based on leading. Rather, the court told counsel to “make your examination as you see fit” and “examine the witness any way you want,” but candidly reminded her that the degree to which answers seemed to come from the questions, rather than the witness, could affect “the amount of ' weight that I’m willing to give that and the credibility that I can attach to that answer . . . .” The court suggested that it “might be better” or “more effective” to ask less leading questions. Contrary to Jose’s argument, this
III-VIII *
Disposition
The judgments are affirmed.
Kline, P. J., and Benson, J., concurred.
Notes
All section references are to the Penal Code unless indicated otherwise.
Section 264.1 states in part: “[I]n any case in which the defendant, voluntarily acting in concert with another person, by force or violence and against the will of the victim, committed an act described in Section 261 [rape] or 289 [penetration by foreign object], either personally or by aiding and abetting the other person, ... the defendant shall suffer confinement in the state prison for five, seven, or nine years.”
The count, amended only to substitute “220” for “264.1,” accused Alan of a felony “violation of section 220 . . . , committed as follows: The said minor Jose [M.] ... did personally commit [forcible rape] and that said minor Alan [A.], aided and abetted the minor Jose [M.], and that the minors . . . voluntarily acted in concert with each other and with other persons in the commission of said offense.”
See footnote, ante, page 1470.
