Opinion
Defendant Elizabeth Ann Perryman was convicted by a jury of being an accessory after the fact for her participation in codefendant Lena Williams’s attempted robbery and deadly weapon assault upon Chong *1548 Daniels. (Pen. Code, § 32.) She appeals alleging (1) evidentiary error and (2) instructional error. We affirm the judgment.
Chong Daniels was waiting at a Richmond bus stop when she was accosted from behind by Williams. Williams ordered Daniels: “Give me your purse.” Daniels refused. Williams pulled a knife, held it against Daniels’s neck and threatened to stab Daniels. Daniels could not describe the knife. When Daniels continued to refuse, Williams grabbed the purse strap and both women fell to the ground struggling. At some point, Williams cut the shoulder straps of the purse.
At this time, defendant drove up in a white Toyota, exited the car and told Daniels: “You just give her your purse. She’s not going to hurt you.” As Daniels pleaded to defendant for help, defendant placed her hand over the victim’s mouth and repeated the previous order.
Later that afternoon, Contra Costa County Deputy Sheriff Kroll arrested defendant and Williams driving in the white Toyota. A routine search of defendant uncovered a “Swiss Army” knife in her purse.
Defendant testified that she just happened upon the two women fighting as she was en route to Williams’s house. She stated that she approached the scene intending to stop the fight and did not intend to take Daniels’s purse. Defendant denied making the statements attributed to her by the victim and testified she did not see a knife.
I *
II
Relying on
People
v.
Wesley
(1986)
Defendant asserts that the trial court should have, sua sponte, instructed in the language of CALJIC No. 17.01, which provides: “The defendant is charged with the offense of____He may be found guilty if the proof shows beyond a reasonable doubt that he committed any one or more of such acts, but in order to find the defendant guilty, all the jurors must agree that he *1549 committed the same act or acts. It is not necessary that the particular act or acts committed so agreed upon be stated in the verdict.”
Where the verdict may be based on any one of a number of unlawful acts, the trial court must give, sua sponte, this instruction in order to assure defendant of his constitutional right to juror unanimity. (See
People
v.
Wesley, supra, 177
Cal.App.3d at p. 401;
People
v.
Crawford
(1982)
Here, codefendant Williams pleaded guilty to attempted robbery and assault with a deadly weapon. These crimes arose out of the single attack on Daniels, to which defendant was a witness. The offenses occurred at a single time and place and involved only one victim. (Compare
People
v.
McNeill
(1980)
The crime of accessory is separate and distinct from the underlying felony. The state of mind required for being an accessory after the fact excludes that intent and state of mind required to be a principal.
(People
v.
Prado
[(1977)
*1550
The duty to instruct with CALJIC No. 17.01 exists where the defendant is charged in one count with multiple offenses. (See
People
v.
Wesley, supra,
III-IV *
The judgment is affirmed.
King, J., concurred.
Haning, J., concurred in the result.
