RAMONA R., a Minor, Petitioner, v. THE SUPERIOR COURT OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY, Respondent; THE PEOPLE, Real Party in Interest.
L.A. No. 31800
Supreme Court of California
Jan. 28, 1985.
Rehearing Denied April 4, 1985
37 Cal.3d 802 | 693 P.2d 789 | 210 Cal. Rptr. 207
COUNSEL
Wilbur F. Littlefield, Public Defender, Paul A. James, Alan C. Oberstein, Alan H. Simon, David Jackson and Gary M. Mandinach, Deputy Public Defenders, for Petitioner.
Quin Denvir, State Public Defender, Kathleen Kahn, Victoria Sleeth and George L. Schraer, Deputy State Public Defenders, as Amici Curiae on behalf of Petitioner.
No appearance for Respondent.
Robert H. Philibosian, District Attorney, Donald J. Kaplan and George M. Palmer, Deputy District Attorneys, for Real Party in Interest.
OPINION
MOSK, J.- In this prosecution for murder, minor defendant Ramona R. seeks a writ of mandate to compel respondent court to vacate an order declaring her unfit to be tried in juvenile court. (
A brief review of the challenged procedure will be helpful. Juvenile court jurisdiction attaches in cases in which the defendant is “under the age of
Ordinarily, the burden of proving unfitness is on the prosecution. (1 Cal. Juvenile Court Practice (Cont.Ed.Bar 1981) § 5.27, p. 162.) But if the minor is charged with certain felonies enumerated in section 707, subdivision (b), he is presumed to be unfit for juvenile court treatment and must shoulder the burden of proving that he is a fit and proper subject under the five criteria listed above (
This case began on October 12, 1982, when Ramona‘s guardian was shot and killed with his own handgun. He was then repeatedly stabbed with a knife and cut with an axe. Ramona turned herself in to the police the following day after she learned that she was wanted for questioning about the killing. She agreed to take a lie detector test, but on the advice of her attorney she declined to be interviewed by or to make any statement to the probation officer.
The People filed a murder charge in juvenile court, because Ramona was 17 years old at the time. (
The People introduced the probation officer‘s report. It stated that the results of the lie detector test were “inconclusive because of minor‘s erratic
Prior to the passage of Proposition 8, the rule was clear that statements made by a minor to a probation officer and to a court in a fitness hearing could not be introduced as substantive evidence against the minor at trial. The rule was enunciated in Bryan v. Superior Court (1972) 7 Cal.3d 575, 587: “evidence of admissions made by a minor to the juvenile judge or the juvenile probation officer should be excluded in a criminal prosecution, for allowing this evidentiary use of the admissions would frustrate the protective and rehabilitative philosophy of the Juvenile Court Law....” Holding in In re Wayne H. (1979) 24 Cal.3d 595, that a minor‘s statements to a probation officer are inadmissible for any purpose at the guilt phase, we discussed the policies involved: “The cases have stressed the law‘s interest in encouraging complete candor between a defendant and his probation officer in the probation interview. The purpose of such an interview is not the marshalling of evidence on the issue of guilt, but rather the assembling of all available information relevant to an informed disposition of the case if guilt is established (
We have likened the quandary of a juvenile subject to a fitness hearing to that of a probationer facing revocation of probation for a crime he allegedly committed. When the probation revocation hearing precedes the trial on guilt, the probationer must decide whether to cooperate fully with the probation officer and the court, thereby obtaining fair treatment at the hearing, or to remain silent and preserve his privilege against self-incrimination. In People v. Coleman (1975) 13 Cal.3d 867, we exercised our supervisory powers over the courts to prevent this dilemma. We noted that “It is apparent that the policies served by the due process guarantee of an opportunity for a probationer to be heard at his probation revocation hearing are impinged when he declines to avail himself of this chance for fear of self-incrimination. Constitutional values are similarly disserved when the probationer resolves the conflict in the opposite way by risking self-incrimination so as to testify at such a hearing.” (Id. at pp. 874-875.) This reasoning applies equally to a juvenile considering his options with respect to an interview with a probation officer, a fitness hearing, and a guilt-phase trial. (Bryan, supra, 7 Cal.3d at p. 587.)
Basing its decision on Coleman, Bryan, and Wayne H., the Court of Appeal in Sheila O. v. Superior Court, supra, 125 Cal.App.3d 812, 816-817, held that “testimony given by the juvenile at the fitness hearing is inadmissible at the jurisdictional hearing except for the purpose of impeachment.”2 Thus Bryan, Wayne H., and Sheila O. combine to give a juvenile in a position such as that of Ramona substantial protection against the use at trial of any statements she may make to her probation officer or to the court at her fitness hearing.
Questions arise as to the continuing validity of these cases after the passage of Proposition 8, which added section 28(d) to article I of the Consti-
Amicus curiae State Public Defender urges that the use immunities provided by Bryan, Wayne H., and Sheila O. fall within the exception to section 28(d) for “existing statutory rule[s] of evidence relating to privilege.” He relies on Evidence Code section 940 (hereinafter section 940), which declares that “To the extent that such privilege exists under the Constitution of the United States or the State of California, a person has a privilege to refuse to disclose any matter that may tend to incriminate him.” The Attorney General, in the June 10, 1982, supplement to his Guide to Proposition 8 (1982) at page 4-52, concedes that “[s]ection 940 is a statutory rule of evidence relating to privilege deriving content from both the state and federal constitutions.” He argues, however, that section 940 “establishes a testimonial privilege; it is inapplicable to extrajudicial statements.” (Ibid., italics in original.) A close examination of section 940 reveals that the Attorney General‘s position lacks merit.
It is true that section 940 does not on its face refer to use immunities. However, the language of that provision is purposefully broad, and is meant to include within its reach judicial decisions relating to the privilege against self-incrimination. The Law Revision Commission comment to section 940 declares that “Section 940 does not determine the scope of the privilege against self-incrimination; the scope of the privilege is determined by the pertinent provisions of the California and United States Constitutions as interpreted by the courts.” Thus, we must determine whether the use immunities of Bryan, Wayne H., and Sheila O. are mandated by the United States or California Constitutions, including judicial interpretation thereof. If they are, they fall within the exception to section 28(d) for statutory privileges, and thus survive the adoption of Proposition 8.
In People v. Coleman, supra, 13 Cal.3d 867, 878-886, we examined federal law in the area of use immunities. We declined to decide whether such immunities were compelled by the United States Constitution, because “[t]he federal law on the subject is currently in a state of confusion.” (Id. at p. 878.) The developments since that time have not changed our opinion.
We begin with our decision in Coleman. In that case we declined to rest our holding on the Constitution, but only because we deemed such a determination to be unnecessary, as “our judicially declared exclusionary rule provides protection ‘coextensive with the scope of the privilege against self-incrimination,’ [citation] . . . . Even if we assume, arguendo, that defendant‘s constitutional claim has merit, the exclusionary rule we propound today gives probationers all the relief to which they are constitutionally entitled.” (Id., 13 Cal.3d at p. 892.) However, Coleman clearly demonstrates that the use immunities there adopted are essential to California‘s privilege against self-incrimination.
Coleman examined in depth the need for use immunities in probation hearings to protect the privilege against self-incrimination. “Of the many and varied policies underlying the privilege against self-incrimination, we hold at least two to be adversely affected by permitting a probationer‘s testimony at his revocation hearing to be used against him at the subsequent criminal trial for the very misconduct at issue in the revocation proceeding.” (Id. at p. 875.) First, “Together with the demands of due process that an accused be presumed innocent and that his guilt be established beyond a reasonable doubt [citations], the privilege against self-incrimination requires the prosecution in a criminal trial to produce sufficient evidence to establish the defendant‘s guilt before he must decide whether to remain silent or to testify in his own behalf. [¶] The heavy burden thus placed upon the prosecution in a criminal trial to prove through its own investigation the guilt of the defendant may be substantially lightened if the prosecution is allowed to take advantage of the defendant‘s testimony at a prior probation revocation hearing.” (Id. at pp. 875-876.) This reasoning applies equally to the prosecution in the trial of a minor following a fitness hearing: if the minor‘s statements to his probation officer or to the court at the hearing can be introduced by the prosecution as substantive evidence in the guilt phase, the prosecution‘s burden is impermissibly lightened.
“The second policy underlying the privilege against self-incrimination which is undermined by forcing a probationer to choose between the privilege and his opportunity to be heard at his revocation hearing, is our ‘unwillingness to subject those suspected of crime to the cruel trilemma of self-
There is a final reason why we hold the California Constitution to require that testimony a minor gives at a fitness hearing or statements he makes to his probation officer may not be used against him at a subsequent trial of the offense. This is because the consequences flowing from his “trilemma” are significant. The result of a fitness hearing is not a final adjudication of guilt; but the certification of a juvenile offender to an adult court has been accurately characterized as “the worst punishment the juvenile system is empowered to inflict.” (Note, Separating the Criminal from the Delinquent: Due Process in Certification Procedure (1967) 40 So.Cal.L.Rev. 158, 162.) Here, because Ramona was bound over to criminal court to face murder
A finding of fitness is not such a bonanza for a minor, however, that he can be considered not to need use immunity on a theory that he faces only rehabilitation in the juvenile system. A minor can be confined for years to the Youth Authority. As Justice Musmanno so stirringly pointed out 30 years ago, the sanctions of the juvenile justice system are severe: The “Commonwealth categorically declares in its brief that ‘commitment to an industrial school is not punishment.’ But it certainly does not come under the classification of pleasure. Calling a reformatory an ‘industrial school’ does not mitigate its bleakness, loneliness and destitution of parental love and care. [¶] What is punishment? It is the infliction of pain, sorrow, and grief. To take a child from the comfort of his home, the joy of his companions and the freedom of field, river and wood, and confine him to a building with whitewashed walls, regimented routine and institutional hours is punishment in the strictest sense of the word. To say, as the Commonwealth says, that this institutionalized incarceration is ‘for the care and treatment’ of the juvenile does not make it any less abhorrent to the boy [or, presumably, to the girl] of spirit, health and energy.” (Holmes’ Appeal (1954) 379 Pa. 599, 615-616, dis. opn. of Musmanno, J.) Thus we hold that use immunity applies even when the minor has been found fit for treatment under the juvenile laws.
Let a peremptory writ of mandate issue directing respondent court to vacate its order finding petitioner not a fit and proper subject to be dealt with under the Juvenile Court Law, and to conduct a new fitness hearing consistent with the views expressed herein.
Bird, C. J., Kaus, J., Broussard, J., Reynoso, J., and Weil, J.,* concurred.
GRODIN, J., Concurring.- I understand the majority to hold that California‘s privilege against self-incrimination is violated unless a juvenile is provided with use immunity for statements he makes to a probation officer or testimony he gives at a fitness hearing. To reach that conclusion, we must necessarily find that a juvenile‘s testimony is compelled by the nature of the fitness proceeding. The proceeding combines relaxed evidentiary rules, a relatively low burden of proof, and, most importantly, a presumption of unfitness. Taken together, these factors create a substantial likelihood that
The petition of real party in interest for a rehearing was denied April 4, 1985. The opinion was modified to read as printed above. Lucas, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
*Assigned by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
