*214 Opinion
James McFarland appeals from his conviction for burglary (Pen. Code, § 459) on the grounds that the trial court erred in denying his motion to preclude use of his prior convictions for purposes of impeachment, in instructing the jury in accordance with CALJIC Nos. 2.03 and 22 (rev.), and in denying his motion to strike a prior conviction as unconstitutional. He contends also that he is entitled to good time/work time (conduct) credit for his time spent in presentence custody. We find no prejudicial error, and therefore affirm his conviction subject to administrative determination of conduct credit pursuant to
People
v.
Sage
(1980)
Background. The prosecution’s case can be briefly summarized. On October 27, 1977, Mrs. Patricia Froio saw a car pull up beside the house of her neighbor and two men walk toward the neighbor’s front door. Suspicious, Mrs. Froio attempted to telephone her neighbor. Receiving no answer, she called the police. While on the phone with the police she saw a third man, later identified as Allen Tobia, exit the car and run toward the neighbor’s house. A minute or two later, she saw the car pull into the driveway of the house, and then after a few minutes back out and head up the street. At about that time, Officer Reed of the Fremont Police Department, responding to the radio broadcast of Froio’s telephone call, arrived on the scene. He saw the car pull out of the driveway and proceed up a hill. He gave chase and stopped it. The driver turned out to be McFarland. McFarland told another officer, Barton, that he was in the area looking for a “man that lived [there] by the name of James Adrich.” Barton noticed an odor of alcohol about McFarland from which Barton concluded that he had been drinking but that he was not intoxicated. Meanwhile another police officer, Officer Dorsey, searched the wooded area near the house and found Tobia hiding in the bushes. Dorsey asked Tobia if “he had any partners,” and Tobia responded that he had been with another person who was driving a dark GTO and who had told Tobia to run. When Mrs. Froio’s neighbor returned home that evening she found that her front door had been forced and the bedroom ransacked. A television set and other articles were near the front door in apparent readiness for transportation.
McFarland offered no evidence at trial. At closing argument, his counsel suggested that McFarland was too intoxicated to have formed *215 the specific intent necessary to burglary, i.e., too intoxicated to have realized what his companions were doing.
1. Did the court err in denying McFarland’s motion to preclude use of his prior convictions for impeachment?
At trial, McFarland moved to preclude use of three prior convictions to impeach his credibility: a 1971 violation of Penal Code section 487, subdivision 2 (grand theft person), a 1969 violation of section 496 (receiving stolen property), and a 1963 violation of section 459 (burglary). The court denied McFarland’s motion with respect to all three convictions, but the prosecutor indicated that he would not use the 1963 conviction if McFarland were to take the stand, We therefore focus upon the two more recent convictions, and review the exercise of the trial court’s discretion in light of the four factors set forth in
People
v.
Beagle
(1972)
While theft-related offenses have been declared “less probative” of credibility than offenses such as perjury, they are nonetheless probative.
(People
v.
Fries, supra,
Beagle
requires that the probative value of a prior conviction be discounted by the passage of time, and the fact that the priors in question were seven and nine years old is a factor to be weighed in the balance. As stated recently in
People
v.
Benton
(1979)
*216
McFarland argues that substantial prejudice would have occurred from the use of these priors because of their similarity to the charged offense, and relies heavily upon
People
v.
Banks
(1976)
Finally, the trial court was obliged to consider the adverse effect on the administration of justice should the defendant (as here) elect not to testify for fear of impeachment.
(People
v.
Fries, supra,
Balancing multiple factors is always a difficult exercise, and necessarily involves some degree of subjectivity. We regard the potential admission of these prior convictions as being very close to the line of impermissibility. We conclude, nevertheless, that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in deciding to admit them.
2. Did the trial court commit prejudicial error in its instructions to the jury?
McFarland contends that the trial court gave the jury two improper instructions. The first instruction in dispute was CALJIC No. 2.03, which permits the jury to use a false statement made by the de
*217
fendant before trial as evidence of consciousness of guilt on his part.
1
The apparent reference of the instruction in the context of these facts is to McFarland’s statement to Officer Barton that he was in the neighborhood looking for Mr. Adrich. McFarland argues that the giving of that instruction is justified only if there exists evidence that defendant prefabricated a story to explain his conduct
(People
v.
Rubio
(1977)
The other instruction to which McFarland objects was based on CALJIC No. 22 (rev.), which the California Supreme Court in
People
v.
Brigham
(1979)
*218 3. Did the trial court err in denying McFarland’s motion to strike his 1971 grand theft conviction as unconstitutional?
The People alleged grand theft from the person (Pen. Code, § 487, subd. 2) as a prior conviction, incurred in 1971 in Los Angeles. To prove the prior the prosecutor tendered copies of minutes of the Los Angeles County Superior Court. From the face of the minutes it appeared that by stipulation joined in by McFarland the matter had been submitted for court trial, and that McFarland had been found guilty upon the transcript of proceedings at the preliminary hearing. The minutes were taken on a printed form which provided printed statements and check blocks for various eventualities in proceedings of various kinds. The portion of the form which relates to trial submission upon the preliminary hearing transcript does not include a check-off statement to reflect an express waiver of jury trial; there is such a check-off statement in another portion of the form, but the block was not checked. There is, in short, no indication on the form that McFarland was advised of, or expressly and personally waived, his right to jury trial, beyond what might be inferred from the checked statement that he had stipulated to submit the matter on the transcript.
In the trial court in this action McFarland moved to strike the 1971 prior on the ground that the minutes submitted by the prosecutor did not affirmatively show advice as to and waiver of his constitutional right to a jury trial, and that waiver of a constitutional right cannot be presumed from a silent record. McFarland’s motion was denied.
In this court McFarland argues that the trial court’s ruling was erroneous in light of
Boykin
v.
Alabama
(1969)
The People seek to short-circuit this argument procedurally, contending that use of a motion to strike as the vehicle for an assertion that a prior is constitutionally invalid, under the procedure outlined in
People
v.
Coffey
(1967)
Coffey
emphasized that “the issue must be raised by means of allegations which, if true, would render the prior conviction devoid of constitutional support.” (
McFarland suggests that the procedural requirements of
Coffey
have been impliedly modified by
Tahl,
which interpreted the United States Supreme Court’s decision in
Boykin
to mean that where a guilty plea is taken “the record must contain
on its face
direct evidence that the accused was aware, or made aware, of his right to confrontation, to a jury trial, and against self-incrimination, as well as the nature of the charge and the consequences of his plea.”
(In re Tahl, supra,
Tahl
and
Mosely,
however, involve the criteria for determining the validity of a conviction under attack in a habeas corpus proceeding, and there is nothing in either opinion which evidences a change in the procedure which
Coffey
prescribes for invoking the application of those criteria in the context of a motion to strike a prior conviction from consideration in a subsequent criminal proceeding.
3
In any event,
Mosley
made
Boykin-Tahl
principles applicable to submissions on preliminary
*221
hearing transcripts only where the submission is
“in fact
tantamount to a plea of guilty....” (
McFarland’s argument in the trial court was somewhat different. Tacitly acknowledging (as
Bunnell
later made clear) that submission on a transcript is in fact a contested trial albeit on a limited evidentiary record, McFarland simply contended that the record did not reflect the knowledgeable and personal waiver of jury trial which had been required by California cases long before
Boykin
or
Tahl. (People
v.
Holmes
(1960)
The judgment of conviction is affirmed. McFarland’s request for modification of his sentence to reflect good time/work time credit for *222 his time spent in presentence custody will be referred to the Department of Corrections pursuant to People v. Sage, supra, 26 Cal.3d 498, as modified.
Racanelli, P. J., and Elkington, J., concurred.
The petitions of both parties for a hearing by the Supreme Court were denied September 11, 1980. Mosk, J., was of the opinion that the petitions should be granted.
Notes
CALJIC No. 2.03 reads: “If you find that before this trial the defendant made false or deliberately misleading statements concerning the charge upon which he is now being tried, you may consider such statements as a circumstance tending to prove a consciousness of guilt but it is not sufficient of itself to prove guilt. The weight to be given to such a circumstance and its significance, if any, are matters for your determination.”
Several cases contain statements to the effect that denial of the right to counsel is the only constitutional infirmity in a prior conviction which may be attacked on a motion to strike.
(People
v.
Lewis
(1977)
A defendant may of course demonstrate the invalidity of a conviction through direct appeal, and in a collateral attack by habeas corpus he may be required to make some showing of reasons why he has not attempted to do so. (Cf.
In re Ronald E.
(1977)
