Lead Opinion
By infоrmation defendant was charged with burglary (Pen. Code, § 459) and a prior felony conviction. Defendant admitted the prior and, following a jury trial, was
Defendant was charged with hаving burglarized the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Holmes while they were away for the weekend. The Holmes left their house on Thursday. Their two sons visited the house briefly on Saturday afternoon and left to join their parents; before they left, they checked to see that the windows and doors were closed and locked. When the Holmes returned to the house around 10:30 p.m. that night, they noted that some of the screens had been “pushed” out from the windows. The window of the front bedroоm had small scratch marks around it and had been pried loose and the screen and window of another bedroom were open. Nothing was missing from the house, but Harry Holmes, one of the sons, subsequently found a handkerchief on his bedpost and a flashlight and pliers in his closet. He had never seen the items before.
Earlier on Saturday evening at about 9:30 p.m., two neighborhood boys observed a man at the front door of the Holmes ’ residence. The man left when the lights of a car shined across the house. The boys walked up the street and went back to the Holmes’ residence through a golf course on which the house fronted. They noticed that a sliding glass door was open, became suspicious and called Mr. Lockwood, a resident across the street. They all went back together to check the Holmes’ house. The boys testified that they heard a screen being “punched out” but were unable to see anyone because of the bushes. Mr. Lockwood checked behind the house and encountered a man, whom he later identified as the defendant, near the screen door of an enclosed tropical garden. Lockwood testified that defendant said he lived in the town of Etiwanda and was visiting his brother-in-law who lived nearby. Lockwood detained defendant until the officers arrived.
Over defendant’s objections, the prosecution was permitted to introduce into еvidence a photograph of a partial heel print found on. a bedstand located near the window in the front bedroom of the Holmes’ residence and a photograph of a footprint found in the tropical garden where defendant was discovered. A pair of black Florsheim shoes defendant was wearing on the night of his arrest was also received in evidence.
i
Defendant testified in substance as follows: On the night in question, he was at one of his brothers-in-law’s house until 9 p.m. and then went to visit another brother-in-law who resided in the general area of the Holmes’ residence, but no one was home. He then drove back towards the country club, parked his car and walked onto thе golf course to check the sprinkler systems because he worked for a nursery and got a commission for leads to their sales. After checking the sprinklers, he came out of the golf course and knocked on the front door of the Holmes’ house to inquire whether new homes were being constructed in the area. No one answered so he went back into the golf course. As he came out he thought he saw someone in the Holmes’ house so he knocked again but no one responded. He left and went to his ear, and as he drove by the Holmes’ residence he heard children shouting that someone was in the house. He parked his car, returned to the Holmes’ house, looked into the windows and was certain he saw someone inside. Eventually he was surrounded by people in the tropical garden. He denied ever entering the house.
Defendant contends (1) that the court committed prejudicial errоr in admitting evidence of an attempted entry into the house at 5818 Sycamore and (2) that the evidence was insufficient to support the conviction.
I
Evidence of other crimes is not admissible solely to prove the criminal disposition or propensity of a defendant to commit the crime charged. (People v. Sam,
Although it is frequently stated that evidence of other offenses may be introduced to show “common scheme or design” or “modus operand!,’’ the true rationale for the admissibility of other offenses for such purpose is that the common features of the crime charged and of the other offenses committed by defendant are so unique that it may be logically inferred that defendant was the one who committed the crimе charged. (People v. Sam, supra,
In the instant case, over defendant’s objection, the court admitted evidence offered by the prosecution to show that defendant may have tampered with the screens at 5818 Sycamore because “this evidence might show a common planned scheme or design.” At oral argument, the Attorney General conceded that there was no other legal basis for the admissibility of the evidence.
II
Defendant contends that the evidence was insufficient to support his conviction on the ground that there was no evidence that the footprints, found at the scene matched the shoes he was wearing on the night in question. The photographs of the footprints were received in evidence over defendant’s objection that no such showing had been made. The only foundational evidence introduced by the prosecutor was that the photographs were taken at the scene on Saturday night during the investigation.
The Attorney General argues that “a correspondence of shoe prints found in the Holmes bedroon [sic] and below the window at the residence of 5818 Sycamore [not thе Holmes’ residence], with the shoes of appellant was admissible to identify appellant as the person who made the unlawful entry.” However, there was no expert or other testimony to show that the prints “corresponded” with defendant’s shoes. The Attorney General contends, nevertheless, that ‘ ‘ in view of the character of a shoe print and its large size, the jury was able to conclude without expert testimony that the prints and shoes were the samе. ’ ’
Although the issue whether the footprints matched defendant’s shoes was a factual question to be resolved by the jury, it does not follow that the photographs of the footprints were admissible without some foundational evidence which would permit an inference that they corresponded to defendant’s shoes.
Evidence of footprints is admissible where they bear such similarity to those of the shoes worn by a. defendant as to justify an inference that the traсks were made by his shoes. (People v. Taylor,
With possibly one exception,
The Attorney General refers to the court’s observation in People v. Taylor,
Although we have discovered no California, case squarely holding that footprint evidence is inadmissible without either expert or lay testimony connecting the tracks with shoes worn by the defendant, such foundation is required in many other jurisdictions.
There is a sound policy for requiring foundational evidence that the footprint matches defendant’s shoes. As Professor Wigmore points out, “. . . popular looseness of thought is apt to overestimate [the] probative value” of apparent similarities between the imprint and the shoes. (Wigmore, supra, p. 394.) Foundational proof, with opportunity for cross-examination, assures a fair evaluation of the evidence by the jury.
We conclude that the photographs of the. footprints were erroneously received without proper foundation and that evidence of the ‘‘other offense” should have been excluded. Although the fact defendant was discovered on the Holmes’
Judgment reversed.
McCabe, P. J., concurred.
Notes
This is not a ease where the “other offense” was so interwoven with the crime charged that proof of the latter necessarily required proof of the other offense. (See People v. Carmen,
Even a cursory examination of the photographs of the footprint allegedly found under the window at 5818 Sycamore discloses dissimilarities between it and the heel of defendant’s shoes.
The one exception was People v. Dwyer,
The implication in the court’s opinion that a qualified expert should not be permitted to express a direct opinion that the tracks were made by the shoes does not comport with the current law of this state in this area. Under recent deсisions, the fact that an expert’s opinion is on an ultimate issue of fact to be determined by the jury is not a ground for its exclusion. (Corn v. State Bar,
While the instruction given is not set out in the opinion, we assume that it was one given in conformity with section 1127b of the Penal Code which reads:
“When, in any criminal trial or proceeding, the opinion of any expert witness is received in evidence, the court shall instruct the jury substantially as follows:
“Duly quаlified experts may give their opinions on questions in controversy at a trial. To assist the jury in deciding such questions, the jury may consider the opinion with the reasons stated therefor, if any, by the expert who gives the opinion. The jury is not bound to accept the opinion of any expert as conclusive, but should give to it the weight to which they shall find it to be entitled. The jury may, however, disregard any such opinion, if it shall be found by them to be unreasonable.
“No further instruction on the subjeсt of opinion evidence need be given. ’’
In Herring v. State,
Dissenting Opinion
I
In my opinion the court committed no error in admitting evidence of the shoeprint and the tampered screen at 5818 Sycamore Street.
This evidence of the tampered screen—and the shoeprint— and the defendant’s car (with the keys in it) which was parked in front of the address—was admissible as relevant circumstantial evidence developed by police investigation at the scene of the crime. Proper police investigation of a burglary need not stop at the property line. All of this evidence was relevant and showed, circumstantially, the appellant’s identity and the method of operation carried out by him in the commission of the crime with which he was charged. It was all part of a continuing transaction, all part of a сhain of circumstantial evidence discovered at the scene of a crime which tended by reasonable inference to establish appellant’s guilt. It was not a prejudicial record of previous crimes committed by appellant in the conventional sense of “other offenses” (in spite of the concession of the Attorney General to the contrary at oral argument—a position in conflict with that set forth in his written brief which supports the above approach to the introduction of this evidence.)
II
In my opinion the appellant suffered no prejudice by the lack of oral testimony that the shoeprints found at the scene were similar to the shoes he was wearing that night. Admit
But shoeprints are not a matter calling for expert testimony. In People v. Taylor,
It was stipulated that the sheriff’s deputy who took the pictures of the shoeprints was a competent photographer. A proper foundation was laid that the photographs were accurate and fair reproductions of the shoeprints. All that was lacking was for a nonexpert witness (obviously a prosecution witness) to testify that he had. examined the shoes and the shoeprints and that they were similаr and to indicate those points which, in his opinion, were points of similarity. In view of the character of a shoeprint and its large size the jury was able to conclude without oral testimony that the shoe and the shoeprint either were or were not similar. So where has the appellant been harmed by the lack of nonexpert opinion as to similarity? As a matter of fact, he benefits. Had a non-expert given his opinion as to similarity, the jury might have been influеnced toward similarity by that opinion—good or bad. But here the jury was able to make its own determination as to similarity or dissimilarity, with the thinking process of the individual juror uninfluenced by the opinion of a nonexpert prosecution witness. Here, in view of the enlarged photographs showing the original size of the shoeprints and the introduction of appellant’s shoes, a jury could reasonably make a determination as to whether or not the shoes and
I submit, therefore, that since the comparison of appellant’s shoes and the shoeprints wras not a matter of expert opinion but was a matter of primarily factual determination by the jury that the technical error, if any, in admitting the shoe and shoeprints without the conventional explanation was not prejudicial. I cannot find that this error, if it was error, resulted in a miscarriage of justice. Assuming it was error, I cannot find that it is reasonably probable that a result more favorable to the appellant would have been reached in the absence of this error. (Cal. Const., art. VI, § 13; People v. Watson,
Our system of justice does not demand a. perfect trial—only a fair one. In my opinion the appellant received a fair trial, free of prejudicial error, and the judgment should be affirmed.
Respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied October 15, 1969. Mosk, J., and Burke, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Assigned by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.
