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ELLEN MILLER, Petitioner
v.
THE SUPERIOR COURT OF SAN JOAQUIN COUNTY, Respondent
THE PEOPLE, Real Party in Interest.
No. S073888
In the Supreme Court of California
Ct. App. 3 C027176
San Joaquin Super. Ct. No. 59994
Superior Court of San Joaquin County, Hon. William J. Murray,
Jr.
COUNSEL
Diepenbrock, Wulff, Plant & Hannegan, Samuel T.
McAdam; Riegels Campos & Kenyon and Charity Kenyon for Petitioner.
Crosby, Heafy, Roach & May, John E. Carne, Kathy
M. Banke, David E. Durant and Helen N. E. Posnansky for California
Newspaper Publishers Association, California First Amendment
Coalition, The Society of Professional Journalists, Northern
California Chapter, The Copley Press, Inc., Freedom Communications,
Knight Ridder, McClatchy Newspapers, Inc., the Ontario Bulletin,
the San Francisco Examiner, the San Francisco Chronicle, the
San Bernardino Sun, the Santa Rosa Press Democrat and The Times
Mirror Company as Amicus Curiae on behalf of Petitioner.
Johanson & Robinson and Steve H. Johanson for Hearst-Argyle
Television, Inc., A. H. Belo Corporation and Channel 58, Inc.,
as Amicus Curiae on behalf of Petitioner.
No appearance for Respondent.
Daniel E. Lungren and Bill Lockyer, Attorneys General,
George Williamson and David P. Druliner, Chief Assistant Attorneys
General, Robert R. Anderson, Assistant Attorney General, Edmund
D. McMurray, Margaret Venturi and Susan J. Orton, Deputy Attorneys
General, for Real Party in Interest.
Gil Garcetti, District Attorney (Los Angeles), George
M. Palmer, Head Deputy District Attorney, Brentford J. Ferreira,
Deputy District Attorney, for California District Attorneys Association
as Amicus Curiae on behalf of Real Party in Interest.
Filed November 1, 1999
In 1990 the voters of this state enacted a constitutional
amendment as part of Proposition 115 affirming that in criminal
cases the people of the State of California have "the right
to due process of law" (Cal. Const., art. I, § 29).[FOOTNOTE
1] In the present case, we consider whether the assertion
of that state constitutional right by a district attorney can
serve as a justification for holding a newsperson in contempt
for refusing to surrender unpublished information, in spite of
the newsperson' s immunity from contempt for such refusal expressly
provided in article I, section 2, subdivision (b) (hereinafter
article I, section 2(b)), and reaffirmed in article I, section
28, subdivision (d) (hereinafter article I, section 28(d)). We
conclude that a newsperson cannot be held in contempt under these
circumstances. We therefore reverse the judgment of the Court
of Appeal.
I. Facts and Procedural History
The pertinent facts of this case are not in dispute
and were largely set forth in SCI-Sacramento, Inc. v. Superior
Court (1997) 54 Cal.App.4th 654, 657-659:
"KOVR is a television station engaged in the gathering,
receiving and processing of information for communication to
the public. After learning that one Anthony Lee DeSoto had confessed
to sheriff' s investigators that he had killed his cellmate,
KOVR news reporter Tom Layson conducted a videotaped interview
with DeSoto in the San Joaquin County jail.
"Portions of the interview were broadcast on KOVR
news programs on March 19 and March 20, 1996.
"In April 1996, the People issued a subpoena duces
tecum for KOVR' s custodian of records to ' Bring Tape Recording
of the Entire Interview at the San Joaquin County Jail of Defendant
Anthony Lee De[S]oto on 3/19 or 3/20/96, to Include Portions
of Broadcast as Well as Portions That Were Not Broadcasted [sic].'
The subpoena indicated no appearance was required if the materials
were turned over to the prosecution.
"KOVR submitted only the broadcast portions of
the interview, invoking the . . . shield law (art. I, §
2; Evid. Code, § 1070)[FOOTNOTE 2] as to the ' outtakes'
which were not broadcast. The prosecutor reiterated her demand
for the unpublished materials.
"In June 1996, KOVR moved to quash the subpoena
on the grounds of the . . . shield law. KOVR' s motion requested
that the subpoena be quashed but asked in the alternative: '
If the court should determine that the District Attorney has
established and produced evidence of a colorable interest in
this matter, KOVR requests that the court review in camera those
portions of the videotape claimed to be essential to protecting
the interests of the People. Such in camera review of the unpublished
material, with counsel for the media present, would be essential
to perform the balancing of the nature described in Delaney
[v. Superior Court (1990) 50 Cal.3d 785]. [¶ ] If the
court should determine that . . . the District Attorney has established
a right to production of the portions of the videotape that have
not been broadcast, then in camera review is requested without
prejudice to the right of KOVR' s custodian of records to review
the court' s ruling and to decide whether or not to disclose
the unbroadcast portions of the videotape or to suffer a judgment
of contempt.'
"At the July 8, 1996, hearing on the motion to
quash, the trial court stated (in concurrence with the position
taken in the People' s opposition to the motion to quash) that
the case law requires in camera review only when the material
sought to be shielded under the . . . shield law is confidential
or sensitive and that such elements were not present in the instant
case, where KOVR has not contended the unpublished tape were
confidential or sensitive. The court further stated that notwithstanding
this point of law, the court would exercise its discretion and
review the tape in camera. The court asked KOVR' s counsel if
she had the tape (exhibit C) with her. She did, and she turned
it over to the court. The court conducted the in camera review
in the presence of KOVR' s counsel, defendant, and defense counsel.
KOVR' s counsel stated she had no objection to the presence of
the defense ' [a]s long as it would not constitute a waiver of
the Shield Law . . . .' The trial court agreed.
"On July 19, 1996, the trial court issued an order
denying KOVR' s motion to quash, ordering that the videotape
(exhibit C) be unsealed (but staying its order), and directing
KOVR to provide a copy of the unedited interview to the prosecution.
There are two versions of the court order - a sealed version
which has not been provided to the People, and an unsealed version.
Both versions of the order stated in part: ' The court hereby
denies KOVR' s Motion to Quash and orders that Exhibit C be unsealed,
but stays the execution of that order until the next hearing
on this matter set for July 23, 1996. KOVR is further ordered
to provide a complete copy of the unedited interview in continuous
sequence at the July 23, 1996 hearing.' "(SCI-Sacramento,
Inc. v. Superior Court, supra, 54 Cal.App.4th at pp. 657-659,
fns. and italics omitted.)
The stay was extended when KOVR indicated its intention
to petition the Court of Appeal for an extraordinary writ setting
aside the superior court' s ruling. That petition was filed in
that court on August 14, 1996. In SCI-Sacramento, Inc. v.
Superior Court, supra, 54 Cal.App.4th 654, the Court of Appeal
concluded the petition was premature as there had been no adjudication
of contempt. The court therefore did not reach the merits of
the dispute but issued a peremptory writ of mandate directing
the superior court to vacate its order and "to enter a new
order giving petitioners the opportunity to choose to be held
in contempt or to disclose the disputed materials." (Id.,
at pp. 667-668.) The previously issued stay was dissolved. (Id.,
at p. 668.)
At the ensuing hearing, the superior court ordered petitioner,
KOVR' s news director, Ellen Miller, to turn over to the prosecution
the unedited videotape. Petitioner refused to do so and was adjudged
in contempt. The court ordered petitioner jailed until the tape
was produced or the criminal proceedings concluded. She was also
ordered to pay the reasonable attorney fees and costs incurred
in connection with the contempt proceedings. However, the court
stayed its order to allow filing of a petition for extraordinary
relief in the Court of Appeal. Petitioner filed such a petition
for "a writ of habeas corpus and/or review," which
the court treated as a writ of prohibition. The Court of Appeal
issued an alternative writ of prohibition and stayed the judgment
of contempt.
The Court of Appeal, relying on article I, section 29,
giving "the people of the State of California . . . the
right to due process of law," and on our decision in
Delaney v. Superior Court (1990) 50 Cal.3d 785 (Delaney),
concluded that a journalist' s immunity from contempt is not
absolute when the prosecution makes a showing of need for information
the journalist possesses. Purportedly following our Delaney
decision, the court employed a balancing test, weighing the relative
importance of the prosecution' s interest in uncovering the information
and the news organization' s interest in keeping it concealed.
The court determined that the People had shown the potential
importance of the unpublished portions of the interview for the
criminal trial against DeSoto and the lack of alternative sources.
The court also determined that the concealment of the information
was of relatively less importance to the news organization, because
it was not protecting a confidential source. The court accordingly
upheld the trial court' s contempt order, denied the writ of
prohibition, and lifted the stay.
We granted review and further stayed enforcement of
the contempt order.
II. Discussion
The shield law, article I, section 2(b), enacted in
its constitutional form in 1980, provides that a newsperson "shall
not be adjudged in contempt . . . for refusing to disclose the
source of any information procured while so connected or employed
[as a newsperson] . . . or for refusing to disclose any unpublished
information obtained or prepared in gathering, receiving or processing
of information for communication to the public." "Stated
more simply, article I, section 2(b) protects a newsperson from
being adjudged in contempt for refusing to disclose either: (1)
unpublished information, or (2) the source of information, whether
published or unpublished." (Delaney, supra, 50 Cal.3d
at pp. 796-797, fn. omitted.)
The shield law is, by its own terms, absolute
rather than qualified in immunizing a newsperson from contempt
for revealing unpublished information obtained in the newsgathering
process. As we have explained: "' Since contempt is generally
the only effective remedy against a nonparty witness, the California
enactments [article I, section 2(b) and Evidence Code section
1070] grant such witnesses virtually absolute protection
against compelled disclosure.' [Citation.] We implicitly reached
the same conclusion in Delaney, supra, 50 Cal.3d 785,
in which we held that a criminal defendant' s federal constitutional
right to a fair trial may in some cases overcome a claim of immunity
under the state shield law. (Id., at p. 805.) If the shield
law itself provided for a balancing approach, i.e., a qualified
immunity, there would have been no need for us to turn to the
federal Constitution . . . . We find nothing in the shield law'
s language or history to suggest the immunity from contempt is
qualified such that it can be overcome by a showing of need for
unpublished information within the scope of the shield law."
(New York Times Co. v. Superior Court (1990) 51 Cal.3d
453, 461, fn. omitted.)
Nonetheless, as the above suggests, the protection of
the shield law must give way to a conflicting federal constitutional
right of a criminal defendant. As we stated in Delaney:
"[T]he shield law' s protection is overcome in a criminal
proceeding on a showing that nondisclosure would deprive the
defendant of his federal constitutional right to a fair trial.
Although this court has not decided a case involving the application
of the shield law in a criminal prosecution, the principle is
beyond question. [Citations.] The incorporation of the shield
law into the California Constitution cannot restrict a criminal
defendant' s federal constitutional right to a fair trial. [Citations.]
Such result would violate the supremacy clauses of the federal
and state Constitutions." (Delaney, supra, 50 Cal.3d
at pp. 805-806, fns. omitted.)
At issue in Delaney was whether a criminal defendant
could, pursuant to the right to a fair trial under the due process
clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution
(Delaney, supra, 50 Cal.3d at pp. 805-806, fn. 18), compel
the testimony of a newspaper reporter who had been a percipient
witness to his arrest. In Delaney, the court formulated
a two-stage inquiry to determine whether a court' s contempt
power could be invoked to enforce a criminal defendant' s subpoena
against a newsperson, the shield law notwithstanding. At the
threshold, the defendant must show "the reasonable possibility
that the information will materially assist his defense."
(Id., at p. 809.) If he makes this showing, then the court
is to proceed to the second stage of the inquiry and balance
the criminal defendant' s and the newsperson' s rights, considering
whether the unpublished information in question is confidential
or sensitive, the degree to which the information is important
to the criminal defendant, whether there is an alternative source
of unpublished information, and whether there are other circumstances
which may render moot the need to avoid disclosure. (Id.,
at pp. 810-812.) Applying this test to the facts of the case,
we concluded that the defendant was entitled to the information
because the reporter' s eyewitness testimony was not sensitive
or confidential, because such testimony would likely be determinative
of the outcome of the defendant' s case, and because there was
no meaningful alternative to that testimony. (Id., at
pp. 814-816.)
The Court of Appeal in the present case held that the
people' s "right to due process of law," incorporated
in article I, section 29, requires that the prosecution' s interest
in obtaining relevant evidence be balanced against the newsperson'
s immunity from contempt under the shield law in the same manner
as in Delaney. Of course, article I, section 29, is a
state constitutional provision, not a federal one, and no supremacy
clause issue is presented. But it is nonetheless the case that
both provisions have equal dignity as constituents of the state
Constitution. As such, the provision must be harmonized if possible
(see City and County of San Francisco v. County of San Mateo
(1995) 10 Cal.4th 554, 563) or, if there is a conflict between
the shield law and article I, section 29, then that conflict
must be resolved in some manner. The Court of Appeal found such
a conflict and held that Delaney provides the means for
resolving it.
The Court of Appeal' s holding, of course, presupposed
that there is a conflict between the shield law and article I,
section 29, in need of resolution. In order to determine whether
this is so, we must inquire into what was meant, or not meant,
by the phrase "the people . . . have the right to due process
of law" in article I, section 29. As stated, that constitutional
provision was part of Proposition 115, enacted by the voters
in June 1990, which made a number of changes to the Penal Code
and the criminal justice system. The provisions of Proposition
115 were reviewed at length in Raven v. Deukmejian (1990)
52 Cal.3d 336, 342-346. Entitled the "Crime Victims Justice
Reform Act," Proposition 115 included such provisions as
more expansive rules for allowing joinder of criminal defendants,
reciprocal discovery for the prosecution and the defense, voir
dire conducted initially by the court rather than by the parties,
augmentation of the felony murder and special circumstances,
statutes, and certain measures to discourage delays in bringing
cases to trial. Proposition 115 also included a provision mandating
that criminal defendants' constitutional rights not be construed
to be greater than those afforded under the United States Constitution,
a provision we held to be an unconstitutional revision of the
California Constitution. (Raven v. Deukmejian, supra,
52 Cal.3d at p. 355.)
Article I, section 29, as stated, adds to these specific
reform measures the statement: "In a criminal case, the
people of the State of California have the right to due process
of law and to a speedy and public trial." The term "due
process of law" is not defined.
The relationship between a prosecutorial right to obtain
relevant evidence and the various evidentiary privileges and
immunities of the press was not addressed in Proposition 115.
The closely related subject of the relationship between the right
to admit relevant evidence and such evidentiary privileges
and immunities was treated in an earlier anticrime initiative,
Proposition 8, enacted in June of 1982. Like Proposition 115,
Proposition 8 consisted of a number of reforms of the criminal
justice system, including provisions on victim' s restitution,
rules for granting bail, abolition of the diminished capacity
defense, enhancement of sentences for habitual criminals, and
curtailment of plea bargaining. (See Brosnahan v. Brown
(1982) 32 Cal.3d 236, 242-245.) The so-called "truth-in-evidence"
provision of Proposition 8, found at article I, section 28(d),
states: "Except as provided by statute hereafter enacted
by a two-thirds vote of the membership in each house of the Legislature,
relevant evidence shall not be excluded in any criminal proceeding,
including pretrial and post-conviction motions and hearings,
or in any trial or hearing of a juvenile for a criminal offense,
whether heard in juvenile or adult court. Nothing in this section
shall affect any existing statutory rule of evidence relating
to privilege or hearsay, or Evidence Code, Sections 352, 782
or 1103. Nothing in this section shall affect any existing statutory
or constitutional right of the press." (Italics added.)
There is no disputing that article I, section 28(d)'
s exemptions include the "right" to withhold unpublished
information obtained in the newsgathering process pursuant to
the protection of the shield law. The enactment of the shield
law predated the passage of Proposition 8, and therefore the
right derived from that law is an "existing . . . constitutional
right of the press" within the meaning of article I, section
28(d). Consequently, under the terms of article I, section 28(d),
however broadly the right to admit evidence is construed to include
the right to obtain such evidence, that right would not include
a right to compel a newsperson to surrender unpublished information
by invoking the court' s power of contempt. The question then
is whether article I, section 29 implicitly expanded the scope
of the prosecutor' s right to obtain evidence to permit what
was forbidden under article I, section 28(d).
We implicitly repudiated such an expansive reading of
article I, section 29 in Menendez v. Superior Court (1992)
3 Cal.4th 434, 456-457, footnote 18. That case involved the prosecution'
s access to audiotapes containing confidential material assertedly
protected by the defendants' psychotherapist-patient privilege.
The prosecution claimed "that the psychotherapist-patient
privilege must yield to their interest in successful criminal
prosecutions and their state constitutional right to due process
of law." (Ibid.) We rejected that argument. As we
stated: "[A]s a general matter at least, the privilege does
not appear to be ' trumped' by the People' s state constitutional
right to due process. By its very terms, the People' s ' right
to truth-in-evidence' under article I, section 28, subdivision
(d) of the California Constitution does not ' affect any existing
statutory rule of evidence relating to the privilege . . . .'
Implicit therein is a constitutional determination that the privilege
does not undermine the integrity or reliability of the truth-finding
function of legal proceedings. From that determination it appears
to follow that the privilege does not deny due process."
(Ibid.)
Similarly, under article I, section 28 (d), the People'
s "right to truth-in-evidence" does not affect "any
existing statutory or constitutional right of the press."
Implicit in this conclusion is a constitutional determination
that such rights, including that provided by the shield law,
"do[ ] not undermine the integrity or reliability of the
truth-finding function of legal proceedings. From that determination
it appears to follow that the [shield law] does not deny due
process." (Menendez v. Superior Court, supra, 3 Cal.4th
at p. 457, fn. 18.)
The Court of Appeal, in concluding to the contrary that
invocation of the shield law would deny due process to the People
in this case, attempted to distinguish Menendez as follows:
"The media exception in article I, section 28(d) is expressly
confined to ' this section,' i.e., section 28. Section 28(d)
addresses the right to present evidence at trial. To interpret
article I, section 28(d) as qualifying the People' s right to
due process is inconsistent with the reasoning of the court in
Delaney. Article I, section 28(d) applies to both the
prosecution and the defense. Hence, if it limits the prosecution'
s due process rights, it necessarily limits the defendant' s
rights as well. Although the holding in Delaney was based
on a federal due process claim, which article I, section 28(d)
cannot limit, the reasoning of the court was not based on the
supremacy of federal over state law but on a balance of competing
rights. Delaney did not hold the state constitutional
shield law must yield to the defendant' s federal constitutional
due process right as a matter of federal supremacy. It had to
yield because in the balance of competing interests, the defendant'
s federal due process rights outweighed the rights protected
by the shield law. In other words, the application of the shield
law in that case would undermine the integrity or reliability
of the truth-finding function. (Menendez v. Superior Court,
supra, 3 Cal.4th at p. 457, fn. 18.)"
The Court of Appeal misapprehended our reasoning both
in Delaney and in Menendez. In Delaney, we had to resolve
a conflict between a federal constitutional right and a state
constitutional right. The Delaney court concluded that
the nature of the federal due process right, in the context of
compelling witness testimony, is not so absolute as to preclude
a balancing of the respective rights if they conflict. But there
is no need to balance the two rights if they are not in conflict.
In Menendez we concluded that whatever "the people['
s] . . . right to due process of law" in article I, section
29 might mean, in light of article I, section 28(d), it specifically
does not mean a right of access to evidence in contravention
of previously existing evidentiary privileges and immunities,
which includes those given to the press. Therefore, there is
no conflict between the shield law and the subsequently enacted
people' s right to due process of law, and accordingly, no need
to engage in the balancing of interests prescribed by Delaney.
Our statement in Menendez does not conflict with our holding
in Delaney because the exemptions set forth in article
I, section 28(d) do not affect a criminal defendant' s federal
constitutional rights to obtain evidence, which was at issue
in the latter case.
To state the matter in other terms, "' It is well
settled . . . that a general provision is controlled by one that
is special, the latter being treated as an exception to the former.
A specific provision relating to a particular subject will govern
in respect to that subject, as against a general provision, although
the latter, standing alone, would be broad enough to include
the subject to which the more particular provision relates.'
"(San Francisco Taxpayers Assn. v. Board of Supervisors
(1992) 2 Cal.4th 571, 577; see also Salazar v. Eastin (1995)
9 Cal.4th 836, 857.) This principle applies whether the specific
provision was passed before or after the general enactment. (Warne
v. Harkness (1963) 60 Cal.2d 579, 588.) In the present case,
even if we were to assume that the people' s right to due process
of law encompasses a right to obtain and admit evidence, the
precise content of that right, and the particular exemptions
that apply to it, would be presumably congruent with the specific
truth-in-evidence provision found in article I, section 28(d).
It is doubtful indeed that the generally worded section 29 impliedly
permits what section 28(d) explicitly precludes, i.e., using
the prosecutorial need for relevant evidence as a justification
for overriding existing evidentiary privileges and rights of
the press.
Moreover, the rule that the general law is governed
by the specific also applies to the relationship between the
shield law itself, article I, section 2(b), and the people' s
right to due process. The former specifically provides an absolute
immunity from contempt for journalists who refuse to furnish
unpublished information. We presume that this specific provision
was not altered or partially repealed by the general recognition
of the people' s right to due process later added to the Constitution.
The presumption that a specific governs a general enactment
may, of course, be rebutted by evidence of a contrary intent
of the Legislature or, as in this case, of the electorate. (Warne
v. Harkness, supra, 60 Cal.2d at p. 588.) No such contrary
intent appears. Nothing in the brief language of article I, section
29 itself evinces such intent. Nor do the pertinent ballot arguments
support such a meaning.[FOOTNOTE 3]
The Court of Appeal' s holding appears to have been
based on the assumption that the people' s right to due process
of law must be the exact equivalent to a criminal defendant'
s right to due process, and that therefore the Delaney
test should apply as much to the former as the latter, article
I, section 28(d) notwithstanding. Nothing in the language or
legislative history of article I, section 29 supports this view.
Nor does anything in our case law. In some cases, the use of
the term "due process of law" in connection with the
prosecution was simply another way of formulating the truism
that the state has a strong interest in prosecuting criminals,
which must be weighed against the criminal defendant' s assertion
of due process rights. (See Stein v. New York (1952)
346 U.S. 156, 197, overruled on other grounds in Jackson v.
Denno (1964) 378 U.S. 368, 391; Snyder v. Massachusetts
(1934) 291 U.S. 97, 122.) Elsewhere, particularly in California
cases, the prosecution' s right to due process has been invoked
to affirm its right to be heard in various preliminary or collateral
proceedings and to oppose a defendant' s claim of right to be
heard ex parte and in camera. (See People v. Huston (1989)
210 Cal.App.3d 192, 212; Department of Corrections v. Superior
Court (Ayala) (1988) 199 Cal.App.3d 1087, 1092-1093; People
v. Dennis (1986) 177 Cal.App.3d 863, 873; People v. Sahagun
(1979) 89 Cal.App.3d 1, 25-26.) The prosecution' s right to due
process, as far as we can determine, has not been recognized
to encompass the breach of established evidentiary privileges
and immunities, and there is no reason to suppose article I,
section 29 intended that meaning.
The People, in contrast to the Court of Appeal and amicus
curiae California District Attorneys Association, do not assert
article I, section 29 as the primary justification for qualifying
the newsperson' s privilege. Rather, based on the history and
ballot arguments of the shield law, they argue that the main
purpose of the law is the protection of confidential sources,
and when, as in this case, no confidential sources are involved,
the shield law should yield in some cases to effective criminal
prosecution.
As we made clear in Delaney, supra, 50 Cal.3d
at page 798, the shield law applies to unpublished information
whether confidential or not: The provision "states plainly
that a newsperson shall not be adjudged in contempt for ' refusing
to disclose any unpublished information.' "(Italics in
Delaney.) Thus, we rejected the argument that "article
I, section 2(b) applies only to unpublished information obtained
in confidence by a newsperson. Such a construction might
be possible if the voters had used the phrase ' unpublished information'
without the modifier ' any.' They did not do so. The use of the
word ' any' makes clear that article I, section 2(b) applies
to all information, regardless of whether it was obtained in
confidence." (Ibid.) Moreover, the meaning of "'
unpublished information' "was defined in broad, nonrestrictive
terms: "' As used in this subdivision, ' unpublished information'
includes information not disseminated to the public by the person
from whom disclosure is sought, whether or not related information
has been disseminated and includes, but is not limited to, all
notes, outtakes, photographs, tapes or other data of whatever
sort not itself disseminated to the public through a medium of
communication, whether or not published information based upon
or related to such material has been disseminated.' Nowhere in
this broad definition is there an explicit or implied restriction
of article I, section 2(b) to confidential information."
(Id., at p. 799.)
Thus, it is beyond dispute that the information sought
by the prosecution in the present case, unbroadcast portions
of an interview of DeSoto by a newsperson, is "unpublished
information" within the meaning of article I, section 2
(b) and is thereby protected by that constitutional provision.
Nor, as discussed above, is there any question that that protection,
by the terms of article I, section 2(b), is absolute, and may
be overcome only by a countervailing federal constitutional right,
as in Delaney. (New York Times Co. v. Superior Court,
supra, 51 Cal.3d at p. 461.) As explained above, article
I, section 29 is not such a right.
Nor is the interpretation of the shield law to vigorously
protect unpublished though nonconfidential information in any
sense irrational. "A comprehensive reporter' s immunity
provision, in addition to protecting confidential or sensitive
sources, has the effect of safeguarding ' [t]he autonomy of the
press.' "(O' Neill v. Oakgrove Constr. (1988) 71
N.Y.2d 521, 526 [528 N.Y.S.2d 1, 3 . . .] [construing a similar
state constitutional provision].) . . . [¶ ] The threat
to press autonomy is particularly clear in light of the press'
s unique role in society. As the institution that gathers and
disseminates information, journalists often serve as the eyes
and ears of the public. [Citations.] Because journalists not
only gather a great deal of information, but publicly identify
themselves as possessing it, they are especially prone to be
called upon by litigants seeking to minimize the costs of obtaining
needed information." (Delaney, supra, 50 Cal.3d 785,
821 (conc. opn. of Mosk, J.); see also Matter of Woodhaven
Lumber (N.J. 1995) 589 A.2d 135, 143; United States v.
Cuthbertson (3d Cir. 1980) 630 F.2d 139, 147.) The threat
to the autonomy of the press is posed as much by a criminal prosecutor
as by other litigants.
Thus, there is nothing illogical in interpreting "the
people[' s] . . . right to due process" not to include
the right to compel the press through the sanctions of contempt
- incarceration and substantial fines - to supply unpublished
information obtained in the newsgathering process. The fact that
the assertion of this immunity might lead to the inability of
the prosecution to gain access to all the evidence it desires
does not mean that a prosecutor' s right to due process is violated,
any more than the assertion of established evidentiary privileges
against the prosecution would be a violation. (See Jones v.
Superior Court (1962) 58 Cal.2d 56, 60-61 [prosecutorial
discovery limited by privilege against self-incrimination and
attorney-client privilege]; Izazaga v. Superior Court
(1991) 54 Cal.3d 356, 369 [suggesting the same under Proposition
115' s reciprocal discovery provisions].)
The People cite in support of their position the following
passage in Delaney: "Although the reporters concede
that a criminal defendant has a constitutional right to a fair
trial, they contend, without citing any authority, that the prosecution
does not have a similar right to obtain information subject to
the shield law. Of course, the prosecutor vigorously disagrees.
There is authority which suggests that a state may have
a right sufficient to overcome a claim of immunity under the
shield law. (Mitchell [v. Superior Court (1984)]
37 Cal.3d 268, 278; Branzburg [v. Hayes (1972)] 408 U.S.
665, 700; United States v. Nixon [(1974)] 418 U.S. 683,
709.) In light of our determination, however, that Delaney is
entitled to the reporters' testimony, the question as to the
state' s right to the same evidence is rendered moot. We therefore
need not, and do not, decide whether the prosecution in a criminal
proceeding can have a constitutional interest sufficient to require
the disclosure of information otherwise protected by the shield
law." (Delaney, supra, 50 Cal.3d at p. 816, fn. 34,
italics in original.)
Although we thus posed the question at issue in this
case in Delaney, we did not decide it. On closer examination,
none of the authority cited by Delaney (supra, 50 Cal.3d
at p. 816, fn. 34) as suggesting "a [constitutional] right
sufficient to overcome a claim of immunity under the shield law"
on the part of the prosecution in fact supports that position,
for none of those cases addressed the shield law. In Mitchell
v. Superior Court (1984) 37 Cal.3d 268, we considered whether
a newsperson who is a defendant in a libel suit can be compelled
to reveal confidential information during the discovery process.
As we made clear, the shield law was not at issue; rather, because
newspersons and a news organization were parties in the case,
they could be subject to sanctions other than contempt for failing
to reveal the requested information, including entry of judgment
against them. (Id., at p. 274.) Therefore, our analysis
was based on an implied First Amendment shield against such sanctions
rather than the explicit immunity from contempt found in our
state Constitution. (Id., at pp. 274-276.) We concluded
that a newsperson who was a party to litigation was eligible
for a limited protection from civil discovery, subject to a balancing
test similar to the one later articulated in Delaney. (Id.,
at pp. 279-283.) As we made clear subsequently in New York
Times Co. v. Superior Court, supra, 51 Cal.3d at page 461,
a newsperson not a party to civil litigation is subject to "virtually
absolute immunity" for refusing to testify or otherwise
surrender unpublished information.
In Branzburg v. Hayes (1972) 408 U.S. 665, the
United States Supreme Court held that the First Amendment did
not provide a newsperson with a privilege from testifying in
front of a grand jury in a criminal case. The Branzburg court
acknowledged, however, that "state legislatures [are] free,
within First Amendment limits, to fashion their own standards
in light of the conditions and problems with respect to relations
between law-enforcement officials and the press in their own
area." (Id., at p. 706.) As we recognized in Delaney,
supra, 50 Cal.3d at page 796, the current version of the
shield law was adopted "apparently in response to Branzburg,"
and, following Branzburg' s dictum, expanded the scope of
the newsperson' s protection from disclosure beyond what the
First Amendment provides. The holding in Branzburg is
therefore inapposite to the present case.
In United States v. Nixon (1974) 418 U.S. 683,
a special prosecutor sought from the President of the United
States audiotapes of certain confidential communications. The
President asserted an executive privilege based in part on the
need to protect communication between high level government officials
and in part on the separation of powers doctrine, which gives
the executive branch some degree of autonomy from the judicial
branch. The United States Supreme Court, while acknowledging
an executive privilege, held that it was not absolute, given
the importance of furthering the workings of the criminal justice
system. As the court stated: "The very integrity of the
judicial system and public confidence in the system depend on
full disclosure of all the facts, within the framework of the
rules of evidence. To ensure that justice is done, it is imperative
to the function of courts that compulsory process be available
for the production of evidence needed either by the prosecution
or by the defense." (Id., at p. 709.) The court recognized
that "[t]he right to the production of all evidence at a
criminal trial . . . has constitutional dimensions. The Sixth
Amendment explicitly confers upon every defendant in a criminal
trial the right ' to be confronted with the witnesses against
him' and ' to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses
in his favor.' Moreover, the Fifth Amendment also guarantees
that no person shall be deprived of liberty without due process
of law. It is the manifest duty of the courts to vindicate those
guarantees, and to accomplish that it is essential that all relevant
and admissible evidence be produced." (Id., at p.
711.) The court elsewhere referred to the conflict between the
asserted executive privilege "and the constitutional need
for relevant evidence in criminal trials." (Id.,
at p. 712, fn. 19.)
The Nixon court acknowledged that the need for
"full disclosure of all the facts" existed side-by-side
with well-established evidentiary privileges "designed to
protect weighty and legitimate competing interests. Thus, the
Fifth Amendment to the Constitution provides that no man ' shall
be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself.'
And, generally, an attorney or a priest may not be required to
disclose what has been revealed in professional confidence. These
and other interests are recognized in law by privileges against
forced disclosure, established in the Constitution, by statute,
or at common law. (418 U.S. at pp. 709-710.) But as the court
further stated: "Whatever their origins, these exceptions
to the demand for every man' s evidence are not lightly created
nor expansively construed, for they are in derogation of the
search for truth." (Id., at p. 710.) The court thus
concluded that the executive privilege was a qualified one that
had to be weighed against the "the fair administration of
criminal justice." (Id., at pp. 711-712.) When the
privilege is "based only on the generalized interest in
confidentiality," rather than specific national security
concerns, "it cannot prevail over the fundamental demands
of due process of law and the fair administration of criminal
justice." (Id., at p. 713.)
Nixon does not support the People' s position.
Its significance was recently clarified in Swidler & Berlin
v. United States (1998) 524 U.S. 399, [118 S.Ct. 2081]. In
that case, the court rejected the argument that the attorney-client
privilege had to be narrowly construed as not surviving a client'
s death - contrary to precedent - in order to promote "the
paramount judicial goal of truth seeking." (524 U.S. at
p. __ [118 S.Ct. at p. 2087].) The court found the prosecution'
s reliance on Nixon and Branzburg in support of its position
misplaced. These cases "dealt with the creation of privileges
not recognized by the common law whereas [the attorney-client
privilege is] one of the oldest recognized privileges in the
law." (Id. at p. ___ [118 S.Ct. at pp. 2087-2088].)
And unlike in Nixon and Branzburg, the court was being
asked not simply to construe the privilege "but to narrow
it, contrary to the weight of the existing body of caselaw,"
and declined to do so. (524 U.S. at p. ___ [118 S.Ct. at p. 2088].)
Thus, Swidler & Berlin clarifies that the "federal
constitutional need for relevant evidence in criminal trials"
recognized in Nixon does not alter the scope of privileges
and immunities well established in the law.
In this case, we are not concerned with the judicial
creation of a new privilege. Rather, the Attorney General asks
us to narrow the shield law, an evidentiary immunity found in
the state constitution, in a manner contrary to its express terms,
because federal due process compels such a result. Swidler
& Berlin makes clear that there is no such constitutional
compulsion. Nor may we convert an absolute into a qualified immunity
merely because it is in accord with a particular conception of
the proper balance between journalists' rights and prosecutor'
s prerogatives. Thus, the absoluteness of the immunity embodied
in the shield law only yields to a conflicting federal or, perhaps,
state constitutional right. As explained, there is no such conflicting
right presented in this case.
III.Disposition
For all the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the Court
of Appeal is reversed and the cause remanded to that court with
directions to cause issuance of a peremptory writ of prohibition
as prayed.
MOSK, J.
WE CONCUR:GEORGE, C. J., KENNARD, J.,
BAXTER, J., and CHIN, J.
CONCURRING OPINION BY BROWN, J.
Although I concur with the result and the bulk of the
majority' s reasoning, I do not agree with the majority' s analysis
of the alleged conflict between California Constitution, article
1, sections 28, subdivision (d)[FOOTNOTE 1] and 29. (See maj.
opn., ante, at p. 13.) The principle that a specific provision
governs over a general provision only applies if there is an
actual conflict between the two provisions. No actual
conflict exists here. The media exception in section 28, subdivision
(d), by its terms, is confined to "this section" and
does not expressly preclude a more general provision from narrowing
the scope of a newsperson' s immunity. This qualified language
should not insulate the media exception from future modifications
or alterations, especially given that the electorate could have
expressly done so. (See, e.g., § § 27, 30, subd. (a).)
Indeed, nothing in the pertinent ballot measures even suggests
such an intent. Because this aspect of the majority' s analysis
is both suspect and unnecessary to its holding and may affect
other constitutional provisions with clauses analogous to section
28, subdivision (d) (see, e.g., § § 7, subd. (a), 24,
31, subds. (c)-(e); art. 4, § 5, subd. (d), art. 5, §
14, subd. (d), art. 10B, § 15, art. 13D, § 1, art.
16, § § 5, 6, 16, subd. (c)), I decline to adopt it.
BROWN, J.
I CONCUR: WERDEGAR, J.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: FOOTNOTE(S):::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
FN1. All references to articles hereafter will be to
articles of the California Constitution unless otherwise indicated.
FN2. The shield law is found in almost identical versions
in both the state Constitution and the Evidence Code. For the
sake of convenience, and because the crux of the case is the
relation between various state constitutional provisions, we
will generally refer solely to the constitutional provision.
FN3. The only portion of the ballot argument in favor
of Proposition 115 that commented even obliquely on article I,
section 29, focused on the "speedy . . . trial" portion
of that section. The ballot argument stated that Proposition
115' s "NIGHTSTALKER COMPONENT conforms California' s criminal
law to federal procedures, bringing California back into the
mainstream of American criminal justice. This will mean major
time savings for the typical California criminal proceeding.
It took an incredible four years to bring the ' Nightstalker'
to justice! Imagine how much that costs you, the taxpayer, and
how much anguish it caused his surviving victims through multiple,
drawn out court appearances." (Ballot Pamp., argument in
favor of Prop. 115 as presented to the voters, Primary Elec.
(June 5, 1990) p. 34.) Nowhere is there mention of the right
to due process, nor any suggestion that it might alter existing
evidentiary privileges and immunities. Indeed, those arguing
in favor of Proposition 115 claimed that its opponents were "the
same people who opposed the ' Victims Bill Of Rights [Proposition
8] . . . ,' "(Ballot Pamp., supra, at p. 34) thereby
implying, if anything, that Proposition 115 was consistent with
Proposition 8 and not intended to alter it.
FN1. All references are to article 1 of the California
Constitution unless otherwise indicated.
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