People v. Florez CA6 ( 2016 )


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  • Filed 3/14/16 P. v. Florez CA6
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    THE PEOPLE,                                                          H040327
    (Santa Clara County
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                   Super. Ct. No. C9890809)
    v.
    JOHN PAUL FLOREZ,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Defendant John Paul Florez is currently serving a “Three Strikes” sentence.
    Following the passage of Proposition 36, the Three Strikes Reform Act, he filed a petition
    for resentencing under Penal Code section 1170.126.1 Although he was eligible to be
    resentenced based on his current and past offenses, the trial court exercised its discretion
    to find that resentencing him “would pose an unreasonable risk of danger to public
    safety” (§ 1170.126, subd. (f)) and denied his petition. Defendant appealed. For the
    reasons set forth below we find no merit in any of defendant’s arguments on appeal and
    affirm the order denying his petition.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    In 1998, police officers saw defendant urinating behind a convenience store in San
    Jose. Officers believed defendant dropped something on the ground. Shortly thereafter,
    officers discovered a small bag containing 0.19 grams of cocaine near where defendant
    1
    Unspecified statutory references are to the Penal Code.
    had been standing. Officers also determined that defendant was under the influence of
    opiates and cocaine.
    In 1999, defendant pleaded guilty to a felony for possession of a cocaine base and
    a misdemeanor for being under the influence. He also admitted he had been convicted of
    four prior strike convictions within the meaning of the former Three Strikes Law and that
    he had served three prior prison terms. Following his plea, the trial court sentenced
    defendant to a term of 25 years to life and an additional three years for his prior prison
    terms.
    Defendant’s prior strike convictions were for robbery. In 1990, defendant put a
    knife to a victim’s throat, pulled the victim out of a car, beat the victim, and took the
    victim’s car. In 1983, defendant placed a knife to the throat of a 7-Eleven store employee
    and demanded money. In 1976, defendant robbed two different convenience stores.
    On January 14, 2013, defendant filed a petition for resentencing under
    section 1170.126. At the time he filed the petition, defendant was 63 years old and had
    served 15 years of his prison sentence.
    The People opposed defendant’s petition, conceding that his offenses rendered
    him eligible for resentencing under section 1170.126 but arguing that resentencing him
    would pose an unreasonable risk of danger to public safety. Attached to the People’s
    opposition were defendant’s prison records, which reflected that he had been involved in
    fights and altercations while incarcerated. The latest incident involving violence took
    place in 2009.
    On October 18, 2013, defendant filed a response to the People’s opposition to his
    petition for resentencing. In his response, defendant argued that the dangerousness
    finding must be submitted to a jury.
    2
    On October 22, 2013, the court held a hearing and heard evidence and argument
    regarding defendant’s petition.2 Defendant had an expert testify that recidivism reduces
    with age, and the recidivism rate of a third strike inmate of defendant’s age was about
    1 percent. Defendant had not abused substances since his incarceration. He had also
    been accepted into a transitional program. One of defendant’s relatives spoke during the
    hearing, describing that defendant would receive support if resentenced and released.
    Afterwards, the court denied defendant’s petition, finding that resentencing him
    would pose an unreasonable risk of danger to public safety. The court noted that
    defendant had broken rules in prison and had been involved in fights and altercations,
    even after he was considered elderly. Further, the court asserted that it was especially
    troubling that it appeared that defendant had not participated in programming to address
    his problem areas, such as anger management or substance abuse. Defendant appealed.
    DISCUSSION
    1. Petition for Resentencing
    a. Statutory Background
    In November 2012, California voters approved Proposition 36, the Three Strikes
    Reform Act of 2012 (hereafter the Reform Act). Prior to the passage of Proposition 36,
    the former Three Strikes law (§§ 667, subds. (b)-(i), 1170.12) mandated that a defendant
    who is convicted of two prior serious or violent felonies would be subject to a sentence of
    25 years to life upon conviction of a third felony. The Reform Act amended the three
    strikes law. Now, section 1170.12, subdivision (c)(2)(C) and section 667,
    subdivision (e)(2)(C) provide that a defendant with two or more strikes who is convicted
    2
    The court did not explicitly rule on defendant’s request for a jury trial. However,
    since it held a hearing on the matter without a jury, it implicitly denied defendant’s
    request.
    3
    of a felony that is neither serious nor violent be sentenced as a second strike offender,
    unless certain exceptions apply.
    The Reform Act also added section 1170.126, which allows eligible inmates who
    are currently subject to 25-years-to-life sentences under the former three strikes law to
    petition the court for resentencing. “Section 1170.126, subdivisions (a) and (b), broadly
    describe who is eligible to file a petition and to be resentenced. Subdivision (a) of
    section 1170.126 states: ‘The resentencing provisions under this section and related
    statutes are intended to apply exclusively to persons presently serving an indeterminate
    term of imprisonment pursuant to paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 667 or
    paragraph (2) of subdivision (c) of Section 1170.12, whose sentence under this act would
    not have been an indeterminate life sentence.’ ” (Teal v. Superior Court (2014) 
    60 Cal. 4th 595
    , 598.) “Subdivision (b) of section 1170.126 states: ‘Any person serving an
    indeterminate term of life imprisonment imposed pursuant to paragraph (2) of
    subdivision (e) of Section 667 or paragraph (2) of subdivision (c) of Section 1170.12
    upon conviction, whether by trial or plea, of a felony or felonies that are not defined as
    serious and/or violent felonies by subdivision (c) of Section 667.5 or subdivision (c) of
    Section 1192.7, may file a petition for a recall of sentence. . . .’ ” (Id. at p. 599.)
    An eligible prisoner “shall be resentenced” as a second strike offender unless
    the court determines that resentencing him or her “would pose an unreasonable risk of
    danger to public safety.” (§ 1170.126, subd. (f).) In exercising its discretion under
    section 1170.126, subdivision (f), the trial court may consider various factors including
    the petitioner’s criminal conviction history, disciplinary record and record of
    rehabilitation while incarcerated, and “[a]ny other evidence the court . . . determines to be
    relevant . . . .” (Id., subd. (g)(3).)
    4
    b. Scope of the Court’s Discretion
    On appeal, defendant argues that the court erred when it denied his petition for
    resentencing, because it failed to understand that section 1170.126 creates a presumption
    in favor of reducing an eligible petitioner’s sentence. Defendant also claims that the
    court erred when it failed to consider the limits on its discretion imposed by the Reform
    Act, which he argues created a new sentencing norm.
    Section 1170.126, subdivision (f) states in pertinent part that “the petitioner shall
    be resentenced pursuant to [a second-strike term] unless the court, in its discretion,
    determines that resentencing the petitioner would pose an unreasonable risk of danger to
    public safety.” (Italics added.) Defendant maintains that “[s]ome statutes contain
    express qualifications delineating, and thereby restricting, the particular exercise of
    discretion” (People v. Superior Court (Alvarez) (1997) 
    14 Cal. 4th 968
    , 977); therefore,
    the “shall/unless” language establishes a presumption in favor of resentencing a petitioner
    that can only be overcome if the court finds the petitioner would present an unreasonable
    risk of danger to public safety.
    In part, defendant cites to statutes relating to the grant or denial of parole. He
    argues that In re Rosenkrantz (2002) 
    29 Cal. 4th 616
    , 654 held that there was a statutory
    presumption in favor of parole based on the “shall/unless” language in section 3041.
    Section 3041 states that the board “shall set a release date [for the inmate] unless it
    determines that the gravity of the current convicted offense or offenses, or the timing and
    gravity of current or past convicted offense or offenses, is such that consideration of the
    public safety requires a more lengthy period of incarceration for this individual, and that
    a parole date, therefore, cannot be fixed at this meeting.” (§ 3041, subd. (b).)
    To an extent, we disagree with defendant’s interpretation of Rosenkrantz and
    section 3041. The statutes and regulations governing parole create a presumption in
    favor of parole in part because of the Legislature’s conclusion that those prisoners who
    5
    have served their minimum parole eligibility terms are “normally” entitled to a parole
    date unless parole poses an unreasonable risk to public safety. (§ 3041, subd. (a).)
    Therefore, we disagree with defendant’s interpretation that Rosenkrantz concluded that,
    by itself, the “shall/unless” construction used in section 3041 created a presumption in
    favor of parole.
    Additionally, we find that defendant’s interpretation of the “shall/unless” statutory
    construction was recently rejected by our Supreme Court in People v. Gutierrez (2014)
    
    58 Cal. 4th 1354
    , which analyzed similar language located in section 190.5, the juvenile
    life without parole statute. The Gutierrez court stated: “Contrary to [People v. Guinn
    (1994) 
    28 Cal. App. 4th 1130
    ], . . . our review of the text and history of section
    190.5[, subdivision] (b) does not lead us to conclude that the statute establishes a
    presumption in favor of life without parole. The text of the statute appears ambiguous on
    this point. As noted, section 190.5[, subdivision] (b) says the penalty for special
    circumstance murder committed by a 16- or 17-year-old offender ‘shall be confinement
    in the state prison for life without the possibility of parole or, at the discretion of the
    court, 25 years to life.’ It is not unreasonable to read this text, as Guinn did, to mean that
    a court ‘shall’ impose life without parole unless ‘at the discretion of the court’ a sentence
    of 25 years to life appears more appropriate. [Citation.] But it is equally reasonable to
    read the text to mean that a court may select one of the two penalties in the exercise of its
    discretion, with no presumption in favor of one or the other. The latter reading accords
    with common usage. For example, if a teacher informed her students that ‘you must take
    a final exam or, at your discretion, write a term paper,’ it would be reasonable for the
    students to believe they were equally free to pursue either option. The text of
    section 190.5[, subdivision] (b) does not clearly indicate whether the statute was intended
    to make life without parole the presumptive sentence.” (Id. at p. 1371.)
    6
    We find that Gutierrez’s interpretation of section 190.5’s syntax is equally
    applicable to section 1170.126, subdivision (f)’s syntax. We therefore disagree with
    defendant’s interpretation that the “shall/unless” construction used in section 1170.126,
    subdivision (f) creates a presumption in favor of resentencing. It is true that a court faced
    with an eligible petition for resentencing is required to resentence the petitioner unless it
    finds doing so would pose an unreasonable risk of danger to public safety. However, the
    inclusion of the word “shall” and “unless” in the statute in no way means that a trial
    court’s discretion to find that a petitioner would be dangerous to public safety is
    somehow circumscribed so that it can only find dangerousness in limited, extraordinary
    circumstances. Rather, we find that the statutory language of section 1170.126 merely
    reinforces that a trial court is vested with the discretion to either resentence a petitioner
    or conclude a petitioner poses an unreasonable risk of danger based on the totality of the
    circumstances presented in each particular case.
    Nonetheless, defendant persists in his claim that section 1170.126 creates a
    presumption in favor of resentencing. He insists that a hearing on a section 1170.126
    petition is essentially the converse of a Romero3 hearing and therefore establishes that a
    court may only deviate from the newly established “norm” of a second-strike sentence in
    extraordinary cases when there is proof of current dangerousness.
    In People v. Carmony (2004) 
    33 Cal. 4th 367
    , our Supreme Court discussed the
    legislative purpose behind the three strikes law and the standards sentencing courts
    should follow in order to determine whether to strike or vacate a prior strike. It noted that
    “the three strikes law not only establishes a sentencing norm, it carefully circumscribes
    the trial court’s power to depart from this norm and requires the court to explicitly justify
    3
    People v. Superior Court (Romero) (1996) 
    13 Cal. 4th 497
    .
    7
    its decision to do so. In doing so, the law creates a strong presumption that any sentence
    that conforms to these sentencing norms is both rational and proper.” (Id. at p. 378.)
    As the Fifth Appellate District explained in People v. Blakely (2014) 
    225 Cal. App. 4th 1042
    (Blakely), “[t]he purpose of the three strikes law has been variously
    stated as being ‘ “to ensure longer prison sentences and greater punishment for those who
    commit a felony and have been previously convicted of serious and/or violent felony
    offenses” ’ [citation] and ‘to promote the state’s compelling interest in the protection of
    public safety and in punishing recidivism’ [citation]. Although the [Reform] Act
    ‘diluted’ the three strikes law somewhat [citation], ‘[e]nhancing public safety was a key
    purpose of the [Reform] Act.’ ” (Id. at p. 1054.)
    Since public safety remains the key focus of the Reform Act, we disagree with
    defendant’s assertion that a decision on a section 1170.126 petition must be subjected to
    the same scrutiny as a Romero hearing. A section 1170.126 petition is not the converse
    of a Romero hearing since section 1170.126 does not establish a new sentencing norm.
    Additionally, we reject defendant’s claim that the trial court should deny an
    eligible petition for resentencing only in extraordinary cases. This would undermine the
    intent of the voters in passing the Reform Act—to preserve public safety. The trial court
    was not required to find that defendant was “outside the spirit” of the Reform Act before
    it could find that resentencing him would pose an unreasonable risk of danger to public
    safety.
    c. Abuse of Discretion to Deny Petition
    Next, we address defendant’s claim that the trial court erred when it denied his
    petition.
    Whether a defendant poses an unreasonable risk of danger to public safety is a
    discretionary decision made by the trial court based on the facts presented in the case.
    8
    However, the facts considered by the trial court must be established by the People by a
    preponderance of the evidence.
    On appeal, we review the court’s finding of an unreasonable risk of danger for an
    abuse of discretion. However, we apply a substantial evidence standard of review to the
    facts supporting the court’s finding. In other words, a factor relied on by the court that is
    not supported by a preponderance of the evidence cannot form the basis of the court’s
    determination. (People v. Cluff (2001) 
    87 Cal. App. 4th 991
    , 998 [holding that a trial court
    abuses its discretion when its factual findings are not supported in the record].) With this
    framework in mind, we do not believe the trial court abused its discretion when it
    declined to resentence defendant.
    When making its dangerousness determination, the court focused on defendant’s
    history of violence, which included the incidents of violence that had occurred while
    defendant was incarcerated. During the hearing, Danielle Arlanda Harris testified as an
    expert on criminology and recidivism. Harris stated that a recent study had concluded
    that inmates who were 55 years of age were considered elderly and recidivism reduces
    with age. The court, taking Harris’ testimony into account, noted that defendant’s age
    may reduce his risk of violence. However, the court was concerned with defendant’s
    history of violent altercations while incarcerated. In 2004, he struck another inmate with
    a broomstick and was found guilty of battery on an inmate with a weapon. In 2007, he
    was found guilty of mutual combat. In 2009, he was found guilty of fighting resulting in
    the use of force. All of these incidents occurred when defendant was already considered
    elderly according to Harris’ testimony, since he was almost 55 years old at the time of the
    incident in 2004. Yet, the court noted that defendant’s age had not eliminated his
    problem with violence.
    Further, the court was concerned with the lack of information regarding the
    programming defendant participated in while in prison. Earlier, the People had raised
    9
    concerns with the lack of information regarding defendant’s participation in programs to
    gain insight into substance abuse or anger management, which the court believed were
    some of the most troubling areas of concern in defendant’s case.
    “The appropriate test for abuse of discretion is whether the trial court exceeded the
    bounds of reason. When two or more inferences can reasonably be deduced from the
    facts, the reviewing court has no authority to substitute its decision for that of the trial
    court.” (Shamblin v. Brattain (1988) 
    44 Cal. 3d 474
    , 478-479.) The court made its
    determination that resentencing defendant would pose an unreasonable risk of danger to
    public safety based on appropriate factors that are supported by substantial evidence.
    Accordingly, we find that it did not abuse its discretion in coming to this conclusion.
    Essentially, defendant argues that the court erred because it did not accord certain
    factors the weight he believes they deserve, such as the remoteness of his prior crimes,
    his participation in education classes, and the fact that some of his prior altercations in
    prison involved self defense. We disagree. Simply because defendant does not agree
    with the court’s conclusion does not mean the court abused its discretion. And, since the
    court’s decision is rationally supported by factual findings that are in turn supported by
    sufficient evidence, our inquiry must end. Even though there were factors that tended to
    weigh in favor of resentencing defendant, it was ultimately up to the trial court to
    determine whether defendant would pose an unreasonable risk of danger to public safety
    if resentenced. Defendant essentially urges us to reweigh the evidence, which is not our
    role as the appellate court.
    We also disagree with defendant’s assertion that the court must take into
    consideration the fiscal drain on the state’s resources that will be incurred due to his
    continuing incarceration. We fail to see how monetary considerations should factor into
    a court’s determination that resentencing an inmate will pose an unreasonable risk of
    danger to public safety. Saving money is one of the Reform Act’s stated goals.
    10
    However, the primary purpose of both the three strikes law and Reform Act is to protect
    public safety. (People v. Osuna (2014) 
    225 Cal. App. 4th 1020
    , 1036-1037.) Therefore,
    the trial court was not required to weigh the potential to reduce costs by releasing inmates
    like defendant. In essence, the electorate already conducted its own cost-benefit analysis
    by determining that those inmates whose resentencing would pose an unreasonable risk
    of danger to public safety should not be released, even if resentencing may provide some
    savings to the state.
    2. Right to a Jury Trial
    Next, defendant argues that due process requires that a determination of
    dangerousness be made by a jury and be proved beyond a reasonable doubt. He claims
    the court erred when it implicitly denied his request for a jury trial.
    The Second Appellate District addressed this issue in People v. Superior Court
    (Kaulick) (2013) 
    215 Cal. App. 4th 1279
    (Kaulick), which determined that the prosecution
    must establish dangerousness by preponderance of the evidence, not by proof beyond a
    reasonable doubt.4 (Id. at pp. 1301-1305.)
    We agree with the reasoning set forth in Kaulick. The United States Supreme
    Court has held that, “[o]ther than the fact of a prior conviction, any fact that increases the
    penalty for a crime beyond the prescribed statutory maximum must be submitted to a
    jury, and proved beyond a reasonable doubt.” (Apprendi v. New Jersey (2000) 
    530 U.S. 466
    , 490.)
    In Kaulick, the appellate court noted that the maximum sentence that Kaulick was
    subject to was, and will always be, an indeterminate life term. 
    (Kaulick, supra
    , 215
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1303.) And, although the Reform Act “presents [Kaulick] with an
    4
    The Fifth Appellate District concurred with Kaulick’s conclusion in 
    Blakely, supra
    , 
    225 Cal. App. 4th 1042
    .
    11
    opportunity to be resentenced to a lesser term, unless certain facts are established, he is
    nonetheless still subject to the third strike sentence based on the facts established at the
    time he was originally sentenced. As such, a court’s discretionary decision to decline to
    modify the sentence in his favor can be based on any otherwise appropriate factor (i.e.,
    dangerousness), and such factor need not be established by proof beyond a reasonable
    doubt to a jury.” (Ibid.)
    Kaulick relied on Dillon v. United States (2010) 
    560 U.S. 817
    . In Dillon, the court
    considered whether a two-step sentence modification procedure implicated the Sixth
    Amendment. (Id. at pp. 826-829.) If eligible for a sentence modification, a reduction in
    the defendant’s sentence could be ordered. (Id. at pp. 826-827.) Dillon concluded that “a
    defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to have essential facts found by a jury beyond a
    reasonable doubt do not apply to limits on downward sentence modifications due to
    intervening laws.” 
    (Kaulick, supra
    , 215 Cal.App.4th at p. 1304.) Kaulick found Dillon’s
    rationale to be equally applicable to the Reform Act, since “[t]he retrospective part of the
    [Reform] Act is not constitutionally required, but an act of lenity on the part of the
    electorate.” (Ibid.) The resentencing scheme is not plenary; it provides for a proceeding
    where the original indeterminate life term can be modified downward. Kaulick
    concluded that this did not implicate any Sixth Amendment rights.
    We follow Kaulick and find that there is no requirement that the dangerousness
    finding be established beyond a reasonable doubt. Accordingly, we conclude the trial
    court did not err in denying defendant’s motion for a jury trial, because a Sixth
    Amendment right to a jury trial does not arise in a petition for resentencing under
    section 1170.126, subdivision (f).
    3. Supplemental Probation Report
    Defendant claims the court should have obtained a supplemental probation report
    prior to denying his petition for resentencing. Defendant argues that a supplemental
    12
    probation report was necessary, because the decision to resentence him is functionally the
    equivalent of a decision to place him on probation. Defendant has forfeited this
    argument. He did not request a supplemental probation report below, nor did he object to
    proceeding without one.
    Defendant claims his lack of objection does not waive or forfeit his claim, citing to
    People v. Dobbins (2005) 
    127 Cal. App. 4th 176
    , 178 (Dobbins). However, Dobbins is
    inapplicable, because the defendant there remained eligible for probation upon remand.
    (Id. at pp. 181-182.) Therefore, a probation report was mandated by law, unless a written
    or oral stipulation was entered by the prosecuting and defense attorneys. (§ 1203,
    subd. (b)(4).) Since the attorneys did not waive or stipulate to proceed without the
    probation report, the Dobbins defendant did not forfeit his claim of error even though he
    failed to object below. 
    (Dobbins, supra
    , at p. 182.)
    Unlike Dobbins, defendant would not have been eligible for probation as a
    second-strike offender. (§§ 667, subd. (c)(2), 1170.12, subd. (a)(2); People v. Johnson
    (1999) 
    70 Cal. App. 4th 1429
    , 1431-1432.) Therefore, a waiver or stipulation to proceed
    without a probation report was not required below. Accordingly, defendant’s failure to
    request a supplemental probation report or object to its omission forfeits his claim on
    appeal. (People v. Murray (2012) 
    203 Cal. App. 4th 277
    , 289, fn. 12, overruled on
    another point in People v. 
    Gutierrez, supra
    , 
    58 Cal. 4th 1354
    ; People v. 
    Johnson, supra
    ,
    at pp. 1431-1432.)
    Regardless, we would reject defendant’s contention even if we were to consider it
    on the merits. The Fifth Appellate District considered and rejected a similar argument in
    People v. Franco (2014) 
    232 Cal. App. 4th 831
    (Franco), and we agree with the Franco
    court’s reasoning.
    As we previously discussed, when a defendant is convicted of a felony and is
    eligible for probation, referral of the matter to the probation officer for an investigation
    13
    and report is mandatory. (§ 1203, subd. (b)(1); Cal. Rules of Court, rule 4.411(a).)
    However, referral for a report is discretionary when a defendant is ineligible for
    probation, except when the amount of a restitution fine must be calculated. (§ 1203,
    subd. (g); Cal. Rules of Court, rule 4.411(b).)
    Since defendant would not have been eligible for probation even if he was
    resentenced as a second strike offender, “neither statute nor rule of court required the trial
    court to obtain a supplemental report.” 
    (Franco, supra
    , 232 Cal.App.4th at p. 834.) Like
    the Franco court, we “decline to impose a mandatory duty on the trial court where the
    statutes and rules of court granting authority for probation reports do not so provide.”5
    (Id. at p. 835.)
    4. The Definition of an “Unreasonable Risk of Danger to Public Safety”
    Lastly, defendant argues in his supplemental brief that Proposition 47’s definition
    of an “unreasonable risk of danger to public safety” should be applied to the Reform Act.
    a. Background
    In November 2012, voters enacted section 1170.126 as part of the Reform Act.
    (People v. Yearwood (2013) 
    213 Cal. App. 4th 161
    , 167.) As discussed above,
    section 1170.126, subdivision (f) specifies that a petitioner shall be resentenced unless
    “the court, in its discretion, determines that resentencing the petitioner would pose an
    unreasonable risk of danger to public safety.” Section 1170.126 does not contain a
    definition of the phrase “unreasonable risk of danger to public safety,” but does include a
    nonexclusive list of criteria a court may consider in making a determination of
    dangerousness. (§ 1170.126, subd. (g).)
    Two years later in November 2014, voters enacted Proposition 47, the “Safe
    Neighborhoods and Schools Act.” The Legislative Analyst described Proposition 47 as
    5
    Based on this conclusion, we need not address defendant’s claim of prejudice.
    14
    having three main functions: reducing penalties for certain offenders convicted of
    nonserious and nonviolent property and drug crimes, allowing certain offenders
    previously convicted of such crimes to apply for reduced sentences, and requiring state
    savings resulting from the measure be spent to support various services.6 (Voter
    Information Guide, Gen. Elec. (Nov. 4, 2014) analysis of Prop. 47 by Legis. Analyst,
    p. 35.)
    Proposition 47 does not mention the Reform Act. However, it did establish
    procedures for certain offenders to apply for a reduced sentence. Section 1170.18,
    subdivision (a) provides that defendants convicted of certain nonserious, nonviolent
    property and drug felonies can file a petition requesting resentencing. A court that
    receives the petition shall resentence the petitioner “unless the court, in its discretion,
    determines that resentencing the petitioner would pose an unreasonable risk of danger to
    public safety.” (§ 1170.18, subd. (b).)
    Pertinent here, section 1170.18, subdivision (c) provides: “As used throughout
    this Code, ‘unreasonable risk of danger to public safety’ means an unreasonable risk that
    the petitioner will commit a new violent felony within the meaning of clause (iv) of
    subparagraph (C) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 667.”
    b. Analysis
    Defendant argues the narrow definition of an unreasonable risk of danger to public
    safety set forth in section 1170.18, subdivision (c), enacted by Proposition 47, applies to
    the phrase as used in section 1170.126, enacted by the Reform Act.7 We disagree.
    6
    We take judicial notice of the text of Proposition 47 and its accompanying ballot
    materials. (Evid. Code, §§ 452, 459.)
    7
    This issue is currently pending review in the California Supreme Court in People
    v. Valencia (2014) 
    232 Cal. App. 4th 514
    (review granted Feb. 18, 2015, S223825).
    15
    “We recognize the basic principle of statutory and constitutional construction
    which mandates that courts, in construing a measure, not undertake to rewrite its
    unambiguous language. [Citation.] That rule is not applied, however, when it appears
    clear that a word has been erroneously used, and a judicial correction will best carry out
    the intent of the adopting body.” (People v. Skinner (1985) 
    39 Cal. 3d 765
    , 775.)
    Whether the use of a word is the result of a drafting error “can only be determined by
    reference to the purpose of the section and the intent of the electorate in adopting it.” (Id.
    at p. 776.)
    We hold that if we examine the intent of the electorate in passing Proposition 47,
    we are compelled to conclude that the word “Code” in section 1170.18, subdivision (c)
    was erroneously used in place of the word “Act,” to refer to the Safe Neighborhoods and
    Schools Act. There is nothing to indicate that in passing Proposition 47 the electorate
    intended to modify or change the Reform Act in any way.
    Defendant disagrees and argues that it is clear from the language of
    sections 1170.18 and 1170.126 that the electorate intended to modify section 1170.126.
    Defendant opines that both propositions sought to improve public safety. And, defendant
    claims that the plain language of Proposition 47 unambiguously applies the definition of
    an unreasonable risk of danger to public safety to the Reform Act. Furthermore, when
    Proposition 47 was enacted, the only other instance in the Penal Code where the phrase
    “unreasonable risk of danger to public safety” was used was in the Reform Act.
    We find defendant’s arguments unpersuasive. None of the materials
    accompanying Proposition 47 contain any reference to the Reform Act. For example, the
    Voter Information Guide to Proposition 47 states that “[t]his measure reduces penalties
    for certain offenders convicted of nonserious and nonviolent property and drug crimes.
    The measure also allows certain offenders who have been previously convicted of such
    crimes to apply for reduced sentences. In addition, the measure requires any state savings
    16
    that result from the measure be spent to support truancy (unexcused absences)
    prevention, mental health and substance abuse treatment, and victim services.” (Voter
    Information Guide, Gen. 
    Elec., supra
    , analysis of Prop. 47 by Legis. Analyst, p. 35.) The
    Legislative Analyst then detailed the changes that would be made if Proposition 47 was
    passed. None of these changes included redefining the meaning of the phrase
    “unreasonable risk of danger to public safety” in the Reform Act.
    In fact, there was no mention of reforming the three strikes law in any of the
    official ballot materials accompanying Proposition 47. Nothing in the official ballot
    materials reflects that Proposition 47 was intended to have an impact on offenders who
    did not commit the specified nonserious, nonviolent property or drug crimes described in
    Proposition 47. The ballot materials indicate that the thrust of the initiative was to reduce
    these less serious felonies to misdemeanors. Further, the ballot materials emphasize that
    the resentencing provisions set forth in Proposition 47 were limited to those individuals
    serving sentences for the specified nonserious, nonviolent drug or property crimes.
    The dissent takes the position that we should not confine ourselves to the official
    ballot materials when ascertaining the voter’s intent. In his reply brief, defendant cites to
    several different Web sites where opponents of Proposition 47 authored written
    arguments against passing Proposition 47. (See, e.g., The Alliance for a Safer California,
    Prop 47 Facts  (as
    of______ ).) These arguments contemplate that Proposition 47’s definition of an
    “unreasonable risk of danger to public safety” may alter the definition used in the Reform
    Act. Unlike defendant and the dissent, we are not convinced that these Web sites, which
    are beyond the legislative analysis and the official ballot arguments that are distributed to
    all voters in the state, are indicative of the electorate’s intent. Although a court may
    consider extrinsic aids such as statements to the voters on initiative and referendum
    measures (Rich v. State Board of Optometry (1965) 
    235 Cal. App. 2d 591
    , 603) when
    17
    determining intent, it is unclear how widely disseminated these arguments were prior to
    the election and if the electorate was even aware of these arguments before they voted
    Proposition 47 into law.8
    The dissent notes that the official ballot materials are limited by considerations of
    time and space. We agree that “[b]allot arguments are not legal briefs and are not
    expected to cite every case the proposition may affect.” (Santa Clara County Local
    Transportation Authority v. Guardino (1995) 
    11 Cal. 4th 220
    , 237.) Further, the official
    summary prepared by the Legislative Analyst need not describe every way the enacted
    measure may change the law. “The analysis may contain background information,
    including the effect of the measure on existing law and the effect of enacted legislation
    which will become effective if the measure is adopted, and shall generally set forth in an
    impartial manner the information the average voter needs to adequately understand the
    measure.” (Elec. Code, § 9087.)
    Here, the ballot summary is completely devoid of any mention of the Reform Act
    or the three strikes law. We cannot take the dissent’s position that the Legislative
    Analyst likely failed to mention Proposition 47’s purported effect on the Reform Act
    because it believed it was likely to matter less to voters, or that it was an auxiliary issue.
    If in fact one of the purposes of Proposition 47 was to provide a new definition of an
    “unreasonable risk of danger to public safety” in the Reform Act—essentially rewriting
    the standard by which three strikes resentencing petitions are heard and decided by the
    8
    Further, we note that case law indicates that it may be improper to rely on
    articles when determining voter intent. (Californians for Political Reform Foundation v.
    Fair Political Practices Com. (1998) 
    61 Cal. App. 4th 472
    , 485.) However, it appears that
    in the past, our Supreme Court has indeed relied on such articles when ascertaining the
    electorate’s intent. (California Housing Finance Agency v. Patitucci (1978) 
    22 Cal. 3d 171
    , 178.)
    18
    trial court—that should certainly be “information the average voter needs to adequately
    understand the measure.” (Elec. Code, § 9087.)
    Defendant argues that Proposition 47 is merely a continuation of the sentencing
    reform initiated by the electorate, which includes the reforms initiated by the Reform Act.
    Further, defendant explains that the drafters and electorate who endorsed Proposition 47
    may have reasonably determined that the strict definition of an “unreasonable risk of
    danger to public safety” was a necessary correction to the Reform Act. He claims the
    lack of a restrictive definition in the Reform Act led to trial courts resentencing petitions
    under section 1170.126 too cautiously based on the “natural human tendency to over
    predict violence and err on the side of further imprisonment.”
    Defendant’s arguments on this point are purely based on conjecture. Despite his
    claim that Proposition 47 can logically be seen as a way to correct the restrictive use of
    resentencing employed by the trial courts under the Reform Act, there is actually no
    evidence that this was conceived or even considered by the electorate. Proposition 47’s
    ballot materials discuss reforming current sentencing laws by reducing certain
    nonserious, nonviolent felonies to misdemeanors, not by reforming the three strikes law
    which had already been reformed just a few years earlier.
    We are also unconvinced with defendant’s claim that the Reform Act and
    Proposition 47 are in pari materi (on the same subject or relating to the same matter),
    rendering it so that similar phrases should be given the same meaning. (See People v.
    Caudillo (1978) 
    21 Cal. 3d 562
    , 585, overruled on another point in People v. Martinez
    (1999) 
    20 Cal. 4th 225
    , 229, 237, fn. 6 and disapproved of on another ground in People v.
    Escobar (1992) 
    3 Cal. 4th 740
    , 749-751, fn. 5.) Proposition 47 and the Reform Act had
    different overarching goals, despite their shared effect of reforming criminal sentencing
    laws.
    19
    On the one hand, both the Reform Act and Proposition 47 emphasized public
    safety and are both targeted at changing the way criminal defendants are sentenced.
    However, the uncodified section 7 of the Reform Act states that the “act is an exercise of
    the public power of the people of the State of California for the protection of the health,
    safety, and welfare of the people of the State of California, and shall be liberally
    construed to effectuate those purposes.” (Voter Information Guide, Gen. Elec. (Nov. 6,
    2012) text of Prop. 36 proposed law, § 7, p. 110.) Proposition 47, on the other hand,
    emphasized the potential for fiscal savings if passed. In its findings and declarations, it
    states: “The people of the State of California find and declare as follows: [¶] The people
    enact the Safe Neighborhoods and Schools Act to ensure that prison spending is focused
    on violent and serious offenses, to maximize alternatives for nonserious, nonviolent
    crime, and to invest the savings generated from this act into prevention and support
    programs in K-12 schools, victim services, and mental health and drug treatment.”
    (Voter Information Guide, Gen. 
    Elec., supra
    , text of Prop. 47 proposed law, § 2, p. 70.)
    These two acts are not in pari materi.
    Further, defendant’s claim that one of the authors of Proposition 47 has seemingly
    taken the position that Proposition 47’s definition of an “unreasonable risk of danger to
    public safety” extends to the Reform Act is beside the point. The author’s intent is
    irrelevant. “In construing a statute we do not consider the objective of an authoring
    legislator when there is no reliable indication that the Legislature as a whole was aware
    of that objective and believed the language of the proposal would accomplish it.”
    (Calvillo-Silva v. Home Grocery (1998) 
    19 Cal. 4th 714
    , 726-727.) Here, based on the
    ballot materials there is no indication the electorate was aware, or even considered the
    possibility, that Proposition 47 would alter the Reform Act. We cannot infer that the
    electorate somehow had this intent.
    20
    There are also practical reasons for us to conclude that Proposition 47 contains a
    drafting error. For example, the Reform Act requires that petitions for resentencing be
    brought within two years of its passage unless the trial court concludes the existence of
    good cause for filing a late petition. (§ 1170.126, subd. (b).) By the time Proposition 47
    took effect, the two-year period for filing a petition under section 1170.126 was nearly
    over. It is illogical to conclude that Proposition 47 was meant to modify the Reform Act
    when most of the three strike resentencing petitions were already adjudicated and decided
    by that time.
    The language of section 1170.18 also lends support to our conclusion.
    Section 1170.18 specifically provides that, “Nothing in this and related sections is
    intended to diminish or abrogate the finality of judgments in any case not falling within
    the purview of this act.” (§ 1170.18, subd. (n).) Applying the definition of
    “unreasonable risk of danger to public safety” from section 1170.18 to section 1170.126,
    would undoubtedly diminish the finality of those three strikes judgments that do not
    involve a nonserious, nonviolent property or drug crime.
    Lastly, our conclusion does not render the phrase “[a]s used throughout this
    Code” in section 1170.18 meaningless surplusage. The general rule is that “statutes
    are to be construed to give meaningful effect to all of their provisions, and to avoid
    rendering any language superfluous.” (Planned Parenthood Affiliates v. Van de Kamp
    (1986) 
    181 Cal. App. 3d 245
    , 270.) Based on the foregoing, we conclude that
    section 1170.18, subdivision (c) contains a drafting error that must be judicially
    corrected. Under a corrected reading of the statute, we find that the word “Code” must be
    read as “Act.” Therefore, the phrase would read “[a]s used throughout this Act,”
    meaning Proposition 47.
    21
    Accordingly, we find no merit in defendant’s argument that the order denying his
    petition must be reversed.9
    DISPOSITION
    The order denying defendant’s petition for recall of sentence is affirmed.
    9
    Based on our conclusion that Proposition 47’s definition of an “unreasonable risk
    of danger to public safety” is inapplicable to section 1170.126, we need not address
    defendant’s claim regarding the retroactivity of that definition. That issue is also
    currently pending review in the California Supreme Court. (People v. Chaney (2014) 
    231 Cal. App. 4th 1391
    , review granted Feb. 18, 2015, S223676.)
    22
    Premo, J.
    I CONCUR:
    Elia, J.
    RUSHING, P.J., Dissenting
    I. Introduction
    My esteemed colleagues join a number of courts in refusing to apply Penal Code
    section 1170.18, subdivision (c) (§ 1170.18(c)), according to its plain meaning. To the
    best of my knowledge, only one of those decisions is currently citable. (People v.
    Esparza (2015) 
    242 Cal. App. 4th 726
    , 734-737; see Cal. Rules of Court, rules 8.1115(a),
    8.1105(e)(1).) Although I joined in that decision, I have concluded on further reflection
    that I erred in doing so, as I believe my colleagues continue to err here. All of these cases
    should be governed by the fundamental principle that statutes possessing a plain meaning
    must be given effect in accordance with that meaning. None of the recognized
    exceptions to this rule is present. Least of all can the language at issue here be credibly
    said to involve a “drafting error.” The real rationale for refusing to enforce the statute
    according to its terms is that the effect of the statute’s plain meaning was not pointed out
    in the ballot pamphlet to the voters who adopted it. I have concluded that for a court to
    disregard plain statutory language on such a ground is obnoxious to the constitutional
    separation of powers. I have also concluded that, carefully read, the statute contains
    ample intrinsic evidence that it is intended to accomplish exactly the result my colleagues
    attribute to a drafting error. In addition, it is apparent that opponents of the measure were
    aware of this effect and that, while they apparently chose not to refer to it in their
    argument in the ballot pamphlet, they did urge it in the surrounding public debate as a
    ground to reject the measure. For those reasons, I would apply the statute as written and
    would reverse the judgment here so that the trial court can reassess the issues under the
    legal standard mandated by section 1170.18(c).
    II. The Plain Meaning Rule
    In construing a statute adopted by initiative we are bound by the same principles
    as those governing our construction of statutes enacted by the Legislature. (People v.
    Lopez (2005) 
    34 Cal. 4th 1002
    , 1006; People v. Elliot (2005) 
    37 Cal. 4th 453
    , 478; Robert
    L. v. Superior Court (2003) 
    30 Cal. 4th 894
    , 900.) The first and most basic of these
    principles, often acknowledged by this court, is that “ ‘if statutory language is “clear and
    unambiguous there is no need for construction, and courts should not indulge in it.” ’ ”
    (Cryolife, Inc. v. Superior Court (2003) 
    110 Cal. App. 4th 1145
    , 1154, quoting Tiernan v.
    Trustees of Cal. State University & Colleges (1982) 
    33 Cal. 3d 211
    , 218 [same]; accord,
    Gilbert v. City of Sunnyvale (2005) 
    130 Cal. App. 4th 1264
    , 1285; Coniglio v. Department
    of Motor Vehicles (1995) 
    39 Cal. App. 4th 666
    , 674, quoting People v. Overstreet (1986)
    
    42 Cal. 3d 891
    , 895; see Robert B. v. Susan B. (2003) 
    109 Cal. App. 4th 1109
    , 1113 [where
    language “is clear, we will not engage in statutory construction to determine [its]
    intended purpose and scope”].)
    III. The Ambiguous Language Exception
    There are of course some well-recognized exceptions to the plain meaning rule.
    Foremost among them is that where statutory language is ambiguous, courts may consult
    various constructional aids to determine its intended meaning. (Murphy v. Kenneth Cole
    Productions, Inc. (2007) 
    40 Cal. 4th 1094
    , 1103.) This is not a true exception to the plain
    meaning rule, but a limitation implicit in the rule itself: if statutory language is
    ambiguous, it has no plain meaning and a court has no choice but to go beyond the
    language in hopes of ascertaining its intended meaning and effect. This limitation cannot
    come into operation, however, unless the language at issue is “susceptible of more than
    one reasonable interpretation .” (Ibid.) “If there is no ambiguity in the language of the
    statute, then the plain meaning of the language governs.” (Cypress Semiconductor Corp.
    v. Superior Court (2008) 
    163 Cal. App. 4th 575
    , 581; see Bonnell v. Medical Bd. of
    California (2003) 
    31 Cal. 4th 1255
    , 1261.)
    The majority does not suggest that there is anything ambiguous about the language
    here under examination. Section 1170.18(c) declares that the definition of dangerousness
    set forth there applies “throughout this Code.” This can only refer to the Penal Code.
    2
    (See Marshall v. Pasadena Unified School Dist. (2004) 
    119 Cal. App. 4th 1241
    , 1255
    [finding “nothing ambiguous about the phrase ‘as used in this code’ ” to define
    “ ‘emergency’ ” as used in Public Contract Code]; People v. Bucchierre (1943) 
    57 Cal. App. 2d 153
    , 166 [“The words ‘as in this code provided’ . . . refer to the Penal
    Code.”].) Here this means that section 1170.18(c)’s definition of “ ‘unreasonable risk of
    danger to public safety’ ” applies to that phrase as it appears in Penal Code section
    1170.126, subdivision (f) (§ 1170.126(f)), and thus to the question whether, as the trial
    court found, resentencing defendant would pose “an unreasonable risk of danger to public
    safety.” Since the phrase “throughout this Code,” as thus used, is not “susceptible of
    more than one reasonable interpretation” (Murphy v. Kenneth Cole Productions, 
    Inc., supra
    , 40 Cal.4th at p. 1103), “there is no need for construction and [we] should not
    indulge in it” (Cryolife, Inc. v. Superior 
    Court, supra
    , 110 Cal.App.4th at p. 1154).
    IV. The Absurd Consequences Exception
    A narrower exception to the plain meaning rule permits courts to depart from the
    meaning of statutory language, even if it is unambiguous, when its literal application
    would produce “ ‘ “ ‘absurd consequences.’ ” ’ ” (May v. City of Milpitas (2013) 
    217 Cal. App. 4th 1307
    , 1333; Younger v. Superior Court (1978) 
    21 Cal. 3d 102
    , 113; see
    California Highway Patrol v. Superior Court (2008) 
    158 Cal. App. 4th 726
    , 736 [“The
    literal meaning of unambiguous statutory language ‘may be disregarded to avoid absurd
    results”].) The underlying rationale is that the Legislature cannot have intended to bring
    about absurd consequences, so if the statute has that effect, it must be an incorrect
    expression of legislative intent. (See Sterling Park, L.P. v. City of Palo Alto (2013) 
    57 Cal. 4th 1193
    , 1203 [proposed interpretation “would lead to absurd results the Legislature
    cannot have intended”]; Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co. v. Superior Court (2011) 
    196 Cal. App. 4th 1263
    , 1281, fn. omitted [“We cannot conclude that our Legislature intended
    such absurd results.”]; Simmons v. Ghaderi (2008) 
    44 Cal. 4th 570
    , 586 [“Because the
    3
    language of section 1122 unambiguously requires express waiver, judicial construction is
    not permitted unless the statutes cannot be applied according to their terms or doing so
    would lead to absurd results, thereby violating the presumed intent of the Legislature.”].)
    I see nothing even remotely “absurd” about giving effect to the definition in
    section 1170.18(c) according to its plain meaning. On the contrary, by adopting a
    narrowed definition of “unreasonable risk of danger to public safety,” the voters
    impliedly found that courts had interpreted that phrase too broadly in denying relief under
    Proposition 36. Given that implied finding, there was nothing unreasonable, let alone
    absurd, in extending the benefits of the narrowed definition to defendants whose
    Proposition 36 applications remained unresolved.
    V. The Contrary-to-Manifest-Intent Exception
    A somewhat more nebulous rule permits departures from a statute’s literal
    language “ ‘to give effect to manifest purposes that, in the light of the statute’s legislative
    history, appear from its provisions considered as a whole.’ ” (California Highway Patrol
    v. Superior 
    Court, supra
    , 158 Cal.App.4th at p. 736, italics added.) Under this exception
    the question is whether “follow[ing] the plain meaning of a statute . . . would ‘frustrate[]
    the manifest purposes of the legislation as a whole . . . .” (California School Employees
    Assn. v. Governing Board (1994) 
    8 Cal. 4th 333
    , 340, italics added, quoting People v.
    Belleci (1979) 
    24 Cal. 3d 879
    , 884.) Here no conflict between the literal meaning and
    manifest purpose of section 1170.18(c) appears. The statute can be applied to cases
    arising under Proposition 36 without impinging in any way upon the purposes or effects
    of Proposition 47. Indeed, as noted above, extending the benefits of the new definition to
    persons in defendant’s position is fully consistent with the curative purpose readily
    inferred from its adoption.
    The majority points to no evidence of a “manifest purpose” that would be
    frustrated or impaired by literal application. It does not attempt to demonstrate that the
    4
    will of the electorate would be thwarted, or the purpose of Proposition 47 frustrated, by
    applying section 1170.18(c) according to its terms. Instead the majority’s treatment rests
    on the premise that the will of the electorate is not adequately corroborated by extrinsic
    evidence of legislative intent, which in the majority’s treatment consists entirely of the
    ballot pamphlet. But in the absence of some conflict between the statute’s literal meaning
    and the affirmatively manifested intentions of the electorate, there is no occasion to look
    for corroboration of the voters’ intent. Any inquiry under the “manifest intention” rubric
    should begin and end with the absence of evidence that voters intended the new
    definition not to benefit persons in defendant’s position.
    Unless applied with assiduous judicial restraint, the manifest intention rule
    becomes a serious threat to the separation of powers. In implicit recognition of this fact,
    we have stated that “courts should disregard unambiguous language ‘only in “extreme
    cases”—those in which, as a matter of law, the Legislature did not intend the statute to
    have its literal effect.” (California Highway Patrol v. Superior 
    Court, supra
    , 158
    Cal.App.4th at p. 739, italics added, quoting Gorham Co., Inc. v. First Financial Ins. Co.
    (2006) 
    139 Cal. App. 4th 1532
    , 1544.) Here there is no manifestation of intent by the
    voters that section 1170.18(c) should not “have its literal effect”—let alone grounds to
    find such an intent “as a matter of law,” meaning one on which reasonable minds cannot
    differ. At the same time, there is affirmative evidence—in the plain language voters
    adopted—that they did intend section 1170.18(c) to govern cases such as defendant’s.
    Nor can this case seriously be characterized, under any fair assessment of the relevant
    factors, as involving an “extreme” divergence between literal and inferred legislative
    intentions. Even if credited, the majority’s argument cannot make the case more than
    5
    doubtful and debatable. Under such conditions, the words of the enactment must
    control.1
    VI. “Drafting Error”
    A No Error by Drafters
    The majority makes no explicit attempt to bring this case within any of the
    foregoing exceptions to the plain meaning rule. Instead it invokes what may be the rarest
    and narrowest of such exceptions, under which courts may correct a “drafting error” in
    statutory language. The majority concludes, in other words, that when the drafters of
    Proposition 47 wrote “throughout this Code,” they actually meant “in this act.”
    On the face of the statute this premise seems extremely unlikely. Two subparagraphs
    before the provision at issue, the drafters had pointedly adopted the phrase “this act” as
    an abbreviation for later use. Section 1170.18, subdivision (a), refers to persons “who
    would have been guilty of a misdemeanor under the act that added this section (‘this
    act’).” (§ 1170.18, subd. (a).) It is difficult to believe that drafters would then almost
    immediately use “this Code” in place of the abbreviation they had just adopted.
    In contrast to some initiative measures, Proposition 47 appears to have been
    authored by persons of no small legal ability. One of the official proponents was George
    Gascón, the San Francisco District Attorney. (George Gascón, Letter to Office of the
    1
    This was the Supreme Court’s conclusion in Calvillo-Silva v. Home Grocery
    (1998) 
    19 Cal. 4th 714
    , 726-727, overruled on another point in Aguilar v. Atlantic
    Richfield Co. (2001) 
    25 Cal. 4th 826
    , 854, footnote 19, which the majority cites for its
    recital of the rule that the views of a bill’s author, if not communicated to other
    legislators, are not evidence of legislative intent. The case is more germane for its
    ultimate holding that the author’s statements there were irrelevant because the language
    at issue furnished no occasion to consult extrinsic evidence of intent. (Id. at p. 727
    [“even assuming other legislators were aware of the author’s press release, [the author’s
    asserted intent] cannot be reconciled with the plain meaning of the statutory language”].)
    6
    Attorney General, Dec. 14, 20132; Ballot Pamp., General Elec. (Nov. 4, 2014), argument
    in favor of Prop. 47, p. 38.) It also appears that the Stanford Justice Advocacy Project
    (SJAP)—an officially recognized student organization at Stanford Law School—
    contributed to the drafting of the measure. (Ho, Prop. 47: Deep split over law reducing 6
    felonies to misdemeanors—S.F. Gate (Nov. 5, 2015) [stating that, according to Gascón,
    SJAP “helped draft Prop. 47”]3; Romano, et al., Proposition 47 Progress Report: Year
    One Implementation (Oct. 2015), p. 1 [according to its Director, SJAP “was involved in
    the drafting of Proposition 47 . . . .”]4; Organizations Archive – Stanford Law School,
     (as of [guide to student
    organizations on school website].) Another article identifies Lenore Anderson, executive
    director of Californians for Safety and Justice, as an author. (Chang, et al., Unintended
    consequences of Prop. 47 pose challenge for criminal justice system, L.A. Times (Nov. 6,
    2015).)5 According to that organization’s website, she was formerly “Chief of Policy and
    Chief of the Alternative Programs Division at the San Francisco District Attorney’s
    Office, where she spearheaded initiatives to reduce recidivism and improve public safety.
    She also crafted local and state legislation to aid victims of domestic violence, protect
    violent crime witnesses, reduce elementary school truancy and reduce recidivism among
    2
    Available on the Attorney General’s website
     (as of
    Mar. 11, 2016).
    3
    Available at  (as of Mar. 11, 2016).
    4
    Available at  (as of Mar. 11, 2016).
    5
    Available at  (as of Mar. 11, 2016).
    7
    people convicted of nonviolent crimes.” (Californians for Safety and Justice, Our Staff,
     (as of Mar. 11, 2016) italics added.)
    I cannot subscribe to the notion that the San Francisco District Attorney, a former
    deputy district attorney experienced in drafting legislation, and a collective of Stanford
    law students wrote “throughout this Code” when they meant to write “in this act.” There
    are many ways the drafters could have expressed the meaning imputed to them by the
    majority, and “throughout this Code” is patently not one of them. Any member of the
    bar—and any student capable of gaining admission to Stanford Law School—would
    immediately recognize that “throughout this Code” means something quite different from
    “in this act.” I have no doubt that when the drafters wrote “throughout this Code,” that
    was exactly what they meant. And since section 1170.126(f) is the only other place in the
    Penal Code where the defined phrase appears, they must have understood and intended
    this language to extend Proposition 47’s definition of dangerousness to petitions filed
    under Proposition 36.
    Indeed, it appears that almost simultaneously with the adoption of the later
    measure, one of its drafters was publicly recorded as expecting the newly adopted
    definition to apply to Proposition 36 applicants. As reported in a Los Angeles Times
    article published the day after the election, the Director of SJAP stated that Proposition
    36 petitioners could “return to court and cite Proposition 47’s new definition of an
    ‘unreasonable risk of danger,’ which Tuesday’s ballot measure defined as likely to
    commit serious or violent crimes that include homicide, sexual assault and child
    molestation.” ( (as of Mar. 11, 2016).)
    The majority describes defendant’s assertion of this fact as a “claim,” though it
    was reported by a highly reputable newspaper and accepted as fact in one of the now-
    uncitable decisions whose analysis the majority otherwise embraces. The majority then
    8
    declares the assertion “irrelevant” because “ ‘[i]n construing a statute we do not consider
    the objective of an authoring legislator when there is no reliable indication that the
    Legislature as a whole was aware of that objective and believed the language of the
    proposal would accomplish it.’ ” (Lead opn. at p. 20, quoting Calvillo-Silva v. Home
    
    Grocery, supra
    , 
    19 Cal. 4th 714
    , 726-727.) This may be conceded as a general matter
    where enactments of the Legislature are concerned; but there is ample authority to
    contrary effect with respect to voter-adopted measures. (See Carman v. Alvord (1982) 
    31 Cal. 3d 318
    , 331, fn. 10 [while not dispositive of the meaning of an initiative amendment,
    “an after-the-fact declaration of intent by a drafter. . . may deserve some consideration”];
    Stanton v. Panish (1980) 
    28 Cal. 3d 107
    , 114 [drafter’s declaration “may be considered in
    the absence of evidence that the electorate may have had reason to understand the
    provision differently”].)
    Here in particular, where the plain meaning of the measure is dismissed as the
    product of a “drafting error,” I find it highly relevant that an author of the statute flatly
    contradicted the claim—and did so at a time when, apparently, no dispute had yet arisen
    on the subject. After all, a mistake by the legislation’s author (or a “scrivener,” i.e., a
    transcriber of the author’s intent) is precisely what a claim of “drafting error” posits. A
    statement by an author that the statute says exactly what he or she meant it to say, and has
    the effect he or she meant it to have, should utterly dispel any claim of a “drafting error”
    subject to judicial correction.
    B. Narrowness of Exception
    The judicial power to correct legislative drafting errors is to be employed only
    with “great restraint.” (Bonner v. County of San Diego (2006) 
    139 Cal. App. 4th 1336
    ,
    1346, fn. 9; Miklosy v. Regents of University of California (2008) 
    44 Cal. 4th 876
    , 905
    (conc. opn. of Werdegar, J.).) This restraint serves a critical constitutional function,
    because any judicial refusal to apply a statute according to its terms threatens to impinge
    9
    upon the coequal power of the legislative branch.6 The exercise of such a power
    threatens both to weaken the people’s representatives—or in this context, the people
    themselves—and to relieve them of the responsibility to act with diligence and
    circumspection in choosing and adopting statutory language. To avoid such effects,
    courts can and should disregard statutory language under the rubric of a “drafting error”
    only where it is clear that the statute was inartfully drawn so as to affirmatively misstate
    the otherwise plainly established intent of lawmakers. (See Gray Cary Ware &
    Freidenrich v. Vigilant Ins. Co. (2004) 
    114 Cal. App. 4th 1185
    , 1193-1194, italics added
    [“The separation of powers doctrine prevents us from rewriting statutes that do not
    conflict with the Constitution, other than to correct an obvious and minor drafting error
    where necessary to effectuate the intent of the Legislature.”].)
    It happens that Proposition 47 does contain an “obvious and minor drafting
    error”—an omitted “as”—that would warrant judicial correction in a proper case.7 The
    error is obvious in the sense not that it is conspicuous but that, once noticed, it cannot be
    attributed to anything but inadvertence. This is precisely the sort of mistake that courts
    have remedied under the rubric of a drafting error. Thus in Szold v. Medical Bd. of
    California (2005) 
    127 Cal. App. 4th 591
    (Szold), the word “or” had been replaced by “of”
    6
    When voters adopt an initiative measure they are exercising legislative power.
    (Cal. Const., art. IV, § 1.)
    7
    Section 1170.18, subdivision (b), provides that resentencing is to take place
    “pursuant to Sections 11350, 11357, or 11377 of the Health and Safety Code, or Section
    459.5, 473, 476a, 490.2, 496, or 666 of the Penal Code, those sections have been
    amended or added by this act.” The absence of an “as” immediately preceding the
    italicized language turns that language into an independent clause, resulting in a run-on
    sentence, i.e., two independent clauses joined by a comma splice. This violates basic
    rules of punctuation. It also renders the italicized phrase superfluous. It is, in other
    words, a genuine “drafting error,” illustrating the fact that no one can achieve absolute
    perfection in drafting legal language, even when their work is proofread by the
    Legislative Counsel, as every ballot measure is required to be. (Elec. Code, § 9091.)
    10
    as a bill progressed through the Legislature. Although this changed the meaning of the
    statute in an important respect, the bill continued to be described in legislative materials
    as possessing its original meaning and effect. From these clear proofs the court could
    safely conclude that “the Legislature intended to specifically require” what the adopted
    language failed to require, “and that the insertion of the word ‘of’ for ‘or’ was an
    inadvertent drafting error” which should not be given effect. (Id. at p. 598.) In contrast,
    no slip of the fingers can cause one to type “this Code” when one means to type “this
    Act.”
    Nor does Proposition 47’s use of “throughout this Code” bear any resemblance to
    the drafting errors that courts have corrected in other cases. The Szold court cited People
    v. Superior Court (Blanquel) (2000) 
    85 Cal. App. 4th 768
    , 771, where circumstances
    furnished an objective basis to infer the accidental omission of cross-references to certain
    predecessor statutes in the course of a complex reorganization of a portion of the code.
    Similarly, in People v. Alexander (1986) 
    178 Cal. App. 3d 1250
    , 1265, this court rejected a
    contention that the Legislature had impliedly pardoned the defendant for his sale of PCP
    when, “in the ‘hurry and confusion’ of major legislative activity involving changes in
    over 100 statutes, the Legislature, through an inadvertent drafting error, eliminated for a
    period of 29 days the sanctions against selling PCP.” Here of course there was no similar
    hurry or confusion that might reasonably lead to details being overlooked. The drafters
    were required to prepare only one measure consisting of 18 sections. They had all the
    time they wanted or needed to ensure that it expressed their intentions. The voters, for
    their part, had access to the measure’s language for months before they were called upon
    to cast their ballots.8
    8
    See Elections Code sections 9002, subdivision (a) [requiring Attorney General
    to post proposed initiative on website and solicit public comments prior to circulation];
    9006, subdivision (b) [requiring Attorney General to prepare circulating title and
    (continued)
    11
    Another illustration of a legislative drafting error is provided by this court’s
    decision in In re Chavez (2004) 
    114 Cal. App. 4th 989
    , 998 (Chavez). The question there
    was whether a change in the sentence for tax fraud was intended to apply retroactively so
    as to abate the defendant’s sentence under prior law. We concluded that the purpose of
    the change was to correct an anomaly introduced by an earlier amendment, which had
    been in effect when the defendant was sentenced. That amendment had been part of
    “voluminous” 1983 legislation that was largely concerned with public education and its
    funding, but that also included provisions conforming state tax law to certain changes in
    federal law. (Id. at p. 994.) One of the conforming changes echoed the federal tax fraud
    statute, with the result that the California statute now imposed an indeterminate sentence
    despite this state’s broad abandonment of indeterminate sentencing six years earlier. (Id.
    at p. 995.) The bill correcting this anomaly was described in its legislative history as a
    “cleanup bill” needed “ ‘to correct technical and grammatical errors in penal provisions
    in various codes.’ ” (Id. at p. 995.) The attorney general argued to us that the earlier
    adoption of an indeterminate term had been a deliberate effort to increase deterrence, but
    we found it “far more likely that SB 813’s incongruous and unexplained reversion to
    indeterminate sentencing was the result of the drafters’ attempt to track the federal
    language as closely as possible.” (Id. at p. 997.) We thus concluded that, “[g]iven the
    legislative history and the surrounding circumstances . . . the 1983 amendment was a
    drafting error and was not enacted for any deterrent purpose.” (Id. at p. 998.) We noted
    summary within 10 days after receipt]; 9014, subdivision (a) [contemplating that
    circulation of petition may commence on official summary date]; 9033, subdivision
    (b)(1) [effectively requiring at least 131 days between date measure is certified for ballot
    and date of election in which it is to be voted upon]; 9034, subdivision (b) [requiring
    Legislature to conduct hearings on measure at least 131 days before election]; 9094,
    subdivision (a) [requiring that ballot pamphlet be sent to voters at least 21 days before
    election]; 9092 [requiring Secretary of State to make contents of pamphlet available to
    public at least 20 days before pamphlet sent to printer].)
    12
    that a “ ‘dangerous potential for drafting errors’ ” had been created by the extreme
    complexity of the 1983 bill and the fact that it had been focused on educational reforms
    rather than criminal law. (Ibid., quoting People v. 
    Alexander, supra
    , 
    178 Cal. App. 3d 1250
    , 1262.) Because the later amendment was intended to “ ‘fix a mistake,’ ” we
    inferred an intent that it be applied retroactively. (Id. at p. 998, quoting In re Marriage of
    Petropoulos (2001) 
    91 Cal. App. 4th 161
    , 172.)
    None of these factors were present here. There was no necessity, and no apparent
    attempt, to track laws promulgated by another sovereign. There was no “extreme
    complexity.” Proposition 47 was not focused on some tangentially related subject; both it
    and Proposition 36 sought to bring about the release of nondangerous prisoners in order
    to free resources for other purposes. The one similarity between this case and Chavez is
    that section 1170.18(c) was indeed intended to “fix a mistake” in a sense, and for that
    reason should be applied retroactively. But its use of the phrase “throughout this Code”
    bears no resemblance to the drafting error found in Chavez or in any of the other cases I
    have examined.
    More nearly resembling this case is this court’s decision in In re Gabriel G. (2005)
    
    134 Cal. App. 4th 1428
    , 1436, where we rejected an argument by a child welfare agency
    that a statutory provision governing dependency dispositions “must have been
    inadvertent” because it would produce consequences the Legislature could not have
    intended. We noted that the language at issue had been adopted to correct “what was
    unquestionably a drafting error,” i.e., a transposed “or” in the phrase, “ ‘paragraph (1),
    (3), or of subdivision (b).’ ” (Id. at p. 1437, quoting Stats.2003, ch. 813, § 7, p. 4749.)
    The Legislature’s attention to the language on that occasion militated against the
    hypothesis that the amending language was itself the product of inadvertence.
    Similarly, in People v. Garcia (1999) 
    21 Cal. 4th 1
    , 4, 6, the Supreme Court
    refused to base its construction of a provision of the “Three Strikes” law on a posited
    13
    “ ‘drafting oversight’ ” or “ ‘drafting error’ ” as manifested in a supposed discrepancy
    between two otherwise redundant provisions of the Three Strikes law. The court found
    such an approach untenable because it would “require the court to disregard one of the
    two assertedly conflicting paragraphs or to rewrite some of their provisions. Although
    we may properly decide upon such a construction or reformation when compelled by
    necessity and supported by firm evidence of the drafters’ true intent (see, e.g., People v.
    Skinner (1985) 
    39 Cal. 3d 765
    , 775, 
    217 Cal. Rptr. 685
    , 
    704 P.2d 752
    ), we should not do
    so when the statute is reasonably susceptible to an interpretation that harmonizes all its
    parts without disregarding or altering any of them.” (Id. at p. 6, italics added.)
    Here no “necessity” compels us to disregard the plain meaning and effect of
    “throughout this Code.” Nor is there any “firm evidence,” or any evidence, that this
    language contravenes, subverts, frustrates, impairs, conflicts with, or departs from the
    “drafters’ true intent.” On the contrary, the only reliable evidence of that intent is the
    statutory language itself. The cases concluding otherwise have declined to adhere to the
    voters’ plainly expressed intent not because it is repugnant to anything in the statutory
    language or history, but because it is not corroborated by some additional evidence
    assuring us that the voters really meant what they quite clearly said. Such an approach
    cannot be validated by invoking the concept of a “drafting error.”
    C. Intrinsic Confirmation of Literal Meaning
    If I thought there were sufficient reason to look behind the plain meaning of
    section 1170.18(c), I would begin with a careful examination of the text of that and
    related provisions. This is appropriate because “ ‘[i]n interpreting a voter initiative . . . ,
    “we turn first to the language of the [initiative], giving the words their ordinary
    meaning.” [Citation.] The [initiative’s] language must also be construed in the context
    of the statute as a whole and the [initiative’s] overall . . . scheme.” (Professional
    Engineers in California Government v. Kempton (2007) 
    40 Cal. 4th 1016
    , 1037, quoting
    14
    People v. Rizo (2000) 
    22 Cal. 4th 681
    , 685, bracketed material in original; see People v.
    Arias (2008) 
    45 Cal. 4th 169
    , 177 [“If the words in the statute do not, by themselves,
    provide a reliable indicator of legislative intent, ‘[s]tatutory ambiguities often may be
    resolved by examining the context in which the language appears and adopting the
    construction which best serves to harmonize the statute internally and with related
    statutes.’ ”].) Such an examination reveals considerable textual evidence that the drafters
    of Proposition 47 did positively intend to extend Proposition 47’s dangerousness standard
    to Proposition 36 petitions.
    First, as pointed out above, shortly before using the phrase “this Code” to describe
    the reach of the definition in section 1170.18(c), the drafters had deliberately adopted the
    phrase “ ‘this act’ ” as shorthand for Proposition 47. (§ 1170.18, subd. (a).) They
    proceeded to employ this shorthand phrase no fewer than seven times in section 1170.18,
    including in subdivision (b), which contains the phrase defined in the next subdivision
    “[a]s used throughout this Code.” (§ 1170.18(c).) It strains credulity to suppose that they
    slipped into using a gross misnomer when they really meant to use “this act” for an eighth
    time.
    The majority’s construction of section 1170.18(c) is also at odds with the use of
    the term “throughout” in the phrase “as used throughout this Code.” It is not enough to
    simply substitute “act” for “Code,” because in the majority’s reading the definition does
    not apply “throughout” anything, even the act. The defined phrase appears only in one
    place: Penal Code section 1170.18, subdivision (b). If the intent was only to define that
    phrase as used in that subdivision, it would have been more felicitously expressed by
    saying “as used in this section” or at most, “in this act.” “Throughout,” in other words,
    implies that the defined phrase appears in more than one place. In fact, the phrase
    appears in two—Penal Code section 1170.18, subdivision (b), and section 1170.126(f).
    15
    “Throughout” is consistent with an intent to refer to both of them. It is not consistent
    with an intent to refer to only one.
    The text of Penal Code section 1170.18 reinforces the plain meaning of
    subdivision (c) for a subtler, but I think even more compelling, reason: in the absence of
    an intent to benefit Proposition 36 petitioners, there was no reason to write Penal Code
    section 1170.18 the way it is written; it could have been drawn in a significantly simpler
    and more straightforward manner. Recall that Proposition 36 requires resentencing
    unless the court determines that resentencing would pose “an unreasonable risk of danger
    to public safety.” (§ 1170.126(f).) The drafters of Proposition 47 copied the quoted
    phrase into Penal Code section 1170.18, subdivision (b), although it was already in use
    and its meaning and effect had been extensively litigated under Proposition 36. Had the
    drafters simply borrowed that phrase, it would suggest that they expected and intended
    courts to possess the same broad discretion under Proposition 47 they had been held to
    have under Proposition 36. Instead, the drafters redefined the borrowed phrase to mean
    something new: “an unreasonable risk that the petitioner will commit a new violent
    felony within the meaning of clause (iv) of subparagraph (C) of paragraph (2) of
    subdivision (e) of Section 667.” (§ 1170.18(c).) This had the effect of sharply restricting
    the latitude courts had been allowed, or found themselves to be allowed, under
    Proposition 36. But if the intent was to restrict judicial discretion only for purposes of
    Proposition 47, there was no reason to introduce the earlier phrase from Proposition 36.
    Penal Code section 1170.18, subdivision (b) could simply have been drafted to say that
    resentencing would be required unless the court found an unreasonable risk that the
    petitioner would “commit a new violent felony within the meaning of clause (iv) of
    subparagraph (C) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 667.” (§ 1170.18(c).)
    The drafters could, in short, have stricken the phrase they borrowed from Proposition 36
    and incorporated the new test directly into section subdivision (b), eliminating any need
    16
    for subdivision (c). This would not only shorten and simplify Proposition 47; it would
    obviate any risk that Proposition 36 petitioners would attempt to take advantage of the
    new test. That the drafters instead lifted a phrase from Proposition 36, and then redefined
    it in a substantially narrower way, can only be explained as intended alter the rule of
    decision in Proposition 36 petitions so as to constrain the broad discretion courts had
    been exercising to deny relief under that measure.
    Another very familiar rule of statutory construction—repeatedly acknowledged by
    us—is that “ ‘[w]e must . . . ‘if possible, . . . give effect and significance to every word
    and phrase of a statute.’ [Citation.] When two provisions touch upon a common subject,
    ‘we must construe them “in reference to each other, so as to ‘harmonize the two in such a
    way that no part of either becomes surplusage.’ ” ’ [Citations.] ‘We must presume that
    the Legislature intended “every word, phrase and provision . . . in a statute . . . to have
    meaning and to perform a useful function.” ’ [Citations.]” (Meyers v. Retirement Fund
    of Fed. City Employees (2014) 
    223 Cal. App. 4th 1201
    , 1206; Nativi v. Deutsche Bank
    National Trust Company (2014) 
    223 Cal. App. 4th 261
    , 283-284 [“ ‘The rules of statutory
    construction direct us to avoid, if possible, interpretations that render a part of a statute
    surplusage.’ [Citations.] [Citation.] Courts ‘must strive to give meaning to every word
    in a statute and to avoid constructions that render words, phrases, or clauses superfluous.’
    [Citations.] [Citation.] The well-established principles of statutory construction
    ‘preclude judicial construction that renders part of the statute “meaningless or
    inoperative.’.”]; People v. Scott (2012) 
    203 Cal. App. 4th 1303
    , 1313 [“We also attempt to
    give effect to every word in a statute and avoid constructions that render statutory terms
    superfluous or meaningless.”]; Murray’s Iron Works, Inc. v. Boyce (2008) 
    158 Cal. App. 4th 1279
    , 1296 [“A construction making some words surplusage is to be
    avoided.”]; Toshiba America Electronic Components, Inc. v. Superior Court (2004) 
    124 Cal. App. 4th 762
    , 769 [same]; People v. Superior Court (2003) 
    114 Cal. App. 4th 102
    , 104
    17
    [“ ‘Where reasonably possible, we avoid statutory constructions that render particular
    provisions superfluous or unnecessary.’ ”].)
    The majority’s treatment renders superfluous Proposition 47’s use of the phrase
    “unreasonable risk of danger to public safety.” Under the majority’s view, that phrase
    has no effect in Proposition 47 other than to complicate and lengthen the statute. Under a
    correct view, as I see it, that phrase can readily be understood, in support rather than
    derogation of the measure’s plain meaning, to serve the very purpose of correcting the
    courts’ unduly parsimonious approach to petitions under Proposition 36.
    VII. Voter Appreciation of Consequences
    A. Unsound Legal Premise
    If the majority’s treatment has any basis in historic fact, it must be not that the
    drafters used words they didn’t mean, but that the voters were insufficiently aware of the
    legal effect of those words, and thus did not appreciate the consequences of their vote. I
    question the factual assumption on which this reasoning rests, but more fundamentally I
    do not believe it states an adequate reason to disregard plain statutory language.9 The
    majority acknowledged as much in In re Gabriel 
    G., supra
    , 
    134 Cal. App. 4th 1428
    , 1436,
    where the plain meaning of a statute was challenged on the ground that it produced
    unintended consequences: “[W]e must recall that in construing a statute, ‘that which is
    9
    If courts were empowered to abrogate statutes based upon doubts that
    lawmakers appreciated their effects, government would grind to a halt. It is fanciful to
    suppose that legislators, or a sizable proportion of them, are aware of all of the
    consequences, or even contents, of the bills they enact. One online article compares a
    1,018-page health care reform bill to earlier federal legislation: “[M]ajor spending bills
    frequently run more than 1,000 [pages]. This year’s stimulus bill was 1,100 pages. The
    climate bill that the House passed in June was 1,200 pages. . . . Budget bills can run even
    longer: In 2007, President Bush’s ran to 1,482 pages.” (Is 1,000 pages long for a piece
    of legislation?  (as of Mar. 11, 2016.)
    18
    construed is the statutory text.’ [Citation.] Evidence of legislative inadvertence would
    have to be quite compelling before we would ignore the plain language of the law.
    [Citation.] The only evidence of inadvertence the Department offers is its assessment of
    the unintended consequences the change will have. Legislation often has unintended
    consequences. But we cannot construe the amendment in a manner wholly unsupported
    by its text merely to avoid the purported unintended consequences. [Citation.]” (Id. at
    pp. 1436-1437, italics added.)
    Again I must observe that a due regard for the separation of powers requires that
    when the legislative will is expressed in clear language which does not frustrate other
    manifestations of legislative intent and does not produce absurd results, lawmakers must
    be deemed to have intended the effect of their enactments, whether or not we find it likely
    that they actually did so. The tacit premise of the majority’s treatment is that where an
    effect may have been inobvious to voters, the absence of extrinsic corroboration of their
    intent is by itself sufficient ground for courts to deny the enactment that effect, no matter
    how inexorably it may flow from the words they have adopted. That premise turns the
    “manifest purpose” exception on its head by authorizing courts to disregard clear
    statutory language unless it is affirmatively ratified by other evidence of legislative
    intent. This reverses the proper burden of proof, which should rest on those who seek to
    deny effect to plain language—not those who seek to enforce an enactment according to
    its terms. I know of no precedent for such an approach. (Cf. Amador Valley Joint Union
    High Sch. Dist. v. State Bd. of Equalization (1978) 
    22 Cal. 3d 208
    , 245-246, italics added
    [“[T]he ballot summary and arguments and analysis presented to the electorate in
    connection with a particular measure may be helpful in determining the probable
    meaning of uncertain language.”].) In my view, any inquiry into the voters’ intent is
    precluded by the facts that (1) the language is clear and (2) nothing in the measure or its
    19
    history suggests, let alone “manifests,” an intention by the electorate not to bring about
    the effects flowing from that language.
    B. Evidence That Consequences Were Acknowledged
    If I thought an inquiry into voter intentions were supportable, I would still take
    exception to confining it, as the majority does, to the contents of the ballot pamphlet.
    The majority understates the extent to which the effect of section 1170.18(c) on
    Proposition 36 petitions was acknowledged—invariably by opponents of the measure—
    prior to the election.10 After minimizing the extent and tenor of these materials, the
    10
    Defendant has requested judicial notice of printouts of several of these
    webpages, but the pages as well as the sources from which they are drawn may still be
    found either at their original web addresses or as archived elsewhere on the web. (See
    Facts – No on Prop 47 
    (as of Mar. 11, 2016); Californians Against Prop. 47 | About Proposition 47,
     (as of Mar. 11, 2016 [recapitulating criticism by California District
    Attorneys’ Association (CDAA)]; Proposition47_A_Cruel_Fraud.pdf:
     (as of
    Mar. 11, 2016 [apparent copy of CDAA report]; D. Greenwald, Analysis: Perspectives
    on Proposition 47 (Oct. 29, 2014) Davis People’s Vanguard
     (as
    of Mar. 11, 2016 [quoting Judge J. Richard Couzens of the Placer County Superior
    Court]; Couzens, Prop. 47: a perspective from the bench (Oct. 28, 2014) Davis Enterprise
     (as of Mar. 11, 2016) [apparent source of preceding]; Our Readers Say:
    Police, sheriffs say no to Prop 47
     (as of Mar. 11, 2016) [letter from sheriffs and police chiefs: “Prop
    47 would rewrite California law, including the Three Strikes Reform law, to give the term
    “unreasonable risk of danger to public safety” a very narrow definition.”].)
    Another, more visually striking page from the Californians Against 47 site also
    acknowledges the effect Proposition 47 would have on Proposition 36 cases.
    (Californians against Prop.47 | No on Proposition 47  (as of Mar. 22, 2016.).)
    (continued)
    20
    majority suggests that we can assign no significance to them because it is “unclear how
    widely disseminated these arguments were prior to the election and if the electorate was
    even aware of these arguments before they voted Proposition 47 into law.” (Lead opn. at
    p. 18, fn. 8.) But this, again, reverses the burden of proof. The burden is not on the
    proponent of a measure’s plain meaning to adduce extrinsic evidence proving that voters
    were made subjectively aware of a contested effect. The burden is on those who would
    disregard the plain meaning to adduce affirmative evidence that the effects flowing from
    the measure’s language are contrary to the will of those who adopted it. Evidence that
    the true meaning and effect of the statute were acknowledged in public debate is relevant
    to refute claims of voter ignorance, though it is by no means necessary. In any event it
    cannot be ignored due to mere doubts about “how widely disseminated these arguments
    were.” Where the plain meaning of an enactment is challenged on the ground that voters
    did not understand its legal effect, it seems to me that any evidence of public awareness
    has a logical tendency to rebut the factual premise on which the challenge rests.
    At least one of the above pieces also appeared in a daily newspaper. (See
     (as of
    Mar. 11, 2016 [web facsimile of print page containing Couzens piece].) The Redland
    Daily News piece, or a version of it, also appeared on the website of the Highland
    Community News, and may therefore have appeared in that entity’s newspaper as well.
    (San Bernardino County Police Chiefs and Sheriff’s Association says: No on Prop 47 –
    Highland Community News: Opinion  (as of Mar. 11, 2016.).)
    The foregoing are only the web-accessible sources thus far found which refer to
    the effect of section 1170.18(c) on Proposition 36 cases. Without vastly greater
    resources—and perhaps even with them—it is impossible to know what information may
    have been presented to voters through more traditional media such as broadcast
    advertising, flyers, and campaign mailers.
    21
    Evidence that a challenged effect was acknowledged and debated in the public
    arena also flatly refutes any suggestion that the effect was so subtle as to go entirely
    unnoticed. Implicit in some of the not-to-be cited decisions is the suggestion that the
    drafters had essentially duped voters by slipping a redefinition of dangerousness into
    Proposition 47 without highlighting its effect on Proposition 36 petitions. Again, I do not
    think such a premise affords any occasion for judicial abrogation of plain statutory
    language. If it does, we may anticipate that the opponents of numerous past ballot
    measures—including some of far greater moment than Propositions 36 and 47—will soon
    be filing new challenges to their more obscure provisions. Perhaps there could arise an
    extreme case where a challenged effect was so obscure, unheralded, and momentous as to
    make a truly compelling case for judicial intervention. But surely this is not such a case.
    As the above materials demonstrate, the meaning and effect of “throughout this Code”
    were neither obscure nor unheralded. All the majority can say is that they were not
    specifically mentioned in the ballot pamphlet. That is not nearly enough, in my view, to
    justify judicial abrogation of plain statutory language.
    Confining the inquiry into voter intent to the four corners of the ballot pamphlet is
    particularly objectionable because the contents of that document are constrained by
    considerations of space, time, and comprehensibility, requiring countless judgments by
    the contributors to the pamphlet as to what effects of a measure are sufficiently material
    to warrant discussion. The official summary of any ballot measure is authored by the
    office of the Legislative Analyst. (Elec. Code, §§ 9087, 9086, subd. (b).) The summary
    is required only to “generally set forth in an impartial manner the information the average
    voter needs to adequately understand the measure.” (Elec. Code, § 9086, subd. (b),
    italics added.) The preparer of such a summary must be given considerable latitude in
    determining what to include. (See Brennan v. Board of Supervisors (1981) 
    125 Cal. App. 3d 87
    , 96 [“Faced with the difficult task of simplifying a complex proposal, the
    22
    Committee drafted a summary which, if not all-encompassing, at least briefly described
    its major subjects.”]; 
    ibid. [“[T]he Committee's ballot
    summary, while technically
    imprecise, omitted only auxilliary [sic] or subsidiary matters, fairly represented the
    measure and thus was in substantial compliance with the law.”].) In particular, there is
    no requirement that the analysis attempt to describe every way in which a measure may
    change the law; rather it “may contain background information, including the effect of the
    measure on existing law.” (Elec. Code, § 9087, subd. (b), italics added.) The Analyst is
    thus called upon only to make a rational judgment about what effects are most likely to
    matter to voters, and to describe them in a fair and intelligible way. Given the limited
    number of persons affected by the use of “this Code” in section 1170.18(c), it seems
    entirely likely that the Analyst failed to mention it not out of ignorance or neglect but
    because it was expected to matter less to voters than other features of the measure.
    Assuming the Legislative Analyst does not find a given effect sufficiently material
    to warrant mention, the burden then falls to the official proponents and opponents of a
    measure to highlight any effects that they believe (1) may otherwise escape voters’
    attention, and (2) may affect the vote of a significant number of electors. To be sure,
    determining what effects to mention in these arguments may require an even more radical
    triage than is required of the Legislative Analyst. Official ballot arguments are
    apparently restricted to 500 words for opening and 250 words for rebuttal. (See Elec.
    Code, §§ 9062, 9069, cf. 
    id., § 9041.)
    This means the advocates must select a limited
    number of points to include in the official argument, relying on other modes of
    communication for any other points they believe may induce voters to cast a ballot in
    their favor.
    I believe that courts are constrained by the separation of powers to trust not only
    the ballot contents, but arguments in the public arena, to ensure that the text of adopted
    measures reflects the actual will of the voters. Here the evidence suggests that at least
    23
    two of the official opponents of Proposition 47 were entirely aware of its effect on
    Proposition 36 petitions but elected not to cite that effect in the ballot pamphlet as a
    reason to vote no, relying instead on public media to bring it to voters’ attention. Two of
    the three opposition authors named in the ballot pamphlet are Christopher W. Boyd,
    president of the California Police Chiefs Association (CPOA), and Gilbert G. Otero,
    president of the California District Attorneys Association (CDAA). (Ballot Pamp.,
    General Elec. (Nov. 4, 2014), argument against Prop. 47, p. 39; [web cite].) CPOA is
    identified by the Secretary of State as a contributor to the lead opposition entity,
    Californians Against Proposition 47 (CAP47). (California Secretary of State – CalAccess
    – Campaign Finance  (as of Mar. 11, 2016).)
    Among the materials of which defendant seeks judicial notice is a printout of a page,
    published prior to the 2014 election, from CAP47’s website.11 That page recapitulates
    portions of what it describes as an “extensive evaluation of Proposition 47 from the
    [CDAA].” It seems to have drawn most of its content verbatim from the CDAA
    “evaluation.”12 It reports that, according to the CDAA, Proposition 47 would “impose an
    impossibly demanding standard of proof in resentencings, including the three strikes
    resentencings enacted in 2012’s Proposition 36.” (Italics added.) Later it elaborates on
    this asserted failing: “[T]his proposed new definition of ‘dangerousness’ . . . applies to
    11
    The page can no longer be found at its original web location, but a version
    archived on October 10, 2014, may be viewed at Californians Against Prop. 47 | About
    Proposition 47  (as of Mar. 11, 2016).
    12
    The CDAA paper is not available to nonmembers on CDAA’s own website.
    Apparent copies, however, can be found at two other web addresses. (See Proposition
    47: A Cruel Fraud  (as
    of Mar. 11, 2016); Proposition47_A_Cruel_Fraud.pdf  (as of Mar. 11, 2016).)
    24
    any resentencing permitted by the Penal Code . . . . By referring to ‘Code,’ § 1170.18
    would alter the meaning of ‘unreasonable risk of danger to public safety,’ not only as it is
    applied in § 1170.18 resentencing hearings, but in all other hearings that rely on the
    dangerousness standard throughout the entire Code. . . . [¶] Moreover, for any of the
    Three Strikes defendants previously denied resentencing based upon a judicial finding of
    dangerousness, may appeal that ruling and request the court now apply this new standard
    of dangerousness, resulting in a further cost to a court system already struggling
    financially.” (Italics added.)
    In short, one opposition author was president of an organization that wrote a paper
    specifically citing the effect on Proposition 36 petitions, and another was president of an
    organization that contributed to an entity whose website highlighted that effect as a
    reason to vote no. Their failure to cite this effect in the ballot pamphlet supports an
    inference, not that the effect was too obscure to be noticed, but that opponents did not
    think it a powerful enough argument for inclusion in the limited space available to them.
    This in turn suggests that by invalidating the plainly expressed will of the voters, the
    courts are handing opponents of the measure a victory they could not, and knew they
    could not, win at the ballot box.
    I simply do not believe it is the office of the courts to protect voters, if that is what
    they think they are doing, from the legal consequences of their votes. Such an approach
    is doubly objectionable where, as here, it appears that voters had knowledge, or at least
    notice, of those consequences. In the absence of absurdity, constitutional infirmity, or
    frustration of an affirmatively manifested purpose, a voter-adopted statute must be given
    effect according to its plain meaning. I therefore can no longer join in the chorus of
    judicial voices that have sought to frustrate the intent of the 2014 electorate as manifested
    by them in the only way that matters.
    25
    VIII. Timing Considerations
    The majority also concludes that “practical reasons” weigh against applying
    “throughout this Code” literally because “[i]t is illogical to conclude that Proposition 47
    was meant to modify the Reform Act when most of the three strike resentencing petitions
    were already adjudicated and decided by that time.” (Lead opn. at p. 21.) The basis for
    this assertion is not clear. One possible argument is that (1) the time to file Proposition
    petitions would have nearly expired when Proposition 47 took effect; (2) because of this,
    few if any such petitions were likely to remain “[un]adjudicated and [un]decided” at that
    time; (3) the new definition could only apply to petitions that remained unadjudicated and
    undecided; (4) extending the new definition to Proposition 36 petitions would therefore
    be futile; therefore (5) voters could not have intended a futile act.
    If this is the underlying reasoning, I find it badly flawed. The first premise fails
    because Penal Code section 1170.126, subdivision (b), permits an eligible prisoner to
    “file a petition for a recall of sentence, within two years after the effective date of the act
    that added this section or at a later date upon a showing of good cause.” Voters could
    well anticipate, and I would be inclined to hold, that a change in law requiring the
    petitioner’s more-or-less immediate release from prison constitutes “good cause” to
    entertain a petition beyond the two-year deadline.
    The second premise fails because there are many cases like this one in which the
    defendant’s Proposition 36 petition remains pending on appeal and has thus not been
    finally adjudicated or decided. Voters could well anticipate that at least these petitioners
    would be able to avail themselves of the change in law occasioned by section 1170.18(c).
    To suppose otherwise is to assume that they did not intend the measure to have any
    retroactive effect—a point the majority professes not to address. (See Lead opn., p. 22,
    fn. 9.)
    26
    I will concede the third premise, for present purposes, to this extent: there may
    indeed be no procedure by which, on November 4, 2014, a prisoner could mount a
    challenge, based upon the change in law effected by section 1170.18(c), to the denial of a
    Proposition 36 petition that had been denied in the trial court and had passed beyond the
    time for appellate review. (See 6 Witkin & Epstein, Cal. Criminal Law (4th ed. 2012)
    Criminal Judgment, § 193, pp. 238-240 [writ of error coram nobis (motion to vacate)];
    3 Witkin & 
    Epstein, supra
    , Punishment, § 394, pp. 608-609 [ordinary motion to recall
    sentence]; 6 Witkin & 
    Epstein, supra
    , Criminal Writs, § 45-66, pp. 655-684 [grounds for
    habeas corpus]; cf. In re Estrada (1965) 
    63 Cal. 2d 740
    , 744-745 [inference that
    legislative reduction in punishment was intended to benefit all defendants whose
    convictions were not yet final].) But the argument fails without or without the third
    premise, so long as Proposition 36 denials still pending on appeal would be subject to
    correction based on the change in law effected by section 1170.18(c). If that is true, the
    fourth premise also collapses and the fifth with it.
    Whatever the logical underpinnings of the majority’s treatment on this point, I
    cannot accede to any suggestion that the number of persons to be affected by a statute can
    justify abrogation of its unambiguous terms. Even if only a handful of cases were likely
    to be affected, it would furnish no occasion to disregard the plain meaning of the statute.
    To posit a regime in which courts are empowered to disregard legislative directives on
    the ground that their effects are too insignificant to have been intended is, yet again,
    obnoxious to the proper separation of powers. It is not for the courts to decide what
    objectives are sufficiently weighty to merit legislative attention. Least of all does it fall
    to the courts to decide when a court may abrogate legislation touching on a fundamental
    right such as physical liberty because it finds the number of citizens benefiting from it too
    small to bother with.
    27
    Here, as already noted, it can be readily inferred from the very existence of
    section 1170.18(c) that its purpose was to correct what the drafters saw as an undesirable
    judicial interpretation and application of Proposition 36. Once the prior regime was
    perceived as unsatisfactory, it was entirely logical not only to create a new regime but to
    extend its benefit to anyone still seeking relief under its predecessor. The logic of doing
    so is the same whatever the size of the class so benefited. Lawmakers are under no
    obligation to count heads before deciding whether to remedy perceived defects in existing
    law. They may act on the basis of one or two cases, or for that matter anecdotes,
    concerning an undesirable consequence of existing law. They are fully empowered to
    adopt corrective measures whether the class of those benefited proves to count a million,
    a hundred, or one. Nor is there anything “illogical” about extending a remedy to less than
    the entire universe of persons to whom it might have been extended. Logic does not
    demand that all aboard must drown merely because there are too few life rafts for
    everyone.
    Finally, I find the reasoning under scrutiny to be self-contradictory. It imputes to
    voters a refined calculus about the effect of their enactment on Proposition 36 petitions,
    but then supposes that they must have considered that effect too trivial to pursue. Of
    course, if voters indeed understood the effect of section 1170.18(c) and did not wish to
    bring that effect about, they would have defeated the measure. To overturn the
    unambiguous words they enacted on the ground that they understood what the language
    of the measure would accomplish, but did not intend it, is to adopt a mode of statutory
    construction I have never seen before and cannot join in introducing to our law.
    IX. “Savings Clause”
    The majority finds tension between the literal meaning of section 1170.18(c) and a
    provision in Proposition 47 declaring that “[n]othing in this and related sections is
    intended to diminish or abrogate the finality of judgments in any case not falling within
    28
    the purview of this act.” (Pen. Code, § 1170.18, subd. (n) (§ 1170.18(n)).) According to
    the majority, “Applying the definition of ‘unreasonable risk of danger to public safety’
    from section 1170.18 to section 1170.126, would undoubtedly diminish the finality of
    those three strikes judgments that do not involve a nonserious, nonviolent property or
    drug crime.” (Lead opn. at p. 21, italics added.) I cannot agree. There is no reason to
    suppose section 1170.18(n) was intended to preclude application of section 1170.18(c)
    “throughout this Code” in accordance with its terms. Indeed, insofar as section
    1170.18(c) applies to Proposition 36 cases, those cases “fall[] within the purview of this
    act” and are thus exempt from the operation of section 1170.18(n).
    Neither the intent nor the letter of section 1170.18(n) is frustrated by applying
    section 1170.18(c) to Proposition 36 cases, at least where the judgment in those cases has
    not passed beyond the power of the courts to modify. The plain meaning and manifest
    purpose of the quoted provision is to prevent a construction of Proposition 47 that
    operates to reopen proceedings in matters falling outside section 1170.18. Here, the
    proceeding has been reopened, and is still open, but not by virtue of Proposition 47. It is
    Proposition 36 that, by authorizing resentencing in cases like this one, has “diminish[ed]
    or abrogate[d] the finality” of the judgment before us. The only effect of Proposition 47
    is to provide a rule of decision on a subsidiary issue, i.e., whether to deny relief on
    grounds of dangerousness. Defendant is not relying on Proposition 47 to attack the
    judgment. He is invoking section 1170.18(c) to provide the rule of decision for a
    subsidiary issue because that is what the cited section mandates. Complying with that
    mandate does not “diminish or abrogate” the original judgment, even if it proves
    dispositive of the Proposition 36 petition. It is still Proposition 36, not 47, that impairs
    the finality of defendant’s sentence.
    Had the drafters and voters intended to achieve the result urged by the majority,
    they could have simply done what the court has now done on their supposed behalf:
    29
    replaced “throughout this Code” with “in this act” in section 1170.18(c). I would give
    effect to all of the language chosen by the voters, including the directive that section
    1170.18(c)’s definition of dangerousness govern determinations of that issue in
    Proposition 36 proceedings.
    X. Presumptions Favoring Literal Construction
    The majority’s construction of section 1170.18(c) runs afoul of at least two
    familiar presumptions concerning the interpretation of doubtful statutory provisions. One
    dictates that remedial statutes such as Proposition 47 are to be broadly construed in favor
    of parties invoking their terms. (See People v. Zeigler (2012) 
    211 Cal. App. 4th 638
    , 658
    [“The Proposition 36 statutory scheme is clearly remedial in nature and . . . , “under well-
    settled rules of judicial construction, such a statute is to be liberally construed to promote
    the objects to be accomplished by it.’ ”]; People v. Rivas-Colon (2015) 
    241 Cal. App. 4th 444
    , 451, quoting People v. Sherow (2015) 
    239 Cal. App. 4th 875
    , 880 [“Section 1170.18
    is a ‘remedial statute[.]’ ”].) Indeed, two uncodified sections of Proposition 47, and one
    of Proposition 36, explicitly dictate such a construction. (See 3 West’s Session Laws
    (2013-2014), pp. A-20 – A-21, §§ 15, 18; 3 West’s Session Laws (2011-2012), p. A-53,
    § 7.)
    The other presumption directs that in the absence of more reliable guidance,
    doubtful provisions of penal statutes are to be construed in favor of the defendant.
    (People v. Johnson (2007) 
    150 Cal. App. 4th 1467
    , 1481 [“Where the statute is susceptible
    of two reasonable constructions, a defendant is ordinarily entitled to that construction
    most favorable to him.”].) If this rule does not apply here, it is only because section
    1170.18(c) contains no ambiguity that the presumption can operate to resolve. (See ibid.;
    People v. Ramirez (2014) 
    224 Cal. App. 4th 1078
    , 1085 [“The rule of lenity applies as a
    tie-breaking principle where ‘ “ ‘two reasonable interpretations of the statute stand in
    relative equipoise.’ ” ’ [Citation.] Where that situation exists, the court must ‘prefer the
    30
    interpretation that is more favorable to the defendant.’ [Citation.]”].) Here there is just
    one literal meaning. But if the majority’s reading of the statute did stand in “relative
    equipoise” with the plain meaning of the statute (People v. 
    Ramirez, supra
    , 224
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1085), this presumption would militate in favor of the latter.
    Conclusion
    I see no colorable basis here to depart from the plain terms enacted by the voters.
    I would reverse the judgment with directions to reevaluate the petition in light of the
    definition of dangerousness set forth in section 1170.18(c).
    31
    ______________________________________
    RUSHING, P.J.
    32