THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent,
v.
ARNULFO VILLARREAL, Defendant and Appellant.
Court of Appeals of California, Second District, Division Six.
*452 COUNSEL
Arthur Lewis, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant.
*453 John K. Van de Kamp, Attorney General, Shunji Asari and Donald E. De Nicola, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
OPINION
STONE, P.J.
Arnulfo Villarreal appeals from an order fixing degree of murder pursuant to Jackson v. Superior Court (1983)
FACTS
In 1976, the Ventura County District Attorney filed an information charging that appellant murdered Fortunato Galvan with a firearm April 21, 1976. (§§ 187, 12022.5.) Appellant withdrew his initial plea of not guilty and pled not guilty by reason of insanity. The court appointed three psychiatrists, Doctors Sheel, Patterson, and von Dedenroth to examine appellant and submit reports. (§ 1026.)
June 22, 1976, appellant waived his rights to jury trial and to confront and cross-examine witnesses. Both parties stipulated that the court consider all psychiatric reports and the preliminary hearing transcript to decide whether appellant was insane at the time of the crime and also whether he had regained his sanity. The court found appellant not guilty by reason of insanity, that he had still not regained his sanity, and ordered him committed to the Department of Corrections for placement in Atascadero State Hospital until he could prove restoration of sanity.
June 13, 1983, the district attorney moved to set a trial date to determine the degree of murder; the court denied appellant's request for jury trial. November 28, 1983, both parties stipulated that the court could receive in evidence transcripts of the preliminary hearing and the psychiatric reports, subject to objections to admissibility and use of appellant's extrajudicial statements. The court denied appellant's motion to exclude his extrajudicial *454 statements, and determined that appellant would have been found guilty of murder in the first degree had he been sane.
DISCUSSION
1. Evidence of First Degree Murder
In 1978, the California Supreme Court held, in In re Moye (1978)
In Jackson v. Superior Court, supra,
(2a) The holding in Jackson was not intended, as appellant infers, to breathe new life into a waiver of right to trial on the "not guilty" plea. Here the trial court correctly presumed appellant was sane for purposes of fixing the degree and allowed all evidence either side wished to present. The evidence disclosed that appellant purchased ammunition, loaded his gun, sharpened his knife, concealed himself in a darkened room and waited for the victim, shot him eight times, stabbed him forty-one times, and that he told his sister the day before the murder that he was going to kill Galvan. *455 There was substantial evidence to support the trial court's finding of first degree murder on theories of "lying-in-wait," or "willful, deliberate and premeditated." (§ 189; People v. Johnson (1980)
Appellant contends, however, that since he was originally adjudged insane at the time of the offense, he could not have the requisite state of mind for first degree murder; i.e., to premeditate, deliberate, or harbor malice aforethought. In essence, appellant asks us to hold that an insane person, as a matter of law, cannot commit first degree murder. We decline to do so. (3) When both "not guilty" and "not guilty by reason of insanity" pleas are entered, a defendant is first tried as if only the "not guilty" plea had been entered, and is conclusively presumed to have been sane at the time the offense was committed. (§ 1026, subd. (a).) Since legal sanity is presumed at the first phase of the trial, evidence to show the existence of legal insanity is barred on that issue at that stage. (People v. Wells (1949)
Nevertheless, in 1976 appellant could have presented evidence at the "not guilty" phase of the trial that, because of diminished capacity due to mental illness not amounting to legal insanity, he was incapable of acting with malice aforethought or with premeditation and deliberation. (People v. Cruz (1980)
(2b) In the instant case, the trial court received in evidence, by stipulation, all three psychiatric reports. The trier of fact, however, is not automatically required to render a verdict which conforms to expert opinion (People v. Drew (1978)
2. Admissibility of Appellant's Statements
(4a) Appellant's second contention is that the only evidence of first degree murder derives from his own statements which, he alleges, were involuntary. The trial court heard the testimony of Officer Elliott who had interviewed appellant after appellant's arrest. Elliott testified that appellant appeared normal, not agitated or excited but "complacent," and followed the officer's directions to enter the room and be seated. After Elliott began to read appellant his Miranda rights but before answering that he understood them, appellant volunteered that he had shot and stabbed the victim and that he had loaded the gun with bullets purchased from the "Big 5" store. He also demonstrated, with visible excitement, how he had hidden the knife in his sock. The officer then completed the Miranda rights; appellant said he understood and agreed to waive them and explained how he had obtained a gun, purchased bullets, loaded the gun, concealed himself in a room and waited for the victim to arrive. Approximately 40 minutes into the interrogation, appellant requested an attorney and the questioning ceased.
Doctor von Dedenroth testified that appellant was a psychotic paranoid schizophrenic, could not have understood his rights, and further was not capable of requesting an attorney. When confronted with the fact that appellant had requested an attorney, he said his opinion was unchanged. The trial court took judicial notice, upon respondent's request, that appellant's competency to stand trial was never questioned. (See People v. Samuel, supra,
(5) The burden of establishing a waiver of right to counsel and the right to remain silent is on the prosecution and courts will indulge in every reasonable presumption against a waiver. (People v. Duren (1973)
(7) Protections of Miranda do not extend to voluntary statements. (Miranda v. Arizona (1966)
Thus, involuntariness of the confession was not conclusively demonstrated as in Blackburn v. Alabama (1960)
Appellant further contends that the police failed to preserve a tape recording of appellant's statements and therefore the statements should be suppressed. Courts have recognized a prosecutor's duty to disclose material evidence favorable to the accused and the correlative duty to preserve it. (People v. Nation (1980)
3. Denial of Jury Trial
(8a) Appellant claims he was denied his right to a jury trial on the issue of degree. Not so. He waived it in 1976. (9) Trying the issue of alleged insanity of a person who is charged with a crime is not a separate trial, but merely a separate determination of one of the issues of the original charge. (People v. Foster (1934)
The order fixing degree at first degree murder is affirmed.
Gilbert, J., and Abbe, J., concurred.
NOTES
Notes
[1] All statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise indicated.
[2] In People v. Wetmore, supra,
[3] The question of mental competence to stand trial (§ 1368) is whether at time of trial the accused is able to understand the nature and purpose of the proceeding against him and to assist his attorney to conduct his defense in a rational manner. The legal defense of insanity (§ 1026) poses separate and distinct questions of whether an accused at time the offense was committed understood the nature and quality of his act and was able to distinguish right from wrong. (People v. Corona, supra,
