Opinion
Jorge O. Bojorquez Perez was charged with second degree robbery (Pen. Code, §§ 211, 212.5, subd. (b), & 213, subd. (a)(2)); 1 personally using a deadly and dangerous weapon (§ 12022, subd. (b)); and a prior serious felony conviction (§ 667, subd. (a)). A jury convicted Perez of second degree robbery and found the weapon use allegation true. In the bifurcated court trial, the court found the prior serious felony allegation true. Perez was sentenced to eleven years in prison based on the upper term of five years for second degree robbery, one year for the weapon use enhancement and five years for the prior serious felony conviction.
I
On June 9, 1992, Suzanna Gomez was working as a cashier at the Azteca Market in Huntington Beach when Perez entered the store. The store owner, *216 Luis Alfredo Bonilla, saw Perez and Gomez talking. Perez first asked about pots and pans and wanted change for a dollar bill to make a phone call. Gomez opened the cash register and then realized Perez was pointing a gun at her. Perez told Gomez to give him all the money. He put a white plastic bag on the counter and instructed her to put the money in it. She complied. Perez grabbed the bag and walked out.
Gomez called to Bonilla, telling him she had been robbed. Bonilla gave chase. As he rounded the comer, he saw Perez, who looked back and started to run. Bonilla stayed about 30 feet behind Perez because he knew he had a gun. He saw Perez enter the driver’s side of a blue car, apparently empty, and drive away. Bonilla noted the license number and called the police.
About the same time, Huntington Beach Police Officer David Dierking was on patrol and heard a transmission regarding the robbery. About a mile and a half away from the crime scene, he saw a car matching the suspect vehicle description. Perez, alone in the car, pulled over after Dierking signaled to him. Dierking inspected the car, finding a white bag containing cash, a B.B. gun and a white sweatshirt turned inside out. A dollar bill was in Perez’s front pocket.
Gomez and Bonilla were brought to the scene to identify the suspect. They noticed Perez’s shirt was dark while the robber had been wearing white. Gomez thought Perez looked similar to the robber but was not sure because Perez was moving his head around. 2 Bonilla identified Perez as the man he had seen in the store and chased down the street.
Perez identified himself as Carlos Garcia. He was found to be suffering from a diabetic seizure and was taken to the hospital. He continued to claim he was Carlos Garcia until Dierking told him his fingerprints would be checked for previous arrests. Perez then gave his true name.
Defense
Perez testified that on June 9, 1992, he met an acquaintance, Arturo, who requested a ride to Anaheim. On the way, Arturo, who was driving, said he was planning a robbery and displayed a B.B. gun. Perez said he did not want trouble. Arturo parked near the Azteca Market and left the car, taking the gun and a plastic bag. Arturo told Perez to stay while he made a phone call. Arturo was wearing a white sweatshirt.
Perez, feeling ill from his diabetes, lay down in the front seat. Through the mirror, he saw Arturo heading toward the car with a man chasing him. *217 Arturo entered the car, took off his sweatshirt, threw everything on the floor and drove off. After a short distance, he stopped the car, got out and tried to take the money; Perez stopped him, saying he would return the money. Arturo ran away and Perez drove off.
Perez was stopped by the police. He was confused due to his illness. When asked whose car he was driving, Perez said “Carlos Garcia” because that was who sold him the car.
Rebuttal
The prosecution played a tape of Dierking’s interview with Perez at the hospital. Perez claimed that before the incident, Arturo mentioned robbing a store and promised to give Perez half of the money. Arturo showed him the gun which Perez touched, verifying it was real. Perez then drove to the store, while Arturo showed him the way. Perez said they were going there because Arturo intended a robbery.
Outside the store, Arturo changed his mind about giving Perez half the money. Arturo wanted Perez to drive the car. Perez said he told Arturo not to go through with the robbery; if Arturo did rob the store, Perez would leave to avoid getting into trouble. Perez then waited for Arturo in the car, and when Arturo ran out of the store with a bag, Perez was in a nervous panic and told Arturo he would have to drive.
II
Perez contends the trial court erred by failing to instruct the jury sua sponte that it must unanimously agree upon which act it relied on in finding him guilty. (CALJIC No. 17.01.) 3 He claims the jurors could have disagreed as to the exact act he committed because the prosecution asserted two separate criminal acts: Either he entered and robbed the store or drove the car to the store.
A unanimous jury verdict is required in criminal cases.
(People
v.
Jones
(1990)
We begin with Melendez. Melendez, Guzman and a third man, Provencio, participated in a store robbery. There was conflicting evidence as to Melendez’s exact involvement. A witness testified a store clerk helped Melendez make a purchase, while Provencio took a videocassette recorder and ran from the store. But a deputy sheriff testified Melendez was waiting in a car outside while the other two men robbed the store. The deputy noticed the car behind the building where he chased the robbers; Melendez was standing next to it with the door open. The deputy was not sure the driver was Melendez because he did not actually see the driver’s face; however, he, nevertheless recognized Melendez.
Another witness, a police officer, testified that after hearing the robbery report, he saw Melendez driving the suspect vehicle. Upon learning Melendez was the registered owner, the officer went to Melendez’s home where he found Melendez and Guzman. (People v. Melendez, supra, 224 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1423-1424.)
The court instructed the jury they could find Melendez guilty as a principal under three theories of liability: active participation, aiding and abetting, and/or conspiracy. However, the prosecutor argued Melendez was guilty as either an aider and abettor or a conspirator,
not
an active participant. The prosecutor told the jury, “ ‘Eight people can say he is ... a conspirator and four can say he is an aider/abettor.’ ”
(People
v.
Melendez, supra,
On appeal, Melendez argued he was deprived of a unanimous jury verdict because the prosecution relied on two different theories of liability and the jurors were not instructed they must unanimously agree upon which acts constituted the basis of liability. “ ‘The problem regarding jury unanimity arises because different jurors could have attached criminal liability arising out of different factual bases.’ ”
(People
v.
Melendez, supra,
The Court of Appeal agreed with Melendez. It recognized jurors need not unanimously agree on the specific theory of liability, but concluded this rule was applicable only when separate theories arise from one set of facts. In other words, “Where a single crime can be proven by different theories based on different acts and at least two of these theories rely on different evidence, and where the circumstances demonstrate a reasonable possibility that a juror will find one theory proven and the other not proven but that all of the jurors will not agree on the same theory, a unanimity instruction must be given.” (People v. Melendez, supra, 24 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1433-1434).
In
People
v.
Davis, supra,
Officer Medero testified he saw Spence driving the suspect vehicle, while another person ducked in the backseat. The car sped off; Medero gave chase until Spence skidded into another car, stopped, and got out. Davis and Mosley opened the passenger doors and fled towards heavy brush. Officers surveying the scene in a helicopter saw the three run from the car. They followed the fleeing driver with a floodlight. Spence and Mosley were soon apprehended. Several hours later, the officers were collecting scattered jewelry when they found Davis under some bushes. They also found two pillowcases containing jewelry, a sawed-off shotgun and a license plate inside the car. (People v. Davis, supra, 8 Cal.App.4th at pp. 31-32.)
On appeal, Davis claimed the court erred in failing to instruct the jury sua sponte with CALJIC No. 17.01. He argued the jury could have based its verdict either on a direct-perpetrator theory or an aider-and-abettor theory. (People v. Davis, supra, 8 Cal.App.4th at pp. 32-33.)
*220
The Court of Appeal affirmed the conviction. It recognized, “In California, as in most American jurisdictions, criminal verdicts must be unanimous.” (
“The
Sullivan
rule takes as irrelevant any jury disagreement on subordinate issues. It matters not that jurors may disagree over the theory of the crime .... Nor does it matter that they disagree on the theory of participation, for example, whether there was a direct participation or aiding and abetting or coconspiracy. Nor does it matter that they disagree about the facts proving any of these theories. If each juror concludes, based on legally applicable theories supported by substantial evidence, that defendant is guilty of the charged offense, the defendant is properly found guilty even if the jurors disagree about the particular theories or facts.”
(People
v.
Davis, supra,
The
Davis
court then discussed the cases which had rejected the ultimate-issue test. Specifically, the court addressed
United States
v.
Gipson
(5th Cir. 1977)
The
Davis
court found
Sullivan
the better reasoned rule. Citing
Schad
v.
Arizona
(1991)
The
Davis
court also noted the theory espoused in
Sullivan
has withstood California Supreme Court scrutiny. Indeed,
Davis
recited several instances in
*221
which our Supreme Court did not require jury unanimity. (E.g.,
People
v.
Chavez
(1951)
Davis
concluded its analysis by examining
People
v.
Beardslee
(1991)
*222
We too reject
Melendez.
Both the United States Supreme Court in
Schad
and the California Supreme Court on several occasions have held jurors need not unanimously agree on the theory supporting liability. We find
Melendez
is not supported by case law or logic. “Because statutes frequently enumerate alternatives that clearly are mere means of satisfying a single element of an offense, adoption of the . . . approach of requiring a specific verdict as to every alternative would produce absurd results.”
(Schad
v.
Arizona, supra,
Although the conclusion in Melendez is a logical extension of earlier, established principles, the court failed to address a critical issue. The Melendez rule rewards the defendant who is guilty of more than one role in the charged crime. Under its rationale, the defendant who sits in the car and later enters the store, actually committing both acts, is not convicted if all jurors do not unanimously agree on at least one act. On the other hand, the defendant who only waits in the car or only enters the store does not have the advantage of splitting the vote. The result therefore rewards defendants who present evidence they committed more than one act, confuse the jury and then exploit that confusion when the jurors cannot agree.
The Attorney General explains this anamoly well. “Assume a robbery with two masked participants in a store, one as the gunman and one as the lookout. If one witness makes a voice identification of the defendant as the gunman who demanded money, but other evidence, such as a fingerprint, suggests the defendant was actually holding the door open as lookout, the jury would be faced with the same theories presented in this case: find the defendant was the gunman and therefore a direct perpetrator, or find he was at the door and therefore an aider and abettor. Either way he would be guilty of robbery.” If 12 jurors must agree on the role played by the defendant, the defendant may go free, even if the jurors all agree defendant committed the crime. That result is absurd.
We find
Davis
the better reasoned decision. “In California it is unnecessary jurors unanimously agree on the theory of criminal culpability supporting their unanimous conclusion of guilt. We conclude the complexity of the
*223
law and the complexity of criminal conduct make any other position so potentially instructionally difficult, and complicated, and so potentially confusing to jurors that any other rule is, as a practical matter, unacceptable. [Citations.]”
(People
v.
Davis, supra,
As did the
Davis
court, we conclude “. . . the giving of CALJIC No. 17.01 is inappropriate in those cases where multiple theories or acts may form the basis of a guilty verdict on one discrete criminal event. We find CALJIC No. 17.01 an appropriate instruction when conviction on a single count could be based on two or more discrete criminal events. In such cases it is appropriate the jurors all agree the defendant is responsible for the same discrete criminal event. As we have noted, however, the jurors need not agree on the theory of criminality or the theory of criminal participation.” (
Perez was charged with one offense, second degree robbery, based on one discrete criminal event. There is no question as to which act constituted the robbery. Witnesses testified the perpetrator entered the store, displayed a gun, took the money in the register and fled. However, there was" conflicting evidence regarding which specific acts Perez committed during the robbery. In light of our conclusions above, it was not necessary jurors unanimously agree on whether Perez was the direct perpetrator or aided and abetted the robbery by driving the perpetrator to the store. Therefore, the failure to give CALJIC No. 17.01 was not erroneous.
III.
After submitting this matter, Perez moved to vacate the submission in order to file a supplemental brief challenging the constitutionality of CALJIC No. 2.90, the standard reasonable doubt instruction, in light of the United States Supreme Court’s grant of certiorari in
People
v.
Sandoval
(1992)
The judgment is affirmed.
Sills, P. J., and Moore, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied April 12, 1994.
Notes
All further statutory references are to the Penal Code.
Later, in a photo lineup, Gomez identified Perez as the robber.
CALJIC No. 17.01 provides: “The defendant is accused of having committed the crime of _[in Count_]. The prosecution has introduced evidence tending to prove that there is more than one [act] [or] [omission] upon which a conviction [on Count_] may be based. Defendant may be found guilty if the proof shows beyond a reasonable doubt that [he] [she] committed any one or more of such [acts] [or] [omissions]. However, in order to return a verdict of guilty [to Count_], all jurors must agree that [he] [she] committed the same [act] [or] [omission] [or] [acts] [or] [omissions]. It is not necessary that the particular [act] [or] [omission] agreed upon be stated in your verdict.”
Schad argued jurors must unanimously agree on the theory of liability in a first degree, capital murder case where the statute provided a finding of guilt based on either premeditation and deliberation or felony murder. However, the
Schad
court characterized the issue as the permissible breadth in defining criminal conduct, as reflected in jury instructions applying the definitions, rather than jury unanimity.
(People
v.
Davis, supra,
The
Schad
plurality found it impossible to “lay down any single analytical model for determining when two means are so disparate as to exemplify two inherently separate offenses.”
(Schad
v.
Arizona, supra,
The defendant urged the court to reject
People
v.
Forbes
(1985)
Perez contends our Supreme Court had the opportunity in Beardslee to take a position similar to that taken in Forbes, but chose not to. We disagree. The Supreme Court did not *222 overrule the decision in Forbes, finding no instruction was required. Instead, the court held it did not need to address the issue because it found “[t]he jurors who concluded that defendant intentionally killed Patty with premeditation and deliberation necessarily would have believed that if he was not the actual killer, he intentionally encouraged and facilitated the actual killer’s perpetration of first degree murder. Since the jury had to agree unanimously at least on the facts required for conviction as an aider and abettor, and for application of the special circumstance findings to a person who was not the actual killer [citation], no further unanimity was required, and the unanimity instruction was not necessary.” (People v. Beardslee, supra, 53 Cal.3d at pp. 93-94.)
This rationale is also consistent with our earlier decision in
People
v.
Dellinger
(1984)
