Opinion
John Christopher Williams entered a negotiated plea of guilty to three counts of soliciting murder (Pen. Code, 1 § 653f, subd. (b)) *441 and one count of burglary (§ 459). Williams admitted the burglary was of an inhabited dwelling and that he took property worth in excess of $25,000. (§ 12022.6, subd. (a).) The court sentenced Williams to serve nine years in prison: the middle term of four years for burglary enhanced by one year for taking property worth over $25,000 and three consecutive terms of one year and four months each (one-third the middle term) for three counts of soliciting murder. Williams appeals.
As Williams pleaded guilty, the facts are drawn from the probation report.
Around January 16, 1985, Williams entered the residence of his in-laws without their permission or knowledge. He removed $100,000 in jewels belonging to his wife’s parents. He took the jewels with the intent to use them to pay someone to kill his in-laws.
During May 1986 Williams asked a coworker to help him hire a hit man. Williams said “I want three certain individuals put out of their misery, I must have them completely out of my life before I get a year older.” Williams added he deserved all the finer things in life and to reach this, he must have “M & M” (Melvin Moss), his wife and their daughter, Rosie, out of the way. Later, he agreed to pay $10,000 each for the three killings. Williams showed the coworker the stolen jewels which he proposed to use as payment for the killings.
The coworker told Williams’s father-in-law, Melvin Moss, what Williams had said and the two contacted the police. An undercover officer contacted Williams. The two had several telephone discussions about the killings. Williams spoke in code referring to the victims as “cans of paint” and the method of the proposed killings as “brushing it on the wall.” In a conversation with his coworker held after he had spoken to the feigned hit man, Williams said he was “paranoid” about discussing the “deal” and “[t]hat’s why I kept talking in code, you know paint, enamel, sprayer, etc., I gotta protect myself. You know I would terminate the three M&M’s myself but this is much more professional and I won’t get my hands dirty doing it.”
Williams offered the undercover officer the stolen jewels as payment for the killings. When the officer said he would need information about the intended victims, Williams said “I can give you locations, the scheds and stuff like that, to get the workmen there.” On May 21, Williams met the “hit man” in Coronado. He described the Mosses’ home and their habits and said he wanted Mrs. Moss’s diamond ring as proof the job had been done.
Later that evening, Williams met again with the “hit man” who gave him the requested ring and said “. . . it’s over.” It was. Williams was arrested.
*442 Williams contends: the court erred in imposing a separate consecutive term for the burglary because it was committed for the purpose of carrying out the remaining offenses and erred in imposing separate consecutive sentences for the three counts of solicitation of murder because he engaged in only one course of conduct in committing those crimes.
I
Williams cites
People
v.
Jaramillo
(1976)
II
Williams also argues the trial court erred in imposing three separate terms for the solicitations of murder because it unwittingly punished him for a single course of conduct. He recognizes multiple punishment is permissible notwithstanding a single course of conduct if there are multiple victims to acts of violence. However, he argues, his solicitation of murder here was analogous to the defendant firing a series of shots into a crowd of people. (See
People
v.
Avalos
(1984)
The quote from Avalos is taken from a discussion regarding use of “multiple victims” and the callousness of the crimes as aggravating factors. Why the court used the phrase “separate acts of violence” is not disclosed. Read in the light most favorable to Williams, Avalos holds only one act, not only *443 one crime was committed. Avalos does not hold that a defendant who fires a series of shots into a crowd can be sentenced for killing or harming only one of the victims. In fact, in Avalos, consecutive sentences were imposed for one murder and two assaults with a deadly weapon which occurred as a result of the shots. Avalos is not authority for the principle consecutive terms are prohibited although a defendant injures or kills multiple victims through a single act or course of conduct.
More relevant is
People
v.
Cook
(1984)
In
People
v.
Morocco
(1987)
Here, we requested counsel to file supplemental briefs on the applicability of
People
v.
Morocco.
In response, Williams argues his guilty plea was invalid because under the law as interpreted in
Morocco,
he did not commit two of the crimes he had pled guilty to. However, “ ‘ “[a] judgment entered upon a plea of guilty is not appealable on the merits, and irregularities not going to jurisdiction or to the legality of the proceedings will not be reviewed.” ’ ”
(People
v.
Wakefield
(1987)
Citing
In re Crumpton
(1973)
The facts apparent on this record would support a trial counsel’s conclusion and advice that the solicitations were factually distinct. Both Cook and Morocco stress that whether one or multiple solicitations has occurred is a question of fact. While both those cases gave weight to whether the proposed killings were to occur at a single time and place and for a single motive, neither case gives talismanic significance to those factors. It is certainly the case that other facts may shed light on the issue.
Here, Williams solicited the killings of three “certain individuals” the death of each being important to his purpose. Significantly, he agreed to pay a separate consideration, $10,000, for each murder. The facts regarding venue are ambiguous. At one point Williams agreed to give the locations of the victims while at another, he described the victims’ home, implying the job could be done there. It is, however, fair to infer that, given Williams’s insistence all three die, the “hit man” was to understand that the killings should occur at different locations if that was what it took. Finally, it would be facile to ascribe a singular motive to Williams. It appears that the three victims were to be eliminated so Williams could live well and have “all the finer things in life.” In a related context, the Supreme Court has observed that the fact a thief wishes to garner wealth does not mean that a series of otherwise distinct thefts were committed for a single objective for the
*445
purpose of determining whether multiple punishments may be imposed.
(People
v.
Perez
(1979)
Williams also argues
Morocco
was a change of law, being the first case to hold a single request may result in a single solicitation to murder, regardless of the number of potential victims. He is mistaken. While
Morocco
may well be the first case to find a single solicitation in a multiple potential victim situation, its holding is no more than an application of preexisting law.
Morocco
considered the issue whether a single or multiple solicitations were made through a single request. Citing
People
v.
Cook, supra,
Williams entered a guilty plea to having committed three solicitations to murder. He argues section 654 forbids imposing separate sentences.
Williams’s argument was raised and resolved in
People
v.
Cook, supra,
*446 We agree. The judgment is affirmed.
Wiener, J., and Benke, J., concurred.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise specified.
The plea was entered on condition Williams receive a maximum term of nine years in prison. Absent the condition, he could have been sentenced to eleven years in prison. (§ 653f, subd. (b) [term for solicitation to murder in 1985 was two, four and six years]; § 1170.1, subd. (a).)
Williams argues the maximum term was eight years, four months since he could not, under the law as interpreted in Morocco, be convicted of but one count of solicitation to murder. In making the argument, he overlooks the expression in Morocco that whether there were multiple solicitations is a question of fact. Having entered the guilty plea to three counts of solicitation to murder, he admitted he made three solicitations. The factual issue is resolved.
