Opinion
Defendant was charged in an information with attempted burglary (Pen. Code, §§ 664, 459). Trial by jury was waived, and the matter submitted on the testimony contained in the transcript of the preliminary hearing together with exhibits. Defendant was found guilty. Proceedings *63 were suspended before pronouncement of sentence, and an order was made granting defendant probation. Thе appeal is from the order which is deemed a final judgment. (Pen. Code, § 1237.)
I. The Facts
In October 1967, while his wife was away on a trip, defendant, a mathematician, under an assumed name, rented an office on the second floor of a building in Hollywood which was over the mezzanine of a bank. Directly below the mezzanine was the vault of the bank. Defendant was aware of the layout of the building, specifically of the relation of the office he rented to the bank vault. Defendant paid rent for the period from October 23 to November 23. The landlord had 10 days before commencement of the rental period within which to finish some interior repairs and painting. During this prerental period defendant brought into the office certain equipment. This included drilling tools, two acetylene gas tanks, a blow torch, a blanket, and a linoleum rug. The landlord observed these items when he came in from time to time to see how the repair work was progressing. Defendant learned from a custodian that no one was in the buliding on Saturdays. On Saturday, October 14, defendant drilled two grоups of holes into the floor of the office above the mezzanine room. He stopped drilling before the holes went through the floor. He came back to the office several times thinking he might slowly drill down, covering the holes with the linoleum rug. 1 At some point in time he installed a hasp lock on a closet, and planned to, or did, place his tools in. it However, he left the closet keys on the premises. Around the end of November, apparently after November 23, the landlord notified the police and turned the tools and equipment over to them. Defendant did not pay any more rent. It is not clear when he last entered the office, but it could have been after November 23, and evеn after the landlord had removed the equipment. On February 22, 1968, the police arrested defendant. After receiving advice as to his constitutional rights, defendant voluntarily made an oral statement which he reduced to writing.
Among other things which defendant wrote down were these:
“Saturday, the 14th ... I drilled some small holes in the floor of the room. Because of tiredness, fear, and the implications of what I was doing, I stopped and went to sleep.
“At this point I think my motives began to change. The actutal [sic] commencement of my plan made me begin to realize that even if I were to succeed a fugitive life of living off of stolen money would not give *64 the enjoyment of the life of a mathematician however humble a job I might have. . .
“I still had not given up my plan however. I felt I had made a certain investment of time, money, effort and a certain pschological [s/c] commitment to the concept.
“I came back several times thinking I might store the tools in the closet and slowly drill down (covering the hole with a rug of linoleum square. As time went on (after two weeks or so). My wife came back and my life as bank robber seemed more and more absurd.”
II. Discussion of Defendant’s Contentions
Defendant’s position in this appeal is that, as a matter of law, there was insufficient evidence upon which to convict him of a criminal attempt under Penal Code section 664. Defendant claims that his actions were all preparatory in nature and never reached a stage of advancement in relation to the substantive crime which he concededly intended to commit (burglary of the bank vault) so that criminal responsibility might attach.
In order for the prosecution to prove that defendant committed an attempt to burglarize as proscribed by Penal Code section 664, it was required to establish that he had the specific intent to commit a burglаry of the bank and that his acts toward that goal went beyond mere preparation. (Pe
ople
v.
Buffum,
The required specific intent was clearly established in the instant case. Defendant admitted in his written confession that he rented the office fully intending to burglarize the bank, that he brought in tools and equipment to accomplish this purpose, and that he began drilling into thе floor with the intent of making an entry into the bank.
The question of whether defendant’s conduct went beyond “mere preparation” raises some provocative problems. The briefs and the oral argument of counsel in this case point up a degree of ambiguity and uncertainty that permeates the law of attempts in this state. Each side has cited us to a different so-called “test” to determine whether this defendant’s conduct went beyond the preparatory stage. Predictably each respective test in the eyes of its proponents yielded an opposite result.
Defendant relies heavily on the following language: “Preparation alone is not enough [to convict fоr an attempt], there must be some appreciable
*65
fragment of the crime committed,
it must be in such progress that it will be consummated unless interrupted by circumstances independent of the will of the attempter,
and the act must not be equivocal in nature.” (Italics added.)
(People
v.
Buffum, supra,
However, the Attorney General suggests that another test, as set out in
People
v.
Anderson, supra,
We suggest that the confusion in this area is a result of the broad statutory language of section 664, which reads in part: “Any person who attempts to commit any crime, but fails, or is prevented or intercepted in the perpetration thereof, is punishable . . . .” This is a very general proscription against all attempts not specifically made a crime (see e.g., Pen. Code, § 217). The statute does not differentiate between the various types of attempts which may be considered culpable. Reference must be made to cаse law in order to determine precisely what conduct constitutes an attempt. However, the statute does point out by the words “fails,” “prevented,” and “intercepted,” those conditions which separate an attempt from the substantive crime.
An examination of the decisional law reveals at least two general categories of attempts, both of which have been held to fall within the ambit of the statute.
In the first category are those situations where the actоr does all acts necessary (including the last proximate act) to commit the substantive crime, but nonetheless he somehow is unsuccessful. This lack of success is
*66
either a “failure” or a “prevention” brought about because of some extraneous circumstances, e.g., a malfunction of equipment, a miscalculation of operations by the actor or a situation wherein circumstances were at variance with what the actor believed them to be.
2
Certain convictions for attempted murder illustrate the first category. Some turn on situations wherein the actor fires a weapon at a person but misses
(People
v.
Glick,
In the above situations application of the rule stated in
People
v.
Buffum, supra,
*67
However, it is quite clear that under California law an overt act, which, when added to the requisite intent, is sufficient to bring about a criminal attempt, need not be the last proximate or ultimate step towards commission of the substantive crime. “It is not necessary that the overt act proved should have been the ultimate step toward the consummation of the design. It is sufficient if it was ‘the first or some subsequent step in a direct movement towards the commission of the offense after the preparations are made.’ [Citation.]”
(People
v.
Gibson,
This rule makes for a second category of “attempts.” The recognition of this separate category is well articulated by Mr. Chief Judge Learned Hand in
United States
v.
Coplon
(2d Cir. 1950)
Applying criminal culpability to acts directly moving toward commission of crime (but short of the last proximate act necessary to consummate the criminal design) under section 664 is an obvious safeguard to society because it makes it unnecessary for police to wait before intervening until the actor has done the substantive evil sought to be prevented. It allows such criminal conduct to be stopped or intercepted when it becomes clear what the actor’s intention is and when the acts done show that the perpetrator is acually putting his plan into action. Discovering precisely what conduct falls within this latter category, however, often becomes a *68 difficult problem. Because of the lack of specificity of section 664, police, trial judges, jurors, and in the last analysis, appellate courts, face thе dilemma of trying to identify that point beyond which conduct passes from innocent to criminal absent a specific event such as the commission of a prohibited substantive crime.
Our courts have come up with a variety of “tests” which try to distinguish acts of preparation from completed attempts. “The preparation consists in devising or arranging the means or measures necessary for the commission of the offense; the attempt is the direct movement toward the commission after the preparations are made.”
(People
v.
Murray,
None of the above statements of the law appliсable to this category of attempts provide a litmus-like test, and perhaps no such test is achievable. Such precision is not required in this case, however. There was definitely substantial evidence entitling the trial judge to find that defendant’s acts had gone beyond the preparation stage. Without specifically deciding where defendant’s рreparations left off and where his activities became a completed criminal attempt,
4
we can say that his “drilling” activity clearly was an unequivocal and direct step toward the completion of the burglary. (Cf.
People
v.
Burton,
The instant case provides an out-of-the-ordinary factual situation within the second category. Usually the actors in cases falling within that category of attempts are intercepted or caught in the act (see e.g., Burton, Cloninger and Davis, supra). Here, there was no direct рroof of any actual interception. But it was clearly inferable by the trial judge that defendant became aware that the landlord had resumed control over the office and had turned defendant’s equipment and tools over to the police. This was the equivalent of interception.
The inference of this nonvoluntary character of defendant’s abandonment was a proper one for the trial judge to draw.
(People
v.
Burton, supra,
The order is affirmed.
Stephens, Acting P. J., and Aiso, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied April 23, 1970, and appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied May 21, 1970.
Notes
This is defendant’s characterization of what occurred after his initial drilling session. (See partial text of confession, post.)
The “classic” case, often used as a law school hypothetical example, occurs when the pickpocket thrusts his hаnd into an empty pocket
(Commonwealth
v.
Cline
(1913)
It is interesting to note how the rule enunciated in
Buffum
entered California law. It first appeared in
People
v.
Miller,
Commentator Bernard Witkin points out the difficulty of pinpointing in any given case the dividing line between acts of preparation and those acts which constitute the completed attempt. He suggests that courts review the entire factual pattern in what might be termed a “common sense approach” rather than trying to extrapolate from precisely drawn lines. (See 1 Witkin, Cal. Crimes (1963) Elements of Crime, §96, p. 92.) Compare the approach taken by the drafters of the Model Penal Code, discussed in Wechsler, Jones and Korn, The Treatment of Inchoate Crimes in the Model Penal Code (1961) 61 Colum. L.Rev. 571, 592-607.)
In the instant case defendant’s drilling was done without permission and did cause property damage.
