Opinion
Pеnal Code section 278.5 provides in subdivision (a) that it is a crime when a person “takes, entices away, keeps, withholds, or conceals a child and maliciously deprives a lawful custodian of a right to custody, or a person of a right to visitation . . . -” 1 Section 278.7, subdivision (a) (section *70 278.7(a)), provides, however, that section 278.5 does not apply to a person who has a right to custody of the child and acts “with a good faith and reasonable belief that the child, if left with the other person, will suffer immediate bodily injury or emotional harm . . . .” This case requires us to examine the relationship bеtween these two provisions. We conclude that the defendant bears the burden of raising a reasonable doubt regarding whether section 278.7(a) applies. Because the trial court instructed the jury that defendant had to prove section 278.7(a)’s facts by a preponderance of the evidence, and because the error was prejudicial, we affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeal, which had reversed the trial judgment.
I. Facts and Procedural History
We take these facts largely from the Court of Appeal opinion. Defendant, William Neidinger, and Olga Neidinger (Olga) were married in 1998. They have two children, a son bom in October 1998, and a daughter bom in November 1999. As the Court of Appeal describes it, “The relationship between defendant and Olga was tumultuous; they had many arguments that escalated to physical altercations. Olga and defendant each claimed the other was the aggressor. Olga testified defendant was physically abusive; defendant testified that Olga became quite angry after the birth of [their daughter], and would take out her aggressions by hitting him or damaging his personal property.” Eventually, after one altercation, Olga and the children moved into an apartment in West Sacramento. On September 5, 2001, at Olga’s request, the Sacramento County Superior Court issued an order restraining defendant from contacting Olga or the children.
In December 2001, Olga filed a petition for legal separation. Later, the court granted Olga and defendant joint legal and physical custody of the children and gave defendant supervised and then unsupervised visitation rights. Pursuant to stipulation, the custody order was modified on February 21, 2002. The new order granted Olga and defendant joint legal custody with primary physical custody to Olga. 2 Defendant was granted visitation with the children on each Saturday and Sunday from 9:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.
Defendant testified that after he began to see the children more frequently, he became concerned about their well-being, as they had regressed into a *71 state of near autism. They were lethargic, detached, and almost catatonic. He said he made over 20 complaints to child protective service agencies about the children’s well-being without receiving a satisfactory response. Defendant’s concern culminated in an incident on March 5, 2002, that, he testified, caused him to decide to take the children from Olga’s care for their own safety. During this time, defendant was trying to conclude all court proceedings in California and to initiate a new proceeding in Nevada because, he testified, “[n]obody was living in Sacramento whatsoever,” and he had maintained his residency in Nevada even after he had moved to Sacramento to complete a job. On March 7, 2002, defendant filed an application in a Nevada court for an order for protection against domestic violence.
Defendant picked up his children for his regular visitation on Saturday, March 9, 2002. He testified he drove to the police station in West Sacramento to inform them of his plans to remove the children, but the station was closed. A woman in civilian clothes told him that the police did not get into such matters and did not care. Through third parties, he communicated to Olga that he would not return the children because he had moved to Nevada, which would be a better place for them. Olga called the police. While a police officer was interviewing her, defendant telephoned her. He told her that he had an order granting custody issued by a Nevada court on March 8, 2002, but he declined to fax a copy of the order to the officer.
Officer Ricky Gore, the investigating officer, left a message on defendant’s cellular telephone the evening of March 9, 2002, to which defendant replied with a lengthy message of his own. Officer Gore testified that defendant said he was fed up with the California court system; he had “gottеn rid” of all actions in California; he had tried, unsuccessfully, to serve Olga with court papers; and the children were safe. Officer Gore returned defendant’s call the next morning, and defendant reiterated the concerns he had stated in his earlier message. The day after that, Monday, March 11, 2002, Officer Gore again spoke with defendant by telephone, who reiterated his frustration with the California courts and said he was concerned about his children’s welfare. Defendant said he would not return the children to California, but he agreed to fax the Nevаda court order to Officer Gore. Officer Gore obtained an arrest warrant for defendant, and Nevada police arrested him later that same day while he was faxing the Nevada order to Officer Gore.
Defendant was charged with two counts of maliciously depriving a lawful custodian of the right to custody of a child in violation of section 278.5, subdivision (a), one count for each of the two children. 3 At trial, defendant *72 claimed that he had a reasonable and good faith belief that removal of the children from Olga’s care was necessary for their рhysical and emotional well-being under section 278.7(a). The court instructed the jury on this defense. As part of this instruction, the court told the jury that defendant had the burden of proving the facts necessary to establish this defense by a preponderance of the evidence.
The jury found defendant guilty on both counts. The trial court suspended imposition of sentence and placed defendant on probation for four years on the condition that he serve 240 days in jail and have no contact with Olga and the children.
Defendant appealed. He argued that the trial court erred in imposing on him the burden of proving section 278.7(a)’s factual requirements by a preponderance of the evidence. The Court of Appeal held that the preponderance-of-the-evidence instruction was proper. But it also held that the trial court erred by not additionally giving an instruction “which clarified the relationship between the good faith defense and the element of malice, so that it was clear to the jury that, to the extent the evidence regarding the good faith defense also showed that defendant acted without malice, he need raise only a reasonable doubt as to that element of the offense.” It found the error prejudicial and reversed the judgment.
We granted the Attorney General’s petition for review.
II. Discussion
In criminal cases, it is well settled, indeed, virtually axiomatic, that the prosecution has the burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt. (E.g.,
In re Winship
(1970)
In this case, defendant was convicted of violating section 278.5, subdivision (a), which provides: “Every person who takes, entices away, keeps, withholds, or conceals a child and maliciously deprives a lawful custodian of a right to custody, or a person of a right to visitation,” is guilty of a crime. At trial, he relied on section 278.7(a), which provides: “Section 278.5 does not apply to a person with a right to custody of a child who, with a good faith and reasonable belief that the child, if left with the other рerson, will suffer immediate bodily injury or emotional harm, takes, entices away, keeps, withholds, or conceals that child.” 4
We must decide how section 278.7(a)’s belief defense interacts with section 278.5. Specifically, we must decide who has the burden of proof regarding this belief, and what that burden is. Within limits, this is a question of state law. “[Djefining the elements of an offense and the procedures, including the burdens of producing evidence and of persuasion, are matters committed to the state.”
(Moss v. Superior Court, supra,
We recently decided similar questions regarding a different offense.
(People v. Mower
(2002)
We began by explaining that two related but distinct issues are involved. The first issue is which party, the prosecution or the defendant, bears the burden of proof regarding the facts underlying the defense. The second issue is exactly what that burden is.
(Mower, supra,
*75
Additionally, wе explained that the medical marijuana statute, Health and Safety Code section 11362.5, subdivision (d), “constitutes an exception” to the criminal statutes because it provides that the criminal statutes “
‘shall not
apply’ ” when the medical requirements are met.
(Mower, supra,
Both of the reasons we cited in
Mower, supra,
Our conclusion that defendant bears this burden raises the second question, which is how heavy that burden is. Here we come to the main contested issue. The Attorney Genеral argues that defendant must prove the facts underlying section 278.7(a) by a preponderance of the evidence. Defendant argues he need only raise a reasonable doubt regarding these facts.
We noted in
Mower, supra,
In
Mower,
we began with Evidence Code section 501 which, we explainеd, “provides that, when a statute allocates the burden of proof to a defendant on any fact
relating to his or her guilt,
the defendant is required merely to raise a reasonable doubt as to that fact.”
(Mower, supra,
Applying this test, we concluded that the defendant need only raise a reasonable doubt as to the facts underlying the medical marijuana defense. “This defense plainly relates to the defendant’s guilt or innocence.” (Mower, supra, 28 Cal.4th at pp. 481-482.) “As a result of the enactment of [Health and Safety Codе] section 11362.5[, subdivision] (d), the possession and cultivation of marijuana is no more criminal—so long as its conditions are satisfied—than the possession and acquisition of any prescription drug with a physician’s prescription.” (Id. at p. 482.) “In sum, the defense provided by [Health and Safety Code] section 11362.5[, subdivision] (d) relates to the defendant’s guilt or innocence, because it relates to an element of the crime of possession or cultivation of marijuana. Thus, this defense negates the element of the possession or cultivation of marijuana to the extent that the element requires that such possession or cultivation be unlawful.” (Ibid.)
As we explain, we reach the same conclusion in this case that we did in Mower—defendant need only raise a reasonable doubt regarding the facts underlying the section 278.7(a) defense. Two Courts of Appeal interpreting two predecessor versions of crimes similar to, but in some ways different than, the crime involved here reached differing results.
In
People v. Beach
(1987)
In
People v. Dewberry
(1992)
The Legislature has amended the relevant statutes since the decisions in
People
v.
Beach, supra,
The Court of Appeal opinion in this case summarized the relevant changes after the Dewberry decision. “After Dewberry, the Legislature revised the provisions regarding child abduction. Prior to the amendment, former section 277 governed child abduction by a person with a right tо custody but without a court order, while former section 278.5 governed child abduction by a person having a right to custody pursuant to court order. (Stats. 1992, ch. 163, *78 § 106, p. 784 [former § 277]; Stats. 1989, ch. 1428, § 4, p. 6320 [former § 278.5].) The amendment combined these two provisions into one, while making changes to the elements required to establish a violation. [Fn. omitted.] (Stats. 1996, ch. 988, §§ 8-9.) Prior to the amendment of former section 278.5, the People were only required to prove that the person with a right to custody pursuant to a court order acted ‘with the intent to deprive the other person of that right to сustody . . . .’ [Citation.] The statute did not include a malice element, nor did it require the People to prove that the defendant acted without good cause. (Former § 278.5; Stats. 1989, ch. 1428, § 4, p. 6320.)
“After the amendment, though, the People were required to prove that a defendant with a right to custody (whether by court order or operation of law) ‘maliciously deprive[d]’ a lawful custodian of the right to custody or visitation. (§ 278.5(a), as amended by Stats. 1996, ch. 988, § 9.) In other words, during the consolidation of former sections 277 and 278.5, the malice element of former section 277 was (1) retained in the cаse of child abduction by a person having a right to custody but without a court order, and (2) added in the case of a person having a right to custody pursuant to a court order. The absence of the good cause element was deleted with respect to a person with a right to custody without a court order. With respect to a person having a right to custody pursuant to court order, the deletion of the absence of good cause element of former section 277 made no change in the law. (Stats. 1996, ch. 988, § 9.) As part of the statutory revision, the good faith defense in section 278.7 was added. (Ibid.)”
In sum, the key differences between the statutes at issue here and the one in
People
v.
Beach, supra,
We think that, for these purposes, the current statutory scheme is closer to that of
People v. Dewberry, supra,
Although the Legislature replaced the absence-of-good-cause element of the Dewberry statute with a malice element and the separate section 278.7(a) defense, we see no indication it intended to place a greater burden on the defendant to establish good cause than had existed before the statutory change. We think the Dewberry rule should still apply. The malice requirement and the section 278.7(a) defense are intertwined, not entirely separate. Section 278.7(a) is not entirely collateral to the elements of the offense but relates to the element of malice and thus to the person’s guilt. (Cf. Mower, supra, 28 Cal.4th at pp. 479-480.)
We conclude that a defendant need only raise a reasonable doubt whether the facts underlying the section 278.7(a) defense exist. Thus, the trial court erred in requiring defendant to prove those facts by a preponderance of the evidence. The Court of Appeal had found the preponderance-of-the-evidence instruction correct but found error in not clarifying the relationship between section 278.7(a)’s belief defense and the element of malice. It found that errоr prejudicial. We conclude that the more serious error that we have found—placing an erroneously high burden on defendant to prove the section 278.7(a) defense—was prejudicial. The Attorney General does not argue that any error was harmless. In
Mower, supra,
28 Cal.4th at pages 484-485, we did not decide which standard of prejudice applies to this kind of error because we found the error prejudicial even under the more lenient test for state law error. (See
People v. Watson
(1956)
*80 III. Conclusion
We affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeal.
George, C. J., Kennard, J., Baxter, J., Werdegar, J., Moreno, J., and Corrigan, J., concurred.
Notes
All further statutory citations are to the Penal Code unless otherwise indicated.
As the Court of Appeal explained, it is unclear what the stipulation and order meant by “primary physical custody.” The provisions in the Family Code governing custody of children do not use that term. (See
In re Marriage of LaMusga
(2004)
Some courts call the crime “child abduction,” after the chapter of the Penal Code of which section 278.5 is a part. However, that chapter also defines other similar crimes that could go by
*72
the same name. Accordingly, for simplicity, at least one Court of Appeal has called this crime “child detention."
(People v. Moses
(1996)
Section 278.7 contains other subdivisions. Subdivision (c) of that section provides: “The person who takes, entices away, keeps, withholds, or conceals a child shall do all of the following:
“(1) Within a reasonable time from the taking, enticing away, keeping, withholding, or concealing, make a report to the office of the district attorney of the county where the child resided before the action. The report shall include the name of the person, the current address and telephone number of the child and the person, and the reasons the child was taken, enticed away, kept, withheld, or concealed.
“(2) Within a reasonable time from the taking, enticing away, keeping, withholding, or concealing, commence a custody proceeding in a court of competent jurisdiction consistent with the federal Parental Kidnapping Prevention Act ... or the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Act....
“(3) Inform the district attorney’s office of any change of address or telephone number of the person and child.”
Subdivision (d) of section 278.7 provides: “For the purposes of this article, a reasonable time within which to make a report to the district attorney’s office is at least 10 days and a reasonable time to commence a custody proceeding is at least 30 days. This section shall not preclude a person from making a report to the district attorney’s office or commencing a custody proceeding earlier than those specified times.”
We express no opinion regarding the meaning of these other subdivisions or how they interrelate with section 278.7(a). (See People v. Mehaisin (2002)101 Cal.App.4th 958 , 962-965 [124 Cal.Rptr.2d 683 ].)
