Opinion
On September 19, 1980, the District Attorney of Contra Costa County filed an information in the superior court alleging that appellant had violated Health and Safety Code section 11378 (possession rof controlled substance for sale). The information also alleged five prior felony convictions pursuant to Penal Code sections 667.5, subdivision (b) and 1203, subdivision (e)(4). On September 22, 1980, appellant pled not guilty and denied the prior convictions.
On May 15, 1981, appellant filed a “Notice of Motion Objecting tо Composition of Jury Panel,” which motion was heard on May 18, 1981, prior to the selection of the jury, and was denied. Out of the presence of the jury, appellant admitted the five prior felony convictions and jury selection commenced. Thе presentation of evidence began on May 19, 1981, the case was submitted to the jury on May 21, 1981, and appellant was found guilty.
On June 18, 1981, the court heard and denied the motion for the new trial. Appellant was sent to state prison for the aggravated tеrm of three years and sentenced to two consecutive one-year terms pursuant to Penal Code section 667.5, subdivision (b) (making a total commitment of five years). Timely notice of appeal followed.
The challenge to the jury pаnel was predicated on the underrepresentation of Richmond residents on the jury venire. At the hearing thereof, the substance of the showing was that 6.79 percent of the venire were Richmond residents, that 7.11 percent of the jurors chosen for the week *457 of May 18, 1981, were Richmond residents, and that the 1980 census showed 11.36 percent of the county’s population resides in Richmond. The court ruled that appellant had the burden of showing systematic exclusion, that no showing had been made, and thаt if there was a disparity, it was not substantial enough to invalidate the jury venire and denied the motion.
On the afternoon of August 6, 1980, vice detail officers of the Richmond Police Department, who had specialized in on-the-job training regarding the paсkaging and sales of methamphetamines, went to an area where they could observe the activities of appellant. Officer Mussetter, from his vantage point across the street, saw appellant leave a group of four оther black males and make “exchanges” with three pedestrians. After the last exchange, he saw appellant put money in his pocket and set a “balled up” brown bag upon the ground next to a cafe. Mussetter directed the other officers, by walkie-talkie, to seize the bag and arrest appellant for sale of drugs. The bag was picked up by Officer Valli and was found to contain 18 small plastic bindles, each sealed with tape. Five samples from these bindles, containing white powder, tested positively for methamphetamine and constituted a usable quantity.
The four males, who were with appellant, all testified that Valli picked up and looked into various bags; one of them heard Valli say, “I can’t find it.” Each of these persons, friends of appellant, had prior felony convictions.
A private investigator for appellant took films of the scene on May 6, 1981, between 4:25 and 4:40 p.m. purporting to show the view from Mussetter’s vantage point to the area of the offense, including traffic on the street.
During trial, appellant moved to have the jury transported to the scene, but the court denied the motion, citing both the difficulty of transporting the jury and the fact that this was the type of case where аll the necessary information could be elicited for the benefit of the jury by witnesses. Also, the court opined, the condition of the scene, specifically the motor traffic, would be different than it was on the date and time of the offense.
Thе motion for a new trial was made on two grounds: insufficiency of the evidence under Penal Code section 1181, and “miscarriage of justice.” The court stated that testimony offered by the majority of the *458 defense witnesses lacked credibility, and concluded, in view of the totality of the circumstances, and from all of the testimony that it could not fault the decision of the jury. The motion was denied.
Appellant’s prior criminal record is extensive, with numerous felony convictions and 14 juvenile probаtion matters. He had been released on parole 34 days before his arrest herein, and had charges pending for an earlier escape (Pen. Code, § 4532, subd. (b)) and robbery.
In selecting the term of imprisonment, the court, disregarding two of the felоny convictions, nevertheless chose the aggravated term based on appellant’s record as a juvenile and adult offender, as well as the increasing severity of the offenses and his poor performance on probatiоn and parole.
Issues on Appeal
I. The jury which decided Mooring’s case was not a representative cross section of Contra Costa County.
II. Refusal of the defendant’s request for a viewing of the area of his arrest was an abuse of discretion and prеjudicial under the circumstances.
III. The evidence when considered in its entirety is legally insufficient to prove defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
IV. The court improperly considered two of Mooring’s prior felony convictions for the purpose of both sentencing Mooring to an aggravated term and enhancing his sentence by two years.
Discussion of Those Issues
I
Appellant was not denied his right to an impartial jury. The burden of proof of an alleged class discrimination in the selection of jurors is оn the party who asserts that discrimination.
(Patton
v.
Mississippi
(1947)
Code of Civil Procedure sections 198 and 199 set forth “who is competent and not competent” to act as a trial juror. The court in
Rubio, supra,
recognized that ex-felons and resident aliens are not cognizable groups within the meaning of the representative cross section rule. (P. 100.) Eligibility to serve on petit juries and raw census figures, without breakdown, may nоt be used as a basis for a showing of systematic discrimination. Figures can be deceptive and hence meaningless, and for that reason the comparison, to be meaningful, must be between those persons
eligible
as a cognizable class to sit as petit jurors and those in that class who are actually called. Richmond residents do constitute a cognizable class.
(People
v.
Spears
(1975)
In
Swain
v.
Alabama
(1965)
Appellant has failed to sustain his burden of establishing that the reprеsentation of Richmond residents on the master jury list or on the venire was other than fair and reasonable.
II
The court properly exercised its discretion in refusing to allow the jury to view the area of the arrest. Penal Code section 1119 prоvides in pertinent part: “When, in the opinion of the court, it is proper that the jury should view the place in which the offense is charged to have been committed, or in which any other material fact occurred, . . . it may order the jury to be conducted in a body ... to the place . .. . ” The grant or denial of a motion to view the scene rests in the sound discretion of the trial court.
(People
v.
Conway
(1962)
The court denied a jury view of the scene based on the problems in transportation, possible differences in the traffic conditions, and because the evidence could have been introduced through other witnesses. These are appropriate considerations.
A court may consider whether the conditions to be viewed by the jury are the same as those perceived by the witness. To the extent that the conditions differ, their probative value is substantially diminished.
(People
v.
Brown
(1981)
Two defense witnesses said the traffic wаs pretty much the same every Wednesday “about that time.” Officer Mussetter said the traffic conditions differ daily and vary at different times of the day and on different days of the week, and, indeed, testified that the film taken by appellant’s investigator on a Wednesday differed from the traffic he
*461
himself observed on Wednesday, the day of the offense. The evidence was introduced from other sources and this was a valid and appropriate consideration in the ruling by the court on the motion to viеw the scene.
(People
v.
Burciago
(1978)
III
The court properly denied the motion for a new trial. Such motion is also addressed to the sound discretion of thе trial court, which is required to independently weigh the evidence, and whose discretion will not be disturbed in the absence of a showing of abuse.
(People
v.
Serrato
(1973)
IV
Appellant was properly sentenced. Penal Code section 1170, subdivision (b) and California Rules of Court, rule 441, prohibit the use of the same fact to aggravate a sentence and to еnhance the term. (See also
People
v.
Lawson
(1980)
In the case at bar, the court expressly declined to consider the two prior felonies to enhance. Appellant had suffered three additional felo *462 nies, and commitment to the Youth Authority, and had an extensive juvenile record and two pending felonies. He was unsuccessful on juvenile probation, his adult probation was revoked, and he had been paroled 34 days prior to the instant offense. Clearly, each of the elements articulated in aggravating the term is present without reference to the two felonies used as enhancements. The court did not err in sentencing appellant.
The judgment of conviction is affirmed.
Elkington, Acting P. J., and Newsom, J., concurred.
Notes
Assigned by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
