On November 12, 1965, the District Attorney of Los Angeles County charged defendant with kidnapping and three violations of section 288a of the Penal Code. With respect to each of the latter charges it was also alleged that the act was done “by force, violence, duress, menace and threats of great bodily harm.” Two prior felonies—escape and burglary—were also charged. After pleading not guilty and denying the priors, defendant eventually pleaded guilty, to one of the 288a counts. The priors and the allegation with respect to force, etc., were stricken. On February 16, 1966, he was sentenced to state prison and the remaining counts were dismissed. On July 27, 1966, he filed a petition for a writ of error coram nobis which was denied the same day. Notice of appeal was filed on August 2, 1966. At defendant’s request we appointed Bertram H. Ross, Esq., to represent him on the appeal. Mr. Ross thereafter filed an application to be permitted to withdraw. In the application counsel reviews the procedural facts of the case, states his conclusion that the petition below does not state facts which would entitle defendant to relief by way of writ of error coram nobis and asks to be relieved. A copy of the application was. served on defendant. After careful review of the record we found the appeal to be wholly frivolous and relieved counsel. Defendant was then given an opportunity to file a brief, being allowed over 30 days within which to do so. No brief by defendant was received. Defendant was then notified that unless he filed a brief within an additional 30 days, his appeal would be. dismissed. Again no brief was received.
Appointed counsel and this court have thus followed the procedure outlined in
Anders
v.
California,
The problem is whether California law does so require. The point was not decided in the leading California case in this area.
(People
v.
Feggans,
Section 1248 of the Penal Code provides as follows: "If the appeal is irregular in any substantial particular, but not otherwise, the appellate court may order it to be dismissed.” On its face this section appears a formidable hurdle to the assertion of a power to dismiss a criminal appeal as frivolous. Indeed
People
v.
McNulty,
Although
McNulty
used pretty plain language, the fact of the matter is that our appellate courts have dismissed appeals on the ground of frivolity. The impetus was the Supreme Court’s decision in
People
v.
Shorts,
In the next paragraph of the Shorts opinion the court takes issue with McNulty’s reliance on section 1248, holding that: “[W]here it appears without any serious contention to the contrary that an appeal from an order after final judgment in *412 a death penalty ease is taken solely for purposes of delay, the appeal must be held to be irregular in a most fundamental sense. ...” (Ibid., p. 517.) The court also held that section 681a 2 of the Penal Code, enacted after McNulty, weakened that decision. 3
The italicized portion of the first passage quoted from
Shorts
may be interpreted in different ways. Read narrowly, it simply means that where the objective of an appeal is not really review, but delay, section 1248 does not apply. If that is all
Shorts
stands for, its impact would be limited to cases where the death penalty has been imposed or where the execution of another type of judgment has somehow been stayed. It is impossible to tell from any holding of the Supreme Court whether it intended
Shorts
to have such a limited application, since the only other cases in which the
Shorts
rule was applied
(People
v.
Rittger,
*413 Read literally, however, the passage says that if the appeal has no proper appellate objective it is sham and frivolous and therefore subject to dismissal. In other words, it is the total lack of merit, not the improper objective which makes it dismissable.
It appears that several courts of appeal have, tacitly perhaps, given
Shorts
the latter interpretation. In
People
v.
Malone,
In any event, whatever may be the limitations on appeal-ability with respect to appeals from orders after judgment (Pen. Code, § 1237, subd. 3), until 1965 appeals from judgments which followed a plea of guilty were freely appealable, even though not very much was reviewable.
(People
v.
Ward,
Although the Court of Appeal of the Fifth District refused to dismiss an appeal as frivolous in
People
v.
Rosalez,
*414
One of the reasons given in
Rosales
for not exercising the power to dismiss the appeal is the one frequently voiced (see Witkin, Cal. Criminal Procedure (1963) § 722) that appeals should not be dismissed where, in ruling on a motion to dismiss, the record must be examined.
6
That rule, however, is no more than a rule which governs the exercise of discretion—a “rule of convenience,”
(Hibernia Sav. & Loan Soc.
v.
Doran,
We therefore conclude that California appellate courts do have the power to dismiss frivolous appeals in criminal cases. Needless to say, for the reasons given in People v. Rosalez, 8 supra, it is a power which should be most sparingly exercised.
*415
Where, as here, eminently competent counsel (see
People
v.
Ross, 67
Cal.2d 64 [
We are not blind to the obvious: the borderline between a frivolous appeal and one which simply has no merit is vague indeed. In
Crook
v.
Crook,
We turn to the petition below, the denial of which is the subject matter of this appeal.
The petition contains just two statements which, if true and properly alleged, might conceivably entitle defendant to some relief somewhere. They are as follows: 1. “That your petitioner is being held on a charge that was dismissed by this court which is 207 of the Penal Code which the Adult Authority has charge
[sic]
him with the crime and found him guilty at the parole board on May 11, 1966. ”
10
If by this allegation defendant is trying to say that the Adult Authority considers him as having been convicted of kidnapping, rather than a violation of section 288a of the Penal Code, that would be a matter for habeas corpus rather than
coram nobis. (In re
*416
Henry,
2. “Petitioner’s confession was obtained by the means of duress and illegal proceeding by the District Attorney’s office by making problem of promies [sic] by which is false to obtained a confession.” This allegation was quite inadequate to have allowed the superior court to act. First, the facts which constitute the alleged duress and “illegal proceeding” are not alleged with particularity.
(People
v.
Shipman,
The appeal is frivolous and is dismissed.
Hufstedler, J., and Stephens, J., concurred.
Notes
The court in McNulty also held that the taking of the appeal from the denial of a post-judgment motion did not automatically stay execution of the judgment.
Former section 681a is now part of section 1050 of the Penal Code. At the time of Shorts the section read as follows: “The welfare of the people of the State of California requires that all proceedings in criminal eases shall be heard and determined at the earliest possible time. It shall be the duty of all courts and judicial officers and of all district attorneys to expedite the hearing and determination of all such cases and proceedings to the greatest degree that is consistent with the ends of justice.”
We may not be far wrong if we read between the lines of
Shorts
a very tactful hint to the Legislature that it cannot legislate away the inherent power of an appellate court to dismiss sham and frivolous appeals. (See
Estate of Wunderle,
Actually
Shorts
was preceded by
People
v.
Smith,
Mattson, it should be noted, was not a capital case. In footnote 8 of the opinion the court, speaking quite generally about frivolous appeals in criminal cases- and citing. Shorts, says- that -an appellate' court ‘ ‘ can dismiss, as irregular, sham, or frivolous, .-an "appeal,which has -no-proper "appellate objective."... Again.it seems'apparent that it is the fact 'that' the appeal is .frivolous rather than its lack of a proper appellate objective, that makes it dismissable.
Apparently the first case to announce this rule in its modern form was
McFadden
v.
Dietz,
There is a curious parallel between the evolution of the rule allowing dismissals of frivolous criminal appeals and the development of a similar —if not identical—rule in civil cases. On the civil side, in spite of very early indications to the contrary
(Buckley
v.
Stebbins,
In
Rosalez
the motion to dismiss was made after the record was filed in the Court of Appeal but before any brief was received from defendant. The last paragraph of the opinion reads as follows: “This court would doubtless have the power to act in the way the Attorney General suggests
(People
v.
Shorts,
In
United States
v.
Johnson,
The date of the judgment is February 16, 1966.
