People v. Superior Court (Wagner)

210 Cal. App. 3d 1146, 258 Cal. Rptr. 740, 1989 Cal. App. LEXIS 504
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 23, 1989
DocketB039996
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 210 Cal. App. 3d 1146 (People v. Superior Court (Wagner)) 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
People v. Superior Court (Wagner), 210 Cal. App. 3d 1146, 258 Cal. Rptr. 740, 1989 Cal. App. LEXIS 504 (Cal. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

Opinion

WOODS (A. M.), P. J.

By petition for writ of mandate the People challenge a trial court order dismissing the People’s statutory petition 1 to extend a convicted felon’s civil commitment on a not-guilty-by-reason-of-insanity (NGI) plea. The extension petition was dismissed because real party in interest (hereafter defendant) had not been advised before entry of the 1983 NGI plea that such plea could possibly result in lifetime confinement in a *1148 mental health facility. Defendant had spent nearly all of his initial six-year maximum NGI commitment period in state hospital and challenged the underlying NGI plea only after the People brought their petition to extend the commitment.

The material facts are simple and not in dispute.

On March 7, 1983, defendant was arraigned on an information charging him with assault with intent to commit rape in violation of Penal Code section 220. Defendant personally entered a plea of not guilty. His counsel, the Los Angeles County Public Defender, entered an additional plea of not guilty by reason of insanity, in which defendant did not personally join.

In further proceedings in open court on March 17, 1983, defendant’s counsel referred to the prior NGI plea and stated that defendant would stipulate to determination of the guilt phase on the basis of the preliminary hearing transcript and to determination of the sanity phase on the basis of psychiatric reports. Defendant assented to these submissions. The court took appropriate waivers on the guilt phase and found defendant guilty as charged. On the basis of the submitted psychiatric reports defendant was found not guilty by reason of insanity. Defendant was then advised that the maximum term for which he could be sentenced to prison on the offense was six years.

Defendant was committed to Patton State Hospital for a maximum period of six years, which term would expire December 8, 1988, unless he sooner recovered his sanity.

On September 16, 1988, the People filed a petition pursuant to section 1026.5, subdivision (b) 2 to extend defendant’s commitment. The motion was based upon an April 20, 1988, letter from the acting medical director of the state hospital requesting a commitment extension. Attached to that letter is a contemporaneous hospital progress report substantiating that defendant remains a danger to others due to his diagnosed chronic paranoid schizophrenia which results in unprovoked physical attacks.

On November 8, 1988, defendant, represented by the public defender, moved to dismiss the People’s petition on the ground that the 1983 NGI plea transcript shows the plea was entered without advisement of the consequence that it could result in lifetime commitment. Defendant’s motion *1149 contended that such defect compelled the setting aside of the 1983 NGI plea and commitment, thus removing the jurisdictional foundation for the People’s petition to extend the commitment.

The People’s opposition to the dismissal motion contended only that the motion was in reality an inappropriate petition for writ of error coram nobis.

On January 17, 1989, respondent granted defendant’s motion to dismiss.

The People filed the petition for mandate with this court. We issued a temporary stay of the dismissal order and of defendant’s release. After we issued the alternative writ, the Los Angeles County Public Defender requested that it be relieved as counsel due to the ostensible conflict of interest created by the appearance that it had been ineffective in its representation of defendant by failing to advise him of the consequences of the NGI plea and by failing to challenge the plea in a timely manner. We granted the application and appointed independent counsel for defendant in this proceeding.

As will be explained, we hold that defendant waived the defect in his 1983 NGI plea by his unexcused delay in challenging that plea until he reaped the full benefit of preferable hospital confinement and avoided the possibility of prison and attendant parole period. We also hold that even if defendant’s motion to dismiss were evaluated on its merits, it fails to meet the threshold burden of proof applicable to belated collateral challenges.

1. Validity of the Plea.

It is undisputed that defendant was not advised on the record before entry of the plea or before the resulting order for commitment that an NGI plea carries the adverse consequence of possible periodic extensions of the commitment that could result in lifetime confinement. Such lack of advisement has been held, on direct appeal from the resulting NGI commitment, to invalidate the plea as involuntarily entered in violation of constitutional due process. (People v. Lomboy (1981) 116 Cal.App.3d 67 [171 Cal.Rptr. 812].) The NGI plea was also entered without an advisement on the record of the initial maximum commitment period. 3

It is not disputed that the 1983 NGI plea is defective for lack of personal entry or ratification, as is required by case law. Defendant’s lack of personal *1150 entry of the NGI plea is materially indistinguishable from that in People v. Vanley (1974) 41 Cal.App.3d 846, 850-856 [116 Cal.Rptr. 446], which held a similarly defective NGI plea defective when challenged on direct appeal.

However, it is established by case law that a defendant’s substantial, unexcused delay in collaterally attacking a disposition such as an NGI commitment for lack of an advisement of consequences effects a waiver of such defect.

2. Waiver by Unexcused Delay.

Defendant Wagner’s delay in challenging his NGI plea until the consequences thereof shifted from beneficial to potentially adverse is highly analogous to the delay occurring in In re Ronald E. (1977) 19 Cal.3d 315 [137 Cal.Rptr. 781 [562 P.2d 684] (hereafter Ronald E.), in the context of juvenile law wardship proceedings. As we will explain, Ronald E. controls the question of waiver of the plea defect in this case.

Ronald E., supra, 19 Cal.3d 315, holds that although a juvenile’s admission of the jurisdictional charges at his initial wardship jurisdictional hearing was defective for lack of the requisite advisement of consequences, the minor waived his entitlement to assert such defect on petition for writ of habeas corpus by his unexcused four-year delay during which his wardship was extended by four supplemental petitions.

Ronald E. foreclosed the juvenile’s belated challenge with this analysis: “We are of the view, however, that petitioner is no longer entitled to raise on petition for the writ of habeas corpus the issue of improprieties in proceedings resulting in detention which he has accepted without timely challenge.

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Related

People v. Minor
227 Cal. App. 3d 37 (California Court of Appeal, 1991)
In Re Robinson
216 Cal. App. 3d 1510 (California Court of Appeal, 1990)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
210 Cal. App. 3d 1146, 258 Cal. Rptr. 740, 1989 Cal. App. LEXIS 504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-superior-court-wagner-calctapp-1989.