DEAN WITTER CALIFORNIA TAX FREE INCOME FUND
485BPOS, 1995-02-23
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<PAGE>
   
   AS FILED WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION ON FEBRUARY 23, 1995
    

                                                      REGISTRATION NOS.: 2-91103
   
                                                                        811-4020
    
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
                              --------------------

                                   FORM N-1A
                             REGISTRATION STATEMENT
                        UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933                     /X/
                         PRE-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO.                         / /
   
                        POST-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO. 11                      /X/
    
                                     AND/OR
                  REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT
                              COMPANY ACT OF 1940                            /X/
   
                                AMENDMENT NO. 12                             /X/
    
                            ------------------------

                  DEAN WITTER CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME FUND
                        (A MASSACHUSETTS BUSINESS TRUST)
        (EXACT NAME OF REGISTRANT AS SPECIFIED IN DECLARATION OF TRUST)

                             TWO WORLD TRADE CENTER
                            NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10048
                    (ADDRESS OF PRINCIPAL EXECUTIVE OFFICE)

       REGISTRANT'S TELEPHONE NUMBER, INCLUDING AREA CODE: (212) 392-1600

                              SHELDON CURTIS, ESQ.
                             TWO WORLD TRADE CENTER
                            NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10048
                    (NAME AND ADDRESS OF AGENT FOR SERVICE)

                                    COPY TO:

                            David M. Butowsky, Esq.
                             Gordon Altman Butowsky
                             Weitzen Shalov & Wein
                              114 West 47th Street
                            New York, New York 10036
                            ------------------------

                 APPROXIMATE DATE OF PROPOSED PUBLIC OFFERING:
 As soon as practicable after this Post-Effective Amendment becomes effective.

 IT IS PROPOSED THAT THIS FILING WILL BECOME EFFECTIVE (CHECK APPROPRIATE BOX)

   
           __X__ immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b)
    

   
           _____ on February __, 1995 pursuant to paragraph (b)
    

           _____ 60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)

           _____ on (date) pursuant to paragraph (a) of rule 485.

   
    THE  REGISTRANT HAS REGISTERED AN INDEFINITE  NUMBER OF ITS SHARES UNDER THE
SECURITIES ACT  OF  1933  PURSUANT  TO  SECTION (A)(1)  OF  RULE  24F-2  OF  THE
INVESTMENT  COMPANY ACT OF 1940. THE REGISTRANT HAS FILED ITS RULE 24F-2 NOTICE,
FOR ITS FISCAL PERIOD ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994, WITH THE SECURITIES AND  EXCHANGE
COMMISSION ON FEBRUARY 9, 1995.
    

         AMENDING THE PROSPECTUS AND UPDATING THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS.

            -------------------------------------------------------
            -------------------------------------------------------
<PAGE>
                  DEAN WITTER CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME FUND

                             CROSS-REFERENCE SHEET

                                   FORM N-1A

   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                     ITEM                                                        CAPTION
- -----------------------------------------------  -----------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                              <C>
PART A                                                                         PROSPECTUS
 1.  ..........................................  Cover Page
 2.  ..........................................  Prospectus Summary; Summary of Fund Expenses
 3.  ..........................................  Financial Highlights; Performance Information
 4.  ..........................................  Prospectus Summary; Investment Objective and Policies; Risk
                                                  Considerations; The Fund and its Management; Cover Page; Investment
                                                  Restrictions
 5.  ..........................................  The Fund and Its Management; Back Cover; Investment Objectives and
                                                  Policies
 6.  ..........................................  Dividends, Distributions and Taxes; Additional Information
 7.  ..........................................  Purchase of Fund Shares; Shareholder Services
 8.  ..........................................  Redemptions and Repurchases; Shareholder Services
 9.  ..........................................  Not Applicable

PART B                                                             STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
10.  ..........................................  Cover Page
11.  ..........................................  Table of Contents
12.  ..........................................  The Fund and Its Management
13.  ..........................................  Investment Practices and Policies; Investment Restrictions; Portfolio
                                                  Transactions and Brokerage
14.  ..........................................  Trustees and Officers
15.  ..........................................  The Fund and Its Management; Trustees and Officers
16.  ..........................................  The Fund and Its Management; The Distributor; Custodian and Transfer
                                                  Agent; Independent Accountants; Shareholder Services
17.  ..........................................  Portfolio Transactions and Brokerage
18.  ..........................................  Shares of the Fund
19.  ..........................................  The Distributor; Redemptions and Repurchases; Financial Statements;
                                                  Shareholder Services
20.  ..........................................  Dividends, Distributions and Taxes
21.  ..........................................  The Distributor
22.  ..........................................  Performance Information
23.  ..........................................  Not applicable
</TABLE>
    

PART C

    Information  required  to be  included  in Part  C  is set  forth  under the
appropriate item, so numbered, in Part C of this Registration Statement.
<PAGE>
   
              PROSPECTUS
FEBRUARY 23, 1995
    

              Dean Witter California Tax-Free Income Fund (the "Fund") is an
open-end diversified management investment company whose investment objective is
to provide a high level of current income exempt from both federal and
California income tax, consistent with the preservation of capital. The Fund
invests principally in California tax-exempt fixed-income securities which are
rated in the four highest categories by Moody's Investors Service, Inc. or
Standard & Poor's Corporation. (See "Investment Objective and Policies.")
               Shares of the Fund are continuously offered at net asset value.
However, redemptions and/or repurchases are subject in most cases to a
contingent deferred sales charge, scaled down from 5% to 1% of the amount
redeemed, if made within six years of purchase, which charge will be paid to the
Fund's Distributor, Dean Witter Distributors Inc. See "Redemptions and
Repurchases--Contingent Deferred Sales Charge." In addition, the Fund pays the
Distributor a Rule 12b-1 distribution fee pursuant to a Plan of Distribution at
the annual rate of 0.75% of the lesser of the (i) average daily aggregate net
sales or (ii) average daily net assets of the Fund. See "Purchase of Fund
Shares--Plan of Distribution."

   
               This prospectus sets forth concisely the information you should
know before investing in the Fund. It should be read and retained for future
reference. Additional information about the Fund is contained in the Statement
of Additional Information, dated February 23, 1995, which has been filed with
the Securities and Exchange Commission, and which is available at no charge upon
request of the Fund at the address or telephone numbers listed on this page. The
Statement of Additional Information is incorporated herein by reference.
    

     DEAN WITTER DISTRIBUTORS INC.
      DISTRIBUTOR

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

Prospectus Summary/2
Summary of Fund Expenses/3
Financial Highlights/4
   
The Fund and its Management/5
    
   
Investment Objective and Policies/5
    
   
  Risk Considerations/7
    
   
Investment Restrictions/11
    
   
Purchase of Fund Shares/12
    
   
Shareholder Services/14
    
   
Redemptions and Repurchases/16
    
   
Dividends, Distributions and Taxes/18
    
   
Performance Information/20
    
   
Additional Information/21
    

SHARES OF THE FUND ARE NOT DEPOSITS OR OBLIGATIONS OF, OR GUARANTEED OR ENDORSED
BY, ANY BANK, AND THE SHARES ARE NOT FEDERALLY INSURED BY THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT
INSURANCE CORPORATION, THE FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD, OR ANY OTHER AGENCY.

THESE SECURITIES HAVE NOT BEEN APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED BY THE SECURITIES AND
EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION NOR HAS THE SECURITIES
AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION PASSED UPON THE
ACCURACY OR ADEQUACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A
CRIMINAL OFFENSE.

    Dean Witter
    California Tax-Free Income Fund
    Two World Trade Center
    New York, New York 10048
    (212) 392-2550 or
    (800) 526-3143
<PAGE>
PROSPECTUS SUMMARY
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

   
<TABLE>
<S>               <C>
The               The Fund is organized as a Trust, commonly known as a Massachusetts business trust, and is an
Fund              open-end diversified management investment company investing principally in California tax-exempt
                  fixed-income securities which are rated in the four highest categories by Moody's Investors Service
                  Inc. or Standard and Poor's Corporation (see pages 5).
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shares Offered    Shares of beneficial interest with $0.01 par value (see page 21).
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Offering          At net asset value without sales charge (see page 12). Shares redeemed within six years of purchase
Price             are subject to a contingent deferred sales charge under most circumstances (see pages 17).
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Minimum           Minimum initial investment, $1,000; minimum subsequent investment, $100 (see page 12).
Purchase
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Investment        The investment objective of the Fund is to provide a high level of current income exempt from both
Objective         federal and California income tax, consistent with preservation of capital.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Investment        The Fund will invest principally in California tax-exempt fixed-income securities. However, it may
Policies          also invest in taxable money market instruments, non-California tax-exempt securities, futures and
                  options.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Investment        Dean Witter InterCapital Inc., the Investment Manager of the Fund, and its wholly-owned subsidiary,
Manager           Dean Witter Services Company Inc., serve in various investment management, advisory, management and
                  administrative capacities to ninety-one investment companies and other portfolios with assets of
                  approximately $66.9 billion at December 31, 1994 (see page 5).
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Management        The Investment Manager receives a monthly fee at the annual rate of 0.55% of average daily net
Fee               assets, scaled down on assets over $500 million. The fee should not be compared with fees paid by
                  other investment companies without also considering applicable sales loads and distribution fees,
                  including those noted below.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dividends         Dividends are declared daily, and either paid monthly as additional shares of the Fund or, at the
                  shareholder's option, paid monthly in cash (see page 18).
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Distributor and   Dean Witter Distributors Inc. (the "Distributor"). The Distributor receives from the Fund, pursuant
Distribution Fee  to a Rule 12b-1 Plan of Distribution, a distribution fee accrued daily and payable monthly at the
                  rate of 0.75% per annum of the lesser of (i) the Fund's average daily aggregate net sales or (ii)
                  the Fund's average daily net assets. This fee compensates the Distributor for the services provided
                  in distributing shares of the Fund and for its sales-related expenses. The Distributor also receives
                  the proceeds of any contingent deferred sales charges (see pages 12).
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Redemption--      At net asset value; redeemable involuntarily if total value of the account is less than $100.
Contingent        Although no commission or sales charge is imposed upon the purchase of shares, a contingent deferred
Deferred          sales charge (scaled down from 5% to 1%) is imposed on any redemption of shares if after such
Sales             redemption the aggregate current value of an account with the Fund falls below the aggregate amount
Charge            of the investor's purchase payments made during the six years preceding the redemption. However,
                  there is no charge imposed on redemption of shares purchased through reinvestment of dividends or
                  distributions (see pages 16).
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Risks             The value of the Fund's portfolio securities, and therefore the Fund's net asset value per share,
                  may increase or decrease due to various factors, principally changes in prevailing interest rates
                  and the ability of the issuers of the Fund's portfolio securities to pay interest and principal on
                  such obligations. The Fund also may invest in futures and options which may be considered
                  speculative in nature and may involve greater risks than those customarily assumed by certain other
                  investment companies which do not invest in such instruments. Since the Fund concentrates its
                  investments in California tax-exempt securities, the Fund is affected by any political, economic or
                  regulatory developments affecting the ability of California issuers to pay interest or repay
                  principal.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
    

  THE ABOVE IS QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY THE DETAILED INFORMATION APPEARING
                                   ELSEWHERE
       IN THE PROSPECTUS AND IN THE STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION.

                                       2
<PAGE>
SUMMARY OF FUND EXPENSES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

   
    The  following table illustrates all expenses and fees that a shareholder of
the Fund will incur. The  expenses and fees set forth  in the table are for  the
fiscal year ended December 31, 1994.
    

   
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                      <C>
SHAREHOLDER TRANSACTION EXPENSES
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Maximum Sales Charge Imposed on Purchases..............................................  None
Maximum Sales Charge Imposed on Reinvested Dividends...................................  None
Deferred Sales Charge
 (as a percentage of the lesser of original purchase price or redemption proceeds).....  5.0%
      A contingent deferred sales charge is imposed at the following declining rates:
</TABLE>
    

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
YEAR SINCE PURCHASE
PAYMENT MADE                                                                                    PERCENTAGE
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------  ---------------
<S>                                                                                           <C>
First.......................................................................................          5.0%
Second......................................................................................          4.0%
Third.......................................................................................          3.0%
Fourth......................................................................................          2.0%
Fifth.......................................................................................          2.0%
Sixth.......................................................................................          1.0%
Seventh and thereafter......................................................................       None
</TABLE>

   
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                     <C>
Redemption Fees.......................................................................       None
Exchange Fee..........................................................................       None
ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES (AS A PERCENTAGE OF AVERAGE NET ASSETS)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Management Fee........................................................................      0.53%
12b-1 Fees*...........................................................................      0.75%
Other Expenses........................................................................      0.04%
Total Fund Operating Expenses.........................................................      1.32%
<FN>
- ------------
*  A PORTION OF  THE 12B-1 FEE, EQUAL  TO 0.20% OF THE  FUND'S AVERAGE DAILY NET
  ASSETS, IS  CHARACTERIZED AS  A SERVICE  FEE WITHIN  THE MEANING  OF  NATIONAL
  ASSOCIATION  OF SECURITIES DEALERS, INC. ("NASD") GUIDELINES (SEE "PURCHASE OF
  FUND SHARES").
</TABLE>
    

   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
EXAMPLE                                                                   1 year       3 years      5 years     10 years
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
<S>                                                                     <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
You would pay the following expenses on a $1,000 investment,  assuming
 (1)  5% annual  return and  (2) redemption  at the  end of  each time
 period...............................................................   $      63    $      72    $      92    $     159
You would pay the following expenses on the same investment,  assuming
 no redemption........................................................   $      13    $      42    $      72    $     159
</TABLE>
    

    THE  ABOVE  EXAMPLE SHOULD  NOT BE  CONSIDERED A  REPRESENTATION OF  PAST OR
FUTURE EXPENSES OR PERFORMANCE.  ACTUAL EXPENSES OF THE  FUND MAY BE GREATER  OR
LESS THAN THOSE SHOWN.

    The  purpose of this  table is to  assist the investor  in understanding the
various costs and expenses that  an investor in the  Fund will bear directly  or
indirectly.  For a  more complete description  of these costs  and expenses, see
"The Fund  and Its  Management,"  "Plan of  Distribution" and  "Redemptions  and
Repurchases."

    Long-term  shareholders  of  the Fund  may  pay  more in  sales  charges and
distribution fees than the  economic equivalent of  the maximum front-end  sales
charges permitted by the NASD.

                                       3
<PAGE>
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

   
    The  following ratios and per share data  for a share of beneficial interest
outstanding throughout each period  have been audited  by Price Waterhouse  LLP,
independent  accountants. The financial highlights should be read in conjunction
with the  financial statements,  notes  thereto and  the unqualified  report  of
independent  accountants  which are  contained  in the  Statement  of Additional
Information. Further information about the performance of the Fund is  contained
in  the  Fund's Annual  Report to  Shareholders, which  may be  obtained without
charge upon request to the Fund.
    
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                      ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                         1994         1993        1992       1991       1990       1989       1988       1987
                                      -----------  -----------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                                   <C>          <C>          <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING PERFORMANCE:
Net asset value, beginning of
 period.............................  $     13.31  $     12.70  $   12.46  $   11.99  $   12.05  $   11.68  $   11.19  $   12.25
                                      -----------  -----------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
Net investment income...............         0.64         0.67       0.69       0.71       0.72       0.71       0.72       0.72
Net realized and unrealized gain
 (loss) on investments..............        (1.42)        0.70       0.26       0.48      (0.06)      0.37       0.50      (1.06)
                                      -----------  -----------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
Total from investment operations....        (0.78)        1.37       0.95       1.19       0.66       1.08       1.22      (0.34)
                                      -----------  -----------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
Less dividends and distributions
 from:
  Net investment income.............        (0.64)       (0.67)     (0.69)     (0.71)     (0.72)     (0.71)     (0.72)     (0.72)
  Net realized gain.................        (0.02)       (0.09)     (0.02)     (0.01)    --         --          (0.01)    --
                                      -----------  -----------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
Total dividends and distributions...        (0.66)       (0.76)     (0.71)     (0.72)     (0.72)     (0.71)     (0.73)     (0.72)
                                      -----------  -----------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
Net asset value, end of period......  $     11.87  $     13.31  $   12.70  $   12.46  $   11.99  $   12.05  $   11.68  $   11.19
                                      -----------  -----------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
                                      -----------  -----------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
TOTAL INVESTMENT RETURN+............        (5.97)%       10.97%      7.83%     10.18%      5.69%      9.54%     11.23%     (2.70)%
RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA:
Net assets, end of period (in
 thousands).........................  $ 1,007,839  $ 1,189,828  $ 987,449  $ 833,628  $ 677,270  $ 567,191  $ 430,148  $ 365,414
Ratios to average net assets:
  Expenses..........................         1.32%        1.27%      1.32%      1.28%      1.30%      1.32%      1.34%      1.35%
  Net investment income.............         5.10%        5.03%      5.45%      5.78%      5.98%      6.00%      6.31%      6.27%
Portfolio turnover rate.............           12%          10%         6%         3%        16%        13%        13%        23%

<CAPTION>

                                        1986       1985
                                      ---------  ---------
<S>                                   <C>        <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING PERFORMANCE:
Net asset value, beginning of
 period.............................  $   11.41  $   10.31
                                      ---------  ---------
Net investment income...............       0.77       0.80
Net realized and unrealized gain
 (loss) on investments..............       1.24       1.10
                                      ---------  ---------
Total from investment operations....       2.01       1.90
                                      ---------  ---------
Less dividends and distributions
 from:
  Net investment income.............      (0.77)     (0.80)
  Net realized gain.................      (0.40)    --
                                      ---------  ---------
Total dividends and distributions...      (1.17)     (0.80)
                                      ---------  ---------
Net asset value, end of period......  $   12.25  $   11.41
                                      ---------  ---------
                                      ---------  ---------
TOTAL INVESTMENT RETURN+............      18.38%     19.03%
RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA:
Net assets, end of period (in
 thousands).........................  $ 358,939  $ 184,168
Ratios to average net assets:
  Expenses..........................       1.32%      1.41%
  Net investment income.............       6.34%      7.22%
Portfolio turnover rate.............         31%        47%
<FN>
- -----------------
+DOES NOT REFLECT THE DEDUCTION OF SALES CHARGE.
</TABLE>
    

   
                       SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
    

                                       4
<PAGE>
THE FUND AND ITS MANAGEMENT
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Dean Witter  California Tax-Free  Income Fund  (the "Fund")  is an  open-end
diversified  management  investment company.  The Fund  is a  trust of  the type
commonly known as a "Massachusetts business  trust" and was organized under  the
laws of Massachusetts on April 9, 1984.
    Dean  Witter InterCapital Inc. ("InterCapital" or the "Investment Manager"),
whose address is Two World Trade Center, New York, New York 10048, is the Fund's
Investment Manager.  The Investment  Manager, which  was incorporated  in  July,
1992,  is a wholly-owned subsidiary  of Dean Witter, Discover  & Co. ("DWDC"), a
balanced financial services organization providing  a broad range of  nationally
marketed credit and investment products.
   
    InterCapital  and its wholly-owned subsidiary,  Dean Witter Services Company
Inc.,  serve  in  various   investment  management,  advisory,  management   and
administrative  capacities to a total of ninety-one investment companies, thirty
of which are listed on the New  York Stock Exchange, with combined total  assets
including  this Fund of approximately $64.9 billion as of December 31, 1994. The
Investment Manager also manages portfolios of pension plans, other  institutions
and individuals which aggregated approximately $2.0 billion at such date.
    
    The  Fund  has retained  the  Investment Manager  to  provide administrative
services, manage its business  affairs and manage the  investment of the  Fund's
assets,  including the placing of orders for  the purchase and sale of portfolio
securities. InterCapital  has  retained Dean  Witter  Services Company  Inc.  to
perform  the  aforementioned administrative  services for  the Fund.  The Fund's
Trustees review the various services provided  by or under the direction of  the
Investment  Manager to  ensure that the  Fund's general  investment policies and
programs are being  properly carried  out and that  administrative services  are
being provided to the Fund in a satisfactory manner.
   
    As  full compensation for the services  and facilities furnished to the Fund
and for expenses of the  Fund assumed by the  Investment Manager, the Fund  pays
the  Investment Manager monthly compensation calculated  daily at an annual rate
of 0.55% of the portion of the daily  net assets of the Fund not exceeding  $500
million,  scaled down at  various asset levels  to 0.475% on  the portion of the
Fund's assets exceeding $1 billion. For the fiscal year ended December 31, 1994,
the Fund accrued total compensation to the Investment Manager amounting to 0.53%
of the Fund's average daily net assets and the Fund's total expenses amounted to
1.32% of the Fund's average daily net assets.
    

INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE AND POLICIES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The investment objective of the Fund is  to provide a high level of  current
income  which is exempt from both  federal and California income tax, consistent
with the preservation of capital. There is no assurance that this objective will
be achieved. The Fund seeks to achieve its investment objective by investing its
assets in accordance with the following policies:
    1. As a fundamental policy the Fund must
have at  least  80%  of  its total  assets  invested  in  California  tax-exempt
securities,  except  as stated  in  paragraph (3)  below.  California tax-exempt
securities consist of California Municipal Bonds and California Municipal  Notes
("California  Municipal Obligations") and California Municipal Commercial Paper.
Only California tax-exempt securities which satisfy the following standards  may
be  purchased by the Fund: (a) California Municipal Bonds which are rated at the
time of purchase within  the four highest grades  by Moody's Investors  Service,
Inc.  ("Moody's")  or  Standard  & Poor's  Corporation  ("S&P");  (b) California
Municipal Notes of issuers which  at the time of purchase  are rated in the  two
highest grades by Moody's or S&P, or, if not rated, have outstanding one or more
issues  of  California Municipal  Bonds  rated as  set  forth in  clause  (a) of

                                       5
<PAGE>
this paragraph; (c) California Municipal Commercial  Paper which at the time  of
purchase is rated P-1 by Moody's or A-1 by S&P; and (d) unrated securities which
at the time of purchase are judged by the Investment Manager to be of comparable
quality to the securities described above.

   
    2. In accordance with the current position of
the staff of the Securities and Exchange Commission, tax-exempt securities which
are  subject to the federal alternative  minimum tax for individual shareholders
("AMT") will not be included  in the 80% total  described in paragraph 1  above.
(See  "Dividends, Distributions  and Taxes,"  page 18.)  As such,  the remaining
portion of the  Fund's total  assets may  be invested  in tax-exempt  securities
subject to the AMT.
    
    3. Up to 20% of the Fund's total assets may be
invested   in  taxable  money   market  instruments,  non-California  tax-exempt
securities, futures and options  and tax-exempt securities  subject to the  AMT.
However,  the Fund may temporarily  invest more than 20%  of its total assets in
taxable money market instruments and non-California tax exempt securities, or in
tax-exempt securities  subject  to  the  federal  alternative  minimum  tax  for
individual  shareholders, to maintain a "defensive" posture when, in the opinion
of the  Investment  Manager,  it  is  advisable  to  do  so  because  of  market
conditions.  Only those  non-California tax-exempt securities  which satisfy the
standards set forth in paragraph (1) for California tax-exempt securities may be
purchased by the Fund.  The types of taxable  money market instruments in  which
the  Fund  may  invest  are limited  to  the  following  short-term fixed-income
securities (maturing  in  one year  or  less from  the  time of  purchase):  (i)
obligations  of the United States Government, its agencies, instrumentalities or
authorities; (ii) commercial  paper rated P-1  by Moody's or  A-1 by S&P;  (iii)
certificates of deposit of domestic banks with assets of $1 billion or more; and
(iv) repurchase agreements with respect to portfolio securities.

   
    Municipal   Obligations  are  debt  obligations  of  a  state,  its  cities,
municipalities and municipal  agencies which generally  have maturities, at  the
time of their issuance, of either one year or more (Bonds) or from six months to
three  years (Notes). Municipal  Commercial Paper are  short-term obligations of
municipalities which may be issued at  a discount and are sometimes referred  to
as Short-Term Discount Notes. Any Municipal Bond or Municipal Note which depends
directly  or indirectly on the credit of the Federal Government, its agencies or
instrumentalities shall be considered to have a rating of Aaa/AAA. An obligation
shall be considered  a California Municipal  Obligation or California  Municipal
Commercial  Paper only if, in the opinion  of bond counsel, the interest payable
thereon is exempt from  both federal income tax  and California personal  income
tax.  The  Fund may  purchase Municipal  Obligations  which had  originally been
issued by  the  same issuer  as  two separate  series  of the  same  issue  with
different interest rates, but which are now linked together to form one series.
    

    The   foregoing  percentage  and  rating  policies  apply  at  the  time  of
acquisition of a  security based  upon the  last previous  determination of  the
Fund's  net  asset value.  Any  subsequent change  in  any rating  or  change in
percentages resulting from market  fluctuations or other  changes in the  Fund's
total  assets  will not  require  elimination of  any  security from  the Fund's
portfolio until such time as the value of all such securities exceeds 5% of  the
Fund's  total  assets  and,  at  such time,  only  when  the  Investment Manager
determines that it is practicable to  sell the security without undue market  or
tax  consequences to the Fund. As such,  the Fund may hold Municipal Bonds rated
below investment grade by Moody's and/or  S&P in its portfolio. Municipal  Bonds
rated  below investment grade may  not currently be paying  any interest and may
have extremely poor prospects of ever attaining any real investment standing.

    The two principal  classifications of Municipal  Obligations and  Commercial
Paper  are "general obligation" and "revenue"  bonds, notes or commercial paper.
General obligation bonds, notes or commercial paper are secured by the  issuer's
pledge  of its faith, credit  and taxing power for  the payment of principal and
interest. Issuers  of  general  obligation  bonds,  notes  or  commercial  paper

                                       6
<PAGE>
include  a  state, its  counties, cities,  towns  and other  governmental units.
Revenue bonds, notes or commercial paper  are payable from the revenues  derived
from  a  particular facility  or class  of  facilities or,  in some  cases, from
specific revenue sources. Revenue  bonds, notes or  commercial paper are  issued
for  a wide variety of purposes, including the financing of electric, gas, water
and sewer  systems  and  other  public  utilities;  industrial  development  and
pollution  control  facilities; single  and  multi-family housing  units; public
buildings and facilities; air and  marine ports, transportation facilities  such
as  toll roads, bridges and tunnels;  and health and educational facilities such
as hospitals  and dormitories.  They rely  primarily on  user fees  to pay  debt
service,  although  the  principal  revenue  source  is  often  supplemented  by
additional security features which are intended to enhance the  creditworthiness
of the issuer's obligations. In some cases, particularly revenue bonds issued to
finance  housing and public buildings, a direct or implied "moral obligation" of
a governmental unit  may be pledged  to the  payment of debt  service. In  other
cases, a special tax or other charge may augment user fees.

   
RISK CONSIDERATIONS
    
   
    Investments  in municipal bonds  rated either BBB  by S&P or  Baa by Moody's
(investment grade bonds--the lowest-rated  permissible investments by the  Fund)
may  have  speculative  characteristics  and,  therefore,  changes  in  economic
conditions or other circumstances  are more likely to  weaken their capacity  to
make  principal and interest payments than would be the case with investments in
securities with higher credit ratings.
    

   
    Included within  the revenue  bonds category  of bonds  described above  are
participations   in   lease  obligations   or  installment   purchase  contracts
(hereinafter collectively called "lease  obligations") of municipalities.  State
and   local  governments  issue  lease  obligations  to  acquire  equipment  and
facilities.
    

    Lease obligations  may  have  risks not  normally  associated  with  general
obligation   or  other  revenue  bonds.   Leases  and  installment  purchase  or
conditional sale contracts (which may provide  for title to the leased asset  to
pass  eventually  to the  issuer)  have developed  as  a means  for governmental
issuers to acquire  property and  equipment without the  necessity of  complying
with  the constitutional and statutory requirements generally applicable for the
issuance of debt. Certain lease obligations contain "non-appropriation"  clauses
that  provide  that the  governmental issuer  has no  obligation to  make future
payments under  the lease  or contract  unless money  is appropriated  for  such
purpose  by  the appropriate  legislative body  on an  annual or  other periodic
basis.  Consequently,  continued  lease  payments  on  those  lease  obligations
containing  "non-appropriation"  clauses  are  dependent  on  future legislative
actions. If such  legislative actions  do not occur,  the holders  of the  lease
obligation  may  experience  difficulty in  exercising  their  rights, including
disposition of the property.

    Lease obligations represent a relatively new type of financing that has  not
yet  developed  the depth  of  marketability associated  with  more conventional
municipal obligations, and, as a result,  certain of such lease obligations  may
be  considered illiquid  securities. To determine  whether or not  the Fund will
consider such securities to be illiquid (the  Fund may not invest more than  ten
percent of its net assets in illiquid securities), the Trustees of the Fund have
established  guidelines to be utilized by  the Fund in determining the liquidity
of a lease obligation. The factors to be considered in making the  determination
include: 1) the frequency of trades and quoted prices for the obligation; 2) the
number  of dealers willing  to purchase or  sell the security  and the number of
other potential purchasers; 3) the willingness of dealers to undertake to make a
market in the security; and 4) the nature of the marketplace trades,  including,
the time needed to dispose of the security, the method of soliciting offers, and
the mechanics of the transfer.

    The  Fund does  not generally intend  to invest  more than 25%  of its total
assets in securities of any one governmental unit. The Fund may invest more than
25% of its total assets in industrial development

                                       7
<PAGE>
and pollution control bonds (two kinds of tax-exempt Municipal Bonds) whether or
not the users of facilities financed by such bonds are in the same industry.  In
cases where such users are in the same industry, there may be additional risk to
the Fund in the event of an economic downturn in such industry, which may result
generally  in a lowered need  for such facilities and  a lowered ability of such
users to pay for the use of such facilities.
    The value of the Fund's portfolio  securities, and therefore the Fund's  net
asset  value  per  share,  may  increase or  decrease  due  to  various factors,
principally changes in prevailing interest rates and the ability of the  issuers
of  the  Fund's  portfolio securities  to  pay  interest and  principal  on such
obligations. Generally, a rise  in interest rates will  result in a decrease  in
the Fund's net asset value per share, while a drop in interest rates will result
in an increase in the Fund's net asset value per share.
    VARIABLE RATE OBLIGATIONS.  The interest rates payable on certain securities
in  which the Fund may invest are not fixed and may fluctuate based upon changes
in  market  rates.  Obligations  of   this  type  are  called  "variable   rate"
obligations. The interest rate payable on a variable rate obligation is adjusted
either  at predesignated periodic intervals or whenever there is a change in the
market rate of interest on which the interest rate payable is based.

   
    WHEN-ISSUED AND DELAYED DELIVERY SECURITIES  AND FORWARD COMMITMENTS.   From
time  to  time,  in the  ordinary  course  of business,  the  Fund  may purchase
securities on a when-issued  or delayed delivery basis  or may purchase or  sell
securities on a forward commitment basis. When such transactions are negotiated,
the  price is fixed at the time of  the commitment, but delivery and payment can
take place a month or more after the date of the commitment. There is no overall
limit on the  percentage of  the Fund's  assets which  may be  committed to  the
purchase  of securities on a when-issued, delayed delivery or forward commitment
basis. An  increase in  the percentage  of the  Fund's assets  committed to  the
purchase  of securities on a when-issued, delayed delivery or forward commitment
basis may increase the volatility of the Fund's net asset value.
    

   
    REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS.  The Fund may enter into repurchase agreements, which
may be viewed  as a type  of secured lending  by the Fund,  and which  typically
involve  the acquisition by the Fund of debt securities from a selling financial
institution such as a bank, savings  and loan association or broker-dealer.  The
agreement provides that the Fund will sell back to the institution, and that the
institution will repurchase, the underlying security at a specified price and at
a  fixed time in the future,  usually not more than seven  days from the date of
applicable regulations  and  that  are  at least  equal  to  the  market  value,
determined  daily, of the  loaned securities. As with  any extensions of credit,
there are risks of delay  in recovery and in some  cases even loss of rights  in
the  collateral should the borrower of the securities fail financially. However,
loans of  portfolio  securities  will  only  be made  to  firms  deemed  by  the
Investment  Manager to be creditworthy  and when the income  which can be earned
from such loans justifies the attendant risks.
    

    The Fund may enter into financial futures contracts, options on such futures
and municipal bond index futures contracts for hedging purposes.

    FINANCIAL FUTURES CONTRACTS AND OPTIONS ON FUTURES.  The Fund may invest  in
financial  futures contracts  and related options  thereon. The Fund  may sell a
financial futures contract or purchase a put option on such futures contract, if
the Investment Manager anticipates interest rates to rise, as a hedge against  a
decrease  in the  value of  the Fund's  portfolio securities.  If the Investment
Manager anticipates that interest  rates will decline, the  Fund may purchase  a
financial  futures  contract or  a  call option  thereon  to protect  against an
increase in the  price of  the securities the  Fund intends  to purchase.  These
futures  contracts and  related options  thereon will  be used  only as  a hedge
against anticipated interest rate  changes. A futures  contract sale creates  an
obligation  by the Fund, as  seller, to deliver the  specific type of instrument
called for in the contract at a specified future

                                       8
<PAGE>
time for  a  specified  price.  A futures  contract  purchase  would  create  an
obligation  by the Fund, as purchaser, to  take delivery of the specific type of
financial instrument  at a  specified  future time  at  a specified  price.  The
specific  securities delivered or taken, respectively, at settlement date, would
not be  determined  until or  near  that date.  The  determination would  be  in
accordance  with the rules of the exchange on which the futures contract sale or
purchase was effected.

    Although the terms of financial futures contracts specify actual delivery or
receipt of securities, in most instances the contracts are closed out before the
settlement date without  the making  or taking  of delivery  of the  securities.
Closing  out of a  futures contract is  effected by entering  into an offsetting
purchase or sale transaction.

    Unlike a financial futures contract, which  requires the parties to buy  and
sell a security on a set date, an option on such a futures contract entitles its
holder  to  decide on  or before  a future  date  whether to  enter into  such a
contract (a long position in the case of  a call option and a short position  in
the case of a put option). If the holder decides not to enter into the contract,
the  premium paid for the option on the contract is lost. Since the value of the
option is fixed at  the point of sale,  there are no daily  payments of cash  to
reflect  the change  in the value  of the underlying  contract as there  is by a
purchaser or seller of a futures contract.  The value of the option does  change
and is reflected in the net asset value of the Fund.

    A  risk  in  employing  futures  contracts  to  protect  against  the  price
volatility of portfolio securities is that  the prices of securities subject  to
such  futures contracts may correlate imperfectly  with the behavior of the cash
prices of the  Fund's portfolio  securities. The risk  of imperfect  correlation
will  be increased by the fact that the financial futures contracts in which the
Fund may invest are on taxable securities rather than tax-exempt securities, and
there is no  guarantee that  the prices  of taxable  securities will  move in  a
similar  manner to the  prices of tax-exempt securities.  The correlation may be
distorted by the fact that the futures market is dominated by short-term traders
seeking to  profit from  the difference  between a  contract or  security  price
objective and their cost of borrowed funds. Such distortions are generally minor
and would diminish as the contract approached maturity.

    Another  risk  is  that  the  Fund's  manager  could  be  incorrect  in  its
expectations as to the direction or extent of various interest rate movements or
the time span within which  the movements take place.  For example, if the  Fund
sold  financial futures contracts for the  sale of securities in anticipation of
an increase  in interest  rates,  and then  interest  rates went  down  instead,
causing bond prices to rise, the Fund would lose money on the sale.

    In  addition to the  risks that apply  to all options  transactions (see the
Statement of Additional Information for a description of the characteristics of,
and the risks of  investing in, options on  debt securities), there are  several
special  risks relating  to options  on futures.  In particular,  the ability to
establish and  close  out positions  on  such options  will  be subject  to  the
development and maintenance of a liquid secondary market. It is not certain that
this market will develop or be maintained.

    MUNICIPAL  BOND INDEX  FUTURES.  The  Fund may utilize  municipal bond index
futures  contracts  and  options  thereon  for  hedging  purposes.  The   Fund's
strategies  in employing such contracts will  be similar to that discussed above
with respect to financial futures and options thereon. A municipal bond index is
a method of reflecting  in a single  number the market  value of many  different
municipal  bonds  and is  designed to  be representative  of the  municipal bond
market generally. The  index fluctuates  in response  to changes  in the  market
values  of  the bonds  included within  the index.  Unlike futures  contracts on
particular financial instruments,  transactions in futures  on a municipal  bond
index  will  be settled  in cash,  if held  until  the close  of trading  in the
contract. However, like any other futures  contract, a position in the  contract
may  be closed out by a purchase or  sale of an offsetting contract for the same
delivery month prior to expiration of the contract.

                                       9
<PAGE>
   
    The Fund may not enter into futures contracts or related options thereon  if
immediately  thereafter the amount committed to  margin plus the amount paid for
option premiums exceeds 5% of the value of the Fund's total assets. The Fund may
not purchase  or  sell  futures  contracts or  related  options  if  immediately
thereafter more than one-third of its net assets would be hedged.
    
   
RISK CONSIDERATIONS RELATING TO CALIFORNIA
 TAX-EXEMPT SECURITIES
    
   
    The  Fund  will  be  affected  by  any  political,  economic  or  regulatory
developments affecting  the ability  of California  issuers to  pay interest  or
repay  principal on their obligations. Various subsequent developments regarding
the California Constitution  and State  of California  ("State") statutes  which
limit  the taxing and spending authority of California governmental entities may
impair the  ability of  California issuers  to maintain  debt service  on  their
obligations.  Of particular  impact are constitutional  voter initiatives, which
have become common in recent years. The following information constitutes only a
brief summary and is not intended as a complete description.
    

   
    California is the most populous state in the nation with a total  population
at  the 1990 census of 29,976,000. Growth has been incessant since World War II,
with population gains in each decade since  1950 of between 18% and 49%.  During
the  last  decade, population  rose  20%. The  State  now comprises  12%  of the
nation's population and 13.3% of its total personal income. Its economy is broad
and diversified  with  major  concentrations in  high  technology  research  and
manufacturing,  aerospace and defense-related manufacturing, trade, real estate,
and financial services. After experiencing strong growth throughout much of  the
1980s,  the State was adversely affected by  both the national recession and the
cutbacks in aerospace  and defense  spending which had  a severe  impact on  the
economy   in  Southern  California.  Although  the  national  economic  recovery
continued at a strong pace  in the fourth quarter  of 1994, California is  still
experiencing  the effects of a recession. However, the State's budget for fiscal
year 1994-95 assumes  that the  State will  begin to  recover from  recessionary
conditions in 1994, with a modest upturn in 1994 and continuing in 1995.
    

   
    These economic difficulties have exacerbated the structural budget imbalance
which  has been  evident since  fiscal year  1985-1986. Since  that time, budget
shortfalls have become increasingly  more difficult to solve  and the State  has
recorded  in its general fund (the "General Fund") operating deficits in five of
the past six fiscal years. Many of these problems have been attributable to  the
fact  that  the  great  population  influx  has  produced  increased  demand for
education and social  services at  a far  greater pace  than the  growth in  the
State's  tax revenues. Despite substantial tax increases, expenditure reductions
and the  shift of  some expenditure  responsibilities to  local government,  the
budget condition remains problematic.
    

   
    In  July 1991,  California increased  taxes by  adding two  new marginal tax
rates, at 10% and 11%,  effective for tax years  1991 through 1995. After  1995,
the  maximum personal income  tax rate is  scheduled to return  to 9.3%, and the
alternative minimum tax rate is scheduled to drop from 8.5% to 7%. In  addition,
legislation  in July 1991  raised the sales  tax by 1.25%.  0.5% was a permanent
addition to counties, but  with the money  earmarked to trust  funds to pay  for
health  and welfare programs  whose administration was  transferred to counties.
This tax increase will be cancelled if a court rules that such transfer and  tax
increase violate any constitutional requirements. 0.5% of the State tax rate was
scheduled  to expire on June  30, 1993, but was extended  for six months for the
benefit  of  counties  and  cities.  On  November  2,  1993,  voters  made  this
half-percent  levy  a  permanent source  of  funding for  local  government. The
1994-95 state budget does not include any additional sales tax rate.
    

   
    On July 8, 1994, the Governor signed into law a $57.5 billion budget  which,
among  other things, (a) reduces  welfare grants and aid  to families and to the
aged, blind and disabled, and (b) relies  on the State's ability to obtain  $2.8
billion  in new reimbursement  from the federal government  for the State's cost
    

                                       10
<PAGE>
   
of serving  illegal immigrants.  Although  the State  legislature has  passed  a
standby  measure which could trigger automatic  budget reductions if the State's
fiscal condition worsens over  the next two years,  the stability of the  budget
would  be jeopardized  if the  State is unable  to obtain  the hoped-for federal
funds.
    
   
    The current budget includes General Fund spending of $40.9 billion, up  4.2%
from  the level  of spending  during the  1993-94 fiscal  year. The  budget also
envisions General  Fund spending  climbing another  8.4% in  the 1995-96  fiscal
year. The budget forecasts levels of revenues and expenditures which will result
in  operating surpluses in both 1994-95  and 1995-96, leading to the elimination
of an estimated $2.0 billion accumulated budget deficit by June 30, 1996.
    
   
    Because of  California's continuing  budget  problems, the  State's  General
Obligation  bonds were downgraded in July 1994 from A1 to Aa by Moody's and from
A+ to A by Standard & Poor's and from AA to A by Fitch Investment Service,  Inc.
All  three ratings  companies expressed  uncertainty in  the State's  ability to
balance its budget by 1996.
    

    The effect  of these  various constitutional  and statutory  amendments  and
budget  developments upon the ability of  California issuers to pay interest and
principal on their obligations remains unclear and in any event may depend  upon
whether  a particular  California tax-exempt  security is  a general  or limited
obligation bond  and on  the  type of  security provided  for  the bond.  It  is
possible  that  other measures  affecting the  taxing  or spending  authority of
California or  its political  subdivisions may  be approved  or enacted  in  the
future.
    For  a more detailed discussion of the State of California economic factors,
see the Statement of Additional Information.

   
PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT
    

   
    The Fund is managed by the Investment  Manager with a view to achieving  the
Fund's investment objective. In determining which securities to purchase for the
Fund  or  hold in  the Fund's  portfolio,  the Investment  Manager will  rely on
information from various sources, including research, analysis and appraisals of
brokers  and  dealers,   including  Dean   Witter  Reynolds   Inc.  ("DWR"),   a
broker-dealer  affiliate of InterCapital; the views  of Trustees of the Fund and
others regarding  economic  developments  and  interest  rate  trends;  and  the
Investment  Manager's own  analysis of  factors it  deems relevant.  The Fund is
managed within  InterCapital's Municipal  Fixed-Income Group,  which manages  39
tax-exempt municipal funds and fund portfolios, with approximately $10.3 billion
in  assets as of December 31, 1994.  James F. Willison, Senior Vice President of
InterCapital and Manager  of InterCapital's  Municipal Fixed  Income Group,  has
been  the primary portfolio manager of the Fund since its inception and has been
a portfolio manager at InterCapital for over five years.
    

   
    Securities are purchased and sold principally in response to the  Investment
Manager's current evaluation of an issuer's ability to meet its debt obligations
in the future, and the Investment Manager's current assessment of future changes
in  the levels of interest rates on tax-exempt securities of varying maturities.
Securities purchased  by the  Fund are,  generally, sold  by dealers  acting  as
principal  for their own accounts (pursuant to an order issued by the Securities
and Exchange Commission, the Fund  may effect principal transactions in  certain
taxable  money market  instruments with  DWR.) In  addition, the  Fund may incur
brokerage commissions on transactions conducted through DWR.
    

INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The investment restrictions  listed below  are among  the restrictions  that
have  been adopted  by the  Fund as  fundamental policies.  Under the Investment
Company Act of 1940,  as amended (the  "Act"), a fundamental  policy may not  be
changed  without the vote of a majority  of the outstanding voting securities of
the Fund, as defined in the
Act.

                                       11
<PAGE>
    The Fund may not:

    1. With respect to 75% of its total assets,
purchase securities of any issuer if immediately thereafter more than 5% of  the
Fund's  total  assets were  invested in  securities of  such issuer  (other than
obligations issued or guaranteed by  the United States Government, its  agencies
or   instrumentalities  or  by   the  State  of   California  or  its  political
subdivisions).

    2. Purchase more than 10% of all outstanding
taxable debt securities  of any one  issuer (other than  obligations issued,  or
guaranteed  as to principal  and interest, by the  United States Government, its
agencies or instrumentalities).

    3. Invest more than 25% of the value of its total
assets in taxable securities  of issuers in any  one industry. This  restriction
does  not  apply  to  obligations  issued or  guaranteed  by  the  United States
Government, its agencies or instrumentalities, or by the State of California  or
its  political subdivisions (industrial development  and pollution control bonds
are grouped into industries based upon the business in which the issuers of such
obligations are engaged).

PURCHASE OF FUND SHARES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Fund offers its  shares for sale  to the public  on a continuous  basis.
Pursuant   to  a  Distribution  Agreement  between  the  Fund  and  Dean  Witter
Distributors Inc. (the "Distributor"), an  affiliate of the Investment  Manager,
shares of the Fund are distributed by the Distributor and are offered by DWR and
other  dealers who have entered into  agreements with the Distributor ("Selected
Broker-Dealers"). The principal executive office  of the Distributor is  located
at Two World Trade Center, New York, New York 10048.
   
    The minimum initial purchase is $1,000. Subsequent purchases of $100 or more
may  be made  by sending  a check,  payable to  Dean Witter  California Tax-Free
Income Fund, directly to  Dean Witter Trust Company  ("Transfer Agent") at  P.O.
Box 1040, Jersey City, New Jersey 07303 or by contacting a DWR or other Selected
Dealer  account executive. Certificates for shares  purchased will not be issued
unless a request is made  by the shareholder in  writing to the Transfer  Agent.
The  offering  price will  be  the net  asset  value per  share  next determined
following receipt of an  order (see "Determination of  Net Asset Value"  below).
Shares  are sold through the Distributor or a Selected Broker-Dealer on a normal
five business day  settlement basis;  that is, payment  generally is  due on  or
before  the fifth business day (settlement date)  after the order is placed with
the Distributor  or  a Selected  Broker-Dealer.  Shares of  the  Fund  purchased
through  the Distributor or  a Selected Broker-Dealer  are entitled to dividends
beginning on the  next business  day following  settlement date.  Since DWR  and
other  Selected Broker-Dealers forward investors' funds on settlement date, they
will benefit from the  temporary use of  the funds where  payment is made  prior
thereto.  Shares purchased through the Transfer  Agent are entitled to dividends
beginning on  the next  business day  following receipt  of an  order. As  noted
above,  orders placed  directly with the  Transfer Agent must  be accompanied by
payment. Investors will be  entitled to receive  capital gains distributions  if
their  order is received by the close of business on the day prior to the record
date for such distributions. While no sales charge is imposed at the time shares
are purchased, a contingent deferred sales charge may be imposed at the time  of
redemption  (see "Redemptions and Repurchases"). Sales personnel are compensated
for selling shares  of the Fund  at the time  of their sale  by the  Distributor
and/or Selected Broker-Dealer. In addition, some sales personnel of the Selected
Broker-Dealer  will receive  various types  of non-cash  compensation as special
incentives,  including   trips,  educational   and/or  business   seminars   and
merchandise.  The  Fund and  the  Distributor reserve  the  right to  reject any
purchase orders.
    

                                       12
<PAGE>
PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION

   
    The Fund has adopted a Plan of  Distribution, pursuant to Rule 12b-1 of  the
Act  (the "Plan"),  under which the  Fund pays  the Distributor a  fee, which is
accrued daily and payable monthly, at an annual rate of 0.75% of the lesser  of:
(a)  the average  daily aggregate  gross sales  of the  Fund's shares  since the
inception of the Fund (not including reinvestments of dividends or capital gains
distributions), less the average daily aggregate  net asset value of the  Fund's
shares  redeemed since  the Fund's  inception upon  which a  contingent deferred
sales charge has been  imposed or waived,  or (b) the  Fund's average daily  net
assets.  Of the amount accrued under the Plan, 0.20% of the Fund's average daily
net assets is  characterized as a  service fee  within the meaning  of the  NASD
guidelines.  The service fee is  a payment made for  personal service and/or the
maintenance of shareholder accounts. The 12b-1 fee is treated by the Fund as  an
expense  in the year it is accrued. Amounts  paid under the Plan are paid to the
Distributor to compensate it for the services provided and the expenses borne by
the Distributor and others in the  distribution of the Fund's shares,  including
the  payment  of  commissions  for  sales of  the  Fund's  shares  and incentive
compensation to and expenses of account  executives and other employees of  DWR,
its  affiliates  and  other Selected  Broker-Dealers  who engage  in  or support
distribution of shares or who  service shareholder accounts, including  overhead
and  telephone expenses; printing  and distribution of  prospectuses and reports
used in connection with the offering of the Fund's shares to other than  current
shareholders; and preparation, printing and distribution of sales literature and
advertising  materials. For  the fiscal year  ended December 31,  1994, the Fund
accrued payments under the Plan amounting  to $8,309,032, which amount is  equal
to  0.75%  of the  Fund's  average daily  net assets  for  the fiscal  year. The
payments accrued under the  Plan were calculated pursuant  to clause (b) of  the
compensation formula under the Plan.
    

   
    At any given time, the expenses of distributing shares of the Fund may be in
excess  of the total of (i)  the payments made by the  Fund pursuant to the Plan
and (ii) the  proceeds of contingent  deferred sales charges  paid by  investors
upon redemption of shares (see "Redemptions and Repurchases--Contingent Deferred
Sales Charge"). For example, if $1 million in expenses in distributing shares of
the  Fund had been incurred  and $750,000 had been  received as described in (i)
and (ii) above, the excess expense would amount to $250,000. The Distributor has
advised the Fund that the  excess distribution expenses, including the  carrying
charge  described above,  totalled $12,196,207 at  December 31,  1994, which was
equal to  1.21% of  the Fund's  net assets  on such  date. Because  there is  no
requirement  under  the Plan  that  the Distributor  be  reimbursed for  all its
expenses or any requirement that the Plan  be continued from year to year,  this
excess  amount does not constitute a liability of the Fund. Although there is no
legal obligation for  the Fund to  pay expenses incurred  by the Distributor  in
excess of payments made to the Distributor under the Plan, if for any reason the
Plan  is terminated the Trustees will consider  at that time the manner in which
to treat such expenses. Any cumulative expenses incurred, but not yet  recovered
through  distribution fees or contingent deferred  sales charges, may or may not
be recovered  through  future distribution  fees  or contingent  deferred  sales
charges.
    

DETERMINATION OF NET ASSET VALUE

   
    The  net asset value per share of the  Fund is determined once daily at 4:00
p.m., New York  time on each  day that the  New York Stock  Exchange is open  by
taking  the  value  of all  assets  of  the Fund,  subtracting  its liabilities,
dividing by the number of shares outstanding and adjusting to the nearest  cent.
The  net asset value per share will not be determined on Good Friday and on such
other federal and  non-federal holidays as  are observed by  the New York  Stock
Exchange.
    

                                       13
<PAGE>
    Certain  of the Fund's portfolio securities may be valued for the Fund by an
outside independent pricing service  approved by the  Fund's Board of  Trustees.
The pricing service utilizes a computerized grid matrix of tax-exempt securities
and  evaluations by its staff in determining  what it believes is the fair value
of the Fund's portfolio securities. The Board believes that timely and  reliable
market  quotations are generally not readily  available to the Fund for purposes
of valuing tax-exempt securities and that the valuations supplied by the pricing
service are more likely to approximate the fair value of such securities.

   
    Short-term taxable debt securities with  remaining maturities of sixty  days
or less to maturity at time of purchase are valued at amortized cost, unless the
Board determines such does not reflect the securities' fair value, in which case
these  securities will be valued at their fair market value as determined by the
Board of Trustees. The value  of other assets will  be determined in good  faith
under  procedures  established by  and  under the  supervision  of the  Board of
Trustees.
    

SHAREHOLDER SERVICES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

   
    AUTOMATIC INVESTMENT OF DIVIDENDS AND  DISTRIBUTIONS.  All income  dividends
and  capital gains distributions  are automatically paid  in full and fractional
shares of the  Fund (or,  if specified by  the Shareholder,  any other  open-end
investment   company  for  which  InterCapital   serves  as  investment  manager
(collectively, with the Fund, the "Dean Witter Funds")), unless the  shareholder
requests  they  be paid  in  cash. Shares  so acquired  are  not subject  to the
imposition of  a contingent  deferred sales  charge upon  their redemption  (see
"Redemptions and Repurchases").
    
    EASYINVEST-SM-.    Shareholders may  subscribe  to EasyInvest,  an automatic
purchase plan  which  provides  for  any  amount  from  $100  to  $5,000  to  be
transferred automatically from a checking or savings account, on a semi-monthly,
monthly  or quarterly basis, to  the Transfer Agent for  investment in shares of
the Fund.

   
    INVESTMENT OF DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS RECEIVED IN CASH.__Any shareholder
who  receives  a  cash  payment   representing  a  dividend  or  capital   gains
distribution may invest such dividend or distribution at the net asset value per
share  next determined  after receipt  by the  Transfer Agent,  by returning the
check or the proceeds to the Transfer Agent within thirty days after the payment
date. Shares  so acquired  are not  subject to  the imposition  of a  contingent
deferred sales charge upon their redemption (see "Redemptions and Repurchases.")
    

    SYSTEMATIC  WITHDRAWAL PLAN.  A  systematic withdrawal plan (the "Withdrawal
Plan") is available  for shareholders  who own or  purchase shares  of the  Fund
having  a minimum value of $10,000 based  upon the then current net asset value.
The Withdrawal Plan provides  for monthly or  quarterly (March, June,  September
and  December) checks in  any dollar amount, not  less than $25  or in any whole
percentage of  the  account balance,  on  an annualized  basis.  Any  applicable
contingent  deferred sales charge  will be imposed on  shares redeemed under the
Withdrawal Plan  (See "Redemptions  and Repurchases--Contingent  Deferred  Sales
Charge").  Therefore, any shareholder participating  in the Withdrawal Plan will
have sufficient shares  redeemed from his  or her account  so that the  proceeds
(net of any applicable contingent deferred sales charge) to the shareholder will
be the designated monthly or quarterly dollar amount.

    Shareholders  should  contact  their  DWR  or  other  Selected Broker-Dealer
account executive or the Transfer Agent for further information about any of the
above services.

EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE

    The Fund  makes  available  to  its  shareholders  an  "Exchange  Privilege"
allowing the exchange of

                                       14
<PAGE>
shares  of the Fund for shares of other  Dean Witter Funds sold with a contigent
deferred sales charge ("CDSC  funds") and for shares  of Dean Witter  Short-Term
U.S.  Treasury Trust, Dean Witter Limited  Term Municipal Trust, and Dean Witter
Short-Term Bond Fund  and five Dean  Witter Funds which  are money market  funds
(the  foregoing  eight  non-CDSC  or  FESC  funds  are  hereinafter collectively
referred to in  this section  as the "Exchange  Funds"). Exchanges  may be  made
after  the shares of the Fund acquired  by purchase (not by exchange or dividend
reinvestment) have been  held for thirty  days. There is  no waiting period  for
exchanges of shares acquired by exchange or dividend reinvestment.

    An  exchange to another CDSC  fund or any Exchange Fund  that is not a money
market fund is on the basis of the next calculated net asset value per share  of
each  fund after the  exchange order is  received. When exchanging  into a money
market fund from the Fund,  shares of the Fund are  redeemed out of the Fund  at
their  next calculated net  asset value and  the proceeds of  the redemption are
used to  purchase shares  of the  money market  fund at  their net  asset  value
determined  the following business day. Subsequent  exchanges between any of the
money market funds and any of the CDSC funds can be effected on the same  basis.
No  contingent deferred  sales charge  ("CDSC") is  imposed at  the time  of any
exchange, although any applicable CDSC will be imposed upon ultimate redemption.
Shares of the Fund acquired in exchange for shares of another CDSC fund having a
different CDSC schedule  than that  of this  Fund will  be subject  to the  CDSC
schedule  of this  Fund, even if  such shares are  subsequently re-exchanged for
shares of the  CDSC fund  originally purchased. During  the period  of time  the
shareholder  remains in the Exchange Funds (calculated  from the last day of the
month in which the Exchange Funds shares were acquired), the holding period (for
the purpose of determining the rate of the CDSC) is frozen. If those shares  are
subsequently  reexchanged  for  shares  of  a  CDSC  fund,  the  holding  period
previously frozen when the first  exchange was made resumes  on the last day  of
the month in which shares of a CDSC fund are reacquired. Thus, the CDSC is based
upon  the time (calculated as described above) the shareholder was invested in a
CDSC fund (see "Redemptions and Repurchases--Contingent Deferred Sales Charge").
However, in the case of shares of the Fund exchanged into the Exchange Funds  on
or  after April 23,  1990, upon a redemption  of shares which  results in a CDSC
being imposed, a credit (not to exceed the amount of the CDSC) will be given  in
an  amount equal to  the Exchange Funds  12b-1 distribution fees  incurred on or
after that date  which are attributable  to those shares.  (The Exchange  Funds'
12b-1 distribution fees are described in the prospectus for these funds.)

    In  addition, shares of the  Fund may be acquired  in exchange for shares of
Dean Witter Funds sold with a front-end sales charge ("FESC funds"), but  shares
of  the Fund, however acquired,  may not be exchanged  for shares of FESC funds.
Shares of a  CDSC fund acquired  in exchange for  shares of a  FESC fund (or  in
exchange  for shares of other Dean Witter Funds  for which shares of a FESC fund
have been exchanged) are not subject to any CDSC upon their redemption.

    Purchases and  exchanges should  be  made for  investment purposes  only.  A
pattern  of frequent  exchanges may  be deemed by  the Investment  Manager to be
abusive and contrary to the best interests of the Fund's other shareholders and,
at the Investment Manager's discretion, may be limited by the Fund's refusal  to
accept  additional purchases and/  or exchanges from  the investor. Although the
Fund does not  have any  specific definition of  what constitutes  a pattern  of
frequent  exchanges,  and  will  consider all  relevant  factors  in determining
whether a particular situation is abusive and contrary to the best interests  of
the Fund and its other shareholders, investors should be aware that the Fund and
each  of the other Dean Witter Funds  may in their discretion limit or otherwise
restrict the number  of times this  Exchange Privilege may  be exercised by  any
investor.  Any such restriction will be made  by the Fund on a prospective basis
only, upon notice to

                                       15
<PAGE>
the shareholder not later than ten days following such shareholder's most recent
exchange.

    Also, the Exchange Privilege may be terminated or revised at any time by the
Fund and/or any of such  Dean Witter Funds for which  shares of the Fund may  be
exchanged,  upon  such  notice  as  may  be  required  by  applicable regulatory
agencies. Shareholders maintaining margin accounts with DWR or another  Selected
Broker-Dealer  are referred to their account executive regarding restrictions on
exchange of shares of the Fund pledged in their margin account.

    The current prospectus for each  fund describes its investment  objective(s)
and  policies, and shareholders  should obtain one and  read it carefully before
investing. Exchanges are subject to  the minimum investment requirement and  any
other  conditions imposed by each fund. An  exchange will be treated for federal
income tax purposes the same  as a repurchase or  redemption of shares on  which
the  shareholder has realized  a capital gain  or loss. However,  the ability to
deduct capital losses on an exchange may be limited in situations where there is
an exchange of  shares within ninety  days after the  shares are purchased.  The
Exchange  Privilege is only available in states where an exchange may legally be
made.

    If DWR or another Selected Broker-Dealer is the current dealer of record and
its account  numbers  are part  of  the account  information,  shareholders  may
initiate  an exchange of shares of the Fund for shares of any of the Dean Witter
Funds (for which the Exchange Privilege is available) pursuant to this  Exchange
Privilege   by  contacting  their  account   executive  (no  Exchange  Privilege
Authorization Form is required). Other shareholders (and those shareholders  who
are  clients  of DWR  or  other Selected  Broker-Dealers  but who  wish  to make
exchanges directly by writing or  telephoning the Transfer Agent) must  complete
and  forward to  the Transfer  Agent an  Exchange Privilege  Authorization Form,
copies of  which  may  be obtained  from  the  Transfer Agent,  to  initiate  an
exchange. If the Authorization Form is used, exchanges may be made in writing or
by  contacting the Transfer Agent  at (800) 526-3143 (toll  free). The Fund will
employ reasonable procedures to confirm that exchange instructions  communicated
over  the telephone are  genuine. Such procedures  may include requiring various
forms of personal identification such as name, mailing address, social  security
or  other tax  identification number  and DWR  or other  Selected Dealer account
number (if any). Telephone instructions may also be recorded. If such procedures
are not employed, the Fund may be  liable for any losses due to unauthorized  or
fraudulent instructions.

    Telephone exchange instructions will be accepted if received by the Transfer
Agent  between 9:00 a.m.  and 4:00 p.m. New  York time, on any  day the New York
Stock Exchange is  open. Any  shareholder wishing to  make an  exchange who  has
previously  filed an Exchange Privilege Authorization  Form and who is unable to
reach the Fund  by telephone should  contact his  or her DWR  or other  Selected
Broker-Dealer  account  executive, if  appropriate, or  make a  written exchange
request. Shareholders are  advised that  during periods of  drastic economic  or
market  changes, it  is possible that  the telephone exchange  procedures may be
difficult to implement, although this has not been the case with the Dean Witter
Funds in the past.

    Additional information concerning the Exchange Privilege is available from a
DWR or other Selected Broker-Dealer account executives or the Transfer Agent.

REDEMPTIONS AND REPURCHASES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    REDEMPTION.  Shares of the Fund can be redeemed for cash at any time at  the
net asset value per share next determined; however, such redemption proceeds may
be reduced by the amount of
any applicable contingent deferred sales charges (see below). If shares are held
in a shareholder's

                                       16
<PAGE>
   
account  without a  share certificate, a  written request for  redemption to the
Fund's Transfer  Agent  at  P.O. Box  983,  Jersey  City, New  Jersey  07303  is
required.  If certificates  are held  by the  shareholder(s), the  shares may be
redeemed  by  surrendering  the  certificate(s)   with  a  written  request   of
redemption,  along  with any  additional  information required  by  the Transfer
Agent.
    

    CONTINGENT DEFERRED SALES CHARGE.  Shares of the Fund which are held for six
years or more after purchase (calculated from the last day of the month in which
the shares were purchased)  will not be subject  to any charge upon  redemption.
Shares redeemed sooner than six years after purchase may, however, be subject to
a  charge upon  redemption. This charge  is called a  "contingent deferred sales
charge" ("CDSC"), which  will be  a percentage of  the dollar  amount of  shares
redeemed  and will be assessed  on an amount equal to  the lesser of the current
market value  or  the cost  of  the shares  being  redeemed. The  size  of  this
percentage  will depend upon how long the shares have been held, as set forth in
the table below:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              CONTINGENT DEFERRED
               YEAR SINCE                        SALES CHARGE
                PURCHASE                      ON A PERCENTAGE OF
              PAYMENT MADE                      AMOUNT REDEEMED
- -----------------------------------------  -------------------------
<S>                                        <C>
First....................................              5.0 %
Second...................................              4.0 %
Third....................................              3.0 %
Fourth...................................              2.0 %
Fifth....................................              2.0 %
Sixth....................................              1.0 %
Seventh and thereafter...................           None
</TABLE>

    A CDSC will not be imposed on:  (i) any amount which represents an  increase
in value of shares purchased within the six years preceding the redemption; (ii)
the current net asset value of shares purchased more than six years prior to the
redemption;  and (iii) the  current net asset value  of shares purchased through
reinvestment of dividends  or distributions and/or  shares acquired in  exchange
for  shares of Dean Witter Funds sold with  a front-end sales charge or of other
Dean Witter Funds acquired in exchange for such shares. Moreover, in determining
whether a CDSC is applicable it will  be assumed that amounts described in  (i),
(ii),  and (iii) above (in that order)  are redeemed first. In addition, no CDSC
will be imposed on redemptions which  were purchased by certain Unit  Investment
Trusts  (on which  a sales charge  has been  paid) or which  are attributable to
reinvestment of dividends or distributions from,  or the proceeds of, such  Unit
Investment Trusts.

    In  addition, the CDSC, if otherwise applicable,  will be waived in the case
of (i) redemptions  of shares held  at the  time a shareholder  dies or  becomes
disabled,  only  if the  shares  are (a)  registered either  in  the name  of an
individual shareholder (not a  trust), or in the  names of such shareholder  and
his  or her spouse as joint tenants with right of survivorship, or (b) held in a
qualified corporate  or  self-employed retirement  plan,  Individual  Retirement
Account  or Custodial  Account under Section  403(b)(7) of  the Internal Revenue
Code, provided in either case that  the redemption is requested within one  year
of  the death  or initial determination  of disability, and  (ii) redemptions in
connection with the  following retirement  plan distributions:  (a) lump-sum  or
other  distributions from a qualified corporate or self-employed retirement plan
following retirement (or in the case of a "key employee" of a "top heavy"  plan,
following  attainment  of  age 59  1/2);  (b) distributions  from  an Individual
Retirement Account or Custodial Account under Section 403(b)(7) of the  Internal
Revenue Code following attainment of age 59 1/2; and (c) a tax-free return of an
excess  contribution to an  IRA. For the purpose  of determining disability, the
Distributor utilizes the definition of disability contained in Section  72(m)(7)
of  the  Internal Revenue  Code, which  relates  to the  inability to  engage in
gainful employment.  All waivers  will  be granted  subject  to receipt  by  the
Distributor of confirmation of the investor's entitlement.

    REPURCHASE.    DWR  and  other  Selected  Broker-Dealers  are  authorized to
repurchase shares represented by a share  certificate which is delivered to  any
of  their  offices.  Shares held  in  a  shareholder's account  without  a share
certificate  may  also  be  repurchased   by  DWR  or  other  Selected   Broker-

                                       17
<PAGE>
Dealers  upon the telephonic request of the shareholder. The repurchase price is
the net asset  value next computed  (see "Purchase of  Fund Shares") after  such
repurchase order is received by DWR or other Selected Broker-Dealers, reduced by
any applicable CDSC.
    The  CDSC, if any, will be the only fee imposed upon repurchase by the Fund,
the Distributor or  DWR. The offer  by DWR or  other Selected Broker-Dealers  to
repurchase  shares may be suspended without notice  by them at any time. In that
event, shareholders may redeem their shares through the Fund's Transfer Agent as
set forth above under "Redemption."

    PAYMENT FOR SHARES REDEEMED  OR REPURCHASED.   Payment for shares  presented
for  repurchase or  redemption will  be made  by check  within seven  days after
receipt by the Transfer Agent of the certificate and/or written request in  good
order.  Such payment may be postponed or the right of redemption suspended under
unusual circumstances. If the shares to be redeemed have recently been purchased
by check, payment of the redemption proceeds may be delayed for the minimum time
needed to verify that the check used  for investment has been honored (not  more
than  fifteen days from the time of receipt of the check by the Transfer Agent).
Shareholders  maintaining   margin  accounts   with   DWR  or   other   Selected
Broker-Dealers are referred to their account executive regarding restrictions on
redemption of shares of the Fund pledged in their margin account.

   
    REINSTATEMENT  PRIVILEGE.   A  shareholder  who has  had  his or  her shares
redeemed or  repurchased and  has not  previously exercised  this  reinstatement
privilege  may,  within  thirty  days  after  the  date  of  the  redemption  or
repurchase, reinstate any portion or all  of the proceeds of such redemption  or
repurchase  in shares of the Fund at the net asset value next determined after a
reinstatement request, together with the  proceeds, is received by the  Transfer
Agent  and receive a pro-rata  credit for any CDSC  paid in connection with such
redemption or repurchase.
    

   
    INVOLUNTARY REDEMPTION.   The Fund reserves  the right to  redeem, on  sixty
days  notice and at net  asset value, the shares  of any shareholder (other than
shares held  in an  Individual  Retirement Account  or Custodial  Account  under
Section  403(b)(7) of the  Internal Revenue Code)  whose shares have  a value of
less than $100 as a result of redemptions or repurchases, or such lesser  amount
as  may be fixed by the Board of Trustees. However, before the Fund redeems such
shares and sends the proceeds to the shareholder, it will notify the shareholder
that the value of the shares is less  than $100 and allow him or her sixty  days
to  make an additional investment in an  amount which will increase the value of
his or her account to $100 or  more before the redemption is processed. No  CDSC
will be imposed on any involuntary redemption.
    

DIVIDENDS, DISTRIBUTIONS AND TAXES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    DIVIDENDS   AND  DISTRIBUTIONS.    The  Fund  declares  dividends  from  net
investment income on each day the New  York Stock Exchange is open for  business
(see  "Purchase of Fund  Shares"). Such dividends are  payable monthly. The Fund
intends to  distribute all  of the  Fund's net  investment income  on an  annual
basis.

    The  Fund will distribute at least once each year all net short-term capital
gains, if there are any. The  Fund may, however, determine either to  distribute
or  to retain all  or part of  any net long-term  capital gains in  any year for
reinvestment. All  dividends and  capital gains  distributions will  be paid  in
additional  Fund shares (without sales charge) and automatically credited to the
shareholder's account  without  issuance  of  a  share  certificate  unless  the
shareholder  requests  in  writing that  all  dividends  be paid  in  cash. (See
"Shareholder Services--Automatic  Investment of  Dividends and  Distributions".)
Taxable  capital gains may  be generated by transactions  in options and futures
contracts engaged in by the Fund. Any dividends or distributions declared in the

                                       18
<PAGE>
last quarter of any calendar year which are paid in the following year prior  to
February 1, will be deemed received by shareholders of record in the prior year.

    TAXES.   Because the Fund intends to distribute substantially all of its net
investment income and  capital gains  to shareholders and  intends to  otherwise
comply with all the provisions of Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code (the
"Code")  to qualify as a  regulated investment company, it  is not expected that
the Fund will be required to pay any federal income tax.

    The Fund  intends  to qualify  to  pay "exempt-interest  dividends"  to  its
shareholders  by maintaining,  as of  the close of  each quarter  of its taxable
year, at least 50% of the value of its total assets in tax-exempt securities. If
the Fund  satisfies such  requirement, then  distributions from  net  investment
income  to shareholders will be  exempt from federal taxation  to the extent net
investment  income  is  represented   by  interest  on  tax-exempt   securities.
Shareholders  generally will not incur  any federal income tax  on the amount of
exempt-interest dividends received by them from the Fund, whether taken in  cash
or  reinvested  in additional  shares.  Exempt-interest dividends  are included,
however, in determining  what portion,  if any,  of a  person's Social  Security
benefits are subject to federal income tax.

    The  Code  may subject  interest  received on  certain  otherwise tax-exempt
securities to an alternative  minimum tax. This alternative  minimum tax may  be
incurred due to interest received on "private activity bonds" (in general, bonds
that  benefit  non-government  entities)  issued  after  August  7,  1986 which,
although tax-exempt, are used for purposes other than those generally  performed
by  governmental units  (e.g., bonds used  for commercial  or housing purposes).
Income received on such  bonds is classified as  a "tax preference item",  under
the  alternative minimum  tax, for  both individual  and corporate  investors. A
portion of the Fund's investments may be made in such "private activity  bonds,"
with the result that a portion of the exempt-interest dividends paid by the Fund
will  be an item  of tax preference  to shareholders subject  to the alternative
minimum tax.  In  addition,  certain  corporations  which  are  subject  to  the
alternative  minimum  tax  may  have to  include  a  portion  of exempt-interest
dividends in calculating their alternative minimum taxable income in  situations
where the "adjusted current earnings" of the corporation exceeds its alternative
minimum taxable income.

    Under  California  law, a  fund which  qualifies  as a  regulated investment
company must have at least 50% of its total assets invested in California  state
and  local issues  (or in  obligations of the  United States  which pay interest
excludable from income) at the end of each quarter of its taxable year in  order
to  be eligible to pay  dividends which will be  exempt from California personal
income tax. Shareholders who are California residents will not incur any federal
or California income tax on the amount of exempt-interest dividends received  by
them  from the Fund and derived from  California state and local issues, whether
taken in cash or reinvested in additional shares.

    After the  end  of  the calendar  year,  the  shareholders will  be  sent  a
statement  indicating  the percentage  of  the dividend  distributions  for such
fiscal year which constitutes exempt-interest  dividends and the percentage,  if
any,  that  is  taxable, and  the  percentage,  if any,  of  the exempt-interest
dividends which  constitutes an  item  of tax  preference. Unlike  federal  law,
California  law provides that  no portion of  the exempt-interest dividends will
constitute an  item  of  tax  preference  for  California  personal  income  tax
purposes. Moreover, unlike federal law, an individual's Social Security benefits
are  not  subject to  California personal  income  tax, so  that the  receipt of
California exempt-interest  dividends will  have no  effect on  an  individual's
California personal income tax.

    Under the Revenue Reconciliation Act of 1993, all or a portion of the Fund's
gain from the sale or redemption of tax-exempt obligations purchased at a market
discount  after April 30,  1993 will be  treated as ordinary  income rather than
capital gain. This  rule may increase  the amount of  ordinary income  dividends
received by shareholders.

                                       19
<PAGE>
    Shareholders  will normally  be subject  to federal  and California personal
income  tax  on  dividends  paid  from  interest  income  derived  from  taxable
securities and on distributions of net capital gains. For federal income tax and
California  personal  income tax  purposes,  distributions of  long-term capital
gains,  if  any,  are  taxable  to  shareholders  as  long-term  capital  gains,
regardless  of how long a shareholder has  held the Fund's shares and regardless
of whether the  distribution is  received in additional  shares or  in cash.  In
addition,  unlike federal law, the shareholders of  the Fund will not be subject
to tax, or receive a credit for  tax paid by the Fund, on undistributed  capital
gains, if any. To avoid being subject to a 31% backup withholding tax on taxable
dividends  and capital gains  distributions and the  proceeds of redemptions and
repurchases, shareholders' taxpayer identification numbers must be furnished and
certified as to accuracy.

    Any loss on the sale  or exchange of shares of  the Fund which are held  for
six  months  or  less  is  disallowed  to  the  extent  of  the  amount  of  any
exempt-interest dividend paid with respect to such shares. Treasury  Regulations
may  provide for a reduction in such  required holding periods. If a shareholder
receives a distribution that is taxed as a long-term capital gain on shares held
for six months  or less  and sells  those shares  at a  loss, the  loss will  be
treated as a long-term capital loss.

    Interest  on  indebtedness incurred  by shareholders  or related  parties to
purchase or  carry  shares  of  an  investment  company  paying  exempt-interest
dividends,  such as the Fund, will not be deductible by the investor for federal
or state personal income tax purposes.

    The foregoing relates to federal income taxation and to California  personal
income  taxation as in effect  as of the date  of this Prospectus. Distributions
from investment income and  capital gains, including exempt-interest  dividends,
may  be subject to California franchise taxes if received by a corporation doing
business in California, to  state taxes in states  other than California and  to
local taxes.

    Shareholders  should consult their  tax advisors as  to the applicability of
the above to their own tax situation.

PERFORMANCE INFORMATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    From time to time the Fund may  quote its "yield" and/or its "total  return"
in  advertisements and sales literature. Both the  yield and the total return of
the Fund  are based  on historical  earnings and  are not  intended to  indicate
future performance. The yield of the Fund is computed by dividing the Fund's net
investment  income over a 30-day  period by an average  value (using the average
number of shares entitled to receive dividends and the net asset value per share
at the  end  of  the  period), all  in  accordance  with  applicable  regulatory
requirements. Such amount is compounded for six months and then annualized for a
twelve-month  period to  derive the  Fund's yield. The  Fund may  also quote its
tax-equivalent yield,  which  is calculated  by  determining the  pre-tax  yield
which,  after being  taxed at a  stated rate,  would be equivalent  to the yield
determined as described above.

   
    The "average annual total return" of the Fund refers to a figure  reflecting
the  average annualized  percentage increase  (or decrease)  in the  value of an
initial investment in  the Fund of  $1,000 over a  period of one,  five and  ten
years.  Average annual total return reflects all  income earned by the Fund, any
appreciation or depreciation of the Fund's assets, all expenses incurred by  the
Fund  and all sales  charges which would be  incurred by redeeming shareholders,
for the  stated periods.  It  also assumes  reinvestment  of all  dividends  and
distributions paid by the Fund.
    

    In  addition to the foregoing, the Fund  may advertise its total return over
different periods of time by means of aggregate, average, year-by-year or  other
types  of total  return figures.  Such calculations may  or may  not reflect the
deduction of the

                                       20
<PAGE>
contingent  deferred  sales  charge  which,  if  reflected,  would  reduce   the
performance  quoted.  The Fund  may also  advertise  the growth  of hypothetical
investments of $10,000,  $50,000 and $100,000  in shares of  the Fund. The  Fund
from  time  to  time may  also  advertise  its performance  relative  to certain
performance rankings and indexes compiled by independent organizations (such  as
mutual fund performance rankings of Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.)

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    VOTING  RIGHTS.  All shares of beneficial  interest of the Fund are of $0.01
par value and are equal as to earnings, assets and voting privileges.
   
    The Fund is not required to  hold Annual Meetings of Shareholders and  under
ordinary  circumstances  the Fund  does not  intend to  hold such  meetings. The
Trustees may call  Special Meetings  of Shareholders for  action by  shareholder
vote  as may be required  by the Act or the  Declaration of Trust. Under certain
circumstances the Trustees may be  removed by action of  the Trustees or by  the
Shareholders.
    
   
    Under Massachusetts law, shareholders of a business trust may, under certain
circumstances,  be held personally liable as partners for the obligations of the
Fund. However,  the  Declaration of  Trust  contains an  express  disclaimer  of
shareholder  liability for acts  or obligations of the  Fund, requires that Fund
obligations include  such  disclaimer,  and  provides  for  indemnification  and
reimbursement  of expenses out  of the Fund's property  for any shareholder held
personally liable  for  the  obligations  of  the Fund.  Thus,  the  risk  of  a
shareholder  incurring  financial loss  on account  of shareholder  liability is
limited to circumstances in which  the Fund itself would  be unable to meet  its
obligations.  Given the above limitations  on shareholder personal liability and
the nature of  the Fund's  assets and operations,  the possibility  of the  Fund
being  unable  to  meet  its  obligations  is  remote  and,  in  the  opinion of
Massachusetts counsel to  the Fund, the  risk to Fund  shareholders of  personal
liability is remote.
    
   
    CODE OF ETHICS.  Directors, officers and em-
ployees  of InterCapital, Dean Witter Services  Company Inc. and the Distributor
are subject to a strict Code of  Ethics adopted by those companies. The Code  of
Ethics  is  intended to  ensure  that the  interests  of shareholders  and other
clients are  placed ahead  of  any personal  interest,  that no  undue  personal
benefit  is obtained from  a person's employment activities  and that actual and
potential conflicts of interest are avoided.  To achieve these goals and  comply
with  regulatory requirements, the Code of  Ethics requires, among other things,
that personal securities transactions by  employees of the companies be  subject
to  an advance clearance process to monitor  that no Dean Witter Fund is engaged
at the same time in a purchase or sale of the same security. The Code of  Ethics
bans  the purchase  of securities  in an  initial public  offering and prohibits
engaging in futures and option transactions and profiting on short-term  trading
(that  is, a purchase within sixty days of a sale or a sale within sixty days of
a purchase) of a security. In addition, investment personnel may not purchase or
sell a security for  their personal account within  thirty days before or  after
any  transaction in any Dean Witter Fund  managed by them. Any violations of the
Code of  Ethics  are subject  to  sanctions, including  reprimand,  demotion  or
suspension  or  termination  of employment.  The  Code of  Ethics  comports with
regulatory requirements  and the  recommendations in  the recent  report by  the
Investment Company Institute Advisory Group on Personal Investing.
    

    SHAREHOLDER  INQUIRIES.  All inquiries regarding the Fund should be directed
to the Fund at the telephone numbers or address set forth on the front cover  of
this Prospectus.

                                       21
<PAGE>
                        THE DEAN WITTER FAMILY OF FUNDS

   
MONEY MARKET FUNDS                       DEAN WITTER RETIREMENT SERIES
Dean Witter Liquid Asset Fund Inc.       Liquid Asset Series
Dean Witter U.S. Government Money        U.S. Government Money Market Series
Market Trust                             U.S. Government Securities Series
Dean Witter Tax-Free Daily Income Trust  Intermediate Income Securities Series
Dean Witter California Tax-Free Daily    American Value Series
Income Trust                             Capital Growth Series
Dean Witter New York Municipal Money     Dividend Growth Series
Market Trust                             Stategist Series
EQUITY FUNDS                             Utilities Series
Dean Witter American Value Fund          Value-Added Market Series
Dean Witter Natural Resource             Global Equity Series
Development Securities Inc.              ASSET ALLOCATION FUNDS
Dean Witter Dividend Growth Securities   Dean Witter Managed Assets Trust
Inc.                                     Dean Witter Strategist Fund
Dean Witter Developing Growth            Dean Witter Global Asset Allocation
Securities Trust                         Fund
Dean Witter World Wide Investment Trust  ACTIVE ASSETS ACCOUNT PROGRAM
Dean Witter Value-Added Market Series    Active Assets Money Trust
Dean Witter Utilities Fund               Active Assets Tax-Free Trust
Dean Witter Capital Growth Securities    Active Assets California Tax-Free Trust
Dean Witter European Growth Fund Inc.    Active Assets Government Securities
Dean Witter Precious Metals and          Trust
Minerals Trust
Dean Witter Pacific Growth Fund Inc.
Dean Witter Health Sciences Trust
Dean Witter Global Dividend Growth
Securities
Dean Witter Global Utilities Fund
Dean Witter International SmallCap Fund
Dean Witter Mid-Cap Growth Fund
FIXED-INCOME FUNDS
Dean Witter High Yield Securities Inc.
Dean Witter Tax-Exempt Securities Trust
Dean Witter U.S. Government Securities
Trust
Dean Witter Federal Securities Trust
Dean Witter Convertible Securities
Trust
Dean Witter California Tax-Free Income
Fund
Dean Witter New York Tax-Free Income
Fund
Dean Witter World Wide Income Trust
Dean Witter Intermediate Income
Securities
Dean Witter Global Short-Term Income
Fund Inc.
Dean Witter Multi-State Municipal
Series Trust
Dean Witter Premier Income Trust
Dean Witter Short-Term U.S. Treasury
Trust
Dean Witter Diversified Income Trust
Dean Witter Limited Term Municipal
Trust
Dean Witter Short-Term Bond Fund
Dean Witter National Municipal Trust
Dean Witter High Income Securities
    
<PAGE>

   
Dean Witter
California Tax-Free Income Fund
                                    Dean Witter
Two World Trade Center
New York, New York 10048
TRUSTEES                            California
Jack F. Bennett                     Tax-Free
Michael Bozic                       Income Fund
Charles A. Fiumefreddo
Edwin J. Garn
John R. Haire
Dr. Manuel H. Johnson
Paul Kolton
Michael E. Nugent
Philip J. Purcell
John L. Schroeder
OFFICERS
Charles A. Fiumefreddo
Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer
Sheldon Curtis
Vice President, Secretary and
General Counsel
James F. Willison
Vice President
Thomas F. Caloia
Treasurer
CUSTODIAN
The Bank of New York
90 Washington Street
New York, New York 10286
TRANSFER AGENT AND
DIVIDEND DISBURSING AGENT
Dean Witter Trust Company
Harborside Financial Center
Plaza Two
Jersey City, New Jersey 07311
INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
Price Waterhouse LLP
1177 Avenue of the Americas
New York, New York 10036
INVESTMENT MANAGER
Dean Witter InterCapital Inc.
                                        PROSPECTUS -- FEBRUARY 23, 1995

    
<PAGE>
STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

   
FEBRUARY 23, 1995                                                    DEAN WITTER
    
                                                             CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE
                                                                     INCOME FUND

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

   
    Dean  Witter California  Tax-Free Income Fund  (the "Fund")  is an open-end,
diversified management  investment  company  whose investment  objective  is  to
provide  a high level of current income  exempt from both federal and California
income tax,  consistent  with the  preservation  of capital.  The  Fund  invests
principally  in California tax-exempt fixed-income securities which are rated in
the four highest  categories by Moody's  Investors Service, Inc.  or Standard  &
Poor's Corporation. (See "Investment Practices and Policies".)
    

   
    A  Prospectus for the Fund dated February 23, 1995, which provides the basic
information you  should know  before  investing in  the  Fund, may  be  obtained
without  charge from the Fund at the address or telephone number listed below or
from the Fund's Distributor, Dean Witter Distributors Inc., or from Dean  Witter
Reynolds  Inc.  at  any of  its  branch  offices. This  Statement  of Additional
Information is not a Prospectus. It contains information in addition to and more
detailed than that set forth  in the Prospectus. It  is intended to provide  you
additional  information regarding the activities and operations of the Fund, and
should be read in conjunction with the Prospectus.
    

Dean Witter
California Tax-Free Income Fund
Two World Trade Center
New York, New York 10048
(212) 392-2550
<PAGE>
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

   
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                      <C>
The Fund and its Management............................................................          3
Trustees and Officers..................................................................          6
Investment Practices and Policies......................................................         12
Investment Restrictions................................................................         19
Portfolio Transactions and Brokerage...................................................         20
The Distributor........................................................................         24
Shareholder Services...................................................................         28
Redemptions and Repurchases............................................................         33
Dividends, Distributions and Taxes.....................................................         35
Performance Information................................................................         38
Shares of the Fund.....................................................................         39
Custodian and Transfer Agent...........................................................         40
Independent Accountants................................................................         40
Reports to Shareholders................................................................         41
Legal Counsel..........................................................................         41
Experts................................................................................         41
Registration Statement.................................................................         41
Report of Independent Accountants......................................................         42
Financial Statements -- December 31, 1994..............................................         49
Appendix...............................................................................         54
</TABLE>
    

                                       2
<PAGE>
THE FUND AND ITS MANAGEMENT
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

THE FUND

    The  Fund is a Trust of the type commonly known as a "Massachusetts business
trust" and was organized under the laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts  on
April 9, 1984.

THE INVESTMENT MANAGER

    Dean  Witter  InterCapital Inc.,  a  Delaware corporation,  (the "Investment
Manager" or "InterCapital"), whose address is Two World Trade Center, New  York,
New York 10048, is the Fund's Investment Manager. InterCapital is a wholly-owned
subsidiary  of Dean Witter, Discover &  Co. ("DWDC"), a Delaware corporation. In
an internal  reorganization  which took  place  in January,  1993,  InterCapital
assumed  the  investment  advisory,  administrative  and  management  activities
previously performed by the InterCapital  Division of Dean Witter Reynolds  Inc.
("DWR"), a broker-dealer affiliate of InterCapital. (As hereinafter used in this
Statement  of Additional  Information, the terms  "InterCapital" and "Investment
Manager"  refer  to   DWR's  InterCapital   Division  prior   to  the   internal
reorganization   and  Dean  Witter  InterCapital  Inc.  thereafter.)  The  daily
management of  the  Fund  and  research relating  to  the  Fund's  portfolio  is
conducted  by  or  under  the direction  of  officers  of the  Fund  and  of the
Investment Manager, subject to periodic review by the Fund's Board of  Trustees.
In  addition,  Trustees of  the Fund  provide guidance  on economic  factors and
interest rate trends. Information as to these trustees and officers is contained
under the caption, "Trustees and Officers."

   
    InterCapital is also  the investment  manager or investment  adviser of  the
following  management investment  companies: Active  Assets Money  Trust, Active
Assets Tax-Free Trust, Active Assets Government Securities Trust, Active  Assets
California  Tax-Free  Trust, Dean  Witter Liquid  Asset Fund  Inc., InterCapital
Income Securities  Inc., Dean  Witter High  Yield Securities  Inc., Dean  Witter
Tax-Free  Daily Income  Trust, Dean  Witter Developing  Growth Securities Trust,
Dean Witter American Value  Fund, Dean Witter  Dividend Growth Securities  Inc.,
Dean  Witter  Natural Resource  Development  Securities Inc.,  Dean  Witter U.S.
Government Money Market  Trust, Dean  Witter Tax-Exempt  Securities Trust,  Dean
Witter Variable Investment Series, Dean Witter World Wide Investment Trust, Dean
Witter   Select  Municipal  Reinvestment  Fund,   Dean  Witter  U.S.  Government
Securities Trust,  Dean  Witter  New  York Tax-Free  Income  Fund,  Dean  Witter
Convertible  Securities Trust, Dean Witter Federal Securities Trust, Dean Witter
Value-Added Market Series, High Income  Advantage Trust, Dean Witter  Government
Income Trust, Dean Witter Utilities Fund, Dean Witter Managed Assets Trust, Dean
Witter Strategist Fund, Dean Witter California Tax-Free Daily Income Trust, High
Income  Advantage Trust  II, Dean  Witter World  Wide Income  Trust, Dean Witter
Intermediate Income  Securities, Dean  Witter  Capital Growth  Securities,  Dean
Witter  European Growth  Fund Inc., Dean  Witter Pacific Growth  Fund Inc., Dean
Witter Precious Metals and Minerals Trust, Dean Witter Global Short-Term  Income
Fund  Inc., Dean Witter Multi-State Municipal Series Trust, InterCapital Insured
Municipal Bond  Trust, InterCapital  Quality  Municipal Investment  Trust,  Dean
Witter  Premier Income Trust, Dean Witter New York Municipal Money Market Trust,
Dean Witter  Short-Term  U.S.  Treasury Trust,  InterCapital  Insured  Municipal
Trust,  InterCapital  Quality Municipal  Income  Trust, Dean  Witter Diversified
Income Trust, Dean Witter Health Sciences Trust, Dean Witter Retirement  Series,
InterCapital  Quality  Municipal  Securities,  InterCapital  California  Quality
Municipal Securities, InterCapital New  York Quality Municipal Securities,  Dean
Witter  Global Dividend  Growth Securities,  Dean Witter  Limited Term Municipal
Trust, Dean Witter Short-Term Bond Fund, Dean Witter Global Utilities Fund, Dean
Witter National Municipal Trust, Dean Witter High Income Securities, Dean Witter
International SmallCap Fund, Dean Witter Mid-Cap Growth Fund, Dean Witter Select
Dimensions  Investment  Series,  Dean  Witter  Global  Asset  Allocation   Fund,
InterCapital  Insured  Municipal  Securities,  InterCapital  Insured  California
Municipal Securities, InterCapital Insured Municipal Income Trust,  InterCapital
California  Insured  Municipal Income  Trust, High  Income Advantage  Trust III,
Municipal Income Trust, Municipal Income  Trust II, Municipal Income Trust  III,
Municipal  Income Opportunities Trust, Municipal  Income Opportunities Trust II,
Municipal Income  Opportunities  Trust III,  Prime  Income Trust  and  Municipal
Premium  Income  Trust. The  foregoing investment  companies, together  with the
Fund, are collectively referred to as  the Dean Witter Funds. In addition,  Dean
Witter   Services   Company  Inc.   ("DWSC"),   a  wholly-owned   subsidiary  of
InterCapital, serves as manager for the following companies
    

                                       3
<PAGE>
   
for which TCW  Funds Management,  Inc. is  the investment  adviser: TCW/DW  Core
Equity  Trust,  TCW/DW  North  American Government  Income  Trust,  TCW/DW Latin
American Growth  Fund, TCW/DW  Income and  Growth Fund,  TCW/DW SmallCap  Growth
Fund,  TCW/DW Balanced  Fund, TCW/DW  North American  Intermediate Income Trust,
TCW/DW Global Convertible  Trust, TCW/DW  Total Return Trust,  TCW/ DW  Emerging
Markets  Opportunities Trust, TCW/DW Term Trust 2000, TCW/DW Term Trust 2002 and
TCW/DW Term Trust 2003  (the "TCW/DW Funds"). InterCapital  also serves as:  (i)
sub-adviser  to  Templeton Global  Opportunities  Trust, an  open-end investment
company; (ii)  administrator  of The  BlackRock  Strategic Term  Trust  Inc.,  a
closed-end   investment  company;  and  (iii)  sub-administrator  of  MassMutual
Participation  Investors  and   Templeton  Global   Governments  Income   Trust,
closed-end investment companies.
    

    The  Investment Manager also serves as an investment adviser for Dean Witter
World Wide Investment Fund,  an investment company organized  under the laws  of
Luxembourg, shares of which may not be offered in the United States or purchased
by American citizens outside of the United States.

    Pursuant  to an Investment  Management Agreement (the  "Agreement") with the
Investment Manager, the Fund has retained  the Investment Manager to manage  the
investment  of  the  Fund's assets,  including  the  placing of  orders  for the
purchase and sale of  portfolio securities. The  Investment Manager obtains  and
evaluates  such  information  and  advice relating  to  the  economy, securities
markets, and  specific  securities  as  it  considers  necessary  or  useful  to
continuously  manage the  assets of  the Fund  in a  manner consistent  with its
investment objective and policies.

    Under the  terms  of the  Agreement,  in  addition to  managing  the  Fund's
investments,  the Investment Manager  maintains certain of  the Fund's books and
records and  furnishes,  at its  own  expense, such  office  space,  facilities,
equipment, clerical help, bookkeeping and certain legal services as the Fund may
reasonably  require in the conduct of its business, including the preparation of
prospectuses, proxy statements and reports required to be filed with federal and
state securities commissions (except insofar as the participation or  assistance
of  independent accountants and  attorneys is, in the  opinion of the Investment
Manager, necessary or desirable). In  addition, the Investment Manager pays  the
salaries  of all personnel, including officers of the Fund, who are employees of
the Investment Manager. The Investment Manager also bears the cost of  telephone
service, heat, light, power and other utilities provided to the Fund.

   
    Effective  December  31,  1993,  pursuant to  a  Services  Agreement between
InterCapital and DWSC, DWSC began to provide the administrative services to  the
Fund  which were  previously performed  directly by  InterCapital. The foregoing
internal reorganization did not result in any  change in the nature or scope  of
the  administrative services being provided to the Fund or any of the fees being
paid by the Fund for the overall services being performed under the terms of the
existing Agreement.
    

    Expenses not expressly assumed by the Investment Manager under the Agreement
or by  the Distributor  of  the Fund's  shares,  Dean Witter  Distributors  Inc.
("Distributors"  or the "Distributor")  (see "The Distributor")  will be paid by
the Fund. The expenses borne by the  Fund include, but are not limited to:  fees
pursuant  to any  plan of distribution,  charges and expenses  of any registrar,
custodian, stock transfer and dividend disbursing agent; brokerage  commissions;
taxes; engraving and printing stock certificates; registration costs of the Fund
and  its shares under federal and state securities laws; the cost and expense of
printing, including typesetting, and distributing prospectuses and statements of
additional information  of  the  Fund  and supplements  thereto  to  the  Fund's
shareholders;  all  expenses  of  shareholders' and  Trustees'  meetings  and of
preparing, printing and mailing of proxy statements and reports to shareholders;
fees and  travel  expenses of  Trustees  or members  of  any advisory  board  or
committee  who  are not  employees of  the Investment  Manager or  any corporate
affiliate of  the Investment  Manager; all  expenses incident  to any  dividend,
withdrawal  or redemption options;  charges and expenses  of any outside service
used for  pricing of  the Fund's  shares; fees  and expenses  of legal  counsel,
including  counsel to the Trustees who are not interested persons of the Fund or
of the Investment Manager (not  including compensation or expenses of  attorneys
who  are  employees of  the  Investment Manager),  and  independent accountants;
membership dues of industry associations; interest on Fund

                                       4
<PAGE>
borrowings; postage;  insurance premiums  on  property or  personnel  (including
officers  and trustees)  of the Fund  which inure to  its benefit; extraordinary
expenses (including,  but  not limited  to,  legal claims  and  liabilities  and
litigation  costs and any indemnification relating thereto); and all other costs
of the Fund's operation.

   
    As full compensation for the services  and facilities furnished to the  Fund
and  expenses of the Fund  assumed by the Investment  Manager, the Fund pays the
Investment Manager monthly compensation calculated daily by applying the  annual
rate  of  0.55% to  the  portion of  the Fund's  net  assets not  exceeding $500
million; 0.525% to the portion of  the Fund's net assets exceeding $500  million
but  not exceeding  $750 million,  and 0.50%  to the  portion of  the Fund's net
assets exceeding $750 million  but not exceeding $1  billion; and 0.475% of  the
portion  of daily net  assets exceeding $1 billion.  Total operating expenses of
the Fund are subject  to applicable limitations under  rules and regulations  of
states  where the  Fund is  authorized to sell  its shares,  as the  same may be
amended from time  to time.  Presently, the  most restrictive  limitation is  as
follows. If in any fiscal year the Fund's total operating expenses, exclusive of
taxes,  interest, distribution  fees, brokerage fees  and extraordinary expenses
(to the extent permitted by  applicable state securities laws and  regulations),
exceed  2 1/2% of the  first $30,000,000 of average daily  net assets, 2% of the
next $70,000,000 and 1% of any excess over $100,000,000, the Investment  Manager
will reimburse the Fund for the amount of such excess. Such amount, if any, will
be  calculated daily and credited on a monthly basis. For the fiscal years ended
December 31, 1992,  1993 and 1994,  the Fund accrued  to the Investment  Manager
total  compensation under the Agreement in the amounts of $4,846,808, $5,806,822
and $5,824,889, respectively. During such  periods, the Fund's expenses did  not
exceed  the limitation  set forth  above or  the then  existing most restrictive
limitation.
    

    The Agreement  provides that  in  the absence  of willful  misfeasance,  bad
faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of its obligations thereunder, the
Investment Manager is not liable to the Fund or any of its investors for any act
or omission by the Investment Manager or for any losses sustained by the Fund or
its  investors.  The Agreement  does not  restrict  the Investment  Manager from
acting as investment manager or adviser to others.

    The Agreement was initially approved by the Trustees on October 22, 1992 and
by the  shareholders  on  January  12,  1993.  The  Agreement  is  substantially
identical  to  a  prior  investment  management  agreement  which  was initially
approved by the  Board of  Trustees on  June 13,  1984 and  by DWR  as the  sole
shareholder of the Fund on June 26, 1984. The Agreement was also approved by the
vote of a majority, as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended
(the  "Act"), of the outstanding shares of the Fund, at the first Annual Meeting
of the Fund  held on October  21, 1985. The  Agreement took effect  on June  30,
1993,  upon the spin-off  by Sears, Roebuck  and Co. of  its remaining shares of
DWDC. The Agreement may  be terminated at any  time, without penalty, on  thirty
days'  notice,  by the  Board  of Trustees  of  the Fund,  by  the holders  of a
majority, as defined  in the  Investment Company Act  of 1940,  as amended  (the
"Act"), of the outstanding shares of the Fund, or by the Investment Manager. The
Agreement  will  automatically  terminate in  the  event of  its  assignment (as
defined in the Act).

   
    Under its terms, the  Agreement had an initial  term ending April 30,  1994,
and  provides  that it  will  continue from  year  to year  thereafter, provided
continuance of the Agreement is  approved at least annually  by the vote of  the
holders  of a majority (as defined in the  Act) of the outstanding shares of the
Fund, or by the  Board of Trustees  of the Fund; provided  that in either  event
such  continuance  is  approved  annually  by the  vote  of  a  majority  of the
Independent Trustees, which vote must be cast in person at a meeting called  for
the  purpose of voting on such approval. At their meeting held on April 8, 1994,
the Fund's  Board  of  Trustees,  including all  of  the  Independent  Trustees,
approved continuance of the Agreement until April 30, 1995.
    

   
    The Fund has acknowledged that the name "Dean Witter" is a property right of
DWR. The Fund has agreed that DWR or its parent company may use or, at any time,
permit  others to use, the name "Dean Witter".  The Fund has also agreed that in
the event the investment management contract between the Investment Manager  and
the  Fund  is terminated,  or if  the affiliation  between InterCapital  and its
parent is terminated, the  Fund will eliminate the  name "Dean Witter" from  its
name if DWR or its parent company shall so request.
    

                                       5
<PAGE>
TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

   
    The  Trustees and Executive  Officers of the  Fund, their principal business
occupations during the  last five  years and  their affiliations,  if any,  with
InterCapital,  and with the  74 Dean Witter  Funds and the  13 TCW/DW Funds' are
shown below.
    

   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
NAME, AGE, POSITION WITH FUND
         AND ADDRESS               PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION DURING LAST FIVE YEARS
- ------------------------------  --------------------------------------------------
<S>                             <C>
Jack F. Bennett (71)            Retired; Director or  Trustee of  the Dean  Witter
Trustee                         Funds; formerly Senior Vice President and Director
c/o Gordon Altman Butowsky      of  Exxon  Corporation  (1975-January,  1989)  and
Weitzen Shalov & Wein           Under Secretary of the U.S. Treasury for  Monetary
Counsel to the Independent      Affairs    (1974-1975);   Director    of   Philips
Trustees                        Electronics N.V.  (electronics), Tandem  Computers
Greenwich, Connecticut          Inc.   and  Massachusetts  Mutual  Insurance  Co.;
                                director or trustee of various not-for-profit  and
                                business organizations.
Michael Bozic (54)              President  and  Chief Executive  Officer  of Hills
Trustee                         Department  Stores  (since  May,  1991);  formerly
c/o Hills Stores Inc.           Chairman  and  Chief  Executive  Officer (January,
15 Dan Road                     1987-August,  1990)   and  President   and   Chief
Canton, Massachusetts           Operating Officer (August, 1990-February, 1991) of
                                the  Sears Merchandise Group of Sears, Roebuck and
                                Co.; Director or Trustee of the Dean Witter Funds;
                                Director of  Eaglemark Financial  Services,  Inc.,
                                the  United  Negro  College Fund  and  Domain Inc.
                                (home decor retailer).
Charles A. Fiumefreddo* (61)    Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and Director  of
Chairman of the Board,          InterCapital,  Distributors  and  DWSC;  Executive
President, Chief Executive      Vice President  and  Director  of  DWR;  Chairman,
Officer                         Director or Trustee, President and Chief Executive
 and Trustee                    Officer  of the Dean Witter Funds; Chairman, Chief
Two World Trade Center          Executive Officer  and  Trustee  of  the  TCW/  DW
New York, New York              Funds;  Chairman and Director of Dean Witter Trust
                                Company  ("DWTC");  Director  and/or  officer   of
                                various DWDC subsidiaries; formerly Executive Vice
                                President  and Director  of DWDC  (until February,
                                1993).
Edwin J. Garn (62)              Director or  Trustee  of the  Dean  Witter  Funds;
Trustee                         formerly    United    States    Senator   (R-Utah)
c/o Huntsman Chemical           (1974-1992) and Chairman, Senate Banking Committee
Corporation                     (1980-1986); formerly  Mayor  of Salt  Lake  City,
2000 Eagle Gate Tower           Utah   (1971-1974);   formerly   Astronaut,  Space
Salt Lake City, Utah 84111      Shuttle  Discovery  (April   12-19,  1985);   Vice
                                Chairman,  Huntsman  Chemical  Corporation  (since
                                January, 1993);  Member of  the board  of  various
                                civic and charitable organizations.
John R. Haire (70)              Chairman  of the  Audit Committee  and Chairman of
Trustee                         the Committee of Independent Directors or Trustees
Two World Trade Center          and Director or Trustee of the Dean Witter  Funds;
New York, New York              Trustee  of the TCW/DW  Funds; formerly President,
                                Council for Aid to Education (1978-October,  1989)
                                and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Anchor
                                Corporation,  an  Investment  Adviser (1964-1978);
                                Director  of   Washington   National   Corporation
                                (insurance).
</TABLE>
    

                                       6
<PAGE>

   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
NAME, AGE, POSITION WITH FUND
         AND ADDRESS               PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION DURING LAST FIVE YEARS
- ------------------------------  --------------------------------------------------
<S>                             <C>
Dr. Manuel H. Johnson (46)      Senior Partner, Johnson Smick International, Inc.,
Trustee                         a consulting firm; Koch Professor of International
c/o Johnson Smick               Economics  and Director  of the  Center for Global
International, Inc.             Market Studies at  George Mason University  (since
1133 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.   September,  1990); Co-  Chairman and  a founder of
Washington, DC                  the Group of Seven Council (G7C), an international
                                economic  commission   (since  September,   1990);
                                Director  or  Trustee  of the  Dean  Witter Funds;
                                Trustee of the TCW/DW Funds; Director of Greenwich
                                Capital Markets  Inc.,  (broker-dealer);  formerly
                                Vice  Chairman of  the Board  of Governors  of the
                                Federal  Reserve  System  (February,  1986-August,
                                1990) and Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Treasury
                                (1982-1986).
Paul Kolton (71)                Director  or  Trustee  of the  Dean  Witter Funds;
Trustee                         Chairman of the  Audit Committee  and Chairman  of
c/o Gordon Altman Butowsky      the  Committee  of  the  Independent  Trustees and
Weitzen Shalov & Wein           Trustee of the TCW/DW Funds; formerly Chairman  of
Counsel to the Independent      the   Financial   Accounting   Standards  Advisory
Trustees                        Council and Chairman  and Chief Executive  Officer
114 West 47th Street            of  the American  Stock Exchange;  Director of UCC
New York, New York              Investors   Holding   Inc.   (Uniroyal    Chemical
                                Company);   director   or   trustee   of   various
                                not-for-profit organizations.
Michael E. Nugent (58)          General Partner, Triumph Capital, L.P., a  private
Trustee                         investment   partnership   (since   April,  1988);
Triumph Capital, L.P.           Director or Trustee of the Dean Witter Funds,  and
237 Park Avenue                 Trustee   of  the  TCW/DW   Funds;  formerly  Vice
New York, New York              President, Bankers  Trust Company  and BT  Capital
                                Corporation    (September,    1984-March,   1988);
                                Director of various business organizations.
Philip J. Purcell* (51)         Chairman of  the  Board  of  Directors  and  Chief
Trustee                         Executive  Officer of  DWDC, DWR  and Novus Credit
Two World Trade Center          Services Inc.; Director of InterCapital, DWSC  and
New York, New York              Distributors;  Director  or  Trustee  of  the Dean
                                Witter Funds; Director  and/or officer of  various
                                DWDC subsidiaries.
John L. Schroeder (64)          Executive  Vice  President  and  Chief  Investment
Trustee                         Officer  of  the  Home  Insurance  Company  (since
c/o The Home Insurance Company  August,  1991);  Director or  Trustee of  the Dean
59 Maiden Lane                  Witter  Funds;  Director  of  Citizens   Utilities
New York, New York              Company;  formerly  Chairman and  Chief Investment
                                Officer  of   Axe-Houghton  Management   and   the
                                Axe-Houghton  Funds  (April, 1983-June,  1991) and
                                President of USF&G Financial Services Inc.  (June,
                                1990-June, 1991).
Sheldon Curtis (63)             Senior   Vice  President,  Secretary  and  General
Vice President, Secretary and   Counsel of  InterCapital  and  DWSC;  Senior  Vice
 General Counsel                President  and  Secretary  of  DWTC;  Senior  Vice
Two World Trade Center          President,  Assistant   Secretary  and   Assistant
New York, New York              General   Counsel   of   Distributors;   Assistant
                                Secretary of  DWR; Vice  President, Secretary  and
                                General  Counsel of the Dean  Witter Funds and the
                                TCW/DW Funds.
</TABLE>
    

                                       7
<PAGE>

   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
NAME, AGE, POSITION WITH FUND
         AND ADDRESS               PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION DURING LAST FIVE YEARS
- ------------------------------  --------------------------------------------------
<S>                             <C>
James F. Willison (51)          Senior  Vice  President   of  InterCapital;   Vice
Vice President                  President of various Dean Witter Funds.
Two World Trade Center
New York, New York
Thomas F. Caloia (48)           First   Vice  President  (since   May,  1991)  and
Treasurer                       Assistant  Treasurer  (since  January,  1993)   of
Two World Trade Center          InterCapital;  First Vice  President and Assistant
New York, New York              Treasurer of DWSC;  Treasurer of  the Dean  Witter
                                Funds  and TCW/DW Funds; previously Vice President
                                of InterCapital.
<FN>
- ------------
*Denotes Trustees who are "interested persons" of the Fund, as defined in the
 Act.
</TABLE>
    

   
    In addition, Robert  M. Scanlan,  President and Chief  Operating Officer  of
InterCapital  and DWSC,  Executive Vice President  of Distributors  and DWTC and
Director  of  DWTC,  David  A.  Hughey,  Executive  Vice  President  and   Chief
Administrative Officer of InterCapital, DWSC, Distributors and DWTC and Director
of  DWTC and Edmund  C. Puckhaber, Executive Vice  President of InterCapital and
Director of  DWTC  and  Peter  M.  Avelar and  Jonathan  R.  Page,  Senior  Vice
Presidents  of  InterCapital, are  Vice Presidents  of the  Fund and  Marilyn K.
Cranney, and Barry Fink, First Vice Presidents and Assistant General Counsels of
InterCapital and Lawrence  S. Lafer, Lou  Anne D. McInnis  and Ruth Rossi,  Vice
Presidents  and  Assistant  General  Counsels  of  InterCapital  and  DWSC,  are
Assistant Secretaries of the Fund.
    

   
BOARD OF TRUSTEES; RESPONSIBILITIES AND COMPENSATION OF INDEPENDENT TRUSTEES
    
   
    As mentioned above under the caption "The Fund and its Management," the Fund
is one of  the Dean Witter  Funds, a  group of investment  companies managed  by
InterCapital.  As of the date of this Statement of Additional Information, there
are a total of 74 Dean Witter Funds, comprised of 114 portfolios. As of December
31, 1994, the  Dean Witter Funds  had total net  assets of approximately  $59.59
billion and more than five million shareholders.
    

   
    The  Board of  Directors or  Trustees, consisting  of ten  (10) directors or
trustees, is the same for each of the  Dean Witter Funds. Some of the Funds  are
organized  as business  trusts, others  as corporations,  but the  functions and
duties of  directors  and trustees  are  the same.  Accordingly,  directors  and
trustees of the Dean Witter Funds are referred to in this section as Trustees.
    

   
    Eight  Trustees, that is,  80% of the  total number, have  no affiliation or
business connection with InterCapital  or any of its  affiliated persons and  do
not  own any stock or other  securities issued by InterCapital's parent company,
DWDC. These are the "disinterested" or "independent" Trustees. Four of the eight
Independent Trustees are also  Independent Trustees of the  TCW/DW Funds. As  of
the  date of this Statement  of Additional Information, there  are a total of 13
TCW/DW Funds. Two of the Funds' Trustees, that is, the management Trustees,  are
affiliated with InterCapital.
    

   
    As  noted in a federal court ruling,  "[T]he independent directors . . . are
expected  to  look  after  the  interests  of  shareholders  by  'furnishing  an
independent  check upon management,' especially with respect to fees paid to the
investment company's sponsor." In addition  to their general "watchdog"  duties,
the  Independent Trustees  are charged with  a wide  variety of responsibilities
under the Act.  In order to  perform their duties  effectively, the  Independent
Trustees  are required to review and understand large amounts of material, often
of a highly technical and legal nature.
    

   
    The  Dean  Witter  Funds  seek   as  Independent  Trustees  individuals   of
distinction  and  experience  in  business and  finance,  government  service or
academia; that is, people whose advice and counsel are valuable and in demand by
others and for  whom there is  often competition.  To accept a  position on  the
Funds'  Boards, such individuals may reject other attractive assignments because
of the demands made
    

                                       8
<PAGE>
   
on their time  by the  Funds. Indeed,  to serve  on the  Funds' Boards,  certain
Trustees  who would be qualified and in demand  to serve on bank boards would be
prohibited by law from serving at the same time as a director of a national bank
and as a Trustee of a Fund.
    

   
    The Independent Trustees are required to select and nominate individuals  to
fill  any Independent Trustee vacancy  on the Board of any  Fund that has a Rule
12b-1 plan of  distribution. Since most  of the  Dean Witter Funds  have such  a
plan,  and since all of the Funds' Boards have the same members, the Independent
Trustees effectively control the selection of other Independent Trustees of  all
the Dean Witter Funds.
    

   
GOVERNANCE STRUCTURE OF THE DEAN WITTER FUNDS
    
   
    While the regulatory system establishes both general guidelines and specific
duties  for  the  Independent  Trustees, the  governance  arrangements  from one
investment company  group to  another  vary significantly.  In some  groups  the
Independent  Trustees perform their  role by attendance  at periodic meetings of
the board  of  directors with  study  of  materials furnished  to  them  between
meetings.  At  the other  extreme, an  investment company  complex may  employ a
full-time staff to assist the Independent  Trustees in the performance of  their
duties.
    

   
    The  governance structure  of the Dean  Witter Funds lies  between these two
extremes. The  Independent  Trustees and  the  Funds' Investment  Manager  alike
believe  that these  arrangements are effective  and serve the  interests of the
Funds' shareholders. All  of the Independent  Trustees serve as  members of  the
Audit  Committee and  the Committee of  the Independent Trustees.  Three of them
also serve as members of the Derivatives Committee.
    

   
    The Committee of the  Independent Trustees is  charged with recommending  to
the  full Board approval  of management, advisory  and administration contracts,
Rule 12b-1  plans  and  distribution and  underwriting  agreements,  continually
reviewing  Fund performance,  checking on  the pricing  of portfolio securities,
brokerage commissions, transfer agent costs  and performance, and trading  among
Funds  in the  same complex, and  approving fidelity bond  and related insurance
coverage and allocations, as well as other matters that arise from time to time.
    

   
    The Audit  Committee is  charged with  recommending to  the full  Board  the
engagement  or  discharge  of  the  Fund's  independent  accountants;  directing
investigations into matters  within the  scope of  the independent  accountants'
duties,  including the power  to retain outside  specialists; reviewing with the
independent accountants the audit plan  and results of the auditing  engagement;
approving  professional  services provided  by  the independent  accountants and
other accounting firms prior to the performance of such services; reviewing  the
independence  of the independent accountants; considering the range of audit and
non-audit fees;  reviewing  the  adequacy  of  the  Fund's  system  of  internal
controls;  advising the  independent accountants  and Management  personnel that
they have  direct  access to  the  Committee at  all  times; and  preparing  and
submitting Committee meeting minutes to the full Board.
    

   
    Finally,  the Board of each Fund  has established a Derivatives Committee to
establish parameters for and oversee the activities of the Fund with respect  to
derivative investments, if any, made by the Fund.
    

   
    During  the calendar year ended December 31, 1994, the three Committees held
a combined total of eleven meetings.  The Committee meetings are sometimes  held
away  from  the offices  of  InterCapital and  sometimes  in the  Board  room of
InterCapital. These meetings are held  without management directors or  officers
being  present, unless and until they may be invited to the meeting for purposes
of furnishing information or  making a report.  These separate meetings  provide
the  Independent  Trustees an  opportunity to  explore in  depth with  their own
independent  legal   counsel,  independent   auditors  and   other   independent
consultants, as needed, the issues they believe should be addressed and resolved
in the interests of the Funds' shareholders.
    

   
DUTIES OF CHAIRMAN OF COMMITTEES
    
   
    The   Chairman  of  the  Committees  maintains   an  office  at  the  Funds'
headquarters in New York.  He is responsible for  keeping abreast of  regulatory
and industry developments and the Funds' operations and
    

                                       9
<PAGE>
   
management. He screens and/or prepares written materials and identifies critical
issues  for the Independent Trustees to consider, develops agendas for Committee
meetings, determines the type and amount of information that the Committees will
need to form  a judgment on  the issues,  and arranges to  have the  information
furnished.  He  also arranges  for  the services  of  independent experts  to be
provided to the Committees and consults with them in advance of meetings to help
refine reports  and to  focus  on critical  issues.  Members of  the  Committees
believe  that the  person who  serves as  Chairman of  all three  Committees and
guides their efforts is pivotal to the effective functioning of the Committees.
    

   
    The Chairman of the  Committees also maintains  continuous contact with  the
Funds' management, with independent counsel to the Independent Trustees and with
the  Funds' independent auditors.  He arranges for a  series of special meetings
involving the  annual  review  of  investment  management  and  other  operating
contracts  of the Funds and, on  behalf of the Committees, conducts negotiations
with the Investment Manager and other service providers. In effect, the Chairman
of the Committees serves as a  combination of chief executive and support  staff
of the Independent Trustees.
    

   
    The Chairman of the Committees is not employed by any other organization and
devotes his time primarily to the services he performs as Committee Chairman and
Independent  Trustee of the Dean  Witter Funds and as  an Independent Trustee of
the TCW/DW Funds.  The current  Committee Chairman has  had more  than 35  years
experience as a senior executive in the investment company industry.
    

   
VALUE OF HAVING SAME INDIVIDUALS AS INDEPENDENT TRUSTEES FOR ALL DEAN WITTER
FUNDS
    
   
    The  Independent Trustees and the Funds'  management believe that having the
same Independent Trustees  for each  of the  Dean Witter  Funds is  in the  best
interests   of  all  the  Funds'   shareholders.  This  arrangement  avoids  the
duplication  of  effort  that  would  arise  from  having  different  groups  of
individuals  serving as Independent  Trustees for each  of the Funds  or even of
sub-groups of Funds. It  is believed that having  the same individuals serve  as
Independent  Trustees of  all the  Funds tends  to increase  their knowledge and
expertise regarding matters which affect the Fund complex generally and enhances
their ability  to negotiate  on behalf  of  each Fund  with the  Fund's  service
providers.  This arrangement also precludes the likelihood of separate groups of
Independent Trustees arriving at conflicting decisions regarding operations  and
management  of the  Funds and  avoids the cost  and confusion  that would likely
ensue. Finally, it is believed that  having the same Independent Trustees  serve
on  all Fund Boards enhances the ability of  each Fund to obtain, at modest cost
to each separate Fund, the services  of Independent Trustees, and a Chairman  of
their  Committees,  of  the  caliber,  experience  and  business  acumen  of the
individuals who serve as Independent Trustees of the Dean Witter Funds.
    

   
COMPENSATION OF INDEPENDENT TRUSTEES
    
   
    The Fund pays each Independent  Trustee an annual fee  of $1,200 plus a  per
meeting  fee of $50 for  meetings of the Board of  Trustees or committees of the
Board of Trustees attended  by the Trustee  (the Fund pays  the Chairman of  the
Audit  Committee an annual fee of $1,000  and pays the Chairman of the Committee
of the Independent  Trustees an additional  annual fee of  $2,400, in each  case
inclusive of the Committee meeting fees). The Fund also reimburses such Trustees
for  travel and other out-of-pocket expenses incurred by them in connection with
attending such meetings. Trustees and officers of the Fund who are or have  been
employed  by  the  Investment  Manager  or  an  affiliated  company  receive  no
compensation or expense reimbursement from the Fund.
    

   
    The Fund has adopted a retirement program under which an Independent Trustee
who retires after serving for at least five years (or such lesser period as  may
be  determined by the Board)  as an Independent Director  or Trustee of any Dean
Witter Fund that has adopted the retirement program (each such Fund referred  to
as  an  "Adopting  Fund" and  each  such  Trustee referred  to  as  an "Eligible
Trustee")  is  entitled  to  retirement  payments  upon  reaching  the  eligible
retirement  age (normally,  after attaining age  72). Annual  payments are based
upon length of  service. Currently,  upon retirement, each  Eligible Trustee  is
entitled  to receive from the Fund, commencing  as of his or her retirement date
and continuing  for the  remainder of  his  or her  life, an  annual  retirement
benefit  (the  "Regular  Benefit")  equal  to  28.75%  of  his  or  her Eligible
Compensation plus 0.4791666% of such  Eligible Compensation for each full  month
of  service as an Independent Director or Trustee of any Adopting Fund in excess
of five years up to a
    

                                       10
<PAGE>
   
maximum of 57.50% after ten years  of service. The foregoing percentages may  be
changed  by  the Board.(1)  "Eligible Compensation"  is  one-fifth of  the total
compensation earned by such Eligible Trustee for service to the Fund in the five
year period prior  to the date  of the Eligible  Trustee's retirement.  Benefits
under  the retirement program are  not secured or funded by  the Fund. As of the
date of this  Statement of  Additional Information,  58 Dean  Witter Funds  have
adopted the retirement program.
    

   
    The  following table  illustrates the  compensation paid  and the retirement
benefits accrued to the Fund's Independent  Trustees by the Fund for the  fiscal
year  ended  December 31,  1994 and  the estimated  retirement benefits  for the
Fund's Independent Trustees as of December 31, 1994.
    

   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                         ESTIMATED RETIREMENT BENEFITS
                              FUND COMPENSATION        ------------------------------------------------------------------
                         ----------------------------      ESTIMATED                                          ESTIMATED
                                         RETIREMENT      CREDIT YEARS        ESTIMATED                         ANNUAL
                           AGGREGATE      BENEFITS       OF SERVICE AT     PERCENTAGE OF      ESTIMATED       BENEFITS
NAME OF INDEPENDENT      COMPENSATION    ACCRUED AS       RETIREMENT         ELIGIBLE         ELIGIBLE          UPON
 TRUSTEE                 FROM THE FUND  FUND EXPENSES    (MAXIMUM 10)      COMPENSATION    COMPENSATION(2)  RETIREMENT(3)
- -----------------------  -------------  -------------  -----------------  ---------------  ---------------  -------------
<S>                      <C>            <C>            <C>                <C>              <C>              <C>
Jack F. Bennett........    $   1,900      $     616                8              46.0%       $   2,219       $   1,021
Michael Bozic..........        1,227              0               10              57.5            1,950           1,121
Edwin J. Garn..........        1,900            440               10              57.5            1,950           1,121
John R. Haire..........        4,900(4)       1,527               10              57.5            5,110           2,938
Dr. Manuel H. Johnson..        1,850            184               10              57.5            1,950           1,121
Paul Kolton............        1,950            695                9              51.3            2,380           1,220
Michael E. Nugent......        1,750            309               10              57.5            1,950           1,121
John L. Schroeder......        1,277              0                8              47.9            1,950             934
- ---------------

<FN>

(1) An Eligible Trustee may  elect alternate payments of  his or her  retirement
    benefits  based upon the  combined life expectancy  of such Eligible Trustee
    and his or her spouse on the date of such Eligible Trustee's retirement. The
    amount estimated to be payable under  this method, through the remainder  of
    the  later of  the lives of  such Eligible  Trustee and spouse,  will be the
    actuarial equivalent  of  the Regular  Benefit.  In addition,  the  Eligible
    Trustee  may elect that the surviving  spouse's periodic payment of benefits
    will be equal  to either 50%  or 100%  of the previous  periodic amount,  an
    election  that, respectively,  increases or decreases  the previous periodic
    amount so that the  resulting payments will be  the actuarial equivalent  of
    the Regular Benefit.
(2) Based on current levels of compensation.
(3) Based  on current  levels of  compensation. Amount  of annual  benefits also
    varies depending on the Trustee's elections described in Footnote (1) above.
(4) Of Mr. Haire's compensation from the Fund, $3,400 is paid to him as Chairman
    of the Committee of the Independent Trustees ($2,400) and as Chairman of the
    Audit Committee ($1,000).
</TABLE>
    

                                       11
<PAGE>
   
CASH COMPENSATION FROM DEAN WITTER FUNDS AND TCW/DW FUNDS
    
   
    The  following  table  illustrates  the  compensation  paid  to  the  Fund's
Independent  Trustees for the calendar year ended December 31, 1994 for services
to the 73 Dean Witter Funds and,  in the case of Messrs. Haire, Johnson,  Kolton
and  Nugent, the 13  TCW/DW Funds that  were in operation  at December 31, 1994.
With respect to Messrs. Haire, Johnson, Kolton and Nugent, the TCW/DW Funds  are
included  solely because of a limited exchange privilege between those Funds and
five Dean Witter Money Market Funds.
    

   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                   FOR SERVICE AS
                                                                                    CHAIRMAN OF
                                             FOR SERVICE                           COMMITTEES OF      TOTAL CASH
                                           AS DIRECTOR OR       FOR SERVICE AS      INDEPENDENT      COMPENSATION
                                             TRUSTEE AND          TRUSTEE AND        DIRECTORS/     FOR SERVICES TO
                                          COMMITTEE MEMBER     COMMITTEE MEMBER     TRUSTEES AND    73 DEAN WITTER
                                          OF 73 DEAN WITTER      OF 13 TCW/DW          AUDIT         FUNDS AND 13
NAME OF INDEPENDENT TRUSTEE                     FUNDS                FUNDS           COMMITTEES      TCW/DW FUNDS
- ---------------------------------------  -------------------  -------------------  --------------  -----------------
<S>                                      <C>                  <C>                  <C>             <C>
Jack F. Bennett........................      $   125,761              --                 --          $     125,761
Michael Bozic..........................           82,637              --                 --                 82,637
Edwin J. Garn..........................          125,711              --                 --                125,711
John R. Haire..........................          101,061          $    66,950       $    225,563(5)         393,574
Dr. Manuel H. Johnson..................          122,461               60,750            --                183,211
Paul Kolton............................          128,961               51,850             34,200(6)         215,011
Michael E. Nugent......................          115,761               52,650            --                168,411
John L. Schroeder......................           85,938              --                 --                 85,938
<FN>
- ------------
(5)   For the 73 Dean Witter Funds.
(6)   For the 13 TCW/DW Funds.
</TABLE>
    

   
    As of the date  of this Statement of  Additional Information, the  aggregate
number of shares of beneficial interest of the Fund owned by the Fund's officers
and  Trustees  as a  group  was less  than  1 percent  of  the Fund's  shares of
beneficial interest outstanding.
    

INVESTMENT PRACTICES AND POLICIES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

PORTFOLIO SECURITIES

    TAXABLE SECURITIES.  As discussed in the Prospectus, the Fund may invest  up
to  20% of its total assets  in taxable money market instruments, non-California
tax-exempt securities, futures and options. Investments in taxable money  market
instruments   would  generally   be  made  under   any  one   of  the  following
circumstances: (a) pending investment of proceeds  of sale of Fund shares or  of
portfolio   securities,  (b)  pending  settlement   of  purchases  of  portfolio
securities and (c) to maintain liquidity for the purpose of meeting  anticipated
redemptions.  Only those non-California tax-exempt  securities which satisfy the
standards established for California tax-exempt  securities may be purchased  by
the Fund.

    In  addition, the  Fund may  temporarily invest more  than 20%  of its total
assets  in  non-California  tax-exempt  securities  and  taxable  money   market
instruments,  or  in tax-exempt  securities subject  to the  federal alternative
minimum tax for individual shareholders, to maintain a "defensive" posture when,
in the opinion of the  Investment Manager, it is advisable  to do so because  of
market  conditions. The types  of taxable money market  instruments in which the
Fund may invest are limited to the following short-term fixed-income  securities
(maturing in one year or less from the time of purchase): (i) obligations of the
United  States Government, its agencies,  instrumentalities or authorities; (ii)
commercial paper rated P-1 by Moody's Investors Service, Inc. ("Moody's") or A-1
by Standard  & Poor's  Corporation  ("S&P"); (iii)  certificates of  deposit  of
domestic banks with assets of $1 billion or more; and (iv) repurchase agreements
with respect to portfolio securities.

    TAX-EXEMPT  SECURITIES.  As discussed in the Prospectus, at least 80% of the
Fund's total  assets  will  be  invested  in  California  tax-exempt  securities
(California Municipal Bonds, California Municipal Notes and California Municipal
Commercial  Paper). In regard  to the Moody's  and S&P ratings  discussed in the

                                       12
<PAGE>
Prospectus, it should  be noted  that the ratings  represent the  organizations'
opinions  as to the quality  of the securities which  they undertake to rate and
that the  ratings are  general and  not  absolute standards  of quality.  For  a
description  of Municipal  Bond, Municipal  Note and  Municipal Commercial Paper
ratings by Moody's  and S&P, see  the Appendix to  this Statement of  Additional
Information.

    The  Fund  does  not  have  any  minimum  quality  rating  standard  for its
downgraded investments. As such, the Fund may invest in securities rated as  low
as  Caa, Ca or C by Moody's or CCC, CC, C or CI by S&P. Bonds rated Caa or Ca by
Moody's may already  be in default  on payment of  interest or principal,  while
bonds  rated C by Moody's,  their lowest bond rating,  can be regarded as having
extremely poor prospects of ever  attaining any real investment standing.  Bonds
rated  CI  by S&P,  their  lowest bond  rating,  are no  longer  making interest
payments.

    The payment  of  principal and  interest  by issuers  of  certain  Municipal
Obligations  purchased by  the Fund  may be guaranteed  by letters  of credit or
other credit facilities offered by  banks or other financial institutions.  Such
guarantees  will  be considered  in determining  whether a  Municipal Obligation
meets the Fund's investment quality  requirements. In addition, some issues  may
contain  provisions which permit the Fund to demand from the issuer repayment of
principal at some specified period(s) prior to maturity.

    MUNICIPAL BONDS.   Municipal Bonds, as  referred to in  the Prospectus,  are
debt  obligations of a state, its  cities, municipalities and municipal agencies
(all of which  are generally  referred to as  "municipalities") which  generally
have  a maturity at the time of issue of one year or more, and the interest from
which is, in the  opinion of bond  counsel, exempt from  federal income tax.  In
addition  to these  requirements, the  interest from  California Municipal Bonds
must be, in the opinion of bond counsel, exempt from California personal  income
tax.  They  are issued  to  raise funds  for  various public  purposes,  such as
construction of  a  wide  range  of public  facilities,  to  refund  outstanding
obligations  and to obtain  funds for general  operating expenses or  to loan to
other  public  institutions  and  facilities.  In  addition,  certain  types  of
industrial  development bonds  and pollution control  bonds are issued  by or on
behalf of public authorities to  provide funding for various privately  operated
facilities.

    MUNICIPAL   NOTES.     Municipal   Notes   are  short-term   obligations  of
municipalities, generally with a maturity at  the time of issuance ranging  from
six  months to three years,  the interest from which is,  in the opinion of bond
counsel, exempt from federal income tax. In addition to those requirements,  the
interest  from  California  Municipal Notes  must  be,  in the  opinion  of bond
counsel, exempt  from California  personal income  tax. The  principal types  of
Municipal Notes include tax anticipation notes, bond anticipation notes, revenue
anticipation  notes  and  project  notes,  although  there  are  other  types of
Municipal Notes in  which the  Fund may invest.  Notes sold  in anticipation  of
collection  of  taxes, a  bond sale  or  receipt of  other revenues  are usually
general obligations of  the issuing  municipality or agency.  Project Notes  are
issued  by local agencies and are guaranteed  by the United States Department of
Housing and Urban  Development. Such  notes are secured  by the  full faith  and
credit of the United States Government.

    MUNICIPAL COMMERCIAL PAPER.  Municipal Commercial Paper refers to short-term
obligations of municipalities the interest from which is, in the opinion of bond
counsel,  exempt from federal income tax. In addition to those requirements, the
interest from  California Commercial  Paper  must be,  in  the opinion  of  bond
counsel,  exempt from  California personal  income tax.  It may  be issued  at a
discount and is sometimes  referred to as  Short-Term Discount Notes.  Municipal
Commercial  Paper is likely to be used to meet seasonal working capital needs of
a municipality or  interim construction financing  and to be  paid from  general
revenues  of the municipality  or refinanced with long-term  debt. In most cases
Municipal Commercial Paper is backed  by letters of credit, lending  agreements,
note  repurchase agreements or other credit facility agreements offered by banks
or other institutions.

    Issuers  of  Municipal  Obligations  are   subject  to  the  provisions   of
bankruptcy,  insolvency  and other  laws affecting  the  rights and  remedies of
creditors, such as the Federal  Bankruptcy Act, and laws,  if any, which may  be
enacted  by Congress or any state extending the time for payment of principal or
interest, or  both,  or imposing  other  constraints upon  enforcement  of  such
obligations or upon municipalities to

                                       13
<PAGE>
levy  taxes. There  is also the  possibility that  as a result  of litigation or
other conditions the power or  ability of any one or  more issuers to pay,  when
due,  principal of  and interest  on its,  or their,  Municipal Bonds, Municipal
Notes and Municipal Commercial Paper may be materially affected.

   
RISK CONSIDERATIONS
    
    Because of the special nature of securities which are rated below investment
grade  by  national  credit  rating  agencies  ("lower-rated  securities"),  the
Investment  Manager  must take  into account  certain special  considerations in
assessing the  risks  associated with  such  investments. For  example,  as  the
lower-rated  securities market  is relatively new,  its growth  has paralleled a
long economic expansion and it has not weathered a recession in its present size
and form.  Therefore, an  economic downturn  or increase  in interest  rates  is
likely  to have a negative effect on this  market and on the value of the lower-
rated securities held by the Fund, as well as on the ability of the  securities'
issuers to repay principal and interest on their borrowings.

    The prices of lower-rated securities have been found to be less sensitive to
changes  in  prevailing interest  rates than  higher-rated investments,  but are
likely to be more sensitive to adverse economic changes or individual  corporate
developments.  During  an  economic  downturn or  substantial  period  of rising
interest rates, highly leveraged issuers  may experience financial stress  which
would  adversely affect  their ability to  service their  principal and interest
payment obligations,  to  meet  their  projected business  goals  or  to  obtain
additional financing. If the issuer of a fixed-income security owned by the Fund
defaults,  the Fund may incur additional expenses to seek recovery. In addition,
periods of  economic uncertainty  and change  can be  expected to  result in  an
increased   volatility  of  market  prices   of  lower-rated  securities  and  a
concomitant volatility in the net asset value of a share of the Fund.  Moreover,
the  market  prices of  certain  of the  Fund's  portfolio securities  which are
structured as  zero  coupon securities  are  affected  to a  greater  extent  by
interest rate changes and thereby tend to be more volatile than securities which
pay  interest periodically and in cash (see "Dividends, Distributions and Taxes"
for a discussion of the tax ramifications of investments in such securities).

    The secondary market for lower-rated securities may be less liquid than  the
markets  for higher quality securities and, as  such, may have an adverse effect
on the market prices of certain securities. The limited liquidity of the  market
may also adversely affect the ability of the Fund's Trustees to arrive at a fair
value  for certain  lower-rated securities at  certain times and  should make it
difficult for the Fund to sell certain securities.

    New laws and proposed new laws may have a potentially negative impact on the
market for  lower-rated securities.  For  example, recent  legislation  requires
federally-insured  savings and loan associations  to divest their investments in
lower-rated securities. This legislation and other proposed legislation may have
an adverse effect  upon the value  of lower-rated securities  and a  concomitant
negative impact upon the net asset value of a share of the Fund.

    VARIABLE RATE OBLIGATIONS.  As stated in the Prospectus, the Fund may invest
in obligations of the type called "variable rate obligations". The interest rate
payable  on  a  variable rate  obligation  is adjusted  either  at predesignated
periodic intervals or whenever there is a change in the market rate of  interest
on  which the  interest rate  payable is based.  Other features  may include the
right whereby the  Fund may  demand prepayment of  the principal  amount of  the
obligation  prior to its stated  maturity (a "demand feature")  and the right of
the issuer  to prepay  the principal  amount prior  to maturity.  The  principal
benefit  of  a variable  rate obligation  is that  the interest  rate adjustment
minimizes changes in the market value  of the obligation. The principal  benefit
to  the Fund of purchasing obligations with  a demand feature is that liquidity,
and the ability of the Fund to obtain repayment of the full principal amount  of
the obligation prior to maturity, is enhanced.

    LENDING  OF PORTFOLIO SECURITIES.  The Fund may lend portfolio securities to
brokers, dealers and financial institutions provided that cash equal to at least
100% of the market value of the  securities loaned is deposited by the  borrower
with  the  Fund and  is maintained  each  business day  in a  segregated account
pursuant to  applicable regulations.  While  such securities  are on  loan,  the
borrower will pay the

                                       14
<PAGE>
   
Fund any income accruing thereon, and the Fund may invest the cash collateral in
portfolio  securities, thereby earning additional income. The Fund will not lend
its portfolio  securities  if  such loans  are  not  permitted by  the  laws  or
regulations of any state in which its shares are qualified for sale and will not
lend  more than 25% of the value of  its total assets. Loans would be subject to
termination by the Fund in the  normal settlement time, currently five  business
days  after notice, or by the borrower  on one day's notice. Borrowed securities
must be returned when  the loan is  terminated. Any gain or  loss in the  market
price of the borrowed securities which occurs during the term of the loan inures
to  the  Fund  and  its  shareholders.  The  Fund  may  pay  reasonable finders,
borrowers, administrative, and custodial fees in connection with a loan.  During
the  fiscal year ended  December 31, 1994,  the Fund did  not loan its portfolio
securities and it has no current  intention to loan its portfolio securities  in
the forseeable future.
    

   
WHEN-ISSUED AND DELAYED DELIVERY SECURITIES AND FORWARD COMMITMENTS
    
   
    As discussed in the Prospectus, from time to time, in the ordinary course of
business,  the Fund may purchase securities on a when-issued or delayed delivery
basis and may purchase  or sell securities on  a forward commitment basis.  When
such  transactions  are  negotiated, the  price  is  fixed at  the  time  of the
commitment, but delivery and payment  can take place a  month or more after  the
date  of  the commitment.  The  securities so  purchased  are subject  to market
fluctuation and no interest accrues to  the purchaser during this period.  While
the  Fund will  only purchase securities  on a when-issued,  delayed delivery or
forward commitment basis  with the  intention of acquiring  the securities,  the
Fund  may  sell the  securities  before the  settlement  date, if  it  is deemed
advisable. At the time the Fund makes the commitment to purchase securities on a
when-issued or delayed delivery basis, the Fund will record the transaction  and
thereafter  reflect the value, each day, of such security in determining the net
asset value of the Fund.  At the time of delivery  of the securities, the  value
may  be more  or less than  the purchase price.  The Fund will  also establish a
segregated account with the Fund's custodian bank in which it will  continuously
maintain  cash or U.S. Government securities  or other high grade debt portfolio
securities equal  in  value  to  commitments for  such  when-issued  or  delayed
delivery  securities;  subject  to  this  requirement,  the  Fund  may  purchase
securities on such  basis without limit.  An increase in  the percentage of  the
Fund's  assets  committed to  the  purchase of  securities  on a  when-issued or
delayed delivery  basis may  increase the  volatility of  the Fund's  net  asset
value.  The Investment Manager and  the Trustees do not  believe that the Fund's
net asset  value  or  income will  be  adversely  affected by  its  purchase  of
securities on such basis.
    

   
    REPURCHASE  AGREEMENTS.   As discussed in  the Prospectus, when  cash may be
available for only  a few days,  it may be  invested by the  Fund in  repurchase
agreements  until such time as it may otherwise be invested or used for payments
of obligations of the Fund. These agreements,  which may be viewed as a type  of
secured  lending by the Fund,  typically involve the acquisition  by the Fund of
debt securities from a selling financial institution such as a bank, savings and
loan association or  broker-dealer. The  agreement provides that  the Fund  will
sell  back to  the institution,  and that  the institution  will repurchase, the
underlying security ("collateral"), which is held  by the Fund's Custodian at  a
specified price and at a fixed time in the future which is usually not more than
seven  days from the date  of purchase. The Fund  will receive interest from the
institution until the time when the  repurchase is to occur. Although such  date
is  deemed by the  Fund to be the  maturity date of  a repurchase agreement, the
maturities of securities subject to repurchase agreements are not subject to any
limits and  may exceed  one year.  While repurchase  agreements involve  certain
risks  not  associated  with direct  investments  in debt  securities,  the Fund
follows procedures designed  to minimize  such risks.  These procedures  include
effecting   repurchase  transactions   only  with   large  well-capitalized  and
well-established financial  institutions,  whose  financial  condition  will  be
continually  monitored. In addition, the value  of the collateral underlying the
repurchase agreement will  always be  at least  equal to  the repurchase  price,
including  any accrued interest earned on the repurchase agreement. In the event
of a default  or bankruptcy by  a selling financial  institution, the Fund  will
seek  to liquidate such collateral. However,  the exercising of the Fund's right
to liquidate such collateral could involve  certain costs or delays and, to  the
extent  that  proceeds  from  any  sale upon  a  default  of  the  obligation to
repurchase were less than the repurchase price, the
    

                                       15
<PAGE>
   
Fund could suffer a loss. It is the current policy of the Fund not to invest  in
repurchase  agreements  that  do  not  mature  within  seven  days  if  any such
investment, together with any other illiquid assets held by the Fund, amounts to
more than 10% of its total assets.
    

HEDGING ACTIVITIES

    The Fund may enter financial futures contracts, options on such futures  and
municipal bond index futures contracts for hedging purposes.

FUTURES CONTRACTS AND OPTIONS ON FUTURES

    As  discussed in  the Prospectus, the  Fund may invest  in financial futures
contracts ("futures  contracts")  and  related options  thereon.  These  futures
contracts  and related  options thereon  will be  used only  as a  hedge against
anticipated interest rate changes. A futures contract sale creates an obligation
by the Fund, as seller, to deliver the specific type of instrument called for in
the contract  at  a specified  future  time for  a  specified price.  A  futures
contract  purchase would create an obligation by the Fund, as purchaser, to take
delivery of the specific type of financial instrument at a specified future time
at a specified price. The specific securities delivered or taken,  respectively,
at  settlement  date, would  not  be determined  until  or near  that  date. The
determination would be in accordance with the rules of the exchange on which the
futures contract sale or purchase was effected.

    Although the terms of futures  contracts specify actual delivery or  receipt
of  securities,  in  most instances  the  contracts  are closed  out  before the
settlement date without  the making  or taking  of delivery  of the  securities.
Closing  out  of a  futures contract  is  usually effected  by entering  into an
offsetting transaction. An offsetting transaction for a futures contract sale is
effected by the  Fund entering  into a futures  contract purchase  for the  same
aggregate  amount  of the  specific  type of  financial  instrument at  the same
delivery date. If  the price in  the sale  exceeds the price  in the  offsetting
purchase,  the Fund is immediately paid the difference and thus realizes a gain.
If the  offsetting purchase  price exceeds  the sale  price, the  Fund pays  the
difference  and  realizes the  loss.  Similarly, the  closing  out of  a futures
contractpurchase is effected by the Fund entering into a futures contract  sale.
If  the offsetting  sale price  exceeds the purchase  price the  Fund realizes a
gain, and if the offsetting sale price is less than the purchase price the  Fund
realizes a loss.

    Unlike  a futures  contract, which  requires the parties  to buy  and sell a
security on a set date, an option  on a futures contract entitles its holder  to
decide  on or before a future date whether to enter into such a contract. If the
holder decides not to enter into the  contract, the premium paid for the  option
is  lost. Since the value of the option is fixed at the point of sale, there are
no daily payments of cash to reflect  the change in the value of the  underlying
contract,  as discussed  below for  futures contracts.  The value  of the option
changes and is reflected in the net asset value of the Fund.

    The Fund  is  required to  maintain  margin deposits  with  brokerage  firms
through  which it  effects futures  contracts and  options thereon.  The initial
margin requirements vary according  to the type of  the underlying security.  In
addition,  due to current industry practice daily variations in gains and losses
on open contracts are required to be reflected in cash in the form of  variation
margin  payments. The  Fund may be  required to make  additional margin payments
during the term of the contract.

    Currently, futures contracts  can be  purchased on debt  securities such  as
U.S. Treasury Bills and Bonds, U.S. Treasury Notes with maturities between 6 1/2
and  10 years, Certificates of the  Government National Mortgage Association and
Bank Certificates  of Deposit.  The Fund  may invest  in interest  rate  futures
contracts  covering these types of financial instruments as well as in new types
of contracts that become available in the future.

    Financial futures  contracts are  traded in  an auction  environment on  the
floors  of several  Exchanges --  principally, the  Chicago Board  of Trade, the
Chicago Mercantile Exchange  and the  New York Futures  Exchange. Each  Exchange
guarantees performance under contract provisions through a clearing corporation,
a  nonprofit  organization  managed by  the  Exchange membership  which  is also
responsible for handling daily accounting of deposits or withdrawals of margin.

                                       16
<PAGE>
    A  risk  in  employing  futures  contracts  to  protect  against  the  price
volatility of portfolio securities is that  the prices of securities subject  to
futures contracts may correlate imperfectly with the behavior of the cash prices
of the Fund's portfolio securities. The correlation may be distorted by the fact
that  the futures  market is dominated  by short-term traders  seeking to profit
from the difference  between a contract  or security price  objective and  their
cost  of borrowed funds. This would reduce their value for hedging purposes over
a short time period. The correlation may be further distorted since the  futures
contracts that are being used to hedge are not based on municipal obligations.

    Another  risk  is  that  the  Fund's  manager  could  be  incorrect  in  its
expectations as to the direction or extent of various interest rate movements or
the time span within which  the movements take place.  For example, if the  Fund
sold futures contracts for the sale of securities in anticipation of an increase
in  interest  rates, and  then interest  rates went  down instead,  causing bond
prices to rise, the Fund would lose money on the sale.

    Put and call options  on financial futures  have similar characteristics  as
Exchange-traded options. See below for a further description of options.

    In  addition to the risks associated  in investing in options on securities,
there are particular risks associated with  investing in options on futures.  In
particular,  the ability  to establish and  close out positions  on such options
will be subject to the development and maintenance of a liquid secondary market.
It is not certain that this market will develop.

    In order to assure  that the Fund is  entering into transactions in  futures
contracts  for  hedging purposes  as such  is defined  by the  Commodity Futures
Trading Commission either: 1) a  substantial majority (i.e., approximately  75%)
of  all anticipatory hedge transactions (transactions in which the Fund does not
own at  the time  of the  transaction, but  expects to  acquire, the  securities
underlying  the  relevant futures  contract) involving  the purchase  of futures
contracts will be completed by the purchase of securities which are the  subject
of  the  hedge or  2)  the underlying  value of  all  long positions  in futures
contracts will not exceed the total value of a) all short-term debt  obligations
held  by the Fund; b) cash held by the Fund; c) cash proceeds due to the Fund on
investments within thirty days; d) the margin deposited on the contracts; and e)
any unrealized appreciation in the value of the contracts.

    The Fund may not enter into futures contracts or related options thereon  if
immediately  thereafter the amount committed to  margin plus the amount paid for
option premiums exceeds 5% of the value of the Fund's total assets. In instances
involving the purchase of futures contracts by the Fund, the market value of the
futures contract will  be deposited  in a segregated  account of  cash and  cash
equivalents  to collateralize  the position and  thereby ensure that  the use of
such futures is unleveraged. The Fund may not purchase or sell futures contracts
or related options  if immediately  thereafter more  than one-third  of its  net
assets would be hedged.

    MUNICIPAL  BOND INDEX  FUTURES.  The  Fund may utilize  municipal bond index
futures  contracts  and  options  thereon  for  hedging  purposes.  The   Fund's
strategies  in employing such contracts will  be similar to that discussed above
with respect to financial futures and options thereon. A municipal bond index is
a method of reflecting  in a single  number the market  value of many  different
municipal  bonds  and is  designed to  be representative  of the  municipal bond
market generally. The  index fluctuates  in response  to changes  in the  market
values  of  the bonds  included within  the index.  Unlike futures  contracts on
particular financial instruments,  transactions in futures  on a municipal  bond
index  will  be settled  in  cash if  held  until the  close  of trading  in the
contract. However, like any other futures  contract, a position in the  contract
may  be closed out  by purchase or sale  of an offsetting  contract for the same
delivery month prior to expiration of the contract.

    OPTIONS.  The Fund may purchase  or sell (write) options on debt  securities
as  a means of  achieving additional return  or hedging the  value of the Fund's
portfolio. The  Fund  would  only  buy options  listed  on  national  securities
exchanges.  The Fund will  not purchase options  if, as a  result, the aggregate
cost of all outstanding options exceeds 10% of the Fund's total assets.

                                       17
<PAGE>
    Presently there are no options on California tax-exempt securities traded on
national securities exchanges and until such time as they become available,  the
Fund  will not invest in options on debt securities. It is anticipated that such
instruments will not become available during the next year.

    A call option is a contract that gives the holder of the option the right to
buy from the writer of  the call option, in return  for a premium, the  security
underlying  the option at a specified exercise price at any time during the term
of the option. The writer of the call option has the obligation upon exercise of
the option to deliver the underlying security upon payment of the exercise price
during the option period. A  put option is a contract  that gives the holder  of
the  option  the right  to sell  to the  writer,  in return  for a  premium, the
underlying security at  a specified  price during the  term of  the option.  The
writer  of  the put  has  the obligation  to  buy the  underlying  security upon
exercise, at the exercise price during the option period.

    The Fund will only write covered call  or covered put options. The Fund  may
not  write covered options in an amount exceeding  20% of the value of its total
assets. A call  option is  "covered" if the  Fund owns  the underlying  security
subject  to the option  or has an  absolute and immediate  right to acquire that
security or  futures  contract without  additional  cash consideration  (or  for
additional  cash consideration  held in a  segregated account  by its custodian)
upon conversion or exchange  of other securities held  in its portfolio. A  call
option  is also covered if the Fund holds a call on the same security or futures
contract as the call written  where the exercise price of  the call held is  (i)
equal  to or less  than the exercise price  of the call  written or (ii) greater
than the exercise price of the call  written if the difference is maintained  by
the Fund in cash, Treasury bills or other high grade short-term obligations in a
segregated  account with its  custodian. A put  option is "covered"  if the Fund
maintains cash, Treasury bills or other high grade short-term obligations with a
value equal to the exercise price in a segregated account with its custodian, or
else holds a put  on the same  security or futures contract  as the put  written
where  the  exercise price  of the  put held  is  equal to  or greater  than the
exercise price of the put written.

    If the  Fund has  written an  option,  it may  terminate its  obligation  by
effecting  a closing purchase transaction. This is accomplished by purchasing an
option of the same  series as the option  previously written. However, once  the
Fund  has been assigned an exercise notice, the  Fund will be unable to effect a
closing purchase transaction. Similarly, if the Fund is the holder of an  option
it  may liquidate its position by effecting  a closing sale transaction. This is
accomplished by selling an  option of the same  series as the option  previously
purchased.  There can  be no  assurance that either  a closing  purchase or sale
transaction can be effected when the Fund so desires.

    The Fund will realize a  profit from a closing  transaction if the price  of
the  transaction is less than the premium received from writing the option or is
more than the premium paid to purchase the option; the Fund will realize a  loss
from  a closing  transaction if the  price of  the transaction is  more than the
premium received from writing  the option or  is less than  the premium paid  to
purchase the option. Since call option prices generally reflect increases in the
price  of the underlying security,  any loss resulting from  the repurchase of a
call option may also be wholly or partially offset by unrealized appreciation of
the underlying security. Other principal factors affecting the market value of a
put or a  call option  include supply and  demand, interest  rates, the  current
market  price  and price  volatility  of the  underlying  security and  the time
remaining until the expiration date.

    An option position may be  closed out only on  an exchange which provides  a
secondary  market  for an  option of  the  same series.  Although the  Fund will
generally purchase or write only those options for which there appears to be  an
active secondary market, there is no assurance that a liquid secondary market on
an  exchange will exist for any particular option. In such event it might not be
possible to effect closing transactions in particular options, so that the  Fund
would  have to  exercise its options  in order  to realize any  profit and would
incur brokerage  commissions upon  the exercise  of call  options and  upon  the
subsequent disposition of underlying securities for the exercise of put options.
If  the Fund  as a  covered call  option writer  is unable  to effect  a closing
purchase transaction in  a secondary market,  it will  not be able  to sell  the
underlying  security  until the  option expires  or  it delivers  the underlying
security upon exercise.

                                       18
<PAGE>
PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT

   
    The Fund's portfolio turnover rate during the fiscal year ended December 31,
1994 was 12%. It is anticipated that the Fund's portfolio turnover rate will not
exceed 50% during the fiscal year ending December 31, 1995. A 50% turnover  rate
would  occur, for example, if 50% of the securities held in the Fund's portfolio
(excluding all securities whose maturities at acquisition were one year or less)
were sold  and  replaced  within one  year.  However,  the Fund  may  engage  in
short-term  trading consistent with its  investment objective. Securities may be
sold in anticipation of a market decline (a rise in interest rates) or purchased
in anticipation of a market rise (a  decline in interest rates). In addition,  a
security  may be  sold and another  security of comparable  quality purchased at
approximately the same  time to take  advantage of what  the Investment  Manager
believes  to be a  temporary disparity in the  normal yield relationship between
the two securities. These yield disparities  may occur for reasons not  directly
related  to the investment quality of  particular issues or the general movement
of interest rates,  such as changes  in the  overall demand for,  or supply  of,
various types of tax-exempt securities.
    

    In  general,  purchases  and  sales  may also  be  made  to  restructure the
portfolio  in   terms   of  average   maturity,   quality,  coupon   yield,   or
diversification  for any one or more of  the following purposes: (a) to increase
income, (b) to improve portfolio quality, (c) to minimize capital  depreciation,
(d)  to realize  gains or losses,  or for  such other reasons  as the Investment
Manager deems relevant in light of economic and market conditions.

    The Fund does  not generally intend  to invest  more than 25%  of its  total
assets  in  securities  of  any one  governmental  unit.  Subject  to investment
restriction number 3 in the Prospectus, the Fund may invest more than 25% of its
total assets in industrial development and pollution control bonds (two kinds of
tax-exempt Municipal Bonds).

    The Fund  may  invest  in  obligations  customarily  sold  to  institutional
investors  in private transactions with the issuers  thereof and up to 5% of its
total assets in securities for  which a BONA FIDE market  does not exist at  the
time  of purchase. With respect to any securities as to which a BONA FIDE market
does not exist, the Fund may be unable to dispose of such securities promptly at
reasonable prices. It  is the  Fund's current intention  not to  invest in  such
obligations.

INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In addition to the investment restrictions enumerated in the Prospectus, the
investment   restrictions  listed  below  have  been  adopted  by  the  Fund  as
fundamental policies, which may not be changed without the vote of a majority of
the outstanding voting securities  of the Fund,  as defined in  the Act. Such  a
majority  is defined as the lesser of (a) 67% of the shares present at a meeting
of shareholders, if the holders  of more than 50%  of the outstanding shares  of
the  Fund  are present  or represented  by proxy  or  (b) more  than 50%  of the
outstanding shares of the Fund. For  purposes of the following restrictions  and
those  recited in the  Prospectus: (a) an  "issuer" of a  security is the entity
whose assets and revenues are committed to the payment of interest and principal
on that particular security, provided that the securities guaranteed by separate
entities will be considered a separate security; (b) a "taxable security" is any
security the interest on  which is subject  to federal income  tax; and (c)  all
percentage limitations apply immediately after a purchase or initial investment,
and  any subsequent  change in any  applicable percentage  resulting from market
fluctuations  or  other  changes  in  total  or  net  assets  does  not  require
elimination of any security from the portfolio.

    The Fund may not:

         1. Invest in common stock.

         2. Invest in securities of any issuer if, to the knowledge of the Fund,
    any  officer  or trustee  of  the Fund  or any  officer  or director  of the
    Investment Manager owns more than 1/2 of 1% of the outstanding securities of
    such issuer, and such officers, trustees and directors who own more than 1/2
    of 1% own in  the aggregate more  than 5% of  the outstanding securities  of
    such issuer.

                                       19
<PAGE>
         3.  Purchase or sell real estate  or interests therein, although it may
    purchase securities secured by real estate or interests therein.

         4. Purchase  or sell  commodities  except that  the Fund  may  purchase
    financial   futures  contracts  and  related   options  in  accordance  with
    procedures adopted by the Trustees described in its Prospectus and Statement
    of Additional Information.

         5. Purchase  oil,  gas  or  other mineral  leases,  rights  or  royalty
    contracts, or exploration or development programs.

         6.  Write, purchase or sell puts, calls, or combinations thereof except
    options on futures contracts or options on debt securities.

         7.  Purchase  securities  of  other  investment  companies,  except  in
    connection  with a  merger, consolidation, reorganization  or acquisition of
    assets.

         8. Borrow  money, except  that the  Fund  may borrow  from a  bank  for
    temporary  or emergency purposes  in amounts not exceeding  5% (taken at the
    lower of  cost or  current value)  of the  value of  its total  assets  (not
    including the amount borrowed).

         9.  Pledge its  assets or assign  or otherwise encumber  them except to
    secure  permitted  borrowings.  (For   the  purpose  of  this   restriction,
    collateral   arrangements  with  respect  to  the  writing  of  options  and
    collateral arrangements with respect to  initial margin for futures are  not
    deemed  to  be  pledges of  assets  and  neither such  arrangements  nor the
    purchase or  sale of  futures are  deemed to  be the  issuance of  a  senior
    security as set forth in restriction 10.)

        10.  Issue senior securities as defined in the Act except insofar as the
    Fund may  be deemed  to have  issued a  senior security  by reason  of:  (a)
    entering  into any repurchase agreement; (b)  purchasing any securities on a
    when-issued or delayed delivery basis; or (c) borrowing money in  accordance
    with restrictions described above.

        11.  Make loans of money  or securities, except: (a)  by the purchase of
    debt obligations in which the Fund may invest consistent with its investment
    objective and policies; (b) by investment in repurchase agreements; and  (c)
    by lending its portfolio securities.

        12. Make short sales of securities.

        13.  Purchase securities on margin, except  for such short-term loans as
    are necessary for the  clearance of purchases  of portfolio securities.  The
    deposit  or payment by the Fund of initial or variation margin in connection
    with futures  contracts or  related options  thereon is  not considered  the
    purchase of a security on margin.

        14. Engage in the underwriting of securities, except insofar as the Fund
    may  be deemed an underwriter under the  Securities Act of 1933 in disposing
    of a portfolio security.

        15. Invest for the  purpose of exercising control  or management of  any
    other issuer.

PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS AND BROKERAGE
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The  Investment  Manager  is  responsible  for  decisions  to  buy  and sell
securities and commodities for the Fund, the selection of brokers and dealers to
effect the transactions, and the  negotiation of brokerage commissions, if  any.
The  Fund expects that the primary market for the securities in which it intends
to  invest  will  generally  be  the  over-the-counter  market.  Securities  are
generally  traded in the  over-the-counter market on a  "net" basis with dealers
acting as principal for their own accounts without charging a stated commission,
although the price  of the  security usually includes  a profit  to the  dealer.
Options and futures transactions will usually be effected through a broker and a
commission  will  be charged.  The  Fund also  expects  that securities  will be
purchased at times in  underwritten offerings where the  price includes a  fixed
amount of compensation, generally referred to as the underwriter's concession or

                                       20
<PAGE>
   
discount.  On  occasion,  the  Fund  may  also  purchase  certain  money  market
instruments directly from an issuer, in  which case no commissions or  discounts
are  paid. During the fiscal  years ended December 31,  1992, 1993 and 1994, the
Fund did not pay any brokerage commissions.
    

    The Investment Manager currently serves as investment manager to a number of
clients, including other  investment companies,  and may  in the  future act  as
investment  manager or adviser to  others. It is the  practice of the Investment
Manager to cause purchase and sale  transactions to be allocated among the  Fund
and  others whose  assets it manages  in such  manner as it  deems equitable. In
making such  allocations among  the Fund  and other  client accounts,  the  main
factors  considered are the respective  investment objectives, the relative size
of portfolio holdings of the same or comparable securities, the availability  of
cash  for investment, the size of  investment commitments generally held and the
opinions of the persons responsible for managing the portfolios of the Fund  and
other client accounts.

    The  policy of the Fund, regarding purchases and sales of securities for its
portfolio, is  that  primary  consideration  be  given  to  obtaining  the  most
favorable  prices  and  efficient  execution  of  transactions.  In  seeking  to
implement the Fund's policies, the Investment Manager effects transactions  with
those  brokers and dealers who the  Investment Manager believes provide the most
favorable prices  and are  capable  of providing  efficient executions.  If  the
Investment  Manager believes such price and  executions are obtainable from more
than one  broker or  dealer,  it may  give  consideration to  placing  portfolio
transactions  with those brokers and dealers who also furnish research and other
services to the Fund or the  Investment Manager. Such services may include,  but
are  not limited  to, any one  or more of  the following: information  as to the
availability  of  securities  for  purchase  or  sale;  statistical  or  factual
information  or opinions pertaining to investment; wire services; and appraisals
or evaluations of portfolio securities.

    The information and services received by the Investment Manager from brokers
and dealers may be  of benefit to  the Investment Manager  in the management  of
accounts  of some of its  other clients and may not,  in every case, benefit the
Fund directly. While the receipt of  such information and services is useful  in
varying  degrees and would  generally reduce the amount  of research or services
otherwise performed by the Investment  Manager and thereby reduce its  expenses,
it is of indeterminable value and the Fund will not reduce the management fee it
pays  to the Investment  Manager by any  amount that may  be attributable to the
value of such services.

    Pursuant to an order of the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Fund may
effect principal transactions in certain money market instruments with DWR.  The
Fund  will limit  its transactions  with DWR  to U.S.  Government and Government
Agency Securities,  Bank Money  Instruments (i.e.  Certificates of  Deposit  and
Bankers'  Acceptances) and Commercial Paper.  Such transactions will be effected
with DWR only when the  price available from DWR  is better than that  available
from other dealers.

    Consistent  with  the  policy  described  above,  brokerage  transactions in
securities and commodities listed on  exchanges or admitted to unlisted  trading
privileges  may be effected  through DWR. In  order for DWR  to effect portfolio
transactions for the Fund, the commissions, fees or other remuneration  received
by  DWR must be reasonable  and fair compared to  the commissions, fees or other
remuneration paid to  other brokers in  connection with comparable  transactions
involving  similar securities  being purchased or  sold on an  exchange during a
comparable period of time. This standard would allow DWR to receive no more than
the remuneration  which would  be expected  to be  received by  an  unaffiliated
broker  in a commensurate arms-length  transaction. Furthermore, the Trustees of
the Fund,  including  a  majority  of the  Trustees  who  are  not  "interested"
Trustees,  have adopted procedures which are reasonably designed to provide that
any commissions, fees or other remuneration paid to DWR are consistent with  the
foregoing standard.

   
RISK CONSIDERATIONS RELATING TO CALIFORNIA TAX-EXEMPT SECURITIES
    
    The  Trust  will  be  affected  by  any  political,  economic  or regulatory
developments affecting  the ability  of California  issuers to  pay interest  or
repay  principal  on  their  obligations.  Various  developments  regarding  the
California Constitution and State statutes  which limit the taxing and  spending
authority of

                                       21
<PAGE>
California governmental entities may impair the ability of California issuers to
maintain   debt  service   on  their  obligations.   The  following  information
constitutes only a brief summary and is not intended as a complete description.

    In 1978, Proposition 13,  an amendment to  the California Constitution,  was
approved,  limiting real  property valuation for  property tax  purposes and the
power of local governments to increase  real property tax revenues and  revenues
from  other  sources.  Legislation  adopted after  Proposition  13  provided for
assistance  to   local  governments,   including  the   redistribution  of   the
then-existing  surplus in  the General Fund,  reallocation of  revenues to local
governments,  and  assumption   by  the  State   of  certain  local   government
obligations.  However, more  recent legislation  reduced such  state assistance.
There can  be no  assurance that  any particular  level of  State aid  to  local
governments  will  be maintained  in future  years. In  NORDLINGER V.  HAHN, the
United States Supreme Court upheld certain provisions of Proposition 13  against
claims that it violated the equal protection clause of the Constitution.

    In  1979,  an  amendment  was  passed  adding  Article  XIIIB  to  the State
Constitution. As  amended  in 1990,  Article  XIIIB imposes  an  "appropriations
limit"  on the spending authority of the State and local government entities. In
general, the appropriations  limit is based  on certain 1978-1979  expenditures,
adjusted  annually  to reflect  changes in  the cost  of living,  population and
certain  services   provided   by   State   and   local   government   entities.
"Appropriations  limit" does  not include  appropriations for  qualified capital
outlay projects, certain increases in transportation-related taxes, and  certain
emergency appropriations.

    If  a government entity raises revenues beyond its "appropriations limit" in
any year,  a portion  of the  excess  which cannot  be appropriated  within  the
following  year's limit  must be returned  to the entity's  taxpayers within two
subsequent fiscal  years,  generally  by  a  tax  credit,  refund  or  temporary
suspension  of tax rates or fee schedules. "Debt service" is excluded from these
limitations, and  is defined  as "appropriations  required to  pay the  cost  of
interest and redemption charges, including the funding of any reserve or sinking
fund  required  in connection  therewith,  on indebtedness  existing  or legally
authorized as of January 1, 1979  or on bonded indebtedness thereafter  approved
[by  the voters]." In addition, Article  XIIIB requires the State Legislature to
establish a prudent State reserve, and to require the transfer of 50% of  excess
revenue to the State School Fund; any amounts allocated to the State School Fund
will increase the appropriations limit.

    In  June 1982,  the voters of  California passed two  initiative measures to
repeal the  California gift  and inheritance  tax  laws and  to enact,  in  lieu
thereof,  California death  taxes. California  voters also  passed an initiative
measure to increase, for taxable years  commencing on or after January 1,  1982,
the amount to account for the effects of inflation. Decreases in State and local
revenues in future fiscal years as a consequence of these initiatives may result
in  reductions in allocations of State revenues  to California issuers or in the
ability of California issuers to pay their obligations.

    In  1986,  California  voters  approved  an  initiative  statute  known   as
Proposition   62.  This  initiative  (i)  requires  that  any  tax  for  general
governmental purposes imposed by local governments be approved by resolution  or
ordinance  adopted by a two-thirds vote of the governmental entity's legislative
body and by a majority vote of  the electorate of the governmental entity,  (ii)
requires  that any  special tax  (defined as tax  levied for  other than general
governmental purposes) imposed by a local  governmental entity be approved by  a
two-thirds  vote of the voters within that jurisdiction, (iii) restricts the use
of revenues from a special tax to the purposes or for the service for which  the
special  tax was imposed, (iv)  prohibits the imposition of  ad valorem taxes on
real property  by  local  governmental  entities  except  as  permitted  by  the
Proposition  13 amendment, (v) prohibits the imposition of transaction taxes and
sales taxes on  the sale of  real property by  local governments, (vi)  requires
that  any tax  imposed by  a local  government on  or after  August 1,  1985, be
ratified by a majority vote of the  electorate within two years of the  adoption
of the initiative or be terminated by November 15, 1989, (vii) requires that, in
the  event  a local  government  fails to  comply  with the  provisions  of this
measure,   a   reduction    of   the    amount   of    property   tax    revenue

                                       22
<PAGE>
allocated  to such local  government occurs in  an amount equal  to the revenues
received by  such entity  attributable to  the tax  levied in  violation of  the
initiative, and (viii) permits these provisions to be amended exclusively by the
voters of the State of California.

    In September 1988, the California Court of Appeals in CITY OF WESTMINSTER V.
COUNTY OF ORANGE held that Proposition 62 is unconstitutional to the extent that
it  requires a general tax by  a general city law enacted  on or after August 1,
1985, and  prior to  the effective  date of  Proposition 62,  to be  subject  to
approval   by  a  majority  of  voters.  The  Court  held  that  the  California
Constitution prohibits the imposition of  a requirement that local tax  measures
be  submitted to the  electorate by either  referendum or initiative.  It is not
possible to predict the  impact of this decision  on charter cities, on  special
taxes or on new taxes imposed after the effective date of Proposition 62.

    In  1988, State voters approved Proposition 87, which amended Article XVI of
the  State  Constitution  to  authorize   the  State  Legislature  to   prohibit
redevelopment  agencies  from  receiving  any property  tax  revenues  raised by
increased property taxes to repay bonded indebtedness of local government  which
is  not approved by voters on  or before January 1, 1989.  It is not possible to
predict whether the State Legislature will  enact such a prohibition, nor is  it
possible  to predict the impact of  Proposition 87 on redevelopment agencies and
their ability to make payments on outstanding debt obligations.

    In November 1988, California voters approved Proposition 98. This initiative
requires that (i) revenues in excess of amounts permitted to be spent and  which
would  otherwise  be returned  by revision  of  tax rates  or fee  schedules, be
transferred and allocated (up to a maximum of 40%) to the State School Fund  and
be expended solely for purposes of instructional improvement and accountability.
No  such transfer or allocation of funds  will be required if certain designated
state officials determine that annual  student expenditures and class size  meet
certain  criteria as  set forth  in Proposition 98.  Any funds  allocated to the
State School Fund shall cause the appropriation limits to be annually  increased
for any such allocation made in the prior year. Proposition 98 also requires the
State of California to provide a minimum level of funding for public schools and
community  colleges. The initiative  permits the enactment  of legislation, by a
two-thirds vote, to suspend the minimum funding requirement for one year.

   
    The State is a party to  numerous legal proceedings, many of which  normally
occur  in governmental operations. In addition, the State is involved in certain
other legal proceedings that,  if decided against the  State, might require  the
State  to make significant future expenditures or impair future revenue sources.
Two such court cases  may upset California's budgetary  balance. In 1992-93  and
1993-94,  the  State met  part  of its  Proposition  98 commitment  to education
through $1.8 billion in off-book loans. These loans were held to be illegal in a
lower court decision, CALIFORNIA TEACHERS ASSOCIATION V. GOULD. If this decision
is upheld on appeal, the schools will not be required to repay these loans,  and
the  officially  recognized  1994-95  year-end deficit  would  increase  by $1.8
billion.  In  July,  1994,  a   federal  appeals  court  invalidated  the   Bush
Administration's  approval of a  5.8% welfare benefits  cut imposed in December,
1992. The ruling could  also nullify a further  2.7% reduction approved in  1993
and a 2.3% reduction scheduled to go into effect in September, 1994. It has been
estimated that, if the ruling is upheld on appeal, it could cost the State up to
$175 million per year in additional welfare benefit payments.
    

   
    Since  1990,  California has  faced the  worst  economic, fiscal  and budget
conditions since the 1930s. After experiencing strong growth throughout much  of
the  1980s,  the State  was  adversely affected  by  the national  recession and
cutbacks in aerospace and defense spending, both of which had a severe impact on
the economy  in Southern  California. Although  the national  economic  recovery
continued  at a strong  pace in the  third quarter of  1994, California is still
experiencing the  effects of  the  recession. However,  the State's  budget  for
fiscal  year  1994-95  assumes  that  the  State  will  began  to  recover  from
recessionary conditions in 1994, with a modest upturn in 1994 and continuing  in
1995.
    

   
    On  July 8, 1994, the Governor signed into law a $57.5 billion budget which,
among other things, (a) reduces  welfare grants and aid  to families and to  the
aged,  blind and disabled, and (b) relies  on the State's ability to obtain $2.8
billion in new reimbursement  from the federal government  for the State's  cost
    

                                       23
<PAGE>
   
of  serving  illegal immigrants.  Although the  State  legislature has  passed a
standby measure which could trigger  automatic budget reductions if the  State's
fiscal  condition worsens over the  next two years, the  stability of the budget
would be jeopardized  if the  State is unable  to obtain  the hoped-for  federal
funds.
    

   
    The  current budget includes General Fund spending of $40.9 billion, up 4.2%
from the  level of  spending during  the 1993-94  fiscal year.  The budget  also
envisions  General Fund  spending climbing  another 8.4%  in the  1995-96 fiscal
year. The budget forecasts levels of revenues and expenditures which will result
in operating surpluses in both 1994-95  and 1995-96, leading to the  elimination
of an estimated $2.0 billion accumulated budget deficit by June 30, 1996.
    

   
    Although  an improving economy  and healthier tax  revenues are anticipated,
the political  environment  and  voter initiatives  may  constrain  the  State's
financial  flexibility.  For  example, according  to  the  Legislative Analyst's
Office the passage of  Proposition 187 in the  November 1994 election, which  in
part  denies certain social services to illegal immigrants, could jeopardize $15
billion in federal funding. In addition,  the passage of Proposition 184 in  the
November  1994 election,  which imposes  mandatory, lengthy  prison sentences on
individuals  convicted  of  three  felonies,  is  expected  to  increase  prison
operating costs by $3 billion annually and increase prison construction costs by
$20 billion.
    

   
    Because of the State of California's continuing budget problems, the State's
General  Obligation bonds were downgraded in July 1994 from A1 to Aa by Moody's,
to A from A+ by Standard & Poor's, and from A to AA by Fitch Investors  Service,
Inc.  All three rating agencies expressed  uncertainty in the State's ability to
balance its budget by 1996.
    

   
    On December 6, 1994,  Orange County became the  largest municipality in  the
United  States to  file for  protection under  the Federal  bankruptcy laws. The
filing stemmed  from  approximately  $1.7  billion in  losses  suffered  by  the
County's   investment  pool  due  to   investments  in  high  risk  "derivative"
securities. Over 185 public agencies had  funds invested in the pool, and  these
funds  may  be accessed  only with  permission  of the  bankruptcy court.  It is
unclear whether the  State will  lend financial  or other  assistance to  Orange
County to prevent the County from defaulting on its other obligations.
    

   
    The  bipartisan Commission on  State Finance believes  that, although it may
carry long-term implications for the City  of Los Angeles, the earthquake  which
struck  Northridge, California on  January 17, 1994 will  not derail the state's
economic recovery.
    

    The effect  of these  various constitutional  and statutory  amendments  and
budget  developments upon the ability of  California issuers to pay interest and
principal on their obligations remains unclear and in any event may depend  upon
whether  a particular  California tax-exempt  security is  a general  or limited
obligation bond  and on  the  type of  security provided  for  the bond.  It  is
possible  that  other measures  affecting the  taxing  or spending  authority of
California or  its political  subdivisions may  be approved  or enacted  in  the
future.

THE DISTRIBUTOR
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

   
    As  discussed in the Prospectus, shares of  the Fund are distributed by Dean
Witter Distributors  Inc.  (the  "Distributor"),  on  a  continuous  basis.  The
Distributor has entered into a selected dealer agreement with DWR, which through
its  own sales organization sells shares of the Fund and may enter into selected
dealer agreements with other  selected dealers ("Selected Broker-Dealers").  The
Distributor,  a Delaware corporation, is a  wholly-owned subsidiary of DWDC. The
Trustees, including a majority of the Trustees  who are not and were not at  the
time  they voted, "interested persons"  of the Fund, as  defined in the Act (the
"Independent Trustees"), at  a meeting  held on  October 30,  1992 approved  the
current  Distribution Agreement appointing the Distributor exclusive distributor
of the Fund's  shares and  providing for  the Distributor  to bear  distribution
expenses   not  borne  by  the  Fund.  The  current  Distribution  Agreement  is
substantially identical to  the Fund's  previous distribution  agreement in  all
material   respects,  except  for  the   dates  of  effectiveness.  The  current
Distribution Agreement took effect on June 30, 1993 upon the spin-off by  Sears,
Roebuck  and Co. of its remaining shares of DWDC. By its terms, the Distribution
Agreement had an initial term ending April  30, 1994, and provides that it  will
remain in effect from year to
    

                                       24
<PAGE>
   
year  thereafter if  approved by the  Board. At  their meeting held  on April 8,
1994, the  Trustees, including  all of  the Independent  Trustees, approved  the
continuation of the Distribution Agreement until April 30, 1995.
    

    The  Distributor bears all expenses incurred in providing services under the
Distribution Agreement. Such  expenses include  the payment  of commissions  for
sales of the Fund's shares and incentive compensation to account executives. The
Distributor  also pays certain  expenses in connection  with the distribution of
the Fund's shares, including the  costs of preparing, printing and  distributing
advertising or promotional materials, and the costs of printing and distributing
prospectuses  and supplements thereto  used in connection  with the offering and
sale of the Fund's shares to other than current shareholders. The Fund bears the
costs of  initial typesetting,  printing and  distribution of  prospectuses  and
supplements   thereto  to  shareholders.  The  Fund  also  bears  the  costs  of
registering the Fund and its shares under federal and state securities laws. The
Fund and the  Distributor have agreed  to indemnify each  other against  certain
liabilities, including liabilities under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.
Under  the  Distribution Agreement,  the Distributor  uses  its best  efforts in
rendering services to the Fund, but  in the absence of willful misfeasance,  bad
faith,   gross  negligence  or  reckless   disregard  of  its  obligations,  the
Distributor is not liable to the Fund  or any of its shareholders for any  error
of  judgment or  mistake of law  or for  any act or  omission or  for any losses
sustained by the Fund or its shareholders.

PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION

   
    To compensate the Distributor for the services provided and for the expenses
borne  by  the  Distributor  or  any  selected  dealer  under  the  Distribution
Agreement,  the Fund has adopted  a Plan of Distribution  pursuant to Rule 12b-1
under the  Act (the  "Plan") pursuant  to which  the Fund  pays the  Distributor
compensation  accrued daily and paid monthly at  the annual rate of 0.75% of the
lesser of: (a)  the average  daily aggregate gross  sales of  the Fund's  shares
since  the inception  of the Fund  (not including reinvestments  of dividends or
capital gains distributions), less the  average daily aggregate net asset  value
of the Fund's shares redeemed since the Fund's inception upon which a contingent
deferred  sales  charge has  been imposed  or  upon which  such charge  has been
waived, or (b)  the average daily  net assets of  the Fund. An  amount equal  to
0.20%  of the Fund's average  annual net assets of the  fees payable by the Fund
each year pursuant to  the Plan of Distribution  is characterized as a  "service
fee"  under the Rules of Fair Practice of the National Association of Securities
Dealers (of which the Distributor is a  member). Such fee is a payment made  for
personal  service and/or the maintenance  of shareholder accounts. The remaining
portion  of  the  Plan  of  Distribution  fee  payments  made  by  the  Fund  is
characterized  as  an  "asset-based sales  charge"  as  such is  defined  by the
aforementioned Rules  of  Fair  Practice.  The  Distributor  also  receives  the
proceeds  of contingent deferred sales charges imposed on certain redemptions of
shares, which are separate and apart from payments made pursuant to the Plan The
Distributor has  informed  the  Fund  that it  and/or  DWR  received  contingent
deferred  sales charges on  redemptions of the Fund's  shares in the approximate
amounts of $1,063,000,  $1,072,000 and  $1,752,000, for the  fiscal years  ended
December   31,  1992,  1993  and   1994,  respectively.  (see  "Redemptions  and
Repurchases -- Contingent Deferred Sales Charge" in the Prospectus).
    

    The Plan was adopted by a majority vote of the Board of Trustees,  including
all of the Trustees of the Fund who are not "interested persons" of the Fund (as
defined in the Act) and who have no direct or indirect financial interest in the
operation  of the Plan ( the "Independent 12b-1 Trustees") , cast in person at a
meeting called for the purpose of voting on the Plan, on June 13, 1984, by  then
the  sole shareholder  of the  Fund on  June 26,  1984, and  by the shareholders
holding a majority, as defined in the Act, of the outstanding voting  securities
of  the Fund at a Meeting of Shareholders  of the Fund held on October 21, 1985.
Under its terms,  the Plan had  an initial  term ending December  31, 1984,  and
provides  that it will remain  in effect from year  to year thereafter, provided
such continuance is approved annually  by a vote of  the Trustees in the  manner
described above.

   
    Most recent continuation of the Plan for one year, until April 30, 1995, was
approved  by the  Board of  Trustees of  the Fund,  including a  majority of the
independent 12b-1 Trustees, at a Board meeting  held on April 8, 1994. Prior  to
approving  the continuation of  the Plan, the Board  requested and received from
    

                                       25
<PAGE>
DWR and reviewed all the information which  it deemed necessary to arrive at  an
informed  determination. In making their determination to continue the Plan, the
Trustees considered: (1) the Fund's experience  under the Plan and whether  such
experience indicates that the Plan is operating as anticipated; (2) the benefits
the  Fund had obtained,  was obtaining and  would be likely  to obtain under the
Plan; and (3) what services had been provided and were continuing to be provided
under the Plan by the Distributor to  the Fund and its shareholders. Based  upon
their  review, the Trustees of the Fund, including each of the Independent 12b-1
Trustees, determined that continuation of the Plan would be in the best interest
of the Fund and would have a reasonable likelihood of continuing to benefit  the
Fund  and its shareholders. This determination  was based upon the conclusion of
the Trustees that the Plan provides  an effective means of stimulating sales  of
shares  of  the  Fund  and  of reducing  or  avoiding  net  redemptions  and the
potentially adverse effects that may occur therefrom. In the Trustees' quarterly
review of the  Plan, they will  consider its continued  appropriateness and  the
level of compensation provided therein.

   
    At  their  meeting held  on  October 30,  1992,  the Trustees  of  the Fund,
including all of the Independent 12b-1 Trustees, approved certain amendments  to
the  Plan which took  effect in January,  1993 and were  designed to reflect the
fact that  upon  the  reorganization  described  above  the  share  distribution
activities  theretofore  performed  for the  Fund  by  DWR were  assumed  by the
Distributor and DWR's sales activities are  now being performed pursuant to  the
terms  of  a selected  dealer  agreement between  the  Distributor and  DWR. The
amendments provide that payments under the Plan will be made to the  Distributor
rather  than to DWR as before the amendment, and that the Distributor in turn is
authorized  to  make  payments  to   DWR,  its  affiliates  or  other   selected
broker-dealers  (or  direct  that  the Fund  pay  such  entities  directly). The
Distributor is also authorized  to retain part of  such fee as compensation  for
its  own distribution-related expenses. At their meeting held on April 28, 1993,
the Trustees,  including a  majority  of the  Independent 12b-1  Trustees,  also
approved  certain technical amendments to the Plan in connection with amendments
adopted by the National Association of  Securities Dealers, Inc. to its Rule  of
Fair Practice.
    

   
    Under  the Plan  and as  required by  Rule 12b-1,  the Trustees  receive and
review promptly after the end of each calendar quarter a written report provided
by the Distributor of the  amounts expended under the  Plan and the purpose  for
which  such expenditures were  made. The Fund accrued  amounts payable under the
Plan, during the fiscal year ended December 31, 1994, of $8,309,032. This amount
is equal to payments required to be paid monthly by the Fund which were computed
at the annual rate of 0.75% of the average daily net assets of the Fund's shares
for  the  fiscal  year  and  was  calculated  pursuant  to  clause  (b)  of  the
compensation  formula under the Plan.  This amount is treated  by the Fund as an
expense in the year it is accrued.
    

    The Plan was  adopted in order  to permit the  implementation of the  Fund's
method  of distribution. Under  this distribution method shares  of the Fund are
sold without a sales load  being deducted at the time  of purchase, so that  the
full amount of an investor's purchase payment will be invested in shares without
any  deduction  for  sales charges.  Shares  of the  Fund  may be  subject  to a
contingent deferred sales charge, payable to the Distributor, if redeemed during
the six years after  their purchase. DWR compensates  its account executives  by
paying  them, from its own funds, commissions for the sale of the Fund's shares,
currently a gross  sales credit of  up to 4%  of the amount  sold and an  annual
gross  residual  of up  to .20  of 1%  of  the current  value of  the respective
accounts for which they are the account executives of record and for which  they
provide  personal service  and/or the  maintenance of  such accounts.  The gross
sales credit is a charge which reflects  commissions paid by DWR to its  account
executives  for Fund  associated distribution-related  expenses, including sales
compensation, and overhead and other branch office distribution-related expenses
including (a) the expenses  of operating branch offices  in connection with  the
sale  of Fund shares, including lease  costs, the salaries and employee benefits
of operations and sales support  personnel, utility costs, communications  costs
and  the  costs  of stationery  and  supplies,  (b) the  costs  of  client sales
seminars, (c) travel expenses of mutual  fund sales coordinators to promote  the
sale  of Fund shares and (d) other expenses relating to branch promotion of Fund
sales. The distribution fee  that the Distributor receives  from the Fund  under
the  Plan, in  effect, offsets distribution  expenses incurred on  behalf of the
Fund and its opportunity costs, such as

                                       26
<PAGE>
the gross  sales credit  and  an assumed  interest  charge thereon  (  "carrying
charge"  ). In the  Distributor's reporting of its  distribution expenses to the
Fund, such assumed  interest (computed  at the  "broker's call  rate") has  been
calculated on the gross sales credit as it is reduced by amounts received by the
Distributor under the Plan and any contingent deferred sales charges received by
the  Distributor upon redemption of shares of the Fund. No other interest charge
is included as a  distribution expense in the  Distributor's calculation of  its
distribution costs for this purpose. The broker's call rate is the interest rate
charged to securities brokers on loans secured by exchange-listed securities.

   
    The  Fund paid 100% of the $8,309,032  accrued under the Plan for the fiscal
year ended  December 31,  1993 to  the  Distributor of  the Fund's  shares.  The
Distributor  and DWR estimate that they  have spent $67,587,409, pursuant to the
Plan, on behalf of  the Fund since  the inception of the  Fund. It is  estimated
that  this  amount was  spent  in approximately  the  following ways:  (i) 3.42%
($2,315,653) -- advertising and promotional  expenses; (ii) 0.33% ($221,341)  --
printing  of prospectuses for  distribution to other  than current shareholders;
and (iii)  96.25% ($65,050,415)  -- other  expenses, including  the gross  sales
credit  and the carrying charge, of which 8.62% ($5,607,332) represents carrying
charges, 36.94%  ($24,026,894)  represents  commission  credits  to  DWR  branch
offices   for  payments  of   commissions  to  account   executives  and  54.44%
($35,416,189) represents overhead and  other branch office  distribution-related
expenses.
    

   
    At  any given time, expenses  may be incurred in  distributing shares of the
Fund which may be more or  less than the total of  (i) the payments made by  the
Fund  pursuant to the  Plan and (ii)  the proceeds of  contingent deferred sales
charges paid by investors upon redemption of shares. The Distributor has advised
the Fund that  such excess  amount, including  the carrying  charge designed  to
approximate  the opportunity costs incurred by  the Distributor which arise from
it having  advanced monies  without  having received  the  amount of  any  sales
charges  imposed at the time of sale  of the Fund's shares, totalled $12,196,207
or 1.21% as of December 31, 1994. Because there is no requirement under the Plan
that the Distributor be reimbursed for all its expenses or any requirement  that
the  Plan be continued from year to year, this excess amount does not constitute
a liability of the Fund. Although there  is no legal obligation for the Fund  to
pay  expenses incurred by the Distributor in excess of payments made to it under
the Plan and the proceeds of contingent deferred sales charges paid by investors
upon redemption  of  shares, if  for  any reason  the  Plan is  terminated,  the
Trustees  will consider at that time the manner in which to treat such expenses.
Any cumulative  expenses incurred  by  the Distributor,  but not  yet  recovered
through  distribution fees or contingent deferred  sales charges, may or may not
be recovered  through  future distribution  fees  or contingent  deferred  sales
charges.
    

    No  interested person of the Fund nor any  Trustee of the Fund who is not an
interested person of the Fund, as defined  in the Act, has any direct  financial
interest  in the operation of the Plan except to the extent that the Distributor
or certain of its employees may be deemed  to have such an interest as a  result
of  benefits derived from the successful operation of the Plan or as a result of
receiving a portion of the amounts expended thereunder by the Fund.

    The Plan may not be  amended to increase materially  the amount to be  spent
for  the services described therein without  approval by the shareholders of the
Fund, and all  material amendments  to the  Plan must  also be  approved by  the
Trustees  in the manner described above. The Plan may be terminated at any time,
without payment of any penalty, by vote  of a majority of the Independent  12b-1
Trustees  or by a vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the
Fund (as defined in the Act) on not more than thirty days' written notice to any
other party to  the Plan. So  long as the  Plan is in  effect, the election  and
nomination of Independent 12b-1 Trustees shall be committed to the discretion of
the Independent 12b-1 Trustees.

DETERMINATION OF NET ASSET VALUE

    As  discussed in the Prospectus, portfolio securities (other than short-term
debt securities and futures and options) are  valued for the Fund by an  outside
independent  pricing  service approved  by the  Board  of Trustees.  The pricing
service has informed the Fund that in valuing the Fund's portfolio securities it
uses both a computerized grid matrix of tax-exempt securities and evaluations by
its staff, in

                                       27
<PAGE>
each case based  on information  concerning market  transactions and  quotations
from  dealers which  reflect the  bid side  of the  market each  day. The Fund's
portfolio  securities  are  thus  valued  by  reference  to  a  combination   of
transactions  and quotations  for the  same or  other securities  believed to be
comparable in quality, coupon, maturity, type of issue, call provisions, trading
characteristics and other features deemed to be relevant. The Board of  Trustees
believes  that timely and  reliable market quotations  are generally not readily
available to the Fund for purposes of valuing tax-exempt securities and that the
valuations supplied by the pricing service, using the procedures outlined  above
and subject to periodic review, are more likely to approximate the fair value of
such securities.

   
    The Investment Manager will periodically review and evaluate the procedures,
methods  and quality of services provided by the pricing service then being used
by the Fund and may, from time to  time, recommend to the Board of Trustees  the
use  of  other pricing  services or  discontinuance  of the  use of  any pricing
service in whole or part. The Board may determine to approve such recommendation
or to make  other provisions  for pricing  of the  Fund's portfolio  securities.
Short-term taxable debt securities with sixty days or less remaining to maturity
at  time of purchase are  valued at amortized cost,  unless the Board determines
such does not reflect the securities' fair value, in which case these securities
will be valued at their fair value as determined by the Board of Trustees. Other
short-term taxable debt  securities will  be valued on  a mark  to market  basis
until  such time as they have a remaining maturity of sixty days, whereupon they
will be valued at amortized  cost using their value on  the 61st day unless  the
Trustees  determine such does  not reflect the securities'  fair value, in which
case these securities will be valued at their fair market value as determined by
the Trustees. Listed options  on debt securities are  valued at the latest  sale
price  on the exchange on which they are  listed unless no sales of such options
have taken place that day, in which case they will be valued at the mean between
their closing bid  and asked  prices. Unlisted  options on  debt securities  are
valued at the mean between the latest bid and asked price. Futures contracts and
options  thereon which are  traded on commodities exchanges  are valued at their
last sale price on such commodities exchanges unless the Trustees determine that
such price does  not reflect  their market  value, in  which case  they will  be
valued  at their fair value as determined by the Trustees. All other securities,
including illiquid securities, and other assets  are valued at their fair  value
as  determined  in good  faith  under procedures  established  by and  under the
supervision of the Board of Trustees.
    

    As stated in  the Prospectus, the  Fund's net asset  value will be  computed
once  daily at  4:00 P.M.  The New  York Stock  Exchange currently  observes the
following holidays: New Year's Day; Presidents' Day; Good Friday; Memorial  Day;
Independence Day; Labor Day; Thanksgiving Day; and Christmas Day.

SHAREHOLDER SERVICES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Upon the purchase of shares of the Fund, a Shareholder Investment Account is
opened  for the investor on  the books of the Fund  and maintained by the Fund's
Transfer Agent, Dean  Witter Trust Company  (the "Transfer Agent").  This is  an
open  account in which shares owned by the investor are credited by the Transfer
Agent in lieu  of issuance of  a share  certificate. If a  share certificate  is
desired,  it must be requested in writing for each transaction. Certificates are
issued only for full shares and may  be redeposited in the account at any  time.
There  is no charge  to the investor  for issuance of  a certificate. Whenever a
shareholder instituted  transaction takes  place in  the Shareholder  Investment
Account,  the shareholder  will be mailed  a statement reflecting  the status of
such Account.

    AUTOMATIC INVESTMENT  OF DIVIDENDS  AND  DISTRIBUTIONS.   As stated  in  the
Prospectus,   all  income   dividends  and   capital  gains   distributions  are
automatically paid  in  full and  fractional  shares  of the  Fund,  unless  the
shareholder  requests that they be paid in  cash. Each purchase of shares of the
Fund is made upon the condition that the Transfer Agent is thereby automatically
appointed as agent of  the investor to receive  all dividends and capital  gains
distributions  on shares owned by the investor. Such dividends and distributions
will be paid, at  the net asset value  per share, in shares  of the Fund (or  in
cash  if the shareholder so requests) as of the close of business on the monthly
payment date, as stated in the Prospectus.  At any time an investor may  request
the Transfer Agent, in writing, to have subsequent

                                       28
<PAGE>
dividends  and/or capital gains distributions paid to  him or her in cash rather
than shares.  To assure  sufficient time  to process  the change,  such  request
should  be received by the  Transfer Agent at least  five business days prior to
the payment date of the dividend or the record date of the distribution. In  the
case  of recently purchased shares for  which registration instructions have not
been received on the payment or record  date, cash payments will be made to  DWR
or  other selected broker-dealer, and will be forwarded to the shareholder, upon
the receipt of proper instructions.

   
    TARGETED  DIVIDENDS.-SM-    In  states  where  it  is  legally  permissible,
shareholders  may also have all income dividends and capital gains distributions
automatically invested in shares of an open-end Dean Witter Fund other than Dean
Witter California  Tax-Free  Income  Fund.  Such  investment  will  be  made  as
described above for automatic investment in shares of the Fund, at the net asset
value  per share (without sales  charge) of the selected  Dean Witter Fund as of
the close  of business  on  the monthly  payment date  and  will begin  to  earn
dividends,  if any, in the  selected Dean Witter Fund  the next business day. To
participate in the Targeted Dividends program, shareholders should contact their
DWR or other  selected broker-dealer  account executive or  the Transfer  Agent.
Shareholders  of the Fund must be shareholders  of the Dean Witter Fund targeted
to receive  investments from  dividends  at the  time  they enter  the  Targeted
Dividends  program. Investors should review the  prospectus of the targeted Dean
Witter Fund before entering the program.
    

    EASYINVEST.-SM-   Shareholders may  subscribe  to EasyInvest,  an  automatic
purchase  plan  which  provides  for  any  amount  from  $100  to  $5,000  to be
transferred automatically from a checking or savings account, on a semi-monthly,
monthly or quarterly basis,  to the Transfer Agent  for investment in shares  of
the Fund. Shares purchased through EasyInvest will be added to the shareholder's
existing  account at the  net asset value  calculated the same  business day the
transfer of  funds is  effected.  For further  information  or to  subscribe  to
EasyInvest,   shareholders   should  contact   their   DWR  or   other  selected
broker-dealer account executive or the Transfer Agent.

    INVESTMENT OF DIVIDENDS OR DISTRIBUTIONS RECEIVED IN CASH.  Any  shareholder
who   receives  a  cash  payment  representing   a  dividend  or  capital  gains
distribution may  invest  such dividend  or  distribution at  net  asset  value,
without the imposition of a contingent deferred sales charge upon redemption, by
returning  the check or the proceeds to  the Transfer Agent within 30 days after
the payment  date. If  the shareholder  returns the  proceeds of  a dividend  or
distribution,  such funds must  be accompanied by  a signed statement indicating
that the proceeds  constitute a dividend  or distribution to  be invested.  Such
investment  will be made at the net  asset value per share next determined after
receipt of the check or proceeds by the Transfer Agent.

    DIRECT INVESTMENTS THROUGH TRANSFER AGENT.  As discussed in the  Prospectus,
a shareholder may make additional investments in Fund shares at any time through
the  Shareholder Investment Account by  sending a check in  any amount, not less
than $100, payable to Dean Witter  California Tax-Free Income Fund, directly  to
the  Fund's Transfer Agent. Such amounts will be applied to the purchase of Fund
shares at the net asset value per share next computed after receipt of the check
or purchase  payment by  the Transfer  Agent. The  shares so  purchased will  be
credited to the investor's account.

    SYSTEMATIC  WITHDRAWAL PLAN.   As discussed in  the Prospectus, a systematic
withdrawal plan (the "Withdrawal Plan") is available for shareholders who own or
purchase shares of the  Fund having a  minimum value of  $10,000 based upon  the
then  current  net asset  value.  The Withdrawal  Plan  provides for  monthly or
quarterly (March, June, September and December) checks in any dollar amount, not
less than  $25  or  in any  whole  percentage  of the  account  balance,  on  an
annualized  basis.  Any  applicable  contingent deferred  sales  charge  will be
imposed on  shares redeemed  under  the Withdrawal  Plan (see  "Redemptions  and
Repurchases--Contingent  Deferred Sales  Charge" in  the Prospectus). Therefore,
any shareholder participating in the Withdrawal Plan will have sufficient shares
redeemed from his or  her account so  that the proceeds  (net of any  applicable
contingent  deferred sales  charge) to  the shareholder  will be  the designated
monthly or quarterly dollar amount.

    The Transfer Agent  acts as agent  for the shareholder  in tendering to  the
Fund  for redemption sufficient full and fractional shares to provide the amount
of the periodic withdrawal payment designated

                                       29
<PAGE>
in the  application.  The shares  will  be redeemed  at  their net  asset  value
determined,  at the shareholder's  option, on the tenth  or twenty-fifth day (or
next following business  day) of the  relevant month or  quarter and normally  a
check for the proceeds will be mailed by the Transfer Agent, or amounts credited
to  a shareholder's  DWR or  other selected  broker-dealer account,  within five
business days  after  the  date  of  redemption.  The  Withdrawal  Plan  may  be
terminated at any time by the Fund.

    Withdrawal  Plan payments should  not be considered  as dividends, yields or
income. If periodic withdrawal plan payments continuously exceed net  investment
income  and net  capital gains,  the shareholder's  original investment  will be
correspondingly reduced and ultimately exhausted.

    Each withdrawal constitutes  a redemption  of shares  and any  gain or  loss
realized  must  be  recognized for  federal  income tax  purposes.  Although the
shareholder may  make  additional  investments  of  $2,500  or  more  under  the
Withdrawal  Plan,  withdrawals made  concurrently  with purchases  of additional
shares may  be  inadvisable because  of  the contingent  deferred  sales  charge
applicable  to the redemption of shares purchased during the preceding six years
(see "Redemption and Repurchases -- Contingent Deferred Sales Charge").

   
    Any shareholder who wishes to have  payments under the Withdrawal Plan  made
to  a third party or sent to an address other than the one listed on the account
must send complete written instructions to  the Transfer Agent to enroll in  the
Withdrawal  Plan.  The  shareholder's  signature on  such  instructions  must be
guaranteed  by  an   eligible  guarantor  acceptable   to  the  Transfer   Agent
(shareholders  should  contact  the Transfer  Agent  for a  determination  as to
whether a particular institution is  such an eligible guarantor). A  shareholder
may,  at any time, change the amount and interval of withdrawal payments through
his or her DWR or other  selected broker-dealer account executive or by  written
notification to the Transfer Agent. In addition, the party and/or the address to
which  checks are mailed may be changed  by written notification to the Transfer
Agent, with signature  guarantees required  in the manner  described above.  The
shareholder may also terminate the Withdrawal Plan at any time by written notice
to  the Transfer Agent.  In the event  of such termination,  the account will be
continued as a regular shareholder investment account. The shareholder may  also
redeem  all  or part  of the  shares held  in the  Withdrawal Plan  account (see
"Redemptions and Repurchases" in the Prospectus) at any time.
    

    EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE.    As  discussed  in  the  Prospectus,  the  Fund  makes
available  to its shareholders an Exchange Privilege whereby shareholders of the
Fund may exchange their shares for shares of other Dean Witter Funds sold with a
contingent deferred sales charge ("CDSC funds"),  and for shares of Dean  Witter
Short-Term  U.S. Treasury  Trust, Dean Witter  Limited Term  Municipal Trust and
Dean Witter Short-Term Bond Fund and for shares of five Dean Witter money market
funds (the foregoing eight  non-FESC or CDSC funds  are hereinafter referred  to
for  purposes of this  section as the  "Exchange Funds"). Exchanges  may be made
after the shares of the Fund acquired  by purchase (not by exchange or  dividend
reinvestment)  have  been held  for  30 days.  There  is no  waiting  period for
exchanges of shares acquired by  exchange or dividend reinvestment. An  exchange
will  be treated  for federal income  tax purposes  the same as  a repurchase or
redemption of shares,  on which the  shareholder may realize  a capital gain  or
loss.

    Any  new account  established through the  Exchange Privilege  will have the
same registration and cash dividend or dividend reinvestment plan as the present
account,  unless  the  Transfer  Agent  receives  written  notification  to  the
contrary.  For  telephone  exchanges,  the exact  registration  of  the existing
account and the account number must be provided.

    Any shares  held  in  certificate  form cannot  be  exchanged  but  must  be
forwarded  to the  Transfer Agent and  deposited into  the shareholder's account
before being eligible for exchange.  (Certificates mailed in for deposit  should
not be endorsed.)

    As  described  below, and  in the  Prospectus  under the  captions "Exchange
Privilege" and "Contingent Deferred Sales  Charge", a contingent deferred  sales
charge  ("CDSC") may  be imposed  upon a  redemption, depending  on a  number of
factors, including the number of years from the time of purchase until the  time
of  redemption or exchange  ("holding period"). When  shares of the  Fund or any
other

                                       30
<PAGE>
CDSC fund  are exchanged  for shares  of  the Exchange  Funds, the  exchange  is
executed  at no charge to the shareholder, without the imposition of the CDSC at
the time of the exchange. During the  period of time the shareholder remains  in
the  Exchange Funds  (calculated from  the last  day of  the month  in which the
shares were acquired), the holding period or "year since purchase payment  made"
is  frozen. When  shares are redeemed  out of  the Exchange Funds,  they will be
subject to a CDSC which would be  based upon the period of time the  shareholder
held  shares in a CDSC  fund. However, in the case  of shares exchanged into the
Exchange Funds on or  after April 23,  1990, upon a  redemption of shares  which
results in a CDSC being imposed, a credit (not to exceed the amount of the CDSC)
will  be given in an amount equal  to the Exchange Funds 12b-1 distribution fees
incurred on  or  after  that  date  which  are  attributable  to  those  shares.
Shareholders  acquiring shares of  the Exchange Funds  pursuant to this exchange
privilege may exchange  those shares  back into a  CDSC fund  from the  Exchange
Funds,  with  no  CDSC  being  imposed  on  such  exchange.  The  holding period
previously frozen when shares  were first exchanged for  shares of the  Exchange
Funds  resumes on the last day  of the month in which  shares of a CDSC fund are
reacquired. A CDSC is imposed only  upon an ultimate redemption, based upon  the
time  (calculated as  described above)  the shareholder  was invested  in a CDSC
fund.

    In addition, shares of the  Fund may be acquired  in exchange for shares  of
Dean  Witter Funds sold  with a front-end sales  charge ("front-end sales charge
funds"), but shares  of the  Fund, however acquired,  may not  be exchanged  for
shares  of  front-end sales  charge funds.  Shares  of a  CDSC fund  acquired in
exchange for shares of a front-end sales charge fund (or in exchange for  shares
of  other Dean Witter  Funds for which  shares of a  front-end sales charge fund
have been exchanged) are not subject to any CDSC upon their redemption.

    When shares initially purchased in a  CDSC fund are exchanged for shares  of
another  CDSC fund, or for shares of the Exchange Funds, the date of purchase of
the shares of the fund exchanged into, for purposes of the CDSC upon redemption,
will be the  last day  of the  month in which  the shares  being exchanged  were
originally  purchased.  In allocating  the purchase  payments between  funds for
purposes of the CDSC the amount which represents the current net asset value  of
shares  at the time of the exchange which  were (i) purchased more than three or
six years prior to the  exchange, (ii) originally acquired through  reinvestment
of  dividends  or distributions  and (iii)  acquired in  exchange for  shares of
front-end sales charge funds, or for shares of other Dean Witter Funds for which
shares of front-end  sales charge  funds have  been exchanged  (all such  shares
called  "Free Shares"), will be exchanged  first. Shares of Dean Witter American
Value Fund (formerly Dean Witter Industry-Valued Securities Inc.) acquired prior
to April 30,  1984, shares of  Dean Witter Dividend  Growth Securities Inc.  and
Dean  Witter Natural Resource Development Securities Inc. acquired prior to July
2, 1984, and shares of Dean Witter Strategist Fund acquired prior to November 8,
1989, are also considered Free  Shares and will be the  first Free Shares to  be
exchanged.  After an  exchange, all dividends  earned on shares  in the Exchange
Funds will be considered Free Shares. If the exchanged amount exceeds the  value
of such Free Shares, an exchange is made, on a block-by-block basis, of non-Free
Shares  held for  the longest  period of  time (except  that if  shares held for
identical periods of time  but subject to different  CDSC schedules are held  in
the  same Exchange Privilege account, the shares  of that block that are subject
to a lower CDSC rate  will be exchanged prior to  the shares of that block  that
are  subject to  a higher CDSC  rate). Shares  equal to any  appreciation in the
value of  non-Free Shares  exchanged will  be treated  as Free  Shares, and  the
amount  of the purchase payments  for the non-Free Shares  of the fund exchanged
into will be equal to  the lesser of (a) the  purchase payments for, or (b)  the
current  net  asset value  of,  the exchanged  non-Free  Shares. If  an exchange
between funds would result  in exchange of  only part of  a particular block  of
non-Free Shares, then shares equal to any appreciation in the value of the block
(up  to the amount of the exchange) will be treated as Free Shares and exchanged
first, and the purchase payment for that  block will be allocated on a pro  rata
basis  between the non-Free Shares of that block to be retained and the non-Free
Shares  to  be  exchanged.  The   prorated  amount  of  such  purchase   payment
attributable to the retained non-Free Shares will remain as the purchase payment
for  such shares, and the amount of  purchase payment for the exchanged non-Free
Shares will be equal to  the lesser of (a) the  prorated amount of the  purchase
payment  for, or (b)  the current net  asset value of,  those exchanged non-Free

                                       31
<PAGE>
Shares. Based upon the procedures described in the Prospectus under the  caption
"Contingent Deferred Sales Charge", any applicable CDSC will be imposed upon the
ultimate redemption of shares of any fund, regardless of the number of exchanges
since those shares were originally purchased.

    The  Transfer Agent acts as agent for  shareholders of the Fund in effecting
redemptions of Fund shares and in applying the proceeds to the purchase of other
fund shares. In  the absence  of negligence on  its part,  neither the  Transfer
Agent  nor the Fund shall be liable for  any redemption of Fund shares caused by
unauthorized telephone  instructions. Accordingly,  in such  event the  investor
shall bear the risk of loss. The Staff of the Securities and Exchange Commission
is currently considering the propriety of such policies.

    With  respect to the  repurchase of shares  of the Fund,  the application of
proceeds to the purchase of new shares in the Fund or any other of the funds and
the general administration of the Exchange Privilege, the Transfer Agent acts as
agent for the Distributor and  for the shareholder's Selected Broker-Dealer,  if
any,   in  the  performance  of  such  functions.  With  respect  to  exchanges,
redemptions or  repurchases, the  Transfer Agent  shall be  liable for  its  own
negligence  and not for the  default or negligence of  its correspondents or for
losses in transit. The Fund shall not be liable for any default or negligence of
the  Transfer  Agent,  the  Distributor  or  any  Selected  Broker-Dealer.   The
Distributor  and any  Selected Broker-Dealer  have authorized  and appointed the
Transfer Agent  to act  as their  agent in  connection with  the application  of
proceeds of any redemption of Fund shares to the purchase of shares of any other
fund  and the general administration of the Exchange Privilege. No commission or
discounts will be paid to the Distributor or any Selected Broker-Dealer for  any
transactions pursuant to this Exchange Privilege.

    Exchanges  are subject to  the minimum investment  requirement and any other
conditions imposed by each fund. (The  minimum initial investment is $5,000  for
Dean  Witter Liquid  Asset Fund Inc.,  Dean Witter Tax-Free  Daily Income Trust,
Dean Witter New  York Municipal Money  Market Trust and  Dean Witter  California
Tax-Free  Daily  Income Trust  although those  funds  may, at  their discretion,
accept initial investments of as low  as $1,000. The minimum initial  investment
is  $10,000 for Dean Witter Short-Term  U.S. Treasury Trust. The minimum initial
investment for all other Dean Witter  Funds for which the Exchange Privilege  is
available is $1,000.) Upon exchange into a money market fund, the shares of that
fund  will  be held  in  a special  Exchange  Privilege Account  separately from
accounts of those shareholders who have acquired their shares directly from that
fund. As a result, certain services normally available to shareholders of  money
market  funds, including  the check writing  feature, will not  be available for
funds held in that account.

    The Fund and each  of the other  Dean Witter Funds may  limit the number  of
times  this  Exchange  Privilege  may  be exercised  by  any  investor  within a
specified period of  time. Also,  the Exchange  Privilege may  be terminated  or
revised  at any time by the  Fund and/or any of the  Dean Witter Funds for which
shares of the Fund have been exchanged,  upon such notice as may be required  by
applicable  regulatory agencies (presently  sixty days prior  written notice for
termination or material revision), provided that six months prior written notice
of termination will be given to the shareholders who hold shares of the Exchange
Funds, pursuant  to  this  Exchange  Privilege and  provided  further  that  the
Exchange  Privilege may  be terminated or  materially revised  without notice at
times (a) when the New  York Stock Exchange is  closed for other than  customary
weekends and holidays, (b) when trading on that Exchange is restricted, (c) when
an  emergency exists  as a result  of which  disposal by the  Fund of securities
owned by it is  not reasonably practicable or  it is not reasonably  practicable
for  the Fund fairly  to determine the value  of its net  assets, (d) during any
other period when  the Securities and  Exchange Commission by  order so  permits
(provided  that applicable rules and regulations  of the Securities and Exchange
Commission shall govern as  to whether the conditions  prescribed in (b) or  (c)
exist)  or (e)  if the  Fund would  be unable  to invest  amounts effectively in
accordance with its investment objective, policies and restrictions.

   
    For further  information  regarding  the  Exchange  Privilege,  shareholders
should  contact their DWR  or other selected  broker-dealer account executive or
the Transfer Agent.
    

                                       32
<PAGE>
REDEMPTIONS AND REPURCHASES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    REDEMPTION.  As stated in the Prospectus, shares of the Fund can be redeemed
for cash at any time at the net asset value per share next determined;  however,
such  redemption  proceeds  may  be  reduced by  the  amount  of  any applicable
contingent deferred  sales  charges  (see  below).  If  shares  are  held  in  a
shareholder's  account  without  a  share  certificate,  a  written  request for
redemption to the Fund's Transfer Agent at  P.O. Box 983, Jersey City, NJ  07303
is  required. If  certificates are  held by the  shareholder, the  shares may be
redeemed by surrendering the certificates with a written request for redemption.
The share  certificate, or  an accompanying  stock power,  and the  request  for
redemption,  must be  signed by the  shareholder or shareholders  exactly as the
shares are registered. Each request  for redemption, whether or not  accompanied
by  a share certificate, must  be sent to the  Fund's Transfer Agent, which will
redeem the shares at their net asset value next computed (see "Purchase of  Fund
Shares"  in the Prospectus)  after it receives the  request, and certificate, if
any, in good order. Any redemption request received after such computation  will
be  redeemed at the next determined net asset value. The term "good order" means
that the share  certificate, if  any, and  request for  redemption are  properly
signed,  accompanied by  any documentation required  by the  Transfer Agent, and
bear signature guarantees when  required by the Fund  or the Transfer Agent.  If
redemption  is requested by a corporation,  partnership, trust or fiduciary, the
Transfer Agent  may require  written  evidence of  authority acceptable  to  the
Transfer Agent be submitted before such request is accepted.

    Whether  certificates are held  by the shareholder  or shares are  held in a
shareholder's account, if the proceeds are to  be paid to any person other  than
the record owner, or if the proceeds are to be paid to a corporation (other than
the Distributor or a selected broker-dealer for the account of the shareholder),
partnership,  trust or fiduciary, or sent to the shareholder at an address other
than the  registered  address, signatures  must  be guaranteed  by  an  eligible
guarantor  acceptable  to the  Transfer Agent  (shareholders should  contact the
Transfer Agent for  a determination as  to whether a  particular institution  is
such  an eligible guarantor). A  stock power may be  obtained from any dealer or
commercial bank. The Fund may  change the signature guarantee requirements  from
time  to time upon  notice to shareholders, which  may be by  means of a revised
prospectus.

    CONTINGENT DEFERRED SALES CHARGE.  As stated in the Prospectus, a contingent
deferred sales charge ("CDSC") will be imposed on any redemption by an  investor
if  after such redemption the current value of the investor's shares of the Fund
is less  than the  dollar amount  of all  payments by  the shareholder  for  the
purchase of Fund shares during the preceding six years. However, no CDSC will be
imposed  to the extent that the net asset  value of the shares redeemed does not
exceed: (a) the current net asset value of shares purchased more than six  years
prior  to  the  redemption, plus  (b)  the  current net  asset  value  of shares
purchased through  reinvestment of  dividends or  distributions of  the Fund  or
another  Dean Witter  Fund (see  "Shareholder Services  -- Targeted Dividends"),
plus (c) the  current net asset  value of  shares acquired in  exchange for  (i)
shares of Dean Witter front-end sales charge funds, or (ii) shares of other Dean
Witter  Funds  for  which  shares  of front-end  sales  charge  funds  have been
exchanged (see "Shareholder Services -- Exchange Privilege"), plus (d) increases
in the  net asset  value of  the investor's  shares above  the total  amount  of
payments  for the purchase of  Fund shares made during  the preceding six years.
The CDSC will be paid to the Distributor.

    In determining the applicability of the CDSC to each redemption, the  amount
which  represents an increase  in the net  asset value of  the investor's shares
above the amount of  the total payments  for the purchase  of shares within  the
last  six  years will  be redeemed  first.  In the  event the  redemption amount
exceeds such increase in value, the next portion of the amount redeemed will  be
the  amount  which  represents the  net  asset  value of  the  investor's shares
purchased more than six  years prior to the  redemption and/or shares  purchased
through  reinvestment of  dividends or  distributions and/or  shares acquired in
exchange for shares of Dean Witter front-end sales charge funds or for shares of
other Dean Witter funds which shares  of front-end sales charge funds have  been
exchanged.  A  portion of  the  amount redeemed  which  exceeds an  amount which
represents both such increase in value and the

                                       33
<PAGE>
value of shares  purchased more than  six years prior  to the redemption  and/or
shares  purchased  through  reinvestment of  dividends  or  distributions and/or
shares acquired in the above-described exchanges will be subject to a CDSC.

    The amount of the CDSC, if any,  will vary depending on the number of  years
from  the time  of payment  for the purchase  of Fund  shares until  the time of
redemption of such shares. For purposes of determining the number of years  from
the  time of any payment for the purchase  of shares, all payments made during a
month will be aggregated  and deemed to have  been made on the  last day of  the
month. The following table sets forth the rates of the CDSC:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                    CONTINGENT DEFERRED
                                    YEAR SINCE                                       SALES CHARGE AS A
                                     PURCHASE                                          PERCENTAGE OF
                                   PAYMENT MADE                                       AMOUNT REDEEMED
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------  --------------------
<S>                                                                                 <C>
First.............................................................................          5.0%
Second............................................................................          4.0%
Third.............................................................................          3.0%
Fourth............................................................................          2.0%
Fifth.............................................................................          2.0%
Sixth.............................................................................          1.0%
Seventh and thereafter............................................................          None
</TABLE>

    In determining the rate of the CDSC, it will be assumed that a redemption is
made  of shares held by  the investor for the longest  period of time within the
applicable six-year period. This will result  in any such CDSC being imposed  at
the   lowest  possible  rate.  Accordingly,  shareholders  may  redeem,  without
incurring any CDSC,  amounts equal to  any net  increase in the  value of  their
shares  above the  amount of  their purchase payments  made within  the past six
years and amounts equal to the current  value of shares purchased more than  six
years  prior  to the  redemption and  shares  purchased through  reinvestment of
dividends or distributions  or acquired in  exchange for shares  of Dean  Witter
front-end sales charge funds, or for shares of other Dean Witter Funds for which
shares  of front-end sales  charge funds have  been exchanged. The  CDSC will be
imposed, in accordance with the table shown above, on any redemptions within six
years of purchase which are in excess of these amounts and which redemptions are
not (a)  requested  within  one  year  of  death  or  initial  determination  of
disability   of  a  shareholder,  or  (b)   made  pursuant  to  certain  taxable
distributions from retirement plans or retirement accounts, as described in  the
Prospectus.

   
    PAYMENT FOR SHARES REDEEMED OR REPURCHASED.  As discussed in the Prospectus,
payment  for shares presented for repurchase or redemption will be made by check
within seven days after receipt by the Transfer Agent of the certificate  and/or
written  request  in good  order. The  term  "good order"  means that  the share
certificate,  if  any,  and  request   for  redemption,  are  properly   signed,
accompanied  by  any  documentation required  by  the Transfer  Agent,  and bear
signature guarantees  when required  by the  Fund or  the Transfer  Agent.  Such
payment  may be postponed or the right of redemption suspended at times (a) when
the New York  Stock Exchange  is closed for  other than  customary weekends  and
holidays, (b) when trading on that Exchange is restricted, (c) when an emergency
exists  as a result of which  disposal by the Fund of  securities owned by it is
not reasonably practicable  or it  is not  reasonably practicable  for the  Fund
fairly  to determine the value of its net assets, or (d) during any other period
when the Securities and Exchange Commission  by order so permits; provided  that
applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission shall
govern  as to  whether the  conditions prescribed  in (b)  or (c)  exist. If the
shares to  be  redeemed have  recently  been  purchased by  check  (including  a
certified  or  bank  cashier's check),  payment  of redemption  proceeds  may be
delayed for the minimum time needed to verify that the check used for investment
has been honored (not more than fifteen days from the time of investment of  the
proceeds  of the check  by the Transfer  Agent). Shareholders maintaining margin
accounts with  DWR  or another  selected  broker-dealer are  referred  to  their
account  executive regarding  restrictions on redemption  of shares  of the Fund
pledged in the margin account.
    

                                       34
<PAGE>
    TRANSFERS OF SHARES.  In the event a shareholder requests a transfer of  any
shares  to a  new registration,  such shares  will be  transferred without sales
charge at the time of  transfer. With regard to the  status of shares which  are
either  subject to the contingent  deferred sales charge or  free of such charge
(and with regard to the  length of time shares subject  to the charge have  been
held),  any transfer involving less than all of the shares in an account will be
made on a pro-rata basis (that is, by transferring shares in the same proportion
that the transferred shares bear to the total shares in the account  immediately
prior  to the transfer). The  transferred shares will continue  to be subject to
any applicable  contingent deferred  sales charge  as if  they had  not been  so
transferred.

    REINSTATEMENT  PRIVILEGE.  As discussed in the Prospectus, a shareholder who
has had  his  or her  shares  redeemed or  repurchased  and has  not  previously
exercised  this reinstatement privilege may, within 30 days after the redemption
or repurchase, reinstate any portion or  all of the proceeds of such  redemption
or repurchase in shares of the Fund at the net asset value next determined after
a reinstatement request, together with the proceeds, is received by the Transfer
Agent.

    Exercise  of the reinstatement privilege will  not affect the federal income
tax and California personal  income tax treatment of  any gain or loss  realized
upon  the redemption or repurchase, except  that if the redemption or repurchase
resulted in a loss and reinstatement is made in shares of the Fund, some or  all
of  the  loss, depending  on the  amount reinstated,  will not  be allowed  as a
deduction for federal income tax and California personal income tax purposes but
will  be  applied  to  adjust  the  cost  basis  of  the  shares  acquired  upon
reinstatement.

DIVIDENDS, DISTRIBUTIONS AND TAXES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As  stated in the Prospectus, the Fund  intends to distribute all of its net
investment income and all of its net short-term capital gains, if any, and  will
determine  whether to retain all or part  of any net long-term capital gains for
reinvestment.

    As discussed in the Prospectus, the Fund may invest a portion of its  assets
in  certain "private activity bonds" issued after August 7, 1986. As a result, a
portion of the exempt-interest dividends paid by the Fund may be an item of  tax
preference  to  shareholders subject  to  the federal  alternative  minimum tax.
Certain corporations which are subject to  the alternative minimum tax may  also
have  to  include  exempt-interest dividends  in  calculating  their alternative
minimum taxable income in  situations where the  "adjusted current earnings"  of
the corporation exceeds its alternative minimum taxable income.

    Each  shareholder will be  sent at least  a quarterly summary  of his or her
account, including  information as  to reinvested  dividends and  capital  gains
distributions.  Share certificates  for dividends  or distributions  will not be
issued unless a shareholder requests in writing that a certificate be issued for
a specific number of shares.

    In computing  interest  income, the  Fund  will amortize  any  premiums  and
original  issue discounts on securities owned.  Capital gains or losses realized
upon sale or maturity of such securities will be based on their amortized cost.

    Gains or losses on  the sales of  securities by the  Fund will be  long-term
capital  gains or losses if  the securities have been held  by the Fund for more
than twelve months. Gains or  losses on the sale  of securities held for  twelve
months  or less will be short-term capital  gains or losses. Gains and losses on
the sale,  expiration  or  other  termination  of  options  on  securities  will
generally  be treated as gains and losses  from the sale of securities. Pursuant
to present federal income tax  laws, futures contracts held  by the Fund at  the
end  of each  fiscal year will  be required to  be "marked to  market", that is,
treated as having  been sold  at their  fair market  value at  such date.  Sixty
percent  of  any  gain recognized  on  these  deemed sales  will  be  treated as
long-term capital gain or loss, and the remainder will be treated as  short-term
capital gain or loss. Gains or losses from options on futures and listed options
on  debt  instruments will  similarly  be treated  as  part short-term  and part
long-term capital gains or losses, unless such gains or losses were incurred  as
part of a securities "straddle," in which case the appropriate straddle rules of
the Internal Revenue Code (the "Code") would apply.

                                       35
<PAGE>
   
    At  December  31,  1996,  the  Fund  had  net  capital  loss  carryovers  of
approximately $1,887,000 which will  be available through  December 31, 2002  to
offset future capital gains to the extent provided by regulations.
    

    Because  the Fund intends to distribute all of its net investment income and
capital gains to shareholders and otherwise  continue to qualify as a  regulated
investment  company under Subchapter M  of the Internal Revenue  Code, it is not
expected that  the  Fund  will  be  required to  pay  any  federal  income  tax.
Shareholders  will normally have to pay federal income taxes, and any applicable
state and/or local income taxes, on the dividends and distributions they receive
from the Fund.  Such dividends and  distributions, to the  extent that they  are
derived  from net investment income or  short-term capital gains, are taxable to
the shareholder  as  ordinary  income  regardless  of  whether  the  shareholder
receives  such payments in additional shares  or in cash. Any dividends declared
in the last quarter of  any year which are paid  in the following year prior  to
February 1 will be deemed received by the shareholder in the prior year.

    With  respect  to the  Fund's  investments in  zero  coupon bonds,  the Fund
accrues income prior to any actual cash  payments by their issuers. In order  to
continue  to comply  with Subchapter  M of  the Code  and remain  able to forego
payment of Federal income  tax on its  income and capital  gains, the Fund  must
distribute  all of its net investment income, including income accrued from zero
coupon bonds.  As such,  the Fund  may be  required to  dispose of  some of  its
portfolio  securities under  disadvantageous circumstances to  generate the cash
required for distribution.

    One of the requirements for regulated  investment company status is that  at
least  90% of a Fund's  gross income be derived  from dividends, interest, gains
from the  sale or  other disposition  of securities  and certain  other  related
income. Another requirement for regulated investment company status is that less
than  30% of the Fund's  gross income can be  derived from, among other sources,
gains from the  sale or  other disposition of  securities held  less than  three
months.  Accordingly, the Fund  may be restricted  in the writing  of options on
securities held for  less than  three months, in  the writing  of options  which
expire  in less  than three months,  and in effecting  closing transactions with
respect to call or put  options which have been  written or purchased less  than
three  months prior to such transactions. The Fund may also be restricted in its
ability to engage in transactions involving futures contracts.

    Under the Revenue Reconciliation Act of 1993, all or a portion of the Fund's
gain from the sale or redemption of tax-exempt obligations purchased at a market
discount after April  30, 1993 will  be treated as  ordinary income rather  than
capital  gain. This  rule may increase  the amount of  ordinary income dividends
received by shareholders.

    As discussed  in  the  Prospectus,  the  Fund  intends  to  qualify  to  pay
"exempt-interest  dividends" to its shareholders by maintaining, as of the close
of each quarter  of its taxable  year, at least  50% of the  value of its  total
assets  in tax-exempt  securities. An exempt-interest  dividend is  that part of
dividend distributions made by the Fund  which consists of interest received  by
the  Fund on tax-exempt securities upon  which the shareholder incurs no federal
income taxes.

   
    Within sixty days after the  end of its fiscal year,  the Fund will mail  to
shareholders a statement indicating the percentage of the dividend distributions
for  such  fiscal  year  which  constitutes  exempt-interest  dividends  and the
percentage, if any, that is taxable, and the percentage, if any, of the  exempt-
interest  dividends which  constitutes an  item of  tax preference,  and to what
extent the taxable portion is long-term capital gain, short-term capital gain or
ordinary income. These percentages  should be applied  uniformly to all  monthly
distributions  made  during  the  fiscal year  to  determine  the  proportion of
dividends that is tax-exempt. The percentages may differ from the percentage  of
tax-exempt dividend distributions for any particular month.
    

    Shareholders  will be subject  to federal income tax  on dividends paid from
interest income  derived from  taxable securities  and on  distributions of  net
short-term  capital gains. Such  dividends and distributions  are taxable to the
shareholder as ordinary  dividend income regardless  of whether the  shareholder
receives  such distributions in  additional shares or  in cash. Distributions of
long-term capital gains, if any, are  taxable as long-term gains, regardless  of
how long the shareholder has held Fund shares and

                                       36
<PAGE>
whether  the distribution is received in additional shares or in cash. Since the
Fund's income  is expected  to be  derived entirely  from interest  rather  than
dividends,  none of  such dividend  distributions will  be eligible  for the 70%
dividends received deduction generally available to corporations. Net  long-term
capital  gains  distributions  are  not  eligible  for  the  dividends  received
deduction.

    Any loss on the sale  or exchange of shares of  the Fund which are held  for
six  months  or  less  is  disallowed  to  the  extent  of  the  amount  of  any
exempt-interest dividends paid with respect to such shares. Treasury Regulations
may provide for a  reduction in such required  holding period. If a  shareholder
receives  a distribution that is taxed as  long-term capital gain on shares held
for six months  or less  and sells  those shares  at a  loss, the  loss will  be
treated  as  a  long-term  capital  loss to  the  extent  of  the  capital gains
distribution.

    Interest on indebtedness incurred or continued by a shareholder to  purchase
or  carry  shares of  the  Fund is  not deductible  to  the extent  allocable to
exempt-interest dividends  of the  Fund  (which allocation  does not  take  into
account  capital gain dividends  of the Fund).  Furthermore, entities or persons
who are  "substantial users"  (or  related persons)  of facilities  financed  by
industrial development bonds should consult their tax advisers before purchasing
shares  of  the Fund.  "Substantial  user" is  defined  generally by  Income Tax
Regulation 1.103-11 (b) as including a "non-exempt person" who regularly uses in
a trade  or  business  a part  of  a  facility financed  from  the  proceeds  of
industrial development bonds.

    From  time to time,  proposals have been introduced  before Congress for the
purpose of  restricting or  eliminating  the federal  income tax  exemption  for
interest  on municipal securities. It can be expected that similar proposals may
be introduced in the future. If  such a proposal were enacted, the  availability
of  municipal securities for investment  by the Fund could  be affected. In such
event, the Fund would re-evaluate its investment objective and policies.

    In any year in  which the Fund qualifies  as a regulated investment  company
under  the Internal Revenue Code and is  exempt from federal income tax, (i) the
Fund will also  be exempt  from the  California corporate  income and  franchise
taxes  to the extent it distributes its income and (ii), provided 50% or more of
the value of the total assets  of the Fund at the  close of each quarter of  its
taxable  year consists  of obligations  the interest on  which (when  held by an
individual) is exempt from  personal income taxation  under California law,  the
Fund  will be qualified under California  law to pay "exempt-interest" dividends
which will be exempt from the California personal income tax.

    The portion  of dividends  constituting  exempt-interest dividends  is  that
portion  derived from interest on obligations which pay interest excludable from
California personal income under California law. The total amount of  California
exempt-interest  dividends  paid by  the Fund  to all  of its  shareholders with
respect to any taxable year cannot exceed the amount of interest received by the
Fund during such  year on such  obligations less any  expenses and  expenditures
(including  dividends paid to  corporate shareholders) deemed  to have been paid
from such interest. Any dividends paid to corporate shareholders subject to  the
California franchise or corporate income tax will be taxed as ordinary dividends
to such shareholders.

    Individual  shareholders of  the Fund who  reside in California  will not be
subject to California  personal income  tax on distributions  received from  the
Fund  to the extent such distributions  are attributable to interest received by
the Fund during its taxable year  on obligations, the interest from which  (when
held by an individual) is exempt from taxation under California law.

    Because,  unlike federal law, California law does not impose personal income
tax on  an individual's  Social  Security benefits,  the receipt  of  California
exempt-interest  dividends  will have  no effect  on an  individual's California
personal income tax.

    Individual shareholders will normally be  subject to federal and  California
personal  income tax on dividends paid from interest income derived from taxable
securities and distributions  of net capital  gains. In addition,  distributions
other  than  exempt-interest dividends  to such  shareholders are  includable in
income subject  to  the California  alternative  minimum tax.  For  federal  and
California  personal  income tax  purposes,  distributions of  long-term capital
gains,  if   any,   are   taxable   to   shareholders   as   long-term   capital

                                       37
<PAGE>
gains,  regardless of how  long a shareholder  has held shares  of the Fund, and
regardless of whether the distributions are received in additional shares or  in
cash.  In  addition,  unlike  federal  law,  California  law  provides  that the
shareholders of the Fund will not be subject to tax, or receive a credit for tax
paid by the Fund, on undistributed capital gains, if any.

   
    Interest on  indebtedness incurred  by shareholders  or related  parties  to
purchase  or  carry  shares  of  an  investment  company  paying exempt-interest
dividends, such as the  Fund, generally will not  be deductible by the  investor
for  California  personal  income tax  purposes.  In  addition, as  a  result of
California's incorporation of certain provisions of the Code, a loss realized by
a shareholder  upon the  sale of  shares  held for  six months  or less  may  be
disallowed  to the extent of any exempt-interest dividends received with respect
to such shares. Moreover, any loss realized  upon the sale of shares within  six
months  from the  date of  purchase of  such shares  and following  receipt of a
long-term capital gains distribution will be treated as a long-term capital loss
to the extent of  such long-term capital gains  distribution. Finally, any  loss
realized  upon  the  sale of  shares  within  thirty days  before  or  after the
acquisition of other shares of the Fund may be disallowed under the "wash  sale"
rules.
    

    Distributions  from investment  income and long-term  and short-term capital
gains will not  be excluded from  taxable income in  determining the  California
corporate  franchise tax for corporate shareholders. Such distributions also may
be includable in  income subject to  the alternative minimum  tax. In  addition,
distributions  from investment income and long-term and short-term capital gains
may be subject  to state  taxes in  states other  than California  and to  local
taxes.

    The  foregoing is only a summary of  some of the important California income
tax considerations generally affecting the Fund and its shareholders. No attempt
is made to present a detailed explanation of the California personal income  tax
treatment  of the Fund or its shareholders,  and this discussion is not intended
as a  substitute for  careful planning.  Shareholders should  consult their  tax
advisers  regarding specific questions  as to federal, state  or local taxes and
how these relate to their own tax situation.

    The Fund is organized as a Massachusetts business trust. Under current  law,
so  long as it qualifies as a  "regulated investment company" under the Internal
Revenue Code, the Fund itself is not  liable for any income or franchise tax  in
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

    Any  dividend or capital  gains distribution received  by a shareholder from
any investment company will have the effect  of reducing the net asset value  of
the  shareholder's stock  in that fund  by the  exact amount of  the dividend or
capital gains distribution.  Furthermore, capital gains  distributions are,  and
some  portion of the dividends  may be, subject to income  tax. If the net asset
value of the shares should be reduced below a shareholder's cost as a result  of
the  payment  of taxable  dividends or  the  distribution of  realized long-term
capital gains, such payment or distribution would be in part a return of capital
but nonetheless  taxable  to  the shareholder.  Therefore,  an  investor  should
consider  the tax implications of purchasing  Fund shares immediately prior to a
distribution record date.

PERFORMANCE INFORMATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

   
    As discussed in the  Prospectus, from time  to time the  Fund may quote  its
"yield"  and/or its "total return" in advertisements and sales literature. Yield
is calculated for any  30-day period as follows:  the amount of interest  income
for  each  security in  the Fund's  portfolio is  determined in  accordance with
regulatory requirements;  the total  for the  entire portfolio  constitutes  the
Fund's  gross  income for  the period.  Expenses accrued  during the  period are
subtracted to arrive at "net investment income". The resulting amount is divided
by the product of the net  asset value per share on  the last day of the  period
multiplied  by the average  number of Fund shares  outstanding during the period
that were entitled to  dividends. This amount  is added to 1  and raised to  the
sixth  power.  1  is then  subtracted  from  the result  and  the  difference is
multiplied by 2 to arrive at the  annualized yield. For the 30-day period  ended
December  31,  1994,  the  Fund's  yield,  calculated  pursuant  to  the formula
described above, was 5.02%.
    

    The Fund may also quote a "tax-equivalent yield" determined by dividing  the
tax-exempt portion of the quoted yield by 1 minus the stated income tax rate and
adding the result to the portion of the yield

                                       38
<PAGE>
   
that  is not tax-exempt. The Fund's  tax-equivalent yield, based upon a combined
Federal and  California  personal income  tax  bracket of  46.24%  (the  highest
current individual marginal tax rate), for the 30-day period ending December 31,
1994, was 9.34% based upon the yield quoted above.
    

    The  Fund's "average annual total return" represents an annualization of the
Fund's total return  over a  particular period and  is computed  by finding  the
annual  percentage rate which  will result in  the ending redeemable  value of a
hypothetical $1,000 investment made at the beginning of a one, five or ten  year
period,  or  for  the  period  from  the  date  of  commencement  of  the Fund's
operations, if shorter than any of the foregoing. The ending redeemable value is
reduced by any contingent deferred sales charge  at the end of the one, five  or
ten  year or other  period. For the  purpose of this  calculation, it is assumed
that all dividends and distributions  are reinvested. The formula for  computing
the  average annual total return involves  a percentage obtained by dividing the
ending redeemable value by the amount  of the initial investment, taking a  root
of  the quotient  (where the root  is equivalent to  the number of  years in the
period) and subtracting 1 from the result.

   
    The average annual total returns of the Fund for the year ended December 31,
1994, the five years ended  December 31, 1994 and for  the period from July  11,
1984 (commencement of operations) through December 31, 1994, were -10.43%, 5.23%
and 8.15%, respectively.
    

   
    In  addition to the foregoing, the Fund  may advertise its total return over
different periods of time by means of aggregate, average, year-by-year or  other
types  of total  return figures.  Such calculations may  or may  not reflect the
deduction of the  contingent deferred  sales charge which,  if reflected,  would
reduce  the performance quoted. For example,  the average annual total return of
the Fund may be calculated in the manner described above, but without  deduction
for  any applicable contingent deferred sales charge. Based on this calculation,
the average annual total  returns of the  Fund for the  year ended December  31,
1994,  the five years ended  December 31, 1994 and for  the period from July 11,
1984 through December 31, 1994, were -5.97%, 5.55% and 8.15%, respectively.
    

   
    In addition, the Fund may compute  its aggregate total return for  specified
periods  by determining the  aggregate percentage rate which  will result in the
ending value of a  hypothetical $1,000 investment made  at the beginning of  the
period.  For the purpose of  this calculation, it is  assumed that all dividends
and distributions  are reinvested.  The formula  for computing  aggregate  total
return  involves a percentage obtained by dividing the ending value (without the
reduction for  any  contingent deferred  sales  charge) by  the  initial  $1,000
investment   and  subtracting  1  from  the   result.  Based  on  the  foregoing
calculation, the Fund's total return for  the year ended December 31, 1994,  the
five  years ended December  31, 1994 and  the period from  July 11, 1984 through
December 31, 1994 were -5.97%, 31.03% and 118.88%, respectively.
    

   
    The Fund  may  also advertise  the  growth of  hypothetical  investments  of
$10,000,  $50,000 and $100,000 in  shares of the Fund by  adding 1 to the Fund's
aggregate total  return  (expressed as  a  decimal and  without  reflecting  the
deduction  of the contingent  deferred sales charge)  and multiplying by $10,000
$50,000 or $100,000. Investments  of $10,000, $50,000 and  $100,000 in the  Fund
since  inception  (July 11,  1984)  would have  grown  to $23,443,  $117,215 and
$234,430, respectively at December 31, 1994.
    

    The Fund from time  to time may also  advertise its performance relative  to
certain performance rankings and indexes compiled by independent organizations.

SHARES OF THE FUND
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

   
    As discussed in the Prospectus, the shareholders of the Fund are entitled to
a  full vote for each  full share held. All of  the Trustees, except for Messrs.
Bozic, Purcell and Schroeder, have been elected by the shareholders of the Fund,
most recently at  a Special Meeting  of Shareholders held  on January 12,  1993.
Messrs.  Bozic, Purcell and Schroeder were elected  by the other Trustees of the
Fund on April  8, 1994.  The Trustees  themselves have  the power  to alter  the
number  and  the terms  of office  of the  Trustees,  and they  may at  any time
lengthen  their  own   terms  or   make  their  terms   of  unlimited   duration
    

                                       39
<PAGE>
and  appoint their own successors,  provided that always at  least a majority of
the Trustees has  been elected by  the shareholders of  the Fund. Under  certain
circumstances  the  Trustees  may be  removed  by  action of  the  Trustees. The
shareholders also  have the  right  under certain  circumstances to  remove  the
Trustees.  The voting rights of shareholders are not cumulative, so that holders
of more than  50 percent of  the shares voting  can, if they  choose, elect  all
Trustees  being selected,  while the  holders of  the remaining  shares would be
unable to elect any Trustees.

    The Declaration of Trust permits the  Trustees to authorize the creation  of
additional  series  of  shares  (the  proceeds of  which  would  be  invested in
separate, independently  managed portfolios)  and additional  classes of  shares
within  any  series (which  would be  used  to distinguish  among the  rights of
different categories of shareholders, as might be required by future regulations
or other unforeseen  circumstances). However, the  Trustees have not  authorized
any such additional series or classes of shares.

    The Declaration of Trust further provides that no Trustee, officer, employee
or  agent of  the Fund is  liable to the  Fund or  to a shareholder,  nor is any
Trustee, officer, employee or  agent liable to any  third persons in  connection
with the affairs of the Fund, except as such liability may arise from his/her or
its  own bad faith, willful misfeasance, gross negligence, or reckless disregard
of his/her or its  duties. It also  provides that all  third persons shall  look
solely  to the Fund's property for  satisfaction of claims arising in connection
with the affairs  of the Fund.  With the exceptions  stated, the Declaration  of
Trust  provides that  a Trustee,  officer, employee or  agent is  entitled to be
indemnified against all liability in connection with the affairs of the Fund.

    The Fund is authorized to issue an unlimited number of shares of  beneficial
interest.  The Fund shall be of unlimited  duration subject to the provisions in
the Declaration of Trust concerning termination by action of the shareholders.

CUSTODIAN AND TRANSFER AGENT
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

   
    The Bank of New York, 90 Washington Street, New York, New York 10286 is  the
Custodian of the Fund's assets. The Custodian has no part in deciding the Fund's
investment  policies or  which securities  are to be  purchased or  sold for the
Fund. Any of the Fund's cash balances  with the Custodian in excess of  $100,000
are  unprotected by Federal  deposit insurance. Such balances  may, at times, be
substantial.
    

    Dean Witter Trust Company, Harborside  Financial Center, Plaza Two,,  Jersey
City,  New Jersey 07311 is the Transfer  Agent of the Fund's shares and Dividend
Disbursing Agent for payment of dividends  and distributions of Fund shares  and
Agent  for shareholders  under various  investment plans  described herein. Dean
Witter Trust  Company is  an affiliate  of Dean  Witter Distributors  Inc.,  the
Fund's  Distributor  and Dean  Witter InterCapital  Inc., the  Fund's Investment
Manager. As  Transfer Agent  and Dividend  Disbursing Agent,  Dean Witter  Trust
Company's  responsibilities include maintaining shareholder accounts; disbursing
cash  dividends  and  reinvesting  dividends;  processing  account  registration
changes; handling purchase and redemption transactions; mailing prospectuses and
reports;   mailing   and  tabulating   proxies;  processing   share  certificate
transactions; and maintaining shareholder records and lists. For these services,
Dean Witter Trust Company receives a per shareholder account fee from the Fund.

INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

   
    Price Waterhouse LLP, serves as the independent accountants of the Fund. The
independent accountants  are  responsible  for  auditing  the  annual  financial
statements of the Fund.
    

                                       40
<PAGE>
REPORTS TO SHAREHOLDERS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The  Fund will send to shareholders, at least semi-annually, reports showing
the Fund's  portfolio  and  other  information.  An  annual  report,  containing
financial  statements audited  by independent  accountants, together  with their
report thereon, will be sent to shareholders each year.

    The Fund's fiscal year ends on December 31. The financial statements of  the
Fund  must be  audited at  least once  a year  by independent  accountants whose
selection is made annually by the Fund's Trustees.

LEGAL COUNSEL
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Sheldon Curtis,  Esq.,  who  is  an  officer  and  General  Counsel  of  the
Investment Manager, is an officer and General Counsel of the Fund.

EXPERTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

   
    The  annual financial statements of the Fund for the year ended December 31,
1994 which are included herein and  incorporated by reference in the  Prospectus
have  been  so included  and incorporated  in  reliance on  the report  of Price
Waterhouse LLP, independent accountants, given on the authority of said firm  as
experts in auditing and accounting.
    

REGISTRATION STATEMENT
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    This  Statement of Additional Information and  the Prospectus do not contain
all of the  information set  forth in the  Registration Statement  the Fund  has
filed  with the  Securities and  Exchange Commission.  The complete Registration
Statement may  be obtained  from  the Securities  and Exchange  Commission  upon
payment of the fee prescribed by the rules and regulations of the Commission.

                                       41
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME FUND
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

To the Shareholders and Trustees of Dean Witter California Tax-Free Income Fund

In  our opinion, the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities, including
the portfolio of investments,  and the related statements  of operations and  of
changes  in  net assets  and  the financial  highlights  present fairly,  in all
material respects, the  financial position  of Dean  Witter California  Tax-Free
Income Fund (the "Fund") at December 31, 1994, the results of its operations for
the  year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of the two years in
the period then ended and the financial highlights for each of the ten years  in
the  period  then  ended,  in  conformity  with  generally  accepted  accounting
principles. These  financial  statements  and  financial  highlights  (hereafter
referred  to as  "financial statements")  are the  responsibility of  the Fund's
management; our  responsibility is  to  express an  opinion on  these  financial
statements  based  on our  audits. We  conducted our  audits of  these financial
statements in  accordance  with  generally  accepted  auditing  standards  which
require  that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about
whether the financial  statements are  free of material  misstatement. An  audit
includes  examining,  on  a  test basis,  evidence  supporting  the  amounts and
disclosures in  the financial  statements, assessing  the accounting  principles
used  and significant estimates  made by management,  and evaluating the overall
financial statement presentation.  We believe  that our  audits, which  included
confirmation of securities owned at December 31, 1994 by correspondence with the
custodian, provide a reasonable basis for the opinion expressed above.

PRICE WATERHOUSE LLP
New York, New York
February 13, 1995

                       1994 FEDERAL TAX NOTICE (UNAUDITED)
  During  the year ended December 31, 1994,  the Fund paid to the shareholders
  $0.636 per share  from net investment  income. All of  the Fund's  dividends
  from  net investment income were  exempt interest dividends, excludable from
  gross income for Federal  income tax purposes. For  the year ended  December
  31,  1994, the  Fund paid  to shareholders  $0.023 per  share from long-term
  capital gains.

                                       42
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME FUND
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS DECEMBER 31, 1994
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 PRINCIPAL
 AMOUNT (IN                                                                  COUPON     MATURITY
 THOUSANDS)                                                                   RATE        DATE          VALUE
- ------------                                                               -----------  ---------  ----------------
<C>           <S>                                                          <C>          <C>        <C>
              CALIFORNIA EXEMPT MUNICIPAL BONDS (92.3%)
              GENERAL OBLIGATION (6.6%)
              California,
$      5,000    Ser 1990.................................................       7.00 %   08/01/07  $      5,256,200
       5,000    Ser 1990.................................................       7.00     08/01/08         5,222,900
       2,000    Ser AT...................................................       9.50     02/01/10         2,541,820
      15,000    Various Purpose Dtd 4/1/93 (FSA Insured).................       5.50     04/01/19        12,603,600
       5,000  San Diego Open Space Park Facilities District #1, Ser 86A
                (Prerefunded)............................................       7.60     01/01/07         5,210,900
       4,000  Santa Margarita/Dana Point Authority, Impr Dists #3, 3A, 4
                & 4A 1994 Ser B Refg (MBIA Insured)......................       5.75     08/01/20         3,493,640
              Santa Margarita Water District,
       6,000    Impr Dists #3&4 Refg Ser 1986............................       7.50     11/01/05         5,615,700
      12,000    Impr Dist #4 1978 Ser E (Prerefunded)....................       7.40     07/01/15        13,133,640
       3,500    Impr Dist #4A 1984 Ser A (Prerefunded)...................       7.75     08/01/06         3,757,460
              Puerto Rico, Pub Impr
       5,000    Refg Ser 1987 A..........................................       5.00     07/01/05         4,380,100
       5,085    Ser 1991 (Prerefunded)...................................       7.30     07/01/20         5,574,482
- ------------                                                                                       ----------------
      67,585                                                                                             66,790,442
- ------------                                                                                       ----------------
              EDUCATIONAL FACILITIES REVENUE (5.8%)
              California Educational Facilities Authority,
       1,750    Loyola Marymount University Ser 1992 B...................       6.55     10/01/12         1,689,327
       2,300    Loyola Marymount University Ser 1992 B...................       6.60     10/01/22         2,168,992
       3,000    Stanford University Ser I................................       6.75     01/01/13         3,023,430
       3,500    University of Southern California Ser 1989 A.............       7.20     10/01/15         3,566,640
              California Public Works Board,
       8,000    State University 1992 Ser A..............................       6.70     10/01/17         7,675,040
       7,000    University of California 1990 Ser A (Prerefunded)........       7.00     09/01/15         7,547,050
              University of California, Multiple Purpose
      11,000    Refg Ser A (Prerefunded).................................       6.875    09/01/16        11,857,120
      15,000    Refg Ser 1993 C (AMBAC Insured)..........................       5.125    09/01/18        12,017,850
      10,000  Whittier, Whittier College Refg Ser 1993 (Connie Lee
                Insured).................................................       5.40     12/01/18         8,244,500
- ------------                                                                                       ----------------
      61,550                                                                                             57,789,949
- ------------                                                                                       ----------------
              ELECTRIC REVENUE (12.2%)
      15,000  Los Angeles Department of Water & Power, Second Issue of
                1993.....................................................       5.40     11/15/13        12,678,900
              Northern California Power Agency,
      15,000    Geothermal #3 1985 Ser A (Crossover Refunded)............       7.00     07/01/10        15,162,450
       7,000    Hydro #1 1993 Refg Ser A (MBIA Insured)..................       5.50     07/01/16         5,993,470
      10,000  Northern California Transmission Agency, California-Oregon
                1990 Ser A (MBIA Insured) (Prerefunded)..................       7.00     05/01/24        10,719,700
       5,000  Redding, Ser 1989 A COPs (MBIA Insured) (Prerefunded)......       7.125    07/01/14         5,302,400
              Sacramento Municipal Utility District,
       5,700    Refg 1994 Ser H (MBIA Insured)...........................       5.75     01/01/11         5,220,345
      26,000    Refg 1992 Ser (FGIC Insured).............................       6.30     08/15/18        24,568,960
</TABLE>

                                       43
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME FUND
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS DECEMBER 31, 1994 (CONTINUED)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 PRINCIPAL
 AMOUNT (IN                                                                  COUPON     MATURITY
 THOUSANDS)                                                                   RATE        DATE          VALUE
- ------------                                                               -----------  ---------  ----------------
<C>           <S>                                                          <C>          <C>        <C>
             Southern California Public Power Authority,
$    12,800    Mead-Adelanto 1994 Ser (AMBAC Insured).............        5.01%   07/01/15  $    10,470,912
      6,115    Multiple Projects 1989 Ser.........................        6.00    07/01/18        5,472,803
      8,000    Power 1993 Refg Ser A..............................        5.00    07/01/15        6,301,120
      7,000    Transmission Refg Ser 1988 (FGIC Insured)..........        0.00    07/01/06        3,395,840
     10,000    Transmission 1986 Refg Ser B.......................        5.50    07/01/23        8,179,600
             Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority,
      3,000    Power Ser N........................................        5.00    07/01/12        2,462,940
      9,000    Power Ser O........................................        5.00    07/01/12        7,388,820
- -----------                                                                                 ---------------
    139,615                                                                                     123,318,260
- -----------                                                                                 ---------------
             HOSPITAL REVENUE (12.9%)
      7,100  Antelope Valley Hospital District, Ser 1989 COPs.....        7.35    01/01/20        7,161,699
             Bakersfield, Bakersfield Memorial Hospital
      1,750    Ser 1992 A.........................................        6.375   01/01/12        1,625,855
      2,000    Ser 1992 A.........................................        6.50    01/01/22        1,821,140
      7,600  Berkeley, Alta Bates Hospital 1995 Ser A.............        6.50    12/01/11        6,705,708
             California Health Facilities Financing Authority,
      4,350    Downey Community Hospital Ser 1993.................        5.625   05/15/08        3,870,282
     10,000    Kaiser Permanente 1983 Ser.........................        5.45    10/01/13        8,412,300
      8,000    Kaiser Permanente 1985 Ser A.......................        9.125   10/01/15        8,374,000
      3,500    Merritt Peralta Medical Center 1985 Ser A..........        9.00    05/01/15        3,538,500
      5,000    St Joseph Health Ser 1991 A (Prerefunded)..........        6.75    07/01/21        5,354,000
             Desert Hospital District, Desert Hospital Corp
      5,000    Ser 1990 COPs (Prerefunded)........................        8.00    07/01/10        5,622,450
     20,000    Ser 1992 COPs (CGIC Insured).......................        6.392   07/28/20       19,085,800
             Duarte, City of Hope National Medical Center,
      3,000    Ser 1993 COPs......................................        5.50    04/01/01        2,774,940
      4,000    Ser 1993 COPs......................................        6.25    04/01/23        3,315,480
      6,000  Eden Township Hospital District, Ser 1989............        7.40    11/01/19        5,457,960
      5,000  Hemet Valley Hospital District, Moreno Valley
               Regional Medical Center 1988 Ser A.................        8.50    07/01/18        5,210,600
      5,000  Los Angeles, Hollywood Presbyterian Hospital/Olmstead
               Memorial Ser 1985 COPs (State Insured).............        9.00    07/01/13        5,186,350
      2,950  Rancho Mirage Joint Powers Financing Authority,
               Eisenhower Memorial Hospital COPs..................        7.00    03/01/22        2,848,992
      4,000  Riverside, Kaiser Permanente 1985 Ser A..............        9.00    12/01/15        4,205,920
      5,000  Santa Rosa, Kaiser Permanente 1985 Ser A.............        9.00    12/01/15        5,267,050
             Stockton,
      2,000    Dameron Hospital Assn Refg Ser 1988................        8.25    12/01/00        2,102,300
      6,000    St Joseph Medical Center of Stockton 1993 Ser A
               (MBIA Insured).....................................        5.50    06/01/23        4,975,380
             University of California,
      9,000    UCLA Medical Center Refg Ser 1994 (MBIA Insured)...        5.50    12/01/14        7,812,360
      8,500    UCLA Medical Center Ser 1986 (Prerefunded).........        6.90    12/01/16        8,907,490
- -----------                                                                                 ---------------
    134,750                                                                                     129,636,556
- -----------                                                                                 ---------------
</TABLE>

                                       44
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME FUND
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS DECEMBER 31, 1994 (CONTINUED)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 PRINCIPAL
 AMOUNT (IN                                                                  COUPON     MATURITY
 THOUSANDS)                                                                   RATE        DATE          VALUE
- ------------                                                               -----------  ---------  ----------------
<C>           <S>                                                          <C>          <C>        <C>
             INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT/POLLUTION CONTROL REVENUE (5.5%)
$     2,500  California Alternative Energy Source Financing
               Authority, SRI International Cogeneration Ser 1985
               (a)................................................        9.75%   12/01/05  $     1,250,000
             California Pollution Control Financing Authority,
      5,000    Atlantic Richfield Co Ser 1985.....................        9.125   11/01/04        5,241,500
      6,000    Pacific Gas & Electric Co 1987 Ser B (AMT).........        8.875   01/01/10        6,528,780
      5,000    Southern California Edison Co 1988 Ser A (AMT).....        6.90    09/01/06        5,093,800
     10,000    Southern California Edison Co Ser D................        6.85    12/01/08       10,128,500
     10,000    Southern California Edison Co 1992 Ser B (AMT).....        6.40    12/01/24        9,135,400
      5,000    Waste Management Inc 1991 Ser A (AMT)..............        7.15    02/01/11        5,066,100
      1,400  Intermodal Container Transfer Facility Joint Powers
               Authority, Southern Pacific Transportation Co
               1989 Ser A.........................................        7.70    11/01/14        1,428,462
             San Diego, San Diego Gas & Electric Co
      6,000    1986 Ser B (AMT)...................................        7.375   12/01/21        6,075,180
      5,000    1987 Ser A (AMT)...................................        8.75    03/01/23        5,486,450
- -----------                                                                                 ---------------
     55,900                                                                                      55,434,172
- -----------                                                                                 ---------------
             MORTGAGE REVENUE -- SINGLE FAMILY (1.3%)
             California Housing Finance Agency,
      6,490    Home 1989 Ser A....................................        7.75    08/01/17        6,704,754
      4,315    Home 1991 Ser G (AMT)..............................        7.05    08/01/27        4,244,277
             Puerto Rico Housing Finance Corporation,
      1,365    Portfolio One GNMA-Backed Ser B....................        7.65    10/15/22        1,419,573
      1,000    Portfolio One GNMA-Backed Ser C....................        6.85    10/15/23        1,003,760
- -----------                                                                                 ---------------
     13,170                                                                                      13,372,364
- -----------                                                                                 ---------------
             PUBLIC FACILITIES REVENUE (10.6%)
     10,000  Alameda County Public Facilities Corporation, 1991
               Financing COPs.....................................        6.15    09/01/21        9,950,000
      3,265  Beverly Hills, Civic Center Impr Refg COPs
               (Prerefunded)......................................        7.00    06/01/15        3,491,264
     10,000  Beverly Hills Public Financing Authority, Lease 1993
               Ser A (MBIA Insured)...............................        5.65    06/01/15        8,730,300
      1,875  Campell Redevelopment Agency, 1991 Financing COPs....        6.75    10/01/17        1,793,063
      9,000  El Cajon-San Diego County Civic Center Authority,
               East County Regional Center 1986 Refg
               (Prerefunded)......................................        6.70    12/01/07        9,394,020
      5,560  Grossmont Union High School District, Land
               Acquisition Convertible Cap Apprec COPs (FSA
               Insured)...........................................        0.00**  09/01/25        4,935,556
             Los Angeles Convention & Exhibition Center Authority,
     10,000    Ser 1985 COPs (Prerefunded)........................        9.00    12/01/10       12,322,200
     14,000    Ser 1985 COPs (Prerefunded)........................        9.00    12/01/20       17,251,080
      5,500  Los Angeles County-West Covina Civic Center
               Authority, 1987 Refg COPs..........................        6.875   09/01/14        5,443,735
      6,500  Nevada County, Western Nevada County Solid Waste Mgmt
               1991 COPs..........................................        7.50    06/01/21        5,971,745
      5,000  North City West School Facilities Financing
               Authority, Community Facs Dist #1 Spl Tax Ser 1989
               A..................................................        7.85    09/01/19        5,024,800
      3,500  Poway Redevelopment Agency, 1986 Cap Impr COPs.......        7.875   08/01/11        3,571,365
</TABLE>

                                       45
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME FUND
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS DECEMBER 31, 1994 (CONTINUED)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 PRINCIPAL
 AMOUNT (IN                                                                  COUPON     MATURITY
 THOUSANDS)                                                                   RATE        DATE          VALUE
- ------------                                                               -----------  ---------  ----------------
<C>           <S>                                                          <C>          <C>        <C>
$     5,000  San Jose Financing Authority, Convention Center Refg
               1993 Ser C.........................................        6.40%   09/01/17  $     4,666,200
     10,000  Stanislaus County Capital Improvements Financing
               Authority, Refg Ser 1990 COPs......................        7.55    04/01/18       10,075,100
      3,000  University of California, Los Angeles Campus Parking
               Ser C (Prerefunded)................................        7.75    11/01/15        3,188,040
      1,200  Puerto Rico Infrastructure Financing Authority, Spl
               Tax Ser 1988 A.....................................        7.90    07/01/07        1,270,632
- -----------                                                                                 ---------------
    103,400                                                                                     107,079,100
- -----------                                                                                 ---------------
             RESOURCE RECOVERY REVENUE (0.5%)
             Stanislaus Waste-To-Energy Financing Agency, Ogden
               Martin Systems of Stanislaus Inc Refg Ser 1990.....        7.625   01/01/10
      5,000
- -----------
                                                                                                  5,119,000
                                                                                            ---------------
             TAX ALLOCATION (7.0%)
      5,000  Fountain Valley Agency For Community Development,
               1985 Industrial Area...............................        9.10    01/01/15        5,050,000
             Garden Grove Community Development Agency,
      5,000    Refg Issue of 1993.................................        5.70    10/01/13        4,101,000
      7,000    Refg Issue of 1993.................................        5.875   10/01/23        5,651,030
             Industry Urban-Development Agency,
     10,000    Civic Rec-Ind Redev Proj #1 Sub Refg Ser 1987 A....        7.30    05/01/06       10,028,500
      2,160    Civic Rec-Ind Redev Proj #1 Sub Refg Ser 1987 B....        7.375   05/01/15        2,154,017
      6,840    Civic Rec-Ind Redev Proj #1 Sub Refg Ser 1987 B
               (Prerefunded)......................................        7.375   05/01/15        7,266,474
     25,500  Long Beach Financing Authority, Ser 1992 (AMBAC
               Insured)...........................................        6.00    11/01/17       23,705,310
      3,750  Long Beach Redevelopment Agency, Downtown Refg Ser
               1988 B (Prerefunded)...............................        8.30    11/01/10        4,124,288
      7,000  Norwalk Redevelopment Agency, Proj #1 1987 Refg......        7.15    12/01/15        6,800,010
      1,960  Pleasanton Joint Powers Financing Authority,
               Reassessment 1993 Ser A............................        6.15    09/02/12        1,764,823
- -----------                                                                                 ---------------
     74,210                                                                                      70,645,452
- -----------                                                                                 ---------------
             TRANSPORTATION FACILITIES REVENUE (9.9%)
             Long Beach,
     11,000    Harbor Ser 1989 A (AMT)............................        7.375   05/15/09       11,304,040
     10,000    Harbor Ser 1989 A (AMT)............................        7.25    05/15/19       10,078,100
             Los Angeles,
      5,000    Department of Airports Refg 1989 Ser C.............        7.00    05/01/10        5,084,950
      6,000    Harbor Department Issue of 1985....................        8.70    09/01/15        6,363,300
             Los Angeles County Transportation Commission,
     20,000    Sales Tax Ser 1991 B...............................        6.50    07/01/13       19,191,000
      5,000    Sales Tax Ser 1986 A...............................        6.25    07/01/16        4,586,250
     10,000    Sales Tax Ser 1987 A (Prerefunded).................        6.75    07/01/19       10,695,100
      5,000  San Francisco Airports Commission, San Francisco Intl
               Airport Second Ser Refg Issue 4 (MBIA Insured).....        6.00    05/01/20        4,558,450
      5,000  San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District, Sales
               Tax Ser 1990 (AMBAC Insured).......................        6.75    07/01/09        5,105,850
</TABLE>

                                       46
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME FUND
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS DECEMBER 31, 1994 (CONTINUED)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 PRINCIPAL
 AMOUNT (IN                                                                  COUPON     MATURITY
 THOUSANDS)                                                                   RATE        DATE          VALUE
- ------------                                                               -----------  ---------  ----------------
<C>           <S>                                                          <C>          <C>        <C>
$    13,000  Puerto Rico Highway Authority, Ser Q (Prerefunded)...        7.75%   07/01/10  $    14,460,030
     10,000  Puerto Rico Highway & Transportation Authority, Refg
               Ser X..............................................        5.25    07/01/21        8,030,400
- -----------                                                                                 ---------------
    100,000                                                                                      99,457,470
- -----------                                                                                 ---------------
             WATER & SEWER REVENUE (17.1%)
             California Department of Water Resources,
      4,000    Central Valley Ser F...............................        6.00    12/01/11        3,747,600
      9,500    Central Valley Ser J-2.............................        6.125   12/01/13        8,870,245
      8,000  Castaic Lake Water Agency, Refg Ser 1994 A COPs (MBIA
               Insured)...........................................        6.00    08/01/18        7,322,640
     10,000  Central Coast Water Authority, Ser 1992 (AMBAC
               Insured)...........................................        6.50    10/01/14        9,856,500
      5,000  Contra Costa Water Authority, Water Treatment 1990
               Ser A (Prerefunded)................................        6.875   10/01/20        5,366,600
      5,000  Contra Costa Water District, Water Ser G (MBIA
               Insured)...........................................        5.50    10/01/19        4,215,650
             East Bay Municipal Utility District,
      8,000    Water Refg Ser 1986 (Prerefunded)..................        7.00    03/01/08        8,358,560
      8,000    Water Refg Ser 1992................................        6.00    06/01/20        7,163,840
      4,000  Eastern Municipal Water District, Water & Sewer Ser
               1991 COPs..........................................        6.00    07/01/23        3,500,120
      3,600  Goleta Water District, Refg Ser 1993 COPs (FGIC
               Insured)...........................................        5.50    12/01/12        3,169,980
             Los Angeles,
      5,745    Wastewater Ser 1990................................        7.10    06/01/18        5,762,005
      5,000    Wastewater Ser 1990-A (Prerefunded)................        7.00    02/01/20        5,367,350
     17,000    Wastewater Ser 1990-B (Prerefunded)................        7.15    06/01/20       18,417,630
     20,500  Los Angeles County Sanitation Districts Financing
               Authority, 1993 Ser A..............................        5.375   10/01/13       17,389,330
      5,000  Los Angeles Department of Water & Power, Water Works
               Issue of 1991 (Crossover Refunded).................        7.00    04/01/31        5,323,100
      3,600  Moulton Niguel Water District, 1993 Refg (MBIA
               Insured)...........................................        5.25    09/01/13        2,961,720
             San Diego County Water Authority,
     11,000    Water Ser 1989 A COPs (Prerefunded)................        7.30    05/01/09       11,680,460
      8,000    Water Ser 1991 COPs (MBIA Insured).................        6.30    04/08/21        7,540,240
     15,000  San Diego, Sewer 1993 Ser A..........................        5.25    05/15/20       11,719,200
      5,750  San Francisco Public Utilities Commission, Water 1992
               Refg Ser A.........................................        6.00    11/01/15        5,264,643
      5,000  West & Central Basin Financing Authority, Water Basin
               Refg Ser 1993 A (AMBAC Insured)....................        5.00    08/01/16        3,983,950
             Puerto Rico Aqueduct & Sewer Authority,
      5,000    Ser 1988 A.........................................        7.90    07/01/07        5,310,400
      9,450    Ser 1988 A.........................................        7.875   07/01/17       10,121,517
- -----------                                                                                 ---------------
    181,145                                                                                     172,413,280
- -----------                                                                                 ---------------
             OTHER REVENUE (2.9%)
      3,500  CSAC Finance Corporation, Contra Costa County Project
               III Ser 1986 COPs (Prerefunded)....................        7.50    10/01/09        3,731,385
</TABLE>

                                       47
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME FUND
PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS DECEMBER 31, 1994 (CONTINUED)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 PRINCIPAL
AMOUNT (IN                                                            COUPON     MATURITY
THOUSANDS)                                                             RATE        DATE          VALUE
- -----------                                                         -----------  ---------  ---------------
<C>          <S>                                                    <C>          <C>        <C>              <C>
              Los Angeles County,
$      5,400    1991 Master Refg COPs....................................       6.708%   05/01/15  $      5,129,892
      10,000    Pension Obligations Certificates Ser A...................       6.875    06/30/07        10,426,400
       9,500    Public Properties Refg of 1987 COPs......................       0.00     04/01/04         5,295,015
       5,000  Orange County Community Facilities District #86-2, Rancho
                Santa Margarita Series A of 1990.........................       7.65     08/15/17         4,460,549
- ------------                                                                                       ----------------
      33,400                                                                                             29,043,241
- ------------                                                                                       ----------------
              TOTAL CALIFORNIA EXEMPT MUNICIPAL BONDS
                  (IDENTIFIED COST $937,731,746).........................
     969,725
- ------------
                                                                                                        930,099,286
                                                                                                   ----------------
              CALIFORNIA EXEMPT SHORT-TERM MUNICIPAL OBLIGATIONS (5.7%)
       5,000  California Health Facilities Financing Authority, Memorial
                Health Refg Ser 1994 (Tender 01/04/95)...................        5.40*   10/01/24         5,000,000
       5,000  California School Cash Reserve Program Authority,
                1993 Pool Ser A..........................................        4.50    07/05/95         4,959,500
      10,000  California Statewide Communities Development Authority,
                St Joseph Health Systems COPs (Tender 01/03/95)..........        6.15 *  07/01/24        10,000,000
      17,500  Newport Beach, Hoag-Memorial Hospital Presbyterian Ser 1992
                (Tender 01/03/95)........................................        6.00 *  10/01/22        17,500,000
       5,045  Riverside, Water Ser 1985 (Prerefunded 10/01/95)...........        8.60    10/01/10         5,327,621
      15,000  Ventura County, Ser 1994 TRANs.............................        4.50    08/01/95        14,850,000
- ------------                                                                                       ----------------
              TOTAL CALIFORNIA EXEMPT SHORT-TERM MUNICIPAL OBLIGATIONS
                (IDENTIFIED COST $57,822,396)............................
      57,545
- ------------
                                                                                                         57,637,121
                                                                                                   ----------------
$  1,027,270  TOTAL INVESTMENTS (IDENTIFIED COST $995,554,142) (B)(C)....                    98.0%      987,736,407
- ------------
- ------------
              CASH AND OTHER ASSETS IN EXCESS OF LIABILITIES.............                     2.0        20,102,128
                                                                                        ---------  ----------------
              NET ASSETS.................................................                   100.0% $  1,007,838,535
                                                                                        ---------  ----------------
                                                                                        ---------  ----------------
</TABLE>

- -------------

<TABLE>
<C>        <S>
   AMT     ALTERNATIVE MINIMUM TAX.
  COPS     CERTIFICATES OF PARTICIPATION.
  TRANS    TAX AND REVENUE ANTICIPATION NOTES.
    *      VARIABLE OR FLOATING RATE SECURITIES. COUPON RATE SHOWN REFLECTS CURRENT RATE.
   **      CURRENTLY ZERO COUPON BOND; WILL BECOME INTEREST BEARING AT A FUTURE DATE.
   (A)     SECURITY IN DEFAULT. PARTIAL INTEREST PAID. INTEREST INCOME IS RECORDED AS RECEIVED.
   (B)     THE AGGREGATE  COST FOR  FEDERAL INCOME  TAX PURPOSES  IS $995,554,142;  THE AGGREGATE  GROSS
           UNREALIZED  APPRECIATION IS  $35,136,549 AND THE  AGGREGATE GROSS  UNREALIZED DEPRECIATION IS
           $42,954,284, RESULTING IN NET UNREALIZED DEPRECIATION OF $7,817,735.
   (C)     INVESTMENT WITHIN  CALIFORNIA  AND PUERTO  RICO  REPRESENTS 91.9%  AND  6.1% OF  NET  ASSETS,
           RESPECTIVELY.
</TABLE>

                       SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

                                       48
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME FUND
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
DECEMBER 31, 1994
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<TABLE>
<S>                                       <C>
ASSETS:
Investments in securities, at value
  (identified cost $995,554,142)........  $   987,736,407
Cash....................................        1,235,323
Receivable for:
  Interest..............................       17,615,206
  Investments sold......................        5,207,008
  Shares of beneficial interest sold....          676,553
Prepaid expenses and other assets.......           16,053
                                          ---------------
        TOTAL ASSETS....................    1,012,486,550
                                          ---------------
LIABILITIES:
Payable for:
  Dividends to shareholders.............        2,175,328
  Shares of beneficial interest
    repurchased.........................        1,226,730
  Plan of distribution fee..............          645,365
  Investment management fee.............          456,506
Accrued expenses and other payables.....          144,086
                                          ---------------
        TOTAL LIABILITIES...............        4,648,015
                                          ---------------
NET ASSETS:
Paid-in-capital.........................    1,017,449,333
Net unrealized depreciation.............       (7,817,735)
Accumulated undistributed net investment
  income................................          148,816
Accumulated net realized loss...........       (1,941,879)
                                          ---------------
        NET ASSETS......................  $ 1,007,838,535
                                          ---------------
                                          ---------------
NET ASSET VALUE PER SHARE, 84,921,168
  shares outstanding (unlimited shares
  authorized of $.01 par value).........
                                                   $11.87
                                          ---------------
                                          ---------------
</TABLE>

STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994

<TABLE>
<S>                                        <C>
NET INVESTMENT INCOME:
  INTEREST INCOME........................  $   71,154,330
                                           --------------
  EXPENSES
    Plan of distribution fee.............       8,309,032
    Investment management fee............       5,824,889
    Transfer agent fees and expenses.....         297,531
    Shareholder reports and notices......          63,622
    Professional fees....................          48,774
    Trustees' fees and expenses..........          29,672
    Custodian fees.......................           8,870
    Registration fees....................           5,264
    Other................................          37,652
                                           --------------
        TOTAL EXPENSES...................      14,625,306
                                           --------------
          NET INVESTMENT INCOME..........      56,529,024
                                           --------------
NET REALIZED AND UNREALIZED LOSS:
    Net realized loss....................      (1,886,812)
    Net change in unrealized
      appreciation.......................    (125,447,219)
                                           --------------
        NET LOSS.........................    (127,334,031)
                                           --------------
          NET DECREASE IN NET ASSETS
            RESULTING FROM OPERATIONS....  $  (70,805,007)
                                           --------------
                                           --------------
</TABLE>

STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                           FOR THE YEAR ENDED  FOR THE YEAR ENDED
                                                                           DECEMBER 31, 1994   DECEMBER 31, 1993
                                                                           ------------------  ------------------
<S>                                                                        <C>                 <C>
INCREASE (DECREASE) IN NET ASSETS:
  Operations:
    Net investment income................................................   $     56,529,024    $     55,504,028
    Net realized gain (loss).............................................         (1,886,812)         10,170,859
    Net change in unrealized appreciation................................       (125,447,219)         46,376,952
                                                                           ------------------  ------------------
        Net increase (decrease)..........................................        (70,805,007)        112,051,839
                                                                           ------------------  ------------------
  Dividends and distributions to shareholders from:
    Net investment income................................................        (56,377,889)        (55,504,028)
    Net realized gain....................................................         (2,061,346)         (8,123,876)
                                                                           ------------------  ------------------
        Total............................................................        (58,439,235)        (63,627,904)
  Net increase (decrease) from transactions in shares of beneficial
   interest..............................................................        (52,745,051)        153,955,199
                                                                           ------------------  ------------------
        Total increase (decrease)........................................       (181,989,293)        202,379,134
NET ASSETS:
  Beginning of period....................................................      1,189,827,828         987,448,694
                                                                           ------------------  ------------------
  END OF PERIOD (including undistributed net investment income of
   $148,816 and distributions in excess of net investment income of
   $2,319, respectively).................................................   $  1,007,838,535    $  1,189,827,828
                                                                           ------------------  ------------------
                                                                           ------------------  ------------------
</TABLE>

                       SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

                                       49
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME FUND
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1.   ORGANIZATION  AND ACCOUNTING  POLICIES --  Dean Witter  California Tax-Free
Income Fund (the "Fund") is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940,
as amended  (the  "Act"),  as  a  diversified,  open-end  management  investment
company.  The Fund was organized  as a Massachusetts business  trust on April 9,
1984 and commenced operations on July 11, 1984.

    The following is a summary of significant accounting policies:

    A.  VALUATION OF INVESTMENTS -- Portfolio securities are valued for the Fund
    by an  outside independent  pricing service  approved by  the Trustees.  The
    pricing  service has informed the Fund  that in valuing the Fund's portfolio
    securities, it uses both a computerized matrix of tax-exempt securities  and
    evaluations  by  its staff,  in each  case  based on  information concerning
    market transactions and quotations from  dealers which reflect the bid  side
    of  the market each day. The Fund's  portfolio securities are thus valued by
    reference to a combination  of transactions and quotations  for the same  or
    other  securities believed  to be  comparable in  quality, coupon, maturity,
    type of issue, call provisions,  trading characteristics and other  features
    deemed  to be relevant. Short-term debt securities having a maturity date of
    more than sixty  days at  time of purchase  are valued  on a  mark-to-market
    basis  until sixty days  prior to maturity and  thereafter at amortized cost
    based on their value  on the 61st day.  Short-term debt securities having  a
    maturity  date of sixty days  or less at the time  of purchase are valued at
    amortized cost.

    B.  ACCOUNTING FOR INVESTMENTS -- Security transactions are accounted for on
    the trade date (date the order to  buy or sell is executed). Realized  gains
    and  losses on security  transactions are determined  on the identified cost
    method. The Fund  amortizes premiums and  discounts on securities  purchased
    over  the  life of  the respective  securities.  Interest income  is accrued
    daily.

    C.  FEDERAL INCOME TAX STATUS -- It is the Fund's policy to comply with  the
    requirements of the Internal Revenue Code applicable to regulated investment
    companies  and to distribute all of its taxable and nontaxable income to its
    shareholders. Accordingly, no federal income tax provision is required.

    D.   DIVIDENDS  AND  DISTRIBUTIONS  TO  SHAREHOLDERS  --  The  Fund  records
    dividends  and distributions  to its  shareholders on  the record  date. The
    amount of dividends  and distributions  from net investment  income and  net
    realized  capital gains are determined in accordance with federal income tax
    regulations which may differ from generally accepted accounting  principles.
    These "book/tax" differences are either considered temporary or permanent in
    nature.  To  the  extent these  differences  are permanent  in  nature, such
    amounts are reclassified within the capital accounts based on their  federal
    tax-basis  treatment; temporary differences do not require reclassification.
    Dividends and  distributions  which exceed  net  investment income  and  net
    realized  capital gains  for financial  reporting purposes  but not  for tax
    purposes are reported  as dividends in  excess of net  investment income  or
    distributions  in excess of  net realized capital gains.  To the extent they
    exceed net  investment  income  and  net  realized  capital  gains  for  tax
    purposes, they are reported as distributions of paid-in-capital.

2.   INVESTMENT  MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT  -- Pursuant  to an  Investment Management
Agreement with Dean  Witter InterCapital  Inc. (the  "Investment Manager"),  the
Fund  pays its  Investment Manager a  management fee, accrued  daily and payable
monthly, by  applying  the following  annual  rates  to the  Fund's  net  assets
determined  as of the close of each business  day: 0.55% to the portion of daily
net assets not exceeding $500 million; 0.525% to the portion of daily net assets
exceeding $500 million but not exceeding  $750 million; 0.50% to the portion  of
daily net assets exceeding $750 million but not exceeding $1 billion; and 0.475%
to the portion of daily net assets exceeding $1 billion.

                                       50
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME FUND
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Under  the  terms  of the  Agreement,  in  addition to  managing  the Fund's
investments, the Investment Manager  maintains certain of  the Fund's books  and
records  and furnishes, at its own expense, office space, facilities, equipment,
clerical, bookkeeping and certain  legal services and pays  the salaries of  all
personnel,  including officers of  the Fund who are  employees of the Investment
Manager. The Investment Manager also bears the cost of telephone services, heat,
light, power and other utilities provided to the Fund.

3.  PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION  -- Shares of the Fund  are distributed by Dean  Witter
Distributors  Inc. (the "Distributor"), an  affiliate of the Investment Manager.
The Fund has adopted a Plan of Distribution (the "Plan") pursuant to Rule  12b-1
under  the Act  pursuant to  which the  Fund pays  the Distributor compensation,
accrued daily and payable monthly, at an annual rate of 0.75% of the lesser  of:
(a)  the average  daily aggregate  gross sales  of the  Fund's shares  since the
Fund's inception  (not  including  reinvestment of  dividend  or  capital  gains
distributions)  less the average  daily aggregate net asset  value of the Fund's
shares redeemed  since the  Fund's inception  upon which  a contingent  deferred
sales  charge has been imposed or upon which such charge has been waived; or (b)
the Fund's average daily net assets. Amounts paid under the Plan are paid to the
Distributor to compensate it for the services provided and the expenses borne by
it and others in the distribution of the Fund's shares, including the payment of
commissions for sales  of the Fund's  shares and incentive  compensation to  and
expenses of account executives of Dean Witter Reynolds Inc., an affiliate of the
Investment   Manager  and   Distributor,  and   other  employees   and  selected
broker-dealers, who engage in  or support distribution of  the Fund's shares  or
who  service shareholder  accounts, including  overhead and  telephone expenses,
printing and distribution of  prospectuses and reports  used in connection  with
the  offering  of  the Fund's  shares  to  other than  current  shareholders and
preparation, printing  and  distribution  of sales  literature  and  advertising
materials.  In addition, the  Distributor may be compensated  under the Plan for
its opportunity costs in advancing such amounts, which compensation would be  in
the form of a carrying charge on any unreimbursed expenses by the Distributor.

    Provided that the Plan continues in effect, any cumulative expenses incurred
but not yet recovered may be recovered through future distribution fees from the
Fund and contingent deferred sales charges from the Fund's shareholders.

    The  Distributor has informed the Fund that  for the year ended December 31,
1994, it received approximately $1,752,000 in contingent deferred sales  charges
from  certain redemptions of the Fund's shares. The Fund's shareholders pay such
charges which are not an expense of the Fund.

4.   SECURITY TRANSACTIONS  AND  TRANSACTIONS WITH  AFFILIATES  -- The  cost  of
purchases  and proceeds from sales of portfolio securities, excluding short-term
investments, for the year  ended December 31,  1994 aggregated $127,850,424  and
$185,117,490, respectively.

    Dean  Witter  Trust  Company, an  affiliate  of the  Investment  Manager and
Distributor, is the Fund's  transfer agent. At December  31, 1994, the Fund  had
transfer agent fees and expenses payable of approximately $32,000.

                                       51
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME FUND
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    On  April 1, 1991, the Fund  established an unfunded noncontributory defined
benefit pension plan covering all independent Trustees of the Fund who will have
served as  independent  Trustees  for  at  least  five  years  at  the  time  of
retirement.  Benefits  under  this  plan  are  based  on  years  of  service and
compensation during the last five years of service. Aggregate pension costs  for
the year ended December 31, 1994, included in Trustees' fees and expenses in the
Statement  of Operations amounted to $10,214. At December 31, 1994, the Fund had
an accrued pension liability of $48,937 which is included in accrued expenses in
the Statement of Assets and Liabilities.

5.   SHARES OF  BENEFICIAL  INTEREST --  Transactions  in shares  of  beneficial
interest were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                           FOR THE YEAR ENDED                FOR THE YEAR ENDED
                                           DECEMBER 31, 1994                 DECEMBER 31, 1993
                                    --------------------------------  --------------------------------
                                        SHARES           AMOUNT           SHARES           AMOUNT
                                    --------------  ----------------  --------------  ----------------
<S>                                 <C>             <C>               <C>             <C>
Sold..............................      10,564,887  $    132,902,122      20,116,156  $    264,871,259
Reinvestment of dividends and
 distributions....................       2,667,705        33,068,131       2,852,146        37,675,586
                                    --------------  ----------------  --------------  ----------------
                                        13,232,592       165,970,253      22,968,302       302,546,845
Repurchased.......................     (17,736,216)     (218,715,304)    (11,273,363)     (148,591,646)
                                    --------------  ----------------  --------------  ----------------
Net increase (decrease)...........      (4,503,624) $    (52,745,051)     11,694,939  $    153,955,199
                                    --------------  ----------------  --------------  ----------------
                                    --------------  ----------------  --------------  ----------------
</TABLE>

6.   FEDERAL INCOME TAX STATUS -- At December 31, 1994, the Fund had net capital
loss carryovers of  approximately $1,887,000,  which will  be available  through
December  31, 2002  to offset  future capital  gains to  the extent  provided by
regulations.

                                       52
<PAGE>
DEAN WITTER CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME FUND
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Selected  ratios  and  per  share  data  for  a  share  of  beneficial  interest
outstanding throughout each period:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                           ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                              1994        1993       1992       1991       1990       1989       1988       1987       1986
                           ----------  ----------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                        <C>         <C>         <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING
 PERFORMANCE:
Net asset value,
 beginning of period.....  $    13.31  $    12.70  $   12.46  $   11.99  $   12.05  $   11.68  $   11.19  $   12.25  $   11.41
                           ----------  ----------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
Net investment income....        0.64        0.67       0.69       0.71       0.72       0.71       0.72       0.72       0.77
Net realized and
 unrealized gain (loss)
 on investments..........       (1.42)       0.70       0.26       0.48      (0.06)      0.37       0.50      (1.06)      1.24
                           ----------  ----------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
Total from investment
 operations..............       (0.78)       1.37       0.95       1.19       0.66       1.08       1.22      (0.34)      2.01
                           ----------  ----------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
Less dividends and
 distributions from:
  Net investment
   income................       (0.64)      (0.67)     (0.69)     (0.71)     (0.72)     (0.71)     (0.72)     (0.72)     (0.77)
  Net realized gain......       (0.02)      (0.09)     (0.02)     (0.01)    --         --          (0.01)    --          (0.40)
                           ----------  ----------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
Total dividends and
 distributions...........       (0.66)      (0.76)     (0.71)     (0.72)     (0.72)     (0.71)     (0.73)     (0.72)     (1.17)
                           ----------  ----------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
Net asset value, end of
 period..................  $    11.87  $    13.31  $   12.70  $   12.46  $   11.99  $   12.05  $   11.68  $   11.19  $   12.25
                           ----------  ----------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
                           ----------  ----------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
TOTAL INVESTMENT
 RETURN+.................       (5.97)%      10.97%      7.83%     10.18%      5.69%      9.54%     11.23%     (2.70)%     18.38%
RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA:
Net assets, end of period
 (in thousands)..........  $1,007,839  $1,189,828  $ 987,449  $ 833,628  $ 677,270  $ 567,191  $ 430,148  $ 365,414  $ 358,939
Ratios to average net
 assets:
  Expenses...............        1.32%       1.27%      1.32%      1.28%      1.30%      1.32%      1.34%      1.35%      1.32%
  Net investment
   income................        5.10%       5.03%      5.45%      5.78%      5.98%      6.00%      6.31%      6.27%      6.34%
Portfolio turnover
 rate....................          12%         10%         6%         3%        16%        13%        13%        23%        31%

<CAPTION>

                             1985
                           ---------
<S>                        <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING
 PERFORMANCE:
Net asset value,
 beginning of period.....  $   10.31
                           ---------
Net investment income....       0.80
Net realized and
 unrealized gain (loss)
 on investments..........       1.10
                           ---------
Total from investment
 operations..............       1.90
                           ---------
Less dividends and
 distributions from:
  Net investment
   income................      (0.80)
  Net realized gain......     --
                           ---------
Total dividends and
 distributions...........      (0.80)
                           ---------
Net asset value, end of
 period..................  $   11.41
                           ---------
                           ---------
TOTAL INVESTMENT
 RETURN+.................      19.03%
RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA:
Net assets, end of period
 (in thousands)..........  $ 184,168
Ratios to average net
 assets:
  Expenses...............       1.41%
  Net investment
   income................       7.22%
Portfolio turnover
 rate....................         47%
<FN>
- -----------------
+ DOES NOT REFLECT THE DEDUCTION OF SALES CHARGE.
</TABLE>

                       SEE NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

                                       53
<PAGE>
APPENDIX
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

RATINGS OF INVESTMENTS
MOODY'S INVESTORS SERVICE INC. ("MOODY'S")
                             MUNICIPAL BOND RATINGS

Aaa   Bonds which are rated Aaa are judged to be of the best quality. They carry
      the  smallest degree of  investment risk and are  generally referred to as
      "gilt edge."  Interest  payments  are  protected  by  a  large  or  by  an
      exceptionally  stable margin  and principal  is secure.  While the various
      protective  elements  are  likely  to  change,  such  changes  as  can  be
      visualized  are most unlikely to  impair the fundamentally strong position
      of such issues.

Aa    Bonds which  are  rated  Aa are  judged  to  be of  high  quality  by  all
      standards.  Together with the  Aaa group they  comprise what are generally
      known as  high grade  bonds. They  are  rated lower  than the  best  bonds
      because  margins of protection may not be as large as in Aaa securities or
      fluctuation of protective elements  may be of  greater amplitude or  there
      may  be  other  elements present  which  make the  long-term  risks appear
      somewhat larger than in Aaa securities.

A     Bonds which are rated A  possess many favorable investment attributes  and
      are  to be  considered as upper  medium grade  obligations. Factors giving
      security to principal and interest  are considered adequate, but  elements
      may  be present which  suggest a susceptibility  to impairment sometime in
      the future.

Baa   Bonds which  are rated  Baa are  considered as  medium grade  obligations;
      i.e.,  they  are neither  highly  protected nor  poorly  secured. Interest
      payments and  principal  security  appear adequate  for  the  present  but
      certain  protective elements may  be lacking or  may be characteristically
      unreliable over  any great  length of  time. Such  bonds lack  outstanding
      investment characteristics and in fact have speculative characteristics as
      well.

      Bonds rated Aaa, Aa, A and Baa are considered investment grade bonds.

Ba    Bonds  which are rated  Ba are judged to  have speculative elements; their
      future cannot  be considered  as  well assured.  Often the  protection  of
      interest  and principal payments  may be very  moderate, and therefore not
      well  safeguarded  during  both  good  and  bad  times  over  the  future.
      Uncertainty of position characterizes bonds in this class.

B     Bonds  which are rated  B generally lack  characteristics of the desirable
      investment. Assurance of interest and principal payments or of maintenance
      of other terms of the contract over any long period of time may be small.

Caa   Bonds which are  rated Caa are  of poor  standing. Such issues  may be  in
      default  or  there  may be  present  elements  of danger  with  respect to
      principal or interest.

Ca    Bonds which are rated  Ca present obligations which  are speculative in  a
      high  degree.  Such  issues are  often  in  default or  have  other marked
      shortcomings.

C     Bonds which are rated C are the lowest rated class of bonds, and issues so
      rated can be regarded as having extremely poor prospects of ever attaining
      any real investment standing.

    CONDITIONAL  RATING:    Bonds  for  which  the  security  depends  upon  the
completion  of  some  act  or  the  fulfillment  of  some  condition  are  rated
conditionally. These  are  bonds  secured  by (a)  earnings  of  projects  under
construction,  (b) earnings of projects  unseasoned in operation experience, (c)
rentals which begin when facilities are completed, or (d) payments to which some
other limiting condition attaches. Parenthetical rating denotes probable  credit
stature upon completion of construction or elimination of basis of condition.

                                       54
<PAGE>
    RATING  REFINEMENTS:  Moody's may  apply numerical modifiers, 1,  2 and 3 in
each generic  rating classification  from Aa  through B  in its  municipal  bond
rating  system. The modifier 1  indicates a mid-range ranking;  and a modifier 3
indicates that the issue ranks in the lower end of its generic rating category.

                             MUNICIPAL NOTE RATINGS

    Moody's ratings for state and municipal notes and other short-term loans are
designated Moody's Investment Grade (MIG). MIG 1 denotes best quality and  means
there  is  present  strong  protection  from  established  cash  flows, superior
liquidity  support  or  demonstrated  broad-based  access  to  the  market   for
refinancing. MIG 2 denotes high quality and means that margins of protection are
ample  although not as  large as in MIG  1. MIG 3  denotes favorable quality and
means that  all security  elements are  accounted for  but that  the  undeniable
strength  of the  previous grades, MIG  1 and MIG  2, is lacking.  MIG 4 denotes
adequate quality and means that the protection commonly regarded as required  of
an investment security is present and that while the notes are not distinctly or
predominantly speculative, there is specific risk.

                        VARIABLE RATE DEMAND OBLIGATIONS

    A short-term rating, in addition to the Bond or MIG ratings, designated VMIG
may  also be assigned to an issue having a demand feature. The assignment of the
VMIG symbol reflects such characteristics as payment upon periodic demand rather
than fixed maturity dates  and payment relying on  external liquidity. The  VMIG
rating criteria are identical to the MIG criteria discussed above.

                            COMMERCIAL PAPER RATINGS

    Moody's  Commercial  Paper  ratings are  opinions  of the  ability  to repay
punctually promissory obligations not having  an original maturity in excess  of
nine  months.  These ratings  apply  to Municipal  Commercial  Paper as  well as
taxable Commercial Paper. Moody's employs the following three designations,  all
judged  to be investment  grade, to indicate the  relative repayment capacity of
rated issuers: Prime-1, Prime-2, Prime-3.

    Issuers rated Prime-1 have a  superior capacity for repayment of  short-term
promissory  obligations.  Issuers  rated  Prime-2  have  a  strong  capacity for
repayment of short-term promissory obligations;  and Issuers rated Prime-3  have
an  acceptable  capacity  for repayment  of  short-term  promissory obligations.
lssuers rated Not Prime do not fall within any of the Prime rating categories.

STANDARD & POOR'S CORPORATION ("STANDARD & POOR'S")

                             MUNICIPAL BOND RATINGS

    A Standard &  Poor's municipal bond  rating is a  current assessment of  the
creditworthiness  of  an obligor  with respect  to  a specific  obligation. This
assessment may take into consideration obligors such as guarantors, insurers, or
lessees.

    The ratings are  based on  current information  furnished by  the issuer  or
obtained  by Standard  & Poor's  from other  sources it  considers reliable. The
ratings are  based, in  varying degrees,  on the  following considerations:  (1)
likelihood  of default-capacity and willingness of  the obligor as to the timely
payment of interest and repayment of  principal in accordance with the terms  of
the  obligation;  (2)  nature  of  and provisions  of  the  obligation;  and (3)
protection afforded by, and relative position of, the obligation in the event of
bankruptcy, reorganization or other arrangement under the laws of bankruptcy and
other laws affecting creditors' rights.

    Standard & Poor's does  not perform an audit  in connection with any  rating
and  may, on occasion, rely on  unaudited financial information. The ratings may
be changed, suspended or withdrawn as a result of changes in, or  unavailability
of, such information, or for other reasons.

                                       55
<PAGE>
AAA   Debt  rated "AAA"  has the highest  rating assigned by  Standard & Poor's.
      Capacity to pay interest and repay principal is extemely strong.

AA    Debt rated  "AA" has  a very  strong capacity  to pay  interest and  repay
      principal and differs from the highest-rated issues only in small degree.

A     Debt  rated "A" has a strong capacity  to pay interest and repay principal
      although they  are somewhat  more susceptible  to the  adverse effects  of
      changes in circumstances and economic conditions than debt in higher-rated
      categories.

BBB   Debt  rated  "BBB"  is regarded  as  having  an adequate  capacity  to pay
      interest and  repay  principal.  Whereas  it  normally  exhibits  adequate
      protection   parameters,   adverse   economic   conditions   or   changing
      circumstances are  more likely  to  lead to  a  weakened capacity  to  pay
      interest  and repay principal for  debt in this category  than for debt in
      higher-rated categories.

      Bonds rated AAA, AA, A and BBB are considered investment grade bonds.

BB    Debt rated "BB"  has less  near-term vulnerability to  default than  other
      speculative  grade debt. However, it  faces major ongoing uncertainties or
      exposure to adverse business, financial or economic conditions which could
      lead to inadequate capacity to meet timely interest and principal payment.

B     Debt rated "B" has  a greater vulnerability to  default but presently  has
      the  capacity to meet interest  payments and principal repayments. Adverse
      business, financial or economic conditions would likely impair capacity or
      willingness to pay interest and repay principal.

CCC   Debt rated "CCC" has a current identifiable vulnerability to default,  and
      is dependent upon favorable business, financial and economic conditions to
      meet timely payments of interest and repayments of principal. In the event
      of adverse business, financial or economic conditions, it is not likely to
      have the capacity to pay interest and repay principal.

CC    The  rating "CC" is typically applied  to debt subordinated to senior debt
      which is assigned an actual or implied "CCC" rating.

C     The rating "C" is  typically applied to debt  subordinated to senior  debt
      which is assigned an actual or implied "CCC" debt rating.

CI    The rating "CI" is reserved for income bonds on which no interest is being
      paid.

D     Debt rated "D" is in payment default. The 'D' rating category is used when
      interest  payments or principal payments are not made on the date due even
      if the applicable grace period has  not expired, unless S&P believes  that
      such  payments will be made during such  grace period. The "D" rating also
      will be used  upon the  filing of a  bankruptcy petition  if debt  service
      payments are jeopardized.

NR    Indicates  that no rating  has been requested,  that there is insufficient
      information on which to base a rating  or that Standard & Poor's does  not
      rate a particular type of obligation as a matter of policy.

      Bonds  rated  "BB",  "B",  "CCC",  "CC" and  "C"  are  regarded  as having
      predominantly speculative characteristics with respect to capacity to  pay
      interest   and  repay  principal.  "BB"  indicates  the  least  degree  of
      speculation and "C"  the highest  degree of speculation.  While such  debt
      will  likely have some  quality and protective  characteristics, these are
      outweighed by  large  uncertainties or  major  risk exposures  to  adverse
      conditions.

      PLUS  (+) OR MINUS (-): The ratings from  "AA" to "CCC" may be modified by
      the addition of a plus or minus sign to show relative standing within  the
      major ratings categories.

      The foregoing ratings are sometimes followed by a "p" which indicates that
      the  rating is  provisional. A  provisional rating  assumes the successful
      completion of the  project being  financed by  the bonds  being rated  and
      indicates that payment of debt service requirements is largely or entirely
      dependent  upon the successful and timely  completion of the project. This
      rating, however, while addressing credit quality subsequent to  completion
      of the project, makes no comment on the likelihood or risk of default upon
      failure of such completion.

                                       56
<PAGE>
                             MUNICIPAL NOTE RATINGS

    Commencing  on  July 27,  1984, Standard  & Poor's  instituted a  new rating
category with respect to certain municipal  note issues with a maturity of  less
than three years. The new note ratings denote the
following:

    SP-1  denotes  a  very  strong  or  strong  capacity  to  pay  principal and
          interest.   Issues   determined   to   possess   overwhelming   safety
          characteristics are given a plus (+) designation (SP-1+).

    SP-2  denotes a satisfactory capacity to pay principal and interest.

    SP-3  denotes a speculative capacity to pay principal and interest.

                            COMMERCIAL PAPER RATINGS

    Standard  and Poor's commercial paper rating  is a current assessment of the
likelihood of timely payment of debt having an original maturity of no more than
365 days. The  commercial paper rating  is not a  recommendation to purchase  or
sell a security. The ratings are based upon current information furnished by the
issuer  or obtained by S&P from other sources it considers reliable. The ratings
may  be  changed,  suspended,  or  withdrawn  as  a  result  of  changes  in  or
unavailability  of such information.  Ratings are graded  into group categories,
ranging from "A"  for the  highest quality obligations  to "D"  for the  lowest.
Ratings  are applicable  to both  taxable and  tax-exempt commercial  paper. The
categories are as follows:

    Issues assigned A ratings are regarded  as having the greatest capacity  for
timely payment. Issues in this category are further refined with the designation
1, 2 and 3 to indicate the relative degree of safety.

A-1 indicates that the degree of safety regarding timely payment is very strong.

A-2  indicates capacity  for timely payment  on issues with  this designation is
strong. However, the  relative degree of  safety is not  as overwhelming as  for
issues designated "A-1".

A-3  indicates a satisfactory capacity  for timely payment. Obligations carrying
this designation are, however, somewhat  more vulnerable to the adverse  effects
of changes in circumstances than obligations carrying the higher designations.

                                       57
<PAGE>

                  DEAN WITTER CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME TRUST

                            PART C  OTHER INFORMATION

Item 24.  Financial Statements and Exhibits

     (a)  FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
          (1)  Financial statements and schedules, included
          in Prospectus (Part A):                                       Page in
                                                                      Prospectus
                                                                      ----------

          Financial highlights for the fiscal years ended
          December 31, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990,
          1991, 1992, 1993 and 1994.............................             4

          (2)  Financial statements included in the Statement of
          Additional Information (Part B):                               Page in
                                                                            SAI
                                                                            ---
          Portfolio of Investments at December 31, 1994.........            43

          Statement of assets and liabilities at
          December 31, 1994.....................................            49

          Statement of operations for the year ended
          December 31, 1994.....................................            49

          Statement of changes in net assets for the
          years ended December 31, 1993 and 1994................            49

          Notes to Financial Statements.........................            50

          Financial highlights for for the fiscal years ended
          December 31, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990,
          1991, 1992, 1993 and 1994.............................            53

          (3) Financial statements included in Part C:

          None

   (b)    EXHIBITS:

          2. -  Amended and Restated By-Laws of the Registrant

         11. -  Consent of Independent Accountants

         16. -  Schedules for Computation of Performance Quotations

         27. -  Financial Data Schedule

       Other -  Powers of Attorney
       --------------------------------
       All other exhibits previously filed and incorporated by reference.
<PAGE>

Item 25.  PERSONS CONTROLLED BY OR UNDER COMMON CONTROL WITH REGISTRANT.

          None


Item 26.  NUMBER OF HOLDERS OF SECURITIES.

               (1)                                      (2)
                                              Number of Record Holders
          Title of Class                        at February 3, 1995
          --------------                     -------------------------
          Shares of Beneficial Interest                22,000

Item 27.  INDEMNIFICATION


     Pursuant to Section 5.3 of the Registrant's Declaration of Trust and under
Section 4.8 of the Registrant's By-Laws, the indemnification of the Registrant's
trustees, officers, employees and agents is permitted if it is determined that
they acted under the belief that their actions were in or not opposed to the
best interest of the Registrant, and, with respect to any criminal proceeding,
they had reasonable cause to believe their conduct was not unlawful.  In
addition, indemnification is permitted only if it is determined that the actions
in question did not render them liable by reason of willful misfeasance, bad
faith or gross negligence in the performance of their duties or by reason of
reckless disregard of their obligations and duties to the Registrant.  Trustees,
officers, employees and agents will be indemnified for the expense of litigation
if it is determined that they are entitled to indemnification against any
liability established in such litigation.  The Registrant may also advance money
for these expenses provided that they give their undertakings to repay the
Registrant unless their conduct is later determined to permit indemnification.

     Pursuant to Section 5.2 of the Registrant's Declaration of Trust and
paragraph 8 of the Registrant's Investment Management Agreement, neither the
Investment Manager nor any trustee, officer, employee or agent of the Registrant
shall be liable for any action or failure to act, except in the case of bad
faith, willful misfeasance, gross negligence or reckless disregard of duties to
the Registrant.

     Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act
of 1933 (the "Act") may be permitted to trustees, officers and controlling
persons of the Registrant pursuant to the foregoing provisions or otherwise, the
Registrant has been advised that in the opinion of the  Securities and Exchange
Commission such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Act
and is, therefore, unenforceable.  In the event that a claim for indemnification
against such liabilities (other than the payment by the Registrant of expenses
incurred or paid by a trustee, officer, or controlling person of the Registrant
in connection with the successful defense of any action, suit or proceeding) is
asserted against the Registrant by such trustee, officer or controlling person
in connection with the shares being registered, the Registrant will,

<PAGE>

unless in the opinion of its counsel the matter has been settled by controlling
precedent, submit to a court of appropriate jurisdiction the question whether
such indemnification by it is against public policy as expressed in the Act, and
will be governed by the final adjudication of such issue.

     The Registrant hereby undertakes that it will apply the indemnification
provision of its by-laws in a manner consistent with Release 11330 of the
Securities and Exchange Commission under the Investment Company Act of 1940, so
long as the interpretation of Sections 17(h) and 17(i) of such Act remains in
effect.

     Registrant, in conjunction with the Investment Manager, Registrant's
Trustees, and other registered investment management companies managed by the
Investment Manager, maintains insurance on behalf of any person who is or was a
Trustee, officer, employee, or agent of Registrant, or who is or was serving at
the request of Registrant as a trustee, director, officer, employee or agent of
another trust or corporation, against any liability asserted against him and
incurred by him or arising out of his position.  However, in no event will
Registrant maintain insurance to indemnify any such person for any act for which
Registrant itself is not permitted to indemnify him.


Item 28.  BUSINESS AND OTHER CONNECTIONS OF INVESTMENT ADVISER.

     See "The Fund and Its Management" in the Prospectus regarding the business
of the investment adviser.  The following information is given regarding
officers of Dean Witter InterCapital Inc.  InterCapital is a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Dean Witter, Discover & Co.  The principal address of the Dean
Witter Funds is Two World Trade Center, New York, New York 10048.


The term "Dean Witter Funds" used below refers to the following registered
investment companies:


CLOSED-END INVESTMENT COMPANIES
 (1) InterCapital Income Securities Inc.
 (2) High Income Advantage Trust
 (3) High Income Advantage Trust II
 (4) High Income Advantage Trust III
 (5) Municipal Income Trust
 (6) Municipal Income Trust II
 (7) Municipal Income Trust III
 (8) Dean Witter Government Income Trust
 (9) Municipal Premium Income Trust
(10) Municipal Income Opportunities Trust
(11) Municipal Income Opportunities Trust II
(12) Municipal Income Opportunities Trust III
(13) Prime Income Trust


                                        3
<PAGE>

(14) InterCapital Insured Municipal Bond Trust
(15) InterCapital Quality Municipal Income Trust
(16) InterCapital Quality Municipal Investment Trust
(17) InterCapital Insured Municipal Income Trust
(18) InterCapital California Insured Municipal Income Trust
(19) InterCapital Insured Municipal Trust
(20) InterCapital Quality Municipal Securities
(21) InterCapital New York Quality Municipal Securities
(22) InterCapital California Quality Municipal Securities
(23) InterCapital Insured California Municipal Securities
(24) InterCapital Insured Municipal Securities


OPEN-END INVESTMENT COMPANIES:
 (1) Dean Witter Short-Term Bond Fund
 (2) Dean Witter Tax-Exempt Securities Trust
 (3) Dean Witter Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
 (4) Dean Witter Dividend Growth Securities Inc.
 (5) Dean Witter Convertible Securities Trust
 (6) Dean Witter Liquid Asset Fund Inc.
 (7) Dean Witter Developing Growth Securities Trust
 (8) Dean Witter Retirement Series
 (9) Dean Witter Federal Securities Trust
(10) Dean Witter World Wide Investment Trust
(11) Dean Witter U.S. Government Securities Trust
(12) Dean Witter Select Municipal Reinvestment Fund
(13) Dean Witter High Yield Securities Inc.
(14) Dean Witter Intermediate Income Securities
(15) Dean Witter New York Tax-Free Income Fund
(16) Dean Witter California Tax-Free Income Fund
(17) Dean Witter Health Sciences Trust
(18) Dean Witter California Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
(19) Dean Witter Managed Assets Trust
(20) Dean Witter American Value Fund
(21) Dean Witter Strategist Fund
(22) Dean Witter Utilities Fund
(23) Dean Witter World Wide Income Trust
(24) Dean Witter New York Municipal Money Market Trust
(25) Dean Witter Capital Growth Securities
(26) Dean Witter Precious Metals and Minerals Trust
(27) Dean Witter European Growth Fund Inc.
(28) Dean Witter Global Short-Term Income Fund Inc.
(29) Dean Witter Pacific Growth Fund Inc.
(30) Dean Witter Multi-State Municipal Series Trust
(31) Dean Witter Premier Income Trust
(32) Dean Witter Short-Term U.S. Treasury Trust
(33) Dean Witter Diversified Income Trust
(34) Dean Witter U.S. Government Money Market Trust
(35) Dean Witter Global Dividend Growth Securities
(36) Active Assets California Tax-Free Trust
(37) Dean Witter Natural Resource Development Securities Inc.
(38) Active Assets Government Securities Trust
(39) Active Assets Money Trust
(40) Active Assets Tax-Free Trust


                                        4
<PAGE>

(41) Dean Witter Limited Term Municipal Trust
(42) Dean Witter Variable Investment Series
(43) Dean Witter Value-Added Market Series
(44) Dean Witter Global Utilities Fund
(45) Dean Witter High Income Securities
(46) Dean Witter National Municipal Trust
(47) Dean Witter International SmallCap Fund
(48) Dean Witter Mid-Cap Growth Fund
(49) Dean Witter Select Dimensions Investment Series
(50) Dean Witter Global Asset Allocation Fund

The term "TCW/DW Funds" refers to the following registered investment companies:

OPEN-END INVESTMENT COMPANIES
 (1) TCW/DW Core Equity Trust
 (2) TCW/DW North American Government Income Trust
 (3) TCW/DW Latin American Growth Fund
 (4) TCW/DW Income and Growth Fund
 (5) TCW/DW Small Cap Growth Fund
 (6) TCW/DW Balanced Fund
 (7) TCW/DW North American Intermediate Income Trust
 (8) TCW/DW Global Convertible Trust
 (9) TCW/DW Total Return Trust


CLOSED-END INVESTMENT COMPANIES
 (1) TCW/DW Term Trust 2000
 (2) TCW/DW Term Trust 2002
 (3) TCW/DW Term Trust 2003
 (4) TCW/DW Emerging Markets Opportunities Trust


NAME AND POSITION             OTHER SUBSTANTIAL BUSINESS, PROFESSION, VOCATION
WITH DEAN WITTER              OR EMPLOYMENT, INCLUDING NAME, PRINCIPAL ADDRESS
INTERCAPITAL INC.             AND NATURE OF CONNECTION
- -----------------             ------------------------------------------------

Charles A. Fiumefreddo        Executive Vice President and Director of Dean
Chairman, Chief               Witter Reynolds Inc. ("DWR"); Chairman, Chief
Executive Officer and         Executive Officer and Director of Dean Witter
Director                      Distributors Inc. ("Distributors") and Dean
                              Witter Services Company Inc. ("DWSC"); Chairman
                              and Director of Dean Witter Trust Company
                              ("DWTC"); Chairman, Director or Trustee, President
                              and Chief Executive Officer of the Dean Witter
                              Funds and Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and
                              Trustee of the TCW/DW Funds; Formerly Executive
                              Vice President and Director of Dean Witter,
                              Discover & Co. ("DWDC"); Director and/or officer
                              of various DWDC subsidiaries.


                                        5
<PAGE>

NAME AND POSITION             OTHER SUBSTANTIAL BUSINESS, PROFESSION, VOCATION
WITH DEAN WITTER              OR EMPLOYMENT, INCLUDING NAME, PRINCIPAL ADDRESS
INTERCAPITAL INC.             AND NATURE OF CONNECTION
- -----------------             ------------------------------------------------

Philip J. Purcell             Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and Director of
Director                      of DWDC and DWR; Director of DWSC and
                              Distributors; Director or Trustee of the Dean
                              Witter Funds; Director and/or officer of various
                              DWDC subsidiaries.

Richard M. DeMartini          Executive Vice President and member of the
Director                      management committee of DWDC; Chief Operating
                              Officer of Dean Witter Capital;Director of DWR,
                              DWSC, Distributors and DWTC; Trustee of the TCW/DW
                              Funds.

James F. Higgins              Executive Vice President of DWDC; President and
Director                      Chief Operating Officer of Dean Witter Financial;
                              Director of DWR, DWSC, Distributors and DWTC.

Thomas C. Schneider           Executive Vice President and Chief Financial
Executive Vice                Officer of DWDC, DWR, DWSC and Distributors;
President, Chief              Director of DWR, DWSC and Distributors.
Financial Officer and
Director

Christine A. Edwards          Executive Vice President, Secretary and General
Director                      Counsel of DWDC and DWR; Executive Vice President,
                              Secretary and Chief Legal Officer of Distributors;
                              Director of DWR, DWSC and Distributors.

Robert M. Scanlan             President and Chief Operating Officer of DWSC,
President and Chief           Executive Vice President of Distributors;
Operating Officer             Executive Vice President and Director of DWTC;
                              Vice President of the Dean Witter Funds and the
                              TCW/DW Funds.

David A. Hughey               Executive Vice President and Chief Administrative
Executive Vice                Officer of DWSC, Distributors and DWTC; Director
President and Chief           of DWTC; Vice President of the Dean Witter Funds
Administrative Officer        and the TCW/DW Funds.

Edmund C. Puckhaber           Director of DWTC; Vice President of the Dean
Executive Vice                Witter Funds.
President

John Van Heuvelen             President, Chief Operating Officer and Director
Executive Vice                of DWTC.
President


                                        6
<PAGE>

NAME AND POSITION             OTHER SUBSTANTIAL BUSINESS, PROFESSION, VOCATION
WITH DEAN WITTER              OR EMPLOYMENT, INCLUDING NAME, PRINCIPAL ADDRESS
INTERCAPITAL INC.             AND NATURE OF CONNECTION
- -----------------             ------------------------------------------------

Sheldon Curtis                Assistant Secretary of DWR; Senior Vice President,
Senior Vice President,        Secretary and General Counsel of DWSC; Senior Vice
General Counsel and           President, Assistant General Counsel and Assistant
Secretary                     Secretary of Distributors; Senior Vice President
                              and Secretary of DWTC; Vice President, Secretary
                              and General Counsel of the Dean Witter Funds and
                              the TCW/DW Funds.

Peter M. Avelar
Senior Vice President         Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Mark Bavoso
Senior Vice President         Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Thomas H. Connelly
Senior Vice President         Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Edward Gaylor
Senior Vice President         Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Rajesh K. Gupta
Senior Vice President         Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Kenton J. Hinchcliffe
Senior Vice President         Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Kevin Hurley                  Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.
Senior Vice President

John B. Kemp, III             Director of the Provident Savings Bank, Jersey
Senior Vice President         City, New Jersey.

Anita Kolleeny
Senior Vice President         Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Jonathan R. Page
Senior Vice President         Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Ira Ross
Senior Vice President         Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Rochelle G. Siegel
Senior Vice President         Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Paul D. Vance
Senior Vice President         Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Elizabeth A. Vetell
Senior Vice President

James F. Willison
Senior Vice President         Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.


                                        7
<PAGE>

NAME AND POSITION             OTHER SUBSTANTIAL BUSINESS, PROFESSION, VOCATION
WITH DEAN WITTER              OR EMPLOYMENT, INCLUDING NAME, PRINCIPAL ADDRESS
INTERCAPITAL INC.             AND NATURE OF CONNECTION
- -----------------             ------------------------------------------------

Ronald J. Worobel
Senior Vice President         Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Thomas F. Caloia              First Vice President and Assistant Treasurer of
First Vice President          DWSC, Assistant Treasurer of Distributors; and
and Assistant                 Treasurer of the Dean Witter Funds and the TCW/DW
Treasurer                     Funds.

Marilyn K. Cranney            Assistant Secretary of DWR; First Vice President
First Vice President          and Assistant Secretary of DWSC; Assistant
and Assistant Secretary       Secretary of the Dean Witter Funds and the TCW/DW
                              Funds.

Barry Fink                    First Vice President and Assistant Secretary of
First Vice President          DWSC; Assistant Secretary of the Dean Witter
and Assistant Secretary       Funds and the TCW/DW Funds.

Michael Interrante            First Vice President and Controller of DWSC;
First Vice President          Assistant Treasurer of Distributors; First Vice
and Controller                President and Treasurer of DWTC.

Robert Zimmerman
First Vice President

Joan Allman
Vice President

Joseph Arcieri
Vice President                Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Stephen Brophy
Vice President

Terence P. Brennan, II
Vice President

Douglas Brown
Vice President

Thomas Chronert
Vice President

Rosalie Clough
Vice President

Patricia A. Cuddy
Vice President                Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

B. Catherine Connelly
Vice President


                                        8
<PAGE>

NAME AND POSITION             OTHER SUBSTANTIAL BUSINESS, PROFESSION, VOCATION
WITH DEAN WITTER              OR EMPLOYMENT, INCLUDING NAME, PRINCIPAL ADDRESS
INTERCAPITAL INC.             AND NATURE OF CONNECTION
- -----------------             ------------------------------------------------

Salvatore DeSteno
Vice President                Vice President of DWSC.

Frank J. DeVito
Vice President                Vice President of DWSC.

Dwight Doolan
Vice President

Bruce Dunn
Vice President

Jeffrey D. Geffen
Vice President

Deborah Genovese
Vice President

Peter W. Gurman
Vice President

Russell Harper
Vice President

John Hechtlinger
Vice President

David Hoffman
Vice President

David Johnson
Vice President

Christopher Jones
Vice President

Stanley Kapica
Vice President

Konrad J. Krill
Vice President                Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Paul LaCosta
Vice President                Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Lawrence S. Lafer             Vice President and Assistant Secretary of DWSC;
Vice President and            Assistant Secretary of the Dean Witter Funds and
Assistant Secretary           the TCW/DW Funds.

Thomas Lawlor
Vice President


                                        9
<PAGE>


NAME AND POSITION             OTHER SUBSTANTIAL BUSINESS, PROFESSION, VOCATION
WITH DEAN WITTER              OR EMPLOYMENT, INCLUDING NAME, PRINCIPAL ADDRESS
INTERCAPITAL INC.             AND NATURE OF CONNECTION
- -----------------             ------------------------------------------------

Lou Anne D. McInnis           Vice President and Assistant Secretary of DWSC;
Vice President and            Assistant Secretary of the Dean Witter Funds and
Assistant Secretary           the TCW/DW Funds.

Sharon K. Milligan
Vice President

James Nash
Vice President

Richard Norris
Vice President

Hugh Rose
Vice President

Ruth Rossi                    Vice President and Assistant Secretary of DWSC;
Vice President and            Assistant Secretary of the Dean Witter Funds and
Assistant Secretary           the TCW/DW Funds.

Carl F. Sadler
Vice President

Rafael Scolari
Vice President                Vice President of Prime Income Trust

Diane Lisa Sobin
Vice President                Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Kathleen Stromberg
Vice President                Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Vinh Q. Tran
Vice President                Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Alice Weiss
Vice President                Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.


Jayne M. Wolff
Vice President                Vice President of various Dean Witter Funds.

Marianne Zalys
Vice President


                                       10
<PAGE>

Item 29.    PRINCIPAL UNDERWRITERS

     (a)  Dean Witter Distributors Inc. ("Distributors"), a Delaware
          corporation, is the principal underwriter of the Registrant.
          Distributors is also the principal underwriter of the following
          investment companies:

 (1)           Dean Witter Liquid Asset Fund Inc.
 (2)           Dean Witter Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
 (3)           Dean Witter California Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
 (4)           Dean Witter Retirement Series
 (5)           Dean Witter Dividend Growth Securities Inc.
 (6)           Dean Witter Natural Resource Development Securities Inc.
 (7)           Dean Witter World Wide Investment Trust
 (8)           Dean Witter Capital Growth Securities
 (9)           Dean Witter Convertible Securities Trust
(10)           Active Assets Tax-Free Trust
(11)           Active Assets Money Trust
(12)           Active Assets California Tax-Free Trust
(13)           Active Assets Government Securities Trust
(14)           Dean Witter Short-Term Bond Fund
(15)           Dean Witter Federal Securities Trust
(16)           Dean Witter U.S. Government Securities Trust
(17)           Dean Witter High Yield Securities Inc.
(18)           Dean Witter New York Tax-Free Income Fund
(19)           Dean Witter Tax-Exempt Securities Trust
(20)           Dean Witter California Tax-Free Income Fund
(21)           Dean Witter Managed Assets Trust
(22)           Dean Witter Limited Term Municipal Trust
(23)           Dean Witter World Wide Income Trust
(24)           Dean Witter Utilities Fund
(25)           Dean Witter Strategist Fund
(26)           Dean Witter New York Municipal Money Market Trust
(27)           Dean Witter Intermediate Income Securities
(28)           Prime Income Trust
(29)           Dean Witter European Growth Fund Inc.
(30)           Dean Witter Developing Growth Securities Trust
(31)           Dean Witter Precious Metals and Minerals Trust
(32)           Dean Witter Pacific Growth Fund Inc.
(33)           Dean Witter Multi-State Municipal Series Trust
(34)           Dean Witter Premier Income Trust
(35)           Dean Witter Short-Term U.S. Treasury Trust
(36)           Dean Witter Diversified Income Trust
(37)           Dean Witter Health Sciences Trust
(38)           Dean Witter Global Dividend Growth Securities
(39)           Dean Witter American Value Fund
(40)           Dean Witter U.S. Government Money Market Trust
(41)           Dean Witter Global Short-Term Income Fund Inc.
(42)           Dean Witter Variable Investment Series
(43)           Dean Witter Value-Added Market Series
(44)           Dean Witter Global Utilities Fund
(45)           Dean Witter High Income Securities
(46)           Dean Witter National Municipal Trust
(47)           Dean Witter International SmallCap Fund


                                       11
<PAGE>

(48)           Dean Witter Mid-Cap Growth Fund
(49)           Dean Witter Global Asset Allocation Fund
 (1)           TCW/DW Core Equity Trust
 (2)           TCW/DW North American Government Income Trust
 (3)           TCW/DW Latin American Growth Fund
 (4)           TCW/DW Income and Growth Fund
 (5)           TCW/DW Small Cap Growth Fund
 (6)           TCW/DW Balanced Fund
 (7)           TCW/DW North American Intermediate Income Trust
 (8)           TCW/DW Global Convertible Trust
 (9)           TCW/DW Total Return Trust

     (b)  The following information is given regarding directors and officers of
     Distributors not listed in Item 28 above.  The principal address of
     Distributors is Two World Trade Center, New York, New York 10048.  None of
     the following persons has any position or office with the Registrant.


                                   Positions and
                                   Office with
     Name                          Distributors
     ----                          -------------

     Fredrick K. Kubler            Senior Vice President, Assistant Secretary
                                   and Chief Compliance Officer.

     Michael T. Gregg              Vice President and Assistant Secretary.


Item 30.    LOCATION OF ACCOUNTS AND RECORDS

       All accounts, books and other documents required to be maintained by
Section 31(a) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 and the Rules thereunder are
maintained by the Investment Manager at its offices, except records relating to
holders of shares issued by the Registrant, which are maintained by the
Registrant's Transfer Agent, at its place of business as shown in the
prospectus.

Item 31.    MANAGEMENT SERVICES

        Registrant is not a party to any such management-related service
contract.

Item 32.    UNDERTAKINGS

        Registrant hereby undertakes to furnish each person to whom a prospectus
is delivered with a copy of the Registrant's latest annual report to
shareholders, upon request and without charge.


                                       12


<PAGE>

                                   SIGNATURES

     Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933 and the
Investment Company Act of 1940, the Registrant certifies that it meets all of
the requirements for effectiveness of this Registration Statement pursuant to
Rule 485(b) under the Securities Act of 1933 and has duly caused this Post-
Effective Amendment to the Registration Statement to be signed on its behalf by
the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, in the City of New York and State of
New York on the 23rd day of February, 1995.

                                     DEAN WITTER CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME FUND

                                             By    /s/ Sheldon Curtis
                                                 ----------------------------
                                                       Sheldon Curtis
                                                 Vice President and Secretary

     Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this Post-
Effective Amendment No.11 has been signed below by the following persons in the
capacities and on the dates indicated.

     Signatures                    Title                     Date
     ----------                    -----                     ----

(1) Principal Executive Officer    President, Chief
                                   Executive Officer,
                                   Trustee and Chairman
By   /s/ Charles A. Fiumefreddo                             02/23/95
    ----------------------------
       Charles A. Fiumefreddo

(2) Principal Financial Officer    Treasurer and Principal
                                   Accounting Officer

By   /s/ Thomas F. Caloia                                   02/23/95
    ----------------------------
        Thomas F. Caloia

(3) Majority of the Trustees

    Charles A. Fiumefreddo (Chairman)
    Philip J. Purcell


By   /s/ Sheldon Curtis                                     02/23/95
    ----------------------------
        Sheldon Curtis
        Attorney-in-Fact

    Jack F. Bennett            Paul Kolton
    Michael Bozic              Michael E. Nugent
    John R. Haire              John L. Schroeder
    Manuel H. Johnson          Edwin J. Garn

By   /s/ David M. Butowsky                                  02/23/95
    ----------------------------
        David M. Butowsky
        Attorney-in-Fact

<PAGE>


                  DEAN WITTER CALIFORNIA TAX FREE INCOME

                                  EXHIBIT INDEX


 2.   --       Amended and Restated By-Laws

11.   --       Consent of Independent Accountants

16.   --       Schedule for Computation of Performance Quotations

27.   --       Financial Data Schedule

Other --       Powers of Attorney




<PAGE>
                                    C65815

                                   BY-LAWS

                                      OF

                 DEAN WITTER CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME FUND
                (AMENDED AND RESTATED AS OF JANUARY 25, 1995)

                                  ARTICLE I
                                 DEFINITIONS

   The terms "COMMISSION", "DECLARATION", "DISTRIBUTOR", "INVESTMENT
ADVISER", "MAJORITY SHAREHOLDER VOTE", "1940 ACT", "SHAREHOLDER", "SHARES",
"TRANSFER AGENT", "TRUST", "TRUST PROPERTY", and "TRUSTEES" have the
respective meanings given them in the Declaration of Trust of Dean Witter
California Tax-Free Income Fund dated April 9, 1984, as amended from time to
time.

                                  ARTICLE II
                                   OFFICES

   SECTION 2.1. PRINCIPAL OFFICE. Until changed by the Trustees, the
principal office of the Trust in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts shall be
in the City of Boston, County of Suffolk.

   SECTION 2.2. OTHER OFFICES. In addition to its principal office in the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the Trust may have an office or offices in the
City of New York, State of New York, and at such other places within and
without the Commonwealth as the Trustees may from time to time designate or
the business of the Trust may require.

                                 ARTICLE III
                            SHAREHOLDERS' MEETINGS

   SECTION 3.1. PLACE OF MEETINGS. Meetings of Shareholders shall be held at
such place, within or without the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, as may be
designated from time to time by the Trustees.

   SECTION 3.2. MEETINGS. Meetings of Shareholders of the Trust shall be held
whenever called by the Trustees or the President of the Trust and whenever
election of a Trustee or Trustees by Shareholders is required by the
provisions of Section 16(a) of the 1940 Act, for that purpose. Meetings of
Shareholders shall also be called by the Secretary upon the written request
of the holders of Shares entitled to vote not less than twenty-five percent
(25%) of all the votes entitled to be cast at such meeting. Such request
shall state the purpose or purposes of such meeting and the matters proposed
to be acted on thereat. The Secretary shall inform such Shareholders of the
reasonable estimated cost of preparing and mailing such notice of the
meeting, and upon payment to the Trust of such costs, the Secretary shall
give notice stating the purpose or purposes of the meeting to all entitled to
vote at such meeting. No meeting need be called upon the request of the
holders of Shares entitled to cast less than a majority of all votes entitled
to be cast at such meeting, to consider any matter which is substantially the
same as a matter voted upon at any meeting of Shareholders held during the
preceding twelve months.

   SECTION 3.3. NOTICE OF MEETINGS. Written or printed notice of every
Shareholders' meeting stating the place, date, and purpose or purposes
thereof, shall be given by the Secretary not less than ten (10) nor more than
ninety (90) days before such meeting to each Shareholder entitled to vote at
such meeting. Such notice shall be deemed to be given when deposited in the
United States mail, postage prepaid, directed to the Shareholder at his
address as it appears on the records of the Trust.


<PAGE>


   SECTION 3.4. QUORUM AND ADJOURNMENT OF MEETINGS. Except as otherwise
provided by law, by the Declaration or by these By-Laws, at all meetings of
Shareholders the holders of a majority of the Shares issued and outstanding
and entitled to vote thereat, present in person or represented by proxy,
shall be requisite and shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of
business. In the absence of a quorum, the Shareholders present or represented
by proxy and entitled to vote thereat shall have power to adjourn the meeting
from time to time. Any adjourned meeting may be held as adjourned without
further notice. At any adjourned meeting at which a quorum shall be present,
any business may be transacted as if the meeting had been held as originally
called.

   SECTION 3.5. VOTING RIGHTS, PROXIES. At each meeting of Shareholders, each
holder of record of Shares entitled to vote thereat shall be entitled to one
vote in person or by proxy, executed in writing by the Shareholder or his
duly authorized attorney-in-fact, for each Share of beneficial interest of
the Trust and for the fractional portion of one vote for each fractional
Share entitled to vote so registered in his name on the records of the Trust
on the date fixed as the record date for the determination of Shareholders
entitled to vote at such meeting. No proxy shall be valid after eleven months
from its date, unless otherwise provided in the proxy. At all meetings of
Shareholders, unless the voting is conducted by inspectors, all questions
relating to the qualification of voters and the validity of proxies and the
acceptance or rejection of votes shall be decided by the chairman of the
meeting. Pursuant to a resolution of a majority of the Trustees, proxies may
be solicited in the name of one or more Trustees or Officers of the Trust.

   SECTION 3.6. VOTE REQUIRED. Except as otherwise provided by law, by the
Declaration of Trust, or by these By-Laws, at each meeting of Shareholders at
which a quorum is present, all matters shall be decided by Majority
Shareholder Vote.

   SECTION 3.7. INSPECTORS OF ELECTION. In advance of any meeting of
Shareholders, the Trustees may appoint Inspectors of Election to act at the
meeting or any adjournment thereof. If Inspectors of Election are not so
appointed, the chairman of any meeting of Shareholders may, and on the
request of any Shareholder or his proxy shall, appoint Inspectors of Election
of the meeting. In case any person appointed as Inspector fails to appear or
fails or refuses to act, the vacancy may be filled by appointment made by the
Trustees in advance of the convening of the meeting or at the meeting by the
person acting as chairman. The Inspectors of Election shall determine the
number of Shares outstanding, the Shares represented at the meeting, the
existence of a quorum, the authenticity, validity and effect of proxies,
shall receive votes, ballots or consents, shall hear and determine all
challenges and questions in any way arising in connection with the right to
vote, shall count and tabulate all votes or consents, determine the results,
and do such other acts as may be proper to conduct the election or vote with
fairness to all Shareholders. On request of the chairman of the meeting, or
of any Shareholder or his proxy, the Inspectors of Election shall make a
report in writing of any challenge or question or matter determined by them
and shall execute a certificate of any facts found by them.

   SECTION 3.8. INSPECTION OF BOOKS AND RECORDS. Shareholders shall have such
rights and procedures of inspection of the books and records of the Trust as
are granted to Shareholders under the Corporations and Associations Law of
the State of Maryland.

   SECTION 3.9. ACTION BY SHAREHOLDERS WITHOUT MEETING. Except as otherwise
provided by law, the provisions of these By-Laws relating to notices and
meetings to the contrary notwithstanding, any action required or permitted to
be taken at any meeting of Shareholders may be taken without a meeting if a
majority of the Shareholders entitled to vote upon the action consent to the
action in writing and such consents are filed with the records of the Trust.
Such consent shall be treated for all purposes as a vote taken at a meeting
of Shareholders.

                                  ARTICLE IV
                                   TRUSTEES

   SECTION 4.1. MEETINGS OF THE TRUSTEES. The Trustees may in their
discretion provide for regular or special meetings of the Trustees. Regular
meetings of the Trustees may be held at such time and place as shall be
determined from time to time by the Trustees without further notice. Special
meetings of the Trustees may be called at any time by the President and shall
be called by the President or the Secretary upon the written request of any
two (2) Trustees.

                                2
<PAGE>


   SECTION 4.2. NOTICE OF SPECIAL MEETINGS. Written notice of special
meetings of the Trustees, stating the place, date and time thereof, shall be
given not less than two (2) days before such meeting to each Trustee,
personally, by telegram, by mail, or by leaving such notice at his place of
residence or usual place of business. If mailed, such notice shall be deemed
to be given when deposited in the United States mail, postage prepaid,
directed to the Trustee at his address as it appears on the records of the
Trust. Subject to the provisions of the 1940 Act, notice or waiver of notice
need not specify the purpose of any special meeting.

   SECTION 4.3. TELEPHONE MEETINGS. Subject to the provisions of the 1940
Act, any Trustee, or any member or members of any committee designated by the
Trustees, may participate in a meeting of the Trustees, or any such
committee, as the case may be, by means of a conference telephone or similar
communications equipment if all persons participating in the meeting can hear
each other at the same time. Participation in a meeting by these means
constitutes presence in person at the meeting.

   SECTION 4.4. QUORUM, VOTING AND ADJOURNMENT OF MEETINGS. At all meetings
of the Trustees, a majority of the Trustees shall be requisite to and shall
constitute a quorum for the transaction of business. If a quorum is present,
the affirmative vote of a majority of the Trustees present shall be the act
of the Trustees, unless the concurrence of a greater proportion is expressly
required for such action by law, the Declaration or these By-Laws. If at any
meeting of the Trustees there be less than a quorum present, the Trustees
present thereat may adjourn the meeting from time to time, without notice
other than announcement at the meeting, until a quorum shall have been
obtained.

   SECTION 4.5. ACTION BY TRUSTEES WITHOUT MEETING. The provisions of these
By-Laws covering notices and meetings to the contrary notwithstanding, and
except as required by law, any action required or permitted to be taken at
any meeting of the Trustees may be taken without a meeting if a consent in
writing setting forth the action shall be signed by all of the Trustees
entitled to vote upon the action and such written consent is filed with the
minutes of proceedings of the Trustees.

   SECTION 4.6. EXPENSES AND FEES. Each Trustee may be allowed expenses, if
any, for attendance at each regular or special meeting of the Trustees, and
each Trustee who is not an officer or employee of the Trust or of its
investment manager or underwriter or of any corporate affiliate of any of
said persons shall receive for services rendered as a Trustee of the Trust
such compensation as may be fixed by the Trustees. Nothing herein contained
shall be construed to preclude any Trustee from serving the Trust in any
other capacity and receiving compensation therefor.

   SECTION 4.7.  EXECUTION OF INSTRUMENTS AND DOCUMENTS AND SIGNING OF CHECKS
AND OTHER OBLIGATIONS AND TRANSFERS. All instruments, documents and other
papers shall be executed in the name and on behalf of the Trust and all
checks, notes, drafts and other obligations for the payment of money by the
Trust shall be signed, and all transfer of securities standing in the name of
the Trust shall be executed, by the Chairman, the President, any Vice
President or the Treasurer or by any one or more officers or agents of the
Trust as shall be designated for that purpose by vote of the Trustees;
notwithstanding the above, nothing in this Section 4.7 shall be deemed to
preclude the electronic authorization, by designated persons, of the Trust's
Custodian (as described herein in Section 9.1) to transfer assets of the
Trust, as provided for herein in Section 9.1.

   SECTION 4.8. INDEMNIFICATION OF TRUSTEES, OFFICERS, EMPLOYEES AND
AGENTS. (a) The Trust shall indemnify any person who was or is a party or is
threatened to be made a party to any threatened, pending, or completed
action, suit or proceeding, whether civil, criminal, administrative or
investigative (other than an action by or in the right of the Trust) by
reason of the fact that he is or was a Trustee, officer, employee, or agent
of the Trust. The indemnification shall be against expenses, including
attorneys' fees, judgments, fines, and amounts paid in settlement, actually
and reasonably incurred by him in connection with the action, suit, or
proceeding, if he acted in good faith and in a manner he reasonably believed
to be in or not opposed to the best interests of the Trust, and, with respect
to any criminal action or proceeding, had no reasonable cause to believe his
conduct was unlawful. The termination of any action, suit or proceeding by
judgment, order, settlement, conviction, or upon a plea of nolo contendere or
its equivalent, shall not, of itself, create a presumption that the person
did not act in good faith and in a manner which he reasonably believed to be
in or not opposed to the best interests of the Trust, and, with respect to
any criminal action or proceeding, had reasonable cause to believe that his
conduct was unlawful.

                                3
<PAGE>


   (b) The Trust shall indemnify any person who was or is a party or is
threatened to be made a party to any threatened, pending or completed action
or suit by or on behalf of the Trust to obtain a judgment or decree in its
favor by reason of the fact that he is or was a Trustee, officer, employee,
or agent of the Trust. The indemnification shall be against expenses,
including attorneys' fees actually and reasonably incurred by him in
connection with the defense or settlement of the action or suit, if he acted
in good faith and in a manner he reasonably believed to be in or not opposed
to the best interests of the Trust; except that no indemnification shall be
made in respect of any claim, issue, or matter as to which the person has
been adjudged to be liable for negligence or misconduct in the performance of
his duty to the Trust, except to the extent that the court in which the
action or suit was brought, or a court of equity in the county in which the
Trust has its principal office, determines upon application that, despite the
adjudication of liability but in view of all circumstances of the case, the
person is fairly and reasonably entitled to indemnity for those expenses
which the court shall deem proper, provided such Trustee, officer, employee
or agent is not adjudged to be liable by reason of his willful misfeasance,
bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of the duties involved in
the conduct of his office.

   (c) To the extent that a Trustee, officer, employee, or agent of the Trust
has been successful on the merits or otherwise in defense of any action, suit
or proceeding referred to in subsection (a) or (b) or in defense of any
claim, issue or matter therein, he shall be indemnified against expenses,
including attorneys' fees, actually and reasonably incurred by him in
connection therewith.

   (d) (1) Unless a court orders otherwise, any indemnification under
subsections (a) or (b) of this section may be made by the Trust only as
authorized in the specific case after a determination that indemnification of
the Trustee, officer, employee, or agent is proper in the circumstances
because he has met the applicable standard of conduct set forth in
subsections (a) or (b).

      (2) The determination shall be made:

         (i) By the Trustees, by a majority vote of a quorum which consists
    of Trustees who were not parties to the action, suit or proceeding; or

        (ii) If the required quorum is not obtainable, or if a quorum of
    disinterested Trustees so directs, by independent legal counsel in a
    written opinion; or

       (iii) By the Shareholders.

      (3) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section 4.8, no person
    shall be entitled to indemnification for any liability, whether or not
    there is an adjudication of liability, arising by reason of willful
    misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence, or reckless disregard of duties
    as described in Section 17(h) and (i) of the Investment Company Act of
    1940 ("disabling conduct"). A person shall be deemed not liable by reason
    of disabling conduct if, either:

         (i) a final decision on the merits is made by a court or other body
    before whom the proceeding was brought that the person to be indemnified
    ("indemnitee") was not liable by reason of disabling conduct; or

        (ii) in the absence of such a decision, a reasonable determination,
    based upon a review of the facts, that the indemnitee was not liable by
    reason of disabling conduct, is made by either--

            (A) a majority of a quorum of Trustees who are neither
         "interested persons" of the Trust, as defined in Section 2(a)(19) of
         the Investment Company Act of 1940, nor parties to the action, suit
         or proceeding, or

            (B) an independent legal counsel in a written opinion.

   (e) Expenses, including attorneys' fees, incurred by a Trustee, officer,
employee or agent of the Trust in defending a civil or criminal action, suit
or proceeding may be paid by the Trust in advance of the final disposition
thereof if:

       (1) authorized in the specific case by the Trustees; and

       (2) the Trust receives an undertaking by or on behalf of the Trustee,
    officer, employee or agent of the Trust to repay the advance if it is not
    ultimately determined that such person is entitled to be indemnified by
    the Trust; and

                                4
<PAGE>


          (3) either, (i) such person provides a security for his
    undertaking, or

             (ii) the Trust is insured against losses by reason of any lawful
         advances, or

            (iii) a determination, based on a review of readily available
         facts, that there is reason to believe that such person ultimately
         will be found entitled to indemnification, is made by either--

                (A) a majority of a quorum which consists of Trustees who are
             neither "interested persons" of the Trust, as defined in Section
             2(a)(19) of the 1940 Act, nor parties to the action, suit or
             proceeding, or

                (B) an independent legal counsel in a written opinion.

   (f) The indemnification provided by this Section shall not be deemed
exclusive of any other rights to which a person may be entitled under any
by-law, agreement, vote of Shareholders or disinterested Trustees or
otherwise, both as to action in his official capacity and as to action in
another capacity while holding the office, and shall continue as to a person
who has ceased to be a Trustee, officer, employee, or agent and inure to the
benefit of the heirs, executors and administrators of such person; provided
that no person may satisfy any right of indemnity or reimbursement granted
herein or to which he may be otherwise entitled except out of the property of
the Trust, and no Shareholder shall be personally liable with respect to any
claim for indemnity or reimbursement or otherwise.

   (g) The Trust may purchase and maintain insurance on behalf of any person
who is or was a Trustee, officer, employee, or agent of the Trust, against
any liability asserted against him and incurred by him in any such capacity,
or arising out of his status as such. However, in no event will the Trust
purchase insurance to indemnify any officer or Trustee against liability for
any act for which the Trust itself is not permitted to indemnify him.

   (h) Nothing contained in this Section shall be construed to protect any
Trustee or officer of the Trust against any liability to the Trust or to its
security holders to which he would otherwise be subject by reason of willful
misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of the duties
involved in the conduct of his office.

                                  ARTICLE V
                                  COMMITTEES

   SECTION 5.1. EXECUTIVE AND OTHER COMMITTEES. The Trustees, by resolution
adopted by a majority of the Trustees, may designate an Executive Committee
and/or committees, each committee to consist of two (2) or more of the
Trustees of the Trust and may delegate to such committees, in the intervals
between meetings of the Trustees, any or all of the powers of the Trustees in
the management of the business and affairs of the Trust. In the absence of
any member of any such committee, the members thereof present at any meeting,
whether or not they constitute a quorum, may appoint a Trustee to act in
place of such absent member. Each such committee shall keep a record of its
proceedings.

   The Executive Committee and any other committee shall fix its own rules or
procedure, but the presence of at least fifty percent (50%) of the members of
the whole committee shall in each case be necessary to constitute a quorum of
the committee and the affirmative vote of the majority of the members of the
committee present at the meeting shall be necessary to take action.

   All actions of the Executive Committee shall be reported to the Trustees
at the meeting thereof next succeeding to the taking of such action.

   SECTION 5.2. ADVISORY COMMITTEE. The Trustees may appoint an advisory
committee which shall be composed of persons who do not serve the Trust in
any other capacity and which shall have advisory functions with respect to
the investments of the Trust but which shall have no power to determine that
any security or other investment shall be purchased, sold or otherwise
disposed of by the Trust. The number of persons constituting any such
advisory committee shall be determined from time to time by the Trustees. The
members of any such advisory committee may receive compensation for their
services and may be allowed such fees and expenses for the attendance at
meetings as the Trustees may from time to time determine to be appropriate.

                                5
<PAGE>


   SECTION 5.3. COMMITTEE ACTION WITHOUT MEETING. The provisions of these
By-Laws covering notices and meetings to the contrary notwithstanding, and
except as required by law, any action required or permitted to be taken at
any meeting of any Committee of the Trustees appointed pursuant to Section
5.1 of these By-Laws may be taken without a meeting if a consent in writing
setting forth the action shall be signed by all members of the Committee
entitled to vote upon the action and such written consent is filed with the
records of the proceedings of the Committee.

                                  ARTICLE VI
                                   OFFICERS

   SECTION 6.1. EXECUTIVE OFFICERS. The executive officers of the Trust shall
be a Chairman, a President, one or more Vice Presidents, a Secretary and a
Treasurer. The President shall be selected from among the Trustees but none
of the other executive officers need be a Trustee. Two or more offices,
except those of President and any Vice President, may be held by the same
person, but no officer shall execute, acknowledge or verify any instrument in
more than one capacity. The executive officers of the Trust shall be elected
annually by the Trustees and each executive officer so elected shall hold
office until his successor is elected and has qualified.

   SECTION 6.2. OTHER OFFICERS AND AGENTS. The Trustees may also elect one or
more Assistant Vice Presidents, Assistant Secretaries and Assistant
Treasurers and may elect, or may delegate to the President the power to
appoint, such other officers and agents as the Trustees shall at any time or
from time to time deem advisable.

   SECTION 6.3. TERM AND REMOVAL AND VACANCIES. Each officer of the Trust
shall hold office until his successor is elected and has qualified. Any
officer or agent of the Trust may be removed by the Trustees whenever, in
their judgment, the best interests of the Trust will be served thereby, but
such removal shall be without prejudice to the contractual rights, if any, of
the person so removed.

   SECTION 6.4. COMPENSATION OF OFFICERS. The compensation of officers and
agents of the Trust shall be fixed by the Trustees, or by the President to
the extent provided by the Trustees with respect to officers appointed by the
President.

   SECTION 6.5. POWER AND DUTIES. All officers and agents of the Trust, as
between themselves and the Trust, shall have such authority and perform such
duties in the management of the Trust as may be provided in or pursuant to
these By-Laws, or to the extent not so provided, as may be prescribed by the
Trustees; provided, that no rights of any third party shall be affected or
impaired by any such By-Law or resolution of the Trustees unless he has
knowledge thereof.

   SECTION 6.6. THE CHAIRMAN. The Chairman shall preside at all meetings of
the Shareholders and of the Trustees, he shall be a signatory on all Annual
and Semi-Annual Reports as may be sent to shareholders, and he shall perform
such other duties as the Trustees may from time to time prescribe.

   SECTION 6.7. THE PRESIDENT. (a) The President shall be the chief executive
officer of the Trust; he shall have general and active management of the
business of the Trust, shall see that all orders and resolutions of the Board
of Trustees are carried into effect, and, in connection therewith, shall be
authorized to delegate to one or more Vice Presidents such of his powers and
duties at such times and in such manner as he may deem advisable.

   (b) In the absence of the Chairman, the President shall preside at all
meetings of the shareholders and the Board of Trustees; and he shall perform
such other duties as the Board of Trustees may from time to time prescribe.

   SECTION 6.8. THE VICE PRESIDENTS. The Vice Presidents shall be of such
number and shall have such titles as may be determined from time to time by
the Trustees. The Vice President, or, if there be more than one, the Vice
Presidents in the order of their seniority as may be determined from time to
time by the Trustees or the President, shall, in the absence or disability of
the President, exercise the powers and perform the duties of the President,
and he or they shall perform such other duties as the Trustees or the
President may from time to time prescribe.

                                6
<PAGE>


   SECTION 6.9. THE ASSISTANT VICE PRESIDENTS. The Assistant Vice President,
or, if there be more than one, the Assistant Vice Presidents, shall perform
such duties and have such powers as may be assigned them from time to time by
the Trustees or the President.

   SECTION 6.10. THE SECRETARY. The Secretary shall attend all meetings of
the Trustees and all meetings of the Shareholders and record all the
proceedings of the meetings of the Shareholders and of the Trustees in a book
to be kept for that purpose, and shall perform like duties for the standing
committees when required. He shall give, or cause to be given, notice of all
meetings of the Shareholders and special meetings of the Trustees, and shall
perform such other duties and have such powers as the Trustees, or the
President, may from time to time prescribe. He shall keep in safe custody the
seal of the Trust and affix or cause the same to be affixed to any instrument
requiring it, and, when so affixed, it shall be attested by his signature or
by the signature of an Assistant Secretary.

   SECTION 6.11. THE ASSISTANT SECRETARIES. The Assistant Secretary, or, if
there be more than one, the Assistant Secretaries in the order determined by
the Trustees or the President, shall, in the absence or disability of the
Secretary, perform the duties and exercise the powers of the Secretary and
shall perform such duties and have such other powers as the Trustees or the
President may from time to time prescribe.

   SECTION 6.12. THE TREASURER. The Treasurer shall be the chief financial
officer of the Trust. He shall keep or cause to be kept full and accurate
accounts of receipts and disbursements in books belonging to the Trust, and
he shall render to the Trustees and the President, whenever any of them
require it, an account of his transactions as Treasurer and of the financial
condition of the Trust; and he shall perform such other duties as the
Trustees, or the President, may from time to time prescribe.

   SECTION 6.13. THE ASSISTANT TREASURERS. The Assistant Treasurer, or, if
there shall be more than one, the Assistant Treasurers in the order
determined by the Trustees or the President, shall, in the absence or
disability of the Treasurer, perform the duties and exercise the powers of
the Treasurer and shall perform such other duties and have such other powers
as the Trustees, or the President, may from time to time prescribe.

   SECTION 6.14. DELEGATION OF DUTIES. Whenever an officer is absent or
disabled, or whenever for any reason the Trustees may deem it desirable, the
Trustees may delegate the powers and duties of an officer or officers to any
other officer or officers or to any Trustee or Trustees.

                                 ARTICLE VII
                         DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS

   Subject to any applicable provisions of law and the Declaration, dividends
and distributions upon the Shares may be declared at such intervals as the
Trustees may determine, in cash, in securities or other property, or in
Shares, from any sources permitted by law, all as the Trustees shall from
time to time determine.

   Inasmuch as the computation of net income and net profits from the sales
of securities or other properties for federal income tax purposes may vary
from the computation thereof on the records of the Trust, the Trustees shall
have power, in their discretion, to distribute as income dividends and as
capital gain distributions, respectively, amounts sufficient to enable the
Trust to avoid or reduce liability for federal income taxes.

                                 ARTICLE VIII
                            CERTIFICATES OF SHARES

   SECTION 8.1. CERTIFICATES OF SHARES. Certificates for Shares of each
series or class of Shares shall be in such form and of such design as the
Trustees shall approve, subject to the right of the Trustees to change such
form and design at any time or from time to time, and shall be entered in the
records of the Trust as they are issued. Each such certificate shall bear a
distinguishing number; shall exhibit the holder's name and certify the number
of full Shares owned by such holder; shall be signed by or in the name of

                                7
<PAGE>


the Trust by the President, or a Vice President, and countersigned by the
Secretary or an Assistant Secretary or the Treasurer and an Assistant
Treasurer of the Trust; shall be sealed with the seal; and shall contain such
recitals as may be required by law. Where any certificate is signed by a
Transfer Agent or by a Registrar, the signature of such officers and the seal
may be facsimile, printed or engraved. The Trust may, at its option,
determine not to issue a certificate or certificates to evidence Shares owned
of record by any Shareholder.

   In case any officer or officers who shall have signed, or whose facsimile
signature or signatures shall appear on, any such certificate or certificates
shall cease to be such officer or officers of the Trust, whether because of
death, resignation or otherwise, before such certificate or certificates
shall have been delivered by the Trust, such certificate or certificates
shall, nevertheless, be adopted by the Trust and be issued and delivered as
though the person or persons who signed such certificate or certificates or
whose facsimile signature or signatures shall appear therein had not ceased
to be such officer or officers of the Trust.

   No certificate shall be issued for any share until such share is fully
paid.

   SECTION 8.2. LOST, STOLEN, DESTROYED AND MUTILATED CERTIFICATES. The
Trustees may direct a new certificate or certificates to be issued in place
of any certificate or certificates theretofore issued by the Trust alleged to
have been lost, stolen or destroyed, upon satisfactory proof of such loss,
theft, or destruction; and the Trustees may, in their discretion, require the
owner of the lost, stolen or destroyed certificate, or his legal
representative, to give to the Trust and to such Registrar, Transfer Agent
and/or Transfer Clerk as may be authorized or required to countersign such
new certificate or certificates, a bond in such sum and of such type as they
may direct, and with such surety or sureties, as they may direct, as
indemnity against any claim that may be against them or any of them on
account of or in connection with the alleged loss, theft or destruction of
any such certificate.

                                  ARTICLE IX
                                  CUSTODIAN

   SECTION 9.1. APPOINTMENT AND DUTIES. The Trust shall at times employ a
bank or trust company having capital, surplus and undivided profits of at
least five million dollars ($5,000,000) as custodian with authority as its
agent, but subject to such restrictions, limitations and other requirements,
if any, as may be contained in these By-Laws and the 1940 Act:

       (1) to receive and hold the securities owned by the Trust and deliver
    the same upon written or electronically transmitted order;

       (2) to receive and receipt for any moneys due to the Trust and
    deposit the same in its own banking department or elsewhere as the
    Trustees may direct;

       (3) to disburse such funds upon orders or vouchers;

all upon such basis of compensation as may be agreed upon between the
Trustees and the custodian. If so directed by a Majority Shareholder Vote,
the custodian shall deliver and pay over all property of the Trust held by it
as specified in such vote.

   The Trustees may also authorize the custodian to employ one or more
sub-custodians from time to time to perform such of the acts and services of
the custodian and upon such terms and conditions as may be agreed upon
between the custodian and such sub-custodian and approved by the Trustees.

   SECTION 9.2. CENTRAL CERTIFICATE SYSTEM. Subject to such rules,
regulations and orders as the Commission may adopt, the Trustees may direct
the custodian to deposit all or any part of the securities owned by the Trust
in a system for the central handling of securities established by a national
securities exchange or a national securities association registered with the
Commission under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, or such other person as
may be permitted by the Commission, or otherwise in accordance with the 1940
Act, pursuant to which system all securities of any particular class or
series of any issuer deposited within the system are treated as fungible and
may be transferred or pledged by bookkeeping entry without physical delivery
of such securities, provided that all such deposits shall be subject to
withdrawal only upon the order of the Trust.

                                8
<PAGE>


                                  ARTICLE X
                               WAIVER OF NOTICE

   Whenever any notice of the time, place or purpose of any meeting of
Shareholders, Trustees, or of any committee is required to be given in
accordance with law or under the provisions of the Declaration or these
By-Laws, a waiver thereof in writing, signed by the person or persons
entitled to such notice and filed with the records of the meeting, whether
before or after the holding thereof, or actual attendance at the meeting of
shareholders, Trustees or committee, as the case may be, in person, shall be
deemed equivalent to the giving of such notice to such person.

                                  ARTICLE XI
                                MISCELLANEOUS

   SECTION 11.1. LOCATION OF BOOKS AND RECORDS. The books and records of the
Trust may be kept outside the Commonwealth of Massachusetts at such place or
places as the Trustees may from time to time determine, except as otherwise
required by law.

   SECTION 11.2. RECORD DATE. The Trustees may fix in advance a date as the
record date for the purpose of determining Shareholders entitled to notice
of, or to vote at, any meeting of Shareholders, or Shareholders entitled to
receive payment of any dividend or the allotment of any rights, or in order
to make a determination of Shareholders for any other proper purpose. Such
date, in any case, shall be not more than ninety (90) days, and in case of a
meeting of Shareholders not less than ten (10) days, prior to the date on
which particular action requiring such determination of Shareholders is to be
taken. In lieu of fixing a record date the Trustees may provide that the
transfer books shall be closed for a stated period but not to exceed, in any
case, twenty (20) days. If the transfer books are closed for the purpose of
determining Shareholders entitled to notice of a vote at a meeting of
Shareholders, such books shall be closed for at least ten (10) days
immediately preceding such meeting.

   SECTION 11.3. SEAL. The Trustees shall adopt a seal, which shall be in
such form and shall have such inscription thereon as the Trustees may from
time to time provide. The seal of the Trust may be affixed to any document,
and the seal and its attestation may be lithographed, engraved or otherwise
printed on any document with the same force and effect as if it had been
imprinted and attested manually in the same manner and with the same effect
as if done by a Massachusetts business corporation under Massachusetts law.

   SECTION 11.4. FISCAL YEAR. The fiscal year of the Trust shall end on such
date as the Trustees may by resolution specify, and the Trustees may by
resolution change such date for future fiscal years at any time and from time
to time.

   SECTION 11.5. ORDERS FOR PAYMENT OF MONEY. All orders or instructions for
the payment of money of the Trust, and all notes or other evidences of
indebtedness issued in the name of the Trust, shall be signed by such officer
or officers or such other person or persons as the Trustees may from time to
time designate, or as may be specified in or pursuant to the agreement
between the Trust and the bank or trust company appointed as Custodian of the
securities and funds of the Trust.

                                 ARTICLE XII
                     COMPLIANCE WITH FEDERAL REGULATIONS

   The Trustees are hereby empowered to take such action as they may deem to
be necessary, desirable or appropriate so that the Trust is or shall be in
compliance with any federal or state statute, rule or regulation with which
compliance by the Trust is required.

                                9
<PAGE>


                                 ARTICLE XIII
                                  AMENDMENTS

   These By-Laws may be amended, altered, or repealed, or new By-Laws may be
adopted, (a) by a Majority Shareholder Vote, or (b) by the Trustees;
provided, however, that no By-Law may be amended, adopted or repealed by the
Trustees if such amendment, adoption or repeal requires, pursuant to law, the
Declaration, or these By-Laws, a vote of the Shareholders. The Trustees shall
in no event adopt By-Laws which are in conflict with the Declaration, and any
apparent inconsistency shall be construed in favor of the related provisions
in the Declaration.

                                 ARTICLE XIV
                             DECLARATION OF TRUST

   The Declaration of Trust establishing Dean Witter California Tax-Free
Income Fund, dated April 9, 1984, a copy of which is on file in the office of
the Secretary of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, provides that the name
Dean Witter California Tax-Free Income Fund refers to the Trustees under the
Declaration collectively as Trustees, but not as individuals or personally;
and no Trustee, Shareholder, officer, employee or agent of Dean Witter
California Tax-Free Income Fund shall be held to any personal liability, nor
shall resort be had to their private property for the satisfaction of any
obligation or claim or otherwise, in connection with the affairs of said Dean
Witter California Tax-Free Income Fund, but the Trust Estate only shall be
liable.

                               10



<PAGE>

                                                               Exhibit 99.11




                     CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS

We  hereby  consent  to  the  use  in the Statement of Additional Information
constituting part of this Post-Effective Amendment No. 11 to the registration
statement  on  Form  N-1A  (the "Registration Statement") of our report dated
February  13,  1995,  relating  to  the  financial  statements  and financial
highlights  of  Dean Witter California Tax-Free Income Fund, which appears in
such  Statement  of  Additional  Information,  and  to  the  incorporation by
reference  of  our  report into the Prospectus which constitutes part of this
Registration  Statement.  We  also  consent to the references to us under the
headings   "Independent  Accountants"  and  "Experts"  in  such  Statement of
Additional  Information  and  to  the  reference  to  us  under  the  heading
"Financial Highlights" in such Prospectus.



PRICE WATERHOUSE

1177 Avenue of the Americas
New York, New York
February 22, 1995





<PAGE>

                 SCHEDULE FOR COMPUTATIONS OF PERFORMANCE QUOTATIONS
                           CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME FUND




(A) AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS (I.E. STANDARDIZED COMPUTATIONS)

                             _                              _
                            |        ______________________  |
FORMULA:                    |       |                        |
                            |  /\ n |          ERV           |
                    T  =    |    \  |     -------------      |  - 1
                            |     \ |           P            |
                            |      \|                        |
                            |_                              _|

                   T = AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURN
                   n = NUMBER OF YEARS
                 ERV = ENDING REDEEMABLE VALUE
                   P = INITIAL INVESTMENT

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                 (A)
  $1,000         ERV AS OF             NUMBER OF             AVERAGE ANNUAL
INVESTED - P      31-Dec-94            YEARS - n             TOTAL RETURN - T
- -------------    -----------           -----------           -------------------
<S>              <C>                   <C>                   <C>

 31-Dec-93          $895.70                     1                      -10.43%

 31-Dec-89        $1,290.60                     5                        5.23%

 31-Dec-84        $2,188.80                -85.00                       -0.92%

</TABLE>

(B) AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS (STANDARIZED COMPUTATIONS) WITHOUT WAIVER OF
    FEES AND ASSUMPTION OF EXPENSES.

                             _                              _
                            |        ______________________  |
FORMULA:                    |       |                        |
                            |  /\ n |          EVb           |
                    tb =    |    \  |     -------------      |  - 1
                            |     \ |           P            |
                            |      \|                        |
                            |_                              _|


            tb = AVERAGE ANNUAL COMPOUND RETURN
                 (DEDUCTION FOR EXPENSES ASSUMED BY FUND MANAGER)
             n = NUMBER OF YEARS
           EVb = ENDING VALUE (DEDUCTION FOR EXPENSES
                 ASSUMED BY FUND MANAGER)
             P = INITIAL INVESTMENT

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                      (B)
  $1,000         EVb AS OF             NUMBER OF                   AVERAGE ANNUAL
INVESTED - P      31-Dec-94            YEARS - n                COMPOUND RETURN - tb
- -------------    -----------           -----------           -------------------------

<S>              <C>                   <C>                   <C>
 11-Jul-84        $2,334.40                 10.47                        8.43%

</TABLE>

(C) AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS WITHOUT DEDUCTION FOR APPLICABLE
    SALES CHARGE  (NON STANDARD COMPUTATIONS)

(D) TOTAL RETURN WITHOUT DEDUCTION FOR APPLICABLE SALES CHARGE
    (NON STANDARD COMPUTATIONS)

                             _                              _
                            |        ______________________  |
FORMULA:                    |       |                        |
                            |  /\ n |          EV            |
                    t  =    |    \  |     -------------      |  - 1
                            |     \ |           P            |
                            |      \|                        |
                            |_                              _|

                                EV
                   TR  =    ----------   - 1
                                 P


             t = AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURN
                 (NO DEDUCTION FOR APPLICABLE SALES CHARGE)
             n = NUMBER OF YEARS
            EV = ENDING VALUE (NO DEDUCTION FOR APPLICABLE SALES CHARGE)
             P = INITIAL INVESTMENT
            TR = TOTAL RETURN (NO DEDUCTION FOR APPLICABLE SALES CHARGE)


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                          (D)                                                (C)
  $1,000         EV AS OF              TOTAL                 NUMBER OF                   AVERAGE ANNUAL
INVESTED - P      31-Dec-94            RETURN - TR           YEARS - n                    TOTAL RETURN - 1
- -------------    -----------           -----------           -----------------    -------------------------------
<S>              <C>                   <C>                   <C>

 31-Dec-93          $940.30                 -5.97%                          1                      -5.97%

 31-Dec-89        $1,310.30                 31.03%                          5                       5.55%

 31-Dec-84        $2,188.80                118.88%                     -85.00                      -0.92%

</TABLE>

(E)        GROWTH OF $10,000
(F)        GROWTH OF $50,000
(G)        GROWTH OF $100,000

FORMULA:   G= (TR+1)*P
           G= GROWTH OF INITIAL INVESTMENT
           P= INITIAL INVESTMENT
           TR= TOTAL RETURN SINCE INCEPTION

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                       (E)                       (F)                         (G)
$10,000          TOTAL                 GROWTH OF                 GROWTH OF                   GROWTH OF
INVESTED - P     RETURN - TR           $10,000 INVESTMENT - G    $50,000 INVESTMENT - G      $100,000 INVESTMENT - G
- -----------      -----------           -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>              <C>                   <C>                       <C>

 31-Dec-84           134.43%              $23,443                    $117,215                         $234,430

</TABLE>

<PAGE>

                   SCHEDULE OF COMPUTATION OF YIELD QUOTATION
                  DEAN WITTER CALIFORNIA TAX-FREE INCOME FUND
                  FOR THE 30-DAY PERIOD ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994


                              6
YIELD  =   2{[((a-b)/cd)+1] -1}


Where:    a = Dividends and interest earned during the period
          b = Expenses accrued for the period
          c = The average daily number of shares outstanding
              during the period that were entitled to receive
              dividends
          d = The maximum offering price per share on the last
              day of the period.

                                                           6
YIELD  =   2{[((5,287,107.17-1,084,106)/85,485,676*11.87)+1] -1}

                   5.02%


                        TAX EQUIVALENT YIELD

TAX EQUIVALENT YIELD = SEC Yield - (1 - stated tax rate)
                           = 5.02% / (1-.4624)
                             9.34%


<TABLE>

<S>                              <C>                      <C>    <C>        <C>
4,203,000.75/ 1,014,714,974.33 = 0.00414205058199718989 + 1.00 = 1.004142 = 1.025111
    1.02511 - 1.00             = 0.02511                x 2    = 0.050222
      5.02%

</TABLE>



<TABLE> <S> <C>

<PAGE>
<ARTICLE> 6
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   12-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          DEC-31-1994
<PERIOD-END>                               DEC-31-1994
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                      995,554,142
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                     987,736,407
<RECEIVABLES>                               23,498,767
<ASSETS-OTHER>                               1,251,376
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                                 0
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                           1,012,486,550
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                             0
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                    4,648,015
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                          4,648,015
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                      0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                 1,017,449,333
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                       84,921,168
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                       89,424,792
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                      148,816
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                               0
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                    (1,941,879)
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                             0
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                   (1,817,735)
<NET-ASSETS>                             1,007,838,535
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>                                    0
<INTEREST-INCOME>                           71,154,330
<OTHER-INCOME>                                       0
<EXPENSES-NET>                              14,625,306
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>                     56,529,024
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                   (1,886,812)
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>                (125,447,219)
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>                     (70,805,007)
<EQUALIZATION>                                       0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>                 (56,377,889)
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                   (2,061,346)
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                                0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                     10,564,887
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>               (17,736,216)
<SHARES-REINVESTED>                          2,667,705
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                   (181,989,293)
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>                    2,006,279
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>                          2,319
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>                           0
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>                        5,824,889
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                   0
<GROSS-EXPENSE>                             14,625,306
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>                     1,107,870,958
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                            13.31
<PER-SHARE-NII>                                   0.64
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                         (1.42)
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>                            (0.64)
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                       (0.02)
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                              11.87
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                   1.32
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                               0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                                 0
        

</TABLE>

<PAGE>

                                POWER OF ATTORNEY

     KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS, that each of JACK F. BENNETT, EDWIN J.
GARN, JOHN R. HAIRE, JOHN E. JEUCK, MANUEL H. JOHNSON, PAUL KOLTON and MICHAEL
E. NUGENT, whose signatures appear below, constitutes and appoints David M.
Butowsky, Ronald Feiman and Stuart Strauss, or any of them, his true and lawful
attorneys-in-fact and agents, with full power of substitution among himself and
each of the persons appointed herein, for him and in his name, place and stead,
in any and all capacities, to sign any amendments to any registration statement
of ANY OF THE DEAN WITTER FUNDS SET FORTH ON SCHEDULE A ATTACHED HERETO, and to
file the same, with all exhibits thereto, and other documents in connection
therewith, with the Securities and Exchange Commission, as fully to all intents
and purposes as he might or could do in person, hereby ratifying and confirming
all that said attorneys-in-fact and agents, or any of them, may lawfully do or
cause to be done by virtue hereof.


Dated: May 10, 1994

 /S/Jack F. Bennett                 /S/Manuel H. Johnson
- --------------------               ----------------------
    Jack F. Bennett                    Manuel H. Johnson


 /S/Edwin J. Garn                   /S/Paul Kolton
- --------------------               -----------------------
    Edwin J. Garn                      Paul Kolton

/S/John R. Haire                    /S/Michael E. Nugent
- --------------------               ------------------------
   John R. Haire                       Michael E. Nugent

 /S/John E. Jeuck
- --------------------
    John E. Jeuck

<PAGE>

                                DEAN WITTER FUNDS

MONEY MARKET

1.  Dean Witter Liquid Asset Fund Inc.
2.  Active Assets Money Trust
3.  Active Assets Tax-Free Trust
4.  Active Assets California Tax-Free Trust
5.  Active Assets Government Securities Trust
6.  Dean Witter Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
7.  Dean Witter U.S. Government Money Market Trust
8.  Dean Witter California Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
9.  Dean Witter New York Municipal Money Market Trust

EQUITY FUNDS

10.  Dean Witter American Value Fund
11.  Dean Witter Dividend Growth Securities Inc.
12.  Dean Witter Capital Growth Securities
13.  Dean Witter Natural Resource Development Securities Inc.
14.  Dean Witter Precious Metals & Minerals Trust
15.  Dean Witter Developing Growth Securities Trust
16.  Dean Witter World Wide Investment Trust
17.  Dean Witter Value-Added Market Series
18.  Dean Witter European Growth Fund Inc.
19.  Dean Witter Pacific Growth Fund Inc.
20.  Dean Witter Equity Income Trust
21.  Dean Witter Utilities Fund
22.  Dean Witter Health Sciences Trust
23.  Dean Witter Global Dividend Growth Securities

ASSET ALLOCATION FUNDS

24.  Dean Witter Managed Assets Trust
25.  Dean Witter Strategist Fund

FIXED-INCOME FUNDS

26. Dean Witter High Yield Securities Inc.
27. Dean Witter Convertible Securities Trust
28. Dean Witter Intermediate Income Securities
29. Dean Witter World Wide Income Trust
30. Dean Witter Global Short-Term Income Fund Inc.
31. Dean Witter Diversified Income Trust
32. Dean Witter Premier Income Trust
33. Dean Witter U.S. Government Securities Trust
34. Dean Witter Federal Securities Trust

<PAGE>

35. Dean Witter Short-Term U.S. Treasury Trust
36. Dean Witter Tax-Exempt Securities Trust
37. Dean Witter California Tax-Free Income Fund
38. Dean Witter New York Tax-Free Income Fund
39. Dean Witter Multi-State Municipal Series Trust
Arizona Series
California Series
Florida Series
Massachusetts Series
Michigan Series
Minnesota Series
New Jersey Series
New York Series
Ohio Series
Pennsylvania Series
40. Dean Witter Select Municipal Reinvestment Fund
41. Dean Witter Limited Term Municipal Trust

SPECIAL PURPOSE FUNDS

42. Dean Witter Variable Investment Series
Money Market Portfolio
Quality Income Plus Portfolio
High Yield Portfolio
Utilities Portfolio
Dividend Growth Portfolio
Capital Growth Portfolio
European Growth Portfolio
Equity Portfolio
Managed Assets Portfolio
43. Dean Witter Retirement Series
Liquid Asset Series
U.S. Government Money Market Series
U.S. Government Securities Series
Intermediate Income Securities Series
American Value Series
Capital Growth Series
Dividend Growth Series
Strategist Series
Utilities Series
Value-Added Market Series
Global Equity Series

<PAGE>

CLOSED-END FUNDS

44. High Income Advantage Trust
45. High Income Advantage Trust II
46. High Income Advantage Trust III
47. InterCapital Income Securities Inc.
48. Dean Witter Government Income Trust
49. InterCapital Insured Municipal Bond Trust
50. InterCapital Insured Municipal Trust
51. InterCapital Quality Municipal Investment Trust
52. InterCapital Quality Municipal Income Trust
53. Municipal Income Trust
54. Municipal Income Trust II
55. Municipal Income Trust III
56. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust
57. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust II
58. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust III
59. Municipal Premium Income Trust
60. Prime Income Trust
61. InterCapital Insured Municipal Income Trust
62. InterCapital California Insured Municipal Income Trust
63. InterCapital Quality Municipal Securities
64. InterCapital California Quality Municipal Securities
65. InterCapital New York Quality Municipal Securities

<PAGE>

                                POWER OF ATTORNEY



     KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS that MICHAEL BOZIC, whose signature appears
below, constitutes and appoints David M. Butowsky, Ronald Feiman and Stuart
Strauss, or any of them, his true and lawful attorneys-in-fact and agents, with
full power of substitution among himself and each of the persons appointed
herein, for him and in his name, place and stead, in any and all capacities, to
sign any amendments to any registration statement of ANY OF THE DEAN WITTER
FUNDS SET FORTH ON SCHEDULE A ATTACHED HERETO, and to file the same, with all
exhibits thereto, and other documents in connection therewith, with the
Securities and Exchange Commission, as fully to all intents and purposes as he
might or could do in person, hereby ratifying and confirming all that said
attorneys-in-fact and agents, or any of them, may lawfully do or cause to be
done by virtue hereof.


Dated: April 15, 1994




/S/ Michael Bozic
- ------------------
    Michael Bozic

<PAGE>

                                DEAN WITTER FUNDS

MONEY MARKET

1.  Dean Witter Liquid Asset Fund Inc.
2.  Active Assets Money Trust
3.  Active Assets Tax-Free Trust
4.  Active Assets California Tax-Free Trust
5.  Active Assets Government Securities Trust
6.  Dean Witter Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
7.  Dean Witter U.S. Government Money Market Trust
8.  Dean Witter California Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
9.  Dean Witter New York Municipal Money Market Trust

EQUITY FUNDS

10.  Dean Witter American Value Fund
11.  Dean Witter Dividend Growth Securities Inc.
12.  Dean Witter Capital Growth Securities
13.  Dean Witter Natural Resource Development Securities Inc.
14.  Dean Witter Precious Metals & Minerals Trust
15.  Dean Witter Developing Growth Securities Trust
16.  Dean Witter World Wide Investment Trust
17.  Dean Witter Value-Added Market Series
18.  Dean Witter European Growth Fund Inc.
19.  Dean Witter Pacific Growth Fund Inc.
20.  Dean Witter Equity Income Trust
21.  Dean Witter Utilities Fund
22.  Dean Witter Health Sciences Trust
23.  Dean Witter Global Dividend Growth Securities
24.  Dean Witter Global Utilities Fund

ASSET ALLOCATION FUNDS

25.  Dean Witter Managed Assets Trust
26.  Dean Witter Strategist Fund

FIXED-INCOME FUNDS

27. Dean Witter High Yield Securities Inc.
28. Dean Witter Convertible Securities Trust
29. Dean Witter Intermediate Income Securities
30. Dean Witter World Wide Income Trust
31. Dean Witter Global Short-Term Income Fund Inc.
32. Dean Witter Diversified Income Trust
33. Dean Witter Premier Income Trust
34. Dean Witter U.S. Government Securities Trust
35. Dean Witter Federal Securities Trust

<PAGE>

36. Dean Witter Short-Term U.S. Treasury Trust
37. Dean Witter Tax-Exempt Securities Trust
38. Dean Witter California Tax-Free Income Fund
39. Dean Witter New York Tax-Free Income Fund
40. Dean Witter Multi-State Municipal Series Trust
Arizona Series
California Series
Florida Series
Massachusetts Series
Michigan Series
Minnesota Series
New Jersey Series
New York Series
Ohio Series
Pennsylvania Series
41. Dean Witter Select Municipal Reinvestment Fund
42. Dean Witter Limited Term Municipal Trust
43. Dean Witter Short-Term Bond Fund

SPECIAL PURPOSE FUNDS

44. Dean Witter Variable Investment Series
Money Market Portfolio
Quality Income Plus Portfolio
High Yield Portfolio
Utilities Portfolio
Dividend Growth Portfolio
Capital Growth Portfolio
European Growth Portfolio
Equity Portfolio
Managed Assets Portfolio
45. Dean Witter Retirement Series
Liquid Asset Series
U.S. Government Money Market Series
U.S. Government Securities Series
Intermediate Income Securities Series
American Value Series
Capital Growth Series
Dividend Growth Series
Strategist Series
Utilities Series
Value-Added Market Series
Global Equity Series

<PAGE>

CLOSED-END FUNDS

46. High Income Advantage Trust
47. High Income Advantage Trust II
48. High Income Advantage Trust III
49. InterCapital Income Securities Inc.
50. Dean Witter Government Income Trust
51. InterCapital Insured Municipal Bond Trust
52. InterCapital Insured Municipal Trust
53. InterCapital Quality Municipal Investment Trust
54. InterCapital Quality Municipal Income Trust
55. Municipal Income Trust
56. Municipal Income Trust II
57. Municipal Income Trust III
58. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust
59. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust II
60. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust III
61. Municipal Premium Income Trust
62. Prime Income Trust
63. InterCapital Insured Municipal Income Trust
64. InterCapital California Insured Municipal Income Trust
65. InterCapital Quality Municipal Securities
66. InterCapital California Quality Municipal Securities
67. InterCapital New York Quality Municipal Securities
68. InterCapital California Insured Municipal Securities
69. InterCapital Insured Municipal Securities

<PAGE>

                                POWER OF ATTORNEY




     KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS, that each of CHARLES A. FIUMEFREDDO and
EDWARD R. TELLING, whose signatures appear below, constitutes and appoints
Sheldon Curtis, Marilyn K. Cranney and Barry Fink, or any of them, his true and
lawful attorneys-in-fact and agent, with full power of substitution among
himself and each of the persons appointed herein, for him and in his name, place
and stead, in any and all capacities, to sign any amendments to any registration
statement of ANY OF THE DEAN WITTER FUNDS SET FORTH ON SCHEDULE A ATTACHED
HERETO, and to file the same, with all exhibits thereto, and other documents in
connection therewith, with the Securities and Exchange Commission, as fully to
all intents and purposes as he might or could do in person, hereby ratifying and
confirming all that said attorneys-in-fact and agents, or any of them, may
lawfully do or cause to be done by virtue hereof.


Dated: May 10, 1994






  /S/Charles A. Fiumefreddo             /S/Edward R. Telling
- ---------------------------             --------------------
     Charles A. Fiumefreddo                Edward R. Telling

<PAGE>

                             DEAN WITTER FUNDS

MONEY MARKET

1.  Dean Witter Liquid Asset Fund Inc.
2.  Active Assets Money Trust
3.  Active Assets Tax-Free Trust
4.  Active Assets California Tax-Free Trust
5.  Active Assets Government Securities Trust
6.  Dean Witter Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
7.  Dean Witter U.S. Government Money Market Trust
8.  Dean Witter California Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
9.  Dean Witter New York Municipal Money Market Trust

EQUITY FUNDS

10.  Dean Witter American Value Fund
11.  Dean Witter Dividend Growth Securities Inc.
12.  Dean Witter Capital Growth Securities
13.  Dean Witter Natural Resource Development Securities Inc.
14.  Dean Witter Precious Metals & Minerals Trust
15.  Dean Witter Developing Growth Securities Trust
16.  Dean Witter World Wide Investment Trust
17.  Dean Witter Value-Added Market Series
18.  Dean Witter European Growth Fund Inc.
19.  Dean Witter Pacific Growth Fund Inc.
20.  Dean Witter Equity Income Trust
21.  Dean Witter Utilities Fund
22.  Dean Witter Health Sciences Trust
23.  Dean Witter Global Dividend Growth Securities

ASSET ALLOCATION FUNDS

24.  Dean Witter Managed Assets Trust
25.  Dean Witter Strategist Fund

FIXED-INCOME FUNDS

26. Dean Witter High Yield Securities Inc.
27. Dean Witter Convertible Securities Trust
28. Dean Witter Intermediate Income Securities
29. Dean Witter World Wide Income Trust
30. Dean Witter Global Short-Term Income Fund Inc.
31. Dean Witter Diversified Income Trust
32. Dean Witter Premier Income Trust
33. Dean Witter U.S. Government Securities Trust
34. Dean Witter Federal Securities Trust

<PAGE>

35. Dean Witter Short-Term U.S. Treasury Trust
36. Dean Witter Tax-Exempt Securities Trust
37. Dean Witter California Tax-Free Income Fund
38. Dean Witter New York Tax-Free Income Fund
39. Dean Witter Multi-State Municipal Series Trust
Arizona Series
California Series
Florida Series
Massachusetts Series
Michigan Series
Minnesota Series
New Jersey Series
New York Series
Ohio Series
Pennsylvania Series
40. Dean Witter Select Municipal Reinvestment Fund
41. Dean Witter Limited Term Municipal Trust

SPECIAL PURPOSE FUNDS

42. Dean Witter Variable Investment Series
Money Market Portfolio
Quality Income Plus Portfolio
High Yield Portfolio
Utilities Portfolio
Dividend Growth Portfolio
Capital Growth Portfolio
European Growth Portfolio
Equity Portfolio
Managed Assets Portfolio
43. Dean Witter Retirement Series
Liquid Asset Series
U.S. Government Money Market Series
U.S. Government Securities Series
Intermediate Income Securities Series
American Value Series
Capital Growth Series
Dividend Growth Series
Strategist Series
Utilities Series
Value-Added Market Series
Global Equity Series

<PAGE>

CLOSED-END FUNDS

44. High Income Advantage Trust
45. High Income Advantage Trust II
46. High Income Advantage Trust III
47. InterCapital Income Securities Inc.
48. Dean Witter Government Income Trust
49. InterCapital Insured Municipal Bond Trust
50. InterCapital Insured Municipal Trust
51. InterCapital Quality Municipal Investment Trust
52. InterCapital Quality Municipal Income Trust
53. Municipal Income Trust
54. Municipal Income Trust II
55. Municipal Income Trust III
56. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust
57. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust II
58. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust III
59. Municipal Premium Income Trust
60. Prime Income Trust
61. InterCapital Insured Municipal Income Trust
62. InterCapital California Insured Municipal Income Trust
63. InterCapital Quality Municipal Securities
64. InterCapital California Quality Municipal Securities
65. InterCapital New York Quality Municipal Securities

<PAGE>

                                POWER OF ATTORNEY




     KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS, that PHILIP J. PURCELL, whose signature
appears below, constitutes and appoints Sheldon Curtis, Marilyn K. Cranney and
Barry Fink, or any of them, his true and lawful attorneys-in-fact and agents,
with full power of substitution among himself and each of the persons appointed
herein, for him and in his name, place and stead, in any and all capacities, to
sign any amendments to any registration statement of ANY OF THE DEAN WITTER
FUNDS SET FORTH ON SCHEDULE A ATTACHED HERETO, and to file the same, with all
exhibits thereto, and other documents in connection therewith, with the
Securities and Exchange Commission, as fully to all intents and purposes as he
might or could do in person, hereby ratifying and confirming all that said
attorneys-in-fact and agents, or any of them, may lawfully do or cause to be
done by virtue hereof.


Dated: April 8, 1994






 /S/ Philip J. Purcell
- -----------------------
     Philip J. Purcell

<PAGE>

                                DEAN WITTER FUNDS

MONEY MARKET

1.  Dean Witter Liquid Asset Fund Inc.
2.  Active Assets Money Trust
3.  Active Assets Tax-Free Trust
4.  Active Assets California Tax-Free Trust
5.  Active Assets Government Securities Trust
6.  Dean Witter Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
7.  Dean Witter U.S. Government Money Market Trust
8.  Dean Witter California Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
9.  Dean Witter New York Municipal Money Market Trust

EQUITY FUNDS

10.  Dean Witter American Value Fund
11.  Dean Witter Dividend Growth Securities Inc.
12.  Dean Witter Capital Growth Securities
13.  Dean Witter Natural Resource Development Securities Inc.
14.  Dean Witter Precious Metals & Minerals Trust
15.  Dean Witter Developing Growth Securities Trust
16.  Dean Witter World Wide Investment Trust
17.  Dean Witter Value-Added Market Series
18.  Dean Witter European Growth Fund Inc.
19.  Dean Witter Pacific Growth Fund Inc.
20.  Dean Witter Equity Income Trust
21.  Dean Witter Utilities Fund
22.  Dean Witter Health Sciences Trust
23.  Dean Witter Global Dividend Growth Securities
24.  Dean Witter Global Utilities Fund

ASSET ALLOCATION FUNDS

25.  Dean Witter Managed Assets Trust
26.  Dean Witter Strategist Fund

FIXED-INCOME FUNDS

27. Dean Witter High Yield Securities Inc.
28. Dean Witter Convertible Securities Trust
29. Dean Witter Intermediate Income Securities
30. Dean Witter World Wide Income Trust
31. Dean Witter Global Short-Term Income Fund Inc.
32. Dean Witter Diversified Income Trust
33. Dean Witter Premier Income Trust
34. Dean Witter U.S. Government Securities Trust
35. Dean Witter Federal Securities Trust

<PAGE>

36. Dean Witter Short-Term U.S. Treasury Trust
37. Dean Witter Tax-Exempt Securities Trust
38. Dean Witter California Tax-Free Income Fund
39. Dean Witter New York Tax-Free Income Fund
40. Dean Witter Multi-State Municipal Series Trust
Arizona Series
California Series
Florida Series
Massachusetts Series
Michigan Series
Minnesota Series
New Jersey Series
New York Series
Ohio Series
Pennsylvania Series
41. Dean Witter Select Municipal Reinvestment Fund
42. Dean Witter Limited Term Municipal Trust
43. Dean Witter Short-Term Bond Fund

SPECIAL PURPOSE FUNDS

44. Dean Witter Variable Investment Series
Money Market Portfolio
Quality Income Plus Portfolio
High Yield Portfolio
Utilities Portfolio
Dividend Growth Portfolio
Capital Growth Portfolio
European Growth Portfolio
Equity Portfolio
Managed Assets Portfolio
45. Dean Witter Retirement Series
Liquid Asset Series
U.S. Government Money Market Series
U.S. Government Securities Series
Intermediate Income Securities Series
American Value Series
Capital Growth Series
Dividend Growth Series
Strategist Series
Utilities Series
Value-Added Market Series
Global Equity Series

<PAGE>

CLOSED-END FUNDS

46. High Income Advantage Trust
47. High Income Advantage Trust II
48. High Income Advantage Trust III
49. InterCapital Income Securities Inc.
50. Dean Witter Government Income Trust
51. InterCapital Insured Municipal Bond Trust
52. InterCapital Insured Municipal Trust
53. InterCapital Quality Municipal Investment Trust
54. InterCapital Quality Municipal Income Trust
55. Municipal Income Trust
56. Municipal Income Trust II
57. Municipal Income Trust III
58. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust
59. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust II
60. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust III
61. Municipal Premium Income Trust
62. Prime Income Trust
63. InterCapital Insured Municipal Income Trust
64. InterCapital California Insured Municipal Income Trust
65. InterCapital Quality Municipal Securities
66. InterCapital California Quality Municipal Securities
67. InterCapital New York Quality Municipal Securities
68. InterCapital California Insured Municipal Securities
69. InterCapital Insured Municipal Securities

<PAGE>

                                POWER OF ATTORNEY



     KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS, that JOHN L. SCHROEDER, whose signature
appears below, constitutes and appoints David M. Butowsky, Ronald Feiman and
Stuart Strauss, or any of them, his true and lawful attorneys-in-fact and
agents, with full power of substitution among himself and each of the persons
appointed herein, for him and in his name, place and stead, in any and all
capacities, to sign any amendments to any registration statement of ANY OF THE
DEAN WITTER FUNDS SET FORTH ON SCHEDULE A ATTACHED HERETO, and to file the same,
with all exhibits thereto, and other documents in connection therewith, with the
Securities and Exchange Commission, as fully to all intents and purposes as he
might or could do in person, hereby ratifying and confirming all that said
attorneys-in-fact and agents, or any of them, may lawfully do or cause to be
done by virtue hereof.


Dated: April 13, 1994




/S/ John L. Schroeder
- ----------------------
    John L. Schroeder

<PAGE>

                                DEAN WITTER FUNDS

MONEY MARKET

1.  Dean Witter Liquid Asset Fund Inc.
2.  Active Assets Money Trust
3.  Active Assets Tax-Free Trust
4.  Active Assets California Tax-Free Trust
5.  Active Assets Government Securities Trust
6.  Dean Witter Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
7.  Dean Witter U.S. Government Money Market Trust
8.  Dean Witter California Tax-Free Daily Income Trust
9.  Dean Witter New York Municipal Money Market Trust

EQUITY FUNDS

10.  Dean Witter American Value Fund
11.  Dean Witter Dividend Growth Securities Inc.
12.  Dean Witter Capital Growth Securities
13.  Dean Witter Natural Resource Development Securities Inc.
14.  Dean Witter Precious Metals & Minerals Trust
15.  Dean Witter Developing Growth Securities Trust
16.  Dean Witter World Wide Investment Trust
17.  Dean Witter Value-Added Market Series
18.  Dean Witter European Growth Fund Inc.
19.  Dean Witter Pacific Growth Fund Inc.
20.  Dean Witter Equity Income Trust
21.  Dean Witter Utilities Fund
22.  Dean Witter Health Sciences Trust
23.  Dean Witter Global Dividend Growth Securities
24.  Dean Witter Global Utilities Fund

ASSET ALLOCATION FUNDS

25.  Dean Witter Managed Assets Trust
26.  Dean Witter Strategist Fund

FIXED-INCOME FUNDS

27. Dean Witter High Yield Securities Inc.
28. Dean Witter Convertible Securities Trust
29. Dean Witter Intermediate Income Securities
30. Dean Witter World Wide Income Trust
31. Dean Witter Global Short-Term Income Fund Inc.
32. Dean Witter Diversified Income Trust
33. Dean Witter Premier Income Trust
34. Dean Witter U.S. Government Securities Trust
35. Dean Witter Federal Securities Trust

<PAGE>

36. Dean Witter Short-Term U.S. Treasury Trust
37. Dean Witter Tax-Exempt Securities Trust
38. Dean Witter California Tax-Free Income Fund
39. Dean Witter New York Tax-Free Income Fund
40. Dean Witter Multi-State Municipal Series Trust
Arizona Series
California Series
Florida Series
Massachusetts Series
Michigan Series
Minnesota Series
New Jersey Series
New York Series
Ohio Series
Pennsylvania Series
41. Dean Witter Select Municipal Reinvestment Fund
42. Dean Witter Limited Term Municipal Trust
43. Dean Witter Short-Term Bond Fund

SPECIAL PURPOSE FUNDS

44. Dean Witter Variable Investment Series
Money Market Portfolio
Quality Income Plus Portfolio
High Yield Portfolio
Utilities Portfolio
Dividend Growth Portfolio
Capital Growth Portfolio
European Growth Portfolio
Equity Portfolio
Managed Assets Portfolio
45. Dean Witter Retirement Series
Liquid Asset Series
U.S. Government Money Market Series
U.S. Government Securities Series
Intermediate Income Securities Series
American Value Series
Capital Growth Series
Dividend Growth Series
Strategist Series
Utilities Series
Value-Added Market Series
Global Equity Series

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CLOSED-END FUNDS

46. High Income Advantage Trust
47. High Income Advantage Trust II
48. High Income Advantage Trust III
49. InterCapital Income Securities Inc.
50. Dean Witter Government Income Trust
51. InterCapital Insured Municipal Bond Trust
52. InterCapital Insured Municipal Trust
53. InterCapital Quality Municipal Investment Trust
54. InterCapital Quality Municipal Income Trust
55. Municipal Income Trust
56. Municipal Income Trust II
57. Municipal Income Trust III
58. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust
59. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust II
60. Municipal Income Opportunities Trust III
61. Municipal Premium Income Trust
62. Prime Income Trust
63. InterCapital Insured Municipal Income Trust
64. InterCapital California Insured Municipal Income Trust
65. InterCapital Quality Municipal Securities
66. InterCapital California Quality Municipal Securities
67. InterCapital New York Quality Municipal Securities
68. InterCapital California Insured Municipal Securities
69. InterCapital Insured Municipal Securities




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