Opinion
Following denial of his motion to set aside an information charging him with the murder of Gary Charles Watson, petitioner seeks prohibition (or mandamus) enjoining prosecution on said charge. For the reasons which follow we have concluded that the requested relief should be granted and that proceedings be resumed against petitioner solely on the charge of manslaughter (Pen. Code, § 192) as reflected in the magistrate’s order of commitment.
The evidence before the magistrate consisted of stipulated testimony of the cause of death (a gunshot wound to the head) and petitioner’s tape-recorded statement. 1 The statement reveals in pertinent part that petitioner, owner of an East Oakland liquor store, had known the victim for several years as a trouble maker involved in alcohol and drug abuse. On the night of the shooting, petitioner was counting his weekend receipts, his hand gun laying alongside, when the victim entered the store and an argument soon erupted. As the victim left, he made an explicit threat to kill petitioner. Shortly thereafter, an undescribed object was hurled through the store front plate glass window followed by the victim’s return into the store where he renewed his threat to kill the now frightened owner. Seizing his weapon, petitioner ran from behind the counter towards the victim who quickly turned to run from the store while reaching under his coat as though he were pulling something from his waistband. Petitioner reacted by firing the weapon at the victim as the latter fled into the street. One of four shots ultimately struck and felled the fleeing victim. Petitioner then dragged the mortally wounded victim by his arms back into the store since he had been previously told by a police official that such incidents were to be confined within the business establishment. 2 Petitioner thereafter summoned the police who arrived to find the victim lying face down apparently with a butcher *888 knife in his right hand and a loaf of bread between his outstretched arms, neither of which petitioner recalled seeing. Petitioner stated he shot the victim acting under a belief that his life was in jeopardy, a fear magnified through his awareness of the recent murder of a fellow shopkeeper during an armed robbery. Petitioner further stated his growing fear of life-threatening violence had compelled a decision to sell his business at a considerable loss.
Based upon such evidence the magistrate, while expressing uncertainty as to whether a complete self-defense had been shown, thereafter made specific findings that: 1) petitioner knew of the victim’s bad reputation; 2) the victim threatened to kill petitioner and had engaged in aggressive conduct directed at petitioner; and 3) petitioner was in fear for his personal safety. Upon articulating those facts the magistrate ultimately determined that “there was sufficient provocation to rebut the presumption.. .of malice” and held petitioner to answer for the lesser crime of manslaughter. The dispute centers on the nature of that final determination.
Petitioner argues that the findings made constituted factual determinations fatal to the charge of murder precluding the filing of an information charging the greater offense. (See
Jones
v.
Superior Court
(1971)
I.
The purpose of the preliminary hearing before a committing magistrate is to determine whether there is sufficient or probable cause to believe the defendant guilty of a public offense
(People
v.
Uhlemann
*889
(1973)
II.
Malice, express or implied, is of course an essential ingredient of the crime of murder. (Pen. Code, §§ 187-188.) “When the killing is proved to have been committed by the defendant,
and nothing further is shown, the presumption of law is that it was malicious and an act of
murder,...”
(Jackson
v.
Superior Court
(1965)
Herein, the record manifests a persuasive showing of circumstances mitigating any inference of malice. The only credible evidence as to the events surrounding the killing was supplied by petitioner’s statement
3
which the magistrate accepted as true
4
in finding that petitioner acted out of fear for his life as the result of the repeated threats and aggressive conduct of the victim. While there was no express finding of petitioner’s belief that deadly force was necessary to repel the apparent danger to life under the standard announced in
Flannel,
such finding was implicit in those actually made on the evidence presented without any taint of conjecture. (Cf.
People
v.
Superior Court (Gibson)
(1980)
Unlike the circumstances reflected in
Pizano
v.
Superior Court
(1978)
*891 Let a writ of prohibition issue limited to the restraint of further proceedings against petitioner on the pending murder charge.
Newsom, J., and Grodin, J., concurred.
Notes
For some unknown reason, none of the three other persons at the scene of the shooting were called as witnesses.
Another reason advanced by petitioner was his desire to avoid an anticipated crowd scene.
We have not overlooked the testimony of Officer Randall during cross-examination which tended to corroborate petitioner’s version of the broken front window.
That circumstance alone moots any necessity for extended discussion of the applicability of the so-called
Toledo
doctrine (see
People
v.
Toledo
(1948)
