P. v. Gerrue CA3 ( 2013 )


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  • Filed 7/24/13 P. v. Gerrue CA3
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
    (Butte)
    ----
    THE PEOPLE,                                                                                  C071020
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                    (Super. Ct. No. CM032537)
    v.
    WARREN ALLEN GERRUE,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    In an ordeal lasting four days, defendant Warren Allen Gerrue imprisoned and
    severely beat his girlfriend, M. A jury found defendant guilty of torture, false
    imprisonment by violence, criminal threats, and corporal injury upon a cohabitant with
    great bodily injury. The court sentenced him to an indeterminate term of seven years to
    life plus a determinate term of four years.
    On appeal, defendant raises nine issues relating to the evidence, instructions, and
    sentence. Agreeing with one -- the trial court erred in failing to stay the punishment for
    corporal injury in light of his punishment for torture -- we modify the sentence and affirm
    the judgment as modified.
    1
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    A
    The Prosecution’s Case
    Defendant and M. had been in an on-and-off-again relationship since October
    2008. While the two were dating, M. also had a sexual relationship with another man.
    Sometime after Valentine’s Day 2010, M. told defendant she had cheated on him.
    Defendant said he was “going to treat [her] like crap for a couple months.” On a number
    of occasions after that conversation, he choked and suffocated her. Once, he threw her
    off the bed onto the ground, and the side of her face hit the tile floor, causing injuries.
    When defendant’s friend saw the bruises on M.’s face, M. told the friend M. had punched
    herself.
    On the afternoon of Friday, May 21, 2010, the abuse in the charged case began.
    Defendant told M. he was having some friends over and asked her to remain with her son
    in her son’s bedroom. M. complied. Some time later, defendant came into her son’s
    room and lay down on the bunk bed with M. M. asked, “ ‘What, is there some girl in my
    bed?’ ” Defendant responded, “ ‘No. Shut the hell up.’ ” But M. “wouldn’t really shut
    up,” so defendant “climbed on top of [her] and he pushed his thumbs into [her]
    eyeballs . . . . [I]t really hurt.” He also put his hands over her nose and mouth,
    suffocating her.
    Later that afternoon, when M. disobeyed defendant’s order not to get up from a
    couch where she was watching television with her son, defendant grabbed her by the hair
    and threw her in her son’s bedroom. He then asked her if she had been cheating on him
    the week before when she said she had been visiting a girlfriend. She kept saying “no,”
    and defendant kept slapping her. In an effort to stop the abuse, M. lied and said she
    recently had cheated on defendant. Defendant said, “ ‘You stupid fucking bitch,’ ” and
    handcuffed her to the bunk bed. He then choked her with an extension cord until she
    thought she passed out. He also gagged her with a sock and put some duct tape around
    2
    her head and then left the room. He came back a while later and “whipp[ed] [her] over
    and over on the back with [the extension cord], asking [her] questions the whole time
    about [her lover].” After he “calmed down a little bit,” defendant allowed M. outside to
    smoke a cigarette, but he said he would stab anybody who came over if she ran away.
    After she came back inside, defendant again handcuffed M. to the bunk bed. As night
    fell, defendant caught M. trying to escape through her son’s bedroom window, so he
    reapplied the handcuffs much tighter.
    The next day, Saturday, May 22, 2010, defendant took off the handcuffs so M.
    could use the bathroom. He then made her eat a hairball. He allowed her to take a
    shower but would not let her get dressed when she finished. He told her he was going to
    the hardware store to buy six buckets “to chop [her] into little pieces and put . . . [her] and
    [her son] in the buckets.” By this time, M.’s face was extremely swollen, she had a big
    black eye, and her entire body hurt badly. When M. heard a car horn, defendant
    announced his ride was here. He handcuffed M. to the bed and left. M. unsuccessfully
    screamed for help.
    When defendant returned, he took off M.’s handcuffs and let her sit on the couch.
    But he started whipping her over and over again on her back and kicking her over and
    over again on her face. Because she “couldn’t stand it anymore,” she curled up in a fetal
    position, so defendant repeatedly hit her in the legs.
    That night, they slept together because defendant said “he would never do this
    again, that his dad used to hit his mom, and that he wasn’t going to hurt [her] anymore.”
    Defendant did not keep his promise, though, and he stood up on the bed, braced himself
    with his hands on the ceiling, and kicked her repeatedly, while he asked her questions
    about her lover. M. ended up with a big bruise on her right hip.
    On Sunday, May 23, 2010, defendant came into M.’s son’s bedroom, where
    defendant had again handcuffed M. to the bed. He told M., “there’s just no way to get to
    you. I can’t get to you. What am I going to have to do? I think I’m going to have to hurt
    3
    [your son] to get to you.’” He took a plastic bag and his “beating stick” to where M.’s
    son had been sleeping and said, “Hey, [M.’s son], do you want to get in this plastic bag?”
    M. “heard the bag rustling around” and was “so scared” she urinated on the floor. When
    it was time to go to bed, defendant stood over her with his “beating stick” and told her
    that if she fell asleep, she “was going to wake up to [her] face being bashed in.” She fell
    asleep anyway while defendant was questioning her about her lover.
    On Monday, May 24, 2010, M. made her escape. While defendant was asleep, M.
    got up, got dressed, and ran out of the house. She banged on the door of a neighbor and
    then a friend. They both called police. M. went to the hospital. She had extensive
    bruising all over her body. She had to relearn to walk, but her balance is still off. She
    cannot write well anymore. She has serious damage to her eyes.
    Forensic pathologist Thomas Resk reviewed pictures of M.’s injuries and
    concluded they were recent because the skin was still shiny and swollen and was yellow
    and bluish in color. They were not self-inflicted because of the horizontal direction in
    which force marks appeared on M.’s body, and the lack of indicia in her nail beds that
    she had scraped or abraded herself. Many of the injuries were likely inflicted at a time
    M. was restrained because of the presence of restraint marks on her wrists and the lack of
    defensive wounds.
    At the time of trial, M. was staying in a drug treatment rehabilitation program that
    was paid for by the district attorney’s office. The office was paying for her to be in the
    drug treatment program “[b]ecause they want[ed] [her] to get clean.” The office knew
    she “wanted to go to rehab” but that she “didn’t have any money.”
    B
    The Defense
    The defense was that M.’s wounds were self-inflicted.
    Defendant presented evidence he was doing landscaping work at a house from
    3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. on May 21, 2010. He also presented evidence that M.
    4
    intentionally cut and scarred herself on her arms when she was 12 years old, had
    purposefully “throw[n] herself into the washer and dryer” “when she g[o]t[] frustrated
    with [defendant],” and had told defendant’s friend that she (M.) had actually punched
    herself in the past, causing bruising.
    DISCUSSION
    I
    The Trial Court Was Correct In Not Giving
    A Unanimity Instruction Regarding Torture
    Defendant contends the trial court erred in failing to give a sua sponte instruction
    on unanimity for the great bodily injury element of torture.1 He claims there were four
    separate incidents defendant perpetrated that could have caused the great bodily injury
    element required for a torture conviction: (1) putting his thumbs into M.’s eyeballs;
    (2) strangling her with an extension cord; (3) whipping her back with the cord; and
    (4) kicking and whipping her, bruising her right hip. We disagree that a unanimity
    instruction was required because the case was charged and tried as a course of conduct
    crime.
    In People v. Hamlin (2009) 
    170 Cal.App.4th 1412
    , this court held that a defendant
    may commit torture by way of a course of conduct, rather than through a discrete act.
    (Id. at p. 1429 [“Just as child, spousal, and animal abuse can be committed by a course of
    conduct rather than a single act, so can torture”].) We applied this holding in considering
    a defendant’s claim that “the jury had to find not only that he acted with the intent to
    cause extreme pain, but that the action he undertook with that intent was one that in fact
    caused great bodily injury.” (Id. at p. 1431.) In rejecting this argument, we reasoned:
    1      The jury was instructed that the great bodily injury element for torture was “the
    defendant inflicted great bodily injury on someone else” and defined it as “significant or
    substantial physical injury. It is an injury that is greater than minor or moderate harm.”
    5
    “Defendant’s argument presumes that each act of violence he committed on [the victim]
    must be analyzed separately to determine if there was evidence that particular act was
    committed with the intent to cause severe pain and evidence that particular act resulted in
    great bodily injury. This is incorrect. Where, as here, torture is charged and tried as a
    course of conduct crime, such analysis is unnecessary. The question for the jury was not
    whether [the victim] suffered great bodily injury from a particular act defendant
    committed on a particular day with the intent to cause her severe pain. Rather, the
    question was whether, with that intent, defendant engaged in a course of conduct toward
    [the victim] that resulted in great bodily injury. As long as the jury could reasonably find
    that defendant had the requisite intent when he engaged in the course of conduct, and that
    the course of conduct resulted in great bodily injury, then the evidence is sufficient to
    support a torture conviction.” (Ibid.)
    As in Hamlin, the record here demonstrates the crime of torture was charged and
    tried as a course of conduct crime. The complaint charged defendant with torture “[o]n
    or about and between May 21, 2010, and May 24, 2010.” And the People so argued to
    the jury, specifically noting that defendant whipped, kicked and punched her “all over her
    body for a four-day period.” Thus, the People’s election to proceed on a continuous
    course of conduct theory obviated the need for a unanimity instruction. (People v.
    Jennings (2010) 
    50 Cal.4th 616
    , 627, 680 [relying on Hamlin to hold that the trial court
    was not required to give a unanimity instruction for a torture special circumstance finding
    where the prosecutor proceeded on a “ ‘course of conduct’ ” theory].)
    II
    The Trial Court Was Correct In Not Giving A Unanimity Instruction
    Regarding Inflicting Corporal Injury Upon A Cohabitant
    In an argument he describes as “parallel[]” to his first, defendant contends the trial
    court erred in failing to give a sua sponte instruction on unanimity for the traumatic
    6
    injury element of inflicting corporal injury upon a cohabitant.2 Given defendant’s
    argument, our analysis is parallel to our first as well.
    The record here demonstrates the crime of inflicting corporal injury was charged
    and tried as a course of conduct crime. The complaint charged defendant with corporal
    injury to a cohabitant “[o]n or about and between May 21, 2010, and May 24, 2010.”
    And the People so argued to the jury, noting that the evidence of injury for the corporal
    injury count was the same as the great bodily injury. Thus, the People’s election to
    proceed on a continuous course of conduct theory obviated the need for a unanimity
    instruction. (See People v. Jennings, 
    supra,
     50 Cal.4th at p. 680.)
    III
    The Court Was Within Its Discretion To Deny The Defense Motion For Mistrial Premised
    On Prosecutorial Misconduct; Defendant’s Contentions Regarding His Motions For
    Continuance Or Recusal Of The District Attorney’s Office Were Abandoned By His
    Failure To Press The Court For A Ruling
    Defendant contends the trial court abused its discretion in denying his mistrial
    motion, continuance motion, and recusal motion that were premised on evidence that the
    People had paid for M.’s stay in a drug rehabilitation program during trial.
    A
    Factual Background
    Before jury selection had ended, the People informed defense counsel they had
    paid for M.’s stay in a rehabilitation facility for a week before trial. The payment was for
    room and board and one week’s worth of meals. Defense counsel moved for a mistrial,
    2      The jury was instructed that defendant had to “willfully inflict[] a physical injury
    on his cohabitant” that “resulted in a traumatic condition.” “A ‘traumatic condition’ is a
    wound or other bodily injury, whether minor or serious, caused by the direct application
    of physical force.”
    7
    recusal of the district attorney’s office from the case, or a continuance of trial. Defense
    counsel specifically noted he was “not going to levy that accusation of this prosecutor or
    his office have made their payment of rehab contingent upon any sort of content in [M.’s]
    testimony.” Instead, defense counsel’s position was that the “mere act” of paying for
    M.’s rehabilitation would cause M. “to feel a sense of obligation for those who are paying
    for her treatment.”
    The court denied the motion for mistrial because it was reasonable for the People
    to house M. “in a facility that is more likely to ensure the production of the complaining
    witness . . . instead of leaving a drug-addicted person in a hotel room unattended on the
    eve of trial.” “Those actions by the district attorney, having been disclosed timely, then
    subject the witness to proper cross-examination. That examination and the jury
    instruction on the issue . . . then leaves [defendant] in a position of receiving a fair trial.”
    The court did not address either the continuance or recusal motions.
    During direct examination of M., the People elicited from M. that she was staying
    “in rehab” that was paid for by the “DA.” During cross-examination, defense counsel
    elicited from M. that the district attorney’s office was paying for her to be in the drug
    treatment program “[b]ecause they want[ed] [her] to get clean.” The office knew that she
    “wanted to go to rehab” but that she “didn’t have any money.”
    B
    Defendant’s Contentions Regarding The Continuance And Recusal Were Abandoned;
    The Court Was Within Its Discretion To Deny The Mistrial Motion
    Defendant contends the trial court abused its discretion by denying the motion for
    mistrial or the alternative motions for continuance or recusal.
    We begin by addressing the motions for continuance or recusal. It is a “long-
    established rule that where a court, through inadvertence or neglect, neither rules nor
    reserves its ruling, the party who objected or made the motion must make an effort to
    have the court actually rule, and that when the point is not pressed and is forgotten the
    8
    party will be deemed to have waived or abandoned the point and may not raise the issue
    on appeal.” (People v. Brewer (2000) 
    81 Cal.App.4th 442
    , 461.) Here, defendant never
    pressed the trial court to rule on his motions for continuance or recusal, and the court
    never ruled on them. “Defendant is thus precluded from obtaining appellate review of
    these issues.” (Id. at p. 462.)
    Defendant’s contention regarding his motion for mistrial fares no better. His
    argument is that “the prosecutor created a motivation for [M.] to testify in conformity
    with the prosecution’s case.” He continues that “[a] payment like this undoubtedly falls
    within the prohibition against use of deceptive or reprehensible methods to persuade a
    jury.” He bases his argument, as he did in the trial court, on what he claims was a
    violation of legal ethics, specifically, State Bar Rules of Professional Conduct, rule 5-
    310(B) which states, “A member shall not: [¶] . . . (B) Directly or indirectly pay, offer to
    pay, or acquiesce in the payment of compensation to a witness contingent upon the
    content of the witness’s testimony or the outcome of the case.” Defendant argues “[a]
    mistrial should have been granted to disapprove of this violation of legal ethics.”
    The court did not abuse its discretion in denying the mistrial motion because there
    was no evidence the prosecutor’s payment of M.’s drug rehabilitation was “contingent
    upon the content of the witness’s testimony or the outcome of the case.” (Rules of Prof.
    Conduct, rule 5-310(B); see also People v. Silva (2001) 
    25 Cal.4th 345
    , 372 [standard of
    review for mistrial motions].) Defense counsel stated, “I am not going to levy that
    accusation of this prosecutor or his office hav[ing] made their payment of rehab
    contingent upon any sort of content in [M.’s] testimony.” As such, there was no violation
    of the rules of professional conduct, and thus, defendant’s argument lacks merit.
    9
    IV
    Defendant Has Forfeited His Appellate Contention Regarding The Admissibility Of
    Evidence That M. Gave Her Grandfather A Marijuana-Laced Cookie
    Defendant contends the trial court erred in excluding evidence that M. had given
    her grandfather a marijuana-laced cookie because M. “had a reason to exaggerate and
    alter her testimony, as a means of avoiding prosecution on the new allegation.”
    Defendant has forfeited this contention by failing to raise this theory in the trial court.
    In the trial court, defense counsel told the court the prosecutor told him M. was
    being investigated for giving her grandfather a marijuana-laced cookie and the conduct
    could amount to elder abuse. Defense counsel argued the evidence was “potentially
    Brady[3] material” and was “relevant towards impeachment of [M.] as a witness.” The
    prosecutor responded, “this is not something that the DA’s office is pursuing in any way,
    shape, or form.” There was not enough evidence to pursue the case and “Brady does not
    require disclosure of rumors, theories, or mere speculations.” Later, defense counsel
    argued M. “has potentially a crime of moral turpitude that she’s being investigated for . . .
    I think it’s a relevant area of inquiry.” When the court asked, “[i]n what way would the
    conduct bear on the credibility of [M.],” defense counsel responded, “Well, [M.],
    according to the [police] report, [M.] leaves rehab with a bag of pot cookies and gives
    one to her grandfather. She is a known drug user. She’s an admitted user of marijuana.
    [¶] For her to indicate that she doesn’t know that the cookies have marijuana in them is
    highly suspect in that she’s a marijuana user. I highly doubt that she was unaware of that
    conduct. I think it absolutely goes to her credibility.”4
    3      Brady v. Maryland (1963) 
    373 U.S. 83
     [
    10 L.Ed.2d 215
    ].
    4     The court noted the police report did not state M. was interviewed. “The
    statement attributed to her comes through another party.”
    10
    Now on appeal, defendant has switched theories of admissibility, claiming the
    evidence was relevant because M. “had a reason to exaggerate and alter her testimony, as
    a means of avoiding prosecution on the new allegation.” Nowhere has defendant pointed
    us to where he argued this theory of admissibility in the trial court, and our review of the
    record demonstrates he did not make such an argument. Where a defendant does not
    raise a specific theory of admissibility at the trial court, “he may not do so for the first
    time on appeal.” (People v. Smithey (1999) 
    20 Cal.4th 936
    , 995.) Defendant has
    therefore forfeited this contention of admissibility on appeal.
    V
    The Trial Court Properly Refused To Instruct On The Lesser Included Offense Of Battery
    On A Cohabitant Because The Evidence Did Not Support The Instruction
    Defendant contends the court erred in refusing his request to instruct on battery on
    a cohabitant as a lesser included offense to corporal injury on a cohabitant. Defendant’s
    theory for the lesser is that the jury could have found M. inflicted the most serious
    corporal injuries herself, while at the same time finding defendant handcuffed her against
    her will, which would have been sufficient for a battery conviction but not enough for the
    traumatic condition necessary for corporal injury. The problem with this theory is there
    was no evidence to support it. (See People v. Breverman (1998) 
    19 Cal.4th 142
    , 162 [“a
    trial court errs if it fails to instruct, sua sponte, on all theories of a lesser included offense
    which find substantial support in the evidence. On the other hand, the court is not
    obliged to instruct on theories that have no such evidentiary support”].)
    While M. testified she had intentionally cut and scarred herself on her arms when
    she was 12 years old, had purposefully “throw[n] herself into the washer and dryer”
    “when she g[o]t[] frustrated with [defendant],” and had told a friend of defendant’s that
    she (M.) had actually punched herself in the past, causing bruising, there was no evidence
    the wounds inflicted in this case (as opposed to ones that were inflicted in the past) came
    from M. The uncontradicted evidence from the forensic pathologist was the wounds
    11
    were recent because the skin was still shiny and swollen and was yellow and bluish in
    color; they were not self-inflicted because of the horizontal direction in which force
    marks appeared on M.’s body, the lack of indicia in M.’s nail beds that she had scraped or
    abraded herself; and they were likely inflicted at a time M. was restrained because her
    wrists had restraint marks and there were no defensive wounds. M. also consistently
    testified that the wounds in this case were inflicted by defendant. On this record, there
    was no evidentiary support for the lesser included offense of battery on a cohabitant.
    VI
    There Was No Prejudice In The Court’s Omission
    Of One Sentence In The Written Jury Instructions
    Defendant contends the court gave to the jury an incomplete written version of
    CALCRIM No. 105 regarding evaluating witness testimony. The written version given
    to the jury omitted the following from the list the factors the jury may consider in
    evaluating a witness’s testimony: “Did other evidence prove or disprove any fact about
    which a witness testified?”
    We find any error in omitting this factor from the written instructions harmless.
    The portion of CALCRIM No. 105 that the trial court omitted from the written
    instructions is bracketed in the CALCRIM jury instruction book, meaning it is optional.
    In any event, the court read to the jury the complete version of CALCRIM No. 105 that
    included this factor.5 At no time was the jury instructed that the written instructions
    5      CALCRIM No. 105 as read to the jury stated:
    “You alone must judge the credibility or believability of the witnesses. In
    deciding whether testimony is true and accurate, use your common sense and experience.
    [¶] You must judge the testimony of each witness by the same standards, setting aside
    any bias or prejudice you may have. You may believe all, part, or none of any witness’s
    testimony. [¶] Consider the testimony of each witness and decide how much of it you
    believe. In evaluating a witness’s testimony, you may consider anything that reasonably
    12
    controlled over the ones read by the court. Defendant’s prejudice argument is a
    nonstarter because his attempt at demonstrating prejudice is based on “other cumulative
    errors” that he alleged in his third and fourth arguments (which we have already rejected)
    that he claims “improperly obscured the weaknesses in [M.]’s testimony.” In any event,
    it is inconceivable that the omission of this one phrase in the written instructions could
    have prejudiced defendant. This phrase did little more than direct the jury to use its
    tends to prove or disprove the truth or accuracy of that testimony. [¶] Among the factors
    that you may consider are:
    “How well could the witness see, hear, or otherwise perceive the things about
    which the witness testified?
    “ How well was the witness able to remember and describe what happened?
    “ What was the witness’s behavior while testifying?
    “Did the witness understand the questions and answer them directly?
    “Was the witness’s testimony influenced by a factor such as bias or prejudice, a
    personal relationship with someone involved in the case, or a personal interest in how the
    case is decided?
    “What was the witness’s attitude about the case or about testifying?
    “Did the witness make a statement in the past that is consistent or inconsistent
    with his or her testimony?
    “ How reasonable is the testimony when you consider all the other evidence in the
    case?
    “Did other evidence prove or disprove any fact about which the witness testified?
    “Has the witness been convicted of a felony?
    “Do not automatically reject testimony just because of inconsistencies or conflicts.
    Consider whether the differences are important or not. [¶] People sometimes honestly
    forget things or make mistakes about what they remember. Also, two people may
    witness the same event yet see or hear it differently.” (Italics added.)
    13
    common sense in evaluating witness testimony, i.e., telling it to consider whether other
    evidence proved or disproved a witness’s testimony. This instruction was not integral to
    evaluate witness testimony when the jury had just been told to use its “common sense and
    experience” “[i]n deciding whether testimony is true and accurate.” Therefore, any error
    in omitting this one line from the written instructions was harmless.
    VII
    The Court Did Not Err In Imposing Separate Punishments
    For Torture, False Imprisonment, And Criminal Threats
    Defendant contends his punishment for false imprisonment and for criminal
    threats must be stayed because he had the same intent for those crimes and for torture.
    We disagree.
    Pursuant to Penal Code section 654 (hereafter section 654), where a defendant has
    multiple criminal objectives, independent of and not merely incidental to each other,
    multiple punishments may be imposed. (People v. Beamon (1973) 
    8 Cal.3d 625
    , 637.)
    However, “ ‘[i]f all the offenses were incident to one objective, the defendant may be
    punished for any one of such offenses but not for more than one.’ ” (Ibid.) We review a
    challenge under section 654 for substantial evidence to support the trial court’s
    determination -- here that section 654 did not preclude multiple punishments. (People v.
    Osband (1996) 
    13 Cal.4th 622
    , 730.)
    As to the false imprisonment, there was substantial evidence that the objective for
    that crime was different from the objective of torture. Based on its torture verdict, the
    jury found, “when inflicting the injury . . . the defendant intended to cause cruel or
    extreme pain and suffering for the purpose of revenge, extortion, persuasion, or for any
    sadistic purpose.” By contrast, as to the false imprisonment conviction, the evidence
    showed defendant’s objective was to prevent M. from escaping to report defendant’s
    violent conduct. Defendant said he would stab anybody who came over if she ran away.
    When he caught her trying to escape through her son’s bedroom window, he reapplied
    14
    the handcuffs much tighter. This evidence supported the conclusion defendant harbored
    separate (albeit simultaneous) objectives to both torture her and prevent her from
    escaping to report the crimes.
    As to the criminal threats counts, there was substantial evidence the objective for
    that crime was different from the objective for torture. Defendant threatened to hurt M.’s
    son to “get to [her].” Specifically, defendant took a plastic bag and his “beating stick” to
    where M.’s son had been sleeping and said, “Hey, [M.’s son], do you want to get in this
    plastic bag?” Before doing so, he told M, “there’s just no way to get to you. I can’t get
    to you. What am I going to have to do? I think I’m going to have to hurt [M.’s son] to
    get to you.’” This act of threatened “gratuitous violence” was not “ ‘incidental’ ” to
    torture for purposes of section 654. (People v. Nguyen (1988) 
    204 Cal.App.3d 181
    , 190.)
    The court therefore did not err in imposing separate punishments for criminal threats,
    false imprisonment, and torture.
    VIII
    The Court Erred In Failing To Stay Defendant’s
    Punishment For Corporal Injury Upon A Cohabitant
    Defendant contends and the People agree the trial court should have stayed his
    punishment for corporal injury upon a cohabitant. So do we. The trial court specifically
    found that “[i]n light of the princip[le] under [section] 654,” defendant’s conduct in
    inflicting corporal injury was “part of the course of conduct for the conviction[]
    supporting [the torture count].” The court then erroneously ordered the punishment for
    inflicting corporal injury to run concurrently to the punishment for torture instead of
    staying the punishment. Yet, the abstract of judgment reflects the punishment for
    inflicting corporal injury upon a cohabitant was stayed. We therefore need not order the
    abstract of judgment amended.
    15
    DISPOSITION
    Defendant’s sentence is modified to stay the punishment for defendant’s 2010
    commission of corporal injury upon a cohabitant. As modified, the judgment is
    affirmed.
    ROBIE        , J.
    We concur:
    HULL          , Acting P. J.
    DUARTE         , J.
    16