Opinion
Pеtitioner is charged by information with possession of heroin for sale (Health & Saf. Code, § 11351). The information alleges that the offense occurred on or about July 26, 1973.
Respondent superior court denied petitioner’s pretrial motion to compel disclosure of the identity of an informant described in the affidavit upon which a search warrant had issued for the search of the premises where petitioner resided. Petitioner seeks herein a writ of mandate directing respondent to order such discovery. Here, as she did in the trial court, *416 petitioner alleges that she will be deprived of a fair trial if the informer’s identity is not disclosed.
Although neither the search warrant affidavit nor the transcript of the preliminary examination was formally introduced at the hearing on the motion, petitioner’s points and authorities in support of the motion incorporated the affidavit, and the transcript of the hearing affirmatively shows that the transcript of the preliminary examination was also before the trial court at the time it ruled.
The record shows that at about 9:30 p.m. on July 26, 1973, upon the basis of an affidavit executed by a Stockton police officer, a warrant was issued authorizing the search of a residence at 1728 East 11th Street in that city, as well as the search of the persons of “Nina Watson” (petitionеr’s alias) and one “Eddie Leroy Anderson.”
In relevant part, the affidavit alleged as follows: “That your affiant is a Sergeant assigned to Metropolitan Narcotics Unit, with the specific duty to investigate narcotics violations within San Joaquin County; that during his investigations he received information that one Dianne [sic] Williams aka Nina Watson is involved in sales of heroin; from her residence at 1728 East 11th Street. [¶] That on 7-26-73 your affiant received information frоm a CRI [confidential reliable informant] that one Nina Watson and Eddie Anderson were dealing heroin from 1728 East 11th Street. [¶] That said informant advised your affiant that he was present at this address between 7-25-73 and 7-26-73 and saw a large quanity [sic] of heroin at the residence and that Nina Watson and Eddie Anderson were selling same. That he was present when both were preparing heroin in packages in order to sell same, [¶] That said informant is a user of narcotics and knows it [sic] appearance, physical effects and the manner in which it is packaged for sale. That based on his observations and on the conversations between himself and the two above named persons he know [sic] the substance was heroin. . . . [¶] That your affiant knows that. Eddie Leroy Anderson was convicted this year of smuggling heroin by the Federal authorities and had two counts of sale of heroin pending in the Superior Cоurt of San Joaquin County at the time of this conviction.”
The warrant was executed approximately one hour after its issuance. When the searching officers approached the described residence, they observed through the front screen door a “young man” seated on a couch in the living room. The officers identified themselves to the young man and advised him that they had a search warrant. Upon hearing someone *417 running inside the residence, the officers opened the screen door and entered. They encountered petitioner as she ran from her bedroom into the living room.
A search of petitioner’s bedroom uncovered 30 hand-rolled balloons containing heroin, which were found in a dresser drawer amongst underclothing. 1 There were two bedrooms in the residence. Although “a lot of people . . . came through the front door” after thе officers entered, petitioner and the young man were the only persons in the residence when the officers arrived. The record contains no express showing as to the identity of the “young man,” but articles of men’s clothing which “belonged to Leroy Anderson” were found in the residence along with “some personal identification” in the same name.
In a series of decisions, the California Supreme Court has enunciated the conditions under which an accused is entitled to disclosure of the identity of a confidential police informant where, as here, the accused does not seek such discovery either to establish the illegality of a search made pursuant to a warrant valid on its face or to show the inadmissibility of evidence obtained as a result of such search. (See Evid. Code, § 1042, subd. (b);
People
v.
Keener
(1961)
Some of those decisions suggest that disclosure is required when it appears from the evidence merely that the informant is a “material witness” on the issue of guilt:
People
v.
McShann
(1958)
*418
Other decisions of the Supreme. Court, while quoting or citing cases from the first group, nevertheless describe a “two-pronged" test of which the fair trial element is the second рrong. Decisions in this second category require disclosure “where, in view of the evidence, the informer would be a material witness on the issue of guilt
and
nondisclosure of his identity would deprive the defendant of a fair trial”:
People
v.
Williams
(1958)
The basic issue is one of constitutional due process
(People
v.
Goliday, supra,
Although this balancing aspect is more concisely reflected in the “two-pronged” test announced by our state high court, we are not of the view that the court has adopted inconsistent formulations. Many of its decisions mention “both” tests interchangeably. (See
People
v.
Garcia,
*419
supra,
67 Cal.2d at pp. 836-838;
Honore
v.
Superior Court, supra,
70 Cal.2d at pp. 167-168;
Price
v.
Superior Court, supra,
1 Cal.3d at pp. 842-843;
People
v.
Hunt, supra,
The latter standard is one which safeguards “the individual’s right to
prepare
his defense”
(People
v.
Kiihoa, supra,
Inherent in the Supreme Court’s formulation is the concept that a defendаnt seeking disclosure is not bound by police allegations that the informer
inculpated
the defendant. The rationale of the rule requiring disclosure “is that the defendant, through the testimony of the informer when his identity is made known,
might
be able to rebut a material element of the prosecution’s case and thereby prove his innocence. The denial by the prosecution of an opportunity for the defendant to
seek out
the informer and to defend by these meаns, where the testimony of the informer would be material to the issues, is unfair and oppressive to the defendant, and deprives him of due process of law.”
(People
v.
Kiihoa, supra,
In
People
v.
Goliday, supra,
It seems, accordingly, to some degree, speculation may properly play a part in the application of a standard which is couched in terms of a reasonable “possibility” that the undisclosed informant could give evidence which “might” result in the defendant’s exoneration
(People
v.
Garcia, supra, 67
Cal.2d at p. 840). Where the evidence indicates that the informer was an actual participant in the crime alleged, or was a nonparticipating eyewitness to that offense, ipso facto it is held he would be a material witness on the issue of guilt аnd nondisclosure would deprive the defendant of a fair trial. In such circumstances, the possible nature of the informer’s testimony is nonetheless speculative; but, under the Supreme Court expressions above noted, the proximity in time and space of the informer’s relationship to the alleged crime readily tips the scales against the public interest in protecting the flow of information to law enforcement officials. (Seе
Roviaro
v.
United States, supra,
353 U.S. at pp. 63-64 [
However, when the informer is shown to have been neither a participant in nor a nonparticipant eyewitness to the charged offense, the possibility that he could give evidence which might exonerate the defendant is even more speculative and, hence, may become an unreasonable possibility.
*421
If disclosure were compelled regardless of the degree of attenuation which marked the informer’s nеxus with the crime, “[t]he result . . . would be to make it impossible to obtain a search warrant on the basis of information from a reliable informant unless the police officer was prepared to disclose the informant’s identity”
(People
v.
Kilpatrick
(1973)
The state Supreme Court has nonetheless made it clear that the defendant seeking disclosure of an informer’s identity “need not prove . . . that the informer was a participant in or even an eyewitness to the crime.”
(Price
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Since speculation concerning the informer’s possible testimony can be as wide-ranging as the ingenuity of defense counsel, disclosure in the case of the nonparticipating noneyewitness informer necessarily depends on the evidentiary showing made concerning the informer’s relationship to the alleged crime. “The words ‘might’ and ‘possibility’ [in the Supreme Court’s standard] have vague and almost limitless perimeters that must be determined on a case-by-case basis and on review great weight should be afforded the trial court’s determination.”
(People
v.
Kilpatrick, supra,
The elements of the crime of possession of heroin for sale are (1) actual or constructive possession of the narcotic (2) for the purpose or intеnt of selling it, with (3) knowledge of its presence and (4) knowledge of its narcotic character. (See
People
v.
Newman
(1971)
*422
“ ‘The accused has constructive possession when he maintains control or a right to control the contraband.’ [Citation.] ‘Possession may be imputed when the contraband is found in a location which is immediately and exclusively accessible to the accused and subject to his dominion and control’ [citation] or which is subject to thе joint dominion and control of the accused and another [citations].”
(People
v.
Francis
(1969)
In the matter before us, the trial court ruled on petitioner’s motion prior to the entry of her plea, and the record does not indicate whether her plea has yet been entered. Neither here nor in the trial court has petitioner directly alleged that Eddie Leroy Anderson was the sole possessor of the heroin found in her bedroom. The record does not show whether Anderson was charged. Petitioner denies in this writ proceeding, however, that she had any actual or constructive possession of the contraband, or that she knew of its presence and nature, or that she had the requisite intent to sell.
Petitioner argued to the trial court, as she does here, that her right to discovery arises from the evidenсe that the informer claimed to have seen both her and Anderson selling and packaging heroin shortly before the search, and from the fact that proof of her possession was circumstantial (i.e., imputed from the presence of heroin in her dresser drawer). Petitioner contends here, as she did before the trial court, that it is reasonably possible that the informer might testify that petitioner was merely present when the informer was at the rеsidence; the informer’s testimony might show that the heroin was sold, packaged, and controlled solely by Anderson during this period; and, from such testimony, the trier of fact might infer that petitioner had no control or right to control the heroin later found in her dresser, and that she herself had no intent to sell contraband.
While we might hold otherwise were this a matter of first impression, prior decisions of the state Supreme Court involving constructive posses
*423
siоn require that petitioner’s contention be upheld. Where possession of contraband is among the elements of the crime charged and it is imputed to the defendant by reason of the location at which the contraband is discovered by the police, and where such discovery stems in whole or part from an informer’s very recent observation of contraband on those same premises, the Supreme Court has comрelled disclosure of the informer’s identity if the evidence shows that persons other than the defendant were on the premises when the informer observed the contraband and that the defendant was not then present or may not have been present
(People
v.
Garcia, supra,
A higher court having spoken, we cannot deny petitioner the benefit of the latter holdings simply because the evidence—here, the search warrant affidavit
(People
v.
Garcia, supra,
As previously stated, the evidentiary showing required by those decisions is not as to the exculpatory nature of the informer’s potential testimony but merely as to the quality of the vantage point from which the informer viewed either the commission or the immediate antecedents of the alleged crime. The noted Supreme Court cases ask in effect, “What was the informer
in a position
to percpive?” If the evidence shows that the informer had a sufficiently proximate vantage point, those Supreme Court decisions simply speculate concerning the informer’s potential testimony and hold that the defendant has demonstrated a reasonable possibility that
*424
the informant could give evidence which might result in the defendant’s exoneration. Speculation as to such an informer’s testimony is consistent with cases which discern a. constitutional right in the accused to seek out the informer to inquire what he knows. (See
People
v.
Garcia, supra,
The Attorney General’s reliance on
People
v.
Goliday, supra,
Nor is the Attorney General’s citation of
People
v.
Acuna
(1973)
In our consideration of the case at bench, we have found no substantial conflict in the Supreme Court’s various expressions of the formula which underlies disclosure of the informer; and, more importantly, we have been required to ascertain the nature of the evidentiary showing which that court has consistently demanded for application of that formula. Those standards must be guardedly applied, lest the public interest in protecting the flow of covert information to the police be frustrated in all cases except those where the information is so remote as to be of no practical utility. However, as an intermediate appellate court bound by the Supreme Court’s pronouncements (Auto Equity Sales, Inc. v. Superior Court, supra, 57 Cal.2d *425 at p. 455), we are compelled in the instant case to conclude that rеspondent court erred in refusing to order the prosecution to disclose the identity of the informant.
At the hearing on petitioner’s motion to compel disclosure, the prosecutor did not request the trial court to hold an in camera hearing pursuant to Evidence Code section 1042, subdivision (d). The Attorney General now contends that, if disclosure was erroneously denied, we must remand the matter to the trial court in order to afford the prosecution “an opportunity to exercise its statutory right to request an in camera hearing.” The contention fails. The prosecution has already had that opportunity. Nothing in section 1042, subdivision (d), supports the Attorney General’s premise that the People’s right to request an in camera hearing arises only after the trial court has first found that a prima facie case for disclosure has been made by the defendant. Subdivision (d) expressly provides that the very purpose оf the in camera hearing is “to aid the court in its determination whether there is a reasonable possibility that nondisclosure might deprive the defendant of a fair trial.” Carried to its logical extreme, the Attorney General’s contention would require the appellate court to entertain two successive mandate proceedings to test the denial of disclosure in cases such as this, if, upon remand, the trial court held an in camera hearing and adherеd to its prior decision. Such a duplication of effort at both the trial and appellate levels cannot have been within the intent of the Legislature when it enacted subdivision (d).
Let a peremptory writ of mandate issue directing respondent superior court to order the People to disclose the identity of the informer within a reasonable time to be fixed by respondent on penalty of dismissal if respondent’s order is not complied with. The temporary stay herein is terminated upon service of the writ.
Friedman, J., and Regan, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied March 29,1974, and the petition of the real party in interest for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied May 1, 1974.
Notes
The return to the search warrant listed additional items which were found on “the premises.” However, although the return was considered by the magistrate, the record does not show that either the return or its contents were placed before respondent court on the discovery motion. The omission is not relevant to the issues raised by the petition.
