Marjorie Knoller and her husband, Robert Noel, took possession of two very large Presa Canario dogs, Bane and Hera, associated with an incarcerated gang member. Over several months, the dogs displayed repeated aggressive behavior: lunging at people and animals, prior biting incidents, and difficulty being controlled even by the owners. Veterinarians, handlers, and neighbors warned about the dogs' dangerous propensities, and Knoller and Noel documented the dogs' aggressiveness in letters. Despite these warnings, the dogs were not consistently muzzled or adequately restrained in the apartment building. On January 26, 2001, while Knoller was returning to her apartment with Bane, the dog attacked neighbor Diane Whipple in the hallway near Whipple's doorway, inflicting catastrophic injuries that proved fatal. The State charged Knoller with second-degree murder and with owning a mischievous animal that caused death (Penal Code § 399). A jury convicted her of second-degree murder and the § 399 offense. The trial judge subsequently granted Knoller a new trial on the murder count, concluding the evidence did not show she subjectively appreciated a "high probability" of death as a result of her conduct. The Court of Appeal reversed and directed reinstatement of the murder conviction, and the California Supreme Court granted review.
What is the correct legal standard for implied malice in a second-degree murder prosecution—specifically, does it require the defendant's subjective awareness that her conduct is dangerous to human life, and must that awareness rise to knowledge of a "high probability" of death?
Implied malice under Penal Code § 188 exists when a defendant intentionally commits an act, the natural and probable consequences of which are dangerous to human life, with knowledge of that danger and a conscious disregard for human life. The standard is subjective: the defendant must actually appreciate the risk to human life. However, the People need not prove that the defendant subjectively knew death was likely or that there was a "high probability" of death; awareness that the conduct endangers human life, coupled with conscious disregard of that danger, suffices. (See, e.g., People v. Watson, 30 Cal. 3d 290; People v. Dellinger, 49 Cal. 3d 1212; People v. Nieto Benitez, 4 Cal. 4th 91.)
The California Supreme Court held that the trial court applied the wrong legal standard by requiring proof that Knoller subjectively appreciated a "high probability" of death. Implied malice requires a subjective awareness that one's conduct endangers human life and a conscious disregard for that danger, not knowledge that death is likely. The Court of Appeal also erred to the extent it suggested an objective standard. The matter was remanded to the trial court to reconsider Knoller's new trial motion under the correct, subjective-conscious-disregard standard focused on danger to human life.
The court grounded its analysis in Penal Code §§ 187–188 and the line of cases defining implied malice. It emphasized that implied malice is a mental state, not merely a description of dangerous conduct. Drawing on People v. Watson, the court reaffirmed that malice is implied when a defendant, knowing that their conduct endangers the life of another, nonetheless acts with conscious disregard for life. The court clarified two points that had sown confusion. First, it rejected the trial court's use of a "high probability of death" threshold, explaining that while older formulations sometimes referenced a high probability, the controlling articulation of implied malice is that the natural and probable consequences of the act are dangerous to human life and the defendant subjectively knows and disregards that danger. As the court's decisions in Dellinger and Nieto Benitez make clear, injecting a "high probability" requirement risks collapsing implied malice into a near-certainty standard inconsistent with second-degree murder doctrine. Second, the court disapproved any objective gloss that would allow a murder conviction based solely on what a reasonable person should have known. The distinction between implied malice murder and involuntary manslaughter turns on the defendant's subjective awareness: gross negligence reflects failure to perceive a substantial risk, whereas implied malice requires actual appreciation of a life-threatening risk and a conscious decision to proceed. Applying these principles to the record, the court noted evidence from which a factfinder could infer Knoller's subjective awareness that her handling of the dogs endangered human life: repeated incidents of aggression and biting; difficulty controlling the dogs; professional warnings; and Knoller's own statements describing the dogs' propensity to attack and the need for stringent control (e.g., muzzling). But the Supreme Court did not decide sufficiency itself. Because the trial judge evaluated the evidence through the wrong legal lens (demanding proof that Knoller knew death was highly probable), the court remanded for the trial court to exercise its discretion anew on the new trial motion using the correct standard—subjective awareness that the conduct was dangerous to human life and a conscious disregard of that danger.
Knoller is the modern touchstone in California for implied malice. It: (1) cements the subjective nature of implied malice, distinguishing it from the objective gross negligence standard for involuntary manslaughter; (2) clarifies that the danger the defendant must appreciate is to human life, not merely to bodily integrity or risk of serious injury; (3) rejects a "high probability of death" requirement; and (4) guides jury instructions and trial rulings in cases involving extreme recklessness, including but not limited to DUI and dangerous instrumentality scenarios. For law students, the case illustrates doctrinal synthesis, error correction across procedural levels, and the practical consequences of precise mens rea definitions.
People v. Knoller provides a clear, authoritative statement of the implied malice standard for second-degree murder in California. By insisting on a subjective awareness of danger to human life while discarding a "high probability of death" threshold, the court preserves the doctrinal boundary between murder and manslaughter and ensures that extreme recklessness toward human life receives appropriately severe treatment.