WHELAN, J. I dissent.
The evidence is not insufficient as a matter of law to support the finding of guilt.
Where a.case rests largely upon circumstantial evidence, the circumstances relied upon to establish the guilt of one [374]accused of crime'must be consistent with that hypothesis .and -inconsistent with any other rational conclusion. In other words, where the incriminatory circumstances relied upon are .equally compatible with innocence, a reviewing court will reverse a judgment of conviction, and a like application of the judgment.
, The rule so stated is defined in People v. Perkins, 8 Cal.2d ,502, 518-519 [66 P.2d 631], where the court goes on to say .that-the rule: “. . . does no more than to instruct the jury -that úf a reasonable doubt is created in their minds for any 'reason they must acquit the defendant. But where the jury rejects the hypothesis pointing to innocence by its verdict, and there - is evidence to support the implied finding of guilt .as the more reasonable of the two hypotheses, this court is bound by the finding of the jury. ’ ’
• In People v. Kerr, 37 Cal.2d 11, 15 [229 P.2d 777], the court said: “The rule as to circumstantial evidence and the requirement as to burden of proof are for application in, and primarily are the concern of, the trial court; an appellate court will not alter or hold unsupported the trial court’s .findings merely because it might reasonably draw an inference different from one the trial court reasonably drew, or might .not be convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that it would have made the same findings. ’ ’
■ In the case at bench, responsibility for the presence of marijuana in defendant’s car was upon defendant, or one or both of his companions, or all three of them, or it was upon •some unknown, hypothetical person.
Since the' earlier presence in the car of defendant and his companions is unquestioned, it is more reasonable to infer that one of those had placed the marijuana there than that a stranger had entered the car and laid out the cigarettes on the dashboard. • .
Indeed, no reason suggests itself why some unknown person should have planted the contraband in defendant’s car.
It is always proper to show that some other person, and not the defendant, committed the crime with which the latter is charged. (People v. Erno, 195 Cal. 272, 279 [232 P. 710].)
Such showing is usually made by the production in the trial court of some evidence to give rise to a reasonable doubt that . the defendant on trial committéd the crime.1
[375]In People v. Bledsoe, 75 Cal.App.2d 862, 864 [171 P.2d 950], the doubt was compelled by defendant’s testimony denying ownership of the marijuana concealed in his car and by undisputed evidence that the ear had been stolen the night before and used by another in the perpetration of a robbery in another city, that the defendant had not used it since it had been returned, and that others beside the defendant had occupied the car at the time of and immediately following the arrest.
In People v. Gory, 28 Cal.2d 450, 457 [170 P.2d 433], an unlocked box used by the defendant in which marijuana was found was in a room shared with 30-odd persons and from which the defendant was absent during the daytime. In view of defendant’s testimony denying knowledge of the presence of the marijuana, the court said: “Here the principal fact relied upon by the prosecution is the finding of marijuana in defendant’s unlocked box and because of the denial by defendant of knowledge of its presence there, it was the duty of the trial court, on proper instructions, to submit to the jury the question as to whether defendant had knowledge of the presence of the marijuana. ’ ’
• There was in People v. Gory no suggestion that as a matter of law the evidence was insufficient to support the verdict.
It was within the present defendant’s power to' prodúce evidence' as to the length of time he had been out of Ms car before his encounter with the deputy sheriffs; and whether his ear had been out of his sight at any time; such evidence could have been unavailable to the prosecution. ' • • •
All such evidence was lacking.
The hypothesis that some unknown person during defendant’s absence from his car placed the package containing -four marijuana cigarettes and two unpackaged cigarettes on the dashboard of the car is unlikely enough on the face of it,' and far less reasonable than the inference that the cigarettes were placed in the car by someone that had a right to enter it. In the absence of all evidence to indicate that any such stranger entered or had the opportunity to enter the ear, or even was present in the vicinity, the hypothesis is not made tenable by the lack of positive evidence to show there was no one else in the vicinity.2
The possibility that some person other than the defendant on trial may have committed a crime of which the corpus [376]delicti has been established is merely a matter of argument in the absence of any evidence that points to some other person as the perpetrator.
If, as I think, it was reasonable to infer that defendant or his companions had placed the contraband in the car, there remains only the question whether defendant, either himself, or jointly with his companions, was chargeable with its presence.
The physical evidence consists of an opened package of Pall Mall cigarettes, white in color, cylindrical in shape, with open ends; five yellow hand-rolled cigarettes, and one white hand-rolled cigarette, each of which has both ends closed and drawn to a point; and a package of Zig-Zag cigarette papers.
The ends of. the four yellow hand-rolled cigarettes stuck out from the opened end of the package as it was seen in plain view on the dashboard.
One of the two unpackaged hand-rolled cigarettes found on the right-hand side of the dashboard was rolled with yellow wheat straw .paper, one with white paper.
' Knowledge of the narcotic nature may be inferred from the manner in which contraband is secreted or attempted to be secreted, in an ordinary package of cigarettes. (People v. Powell, 236 Cal.App.2d 881 [46 Cal.Rptr. 415].)
The cigarettes were so placed that it. might be inferred the two unpackaged cigarettes had been placed for use by twq persons; and that a third person could take one from the package.
It is unlikely that the cigarettes could have been placed there or could have been there during, defendant’s presence without his having been aviare of them. . ......•
Defendant and Gonzales, one of the 16-year-old boys, were from Canoga Park, and the other boy from Reseda. It may .¡be judicially noticed that Canoga, Park is near, the northwesterly limit of the Los Angeles metropolitan area, Reseda a separate community some four miles easterly.
It may reasonably be inferred if Faust and Gonzales had each brought some of the marijuana cigarettes into the car and severally laid them out on the dashboard that, if not prearranged, so unlikely a coincidence would have been the subject of conversation between them.
The same would be true if only one of them had produced the cigarettes. '
It might also be inferred that Faust and Gonzales would [377]not have laid out marijuana cigarettes for their own use in the car of the 19-year-old defendant without his having been aware of it.
It would not be reasonable to say that if defendant knowingly permitted contraband to be in his vehicle, he could not be held culpable solely because his was not the hand that put it there. Thus, it would be reasonable to infer that the 19-year-old defendant, the owner of the car, had joint possession with his 16-year-old companions or aided and abetted them.
It is not necessary for that purpose to infer that the ZigZag cigarette papers, although received in evidence against defendant without objection, were found on his person rather than on that of a companion; or to infer that the cigarettes were not on the right-hand side of the dashboard.3
It is, of course, possible that Faust or Gonzales or both jointly, rather than defendant, placed the cigarettes on the dashboard; it is even possible that they did so after defendant alighted from the car, and unobserved by him. However, there is nothing in the evidence to suggest that either of them had been in the ear at any time when defendant was absent; all were together when first seen by the deputy.
Here again, it was possible for defendant to have produced the evidence in support of that hypothesis. The entire absence of evidence on the subject does not compel an inference that might have been founded on such evidence had it been produced. This is not to draw any inference from the fact defendant did not testify.
The following circumstances are not without significance: Two 16-year-old youths from different communities in the Los Angeles area “had been transported” to the San Diego area in defendant’s car; defendant was one of the party of [378]three making the trip. At 11 o ’clock at' night they were in an unincorporated beach area in San Diego County that was otherwise deserted, so far as has been shown, and which was posted as being for day use only.
The significance of those matters is not limited to their bearing on the question of knowing possession of the drug. They make it reasonable also that the sheriff’s deputy, having made the original determination as to the ages and places of residence of the three persons, should have made further inquiry in view of the lateness of the hour, the seclusion of the area, and the distance the three were from home.
The evidence presents a different factual situation from that of People v. Moore, 69 Cal.2d 674 [72 Cal.Rptr. 800, 446 P.2d 800], In People v. Moore, supra, further, the defendant was denied by a ruling of the trial court the opportunity of testifying regarding the voluntariness of his consent.
It is not the burden of the prosecution to produce evidence that would exclude the very possibility that some person other than the defendant on trial committed the offense.
It is said in People v. Nunn, 65 Cal.App.2d 188, 195 [150 P.2d 476] : ‘ ‘ When reliance is placed upon circumstantial evidence only it is not essential that the inculpatory facts be absolutely incompatible with innocence in order to justify the inference of guilt. It is sufficient if the jurors are convinced by the evidence of its guilt to a moral certainty and beyond a reasonable doubt. ’ ’
Circumstantial evidence need not, in order to justify the inference of legal guilt, consist of inculpatory facts which are absolutely and to the point of demonstration incompatible with innocence. A conviction in the minds of the jurors to a moral certainty and beyond a reasonable doubt arising from the evidence of defendant’s guilt is sufficient. (People v. Borrego, 211 Cal. 759, 765 [297 P. 17].)
I would affirm.
A petition for a rehearing was denied February 18, 1969, and respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied April 2, 1969. Burke, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
The subject of evidence to show that someone other than the defend- ‘ ant committed the crime is discussed in 1 Wigmore (3d ed.), sections 139-141, pages 573-579.
When asked what the deputies saw on the parking lot, West said, “We observed a vehicle parked there. ’ ’