Opinion
Jose Tapia and Tomas Rico Serna pleaded guilty to sale of heroin. (Health & Saf. Code, § 11352.) They appeal the judgments, contending their sentences (imprisonment for five years to life with ineligibility for parole for three years) constitute cruel or unusual punishment within the meaning of the California Constitution, article I, section 6.
The preliminary hearing disclosed that on 13 March 1973, police informant Martinez, who had purchased heroin at Tapia’s house five or six times before, telephoned Tapia to see if he could come over. Tapia told him to come alone. When Martinez arrived, Tapia signaled through a front window for him to go to the backdoor. There he found Tapia and Serna waiting. Martinez handed $25 to Tapia and got back a balloon from Serna containing 1.8 grams of heroin. A subsequent search of Tapia and his house uncovered marijuana, amphetamines, and an additional quantity of heroin. On Tapia’s and Serna’s plea of guilty to sale of heroin, charges of possession of marijuana and of amphetamines were dropped, as was the allegation that Serna had been previously convicted of a federal narcotics offense.
In re Lynch,
Appellants challenge each aspect of their punishment: the five-year minimum imprisonment, the life-term maximum imprisonment, and the three-year ineligibility for parole. In
In re Foss,
10 Cal.3d
*720
910 [
First, the nature of the offense and the offender. No citation of authority is needed to support the propositions that the sale of heroin is a serious and deadly offense against society, and that traffic in heroin is a major factor in contemporary crime. Not only is the recipient of the heroin endangered by its use, but criminal offenses against persons and property commonly arise out of the recipient’s need for money to pay for the heroin.
The offenders, Tapia and Serna, assert they are merely heroin addicts who finance their own addiction by furnishing heroin to other addicts. The record on appeal neither supports nor controverts this assertion, for it reveals little about the crime charged or the background of defendants other than the suggestion that both defendants have a prior criminal history. The assumed truth of their assertion, however, does not place Tapia and Serna beyond the reach of criminal sanctions.
In re Foss,
Second, comparison with punishments for other crimes.
As a serious crime, punishment for the sale of heroin (five years to life) ranks in severity with the punishment for other serious crimes: second degree murder (five years to life); first degree robbery (five years to life); first degree burglary (five years to life). Its severity is less than aggravated kidnaping (life without parole) and first degree murder (life imprisonment or death), but more than mayhem (six months to fourteen years) and manslaughter (six months to fifteen years). (See
People
v.
Smith,
With respect to the three-year ineligibility for parole, we note the concern expressed in recent cases over unreasonably long minimum periods of incarceration which interfere with the rehabilitative process.
(In re Foss,
Third, comparison with punishment for similar crimes in other jurisdictions.
Appellants’ argument on this point is directed to the potential maximum sentence of life imprisonment. A compilation offered by Tapia shows that for the crime of sale of heroin, 7 other states have maximum life sentences, 2 have máximums of 40 years, 1 of 25 years, 11 of 20 years, 10 of 15 years, 1 of 12 years, 11 of 10 years, 2 of 6 years, and 4 of 5 years. These statistics prove little more than that reasonable men will differ in establishing appropriate maximum punishment for a crime of universally recognized offensiveness. In our view comparison of the punishment provided for a particular crime with that adopted in other jurisdictions, while a useful and instructive subject of investigation for a legislative committee engaged in revision of the Penal Code, is of value to a court only in determining the basic classification of the crime as major or minor, for which, respectively, major or minor punishment may be constitutionally imposed. Lacking in this case is the “virtually unanimous judgment of our sister states” which might indicate, we have strayed from the contemporary path of reasoned justice.
(In re Lynch,
In sum, the punishment here imposed for sale of heroin is not “so disproportionate to the crime for which it is inflicted that it shocks the conscience and offends fundamental notions of human dignity.” (In re Lynch, supra, at p. 424.)
The judgments are affirmed.
Roth, P. J., and Compton, J., concurred.
Appellants’ petitions for a hearing by the Supreme Court were denied March 19, 1975. Tobriner, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
