Lead Opinion
Opinion
In this case we consider whether the denial of defendant’s motion to represent himself under Faretta v. California (1975)
Defendant entered pleas of no contest to charges of possession of methamphetamine for sale (Health & Saf. Code, § 11378), perjury (Pen. Code, § 118), vehicular manslaughter (Pen. Code, § 192, subd. (c)(3)), and assault with a firearm (Pen. Code, § 245, subd. (a)(2)). Defendant also admitted various enhancements (Pen. Code, §§ 12022, subd. (c), 12022.1, subd. (b); Health & Saf. Code, § 11370.2, subd. (a)) and the trial court sentenced him to an aggregate unstayed prison term of 14 years.
On appeal, defendant contends the trial court erred in denying his Faretta motion for self-representation and in denying his motion to withdraw his plea. Defendant’s first contention has merit and is dispositive of his appeal. We shall therefore reverse the judgment.
Factual and Procedural Background
The underlying facts surrounding defendant’s offenses are irrelevant to the issues raised on appeal. We instead focus our attention on the proceedings involving defendant’s request for self-representation.
Defendant’s case was set for trial on September 12, 1994. On August 9, James Carroll, the appointed attorney who had represented defendant at the preliminary hearing, asked to be relieved because of trial schedule conflicts. After Carroll was relieved, Frances Huey was assigned from the attorney panel to handle defendant’s case. Huey informed the court that defendant had asked to represent himself. Defendant clarified that he would like a different attorney, a Mr. Masuda, appointed to his case because Huey had already told him that she would be unable to go to trial on September 12.
The court advised that while defendant was entitled to an attorney he was not entitled to specify which attorney should be appointed. Defendant then said he would accept the attorney appointed by the court.
The court advised defendant that he was entitled to have appointed counsel, a right defendant said he understood. The court asked if defendant understood that it was “generally not a wise choice to represent yourself in a criminal matter,” and defendant responded affirmatively. Defendant also said he understood that if found guilty, a sentence of 27 years 4 months might be imposed.
The court further advised, and defendant acknowledged, that defendant would be opposed by a trained prosecutor, would be required to comply with all the rules of criminal procedure and evidence, could not base an appeal on his own lack of competence, and would not be entitled to a delay in proceedings if he subsequently changed his mind and wanted to hire an attorney.
The court then inquired into defendant’s background. Defendant said his only legal experience was in his own “previous cases.” He said he thought he had represented himself 11 years earlier when he was 18 years old, on a burglary charge and successfully got the case reduced to misdemeanor trespassing, for which probation was ordered. Defendant said he had completed the 11th grade and had attended other classes at the Rio Cosumnes Correctional Center, but had not received any degrees or a general equivalency diploma.
In response to the court’s question, defendant stated he had held “various kinds” of employment, primarily manual labor, and had most recently worked as a ranch hand.
The district attorney noted that he was trying to work out a resolution to this case, but concluded, “[defendant’s] got a right to represent himself if he wants to do that on a 27-year exposure. I don’t know what else we can say.”
The court then said to defendant: “. . . I have to make a determination that you have knowingly, intelligently and voluntarily decided to represent yourself. While I find that you have now made a request to represent yourself, I do not find that you have intelligently made a request to represent
Defendant interrupted to point out that there was a law library available in the jail, that he was “a determined individual,” and that he believed he “could handle [him]self.”
The court concluded; “It’s my determination to make, . . . and I find I cannot determine that you have intelligently decided to represent yourself. I’m denying your pro[.] per[.] status request and appointing Ms. Huey to all three cases.”
The court found good cause to postpone trial to September 28, 12 days beyond the 60-day limit. Defendant subsequently entered a negotiated plea of no contest to various offenses and received an aggregate unstayed prison term of 14 years.
Defendant received a certificate of probable cause and this appeal followed.
Discussion
I. Raising Faretta Issue After Plea of No Contest
At the court’s request, the parties filed supplemental briefs addressing whether defendant’s plea of no contest waived any error related to the denial of his Faretta motion. We conclude this issue is not waived by his plea and thus may properly be raised on appeal.
A plea of no contest has the same legal effect as a guilty plea. (Pen. Code, § 1016, subd. 3. [all subsequent statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise indicated].) After a plea of guilty or its functional equivalent of no contest (nolo contendere), the appellate rights of the defendant are statutorily restricted. Under section 1237.5, no appeal can be taken by a defendant from a judgment of conviction after a plea of guilty or no contest except where defendant has filed a written statement asserting enumerated grounds “going to the legality of the proceedings” and the court has filed a certificate of probable cause. (See also Cal. Rules of Court, rule 31(d).) But a defendant who receives a certificate of probable cause after a guilty or no contest plea does not have carte blanche to raise any and all issues on appeal.
In People v. Turner (1985)
We further explained: “A guilty plea also waives any irregularity in the proceedings which would not preclude a conviction. [Citation.] Thus irregularities which could be cured, or which would not preclude subsequent proceedings to establish guilt, are waived and may not be asserted on appeal after a guilty plea. [Citation.] In other words, by pleading guilty the defendant admits that he did that which he is accused of doing and he thereby obviates the procedural necessity of establishing that he committed the crime charged. In short, a guilty plea ‘admits all matters essential to the conviction.’ [Citation.] A defendant thereafter can raise only those questions which go to the power of the state to try him despite his guilt. In other words, in the language of the statute, defendant can only raise ‘grounds going to the legality of the proceedings.’ ” (
After enumerating some of the issues waived by a guilty plea, we turned to those that survive a guilty plea and that may be raised on appeal with a certificate of probable cause. We noted: “Since a factually guilty defendant is entitled to benefit of counsel, the denial of the right to counsel ... is not waived by a plea of guilty.” (
The right to self-representation is grounded in the Sixth Amendment’s right to counsel. (Faretta v. California, supra,
In dicta in People v. Barlow (1980)
Having obtained a certificate of probable cause, defendant is therefore entitled to raise his Faretta claim in this appeal.
Defendant contends the court erred in denying his motion for self-representation. We agree.
As this court has explained: “In Faretta, the United States Supreme Court held that a defendant in a state criminal prosecution has a constitutional right under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to waive counsel and represent himself. [Citation.] Once defendant asserts this right, the court must determine whether he has the mental capacity to make a voluntary and intelligent waiver of the right to counsel. [Citation.] In making this determination, ‘[t]he trial court is not concerned with the wisdom of defendant’s decision to represent himself, or with how well he can do so. The sole relevant question is whether the defendant has the mental capacity to knowingly waive counsel while realizing the probable risks and consequences of self representation. . . .’” (People v. Nauton (1994)
A court cannot consider defendant’s ability to represent himself. The United States Supreme Court held: “[T]he competence that is required of a defendant seeking to waive his right to counsel is the competence to waive the right, not the competence to represent himself.” (Godinez v. Moran (1993)
A defendant’s competence to waive counsel is a matter left to the sound discretion of the trial court and its decision will not be disturbed absent a manifest abuse of discretion. (People v. McArthur (1992)
Here, the record demonstrates an abuse of discretion. The trial court advised defendant of the problems inherent in self-representation, and defendant clearly stated he understood them. The court’s decision to deny defendant’s right to self-representation was predicated on the court’s assessment of defendant’s skills and background and its conclusion that defendant could not “effectively represent [himself] in these very serious cases.”
The court appears to have confused the intelligence of defendant’s waiver with the intelligence of the choice itself. Defendant had an 11th grade education and had taken classes beyond that level. He had worked as a manual laborer, and had previous experience in the criminal justice system. Defendant clearly understood his right to counsel and what was involved in self-representation.
In Johnstone v. Kelly (2d Cir. 1986)
The United States Supreme Court reaffirmed these principles in Godinez v. Moran, supra, 509 U.S. at pages 399-402 [113 S.Ct. at pages 2687-2688, 125 L.Ed.2d at pages 332-334], Commenting on those principles, the California Court of Appeal recounted that “Godinez establishes that the only requirements for a valid waiver of the right to counsel are: (1) a determination that the accused is competent to waive the right, i.e., whether he/she has the mental capacity to understand the nature and object of the proceedings against him/her, and (2) a finding that the defendant is able to make an intelligent and voluntary wavier, i.e., whether the defendant understands the significance and consequences of his/her decision, and whether that decision is uncoerced.” (People v. Poplawski (1994)
Recently in People v. Marshall (1997)
Unlike the record in Marshall, there is nothing in the record in this case to support a claim that defendant’s request was equivocal, made in anger or frustration or was otherwise asserted for the purpose of delay or frustration of the orderly administration of justice. Moreover, unlike cases such as People v. Burnett (1987)
Under these circumstances, the trial court erred in denying defendant’s motion for self-representation.
As we have commented before: “Respect for the dignity and autonomy of the individual is a value universally celebrated in free societies and uniformly repressed in totalitarian and authoritarian societies. Out of fidelity to that value defendant’s choice must be honored even if he opts foolishly to go to hell in a handbasket.” (People v. Nauton, supra,
The denial of the right to self-representation is prejudicial per se, and we therefore reverse. (People v. Joseph (1983)
Disposition
The judgment is reversed.
Puglia, P. J., concurred.
Notes
Similarly, a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel may be raised following a guilty plea (People v. Everett (1986)
In arguing otherwise, the Attorney General contends the claimed Faretta error played no part in defendant’s decision to enter a plea of no contest, and therefore cannot be raised on appeal. The Attorney General misconstrues the import of the cited cases. For example, citing People v. Kaanehe (1977)
The People also suggest that Barlow is distinguishable from the instant case because it involved “pseudo-Faretta error" instead of “true Faretta” error. Because this claimed distinction is chimerical, we reject it.
Dissenting Opinion
The majority opinion holds that a defendant (1) who is represented by counsel whose competence is not questioned, (2) in the course of such representation knowingly and intelligently decides to plead guilty, and (3) whose claim of Faretta error does not involve the circumstances surrounding the plea itself, may nevertheless succeed in reversing his conviction by alleging erroneous denial of his pretrial Faretta motion at a time when he was contesting rather than admitting his guilt. (Faretta v. California (1975)
The denial of a pretrial Faretta motion is not an irregularity which bars subsequent proceedings to establish guilt. Regardless of whether the motion is granted or denied, the People may go forward with their case against the defendant. Indeed, defendant’s guilty plea takes the Faretta issue out of the litigable arena, because it precludes a trial on the merits and the taking of evidence. (People v. Whitton (1952)
Having pleaded guilty, “[a] defendant thereafter can raise only those questions which go to the power of the state to try him despite his guilt.” (People v. Turner, supra,
The majority claims that since a Faretta motion is not related to guilt and goes to the “legality of the proceedings” (presumably because self-representation is a constitutional right), it may be raised after a guilty plea. The majority misreads the rule.
First, the fact that Faretta is unrelated to guilt is a makeweight—there are a host of errors “unrelated to guilt,” including those of constitutional magnitude, which are waived by a guilty plea. (See, e.g., People v. Hernandez (1992)
Second, the majority ignores the language of California Supreme Court cases which state clearly that “legality of the proceedings” under Penal Code section 1237.5 means legality of the proceedings which resulted in the plea. (People v. Kaanehe (1977)
The majority concludes Faretta error goes to the legality of the proceedings because the right to self-representation is derived from a defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel. However, this reasoning confuses the distinction between the right to counsel and the right of a defendant to represent himself. The two rights are not interchangeable as the majority implies—in fact they are “mutually exclusive.” (People v. Marshall (1997)
A defendant’s right to present his or her own defense is not only not self-executing, it must be timely and unequivocally asserted. (People v.
By jumbling the difference between the Sixth Amendment right to counsel, which automatically attaches at all stages of the proceedings, with the denial of a pretrial Faretta motion, the majority sidesteps the basic principles enunciated in Turner. A defendant who pleads guilty without effective assistance of counsel may raise that deprivation on appeal because the constitutional infringement unavoidably impairs his ability to enter a voluntary and intelligent plea. A defendant who desires to act as his own lawyer but is precluded from doing so stands on no such footing. His ability to intelligently decide whether to plead guilty is not impaired by having counsel assist him despite his wishes.
Ten years ago in People v. Lobaugh (1987)
In sum, having failed to demonstrate that the improper denial of his Faretta motion affected the guilty plea, defendant may not raise Faretta error on appeal. When defendant accepted the lawyer the court appointed for him, and with the assistance of that counsel entered a voluntary and intelligent plea of guilty, he forfeited his right to reopen the academic question whether the court properly refused to allow him to represent himself during the adversarial stage of the proceedings.
I would affirm the judgment.
Respondent’s petitions for review by the Supreme Court were denied October 22,1997. Baxter, J., was of the opinion that the petitions should be granted.
It is important to note that defendant does not attack his guilty plea on the grounds that he felt coerced to enter it because of the denial of his Faretta motion. Had he done so, an appealable issue might very well be raised, since the issue whether the plea was improperly induced goes directly to the legality of the proceedings which resulted in the plea. (See People v. DeVaughn, supra,
One may well wonder what practical implications will flow from today’s ruling. Will district attorneys and judges be as confident accepting guilty pleas where there has been a previous Faretta denial, knowing that the defendant has an “automatic reversal” ace up his sleeve? Will Faretta motions become increasingly more common as defendants discover that if they eventually decide to plead guilty, they will still have a chance to wipe the slate clean and start all over by invoking Faretta error? How many new habeas corpus petitions will suddenly surface based upon the fact that the defendant had a Faretta motion denied before he pleaded guilty?
As one federal appeals court recently observed: “Many a defendant would like to plant an error and grow a risk-free trial.” (U.S. v. Boyd (7th Cir. 1996)
I would also reject defendant’s alternative argument that the trial court abused its discretion in failing to set aside his guilty plea on the ground it was coerced by the district attorney’s threat to prosecute his wife, an issue not reached in the majority opinion. At the time the plea was taken, the trial court asked defendant directly, “Have you or anyone else been threatened in any way to get you to plead guilty," and defendant answered, “No.” (Italics added.) The declarations of the witnesses to the alleged “threat” recited inconsistent versions of the same conversation. Finally, after accepting the negotiated plea, defendant confided to the police in a videotaped conversation, “[M]y attomey[] want[ed] me to take it [the plea] back because she knows we [could] beat the case.” These items of evidence provided solid, tangible evidence supporting the court’s denial of defendant’s request to change his plea due to alleged prosecutorial extortion.
