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
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.
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.
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.
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.)
Before the proceedings in the case at bar started on October 7, 1969, the defense had subpoenaed 70 superior court judges as witnesses.
They were placed “on call” by the judge who heard the motion.* ***
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.
It had previously repeatedly an
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
judges of the court
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.
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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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
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.
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.
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.
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.)
Before the proceedings in the case at bar started on October 7, 1969, the defense had subpoenaed 70 superior court judges as witnesses.
They were placed “on call” by the judge who heard the motion.* ***
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.
It had previously repeatedly an
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
judges of the court
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.
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. “Defendants under our criminal statutes are not entitled to demand representatives of their racial inheritance upon juries before whom they are tried. But such defendants are entitled to require that those who are trusted with jury selection shall not pursue a course of conduct which results in discrimination ‘in the selection of jurors on racial grounds.’ [Citation omitted.] Our directions that indictments be quashed when Negroes, although numerous in the community, were excluded from grand jury lists have been based on the theory that their continual exclusion indicated discrimination and not on the theory that racial groups must be recognized. [Citations omitted.] The mere fact of inequality in the number selected does not in itself show discrimination. A purpose to discriminate must be present which may be proven by systematic exclusion of eligible jurymen of the proscribed race or by unequal application of the law to such an extent as to show intentional discrimination. . . .”
(Akins
v.
Texas,
325 U.S. 398, 403-404 [89 L.Ed. 1692, 1696-1697, 65 S.Ct. 1276].)
Petitioners made it perfectly plain that they did not contend that constitutionally they were entitled to have even a single member of their
class among the grand jury nominees. What they did contend and offered to prove was that the system of nominating grand jurors employed in Los Angeles County systematically deprived eligible members of their class from being considered for grand jury duty. In a nutshell they intended to show that, with very few exceptions, the judges of the respondent court were tby reason of birth, education, residence, wealth, social and professional associations and similar factors not acquainted with the qualifications of eligible potential grand jurors of petitioners’ class and that they did not make an adequate effort to overcome this alleged deficiency.
In this effort petitioners unquestionably were on safe ground. In
Cassell
v.
Texas,
339 U.S. 282, 285 [94 L.Ed. 839, 846, 70 S.Ct. 629], the statistical case proved that “as a proportional matter 6.5% of grand jurors would be Negroes” while actually, over a five-year period, 6.7 percent had been black. Nevertheless the grand jury was held to have been constitutionally inadequate because the testimony of the jury commissioners revealed that in selecting nominees they did not adequately acquaint themselves with the qualifications of eligible jurors of the Negro race in order that they might comply with the constitutional mandate that the jury be selected in such a way that “there has been neither inclusion nor exclusion because of race.” (339 U.S. at p. 287 [94 L.Ed. at p. 847].)
It should be noted that the People do not contend that petitioners had made an adequate record by offering the
Castro
record which contained the testimony of 34 judges and that the additional testimony was merely cumulative. They could hardly do so in view of the fact that none of the 34 had testified with respect to the 1969 grand jury while, on the other hand, the respondent court refused to consider evidence related to any period before 1969 unless petitioners first proved discrimination in the composition of the grand jury of the latter year.
The People insist that petitioners’ point must fail because they did not make an adequate offer of proof. To this contention there are several answers.
First the court’s remarks throughout the proceeding made it abundantly
clear that it simply was not going to receive the proffered evidence if the 1969 statistics did not establish a prima facie case. “Where an entire class of evidence has been declared inadmissible or the trial court has clearly intimated it will receive no evidence of a particular class or upon a particular issue, an offer of proof is not a prerequisite to raising the question on appeal, and an offer, if made, may be broad and general.”
(Beneficial etc. Ins. Co.
v.
Kurt Hitke & Co.,
46 Cal.2d 517, at p. 522 [297 P.2d 428].)
Second, petitioners made about as adequate an offer as could reasonably be expected under the circumstances. The court had the
Castro
transcript before it and knew the type of question petitioners wanted to ask. In addition it knew the type of question it had been asked when examined as a witness. Further, counsel for petitioners made an oral offer, comprising five pages of transcript, detailing the questions they desired to ask of the prospective witnesses and the type of answer they expected.
Finally a very plausible argument can be presented that the principle which dispenses with the need to make an offer of proof when the witness is under cross-examination, also covers the situation where a party who is trying to prove that a grand jury has been illegally selected, examines the selectors.
In summary it is noted that the Evidence Code contains no requirement for an offer of proof, as such. Section 354 reads as follows: “A verdict or finding shall not be set aside, nor shall the judgment or decision based thereon be reversed, by reason of the erroneous exclusion of evidence unless the court which passes upon the effect of the error or errors is of the opinion that the error or errors complained of resulted in a miscarriage of justice and it appears of record that:
“(a) The substance, purpose, and relevance of the excluded evidence
was made known to the court by the questions asked, an offer of proof,
or by any other means;
“(b) The rulings of the court made compliance with subdivision (a) futile; or
“(c) The evidence was sought by questions asked during the cross-examination or recross-examination.” (Italics ours.)
It is evident that the making of an offer of proof is only one of several means by which the evident purposes of section 354 may be satisfied. We believe that the record made by petitioners in the case at bar amply fulfilled the aim of the section.
The peremptory writ of prohibition must be granted because of the respondent court’s refusal to permit petitioners to examine the subpoenaed judges as witnesses.
Petitioners also feel aggrieved by the respondent court’s refusal to permit one other witness to testify and by the rejection of other evidence, both oral and documentary. Without considering these claims of error in detail, we are satisfied that all of the court’s rulings were either correct by any standard, or well within its discretion under section 352 of the Evidence Code or, if neither of those, not prejudicial.
Petitioners attack the entire system of judicial participation in grand jury selection as being violative of the doctrine of separation of powers. Since, in order to dispose of the present proceeding, it is unnecessary to decide this rather basic constitutional question, we decline to do so.
(People
v.
Gilbert,
1 Cal.3d 475, 481-485 [82 Cal.Rptr. 724, 462 P.2d 580].)
Petitioners also claim that the trial court erroneously refused to disqualify itself after it had testified in the instant proceeding. It seems to us that this argument turns section 703 of the Evidence Code inside out. The section reads as follows:
“(a) Before the judge presiding at the trial of an action may be called to testify in that trial as a witness, he shall, in proceedings held out of the presence and hearing of the jury, inform the parties of the information he has concerning any fact or matter about which he will be called to testify.
“(b) Against the objection of a party, the judge presiding at the trial
of an action may not testify in that trial as a witness. Upon such objection, the judge shall declare a mistrial and order the action assigned for trial before another judge.
“(c) The calling of the judge presiding at a trial to testify in that trial as a witness shall be deemed a consent to the granting of a motion for mistrial, and an objection to such calling of a judge shall be deemed a motion for mistrial.
“(d) In the absence of objection by a party, the judge presiding at the trial of an action may testify in that trial as a witness.”
If petitioners intended to insist on their right to examine every grand jury “selector” on the respondent court, including the judge who conducted the present hearing, they should have lodged an objection under section 703, subdivision (b) and the matter could have been assigned to another judge.
Instead they themselves called the judge as a witness. There was no indication that they felt that he was disqualified from hearing the motion to quash the indictment until after his testimony had been completed. Under these circumstances we believe that petitioners waived any right that the court disqualify itself.
Finally petitioners want us to hold on the basis of the
Castro
record and the additional evidence which they did produce in this case that the 1969 grand jury was illegally constituted. Obviously, this we cannot do. Had the basic error not been committed, the 70 judges would have testified. Then, depending on the nature of their testimony, the People would have had an opportunity to rebut whatever prima facie case petitioners had made out. If we held now that on the evidence so far adduced the grand jury had been illegally selected and ordered the indictment quashed, we would be depriving the People of a chance to prove their case.
The alternative writ is discharged. Let a peremptory writ of prohibition issue prohibiting the respondent court from any further proceedings in the case entitled People of the State of California v. Carlos Montez et ah, being its number A-244906, without first reopening the hearing on the
petitioners’ motion to quash the indictment and proceeding in accordance with the views expressed in this opinion or, alternatively, in its discretion, proceeding to hear said motion de novo.
Stephens, J., and Reppy, J., concurred.