Supreme Court of California Justia
Citation 54 Cal. 4th 270, 278 P.3d 259, 142 Cal. Rptr. 3d 268
Magness v. Super. Ct.


Filed 6/7/12

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA

CHRISTOPHER MAGNESS,
Petitioner,
S194928
v.
Ct.App. 3 C066601
THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
SACRAMENTO COUNTY,
Sacramento County
Super. Ct. No. 10F04832
Respondent;
THE PEOPLE,
Real Party in Interest.
____________________________________)

We granted review to decide whether a person standing in the driveway of a
residence who uses a remote control to open a motorized garage door has entered
the residence within the meaning of the burglary statute. For the reasons that
follow, we hold that using a remote control to open a garage door does not
constitute an entry into the residence. On these facts, defendant may be charged
with attempted burglary, but he cannot be charged with a completed burglary.
I.
Defendant Christopher Magness was charged in a felony complaint with
attempted first degree burglary of an inhabited dwelling (Pen. Code, §§ 664, 459,
460, subd. (a); further undesignated statutory references are to this code) and
1



second degree burglary of an automobile (§§ 459, 460, subd. (b)). Deputy Sheriff
Mark Kuzmich testified at the preliminary hearing that on the evening of July 24,
2010, Timothy Loop was at home with his wife when he heard the garage door of
their house opening. Loop ran into the garage and saw defendant standing near the
end of the driveway. When defendant fled, Loop chased him on a bicycle and saw
him enter a residence. Loop summoned Deputy Kuzmich, who arrested defendant.
Loop and Deputy Kuzmich returned to Loop‟s house and found the remote
control for the garage door near the end of the driveway where defendant had been
standing. Loop had locked the remote control in his car, which was parked in the
driveway. The door seal on one of the car‟s windows had been “peeled back a
little bit” and the window “was down a couple of inches.”
The prosecutor at the preliminary hearing argued that defendant had
committed a completed burglary of the residence. The magistrate agreed,
reasoning that opening the garage door constituted an entry into the residence. The
prosecutor filed an information charging defendant with a completed residential
burglary, and the superior court denied defendant‟s motion to reduce the charge to
attempted burglary. The Court of Appeal granted defendant‟s petition for writ of
prohibition, ruling that the evidence adduced at the preliminary hearing established
no more than an attempted residential burglary because defendant did not enter the
garage. We granted the prosecution‟s petition for review.
II.
A person who “enters any house . . . with intent to commit . . . larceny or
any felony is guilty of burglary.” (§ 459.) It has long been settled that the slightest
entry by any part of the body or an instrument is sufficient: “As for the entry, any
the least degree of it, with any part of the body, or with an instrument held in the
hand, is sufficient: as, to step over the threshold, to put a hand or a hook in at a
window to draw out goods, or a pistol to demand one‟s money, are all of them
2

burglarious entries.” (4 Blackstone‟s Commentaries 227, fn. omitted.) This court
has recognized that “a burglary may be committed by using an instrument to enter
a building — whether that instrument is used solely to effect entry, or to
accomplish the intended larceny or felony as well. Thus, using a tire iron to pry
open a door, using a tool to create a hole in a store wall, or using an auger to bore a
hole in a corn crib is a sufficient entry to support a conviction of burglary.”
(People v. Davis (1998) 18 Cal.4th 712, 717-718 (Davis).)
For an entry to occur, a part of the body or an instrument must penetrate the
outer boundary of the building. (People v. Valencia (2002) 28 Cal.4th 1, 10-11
(Valencia).) “In most instances, of course, the outer boundary of a building for
purposes of burglary is self-evident. Thus, in general, the roof, walls, doors, and
windows constitute parts of a building‟s outer boundary, the penetration of which
is sufficient for entry.” (Id. at p. 11.)
In People v. Osegueda (1987) 163 Cal.App.3d Supp. 25 (Osegueda), for
example, the court found that the defendant had entered an electronics store for
purposes of burglary by using tools to create a small hole in the wall. Osegueda
and his four accomplices were arrested at 2:30 a.m. outside the electronics store.
“ „[A] three-foot by four-foot section of the wall had been removed and a small six
by four to five inch hole existed in the inner wall leading into Rees Electronics.
One could see into Rees Electronics through the hole.‟ ” (Id. at p. Supp. 28.)
“Instruments were discovered adjacent” to the hole. (Id. at p. Supp. 29.) The
Court of Appeal held that this was sufficient evidence to support the jury‟s implicit
finding that “the air space of Rees Electronics was indeed penetrated” and thus the
defendant had entered the store. (Id. at p. Supp. 32.)
The Court of Appeal in People v. Ravenscroft (1988) 198 Cal.App.3d 639
(Ravenscroft), applied this “air space test” to hold that the defendant had entered
two banks for purposes of burglary by inserting a stolen automatic teller machine
3

(ATM) card into two ATMs that were “mounted inside the banks and secured flush
with the exterior walls of those banks.” (Ravenscroft, at p. 641.) However, we
disapproved the decision in Ravenscroft in Davis, supra, 18 Cal.4th at page 722,
footnote 5, in which we held that inserting a forged check into a chute in the walk-
up window of a check-cashing business did not constitute an entry for purposes of
burglary. (Id. at p. 722.) Although we agreed with the Ravenscroft court “that the
ATM card in that case was inserted into the air space of the ATM” (Davis, at
p. 722, fn. 5), we concluded that this was not an entry for purposes of burglary
because neither that act nor inserting the forged check into the chute in Davis
“violates the occupant‟s possessory interest in the building as does using a tool to
reach into a building and remove property.” (Davis, at p. 722.) We explained:
“Inserting a stolen ATM card into the designated opening in an ATM is markedly
different from the types of entry traditionally covered by the burglary statute, as is
passing a forged check through a chute in a walk-up window. In each situation the
defendant causes an object to enter the air space of a building, but it is not apparent
that the burglary statute was meant to encompass such conduct. It is important to
establish reasonable limits as to what constitutes an entry by means of an
instrument for purposes of the burglary statute. Otherwise the scope of the
burglary statute could be expanded to absurd proportions.” (Id. at p. 719.)
Our opinion in Davis quoted our observation in People v. Gauze (1975) 15
Cal.3d 709 that “ „[a] burglary remains an entry which invades a possessory right
in a building.‟ . . . „Burglary laws are based primarily upon a recognition of the
dangers to personal safety created by the usual burglary situation — the danger that
the intruder will harm the occupants in attempting to perpetrate the intended crime
or to escape and the danger that the occupants will in anger or panic react violently
to the invasion, thereby inviting more violence. The laws are primarily designed,
then, not to deter the trespass and the intended crime, which are prohibited by other
4

laws, so much as to forestall the germination of a situation dangerous to personal
safety.‟ Section 459, in short, is aimed at the danger caused by the unauthorized
entry itself.” (Davis, supra, 18 Cal.4th at p. 721, quoting People v. Gauze, 15
Cal.3d at pp. 714, 715.)
Subsequently, the Court of Appeal in People v. Calderon (2007) 158
Cal.App.4th 137 (Calderon) held that kicking in the door of a residence constituted
an entry for purposes of burglary. The defendant and two accomplices went to the
victim‟s home to collect a debt. One of the defendant‟s accomplices “kicked in the
victim‟s door, but before anyone in the group had gone inside, the victim came
running out. Defendant tried to stab the victim in the chest, but the victim grabbed
the knife blade; thus, he was slashed in the hand instead.” (Id. at p. 139.)
The trial court in Calderon instructed the jury that “ „[u]nder the law of
burglary, a person enters a building if some part of his . . . body or some object
under his control penetrates the area inside the building‟s outer boundary.‟ (Italics
added.)” (Calderon, supra, 158 Cal.App.4th at p. 142.) This instruction was
correct. As we stated in Valencia, supra, 28 Cal.4th at page 8, entry for purposes
of burglary “may be effected by the intruder or by an instrument employed by the
intruder, whether used „solely to effect entry, or to accomplish the intended larceny
or felony as well.‟ [Citation.]” We added that “ „[a]ny kind of entry, complete or
partial, . . . will‟ suffice. [Citation.] All that is needed is entry „inside the
premises‟. . . .” (Id. at p. 13.)
Calderon argued on appeal that the instruction “erroneously allowed the jury
to convict him of burglary on the theory that the penetration of the victim‟s home
by the victim‟s own door constituted the necessary entry.” (Calderon, supra, 158
Cal.App.4th at p. 139.) But the suggestion that the door itself could constitute an
instrument that the defendant used to enter the house came not from the trial
court‟s instructions, but from the prosecutor‟s argument. The prosecutor had
5

argued that the defendant entered the victim‟s house when his accomplice kicked in
the door, either because the accomplice‟s foot “ „penetrated the outer boundary of
that door‟ ” or because the door was an instrument under the accomplice‟s control
that penetrated the outer boundary of the building. (Id. at pp. 141-142.) Defense
counsel did not agree “ „that the door going inside the residence is sufficient in and
of itself for a burglary‟ ” and argued that the defendant should not be convicted
because it was unclear whether the accomplice‟s foot had penetrated the outer
boundary of the residence. (Id. at p. 142.) The Court of Appeal affirmed the
judgment, ruling that “the trial court correctly instructed the jury on the „entry‟
element of burglary” because “kicking in the door of a home is a sufficient entry to
constitute burglary.” (Id. at p. 145.)
The Court of Appeal in Calderon reached the correct result. Just as “[i]t
reasonably could be inferred [in Osegueda] that, in creating the hole in the wall,
some portion of the tools had entered the building” (Davis, supra, 18 Cal.4th at
p. 717), it reasonably could be inferred in Calderon that, in kicking the door and
causing it to open, some portion of the accomplice‟s foot had crossed the outer
boundary of the residence. (Accord, Paulley v. Com. (Ky. 2010) 323 S.W.3d 715,
722-723 [sufficient entry for burglary when the door of a residence had “opened
slightly when it was kicked,” so the defendant‟s “foot could have crossed the
threshold when the door was ajar”]; State v. Adorno (1997) 45 Conn.App. 187, 195
[695 A.2d 6] [“Common sense dictates that it would be reasonable to conclude
that, in using the force necessary to kick open a locked door, the momentum would
carry the defendant or one of his companions into the victim‟s apartment.”].) The
jury in Calderon was correctly instructed, and there was sufficient evidence to
support a finding that the accomplice‟s foot had entered the residence. But the
court in Calderon erred in reasoning that the door itself was an instrument under
6

the defendant‟s control that penetrated the outer boundary of the building
(Calderon, supra, 158 Cal.App.4th at p. 145), as we explain below.
The court in Calderon observed that our opinion in Davis “focused on
whether the insertion of the object into a building violated an interest that the
burglary statute is intended to protect, such as the occupant‟s possessory interest in
the building.” (Calderon, supra, 158 Cal.App.4th at p. 145.) The Calderon court
then stated emphatically: “Surely kicking in the door to a home invades the
possessory interests in that home!” (Ibid.) The court noted that “kicking in a door
creates some of the same dangers to personal safety that are created in the usual
burglary situation — the occupants are likely to react to the invasion with anger,
panic, and violence.” (Ibid.) While admitting that “the door is doing what a door
is supposed to do,” the court found it significant that “it is doing so under the
control of an invader, not the householder.” (Ibid.)
The Calderon court was correct that kicking in a door invades the
occupant‟s possessory interest and is likely to provoke a violent response. To
constitute entry for purposes of the burglary statute, however, these effects must be
caused by a physical entry into the building. (People v. Gauze, supra, 15 Cal.3d at
p. 714 [“A burglary remains an entry which invades a possessory right in a
building.”].) These same dangers could be created by a perpetrator who stood
outside a house and threatened to set fire to the building unless the occupants
opened the door. The occupants might well open the door and react with anger,
panic, or violence, but the perpetrator would not have entered the house for
purposes of burglary.
The court in Calderon conflated Davis‟s inquiry into what kinds of physical
entry implicate the interests underlying the burglary statute with the threshold
inquiry into whether a physical entry has occurred at all. It is beyond cavil that
there must be a physical entry for a burglary to occur. (13 Am.Jur.2d (2011)
7

Burglary, § 16, p. 232 [“Entry is an indispensable element in the crime of burglary
as it is understood at common law.”]; accord, People v. Davis (1972) 3 Ill.App.3d
738, 739 [279 N.E.2d 179] [“Obviously, the essence of the crime [of burglary] is
unlawful entry . . . .”]; State v. O’Leary (1954) 31 N.J.Super. 411, 416 [107 A.2d
13] [“Entry is an indispensable element to the commission of the crime” of
burglary.].) The defendant in the classic case of Walker v. State (1879) 63 Ala. 49,
50, committed burglary by using an auger to bore a hole in the bottom of a corn
crib. The Supreme Court of Alabama acknowledged that boring a hole in the corn
crib certainly constituted a breaking, but recognized if “an entry is not effected,
burglary has not been committed.” (Id. at p. 51, italics added.) The court held that
the defendant had used an instrument to enter the corn crib when the auger “was
intruded into the crib.” (Id. at p. 52.) In People v. Nible (1988) 200 Cal.App.3d
838, 845, the Court of Appeal held that “when a screen which forms the outer
barrier of a protected structure is penetrated, an entry has been made for purposes
of the burglary statute.” We relied upon Nible to hold in People v. Valencia, supra,
28 Cal.4th at page 11, that “the penetration of” “a building‟s outer boundary . . . is
sufficient for entry.” As these cases show, the requirement of entry is not difficult
to satisfy; the slightest penetration will suffice. But without an entry, no burglary
has occurred.
The Attorney General‟s argument that causing the garage door to open
constitutes entering the house for purposes of burglary confuses the discarded
common law requirement of a breaking with an entry. “At common law, burglary
was defined to be „a breaking and entering of the mansion-house of another in the
night, with the intent to commit some felony within the same, whether such
felonious intent be executed or not.‟ [Citation.]” (People v. Barry (1892) 94 Cal.
481, 482.) Opening a door constituted a breaking at common law: “No more is
needed . . . than the opening of a door or window . . . .” (Perkins & Boyce,
8

Criminal Law (3d ed. 1982) Burglary, § 1, p. 247 (Perkins & Boyce); 3 Wharton‟s
Criminal Law (15th ed. 1995) Burglary, § 318, pp. 225-226 (Wharton).)
But a breaking alone is not sufficient to constitute burglary; the defendant
must also enter. “While a breaking . . . is indispensable to common-law burglary, it
is not sufficient unless there is also an entry.” (Perkins & Boyce, supra, § 1,
pp. 252-253, fn. omitted.) “At common law, a defendant must enter as well as
break into the dwelling house of another.” (Wharton, supra, § 321, p. 246.)
“[T]here is an entry when the defendant, after opening a closed door, steps across
the threshold . . . or when, in the course of pushing open a closed door or raising a
closed window, his finger or hand happens to pass the line of the threshold or to
pass through the opening.” (Id., § 322, pp. 247-248; see 3 LaFave, Substantive
Criminal Law (2d ed. 2003) Burglary, § 21.1, pp. 205-211.)
In California, the requirement of a breaking has long been eliminated from
our burglary statute. (People v. Barry, supra, 94 Cal. at p. 482.) Here, defendant
may well have committed a common law breaking by using the remote control to
open the garage door. But whether or not he committed a breaking, he did not
commit burglary because he did not enter the residence. Nothing penetrated the
outer boundary of the residence. There is no allegation, for example, that
defendant reached under the bottom of the garage door with his hand or a tool. (Cf.
People v. Moore (1994) 31 Cal.App.4th 489, 490 & fn. 4 [sufficient entry where
tire iron penetrated screen door of residence and tip of tire iron penetrated the plane
of the door itself].) The facts here are conceptually no different than if a would-be
intruder were to approach an unlocked sliding glass door on the back patio of a
residence and open it. Assuming the sliding door is the interior pane of a double-
pane frame, sliding it open would cause the door to displace the air inside the
residence. If the would-be intruder were to stop before any part of his body or any
instrument under his control crossed the door‟s threshold, then no burglary would
9

have occurred. (Accord, Price v. Com. (1908) 129 Ky. 716, 718 [112 S.W. 855] [no
burglary when the defendant broke the seal on the door of a railroad car and slid
the door “back a little,” but then closed the door and left when a train approached,
because the evidence failed to show “the slightest entry of the car”].) A defendant
who opens a door but does not enter the structure may be charged with attempted
burglary, but not with a completed burglary.
Decisions from other jurisdictions are in accord, and our research has
disclosed no case that has upheld a conviction of burglary where there was no
physical entry of the structure. The defendant in Galemore v. State (1933) 124
Tex.Crim. 77, 78 [61 S.W.2d 519, 519-520] was observed “coming over the fence
into the garden; [the defendant] went to the garage, opened the door, looked in, and
closed that door. He then went to a feed barn, opened the door, looked in, and
closed that door; he then went to the chicken house, opened the door to it, and
looked in.” The homeowner then detained the defendant at gunpoint. The court
held that there was no burglary, because “the offense is not complete unless there is
an „entry‟ of some kind into the building charged to have been burglarized . . . .”
(124 Tex.Crim. at p. 79.) The court noted that the defendant “at no time did
anything more than open the doors to the several houses and look in. There is no
evidence that he went into either building, or reached in with his hand as if to take
anything therefrom.” (Ibid.) Thus, the court concluded that “at no time did [the
defendant] make any kind of „entry‟ into any one of the three houses.” (Ibid.; see
Mason v. State (Tex.Crim.App. 1907) 100 S.W. 383, 384 [no entry when defendant
broke store window but was apprehended before reaching into building].)
In sum, something that is outside must go inside for an entry to occur. This
has been true in every case to our knowledge where a completed burglary has been
found, including Osegueda, Valencia, Calderon, and other decisions cited above.
A person, a foot, a hand, or a tool can “enter” a house. A door, however, marks the
10

boundary between outside and inside. Here, even assuming that the garage door
opened inward in some fashion, the door did not go from the outside to the inside
of the house. The garage door was never outside the house; it formed part of the
house‟s outer boundary.
The Attorney General contends that the position we adopt would lead to
absurd results. As an example, she says it would be absurd to find a burglary if an
intruder “uses a glass cutter to create a hole in the window and any portion of the
glass cutter crosses the threshold,” but no burglary if the same intruder “uses a
laser to cut a hole in [the window], causing glass to fall into the home.” We
express no view as to whether use of a laser to cut a hole that causes glass to fall
into a home would constitute burglary. (Cf. Davis, supra, 18 Cal.4th at p. 719.)
But we see nothing more absurd in the Attorney General‟s example, taken at face
value, than in the observation that no burglary would have occurred in Valencia,
supra, 28 Cal.4th at pages 12-13, had the defendant removed the window screen
but not penetrated into the area behind it, or that no burglary would have occurred
on the facts in Osegueda, supra, 163 Cal.App.3d at page Supp. 32, had the jury
concluded that no instrument had crossed the outer boundary of the electronics
store.
There is no question that “an intruder‟s use of a garage door opener to open
a garage door violates the occupant‟s possessory interest and fosters a situation that
can be extremely dangerous to personal safety.” But not all conduct that implicates
the interests underlying the burglary statute constitutes a completed burglary. That
the requirement of “entry” inevitably calls for line drawing does not make the line
drawing absurd. The line we adopt — something outside must go inside for an
entry to occur — is simple, workable, and consistent with common sense. It is also
consistent, to our knowledge, with every case that has found a completed burglary.
11

CONCLUSION
The judgment of the Court of Appeal is affirmed.
LIU, J.

WE CONCUR: CANTIL-SAKAUYE, C. J.

KENNARD, J.
BAXTER, J.
WERDEGAR, J.
CHIN, J.
CORRIGAN, J.
12



See next page for addresses and telephone numbers for counsel who argued in Supreme Court.

Name of Opinion Magness v. Superior Court
__________________________________________________________________________________

Unpublished Opinion


Original Appeal
Original Proceeding
Review Granted
XXX 196 Cal.App.4th 630
Rehearing Granted

__________________________________________________________________________________

Opinion No.

S194928
Date Filed: June 7, 2012
__________________________________________________________________________________

Court:

Superior
County: Sacramento
Judge: Allen Sumner and Ernest W. Sawtelle

__________________________________________________________________________________

Counsel:

Paulino G. Durán, Public Defender, Arthur L. Bowie and Alicia Hartley, Assistant Public Defenders, for
Petitioner.

No appearance for Respondent.

Edmund G. Brown, Jr., and Kamala G. Harris, Attorneys General, Dane R. Gillette, Chief Assistant
Attorney General, Michael P. Farrell, Assistant Attorney General, Julie A. Hokans, Maggy Krell and Sally
Espinoza, Deputy Attorneys General, for Real Party in Interest.



Counsel who argued in Supreme Court (not intended for publication with opinion):

Arthur L. Bowie
Assistant Public Defender
9591 Kiefer Boulevard
Sacramento, CA 95827
(916) 875-5077

Sally Espinoza
Deputy Attorney General
1300 I Street, Suite 125
Sacramento, CA 94244-2550
(916) 323-5312


The Supreme Court granted review to decide whether a person standing in the driveway of a
residence who uses a remote control to open a motorized garage door has entered
the residence within the meaning of the burglary statute.

Opinion Information
Date:Citation:Docket Number:
Thu, 06/07/201254 Cal. 4th 270, 278 P.3d 259, 142 Cal. Rptr. 3d 268S194928

Opinion Authors
OpinionJustice Goodwin Liu

Brief Downloads
application/pdf icon
Magness Petition for Review.pdf (1305939 bytes) - This is the state's petition asking the CA Supreme Court to take the case
application/pdf icon
Magness State:Petitioner Merits Brief.pdf (915534 bytes) - This is the state's opening brief on the merits
application/pdf icon
Answer Brief on the Merits.pdf (740265 bytes) - This is the defendant's answer brief on the merits
application/pdf icon
Magness Reply Brief on Merits.pdf (501431 bytes) - This is the state's reply brief on the merits
If you'd like to submit a brief document to be included for this opinion, please submit an e-mail to the SCOCAL website
Jun 11, 2012
Annotated by Daniel Galindo

Facts:

On the evening of July 24, 2010, Timothy Loop was at home when he heard his garage door opening. He ran to his garage and saw a man, later identified as Christopher Magness standing near the end of his driveway. Magness ran, and Loop chased him on a bicycle to a nearby house. Loop called the sheriff’s office, and a deputy came and arrested Magness.

Back at Loop’s house, the deputy found the remote control to the garage door near where Magness had been standing. Loop had locked the remote in his car, which was parked in the driveway. One of the car’s windows was a few inches down, and the door seal had been peeled back.

Magness was charged with attempted first degree burglary of an inhabited dwelling, Penal Code Sections 664 (attempt, generally),
459 (burglary, generally), and 460(a) (burglary of an inhabited dwelling). He was also charged with second degree burglary of an automobile, Penal Code Sections 459 & 460(b).

Procedural History

At the preliminary hearing, the prosecutor argued that Magness had committed a completed burglary of the house. The magistrate agreed, based on the idea that opening the garage door counted as an entry. After the prosecutor filed an information charging Magness with a completed first degree burglary, Magness moved to reduce the charge to attempted burglary. The Superior Court judge denied that motion, and Magness then sought a writ of prohibition
from the Court of Appeal. The Court of Appeal granted that motion, holding that because Magness did not enter the garage, the evidence established no more than an attempted burglary. The Supreme Court granted the attorney general’s petition for review to consider whether, on these facts, a person can be charged with a completed burglary.

Issues

1. Does using a remote control to open a garage door constitute an entry into a residence, and thus meet the requirement of "entry" for a burglary charge?

Holding

1. No, using a remote control to open a garage door does not count as an entry for purposes of a burglary charge, because neither the defendant, nor any object he was holding, “penetrated the outer boundary of the residence.” “A defendant who opens a door but does not enter the structure may be charged with attempted burglary, but not with a completed burglary.”

Analysis

The text of the burglary statute is that a person who “enters any house . . . with intent to commit . . . larceny or any felony is guilty of burglary.” Penal Code 459.

One key idea guides the Court’s discussion of why Magness cannot be charged with burglary. At common law, both a “breaking” and an entry were required for burglary. Opening a door would count as the breaking, and stepping across the door’s threshold would be the entry. Note that California does not require a breaking as part of its burglary statute. See People v. Barry, 94 Cal. 481 (1892).

The entry requirement can be met by any part of the body entering the building, or any instrument that the burglar is holding. (The Court cites Blackstone.)

Thus, these types of entries have all been held to constitute burglary:

- Using a tire iron to pry open a door
- Using a tool to bore a hole in a store wall
- Using an auger to bore a hole in a corn crib.

See People v. Davis, 18 Cal. 4th 712, 717-18 (1998) (discussing cases).

Here, the Court says that “nothing penetrated the outer boundary of the residence,” and the case is no different from other cases that have found that sliding open a door, without entering, is not a burglary. The Court’s research found no case that upheld a burglary conviction without a physical entry.

This entry requirement “inevitably calls for line drawing,” the Court wrote, but that alone “does not make the line drawing absurd. The line we adopt — something that is outside must go inside for an entry to occur — is simple, workable, and consistent with common sense.”

The state then petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court for certiorari, but that Court denied the petition.

-

The Court’s discussion of other cases

The bulk of Justice Liu’s opinion is spent reconciling cases.

Two points are relevant in this discussion, and both appear in People v. Gauze. “The usual burglary situation,” the Court said in Gauze, raises the risk that the burglar will hurt the occupants, or that the occupants “will in anger or panic react violently to the invasion, thereby inviting more violence.” People v. Gauze 15 Cal. 3d 709, 715 (1975) (quoting People v. Lewis 274 Cal. App. 2d 912, 920 (1969). The main point to burglary laws, then, is “not to deter the trespass and the intended crime, which are prohibited by other laws, so much as to forestall the germination of a situation dangerous to personal safety.” Id.

The other idea from Gauze is the description of burglary as “an entry which invades a possessory right in a building." Id. Both aims of the burglary law — guarding against dangerous situations, and protecting a possessory right — are important underlying interests, but there still must be an entry, Liu wrote.

In People v. Osegueda, 163 Cal. App. 3d Supp. 25 (1984), the Court of Appeal held that burglars had penetrated “the air space” of a store by making a hole into the store wall, through which one could see inside. Thus, there was sufficient evidence to support the jury’s verdict that the defendants had entered the store.

Where the doctrine became complicated was in People v. Ravenscroft, 198 Cal. App. 3d 639 (1988). The Court of Appeal applied the “air spare test” from Osegueda to find that it counts as an entry when someone puts a stolen ATM card into ATMs that were mounted inside a bank and had been installed flush against the exterior wall.

In
People v. Davis
, The California Supreme Court disapproved the decision in Ravenscroft, 18 Cal. 4th 712 (1998). The Davis Court held that putting a forged check into a chute in the walk-up window of a check-cashing business did not count as an entry into the business. The Court said it was not clear the burglary statute was meant to cover this conduct, even though the air space of the building was penetrated. “It is important to establish reasonable limits as to what constitutes an entry by means of an instrument,” the Court said. Id. at 719. The Court reasoned that inserting the check into a chute, or using the ATM card in the machine, does not “violate[] the occupant’s possessory interest in the building” itself in the same way that using a tool to reach inside a building does. Id. at 722.

In People v. Calderon, 158 Cal. App. 4th 137 (2007), the Court of Appeals held that kicking in the door of a home was sufficient entry to constitute burglary. The defendant’s accomplices in that case had kicked in the door, but no one entered the house. The Magness Court said that the court of appeals reached the correct result, but that its reasoning was wrong. The court of appeals had reasoned that the door itself could be the instrument that the defendant used to “enter” the home when he kicked it in. Further, the court of appeals had reasoned that the interests from Gauze (danger to personal safety of everyone involved) were also implicated—“Surely kicking in the door to a home invades the possessory interests in that home!” Calderon 158 Cal. App. 4th at 145.

The error in Calderon is to conflate “Davis’s inquiry into what kinds of physical entry implicate the interests underling the burglary statute with the threshold inquiry into whether a physical entry has occurred at all,” Justice Liu wrote in Magness. One could implicate the interests in the burglary statute by threatening to set fire to a house unless someone opened the door, Liu wrote, and the occupants might react with violence, but there would still be no entry, and no burglary.

But the result of Calderon was ultimately correct, according to the Court in Magness, because you could infer that in kicking in the door hard enough for it to open, some part of the burglar’s foot “crossed the outer boundary of the residence.”

Shaun Martin, a professor at the University of San Diego School of Law, discusses Magness on his blog, California Appellate Report. Martin agrees that the Court got Magness right, but says that there are two problems with Liu’s treatment of Calderon. First, the court of appeals had affirmed the conviction even though the prosecutor argued two theories: that the door’s entry to the house satisfied the entry element of burglary, or that the foot of the burglar who kicked in the door must have passed into the house. Only the second theory is correct, according to the Magness Court. “But if there are two theories presented at trial and allowed to go to the jury, and one is legally insufficient, that makes the conviction improper,” Martin wrote, “since you can’t tell which one the jury bought.”

Martin’s other point is that it’s not true, as a question of physics, that your foot enters part of the house on the follow-through from a kick:

“Not if you do it the right, and most effective, way. Physics teaches us that you get more power off of recoil than you do with follow-through . . . the right way to bust down a door is . . . to have your foot . . . bounce off the door, thereby maximizing force. So you don’t enter the residence at all. You hit it, bounce off, and stay outside the residence at all times. (Sure, there’s necessarily a nanometer or whatever of compression, but that’s no more “entering” than is a polite knock on the door . . . .) So it’s not like you can say that kicking a door down necessarily (or even generally) enters. You’ve got to have some evidence that there was actually entry. Not mere speculation that the defendant probably did it the wrong way.”

Cases cited and other important authorities

Penal Code 459 (burglary)

Penal Code 460(a) (burglary of an inhabited dwelling)

People v. Barry, 94 Cal. 481 (1892)

Writ of Prohibition

Blackstone, Of Offenses Against the Habitations of Individuals

People v. Davis, 18 Cal. 4th 712, 717-18 (1998)

People v. Gauze 15 Cal. 3d 709 (1975)

People v. Osegueda, 163 Cal. App. 3d Supp. 25 (1984)

People v. Ravenscroft, 198 Cal. App. 3d 639 (1988)

People v. Calderon, 158 Cal. App. 4th 137 (2007)

Tags
People v. Gauze, burglary, attempted burglary, completed burglary, garage door opener, Calderon

Annotated by Dan Galindo