People v. Valerio CA2/5 ( 2016 )


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  • Filed 2/23/16 P. v. Valerio CA2/5
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
    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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FIVE
    THE PEOPLE,                                                         B260150
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                  (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. PA 069284)
    v.
    JOHN J. VALERIO,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Daniel
    B. Feldstern, Judge. Affirmed.
    Kristin A. Erickson, for Defendant and Appellant.
    Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Gerald A. Engler, Chief Assistant Attorney
    General, Lance E. Winters, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Margaret E. Maxwell,
    Supervising Deputy Attorney General, Eric E. Reynolds, Deputy Attorney General, for
    Plaintiff and Respondent.
    A jury convicted defendant John Valerio (defendant) on arson, insurance fraud,
    and conspiracy charges. The prosecution introduced evidence to show, among other
    things, that defendant was experiencing financial difficulties, that he took out a $4 million
    dollar insurance policy on his business, that six weeks after the policy took effect
    someone entered the business using his alarm code and intentionally caused an explosion
    and fire, and that defendant thereafter submitted an insurance claim for the full value of
    the policy. The trial court also permitted the prosecution to introduce evidence of an
    incident four years earlier when someone intentionally set fire to defendant’s car. We are
    asked to decide whether the trial court prejudicially erred in permitting the prosecution to
    introduce evidence of the prior car fire under Evidence Code section 1101,
    subdivision (b).
    I. BACKGROUND
    Defendant was the Chief Financial Officer and co-owner of Globotech, an
    electronic parts distribution company. Globotech’s offices were located in a two-story
    concrete slab building in Santa Clarita, California. On October 24, 2009, at
    approximately 9:30 p.m., an explosion and fire burned Globotech’s offices. The Los
    Angeles County District Attorney later charged defendant in an amended information
    with arson of a structure (Penal Code1 § 451, subd. (c)) in count 1, insurance fraud
    (§ 550, subd. (a)(1)) in count 2, and conspiracy to commit arson and insurance fraud
    (§ 182, subd. (a)(1)) in count 5.2
    1      Undesignated statutory references that follow are to the Penal Code.
    2       During trial, the court granted the prosecution’s motion to dismiss the other counts
    of the information, counts 3, 4, and 6.
    2
    A.     Evidence at Trial Concerning the Charged Arson and Insurance Fraud
    Offenses
    Defendant and his business partner Sergio Ramirez (Ramirez) opened Globotech
    in 2007. By 2009, Globotech—which was funded by investors, many of whom were
    defendant’s family members and friends—faced financial difficulties. The company sold
    two different categories of parts, electronic components and telecommunications
    equipment. In 2009, the electronic components part of the business was foundering
    because the parts were not selling.3 The telecommunications equipment side of the
    business, however, was doing better. These circumstances caused a falling out between
    defendant and Ramirez in July or August of 2009. Ramirez wanted to dissolve the
    company and focus solely on selling telecommunications equipment. Defendant,
    however, felt pressure to return the amount his family and friends had invested in
    Globotech, and Ramirez’s plan to dissolve the company would prevent them from
    recouping their investments, which totaled about $1 million in the aggregate. Ramirez
    decided to leave Globotech to start his own telecommunications company, leaving
    defendant to run Globotech with one other employee in Santa Clarita, Ron Reyes (Reyes).
    Defendant also faced personal financial difficulties in 2009. Scott Lollis (Lollis), a
    Globotech employee who was also a long-time acquaintance of defendant’s, observed
    defendant was “pretty stressed” in the beginning of 2009 and asked defendant what was
    wrong. Defendant told Lollis that the Internal Revenue Service was suing him for
    $500,000. Defendant was also going through a contested divorce in 2009 and was having
    “some issues” because his wife was demanding defendant pay her a greater amount of
    money per month than he was then paying.
    3       The defense admitted documents at trial intended to show that, shortly before the
    fire at Globotech, defendant did have one or more pending deals to sell electronic
    components. During closing argument, the prosecution argued the components referred
    to in the documents were not among the components inside the Globotech building when
    the fire occurred.
    3
    From the time Globotech opened until Ramirez left in mid-2009, the company had
    been uninsured. After Ramirez left the company, defendant contacted a Farmer’s
    Insurance representative to procure insurance for Globotech’s property, including its parts
    inventory. The representative visited the Globotech premises on three or four occasions
    in August 2009 to discuss insurance terms and inspect the location.4 Defendant told the
    representative that he did not need insurance to cover any damage to the building itself,
    which defendant was leasing; defendant wanted insurance only for Globotech’s property
    inside. Defendant said Globotech’s inventory was worth almost $2 million, but he
    wanted to see insurance quotes for policies that would cover losses at four different
    values, $1 million, $2 million, $3 million, and $4 million, because he was planning on
    increasing inventory. The Farmer’s representative told defendant there was no reason to
    write him a policy for $4 million if he only had $2 million in inventory because it was
    easy to increase the policy’s covered loss amount once inventory actually increased; in the
    representative’s view, paying premiums on a $4 million policy would be like “paying for
    a car two months before you bought it.” Defendant, however, told the representative he
    wanted $4 million in coverage, and the representative issued a policy with coverage for
    that amount to take effect on September 11, 2009.
    Around the same time that defendant was insuring the business, late July and
    August of 2009, defendant also had an alarm system installed at Globotech’s offices and
    had the locks changed on the building’s front door. When the alarm system was installed,
    defendant and his sole employee Reyes were the only ones who were given codes to arm
    and disarm the system. Each man had a different code, and defendant did not know
    Reyes’s code nor did defendant disclose his own code to Reyes (or, as defendant would
    later claim after the fire, anyone else). The locks that defendant had installed at
    4      The Farmer’s Insurance representative observed “a bunch of pictures” on
    defendant’s desk during his first visit, and defendant told him they were pictures of his
    children and his girlfriend. On one of the subsequent visits, the representative noticed the
    photos were gone, which he found odd.
    4
    Globotech’s offices were “Laser Tech” locks that are nearly impossible to pick because of
    their advanced design. Defendant and Reyes were the only people that had keys to the
    locks.
    On Friday, October 23, 2009, the day before the fire at Globotech, defendant was
    the last to leave the office at the end of the day. He locked the doors and he set the alarm
    when he left the premises.
    The next day, the day of the fire, Reyes was not at Globotech to the best of
    defendant’s knowledge. Defendant took an overnight trip to Disneyland with his kids and
    girlfriend. At 6:20 p.m. that day, someone entered Globotech’s offices and deactivated
    the alarm system using defendant’s alarm code. The alarm was then reactivated at 8:31
    p.m. using the same code.
    Cell phone records revealed 14 calls were made from a phone registering with a
    cellular tower in the area of Globotech’s offices between 5:42 p.m. and 8:39 p.m. on the
    evening of the fire. Among the calls was a 6:39 p.m. call to defendant (19 minutes after
    the Globotech alarm was deactivated) and another call to defendant at 8:39 p.m. (eight
    minutes after the alarm had been reactivated). Just under an hour after the 8:39 p.m. call
    to defendant, the explosion and fire occurred at Globotech.
    Firefighters responded to Globotech that evening, and the scene when they arrived
    was atypical because there was debris in the front of the building and an obvious odor of
    gasoline in the air that indicated there had been some type of explosion. The next day,
    Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Detective Michael Digby, an arson investigator, assembled
    a team and travelled to Globotech to investigate the explosion and fire.
    At the scene of the fire, Detective Digby observed an oily substance on the asphalt
    near the building and he could smell gasoline. He observed explosion debris near the
    front door, and a butane lighter was found in explosion debris littering the parking lot. A
    large roll-up door at the rear of the building had been blown out, and the front door had
    blown off intact and the lock had not been tampered with. The building’s front door was
    the only door that could be opened from the outside, and there were no observed signs of
    5
    forced entry into the building.5 The walls of the building were over 20 feet high, and the
    only access to the roof was via a ladder inside the building.
    Inside the building, investigators found a red gasoline can in an office area. The
    carpet in the office area had irregular burn patterns, which according to Digby could
    indicate the presence of an ignitable fluid at the time of the fire. A carpet sample taken
    from the business tested positive for the presence of gasoline.
    On the roof of the building, Digby found a pool of an oily substance and three road
    flares that had burned to varying degrees. Digby testified that he had come across road
    flares many times in the arsons he previously investigated. Two of the flares on
    Globotech’s roof were in the pool of liquid and one was not. Several dozen holes had
    been drilled into the roof for the purpose of permitting the fluid, later confirmed to be oil,
    to drain into the building.
    Based on his investigation, Digby believed the road flares on the roof were not
    what ignited the fire. He believed the road flares had been thrown onto the roof from the
    walkway in front of the building, and two of the flares had been extinguished by the
    liquid while the third burned down on its own. (Digby explained that road flares may not
    ignite a liquid, particularly a liquid like oil that is not especially flammable, because the
    liquid chokes off the oxygen necessary to start a fire.) Instead, Digby opined that the fire
    originated in the mail slot at the front door when someone used the lighter investigators
    found in the debris to set the gasoline on fire. Digby believed, based on the amount of
    preparation involved, that more than one person was involved in starting the fire at
    Globotech and that when the perpetrators who attempted to start the fire observed that the
    flares on the roof had been ineffective, at least one person then went back and started the
    fire at the mail slot by using the lighter.
    5      At trial, defense counsel called Detective Digby as a witness during the defense
    case and asked him questions concerning several photographs of a skylight in the roof of
    the building that the defense believed could have been a point of forced entry. On cross-
    examination, however, Digby testified the skylight was damaged by the explosion and
    showed no signs of forced entry.
    6
    In Digby’s expert opinion, the fire and explosion were a deliberate act of arson,
    and he also believed there were indicia the arson was committed for profit. Digby based
    his arson conclusion on the presence of the disposable lighter, the gasoline can, and the
    ignitable pour patterns in the office. As to his belief the arson may have been committed
    for profit, Digby found it significant that there were no personal photographs or personal
    memorabilia in the office, and that most of the desk drawers in the office were empty.
    Digby explained that in his prior experience with cases where someone had intentionally
    burned their own house, vehicle, or other commercial property, the owner had often
    removed personal items before the fire or replaced such items with things that are less
    personal. Digby also believed profit may have been the motive for the Globotech arson
    because defendant obtained an insurance policy just six weeks before the fire; as Digby
    explained, insurance fraud was the most typical form of arson for profit.
    Two days after the explosion and fire at Globotech, defendant called his Farmer’s
    Insurance representative and told him what had happened. The representative told
    defendant to call the claims department but warned him it was “probably going to look a
    little fishy.” Defendant submitted an insurance claim for $4,713,058.27 in losses as a
    result of the fire.
    Three days after the explosion and fire, Detective Digby interviewed defendant in
    the parking lot outside the Globotech building. In that interview, Digby asked defendant
    whether Ramirez could have been responsible for setting the fire. Defendant said
    probably not, because it wasn’t in Ramirez’s nature, but defendant did tell Digby it could
    have been Nigerians in Lagos, Nigeria that had run an internet scam and embarrassed
    him. Detective Digby also asked defendant about his whereabouts on the day of the fire
    at Globotech. Defendant related his comings and goings in great detail, including his
    attendance at a little league baseball game and the overnight visit to Disneyland.
    Defendant also had receipts documenting his whereabouts on October 24, 2009, which he
    provided to Digby “right then and there” during the interview. Digby thought this was
    7
    unusual because, in his prior experience, business owners generally did not feel a need to
    account for where they were at the time of a fire in such tremendous detail.
    B.       The Prior Uncharged Vehicle Arson
    Prior to trial, the prosecution sought the court’s permission to introduce, under
    Evidence Code section 1101, subdivision (b), evidence that someone had deliberately set
    fire to defendant’s car in 2005 using gasoline and road flares, and that defendant
    submitted an insurance claim for the damages. The prosecution argued evidence
    concerning the 2005 car fire should be admitted because it involved the same means,
    gasoline and road flares, involved in the charged Globotech arson. Defendant objected,
    contending there was no evidence that defendant was responsible for the 2005 car fire:
    “[T]he evidence will show that the insurance company in that case actually paid
    [defendant]. So the insurance company for that damage actually believed that [defendant]
    was not responsible for that, nor was he even charged in that case. So the idea that that
    incident happened in a prior case is—again, he wasn’t charged. It’s not established that
    he did that.”
    After taking the matter under submission, the trial court ruled the prosecution
    could present evidence concerning the 2005 car fire at trial. The court noted that it had
    reviewed the case of People v. Erving (1998) 
    63 Cal. App. 4th 652
    (Erving), which
    discussed the “doctrine of chances,” and stated: “[I] come down to a question of what are
    the chances that a single individual within a four-year span would have two sources of
    property both burn in very similar ways involving the source of ignition being road flares
    on flammable liquid or attempted use of road flares, [these facts are] distinctive and ties
    [the two incidents] together in the sense of how the person who caused these fires
    prepared the event for the arson. It may demonstrate evidence that establishes the identity
    of the person or persons involved in both arsons because they had a similar tie to
    [defendant].” Beyond being evidence of identity, the trial court also found that the
    similarities between the charged offenses and the 2005 car fire were relevant to
    8
    undermine any claim that the Globotech fire was an accident or a mistake and were
    probative of whether defendant had the intent to defraud an insurance company. The trial
    court further found that any prejudice from admitting the 2005 car fire evidence did not
    outweigh the evidence’s “significant” probative value.
    At trial, evidence concerning the 2005 car fire came from three sources: testimony
    by Enrique Velazquez, a Deputy Sheriff who investigated the 2005 car fire; testimony by
    former Globotech employee Lollis; and statements defendant made in an under-oath
    examination conducted by Farmer’s Insurance in connection with his Globotech
    insurance claim.
    Velazquez testified that defendant’s car, a Volkswagen defendant converted to
    look like a Porsche, was parked outside a home in Lancaster on October 3, 2005.
    Defendant told Deputy Velazquez that he had loaned his car to his sister so she could visit
    his ex-girlfriend who lived at the Lancaster address. In the early morning hours on
    October 3, someone poured gasoline in the passenger compartment of defendant’s car and
    then tossed a road flare inside. Deputy Velazquez investigated the car arson and testified
    that the police had not arrested anyone for the offense. When Velazquez asked defendant
    who might have been responsible for burning his car, defendant said the only people he
    might suspect were his ex-girlfriend’s former husband and her new boyfriend.
    Lollis testified about a conversation he had with defendant about his car being
    burned. According to Lollis, defendant said someone had poured gasoline in his car and
    thrown a road flare in it while it was parked at his sister’s house. Lollis also testified that
    defendant said he was not positive who was responsible.
    Excerpts of the Farmer’s Insurance examination of defendant that were read to the
    jury included defendant’s answers to questions concerning the 2005 car fire. Defendant
    stated his sister had borrowed the car and someone burned the car in front of a house
    occupied by a friend of defendant’s sister. Defendant told the insurance examiner there
    were no suspects or people defendant thought may have been responsible. Defendant also
    9
    stated he filed an insurance claim for the damage and the insurance company paid an
    amount in the “mid-20s” on the claim.
    After the presentation of evidence at trial, the trial court instructed the jury on the
    circumstances under which it may and may not consider evidence of the 2005 car fire
    using CALCRIM No. 375, tailored to the facts of the case. The instruction informed the
    jury that it could consider evidence of the uncharged 2005 car fire “only if the People
    have proved by a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant in fact committed the
    uncharged act[].” The instruction told the jury it must disregard the evidence entirely if
    the People had not met that burden. If the jury decided defendant did commit the
    uncharged act, the instruction informed the jury it may consider the evidence for the
    limited purpose of deciding identity, intent, or the existence of a plan or scheme to
    commit the crimes of arson and insurance fraud—but for no other purpose.
    II. DISCUSSION
    Defendant argues the trial court erred in admitting evidence of the 2005 car fire,
    and that the error resulted in prejudice warranting reversal. The trial court applied
    Erving’s doctrine of chances in ruling the 2005 car fire was admissible. That is, the court
    concluded the jury could find defendant committed the uncharged 2005 car fire because it
    was unlikely that defendant would be the victim of two arsons committed in a similar
    manner if he did not have a role in committing both offenses. Although a decision to
    apply the doctrine of chances under these circumstances might otherwise warrant a
    careful analysis, there is no reasonable probability of a more favorable outcome for
    defendant if the evidence of the 2005 car fire had been excluded. We affirm for that
    reason.
    Evidence that a defendant committed a crime, civil wrong, or other act apart from
    the charged crime(s) is inadmissible to prove the defendant had a propensity to commit
    the charged offense (Evid. Code, § 1101, subd. (a).) However, such “other act” evidence
    may be admitted when relevant to prove some other material fact, including intent,
    10
    knowledge, identity, motive, or the existence of a common design or plan. (Evid. Code,
    § 1101, subd. (b); People v. Leon (2015) 
    61 Cal. 4th 569
    , 597 (Leon); People v. Ewoldt
    (1994) 
    7 Cal. 4th 380
    , 400.) “The relevance depends, in part, on whether the act is
    sufficiently similar to the current charges to support a rational inference of intent,
    common design, identity, or other material fact.” 
    (Leon, supra
    , at p. 598.) Even if other
    crimes evidence is relevant, it should be excluded under Evidence Code section 352 if its
    probative value is substantially outweighed by undue prejudice. (People v. Thomas
    (2011) 
    52 Cal. 4th 336
    , 354.) On appeal, we review a trial court’s evidentiary ruling for
    abuse of discretion. 
    (Leon, supra
    , at p. 597.)
    There were sufficient similarities between the 2005 car fire and the charged
    offenses, particularly the use of gasoline and road flares, to support a rational inference
    that the person who committed the 2005 car fire was also responsible for the Globotech
    arson. Defendant protests, however, that the existence of these similarities should not end
    the inquiry because there was insufficient evidence he committed the prior act, i.e., that
    he set fire to his own car and fraudulently submitted an insurance claim for the damage.
    A jury may consider other acts evidence if the prosecution proves by a
    preponderance of the evidence that the defendant committed the other act. 
    (Leon, supra
    ,
    61 Cal.4th at p. 599; People v. Carpenter (1997) 
    15 Cal. 4th 312
    , 381-382; People v.
    Hawkins (2002) 
    98 Cal. App. 4th 1428
    , 1444-1445.) Thus, for other act evidence to be
    admissible, there must be sufficient evidence to permit the jury to make such a finding.6
    6      Our Supreme Court has repeatedly rejected the argument that the admissibility of
    uncharged other act evidence requires “proof that the defendant was the perpetrator” of
    the other act or crime. (See, e.g., 
    Leon, supra
    , 61 Cal.4th at p. 599.) That is to say, the
    Supreme Court has rejected the view that “it must be conceded, or a court must be able to
    assume that the defendant was the perpetrator” to conclude other act evidence is
    admissible. (People v. Soper (2009) 
    45 Cal. 4th 759
    , 778; People v. Foster (2010) 
    50 Cal. 4th 1301
    , 1332 [rejecting defense argument that other act evidence was inadmissible
    because the identity of the perpetrator was in dispute].) Instead, the Supreme Court has
    held other act evidence is admissible if there is enough evidence to allow a jury to
    conclude the defendant more likely than not committed the other uncharged offense.
    
    (Leon, supra
    , at p. 599.)
    11
    (People v. McCurdy (2014) 
    59 Cal. 4th 1063
    , 1097; see People v. Marshall (1996) 
    13 Cal. 4th 799
    , 832 [explaining, in reference to Evidence Code section 403, that “the trial
    court must determine whether the evidence is sufficient to permit the jury to find the
    preliminary fact true by a preponderance of the evidence”].)
    The trial court, citing 
    Erving, supra
    , 
    63 Cal. App. 4th 652
    , relied on the doctrine of
    chances to conclude there was sufficient evidence to permit the jury to conclude
    defendant committed the 2005 car fire, reasoning: “what are the chances that a single
    individual within a four-year span would have two sources of property both burn in very
    similar ways involving the source of ignition being road flares on flammable liquid . . . .
    It may demonstrate evidence that establishes the identity of the person or persons
    involved in both arsons because they had a similar tie to [defendant].” (Emphasis added.)
    We find it unnecessary to parse Erving, and the cases cited therein, to analyze the trial
    court’s application of the doctrine in this case because it plainly appears the trial court’s
    decision to admit the 2005 car fire evidence was harmless on this record.
    We assess prejudice using the People v. Watson (1956) 
    46 Cal. 2d 818
    test, asking
    whether it is reasonably probable that exclusion of the evidence would have produced a
    result more favorable to the defendant.7 (People v. Malone (1988) 
    47 Cal. 3d 1
    , 22 [error
    in admitting other acts evidence reviewed under People v. Watson, not Chapman v.
    California (1967) 
    386 U.S. 18
    ]; People v. Lopez (2011) 
    198 Cal. App. 4th 698
    , 716.)
    No more favorable result is reasonably probable on this record because the
    circumstantial evidence of defendant’s guilt was quite strong apart from the evidence the
    7       Although defendant did not object to admission of the other act evidence on
    federal constitutional grounds in the trial court, on appeal he asserts admission of the
    evidence violated his Fourteenth Amendment due process right to a fair trial.
    Defendant’s federal constitutional claim is meritless. “[T]he admission of evidence, even
    if erroneous under state law, results in a due process violation only if it makes the trial
    fundamentally unfair.” (People v. Partida (2005) 
    37 Cal. 4th 428
    , 439; People v. Lucas
    (1995) 
    12 Cal. 4th 415
    , 464; People v. Cudjo (1993) 
    6 Cal. 4th 585
    , 611.) Admission of
    the 2005 car fire evidence did not render defendant’s trial fundamentally unfair.
    12
    jury heard concerning the 2005 car fire. The prosecution proved defendant had a
    powerful motive to commit the crime because he and his business were suffering
    financial difficulties and he felt pressure to return the money his mother and other family
    and friends had invested in Globotech.8 It was undisputed at trial that defendant insured
    the business—which had never been insured before—just six weeks before the explosion
    and fire, and defendant took out a policy over twice as valuable as the goods he was
    insuring even though the Farmer’s Insurance agent explained it was unnecessary to do so.
    The prosecution also introduced strong circumstantial evidence that defendant must have
    been involved, with unnamed others, because of the manner in which the offense was
    committed: the person or persons that actually started the fire entered the building without
    signs of forced entry and notwithstanding defendant’s recent installation of high-security
    locks; defendant’s alarm code was used to deactivate the system; defendant’s personal
    photos and business documents did not burn because they had been removed before the
    fire; and defendant received calls from someone using a cell phone in the general vicinity
    of Globotech on the night of the fire, including one call shortly after the alarm was
    deactivated and a second call shortly after the alarm had been reactivated—and the
    explosion occurred less than an hour after that second call. With such a strong
    circumstantial case, we are confident it is not reasonably probable the verdict turned on
    the other act evidence the trial court admitted.
    Our conclusion that there was no prejudicial error is reinforced by the manner in
    which counsel argued the case and by the other act evidence jury instruction given by the
    trial court. The prosecutor made only a brief reference to the other act evidence during
    summation and did not refer to the 2005 car fire at all during rebuttal argument.
    Likewise, defense counsel did not spend substantial time discussing the 2005 car fire
    during his closing argument, and instead focused on attempting to undermine the other
    8      There was no evidence at trial that anyone but defendant had a motive to set fire to
    Globotech. When Detective Digby interviewed defendant after the incident and asked if
    he could think of anyone who might be responsible, defendant answered only with the
    dubious assertion that it could have been unnamed individuals in Lagos, Nigeria.
    13
    circumstantial evidence of guilt presented by the prosecution. The court’s jury instruction
    also directed the jurors to consider the other act evidence only for a limited purpose—and
    to refrain from considering the evidence at all if it could not find by a preponderance of
    the evidence that defendant committed the prior act. Thus, the jury may have disregarded
    the other act evidence entirely. (See Griffin v. United States (1991) 
    502 U.S. 46
    , 59
    [juries are well equipped to analyze evidence and avoid relying on a factually inadequate
    theory].) But, as we have said, even if the jury did consider the evidence during its
    deliberations, we believe there is no reasonable probability that the jury would have
    reached a different verdict if the evidence had instead been excluded.
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
    BAKER, J.
    We Concur:
    TURNER, P.J.
    KUMAR, J.
           Judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to
    article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    14
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B260150

Filed Date: 2/23/2016

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 2/23/2016