Opinion
COLE, J.
Ben Lee Brown appeals his conviction of murder in the second degree arising out of the death of Jessie Houston. Defendant was previously convicted of this same offense in 1966, and the conviction was affirmed by division three of this court in 1967 in an unpublished opinion. The major contentions raised on this appeal were also raised then. Subsequently, the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit entertained an appeal [830]*830from, a denial by the United States District Court of Brown’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus. The federal Court of Appeals reversed the order of the United States District Court, first, ruling that at the original trial the requirements of Jackson v. Denno, 378 U.S. 368 [12 L.Ed.2d 908, 84 S.Ct. 1774, 1 A.L.R.3d 1205], concerning trial court resolution of the voluntariness of a “confession” did not appear on the record with the “unmistakable clarity” which is required. Secondly, the federal Court of Appeals was “gravely troubled” by what it termed the trial court’s failure to make an adequate inquiry into the cause of defendant’s expressed dissatisfaction with his counsel at the first trial, and his refusal to talk to or collaborate with his counsel. The federal proceedings are reported sub nom., Brown v. Craven, 424 F.2d 1166.
On this appeal, defendant raises four contentions:
“I. The trial court committed prejudicial error in refusing to instruct the jury on the Diminished Capacity evidence and the rebuttal of malice by evidence of intoxication.
“II. Appellant was deprived of effective assistance of counsel by failure to secure and present evidence of Diminished Capacity.
“III. The trial court erred in not conducting a hearing to determine what might be done to secure appellant’s cooperation with appointed counsel.
“IV. The admission of appellant related to the jury by the arresting officer was elicited under compulsion in violation of appellant’s constitutional rights.”
We set forth only so many of the facts as are necessary to delineate the limited points raised.
Facts
In the early morning hours of October 11, 1965, police were called, apparently by defendant and his 14-year-old son, to defendant’s one-room, plus kitchen, apartment where the body of Jessie Houston, clad in a nightgown, was found in bed. The body was removed by coroner personnel for further examination. Defendant was not taken into custody. The investigating officer, Fallon, noticed what appeared to be burns around the legs and thighs of decedent. On October 11, defendant stated that the previous night (about 24 hours earlier) he had gone to bed with the deceased and that she woke him up about an hour later saying she had been burned. The bed was on fire and he threw some water on her. The next day he purchased [831]*831salve for her burns. There were tears in defendant’s eyes as he talked to the officer.
Before testifying to the foregoing effect, Officer Fallon had testified similarly before the court, out of the presence of the jury, adding to his testimony then that defendant said that the victim had been high on narcotics and he had brought her home and that about two hours or so before the officers were there, his son had awakened him and told him that Miss Houston was not breathing.
Another police officer, Hambley, testified that on October 12, 1965, at about 10 o’clock in the morning, he was advised by radio to proceed to the apartment to make a further investigation because the coroner’s report indicated that the deceased had suffered injuries of a traumatic nature. Officer Hambley testified, out of the presence of the jury, that he saw evidence of blood or a scuffle in the apartment; that he ascertained that defendant, defendant’s son and the deceased had been the only persons present, and that he knew these matters before he asked defendant how the decedent was injured.
Hambley testified that at this point he was not absolutely certain that the defendant was a primary suspect.1 When defendant told Hambley that he had slapped the victim the officer placed defendant under arrest and advised him of his constitutional rights.
The advice was concededly defective under Miranda2 standards. Therefore, no attempt was made to introduce into evidence any statement of defendant to the officer subsequent to the time of arrest. However, Hambley was permitted to testify in front of the jury that when he told defendant that the coroner’s office had advised that there were certain traumatic injuries on the deceased’s body and asked the defendant if he had any knowledge of how she received those injuries that the defendant stated: “Yes. I slapped her.”
[832]*832At the time this statement was made by defendant the officer smelled an alcoholic odor and was of the opinion that defendant had been drinking but was not under the influence of alcohol. The trial court, after hearing this testimony, found the statement to be voluntary and further not to- be the product of custodial interrogation.
The coroner testified that the cause of death was due to blows to the head applied by a blunt force. He also described detailed deep puncture wounds around the deceased’s buttocks area which could have been caused by the spike heels on women’s shoes. As to the burning about the decedent’s legs and thighs, this, in the coroner’s opinion, had been suffered when the decedent was either dying or dead.
The only defense testimony presented was that of defendant’s son. His testimony was impeached in material respects. His testimony was that the victim on the night of her death appeared to be high; that she went into the kitchen and on coming out, fell, hitting her head on a coffee table; that the victim then lit a cigarette and went to bed, smoking; and that he, the witness, fell asleep. He testified that when he woke up the mattress appeared to be burnt; that he told his father, the defendant about it; that the latter put his ear to the decedent’s heart and said she was alive and that he, the witness, fell asleep again. When he woke up again he noticed that the victim had stopped breathing and told his father, who started crying. His father got dressed and he and his father went to call the police and an ambulance.
We turn now to defendant’s contentions.
Instructions About Intoxication
Defendant’s argument that the trial court committed error in refusing to give; various instructions dealing with appellant’s intoxication and mental condition as it affected his capacity to harbor malice is without merit. This is for the simple reason that there was no evidence that defendant was intoxicated. It is, of course, error to instruct the jury on matters or issues not before it. Conversely, the. court must give any correct instructions on defendant’s theory of the case which the evidence justifies no matter how weak or unconvincing that evidence may be. (People v. Bynum, 4 Cal.3d 589, 604 [94 Cal.Rptr. 241, 483 P.2d 1193].)
Here, it is true that at the conference with the trial court, out of the presence of the jury, and at a very early stage in the trial, counsel for defendant stated that he had definite information that diminished capacity would be part of the defense and that there was drinking on the part of defendant. He stated that he intended to follow this up to the best of his [833]*833ability, and “I will have to see what evidence I will be able to bring in, whether or not it will be brought in by my client or not.” Again, out of the presence of the jury, and in connection with a hearing on the question of the voluntariness of his statement to the officers, defendant testified that he had been drinking. (The transcript is considerably confused as to whether this testimony relates to the evening immediately preceding the death of decedent or the evening before that.) The transcript does support the inference from defendant’s testimony that he had a hangover from drinking when Officer Hambley arrived on October 12. However, as indicated, defendant’s testimony was presented only to the court and not to> the jury. Defendant did not take the stand before the jury.
The only evidence at all relating to defendant’s drinking which was heard by the jury is the testimony of Officer Hambley that on October 12, 1965, defendant’s breath had a stale, alcoholic odor and that defendant stated that the preceding night (in other words, the evening of October 11, more than 12 hours after decedent’s body had been delivered to the coroner) he “had had a few or imbibed or something of that nature.” The latter evidence might have raised a question for the jury as to defendant’s sobriety on the morning of October 12. But there is no evidence to affect his sobriety or put in issue his mental condition the day decedent met her death.
Even if we are to assume that there was evidence that the. defendant had been drinking, such conduct prior to the commission of a crime does not by itself establish intoxication or require the giving of a requested instruction on the subject of intoxication. (People v. Turville, 51 Cal.2d 620, 633 [335 P.2d 678]; People v. Cram, 12 Cal.App.3d 37, 44 [90 Cal.Rptr. 393].)
Contentions Concerning Defendant’s Trial Counsel
Because they have some relationship to each other it is convenient to consider together, and in reverse order from that presented in defendant’s brief, the contentions that the trial court erred in not having a hearing to determine what might be done to secure defendant’s cooperation with appointed counsel and that such counsel failed to give effective assistance to defendant since he did not secure and present evidence of diminished capacity.
In reversing the judgment denying the writ of habeas corpus, the United States Court of Appeals ruled that at the first trial the superior court did not make “adequate inquiry into the cause of Brown’s dissatisfaction with his counsel or [take] any other steps which might possibly lead to the ap[834]*834pointment of substitute counsel in whom Brown could repose his confidence. The result was that Brown was forced into a trial with the assistance of a particular lawyer with whom he was dissatisfied, with whom he would not cooperate, and with whom he would not, in any manner whatsoever, communicate. ... Of course, a court is riot required to provide an indigent accused with any particular attorney whom he may. desire, and we think that the state court might very properly have required Brown to accept the assistance of some other of the great number of competent attorneys associated with the Public Defender’s office of Los Angeles County. The problem arises because the state court did not, in our opinion, take the necessary time and conduct such necessary inquiry as might have eased Brown’s dissatisfaction, distrust and concern. And, we think it not unreasonable to believe that had Brown been represented by counsel in whom he had confidence he would have been convicted, if at all, of no more than the offense of manslaughter.” (Brown v. Craven, 424 F.2d 1166, 1169-1170.)
We recognize as the law applicable in this situation, a statement of our Supreme Court in People v. Marsden, 2 Cal.3d 118, 123 [84 Cal.Rptr. 156, 465 P.2d 44], quoting from People v. Mitchell, 185 Cal.App.2d 507, 512 [8 Cal.Rptr. 319]: ‘“A defendant’s right to a court-appointed counsel does not include the right to require the court to appoint more than one counsel, except in a situation where the record clearly shows that the first appointed counsel is not adequately representing the accused. ... “The right of a defendant in a criminal case to have the assistance of counsel for his defense . . . may include the right to have counsel appointed by the court . . . discharged or other counsel substituted, if it is shown . . . that failure to do so would substantially impair or deny the right . . . , but the right to such discharge or substitution is not absolute, in the sense that the court is bound to accede to its assertion without a sufficient showing . . . that the right to. the assistance of counsel would be substantially impaired ... in case the request is not granted, and within these limits there is a field of discretion for the court.” [Citations.]’ ”
The Supreme Court continued (2 Cal.3d at. pp. 123-124): “Defendant properly contends that the trial court cannot thoughtfully exercise its discretion in this matter without listening to his reasons for requesting a change of attorneys. A trial judge is unable to intelligently deal with a defendant’s request for substitution of attorneys unless he is cognizant of the grounds which prompted the request. The defendant may have knowledge of conduct and events relevant to the diligence and competence of his attorney which are not apparent to the trial judge from observations within the four corners of the courtroom. Indeed, ‘[w]hen inadequate representation is [835]*835alleged, the critical factual inquiry ordinarily relates to <natters outside the trial record: whether the defendant had a defense which was not presented; whether trial counsel consulted sufficiently with the accused, and adequately investigated the facts and the law; whether the omissions charged to trial counsel resulted from inadequate preparation rather than from unwise choice of trial tactics and strategy.’ [Citation.] Thus, a judge who denies a motion for substitution of attorneys solely on the basis of his courtroom observations, despite a defendant’s offer to relate specific instances of misconduct, abuses the exercise of his discretion to determine the competency of the attorney. A judicial decision made without giving a party an opportunity to present argument or evidence in support of his contention ‘is lacking in all the attributes of a judicial determination. [Citation.]’
In fairness to the previous state courts which ruled on this matter, we think it must be pointed out from the record of the first trial, of which we take judicial notice, that defendant manifested an obdurate refusal to cooperate with counsel in his first trial; that the trial court there conducted a colloquy with him extending over seven pages of the reporter’s transcript and that defendant’s statement of reasons for requesting a change of attorneys was: “My personal feelings is my case. I don’t have any personal feelings against this gentleman. I just don’t want to have him for my lawyer. You just try me under duress without an attorney.” The previous trial court gave more than thoughtful attention to defendant’s contentions.
Given the broad clue appearing from the language of the United. States Court of Appeals, quoted above, it is predictable that in his second trial of the matter defendant should have acted in the manner which we are about to recite. However, it is evident that defendant was so enamored of the federal suggestion that if he was represented by an attorney in whom he had confidence it was likely that he would be convicted only of manslaughter at best, that he determined not to have confidence in anyone. It is also evident from some of his comments that he was under the erroneous opinion that he could only be convicted of manslaughter. It is also obvious that he failed to heed the concluding words of the opinion of the federal court reversing the United States District Court’s denial of a writ of habeas corpus: “Upon remand, the District Court may temporarily hold Brown’s petition in abeyance and shall grant the petition unless California authorities do, within a reasonable period, not exceeding sixty days, grant Brown a new trial attended with all reasonable assurance that he be represented by competent counsel, from the Public Defender’s office or elsewhere, in whom he may, if he does not demonstrate obstinance, recalcitrance, or unreasonable contumacy, repose his confidence.” (Italics added; 424 F.2d at p. 1170.) It is clear to us that defendant did demonstrate each of these undesirable traits as illustrated by the matters occurring which we now outline.
[836]*8361. Although it was not necessarily required so to do, the superior court on August 13, 1970, granted the motion of the public defender under then Penal Code section 987 a to relieve the public defender’s office “for other reasons” as provided in that section. The public defender stated only that it was in the interest of defendant for the public defender to' be relieved. When the court asked for further explanation, insofar as the record shows, counsel stated only that the motion was the basis of his considered judgment and that to go further into the matter might be prejudicial to the defendant. The court conferred off the record with the deputy district attorney and the deputy public defender, and announced that it was persuaded that the motion was well taken and would be granted. The court then asked the defendant the name of the lawyer that he wanted appointed, and defendant named counsel who had represented him in his prior state court appeal. That counsel was appointed and represented defendant thereafter throughout his trial.
2. Actual trial of this matter took place over a span of seven court days, from October 27 through November 6, 1970. At the start of the trial, counsel announced that defendant was ready and defendant stated: “I got a witness, my son, and I don’t see him, your Honor.” Counsel advised that he had been unable to get in touch with the son but he and defendant could take care of this between them. The son did, in fact, testily as indicated above.
3. Defendant then attempted individually to waive a jury trial but both his counsel and the People refused the waiver. After the noon recess, the court again took up with defendant and his counsel, in chambers, the question of a jury trial. Counsel stated that he was convinced that it would not be wise for defendant to waive a jury trial. Defendant first said he had discussed nothing about this with his counsel but then said that counsel had so advised him previously.3
[837]*8374. In a chambers’ session on the third day of trial, after a discussion concerning the diminished capacity defense (which we will come to shortly), the court made certain inquiries of defendant.4
[838]*8385. The next reference to the relationship between defendant and counsel, [839]*839eliminating interim reports on counsel’s efforts to locate defendant’s son as a witness, occurred on the fourth day of the trial.5
6. While counsel had indicated that he could keep his client under control, the control did not last any longer than the start of proceedings the next day.6
[840]*840Thereafter, the court having been forced to conduct the trial in defendant’s absence, defendant apparently remained outside of the courtroom through the remainder of the trial except when he was brought into the court in the absence of the jury.
7. At the start of the trial session in the afternoon of the same day that defendant refused the opportunity to be.present, this colloquy occurred.7 After defendant left the courtroom again, as indicated in the [841]*841footnote, counsel made and the court denied a motion for judgment of acquittal. Counsel was then excused to have an opportunity to confer with defendant and later trial resumed again in defendant’s absence.
8. Toward the end of the afternoon session, defense counsel made the following statement on the record: “[Defense Counsel]: If Your Honor please, I wish to advise the Court that today at 2:20 I personally spoke with the defendant, Ben Brown, and inquired whether he wished to take the stand and testify on his own behalf in this matter. I advised him that it was his decision to make. I pointed out to him further that in my judgment in some cases some juries take a dim view of the defendant who does not take the stand. I further pointed out to him that if he did take the witness stand he would be subjecting himself to cross-examination. The defendant did not reply. Therefore, the defendant will not take the stand at this time.
“The Court: Is this your advice to him, that he not take the stand.
“[Defense Counsel]: Yes.
“The Court: All right. Then you are ready to rest?
“[Defense Counsel]: Yes.”
Court then recessed until the following afternoon when the defendant was again brought into court in the absence of the jury.8
[843]*8439. At time of sentencing defendant presisted in his objections to counsel.9
[844]*844We have set forth all of the colloquy pertaining to the representation of defendant appearing in the reporter’s transcript so that it should be crystal clear that defendant was afforded the hearing envisioned by People v. Mars-den, supra, 2 Cal.3d 118, and found to be lacking in Brown v. Craven, supra, 424 F.2d 1166.
Indeed, it is ironic to note that the counsel now complained of is the very one whom defendant had asked to be appointed; that halfway through his trial he started to praise the public defender whom he had previously objected to and that he did not start to absent himself from the courtroom until the day that the People put on evidence of a criminalist that could be construed to be highly damaging to defendant.
It would be stultifying to say that defendant’s expressed dissatisfaction with his counsel is sufficient to win him a reversal or a new trial from a credulous appellate court. Defendant’s refusal to cooperate, obviously, was a calculated gamble that such tactics would secure him a second reversal.
We have not the slightest doubt that defendant’s other point about counsel—that is that defendant was deprived of effective assistance of counsel by reason of the latter’s failure to secure and present evidence of diminished capacity—is not well taken.
It is now argued that trial counsel should have (1) asked the court to examine defendant to determine his tolerance and reaction to the use of alcohol and seconal; (2) seen that defendant was advised to testify in his own defense so that the jury could be informed fully of the use of alcohol and seconal preceding his arrest; (3) asked defendant’s son to describe his [845]*845father’s condition; and (4) secured experts to testify as to the effect upon defendant as a result of his ingestion of drugs and alcohol.
Suggestions 1 and 4 both presume that there was evidence that defendant used alcohol and seconal immediately prior to decedent’s death. In the absence of any such evidence, the examination and expert testimony requested would have been speculative and useless.
Insofar as suggestion number 2 is concerned, the quotations which we have set forth in footnote 8, supra, amply show that defendant was advised to testify insofar as the court could advise him. Counsel’s suggestion that defendant not testify was clearly a tactical decision with which this court will not and should not be involved. (People v. Cram, 12 Cal.App.3d 37, 45 [90 Cal.Rptr. 393].) Indeed, given the nature of defendant’s testimony and remarks to the court out of the presence of the jury, counsel may well have felt that for defendant to testify concerning drinking would harm him more than help.
It is clear that counsel was acutely aware of the possible existence of a defense of diminished capacity. Thus, the record shows, early in the trial, that the court asked defense counsel whether diminished capacity was going to be one of the defenses. Counsel stated;
“There is definite information that I have that the diminished capacity would be part of the defense.
“I have information that there was drinking on the part of Mr. Brown .... I intend to follow it up to the best of my ability. . . . Now, at the present juncture of the case, I will have to see what evidence I will be able to bring in, whether or not it will be brought in by my client or not.
“The Court: Well, have you prepared yourself with this defense in mind?
“[Defense Counsel]: Well, yes. That is not the whole defense. That was an element that became apparent to me in talking to Mr. Brown when I first was appointed in August.”
The applicable law is as follows:
“The constitutional right to the assistance of counsel in a criminal case [citations] includes the guarantee that such assistance be ‘effective.’ [Citations.] That ‘effective’ counsel required by due process, however, is not errorless counsel; rather, it is counsel ‘reasonably likely to render, and rendering reasonably effective assistance.’ [Citations.]
[846]*846“Although the determination of whether the demands of due process have been met in a particular case is always ‘a question of judgment and degree’ to be answered in light of all the circumstances and with a view to ‘fundamental fairness’ [citations], certain general standards have evolved for the aid of the court making this determination. Fundamental among these is that which places upon counsel the duty to conduct careful factual and legal investigations and inquiries with a view to developing matters of defense in order that he may make informed decisions on his client’s behalf both at the pleading stage [citations] and at trial [citations], If counsel’s ‘failure [to undertake such careful inquiries and investigations] result in withdrawing a crucial defense from the case, the defendant has not had the assistance to which he is entitled.’ [Citations.]” (In re Saunders, 2 Cal.3d 1033, 1041-1042 [88 Cal.Rptr. 633, 472 P.2d 921].)
While “[t]he failure to present the defense of diminished capacity is the withdrawal of a crucial defense within the foregoing principles, whether it is occasioned by ignorance of counsel ... or by lack of preparation and investigation ...” still a defendant must show an inadequacy as a demonstrable reality. (People v. Cortez, 13 Cal.App.3d 317, 328, 330 [91 Cal.Rptr. 660].) Here, as in People v. Cram, supra, 12 Cal.App.3d 37, 46, there is no suggestion that the defense of diminished capacity due to intoxication was withheld because of ignorance of facts which might raise it, and therefore, without any -real judgment by counsel at all. This distinguishes the case at bench from In re Saunders, supra. Here, as in Cram, the evidence of intoxication is slight, if not nonexistent. Here, as in Cram, counsel rested his hope on another defense—the testimony of defendant’s son that the decedent suffered the fatal injuries by reason of a blow on her head when she struck a coffee table while falling. There is nothing in this record to show that trial counsel had not investigated a possible defense of diminished capacity. (People v. Roy, 18 Cal.App.3d 537, 554 [95 Cal.Rptr. 884].)
The final suggested error on this point is that counsel should have asked defendant’s son to describe his father’s condition. The son was already badly impeached. At the trial under review here he testified that decedent fell and struck her head against the coffee table. At the first trial some four years earlier the son testified that the decedent remained in bed the entire evening of her death and did not get up at all. Since the son had also testified that defendant stayed in bed the entire evening of decedent’s death, testimony that he was drinking on that evening would have been likewise subject to serious impeachment. There is no showing that the son was otherwise aware of his father’s actions. This assignment of error is without merit.
[847]*847
Contentions Concerning Defendant’s Constitutional Rights
The last claim made by defendant is that it was in violation of his constitutional rights to allow Officer Hambley to testify that on October 12 defendant stated he had slapped the decedent.
The claim is that under the principles of Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 [16 L.Ed.2d 694, 86 S.Ct. 1602, 10 A.L.R.3d 974], defendant should have been advised of his constitutional rights prior to eliciting that information.
Before the court allowed this testimony into evidence it heard testimony from the officer, out of the presence of the jury. In full compliance with the federal mandate and with state practice, the court determined as a question of fact that defendant’s statements were voluntarily made. Defendant’s argument that his Miranda rights were violated are misplaced. Officer Hambley did regard him as a material witness and would have been unwilling to allow defendant to leave, but there is no evidence that defendant knew this. It is also true that the officer went to the scene because, according to his testimony, more investigation was needed, and that he had advised defendant that he was investigating the circumstances of the death.
The circumstances known to Officer Hambley and his state of mind as to defendant’s status as a suspect are set forth in the factual recitation above. (See fn. 1, supra, and related text.) There is no showing that defendant was in custody. When the officer and his partner first arrived at defendant’s apartment, defendant was dressed only in his underclothing and proceeded to move about the apartment dressing himself while talking to the officers. “Custody is an essential element of the accusatory stage.” (People v. Miller, 71 Cal.2d 459, 481 [78 Cal.Rptr. 449, 455 P.2d 377].)
The trial court found that the questions asked of defendant before he became a suspect in Officer Hambley’s mind were not the product of custodial interrogation. It is, of course, only such interrogation focusing on an accused which brings into play the requirements of the Miranda warning. (Miranda v. Arizona, supra, 384 U.S. 436, 444 [16 L.Ed.2d 694, 706].)
That Officer Hambley was merely conducting an investigation is also borne out by the fact that he first became suspicious that a crime might have occurred and that defendant might be involved in it when defendant told the officer that he had slapped the decedent. Officer Hambley clearly had reason to investigate further when he was sent to the apartment, but that is not the same as probable cause to arrest. (Cf. People v. Wright, 273 Cal.App.2d 325 [78 Cal.Rptr. 75].) In People v. Morse, 70 Cal.2d [848]*848711 [76 Cal.Rptr. 391, 452 P.2d 607], our Supreme Court said at page 723, that it is not “to be assumed that any question put by any police officer to a person seriously suspected of crime must necessarily be prefaced by information or warnings as to constitutional rights.” A fortiori this is so as to one not a suspect.
Even if we make the assumption, unsupported by the record, that defendant felt that he was not free to leave, we certainly would not be warranted in assuming that he felt he was arrested. Until such arrest, at the most there is a temporary detention which does not rise to the dignity of that custody which requires that constitutional warnings be given. (People v. Manis, 268 Cal.App.2d 653, 667 [74 Cal.Rptr. 423].)
In contrast to the situation presented in Orozco v. Texas, 394 U.S. 324 [22 L.Ed.2d 311, 89 S.Ct. 1095], defendant was not under arrest the moment that Officer Hambley came into the room. Further, the officer’s questions here were much more of an exploratory nature than those in Orozco and were considerably less pointed than those found not to require constitutional warning in People v. Morse, supra. This is not a situation where defendant reasonably believed that his freedom of movement was restricted by the mere presence of official authority. (People v. McLean, 6 Cal.App.3d 300 [85 Cal.Rptr. 683].)
Officer Hambley was not required to give a Miranda warning to defendant.
Disposition
The judgment is affirmed.
Stephens, J., concurred.
Assigned by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.