Montez v. Superior Court

10 Cal. App. 3d 343, 88 Cal. Rptr. 736, 1970 Cal. App. LEXIS 1845
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 7, 1970
DocketCiv. 36021
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 10 Cal. App. 3d 343 (Montez v. Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montez v. Superior Court, 10 Cal. App. 3d 343, 88 Cal. Rptr. 736, 1970 Cal. App. LEXIS 1845 (Cal. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

Opinion

KAUS, P. J.

In May 1969 the Los Angeles County Grand Jury handed down a six-count indictment charging petitioners with a variety of serious *346 felonies. Each petitioner was named in at least one count. Eventually petitioners moved to quash the indictment on the ground that the grand jury had been, illegally constituted in that eligible grand jurors of a class to which, petitioners belong, namely, “Spanish-surnamed Mexican American citizens” had been systematically excluded from consideration for nomination to the grand jury. 1 At the hearing it was stipulated that the court could consider the record made before another judge in another case, People v. Castro et al., in which a similar claim with respect to the 1968 grand jury had been made by the defendants in that case, some of whom are also petitioners in this proceeding. 2 There is also some overlapping of legal representation. In People v. Castro the defendants had called 34 Los Angeles County Superior Court judges as witnesses to support their contention. 3 Significantly at the time the motion in the case at bar was heard, the People had already argued in the prohibition proceeding in Castro that the defendants there had not called an adequate number of judges. The reason for calling judges as witnesses on motions such as these is that each judge in Los Angeles County is annually entitled to nominate two persons to the grand jury. (Rule 29 § 2, Rules of Superior Court, Los Angeles County.) 4

Before the proceedings in the case at bar started on October 7, 1969, the defense had subpoenaed 70 superior court judges as witnesses. *347 They were placed “on call” by the judge who heard the motion.* *** 5 During the ensuing hearing petitioners called six other witnesses, one of whom was the judge presiding over the hearing. One of the purposes of calling the judge was to illustrate, as part of an offer of proof on which the court insisted, what questions petitioners intended to propound to the 70 judges under subpoena. !

In the Castro case which, as noted, was an attack on the 1968 grand jury, the defendants had made a massive effort to prove: (1) that Spanish-surnamed persons were an identifiable class and that Spanish-sumamed persons of Mexican extraction were an identifiable subclass; (2) that a prima facie case of discrimination against members of that class in the process of selecting grand jurors in Los Angeles County could be proved by comparing certain statistics respecting grand jury nominees covering the 1959-1968 period with the size of the class as a segment of the population of Los Angeles County; and (3) that, statistics aside, the method of selecting grand jurors employed in Los Angeles County discriminated against the class.

At the hearing in the case at bar it appeared that members of petitioners’ class were better represented among the nominees for the 1969 grand jury than they had been, on the average, during the preceding 10 years. Finding that statistically petitioners had not proved a prima facie case of discrimination based on the 1969 figures alone, the trial court ruled that any other evidence became immaterial. 6 It had previously repeatedly an *348 nounced. that it would not permit petitioners to interrogate the 70 judges as witnesses unless it could find evidence of discrimination from the 1969 figures.

We believe that petitioners justly complain that the court’s ruling, in effect, permitted them to call their judicial witnesses only if the statistical evidence made it unnecessary for them to do so.

Traditionally, in this type of attack on the composition of grand or petit juries, the statistical evidence, if sufficiently probative, has been given the effect of making a prima facie case for the attackers, shifting the burden onto the prosecution’s shoulders. (E.g., Sims v. Georgia, 389 U.S. 404, 407-408 [19 L.Ed.2d 634, 637-638, 88 S.Ct. 523]; Eubanks v. Louisiana, 356 U.S. 584, 586-588 [2 L.Ed.2d 991, 993-995, 78 S.Ct. 970].) It then becomes incumbent on the defenders of a particular selection or selection system to adduce evidence to overcome the prima facie case. We need not concern ourselves with the type of evidence which is adequate to meet that burden. (See Norris v. Alabama, 294 U.S. 587, 598 [79 L.Ed. 1074, 1081, 55 S.Ct. 579].) Often the attempt consists of the production of the selectors, be they jury commissioners (e.g., Brown v. Allen, 344 U.S. 443, 480-482 [97 L.Ed. 469, 501-502, 73 S.Ct. 397]) or judges (e.g., Eubanks v. Louisiana, supra, 356 U.S. 584, 587-588 [2L.Ed.2d 991, 994-995]). However, no case brought to our attention, has ever precluded the attackers from producing the selectors as their own witnesses, if their statistical case was found inadequate to shift the burden.

The record makes it clear that the respondent court misunderstood the significance of statistical evidence in cases where a jury, grand or petit, is attacked for alleged discrimination in its composition. The final ruling (see fn. 6, ante) indicates that the court felt that the mere fact that a respectable percentage of persons of petitioners’ class had been nominated, conclusively disproved discrimination. Of course, that can only be so if roughly proportional representation is equated with lack of discrimination—but that cannot be. The presence of ten nominees of a certain class merely proves that a maximum of ten and a minimum of five judges did not discriminate against the class—but no one would contend that a grand jury would be constitutionally constituted if all the other *349 judges of the court 7 intentionally and arbitrarily failed to consider mem bers of the class whether or not they qualified for the nomination. Yet it seems clear from the record that the court would not permit petitioners to go behind the cold statistics, whatever their import. Repeated remarks to that effect are copied in the footnote. 8

Just as mere numbers on one grand jury list do not establish a legal selection process, so does underrepresentation of a defendant’s class on a jury not automatically and conclusively prove its illegality. As noted (see fn. 1, ante) there is no right to proportional representation.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Cal. App. 3d 343, 88 Cal. Rptr. 736, 1970 Cal. App. LEXIS 1845, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montez-v-superior-court-calctapp-1970.