People v. Wright CA2/5 ( 2016 )


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  • Filed 5/24/16 P. v. Wright 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    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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,                                                          B260216
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                   (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BA361187)
    v.
    RODERICK WRIGHT,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of the County of Los Angeles,
    Kathleen Kennedy, Judge. Affirmed.
    Keker & Van Nest, John W. Keker, Eric H. MacMichael, Steven A. Hirsch and
    Elizabeth K. McCloskey for Defendant and Appellant.
    Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Gerald A. Engler, Chief Assistant Attorney
    General, Lance E. Winters, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Scott A. Taryle,
    Supervising Deputy Attorney General and Michael C. Keller, Deputy Attorney General,
    for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    INTRODUCTION
    A jury found defendant and appellant Roderick Wright guilty on two counts of
    perjury, one count of filing a false declaration of candidacy, and five counts of fraudulent
    voting. On appeal, he contends our prior decision in People v. Superior Court (Wright)
    
    197 Cal. App. 4th 511
    , (Wright)—which interpreted and applied the conclusive
    presumption in Elections Code section 20261—constituted a manifest misapplication of
    existing legal principles that resulted in a substantial injustice. He further contends: even
    under our interpretation of section 2026, he established, as a matter of law, entitlement to
    the conclusive presumption in that section; the trial court committed prejudicial
    instructional error as to the perjury charge in count one; the prosecutor engaged in
    prejudicial misconduct during argument; the jury’s finding that he acted with the requisite
    criminal intent was not supported by sufficient evidence; and his allegedly false statement
    that he met the residency requirement for the office of State Senator was true and
    immaterial.
    We hold defendant is barred under the law of the case doctrine from relitigating
    the issue decided in 
    Wright, supra
    , 
    197 Cal. App. 4th 511
    . We further hold the trial court
    did not commit the instructional error claimed and that defendant’s statement that he met
    the residency requirement for office was false and material. And, as we explain below,
    we conclude that defendant forfeited his other contentions on appeal. We therefore
    affirm the judgment of conviction.
    1
    All statutory references are to the Elections Code unless otherwise specified.
    2
    FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    A.     Prosecution’s Case
    1.     868 Glenway Drive
    In 1977, defendant purchased a residential apartment complex located at 868
    Glenway Drive in Inglewood (Glenway complex). The complex consisted of six-units: a
    building with four two-bedroom apartments—units one through four; a free-standing
    three-bedroom house—unit five; and a one-room bachelor apartment that had been built
    in the garage for the house—unit six. Between 2000 and 2010, the Glenway complex
    was located in the 25th State Senate District.
    2.     4556 Don Milagro Drive
    In 2000, defendant purchased a single family residence in Baldwin Hills located at
    4556 Don Milagro Drive (Don Milagro residence). The home was two stories and had
    two bedrooms, two baths, and a den. From 2000 to 2010, the Don Milagro residence was
    located in the 26th Senate District.
    3.     Defendant’s Agreement with Sanders
    In 1985, Wanda Sanders moved into the house—unit five—at the Glenway
    complex with defendant’s father Leo. 2 When Leo died in 1991, Sanders continued to
    live in the house by herself and pay rent to defendant.
    Defendant claimed to have entered into a letter agreement with Sanders in January
    2007 by which defendant raised her rent from $800 to $850 a month. The agreement also
    provided that defendant would “have the use of a room as a dwelling place” and that
    Sanders was to continue to mail her rent to the Don Milagro residence.
    2
    Sanders considered defendant as a step-son.
    3
    4.         Defendant’s 2007 Voter Registration Form
    On March 14, 2007, defendant submitted to the Los Angeles County Registrar-
    Recorder/County Clerk (County Registrar) a voter registration form signed under penalty
    of perjury. In the space on the form calling for the “address where you live,” defendant
    entered “868 Glenway Drive,” unit five.
    5.         Defendant’s 2008 Declaration of Candidacy for State Senator for
    25th District
    A candidate for public office must fill out and submit a declaration of candidacy
    form under penalty of perjury stating that he or she meets “all the statutory and/or
    constitutional qualifications for this office, including but not limited to citizenship,
    residency . . . .” A candidate running for public office must also fill out a candidate
    registration and qualification form stating, inter alia, that he or she is “aware of the
    qualifications for office . . . .” According to a representative of the County Registrar, one
    of the qualifications for running for a state office is to have a residence located in the
    district of the office.
    In February 2008, defendant filled out and submitted under penalty of perjury a
    declaration of candidacy form for the office of State Senator for the 25th District. In the
    form, defendant stated that he met all the qualifications for office, including the
    requirement that he reside in the 25th District. Defendant also filled out a registration
    and qualification form that listed his “residence street address” as “868 Glenway Drive,
    #5.”
    6.         Defendant Voted Five Times as Resident of 25th District Between
    2008 and 2009
    Voter registration records showed that defendant voted by mail in the 25th Senate
    District, using the 868 Glenway Drive, unit five, address in the elections held on
    February 5, 2008; June 3, 2008; November 4, 2008; May 19, 2009; and September 1,
    4
    2009. Defendant was listed as a candidate for State Senator for the 25th District on the
    sample ballots distributed for the June 2008 and November 2008 elections and he was a
    State Senator when he voted in May 2009 and September 2009.3
    7.     Investigation
    In December 2008, Los Angeles County District Attorney Investigator Jose
    Cisneros was assigned to investigate a complaint concerning defendant’s residency. On
    December 8, 2008, he drove by the Don Milagro residence and observed a black Lincoln
    LS parked in front. Using the license plate for that vehicle, the investigator verified that
    it was registered to defendant at the Don Milagro address. The investigator next went to
    the Glenway complex and interviewed Sanders who told him that defendant did not live
    there.4
    Since 2003, Rene Torres lived in unit six, the one-room bachelor apartment in the
    garage at the Glenway complex, initially by himself and later with his wife, Martha
    Cervantes, and their two children. During the entire time he lived there, Torres saw
    defendant at the Glenway complex only five or six times. He did not know whether
    defendant ever stayed overnight at Sanders’s house, but he did see a flight attendant,
    Felicia Porter, stay at Sanders’s house when she was not working. Cervantes lived with
    Torres in unit six for seven years. During that time, she only saw defendant once at the
    Glenway complex, in connection with a plumbing problem.
    From November 2007 to 2010, Micah Green lived in unit four of the Glenway
    complex. During the time he lived there, he mailed his rent to the Don Milagro
    residence. He did not believe anyone lived with Sanders while he lived in unit four. The
    3
    Defendant was elected State Senator in November 2008 and was sworn in on
    December 2, 2008.
    4
    At trial, Sanders stated that she was unaware whether defendant ever used a room
    in the house. Sanders did not recall ever sharing her bathroom with defendant or seeing
    him use the kitchen in 2007. Sanders purportedly did not know whether defendant was
    living at her house in 2008 or 2009, even though she was retired and spent a great deal of
    time at home.
    5
    only time Green saw defendant at the Glenway complex was when defendant came to
    Green’s unit to schedule when Green would move out. Green typically arrived home
    from work at around 2:30 a.m. and he did not recall ever seeing defendant’s Lincoln
    parked at the complex at that time in the morning.
    Wilma Callender lived on Don Milagro Drive in Baldwin Hills for “50 plus
    years.” She described her neighborhood as “middle class” and her neighbors as
    “doctors[,] lawyers [, and] musicians.” The homes on Callender’s street had views of the
    city and the hills. Defendant lived across the street from Callender. Callender had seen a
    Cadillac and a Maserati parked in defendant’s garage and a Lincoln parked in front of his
    house. Callender also observed a woman driving a BMW occasionally visit defendant at
    his house.
    Mary Bryant lived on Don Milagro Drive in Baldwin Hills since 1970. Her
    neighbors were “mostly professional people” and she enjoyed a partial city view from her
    house. On occasion, when she saw defendant standing outside his garage as she was
    pulling out of her driveway, she waived to him and said “hello.” On one occasion, she
    heard a loud alarm go off at defendant’s house.
    Hiwot Shenkute lived on Don Milagro Drive in Baldwin Hills since 2004.
    Defendant was her neighbor. She saw defendant in the middle of the day and said “hi” to
    him. She also observed him driving a gray Lincoln. Defendant was the only person she
    saw at his house. In approximately 2012, Shenkute had a conversation with defendant
    about trimming a tree in defendant’s backyard that was damaging a joint fence between
    their two properties.
    On September 16, 2009, a team of District Attorney investigators executed a
    search warrant at the Don Milagro residence. About 30 seconds after investigators
    knocked on the door, defendant opened the door wearing only a T-shirt and underwear.
    The investigators conducting the search took videotape and photographs documenting the
    items found inside the Don Milagro residence. Among other things, the photographs
    showed: a Maserati and a Cadillac in the garage, as well as a Lincoln parked in front of
    the house; awards that defendant had received on display in one of the rooms; personal
    6
    photographs on display in one of the rooms; a refrigerator and freezer stocked with
    various food items; a closet full of suits and ties; drawers full of personal items such as
    paper money, coins, cufflinks, watches, and keys; drawers with folded dress shirts and
    belts inside; a bathroom with personal grooming items on the vanity and a medicine
    cabinet filled with over-the-counter and prescription drugs. Investigators also found three
    handguns registered to defendant, including one recovered from under a bed and another
    recovered in a bedroom closet.
    On that same day, a team of District Attorney investigators executed a search
    warrant at unit five of the Glenway complex. A member of the team videotaped and
    photographed the inside of the unit to document the items found inside. Porter, the flight
    attendant who sometimes stayed at Sanders’s house, answered the door. Sanders was not
    home. Only women’s clothes were found in the closet and women’s shoes were found
    under the bed, but no men’s clothing was found. There were personal items in the
    bathroom, including prescription pill bottles with Sanders’s name on them. Billing
    statements with Sanders’s name on them were recovered, but there were no documents
    with defendant’s name on them. The investigators did not locate the January 2007 letter
    agreement that raised Sanders rent and allowed defendant to use a room at the house as a
    dwelling place.
    In 2000, defendant opened a residential account in his name with the Department
    of Water and Power pursuant to which electricity and water were supplied to the Don
    Milagro residence. In 2006 and 2007, the electricity and water usage at that location
    were consistent, but in 2008 and 2009, after defendant was elected to the State Senate, the
    usage of electricity and water at the Don Milagro residence decreased substantially.
    Sanders had a residential account with Southern California Edison pursuant to
    which electricity was supplied to unit five of the Glenway complex. Units one through
    four of the complex were supplied with electricity pursuant to a commercial account in
    defendant’s name. The bill for the commercial account was sent to the Don Milagro
    residence. Water was supplied to the Glenway complex pursuant to an account in
    defendant’s name and the billing address for that account was the Don Milagro residence.
    7
    The City of Inglewood required defendant to pay an annual business tax on the
    Glenway complex. If, however, the owner of a multi-unit apartment complex lived in
    one of the units and filed for an owner-occupier exemption, the City would not include
    that unit in its annual tax calculation. Between 2003 and 2009, defendant did not claim
    the owner-occupier exemption.
    Defendant’s daughter attended Hamilton High School from approximately 2004 to
    June 2008. The high school’s records listed an emergency contact number for defendant
    as one of the phone lines at the Don Milagro residence.
    Defendant worked as a legislative aide at the State Senate between 2005 and 2008.
    When he was hired, he filled out a card that asked for personal information including
    address, social security number, and birth date. Defendant provided “4556 Don Milagro
    Drive” as his address.
    Records of the security company that provided security services for defendant at
    the Don Milagro residence showed that on February 26, 2006, at 8:26 p.m., defendant
    had an activation of his alarm system. When the security company contacted him by
    telephone at the property, he provided his password and indicated that everything was
    “okay.” Those records also showed that between 2006 and 2012 there were several other
    instances in which an activated alarm required defendant to call the security company and
    provide his password.
    At the time of trial, AT&T was billing defendant for three land lines that provided
    telephone service at the Don Milagro residence. AT&T’s records showed that calls were
    being made from one of those land lines at various times of the day and night on
    randomly selected dates between 2007 and 2009.
    B.     Defendant’s Case
    Cine Ivery had known defendant for over 20 years. At the time of trial, she was
    employed as defendant’s chief of staff. According to Ivery, defendant purchased the Don
    Milagro residence in July 2000. At the time, Ivery was working for defendant—who was
    then a State Assemblyman—as a district director. Ivery located the Don Milagro
    8
    residence for defendant and helped him move there using her car, a truck, and a “roll off”
    bin. When defendant left the State Assembly in 2002, Ivery continued to work for him as
    he acted as a consultant for the State Assembly. Between 2002 and 2008, when
    defendant was elected to the State Senate, Ivery occasionally worked through the night at
    the Don Milagro residence.
    Ivery explained that, prior to opening his State Senate campaign in January 2008,
    defendant began preparations to move to the Glenway complex. Ivery assisted him in
    moving light items to the Glenway complex. Following his election to the State Senate,
    defendant conducted fundraising activities from the Don Milagro residence because he
    was not permitted to do so from his office in Sacramento. Ivery estimated that, after
    being elected as State Senator, defendant spent 80 to 85 percent of this time in
    Sacramento.
    According to defendant, after purchasing the Glenway complex in 1977, he moved
    into unit six for about 18 months. In either 1978 or 1979, defendant purchased a
    residence at 9316 4th Avenue in Inglewood. Over the next several years, defendant
    moved into unit six, four or five different times, for periods of six to eight months. The
    last time he lived there was 1988 or 1989.
    A member of defendant’s family had always lived at the Glenway complex. In
    about 1985, defendant’s father moved into unit five of the Glenway complex and lived
    with Sanders until his death in 1991. Defendant’s brother also lived in unit six for about
    a year. In addition, Sander’s son lived in that unit for some unspecified period.
    Defendant owned the Glenway complex continuously since 1977 and had no intention of
    selling it.
    Defendant purchased the Don Milagro residence in 2000 or 2001 primarily
    because there was a large room on the second floor that he wanted to convert into an
    office. But defendant admitted that, as part of the purchase transaction for the Don
    Milagro residence, he declared in mortgage documents that he intended to use the
    property as his principal residence. When defendant purchased the house, he sold his
    home on 4th Avenue in Inglewood to Ivery. Defendant used the office he built at the
    9
    Don Milagro residence to conduct political activities he could not conduct from his State
    Senate office in Sacramento. Defendant claimed he never intended the Don Milagro
    residence to be his domicile. He never registered to vote at that address, never used that
    address on his driver’s license or passport, and never took a homeowner’s exemption on
    the property. Defendant also ran a consulting business from an office at the Don Milagro
    residence and took out a business license for that address.
    When defendant decided to run for State Senate, he considered running in the 26th
    District where the Don Milagro residence was located, but decided against it. He
    ultimately decided to run for the 25th District Senate seat. He therefore took steps to
    ensure that the Glenway complex in that district was his domicile. Initially, he thought
    he could occupy unit six, but Sanders had rented that unit to one of her friends. Because
    Sanders wanted to continue to collect the rent from unit six, defendant suggested that
    they share her house, unit five. They agreed Sanders would continue to collect the rent
    from unit six, pay for the gardener, and pay an increased rent of $850. In return,
    defendant would be entitled to share the house with her. Defendant therefore prepared a
    letter on January 7, 2007, memorializing their agreement. After signing the agreement,
    defendant moved personal items, such as toiletries, clothing, and books into unit five at
    the Glenway complex.
    Defendant understood that if he had a tenancy, a key, free access to the property,
    and a right to remain there if he chose, he could claim unit five at the Glenway complex
    as his domicile for purposes of voter registration. Thus, when he filled out his voter
    registration form, he believed he was listing the address that he considered to be his legal
    domicile. Defendant claimed his understanding concerning his domicile was based, in
    part, on his experience running voter registration drives and working on political
    campaigns, the practices of other state legislators, and the case of Fenton v. Board of
    Directors (1984) 
    156 Cal. App. 3d 1107
    (Fenton). Defendant also understood that once he
    took office in 2008, his domicile was conclusively presumed to be the location listed on
    his voter registration card based on section 2026.
    10
    PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Defendant was charged in an indictment in counts one and two with perjury in
    violation of Penal Code section 118, subdivision (a); in count three with filing a false
    declaration of candidacy in violation of section 18203, subdivision (a); and in counts four
    through eight with fraudulent voting in violation of section 18560, subdivision (a).
    Defendant pleaded not guilty to all counts.
    The jury found defendant guilty on all counts. The trial court suspended
    imposition of sentence and placed defendant on formal probation for three years. The
    trial court ordered defendant to serve 90 days in jail and to perform 1500 hours of
    community service. The court also directed defendant not to hold any public office in the
    State of California pursuant to Government Code section 1021.
    DISCUSSION
    A.     Law of the Case
    1.     Background
    Prior to trial, defendant moved under Penal Code section 995 to set aside the
    indictment, arguing, inter alia, that counts 7 and 8—fraudulently voting on two occasions
    in 2009—should be dismissed because under section 2026, he was entitled to a
    conclusive presumption that the residence address on his voter registration form—868
    Glenway Drive, unit five, in the 25th District—was his domicile for purposes of voting in
    that district.5 The trial court ruled that the conclusive presumption in section 2026
    applied and prevented prosecution on counts 7 and 8.
    The prosecution filed a petition for writ of mandate in this court seeking an order
    reinstating counts 7 and 8. (
    Wright, supra
    , 197 Cal.App.4th at p. 516.) We issued an
    5
    Section 349, subdivision (a) provides: “‘Residence’ for voting purposes means a
    person’s domicile.”
    11
    order to show cause directing defendant to address why the relief prayed for in the
    petition should not be granted. (Id.at 514.)
    Following briefing and oral argument, we issued a unanimous published opinion
    granting the petition and directing the trial court to reinstate counts 7 and 8. (
    Wright, supra
    , 197 Cal.App.4th at p. 517.) In our opinion, we rejected the trial court’s
    interpretation of section 2026, reasoning as follows: “Section 2026 provides, ‘The
    domicile of a Member of the Legislature . . . shall be conclusively presumed to be at the
    residence address indicated on that person’s currently filed affidavit of registration.’
    (Italics added.) The Legislature has articulated a stark difference between a person’s
    domicile and a person’s residence. [¶] A domicile is described as a ‘fixed’ place of
    habitation—one in which the person has an ‘intention of remaining’ or, if absent, an
    ‘intention of returning.’ (§ 349, subd. (b).) Importantly, ‘[a]t a given time, a person may
    have only one domicile.’ (Ibid., italics added.) [¶] On the other hand, ‘[t]he residence of
    a person is that place in which the person’s habitation is fixed for some period of time,
    but wherein he or she does not have the intention of remaining.’ (§ 349, subd. (c).)
    Thus, ‘[a]t a given time, a person may have more than one residence.’ (Ibid., italics
    added.)” (
    Wright, supra
    , 197 Cal.App.4th at p. 515.)
    “Reading these statutes together, the conclusive presumption set forth in section
    2026 is triggered when the legislator lists one of his or her residences when he or she fills
    out the section of the voter registration form that requires the legislator to write the
    ‘ADDRESS where [the legislator] live[s].’ For example, the presumption would not be
    triggered if the legislator were to indicate he or she lived at an address that corresponded
    to a local McDonald’s restaurant, or the home of another in which the legislator had no
    fixed habitation ‘for some period of time’ (§ 349, subd. (c)). (
    Wright, supra
    , 197
    Cal.App.4th at p. 515.)
    “The word ‘residence’ should not be considered in a vacuum. In fact, ‘the
    meaning of the word [“residence”] is governed by the purpose and intent of the statute in
    which it appears or in the context of the circumstances in issue. [Citations.]’ (People v.
    Horn (1998) 
    68 Cal. App. 4th 408
    , 416 [
    80 Cal. Rptr. 2d 310
    ].) In support of Assembly Bill
    12
    No. 1798 (1983–1984 Reg. Sess.), the bill underlying section 2026, former Assembly
    Speaker Willie Brown explained to the Governor that the bill was designed to apply to
    ‘[l]egislators who, of necessity, spend a great amount of time away from their true
    domicile, often going so far as to purchase homes and move their families to the location
    of their Legislature in service of their constituents . . . .’ (Assembly Speaker Willie
    Brown, letter to Governor George Deukmejian, Mar. 1, 1984, italics added.) Indeed, we
    have previously pointed out the purpose of section 2026 is to address and resolve the
    issue of domicile unique to certain elected officials: ‘While many people may choose to
    have more than one residence, incumbent legislators may be required by their official
    duties to have two residences, one in Sacramento and one in their home district.’ (People
    v. Mayer (2003) 
    108 Cal. App. 4th 403
    , 419 [
    133 Cal. Rptr. 2d 454
    ].)” (
    Wright, supra
    , 197
    Cal.App.4th at pp. 515-516.)
    “The trial court’s ruling suggests any address listed on the affidavit as
    [defendant’s] residence address would trigger the applicability of the conclusive
    presumption and, for voting purposes, establish that address as [defendant’s] true
    domicile. This interpretation of ‘residence’ does not comport with the purpose and intent
    of section 2026 and would lead to absurd results. What is conclusively presumed is not
    the legislator’s ‘residence’ but rather his or her ‘domicile.’ We hold this conclusive
    presumption applies only if the address indicated on the legislator’s currently filed
    affidavit of voter registration is one of the legislator’s legal residences. [Fn. omitted.]”
    (
    Wright, supra
    , 197 Cal.App.4th at p. 516.)
    Following the issuance of our published opinion, we denied defendant’s petition
    for rehearing. (
    Wright, supra
    , 197 Cal.App.4th at p. 517.) The Supreme Court thereafter
    unanimously denied defendant’s petition for review. (Ibid.)
    2.     Contentions
    Defendant contends our decision in 
    Wright, supra
    , 
    197 Cal. App. 4th 511
    was
    wrongly decided and urges us to reconsider it. According to defendant, the law of the
    case doctrine does not apply to bar his challenge to our prior decision because that
    13
    decision constitutes a manifest misapplication of legal principles that resulted in a
    substantial injustice—his convictions in this case. Defendant maintains that our decision
    was wrongly decided because: it violated the separation of powers doctrine by rewriting
    a valid legislative enactment; it denied his due process rights by depriving him of a fair
    warning that evidence of his domicile could be used to convict him of the charged crimes
    and because the language of section 2026 affirmatively misled him into believing that his
    conduct could not give rise to criminal prosecution; and it violated the rule of lenity by
    not giving him the benefit of every reasonable doubt when interpreting the statute in
    issue.
    3.     Legal Principles
    The law of the case doctrine and the limited exceptions to its application are well
    established. “As reiterated in People v. Shuey (1975) 
    13 Cal. 3d 835
    , 841 [
    120 Cal. Rptr. 83
    , 
    533 P.2d 211
    ] (Shuey): ‘“The doctrine of the law of the case is this: That where,
    upon an appeal, the [reviewing] court, in deciding the appeal, states in its opinion a
    principle or rule of law necessary to the decision, that principle or rule becomes the law
    of the case and must be adhered to throughout its subsequent progress, both in the lower
    court and upon subsequent appeal, and, as here assumed, in any subsequent suit for the
    same cause of action, and this although in its subsequent consideration this court may be
    clearly of the opinion that the former decision is erroneous in that particular.”’ (1) The
    principle applies to criminal as well as civil matters [citations], and it applies to this court
    even though the previous appeal was before a Court of Appeal [citation]. [¶] The
    principal reason for the doctrine is judicial economy. ‘Finality is attributed to an initial
    appellate ruling so as to avoid the further reversal and proceedings on remand that would
    result if the initial ruling were not adhered to in a later appellate proceeding.’ [Citation.]
    Because the rule is merely one of procedure and does not go to the jurisdiction of the
    court [citations], the doctrine will not be adhered to where its application will result in an
    unjust decision, e.g., where there has been a ‘manifest misapplication of existing
    principles resulting in substantial injustice’ [citation], or the controlling rules of law have
    14
    been altered or clarified by a decision intervening between the first and second appellate
    determinations [citation]. The unjust decision exception does not apply when there is a
    mere disagreement with the prior appellate determination. [Citation.]” (People v.
    Stanley (1995) 
    10 Cal. 4th 764
    , 786-787.)
    4.      Analysis
    In seeking to avoid of the law of the case bar, defendant does not contend that the
    controlling rules of law have been altered or clarified by an intervening decision. Instead,
    he relies exclusively on the unjust decision exception. But, as the foregoing authorities
    establish, before a defendant can avail himself of the unjust decision exception, he must
    demonstrate not just that the decision in question was erroneous, but that it constituted a
    manifest misapplication of existing legal principles.
    Defendant’s arguments on appeal do not acknowledge the difference between an
    appellate decision that may, in retrospect, be erroneous and a decision that so obviously
    misapplies well established legal principles that it results in a substantial injustice. In
    doing so, his arguments amount to nothing more than an untimely request to rehear or
    reconsider a decision that was rendered almost five years ago. Reconsideration at this
    point, however, would run afoul of the principles of finality and judicial economy upon
    which the law of the case doctrine is based.
    Here, defendant had a full and fair opportunity during the prior writ proceeding to
    brief the issues concerning the proper interpretation and application of the conclusive
    presumption in section 2026. Defendant also had a full and fair opportunity to present his
    views on those issues at oral argument. And, assuming, arguendo, our subsequent
    published opinion manifestly misapplied existing legal principles, defendant had a fair
    opportunity to demonstrate that fact in his petition for rehearing. Defendant then had yet
    another fair opportunity to demonstrate that our decision was a manifest misapplication
    of existing legal principles during the proceedings on his petition for review in the
    Supreme Court, including the opportunity to present and argue the issues addressed in the
    amicus letter brief from the Office of Legislative Counsel which set forth Legislative
    15
    Counsel’s opinions concerning the proper interpretation and application of the conclusive
    presumption in section 2026. Notwithstanding that amicus letter brief and defendant’s
    arguments in the Supreme Court, his petition for review was denied by a unanimous
    court.
    Since our published opinion became final and binding almost five years ago, it has
    not been challenged or criticized by any other appellate court and the legislature has not
    acted to amend or clarify section 2026 to address any asserted manifest misapplication of
    that section. Given the foregoing procedural history of our decision in 
    Wright, supra
    ,
    
    197 Cal. App. 4th 511
    , we are not convinced that it is an erroneous decision, much less a
    manifest misapplication of existing legal principles, based on all the reasons set forth in
    our previous opinion. And, even assuming, arguendo, that upon further consideration, we
    might determine that it is erroneous, that, by itself, would be insufficient to avoid the
    relitigation bar of the doctrine of law of the case. We therefore conclude that defendant
    has failed to establish an exception to that doctrine. Absent such an exception, we are
    prevented under that doctrine from doing what defendant urges us to do, reconsider a
    final published opinion.
    B.     Entitlement to Invoke Conclusive Presumption
    Defendant argues that, even under this Court’s interpretation of section 2026, the
    evidence established, as a matter of law, that the Glenway complex—not unit five (the
    free-standing house) of that complex which he listed on his voter registration form—was
    one of his legal residences. In support of that assertion, defendant points to his evidence
    showing his long-term ownership of the Glenway complex, his prior periodic occupancy
    of unit six (the garage apartment associated with unit five), and his January 2007 letter
    agreement with Sanders.
    Although defendant couches this issue as purely a matter of law, the issue of
    residence or domicile is a mixed question of fact and law, and a resolution of it based on
    conflicting evidence is conclusive in the reviewing court. (Noble v. Franchise Tax Bd.
    (2004) 
    118 Cal. App. 4th 560
    , 567.) Here, the issue concerning residence was subject to
    16
    conflicting evidence. Therefore, the issue “is in reality a substantial evidence question,”
    
    (Fenton supra
    , 156 Cal.App.3d at p. 1117), i.e., was there sufficient evidence that unit
    five was not one of defendant’s legal residences. “When a defendant challenges the
    sufficiency of the evidence, ‘“[t]he court must review the whole record in the light most
    favorable to the judgment below to determine whether it discloses substantial evidence—
    that is, evidence which is reasonable, credible, and of solid value—such that a reasonable
    trier of fact could find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.” [Citation.]’
    [Citations.] . . . ‘Substantial evidence includes circumstantial evidence and any
    reasonable inferences drawn from that evidence. [Citation.]’ [Citation.] We ‘“‘presume
    in support of the judgment the existence of every fact the trier could reasonably deduce
    from the evidence.’” [Citation.]’ [Citation.]” (People v. Clark (2011) 
    52 Cal. 4th 856
    ,
    942-943.)
    Moreover, when a defendant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence as to a
    particular factual finding, a reviewing court presumes the evidence was sufficient, and the
    defendant bears the burden of affirmatively demonstrating that the evidence is
    insufficient. (People v. Cardenas (2015) 
    239 Cal. App. 4th 220
    , 227.) To do so, the
    defendant must set forth all the material evidence on the issue in the light most favorable
    to the judgment, not just his own evidence or by portraying the evidence in a light most
    favorable to him. (Foreman & Clark Corp. v. Fallon (1971) 
    3 Cal. 3d 875
    , 881-882;
    People v. Sanghera (2006) 
    139 Cal. App. 4th 1567
    , 1573-1574.) Failure to do so forfeits
    the contention on appeal. (Ibid.)
    Because it appeared that defendant’s factual statement on appeal did not set forth
    all the material evidence regarding the jury’s finding that unit five at the Glenway
    complex was not one of his legal residences, we asked the parties to submit letter briefs
    on whether defendant forfeited his challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence in support
    17
    of that finding. In his letter brief on the forfeiture issue, 6 defendant contends that his
    factual statement in his opening brief discusses all the evidence relevant to his contention
    that he was entitled to the conclusive presumption in section 2026. According to
    defendant, the sole issue concerning the conclusive presumption is whether his evidence
    showed that he had a fixed period of habitation at any of the six units at the Glenway
    complex at any time since he acquired it in 1977. Defendant concludes that because he
    testified he lived in unit six for a year and one-half after acquiring the complex, and
    thereafter occupied that unit for several months at a time on four or five other occasions
    prior to 1988, he established the entire Glenway complex as his legal residence and the
    prosecution provided no evidence to the contrary.
    Defendant’s argument is based on a misreading of California law and on a faulty
    factual premise which ignores that he listed unit five of the complex on his voter
    registration form, not the entire complex or unit six. It further ignores that the indictment
    accused him of falsely listing unit five as his residence on his voter registration form and
    the jury instruction on count one—perjury by declaration—advised the jury that the false
    statement on which defendant was being prosecuted in count one was his statement under
    oath that he lived in unit five. In addition, defendant’s argument fails to acknowledge the
    prosecution’s entire case was predicated on the theory that defendant resided at the Don
    Milagro residence, when he was not living at his apartment in Sacramento while serving
    as a State Senator, and that he had no fixed period of habitation at unit five of the
    6
    In his letter brief, defendant claims the argument was not waived. Our Supreme
    Court has explained that, under these circumstances, the principle is forfeiture, not
    “waiver.” “As the United States Supreme Court has clarified, the correct term is
    ‘forfeiture’ rather than ‘waiver,’ because the former term refers to a failure to object or to
    invoke a right, whereas the latter term conveys an express relinquishment of a right or
    privilege. (See, e.g., United States v. Olano (1993) 
    507 U.S. 725
    , 733 [
    113 S. Ct. 1770
    ,
    
    123 L. Ed. 2d 508
    ]; In re S.B. (2004) 
    32 Cal. 4th 1287
    , 1293, fn. 2 [
    13 Cal. Rptr. 3d 786
    , 
    90 P.3d 746
    ] (S.B.); People v. Simon (2001) 
    25 Cal. 4th 1082
    , 1097, fn. 9 [
    108 Cal. Rptr. 2d 385
    , 
    25 P.3d 598
    ] (Simon).) As a practical matter, the two terms on occasion have been
    used interchangeably. (Simon, at p. 1097, fn. 9; People v. Saunders (1993) 
    5 Cal. 4th 580
    ,
    590, fn. 6 [
    20 Cal. Rptr. 2d 638
    , 
    853 P.2d 1093
    ] (Saunders).)” (In re Sheena K. (2007) 
    40 Cal. 4th 875
    , 880, fn.1.)
    18
    Glenway complex. Those were the only two properties that were searched during the
    investigation and only the contents of those two properties were inventoried,
    photographed, video recorded, and presented to the jury in support of the prosecution’s
    theory of the case. Moreover, only residents of the Glenway complex and neighbors on
    Don Milagro Drive were interviewed and called to testify at trial in support of the
    prosecution’s theory.
    Nevertheless, defendant’s opening brief ignores most, if not all, of the
    prosecution’s evidence because, according to defendant, it was irrelevant to his flawed
    theory of the case. In support of that assertion, defendant cites to 
    Fenton, supra
    , 
    156 Cal. App. 3d 1107
    and Collier v. Menzel (1985) 
    176 Cal. App. 3d 24
    (Collier) and, based
    solely on those cases, concludes in his letter brief that “[u]nder California law, a home
    that one owns but where one has not lived for many years may be a legal residence if
    one’s habitation was fixed there at some time in the past.” Neither case cited, however,
    stands for such a broad proposition.
    In 
    Fenton, supra
    , 
    156 Cal. App. 3d 1107
    , the plaintiff presented evidence on a
    domicile issue showing that she had lived at her property on Big Oak Road for 20 years,
    after which she purchased and lived part-time at a property in Ferndale. Several years
    later, the plaintiff began to live exclusively at the Ferndale property for a period of
    approximately 13 years, during which time she regularly visited and maintained the Big
    Oak property because she considered that property to be her “home.” (Id. at pp. 1111-
    1112.) Based on the plaintiff’s evidence, the court in Fenton concluded that substantial
    evidence supported the trial court’s finding that the Big Oak property was the plaintiff’s
    domicile for purposes of the Government Code section in issue, which required the
    plaintiff be domiciled in the district of the local agency board to which she had been
    appointed. (Id. at p.1117-1118.)
    The decision in 
    Fenton, supra
    , 
    156 Cal. App. 3d 1107
    was based on facts that are
    unrelated to the evidence at issue in this case. Defendant did not contend, much less
    present evidence, he had resided in unit five continuously for 20 years or that, once he
    left that unit, he regularly visited it and still considered it to be his “home.” Moreover,
    19
    the issue in that case concerned the sufficiency of the evidence of domicile, not legal
    residence under sections 349 and 2026. The court in Fenton did not state or imply that a
    fixed period of habitation in one unit of a multi-unit apartment complex, many years
    before a voter registered to vote in that property’s district, would establish another unit at
    the complex as the voter’s residence for purposes of sections 349 and 2026.
    The facts in 
    Collier, supra
    , 
    176 Cal. App. 3d 24
    are also readily distinguishable
    from this case. There, three homeless persons who were living in a park in Santa Barbara
    listed the address of the park on their voter registration forms as their residence. (Id. at
    pp. 29-30.) The court in Collier merely held that, so long as the homeless voters were
    actually residing in the park, they could register to vote in the precinct in which the park
    was located. (Id. at pp. 30-32.) Because the holding in Collier dealt solely with the issue
    of current residency, it provides no support for defendant’s contention based on a past
    period of fixed habitation in a different unit of the complex than the one listed on his
    voter registration form.
    As our prior opinion in this case explained, the purpose of the exclusive
    presumption in section 2026 was to address the issue of a legislator’s domicile for voting
    purposes when the legislator had two current legal residences—one in his home district
    and one in Sacramento that he or she used while the Legislature was in session. At trial
    in this case, there was substantial evidence presented to support a finding that defendant
    was not currently residing in any unit at the Glenway complex, including unit five, and
    that instead his second current residence, when he was not residing in Sacramento, was
    the Don Milagro residence. Defendant’s failure to acknowledge, much less discuss
    candidly, that evidence in his opening brief therefore forfeited his contention that there
    was insufficient evidence to support the jury’s finding that unit five of the Glenway
    complex was not one of his legal residences for purposes of the conclusive presumption
    of domicile in section 2026.
    20
    C.      Instructional Error on Count 1
    1.     Contention
    Defendant contends the trial court erred by refusing to instruct the jury as to count
    one that the phrase “address where you live” on his voter registration form referred to his
    domicile for voting purposes. According to defendant, the trial court had a sua sponte
    duty to give a clarifying instruction on the domicile issue because the voter registration
    form’s use of the term “live” had the potential to confuse the jury, particularly in light of
    the court’s other instruction that “[w]ords and phrases not specifically defined in these
    instructions are to be applied using their ordinary, everyday meanings.” Defendant
    maintains that without the clarifying instruction, the jury was unable to properly
    adjudicate the intent element of the count one perjury charge because the use of the term
    live in the instruction likely caused the jury to adjudicate whether defendant intended to
    lie about where he lived, not about where he was domiciled.
    2.     Background
    As explained above, defendant was charged in count one with perjury because, on
    his voter registration form, he declared under penalty of perjury that the address where he
    lived was unit five of the Glenway complex. During a jury instruction conference
    concerning the materiality element in CALCRIM No. 2640, defendant’s counsel
    suggested that because voter eligibility depended on a person’s domicile, rather than the
    place a person lives, the trial court should instruct the jury that the word “lived” as used
    in the instruction was immaterial if defendant satisfied the domicile requirement. The
    trial court responded by proposing that the jury be advised that “information is material if
    it goes directly to the person’s qualifications to register to vote in that district.”
    Defendant’s counsel agreed to the trial court’s proposal, saying, “That’s fine.”
    The trial court thereafter instructed the jury on count one using CALCRIM No.
    2640. The trial court’s instruction stated, in pertinent part: “The defendant is charged in
    21
    Count One . . . with perjury in violation of Penal Code section 118. [¶] To prove that the
    defendant is guilty of this crime, the People must prove that: [¶] 1. The defendant
    declared, or certified under penalty of perjury under circumstances in which such
    declaration, or certificate was permitted by law; [¶] 2. When the defendant declared, or
    certified, he willfully stated that the information was true even though he knew it was
    false; [¶] 3. The information was material; [¶] 4. The defendant knew he was making
    the statement under penalty of perjury; AND [¶] 5. When the defendant made the false
    statement, he intended to declare or certify falsely while under penalty of perjury; AND
    [¶] 6. The defendant signed and delivered his declaration, or certificate to someone else
    intending that it be circulated or published as true. [¶] Someone commits an act willfully
    when he or she does it willingly or on purpose. [¶] Information is material if it goes
    directly to the person’s qualifications to register to vote in that district as to Count One.
    [¶] . . . [¶] The People allege that the defendant made the following false statements: as
    to count One: that he lived at 868 Glenway Drive #5, Inglewood; . . . .” (Italics added.)
    During jury deliberations, defendant objected to the use of the term “lives” on the
    jury verdict form instead of the term “domicile.”7 The trial court overruled the objection
    because the voter registration form used the term “lived.” After trial, defendant filed a
    motion for new trial in which he argued, inter alia, that the trial court misinstructed the
    jury on count one by using the term “lived” as opposed to domicile. The trial court heard
    and denied the motion.
    3.     Legal Principles
    7
    The jury verdict form on count one provided: “We, the Jury in the above-entitled
    action, find [defendant], GUILTY of the crime of PERJURY BY DECLARATION, on or
    about March 14, 2007, in the County of Los Angeles, the defendant did unlawfully, under
    penalty of perjury, declare as true, a material fact that he knew at the time to be false, to
    wit, in his Voter Registration Form, declared that the address where he lives is 868
    Glenway Drive, #5, Inglewood, in violation of Penal Code Section 118(a), a Felony, as
    charged in Count 1 of the Indictment.”
    22
    “In a criminal case, a trial court has a duty to instruct the jury on ‘“‘“the general
    principles of law relevant to the issues raised by the evidence.”’”’ [Citations.] The
    ‘general principles of law governing the case’ are those principles connected with the
    evidence and which are necessary for the jury’s understanding of the case. [Citations.]
    As to pertinent matters falling outside the definition of a ‘general principle of law
    governing the case,’ it is ‘defendant’s obligation to request any clarifying or amplifying
    instruction.’ [Citation.] [¶] . . . [¶] “When a word or phrase ‘“is commonly understood
    by those familiar with the English language and is not used in a technical sense peculiar
    to the law, the court is not required to give an instruction as to its meaning in the absence
    of a request.”’ [Citations.] A word or phrase having a technical, legal meaning requiring
    clarification by the court is one that has a definition that differs from its nonlegal
    meaning. [Citation.] . . . Thus, as the court in People v. Richie (1994) 
    28 Cal. App. 4th 1347
    [
    34 Cal. Rptr. 2d 200
    ] explains, terms are held to require clarification by the trial
    court when their statutory definition differs from the meaning that might be ascribed to
    the same terms in common parlance. [Citation.]” (People v. Estrada (1995) 
    11 Cal. 4th 568
    , 574-575.)
    “‘[T]he case law is clear that whether the giving of a concrete instruction is
    confusing or erroneous must be determined from the instructions as a whole. . . . “Error
    cannot be predicated upon an isolated phrase, sentence or excerpt from the instructions
    since the correctness of an instruction is to be determined in its relation to other
    instructions and in the light of the instructions as a whole. [Citations.] Accordingly,
    whether a jury has been correctly instructed is not to be determined from a part of an
    instruction or one particular instruction, but from the entire charge of the court.”’
    [Citation.]” (People v. Gomez (1986) 
    183 Cal. App. 3d 986
    , 992.) “As jurors are
    presumed to follow the instructions given by the court (People v. Murtishaw (1989) 
    48 Cal. 3d 1001
    , 1044 [
    258 Cal. Rptr. 821
    , 
    773 P.2d 172
    ]), we presume they did so.” (People
    v. McDonald (2015) 
    238 Cal. App. 4th 16
    , 26.) In evaluating the impact of an instruction
    on the jury, the reviewing court considers the arguments of counsel. (People v. Young
    (2005) 
    34 Cal. 4th 1149
    , 1202.)
    23
    24
    4.   Analysis
    In giving CALCRIM No. 2640 on count one, the trial court informed the jury that
    the prosecution alleged defendant made a false statement—“he lived at 868 Glenway
    Drive, number five, Inglewood . . . .” But the trial court also informed the jury as to
    count one that the false statement must be material and explained that “[i]nformation is
    material if it goes directly to a person’s qualifications to register to vote in that
    district . . . .”
    Subsequent instructions explained that to be qualified to vote in a district, a person
    was required to be domiciled there. For example, the instruction based on section 321
    explained that an “elector” must be a “resident of an election precinct at least 15 days
    prior to an election.” The next instruction, based on section 349, made clear that
    “‘[r]esidence’ for voting purposes means a person’s domicile” and it defined domicile as
    “that place in which his or her habitation is fixed, wherein the person has the intention of
    remaining, and to which, whenever he or she is absent, the person has the intention of
    returning.” The instruction based on section 2021 also explained that a person could
    leave his or her domicile to go into another state or precinct temporarily, but with the
    intention to return, and not lose his or her domicile.
    Thus, the trial court’s instructions when read together clearly informed the jury
    that to be guilty on count one, defendant must have intended to lie about his domicile on
    his voter registration form. Moreover, both the prosecutor and defense counsel
    emphasized during their respective arguments that the perjury charge in count one was
    based on defendant’s act of listing unit five as his domicile or voting address. And, the
    jury did not have any questions concerning the instruction. Thus, notwithstanding the use
    of the term “lived” in the instruction, it was not reasonably likely that the jury
    misunderstood the instruction as claimed by defendant. In light of the totality of the
    instructions, we hold the trial court committed no error.
    25
    D.     Prosecutorial Misconduct During Argument
    Defendant contends that the prosecutor engaged in prejudicial misconduct during
    argument by misstating the law applicable to the domicile issue. According to defendant,
    the prosecutor misinformed the jurors that they could convict defendant on counts two
    through eight for not living at unit five of the Glenway complex, instead of informing
    them that defendant could only be convicted on those counts if they found that unit was
    not defendant’s domicile.
    “‘A prosecutor who uses deceptive or reprehensible methods to persuade the jury
    commits misconduct, and such actions require reversal under the federal Constitution
    when they infect the trial with such “‘unfairness as to make the resulting conviction a
    denial of due process.’” [Citations.] Under state law, a prosecutor who uses such
    methods commits misconduct even when those actions do not result in a fundamentally
    unfair trial. [Citation.] In order to preserve a claim of misconduct, a defendant must
    make a timely objection and request an admonition; only if an admonition would not
    have cured the harm is the claim of misconduct preserved for review.’ [Citations.]”
    (People v. Thompson (2010) 
    49 Cal. 4th 79
    , 120-121.)
    The Attorney General contends defendant forfeited this claim because, when the
    prosecutor made the comments at issue, defendant failed to object and request a curative
    instruction. In response, defendant concedes he did not make the necessary objections
    during argument, but maintains an objection would have been futile because the trial
    court rejected similar positions he had taken (1) in his pretrial motion to dismiss, (2)
    when proposing jury instructions, (3) during the discussions on the element of
    materiality, and (4) when he objected post-argument (during jury deliberations) to the use
    of the word “lives” in the verdict form.
    But defendant wholly fails to explain how an argument made in a pretrial motion
    years before trial can excuse him from the duty to object during argument. Similarly,
    while defendant refers to his proposed jury instructions, he does not specify which
    instruction or instructions raised the issue, much less explain whether or why the trial
    26
    court rejected those instructions. In addition, defendant fails to explain how a suggestion
    that his counsel made to the trial court, prior to argument, concerning the wording of a
    jury instruction on materiality, could excuse his failure to object during argument. And,
    of course, defendant fails to explain how an objection to a verdict form made after the
    prosecutor had concluded his arguments could possibly operate to excuse him from his
    failure to make any objection to the alleged misstatements during argument.
    In addition, it is quite clear that, even if the prosecutor’s remarks were somehow
    unfair (which we do not suggest they were), an admonition to the jury could have readily
    cured any undue prejudice to the defense. The comments were neither inflammatory nor
    irrational. Indeed, it is common for a person to respond to a question of where they
    “live” by providing a location that is their domicile rather than a place of transitory
    housing. In this respect, it is entirely reasonable to conclude that, if defendant had
    objected, the trial court would have simply told the jury that the prosecutor’s argument
    was not evidence and that the elements of the crime were defined by the jury instructions
    which, as we pointed out previously, were accurate. Such an admonition would have
    been an effective tool to allay defendant’s perceived harm.
    The arguments of prosecutorial misconduct are forfeited.
    E.     Substantial Evidence of Criminal Intent
    Defendant contends there was insufficient evidence to support the jury’s finding
    that he acted with the requisite intent to commit the crimes charged in counts one, two,
    and four through eight. But, as discussed above in connection with the jury’s finding on
    the residency issue, his factual statement did not appear to set forth all the material
    evidence relevant to the intent finding. (Foreman & Clark Corp. v. 
    Fallon, supra
    , 3
    Cal.3d at pp. 881-882; People v. 
    Sanghera, supra
    , 139 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1573-1574.)
    We therefore asked the parties to brief the forfeiture issue.
    In his letter brief, defendant contends he did not omit any material evidence
    relevant to the intent element, even though he admittedly failed to discuss the vast
    majority of the prosecution’s evidence and exhibits. According to defendant, most if not
    27
    all of the prosecution’s evidence dealt with the issue of whether he lived at the Don
    Milagro residence, as opposed to unit five of the Glenway complex, and that evidence
    was irrelevant to the issue of whether he intended to lie about the address of his domicile
    on his voter registration form.
    Contrary to defendant’s assertion, the prosecution’s evidence was relevant to
    intent. It strongly suggested he had a fixed period of habitation at the Don Milagro
    residence; he intended to remain at that location; and, when absent, he intended to return
    to the Don Milagro residence. By contrast, the prosecution’s evidence showed defendant
    had no fixed period of habitation at unit five of the Glenway complex and it was, at most,
    a transitory step for him. Because a defendant’s intent can be inferred from his actions
    (People v. Imler (1992) 
    9 Cal. App. 4th 1178
    , 1182 [“The defendant’s intent may be
    inferred from his conduct . . .”]), the prosecution’s evidence provided the jury with a
    basis to infer defendant knew he was domiciled at the Don Milagro residence and had no
    fixed period of habitation at unit five or any intent to remain at, or return to, that unit.
    Therefore, his act of listing unit five of the Glenway complex on his voter registration
    form despite that knowledge supported an inference that he intentionally misrepresented
    his domicile for purposes of voting. Defendant’s failure to candidly address the
    prosecution’s evidence in the context of the intent element therefore forfeited his
    sufficiency claim on appeal.
    F.     Accuracy of Declaration of Candidacy
    Defendant contends his convictions on counts 2 and 3 must be reversed because
    they are based on his declaration of candidacy which stated under oath that he satisfied
    the residency requirements to run for State Senator in the 25th District. According to
    defendant, because the California Constitution’s one-year residency requirement (Cal.
    Const., art. IV, § 2, subd. (c)) has been declared unconstitutional by the Secretary of State
    and the Attorney General, his declaration of candidacy was true and immaterial.
    Contrary to defendant’s assertion, the one-year residency requirement in article
    IV, section 2, subdivision (c) of the California Constitution has never been declared
    28
    unconstitutional. Although the Secretary of State in 1976 rendered an “opinion” that the
    one-year requirement was unconstitutional, the Attorney General did not state or imply
    agreement with that opinion. Instead, based on an inquiry from the Secretary of State
    about the constitutionality of the one-year residency requirement, the Attorney General
    opined that the Secretary of State had no authority to enforce that requirement and
    declined to reach the constitutional issue posed by the Secretary of State. (62
    Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 365, 369 (1979) [“It is concluded that the Secretary of State is not
    authorized to enforce the provision of article IV, section 2, subdivision (c) of the
    California Constitution imposing a one year residence prerequisite for membership in the
    Legislature”].) In doing so, the Attorney General distinguished those cases that declared
    durational residency requirements for local public office unconstitutional—including
    Johnson v. Hamilton (1975) 
    15 Cal. 3d 461
    —and reaffirmed that no appellate court had
    declared the one-year residency requirement for statewide office unconstitutional. (62
    Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 365, 366-367 [“All of the above-cited cases concerned elections for
    local public office. The durational residence requirement for statewide office set forth in
    section 2 of article IV of the California Constitution has never been determined by an
    appellate court to be unconstitutional. (Cf. Johnson v. 
    Hamilton, supra
    , 15 Cal.3d at 471-
    472.)”].)
    Given that the authorities upon which defendant relies for this contention do not
    support it, we conclude that, at the time defendant executed under penalty of perjury his
    declaration of candidacy, there was an enforceable residency requirement for the
    statewide office in the California Constitution. No appellate court had ever held the one-
    year residency requirement for statewide, as opposed to local, office to be
    unconstitutional.8 Therefore, defendant’s statement in his candidacy declaration—that he
    8
    Although defendant now contends that the one-year residency requirement was
    unconstitutional, he proposed a jury instruction which expressly stated that under the
    California Constitution, one of the requirements for election to a statewide office is that
    the candidate must be “a resident of the legislative district for one year . . . .”
    29
    met all the legal requirements for that office—was both false and material, and it fully
    supported his convictions on counts 2 and 3.
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment of conviction is affirmed.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
    KUMAR, J.
    We concur:
    TURNER, P. J.
    KRIEGLER, J.
    
    Judge of the Superior Court of the County of Los Angeles, assigned by the Chief
    Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    30