People v. Hosner

538 P.2d 1141, 15 Cal. 3d 60, 123 Cal. Rptr. 381, 1975 Cal. LEXIS 222
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 22, 1975
DocketCrim. 17837
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 538 P.2d 1141 (People v. Hosner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Hosner, 538 P.2d 1141, 15 Cal. 3d 60, 123 Cal. Rptr. 381, 1975 Cal. LEXIS 222 (Cal. 1975).

Opinion

Opinion

WRIGHT, C. J.

Defendant appeals from a judgment of conviction entered upon jury verdicts of guilt of first degree burglary with great bodily injury and use of a firearm (Pen. Code, §§ 459, 460, 12022.5), 1 first degree robbery with great bodily injury and use of a firearm (§§ 211, 211a, 12022.5), and possession of a concealable firearm by a convicted felon (§ 12021), and from a finding that he is an habitual criminal because of two prior convictions (§ 644, subd. (a)). Defendant was sentenced to the terms provided by law for the convictions of burglary, robbery and possession of a firearm, the latter sentence to be served consecutively. Execution of sentence on the robbery conviction was suspended, the suspension to become permanent upon completion of the other sentences.

The judgment under review arose from the second trial of defendant on the same charges. Defendant’s first trial, four and one-half months earlier, resulted in a mistrial when the jury reported that it was unable to reach a verdict after two days of deliberation.

Defendant is indigent and was represented at both trials by the same attorney. When defendant’s case was first called for retrial, two months after the first trial, defendant’s motion for a transcript of his first trial was denied. We hold the denial of this motion to have abridged defendant’s right to the equal protection of the laws under the Fourteenth Amendment of the federal Constitution, as construed by the relevant decisions of the United States Supreme Court. We deem defendant to have been prejudiced at trial by this error, and we accordingly reverse the judgment against him.

The parties have argued at length throughout the checkered procedural course of this appeal whether or not there is anything more in the record on appeal which may properly be considered as bearing on defendant’s claim that the trial court erred in denying his motion for a *63 transcript of his prior trial. 2 The parties’ contentions in this regard have been rendered moot by our decision to order on our own motion that the record on appeal be augmented to include the reporter’s transcript of the hearing on defendant’s motion for a transcript of his first trial. (Rule 12(a), Cal. Rules of Court.)

We are unwilling, however, to make immediate reference to the record of the hearing on the motion for a transcript. If it appears that a showing of need was in fact made below by defendant in support of his motion for a transcript of his prior trial, it might seem by implication that the existence in the augmented record on appeal of evidence of such a showing was crucial to the merits of defendant’s claim that the denial of this motion was erroneous. To avoid needlessly injecting confusion into this area of law, we have decided to reverse the usual sequence of discussion in an opinion of this type. Ordinarily, we would set forth the facts upon which a claim of error was premised, then state the relevant law, and applying that law to the facts conclude whether or not an error of law had in feet occurred. Herein we will first set forth the law governing a motion by an indigent criminal defendant for a transcript of prior proceedings in the course of his current prosecution. We will then look to the factual record of the hearing on such a motion in the instant case to determine if error occurred in light of our foregoing statement of the applicable law.

*64 The basic question which we accordingly now address is whether the mere facts of a defendant’s indigency and his timely motion for a transcript of prior proceedings entitle him prima facie to the requested transcript. We deem this question to have been settled in the affirmative by two cases of the United States Supreme Court. In Roberts v. LaVallee (1967) 389 U.S. 40 [19 L.Ed.2d 41, 88 S.Ct. 194], the Supreme Court held in a per curiam opinion that an indigent has a constitutional right to a transcript of his preliminary hearing, and that standing to complain of the violation of this right was conferred by the petitioner’s having “adequately made known his desire to obtain the minutes of his preliminary hearing” by a “demand [which] was ‘clear and unequivocal.’ ” (389 U.S. at p. 42 [19 L.Ed.2d at p. 44].) In his dissenting opinion Mr. Justice Harlan stated it to be his reading of the record “that petitioner and his counsel were both present at the preliminary hearing, that they were furnished a'free transcript of the grand jury testimony of the state witness in question but made no use of this transcript at trial, and that at no time has petitioner suggested any use to which the preliminary hearing transcript could have been put, although he is in a position to know what it contains.” (389 U.S. at p. 43 [19 L.Ed.2d at p. 44].) In objecting to the expansive scope of the per curiam opinion, he described it as “declaring that any document related to the criminal process, no matter how demonstrably trivial its significance, 'must be supplied free to indigents simply because the State is willing to make it available to others able to pay for it.” (Id.)

More recently, in Britt v. North Carolina (1971) 404 U.S. 226 [30 L.Ed.2d 400, 92 S.Ct. 431], the court has made explicit what, absent Mr. Justice Harlan’s dissent, was merely implicit in Roberts. 3 Britt did limit the state’s obligation to provide an indigent defendant with a transcript of prior proceedings to circumstances in which the transcript is “needed for an effective defense or appeal.” (Italics added.) (404 U.S. at p. 227 [30 L.Ed.2d at pp. 403-404].) But the court indicated that such need is to be presumed, and that it is the state’s burden to show that particular circumstances afford a defendant an effective defense notwithstanding his lack of a transcript of prior proceedings. The court noted that its prior *65 cases had “identified two factors that are relevant to the determination of need: (1) the value of the transcript to the defendant in connection with the appeal or trial for which it is sought, and (2) the availability of alternative devices that would fulfill the same functions as a transcript.” (Id.) In regard to the first factor of “particularized need” (id., at p. 228 [30 L.Ed.2d at p. 404]), the court went on to declare that even in the absence of specific allegations such need could “ordinarily be assumed.” (Id.; see ante, fn. 3.) As to the second factor of alternative devices, the court in Britt took pains to stress that despite the result reached therein (the denial of a free transcript of a prior mistrial to a defendant who conceded at oral argument that he had had available to him an “informal alternative which appealed] to be substantially equivalent to a transcript” (404 U.S. at p. 230 [30 L.Ed.2d at p.

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Bluebook (online)
538 P.2d 1141, 15 Cal. 3d 60, 123 Cal. Rptr. 381, 1975 Cal. LEXIS 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hosner-cal-1975.