Opinion
Defendant/appellant David Laskiewicz was convicted by jury trial of grand theft (Pen. Code, §§ 484/487, subd. 1) and being an accessory after the fact to grand theft (Pen. Code, § 32). The trial court vacated the verdict on the accessory charge. He appeals on the ground the
Substantial evidence supports the conviction and discloses that appellant conspired with an accomplice, who was separately convicted, to steal money from the accomplice’s employer. Appellant wаs charged with grand theft as well as being an accessory to the theft. The jury was instructed as to the elements of both offenses and convicted him of both. Thе People concede that appellant cannot be guilty of both offenses, but contend no reversible error occurred.
Appellant relies upon
People
v.
Prado
(1977)
In
People
v.
Francis
(1982)
While both
Francis
and
Prado
provide analysis of the multiple conviction issue, we find it unnecessary to deal with that problem in the instant case. First, appеllant was not convicted and sentenced for both offenses—the trial court struck the accessory conviction, Second, the California Constitutiоn, article VI, section 13, provides that a judgment shall not be set aside on the ground of misdirection of the jury unless it results in a miscarriage of justice. (See alsо, Pen. Code, §§ 1258, 1404.) The primary inquiry into whether misdirection causes a miscarriage of justice is whether the jury was misled. (See, e.g.,
People
v.
Montiel
(1985)
Appellant does not question the adequacy of the instructions which werе given, and our own review reveals that the trial court fully and adequately advised the jury on the elements of each offense, the burden of proof, the prosecution’s duty and all other principles necessary to resolve the issue of guilt or innocence on both charges. It did not advise the jury that the offenses were mutually exclusive, but we do not perceive the failure to so instruct, assuming the legal principle of mutual exclusivity is correct, to bе misleading or confusing. Jurors are not lawyers or judges, but lay persons. In the nonlegal context it is logical to presume that appellant could be guilty оf both offenses—as a principal in the initial planning and execution of the theft, and thereafter as an accessory in assisting his accomplice to flee the state and avoid detention. 2
Given these circumstances, we perceive no error and conclude that even if it did exist, it was harmless.
(People
v.
Watson
(1956)
Affirmed.
Low, P. J., and King, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied May 7, 1986.
Notes
“The court in Prado appears to have assumed, without citation of any authority, that convictions as both principal and accessory are mutually exclusive or inconsistent, [fn.] and, therefore, to have examined the admitted evidence in an effort to ascertain аt which conviction, if either, the jury would have arrived if so instructed. However, the offenses of robbery and accessory to robbery, like the offenses of murder and accessory to murder as in the present case, are not mutually exclusive or inconsistent. Though the offenses are distinct and different, the еlements of the crime of murder are not inconsistent with the elements of the crime of accessory to murder. One guilty of the former is not necessarily not guilty of the latter or vice-versa. If, as the People here concede, a defendant may not be convicted as both a principal аnd as an accessory to the same offense absent exceptional circumstances, it is not because the elements of the two offenses are inconsistent, but because the Legislature, in proscribing the conduct of an accessory to a felony, did not intend to embrace such conduct of the principal felon. [Citations.]” (People v. Francis, supra, 129 Cal.App.3d at pp. 251-252.)
The record reveals that following the theft appellant arranged for his friends to transport them both to Canada. They then moved to Oregon and lived together under assumed names.
