Defendant was convicted by a jury of (1) grand theft—auto (Pen. Code, § 487, subd. 3), and on a separate count of (2) taking or driving a vehicle without the owner’s consent (Veh. Code, § 10851). He was sentenced on both counts.
On June 12, 1967, defendant, an unemployed parolee, was arrested while driving a 1967 Ford Mustang, which had been stolen from the lot of a Sacramento Ford dealer sometime during the night of June 7-8. That automobile, when defendant was arrested, carried license plates and a registration certificate which had been removed and stolen several days earlier from another 1967 Ford Mustang. Substantial circumstantial evidence was adequate to prove that the theft of the license plates and subsequent theft of the automobile had been perpetrated by defendant: Defendant’s arrest on June 12 was accomplished only after a chase. The chase had commenced when officers in a patrol ear had approached the stolen car being operated by defendant and had signaled for him to *923 stop. Defendant did not stop. Instead he sped away. When defendant was apprehended a screw-driver suitable for removing and installing license plates was found in the pocket of defendant’s jacket.
A Miss Widby was a prosecution witness. She was an acquaintance of defendant. She had seen him driving the stolen Mustang in Sacramento June 11, 1967, and had conversed with him at the time. Earlier she had seen him driving a Chevrolet. When Miss Widby questioned defendant about the change of automobiles he said he had “traded his Impala in on this car. ...” Defendant’s presence in Sacramento at the time of his arrest was in violation of a condition of his parole.
Defendant’s contention of insufficient evidence to support the verdict and judgment of theft of the automobile is without merit. Possession of recently stolen property is so incriminating that to warrant a conviction of theft there need only be, in addition to possession, slight corroboration in the form of statements or conduct of the defendant tending to show guilt.
(People
v.
McFarland
(1962)
The contention that it was error to enter judgment for both the offense of grand theft and the offense of violation of Vehicle Code section 10851 cannot be as readily answered. The offense of violation of Penal Code section 487, subdivision 3, is defined:
“ Grand theft is theft committed . . . : 3. When the property taken is an automobile. ...”
In California the catch-all section (Pen. Code, § 490a) has combined several crimes—larceny, embezzlement, stealing— under one name, “theft.” Theft is defined in Penal Code section 484. The definition includes the taking or driving away of the personal property of another. When that personal property is an automobile the offense falls within the offense ‘1 grand-theft—auto ’ ’ as stated in Penal Code section 487, subdivision 3. Conviction of that offense requires proof of a specific intent by the accused to deprive the owner of the automobile permanently.
(People
v.
Renteria
(1943)
The two counts of the information charging defendant did not purport to cover the same offense. The theft (under Pen. Code, § 487, subd. 3) was stated in the information in count 1 to have been committed on June 8th when the Mustang was taken from the dealer’s car lot. The driving “and” taking under count 2 in violation of Vehicle Code section 10851 was allegedly the act of defendant in driving the stolen vehicle on the day he was arrested, June 12.
The question is whether, under the circumstances of this ease, the prosecution could or did actually prove two separate crimes. The problem may be stated with greater particularity: When the prosecution relies on the same evidence—no more, no less—to prove the original theft as is used to prove the Vehicle Code section 10851 violation, may the defendant be convicted of both offenses ? We hold that he may not.
“Multiple Punishment” of “Neoessabilt Included” Offenses
The term “necessarily included” offense derives from Penal Code section 1159. It provides that the trier of fact may find the defendant guilty of any offense “the commission of which is necessarily included in that with which he is charged . . . .” There is no statutory definition of what a “necessarily included offense” is. (Witkin, Cal. Criminal Procedure (1963) § 541, p. 552.) The traditional case law test is: “Where the offense charged cannot be accomplished without in the process committing the lesser offense, that lesser offense is a necessarily included offense.” (Witkin,
id.,
p. 553;
In re Hess
(1955)
By definition—even under the earlier test—all of the elements of Vehicle Code section 10851, as now framed, are necessarily included within grand theft—auto (Pen. Code, § 487).
(People
v.
Marshall, supra,
Our California Supreme Court, commencing with
Neal
v.
State of California
(1960)
We explain why we commenced this dissertation with the principles involved in necessarily included offenses rather than with the “multiple punishment” rules. When a multiple punishment is involved under facts which
do not
encompass necessarily included offenses a
conviction
may stand although the
punishment
must be expunged.
(People
v.
Smith
(1950)
The Attorney General points to the fact that in the accusatory pleading the grand theft—auto charge (count 1) is alleged to have occurred on June 8, 1967, while the violation of Vehicle Code section 10851 (count 2) is alleged to have occurred on June 12, 1967, when defendant was apprehended. Respondent recognizes the “indivisible course of conduct” rule but sees a break in the sequence of events once the theft of the automobile has been consummated which makes the driving of the car thereafter a disassociated, separate and severable transaction. We do not accept that argument.
As we have explained above, under count 1 the jury in the case before us could properly have convicted defendant of grand theft—auto (Pen. Code, § 487, subd. 3) OR of violating Vehicle Code section 10851, a necessarily included offense. (Pen. Code, § 1159;
People
v.
Marshall, supra,
There was just one continuous, indivisible, inseverable act or course of conduct which, as we see it, would have retained its indivisible status so long as defendant retained the original dominion over the property obtained by the original theft. Neither clocks, calendars nor county boundaries convert one continuing course of conduct into a series of Qryuinal acts, He *927 who steals an automobile, steals it for use—whether that use be personal, for resale, gift, consumption, abandonment or some other form of ultimate disposal.
Thus, the act charged under count 2 was a lesser included offense under count 1. It need not have been pleaded as a separate count, and it cannot be transformed into a separate severable offense by doing so.
(People
v.
Logan
(1953)
One of the eases cited in
People
v.
Quinn, supra,
The Attorney General attempts to distinguish the Kehoe decision. There is dictum in Kehoe which superficially could be construed to support the Attorney General's position. It is stated (on p. 715 of 33 Cal.2d) : “The record here under review shows a theft completed in Eureka and Kehoe’s arrest one week later while driving the automobile in Salinas. Upon this evidence he might also have been prosecuted in Monterey County for driving an automobile without the owner’s permission. ’ ’ (Italics ours.)
That sentence might be construed to mean that double prosecutions and convictions might have been had; in Humboldt County (for the theft) and a second prosecution thereafter in Monterey County for the driving. 2 If that is what the Supreme Court meant, it is bad law. The result would be there could be a separate cumulative prosecution and punishment in every county through which the thief drives a stolen car and for every day (or perhaps every hour or minute) he drives it. The Kehoe ease itself might be used for illustration. It was lmown that Kehoe had driven the stolen car in Alameda County where he had bought gas. And, of course, to get to Monterey County from Humboldt County he had had to go through many counties. A reduetio ad absurdum will some *928 times point up an atrocious postulation. Our Constitution (art. I, §13) prohibits double jeopardy. Penal Code section 687 implements it. Penal Code section 654, as we have shown, prohibits multiple punishment and multiple prosecutions for the same and necessarily included offenses. Penal Code section 1023 is another bar for double prosecution on the same or necessarily included offenses.
We do not think the Supreme Court intended to prophesy a result running cruelly counter to all civilized concepts. No conceivable public policy could rationalize such a rule either as a matter of statutory interpretation or judicial rule making.
Our explanation of the
Kehoe
dictum is that the court intended to state that either the District Attorney of Humboldt County or the District Attorney of Monterey County (or the District Attorney of Alameda County for that matter) might legally have prosecuted defendant, but that there could neither be multiple prosecutions nor multiple punishment. That interpretation is justified by the fact that the sentence quoted from the
Kehoe
opinion is buttressed by citation of the case of
People
v.
Cuevas
(1936)
The Effect of a Poorly-Framed Instruction Involving Proof of Specific Intent
Defendant contends that error was committed in the giving of an instruction to the jury supplementing the instructions on specific intent. He concedes that 1 ‘ specific intent” was adequately explained to the jury which was also informed that both counts charged were “specific intent” *929 crimes. The judge then attempted an instruction under CAL JIG 27-A (New). That instruction reads: “The specific intent with which an act is done may be manifested by the circumstances surrounding its commission. But you may not find the defendant guilty of the offense charged in [Count . . .] unless the proved circumstances not only are consistent with the hypothesis that he had the specific intent to . . . but are irreconcilable with any other rational conclusion.” Instead of repeating the instruction to cover each count separately, the judge undertook so to frame CALJIC 27-A as to make one reading suffice for both counts. In doing so, he got into syntactical difficulties. He said: ‘ ‘ The specific intent with which an act is done may be manifested by the circumstances surrounding its commission. But you may not find the defendant guilty of the offense charged in Count 1 of this case unless the proved circumstances not only are consistent with the hypothesis that he had the specific intent to permanently deprive the owner of his property as alleged in Count 1 OB. to either permanently or temporarily deprive the owner of his title to or possession of the vehicle as alleged in Count 2 but are irreconcilable with any other rational conclusion.”
Those two sentences droned monotonically are incomprehensible. We have only a clerk’s transcript of the instructions given. As written the instruction does not furnish even the usual punctuational aids. We believe it would be possible, however, so to read the instruction that the listening jury would understand by the inflections of the judge’s voice and by suitable pauses that he was telling it that, as to each count separately considered, the jury must not find the defendant guilty unless the proved circumstances were irreconcilable with any rational conclusion other than that the defendant had had the specific intent required to establish guilt as to that offense. We do not think that this reviewing court should assume that the judge so read the instruction that a false definitive message of the separate elements of the two offenses got through to the jurors. (See
People
v.
Jones
(1926)
The complaint is that the jury might have been left with a belief that it could find the defendant guilty of grand theft even were it to find from the evidence that defendant intended only to deprive the owner of possession of his property temporarily. But instructions must be read as a whole.
(Lerner
v.
Glickfeld
(1960)
We have read the judge’s charge to the jury carefully. Considering it as a whole, and leaving the objected-to instruction in context, the charge was accurate and fair. The trial was fair. Not every inaccurate instruction necessitates a reversal. In considering under the
Watson
test
(People
v.
Watson
(1956)
The judgment under count 2 is reversed with directions to the trial court to dismiss count 2 of the information. In all other respects the judgment is affirmed.
Friedman, J., and Regan, J., concurred.
The petitions of appellant and of respondent for a hearing by the Supreme Court were denied February 26, 1969. Peters, J., was of the opinion that the petitions should be granted.
