People v. Cortez ( 2018 )


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  • Filed 6/20/18
    CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    THE PEOPLE,
    E064915
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    (Super.Ct.No. SWF1302486)
    v.
    OPINION
    ANTHONY ESPARZA CORTEZ, JR.,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. Mac R. Fisher, Judge.
    Affirmed in part; reversed in part with directions.
    Gene D. Vorobyov, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
    Appellant.
    Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, Kathleen A. Kenealy, Acting Attorney General,
    Gerald A. Engler, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney
    General, Arlene A. Sevidal, Michael Pulos, and Alan L. Amann, Deputy Attorneys
    General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    * Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1105(b) and 8.1110, this opinion is
    certified for publication with the exception of parts IV, V and VI
    1
    I
    INTRODUCTION
    Defendant and appellant, Anthony Esparza Cortez, Jr., a convicted felon, and his
    friend, Michael Saavedra, conspired to commit murder against Rene Perez, and his son-
    in-law, Alvino Barrera. While defendant drove, Saavedra fired a gun at Perez and
    Barrera in another car. Defendant and Saavedra then drove to the home of Guadalupe
    Valle, Perez’s relative by marriage. Armed with a rifle and a handgun, defendant and
    Saavedra fired more than 30 bullets into the house, which was occupied by 10 people.
    Defendant admitted having possession of the rifle used in the shooting, and of an assault
    rifle which is banned in California, as well as several rounds of ammunition.
    A jury convicted defendant of five charges: conspiracy to commit murder; being a
    felon in possession of a firearm; possessing firearms ammunition while prohibited from
    possessing a firearm; assault with a firearm; and possessing an assault weapon. (Pen.
    Code, §§ 182, 187, 245, subd. (a)(2), 1192.7, subd. (c)(8), 12022, subd. (a)(1), 12022.53,
    subd. (c), 29800, subd. (a)(1), 30305, subd. (a), 30605, subd. (a).)1 The court sentenced
    defendant to an aggregate, determinate term of 29 years four months, followed by an
    indeterminate term of 25 years to life.
    1   All statutory references are to the Penal Code.
    2
    On appeal, defendant claims the trial court erred in not instructing the jury sua
    sponte on conspiracy to commit assault with a firearm and conspiracy to shoot at an
    inhabited dwelling as lesser included offenses of conspiracy to commit murder as
    charged. Defendant also claims the trial court erred in denying his requested self-defense
    instruction. Additionally, he asserts substantial evidence did not support the jury’s
    finding that defendant personally and intentionally discharged a firearm in the
    commission of conspiracy to commit murder.
    Finally, defendant asserts four claims of sentencing error, which the People
    concede. The parties agree the trial court should strike the one-year section 12022,
    subdivision (a)(1), enhancement as to the assault with a firearm count (count 4). The trial
    court should also stay under section 654 the one-year section 12022, subdivision (a)(1),
    enhancement as to the conspiracy count. In addition, under section 654, the trial court
    should also stay the separate punishment either for count 2 or count 5. Defendant further
    asserts in supplemental briefing that this court should remand this matter for resentencing
    on his firearm enhancement (§ 12022.53, subd. (c)) under recently enacted Senate Bill
    No. 620 ((2017-2018 Reg. Sess.) § 2), which amended section 12022.53, subdivision (h).
    The parties agree in their supplemental briefs that the recent amendment applies in this
    case retroactively, because the amendment took effect before final judgment.
    3
    We accordingly order this matter remanded to the trial court for the purpose of
    permitting the trial court to exercise its discretion as to whether to strike defendant’s
    firearm enhancement, and to make the other corrections to defendant’s sentence, as noted
    above. In all other regards, we affirm the judgment.
    II
    STATEMENT OF FACTS
    In reviewing instructional error, we consider the evidence in the light most
    favorable to defendant. (People v. Millbrook (2014) 
    222 Cal. App. 4th 1122
    , 1137.)
    A. Prosecution Evidence
    Defendant first became friends with Valle at a classic car show. Both men are
    fans of 1950’s automobiles. Perez is married to Valle’s wife’s cousin. In June 2013,
    there was a fight among the guests at a party at Perez’s house. The combatants included
    defendant, Saavedra, and Barrera.
    Perez and Valle helped break up the fight. Perez and Valle discussed what had
    happened and agreed there was no ongoing problem. Defendant seemed pleased to leave
    the party. Perez did not see any punches thrown and he thought the dispute had ended.
    After the June party, defendant sent several text messages to Valle, asking for
    photographs from a car show. Eventually, Perez sent defendant the photographs.
    4
    B. The Offenses
    The basis for the conspiracy to commit murder in count 1 involved two separate
    shooting episodes—assault with a firearm on Perez’s vehicle and the shooting of the
    Valle residence.
    On August 17, 2013, Perez and Barrera were on a liquor run when a car stopped in
    front of them at an intersection. Perez saw a hand outside the car but did not see anything
    else because it was dark. As Perez drove away, he heard a loud pop that could have been
    a gunshot or a car backfiring. Perez did not see any of the car’s occupants or whether
    they threw beer cans out of the car.
    At trial, Perez testified he did not remember telling law enforcement about the car
    and the incident. However, Perez had stated in his police interview that both he and
    Barrera were in Perez’s car at an intersection when a silver 2000 Chevrolet Monte Carlo
    with 20-inch chrome rims pulled up to their car, and a single shot was fired from the
    passenger side towards Perez’s car. Perez described the passenger as a bald very thin
    Hispanic man and said that, as the Monte Carlo drove away, both the driver and the
    passenger tossed out Modelo beer cans.
    The parties stipulated that a witness would testify that, at the intersection where
    the Perez shooting took place, a silver two-door Chevrolet Impala pulled up with two
    Hispanic men inside. The driver was a heavyset man, with a mustache; the passenger
    was a thin man, with a mustache and a goatee.2 The passenger, holding a black handgun,
    2Defendant testified that both he and Saavedra were stocky; Saavedra’s weight
    was about 230 or 235 pounds. They could wear the same size pants.
    5
    yelled that they were from Carson and Fontana. Defendant is from Fontana and Saavedra
    is from Carson. Defendant was the driver of their car. The parties stipulated that one of
    the beer cans collected at the scene had Saavedra’s fingerprints on it.
    C. The Valle Residence Shooting
    Later on the evening of August 17, 2013, Valle was at home with his wife and
    other family members. The rooms were illuminated. One of Valle’s sons and a grandson
    were in the living room in the front of the house with the blinds closed. Valle’s daughter
    was taking a shower in a bathroom adjacent to a bedroom near the front door. Two of her
    friends were waiting for her in the room. Valle’s daughter heard a loud noise and the
    sound of breaking glass. Valle estimated 30 shots were fired through the front door and
    three walls.
    Valle’s neighbors across the street heard the shots. The father described two
    Hispanic men, one big and the other “a little bit smaller.” The larger man was shooting a
    rifle. The thinner man may have fired several shots as well. After the shooting stopped,
    both men got into the car and drove off. The son testified that he only saw a single
    shooter, next to a white or a beige car with big silver rims. The shooter was a man, age
    30 to 35.
    Soon after the shooters left, defendant called Valle multiple times to ask him if he
    was all right. A subsequent police investigation revealed bullet holes in the door and the
    inside walls of the house, including the living room windows and the bedroom that was
    closest to the front door. The bullet strike marks were found all the way from the floor to
    6
    the ceiling. A .40-caliber shell casing was at the scene. No gun or ammunition of that
    caliber was found during the subsequent search of defendant’s and Saavedra’s residences.
    During police questioning, defendant admitted that he drinks Modelo beer and
    knows Saavedra, although he had not seen him for a while. He also admitted there were
    shell casings in his Chevrolet Monte Carlo. Defendant was equivocal about the details of
    the Perez assault but he knew no one had been killed.
    D. The Weapons Charges
    The parties stipulated that defendant was prohibited from possessing a firearm due
    to a prior felony conviction. Defendant admitted that two rifles and ammunition found at
    his house belonged to him. The officers found firearm ammunition in a bedroom and
    additional ammunition (nine-millimeter) in the garage. The police found a synthetic
    polymer stock used to modify a weapon to change its appearance. The police also found
    a Norinco-320 rifle (an Uzi) in defendant’s car. At trial, a prosecution’s expert testified
    that the Norinco-320 rifle meets the definition of an assault weapon banned under the
    California Assault Weapons Act because it has a pistol grip, and a capacity to accept a
    detachable magazine and a folding stock. Also, the police found a .223-caliber Ruger
    Mini-14 rifle in the attic of the house.
    E. The Defense
    The defense argued defendant was not guilty of conspiracy to commit murder
    because there was no evidence of a conspiratorial agreement to kill or the intent to kill.
    Concerning the Perez episode, the defense argued that the evidence, at worst, showed a
    7
    single shot fired with the intent to scare Perez, not to kill anyone in his car. As to the
    Valle shooting, the defense argued that Saavedra returned fire only after someone had
    shot at them from the direction of the Valle house.
    Defendant testified that he denied conspiring to kill anyone or intending to kill
    anyone.3 On August 17, 2013, defendant finished work and headed home, stopping to
    buy six 24-ounce Modelo beer cans. Defendant then left his home, planning to attend a
    children’s birthday party at Saavedra’s house, so he also bought a gift card and another
    36 cans of Modelo beer. Defendant arrived at around 6:00 or 6:30 p.m. Defendant had
    placed weapons in the car—handguns and a Ruger Mini-14 rifle—because the next
    morning, he planned to go to a shooting range in Fontana.
    After drinking heavily, defendant, Saavedra, and another man made a beer run.
    Defendant bought another 30-pack of Modelo beer while Saavedra bought a 30-pack of
    Bud Light. They returned to the party and played darts. Defendant had three or four
    shots of tequila; Saavedra drank more because he was losing the darts competition.
    After Saavedra and his wife had an argument, she asked everyone to leave.
    Defendant left the party with Saavedra and again stopped by a liquor store. Saavedra
    stayed in the car while defendant bought beer. Defendant encountered Barrera, with
    whom he had the fight in June. Defendant thought the fight was no longer an issue, but
    Barrera kept repeating, “Hey, bitch. Remember me?” Barrera then threw a beer bottle at
    defendant but missed.
    3   The trial court admitted a prior conviction to impeach his credibility.
    8
    Defendant drove his car to Perez’s house. Defendant wanted to ask Perez about
    the argument with Barrera. When Perez did not answer, defendant kicked over a
    motorcycle in anger. Defendant then drove back to the same liquor store and bought a
    30-pack of Modelo beers and an 18-pack of Bud Light. At that point, defendant already
    had 15 to 18 beers.
    As they were driving, defendant and Saavedra saw Barrera driving Perez’s car in
    the opposite direction. Without any notice, Saavedra fired a single shot. Afterwards,
    Saavedra told defendant that he did not intend to shoot anyone. Barrera drove off in a
    different direction. Defendant and Saavedra did not pursue him.
    F. The Valle Residence Shooting
    Defendant and Saavedra noticed police activity and decided to go to Valle’s house
    to evade the police and hide the guns. Defendant drove to the Valle house and parked,
    blocking the driveway at an angle. Defendant got out of the car and grabbed as much
    beer as he could. Saavedra took his handgun and rifle. Defendant noticed two men by
    the garage door, wearing black sweaters with hoods, concealing their faces. One man
    started to shoot. Saavedra dove and returned fire. They continued to exchange fire until
    defendant threw a beer can at the shooter, who ran into the house, firing rounds as he
    moved towards the entrance.
    After the shooting finished, defendant and Saavedra slowly drove off. Defendant
    was nervous and fumbling with his keys. Saavedra had been scorched by a round that
    came very close to him. Defendant checked to see if Saavedra was all right. Defendant
    9
    called Valle and asked why he was shooting at him. Valle said that he could not really
    talk and that he would call him back later.
    III
    INSTRUCTION ON CONSPIRACY TO COMMIT ASSAULT WITH A FIREARM OR
    TO SHOOT AT AN INHABITED DWELLING
    Defendant argues the trial court had a sua sponte duty to instruct the jury on two
    offenses that he argues were necessarily included within the charged offense of
    conspiracy to commit murder: conspiracy to commit assault with a firearm and
    conspiracy to shoot at an inhabited dwelling. However, neither offense was necessarily
    included within conspiracy to commit murder as charged. The alleged conspiracy
    agreement was only to commit murder. There are no allegations defendant conspired or
    agreed to commit an assault with a firearm or shoot at an inhabited dwelling. Such
    conspiracy offenses thus are not necessarily included offenses.
    In addition, substantial evidence did not support giving either instruction. At trial,
    defendant contended he did not commit any offense. He also did not claim he conspired
    to commit any lesser offense. Based on the evidence that defendant and Saavedra fired
    more than 30 bullets into an occupied residence, it was not reasonable for a jury to find
    that defendant conspired to commit an assault with a firearm or conspired to shoot at an
    inhabited house, instead of finding defendant conspired to commit murder.
    10
    Finally, any error was harmless because there was overwhelming evidence
    defendant conspired to commit murder when he and Saavedra both simultaneously fired a
    deluge of bullets into Valle’s home.
    A. Procedural Background
    Count 1 of the charging document alleged that defendant conspired to commit
    murder in violation of section 187 based on 10 overt acts: (1) defendant and Saavedra
    armed themselves; (2) defendant drove his car; (3) defendant pulled his car in front of a
    car driven by Perez; (4) Saavedra fired one shot at Perez’s vehicle; (5) defendant then
    drove to the Valle residence; (6) defendant and Saavedra exited the car and approached
    the Valle residence; (7) and (8) both men fired their weapons—about 30 bullets—at the
    house; (9) defendant and Saavedra then fled the scene; and (10) defendant hid the .223-
    caliber rifle used in the shooting in his home’s attic.
    The court instructed the jurors that to find defendant guilty of conspiracy to
    commit murder as charged, they had to find that defendant and Saavedra agreed
    intentionally and unlawfully to kill and committed at least one of the overt acts alleged.
    The court further instructed the jury that the “People have presented evidence of more
    than one event to prove that the defendant committed this offense [of conspiracy to
    murder], specifically evidence of the alleged shooting of Rene Perez and evidence of an
    alleged shooting at [Valle’s] residence.” The overt acts could apply either to conspiracy
    to commit murder of Perez or murder at the Valle residence. The jury was also instructed
    that, in determining whether defendant committed the alleged overt acts, it was to
    11
    consider “all of the evidence presented about the overt acts.” Finally, in finding
    defendant guilty of conspiracy to commit murder as charged, the jury found that, in
    committing that offense, defendant personally and intentionally discharged a firearm and
    that he participated as a principal in committing that offense, knowing that another
    principal to the offense was armed with a firearm.
    B. Law Applicable to Determining a Lesser Included Offense
    The test for determining whether there is a necessarily included offense is whether
    one offense cannot be committed without necessarily committing another offense; the
    latter is a necessarily included offense. (People v. Pendleton (1979) 
    25 Cal. 3d 371
    , 382.)
    “An offense is necessarily included in the charged offense if (1) under the statutory
    definition of the charged offense the charged offense cannot be committed without
    committing the lesser offense, or (2) the charging allegations of the accusatory pleading
    include language describing the offense in such a way that if the charged offense was
    committed as specified, the lesser offense was necessarily committed.” (People v.
    Fenenbock (1996) 
    46 Cal. App. 4th 1688
    , 1707 (Fenenbock); see also People v. Lopez
    (1998) 
    19 Cal. 4th 282
    , 288-289; People v. Clark (1990) 
    50 Cal. 3d 583
    , 636.) These two
    lesser-included-offense tests are known as the elements test and the accusatory pleading
    test, respectively. Often, when considering whether to instruct on a lesser included
    offense (the relationship) courts have applied either the elements test or the accusatory
    pleading test. (People v. Juarez (2016) 
    62 Cal. 4th 1164
    , 1174; People v. Shockley (2013)
    
    58 Cal. 4th 400
    , 404.)
    12
    Here, the parties agree the assault and dwelling-shooting conspiracy offenses do
    not qualify as lesser included offenses to the murder conspiracy charge under the
    elements test. The issue here is whether the offenses qualified as lesser included offenses
    under the accusatory pleading test by virtue of language in the information describing the
    overt acts. In determining whether an accusatory pleading encompasses an allegedly
    lesser included offense, the courts “consider only the pleading for the greater offense.”
    (People v. Montoya (2004) 
    33 Cal. 4th 1031
    , 1036.) It is “of no consequence that the
    evidence at trial might also establish guilt of another and lesser crime than that charged.”
    (People v. Steele (2000) 
    83 Cal. App. 4th 212
    , 218.)
    California courts have a sua sponte duty to instruct the jury on all necessarily
    included offenses supported by substantial evidence from which a reasonable juror could
    find the defendant guilty of the lesser offense but not the greater. (People v. Licas (2007)
    
    41 Cal. 4th 362
    , 366, citing People v. Cole (2004) 
    33 Cal. 4th 1158
    , 1218.) This court
    independently reviews a trial court’s failure to instruct the jury on a necessarily included
    offense. 
    (Licas, supra
    , at p. 366.)
    C. Conspiracy
    Section 182 defines the crime of conspiracy as two or more persons conspiring to
    “commit any crime.” (§ 182, subd. (a)(1).) Section 184 requires that one or more parties
    to the agreement commit an act to “effect the object” of the conspiracy. (§ 184.) Thus a
    conspiracy requires proof that the defendant and at least one other person “had the
    specific intent to agree or conspire to commit an offense, as well as the specific intent to
    13
    commit the elements of that offense, together with proof of the commission of an overt
    act ‘by one or more of the parties to such agreement’ in furtherance of the conspiracy.”
    (People v. Morante (1999) 
    20 Cal. 4th 403
    , 416, quoting § 184; People v. Cortez (1998)
    
    18 Cal. 4th 1223
    , 1232.) An overt act is an “‘“outward act done in pursuance of the crime
    and in manifestation of an intent or design, looking toward the accomplishment of the
    crime.”’” (People v. Johnson (2013) 
    57 Cal. 4th 250
    , 259, quoting People v. Zamora
    (1976) 
    18 Cal. 3d 538
    , 549, fn. 8.) The overt act requirement “consists of an overt act,
    not a specific overt act.” (People v. Russo (2001) 
    25 Cal. 4th 1124
    , 1134.) The jury need
    not unanimously agree on a particular overt act but only that the defendant or a
    coconspirator committed at least one of the overt acts alleged. (Ibid.)
    Conspiracy is a crime distinct from the substantive offense that is its object; it does
    not require commission of the substantive offense (target offense). (People v. Swain
    (1996) 
    12 Cal. 4th 593
    , 600; People v. 
    Morante, supra
    , 20 Cal.4th at pp. 416-417.) The
    conspiratorial agreement is itself the essence of the crime, and is what it seeks to punish.
    (People v. 
    Johnson, supra
    , 57 Cal.4th at p. 258, citing 
    Swain, supra
    , at p. 599.) That is
    why, “[o]nce one of the conspirators has performed an overt act in furtherance of the
    agreement, ‘the association becomes an active force[;] it is the agreement, not the overt
    act, which is punishable. Hence the overt act need not amount to a criminal attempt and
    it need not be criminal in itself.’” (
    Johnson, supra
    , at p. 259.)
    14
    D. Application of Fenenbock and Cook
    Defendant argues that under People v. Cook (2001) 
    91 Cal. App. 4th 910
    (Cook),
    the trial court was required to instruct sua sponte on conspiracy to commit assault with a
    firearm and conspiracy to shoot into an inhabited home, as lesser included offenses of the
    count 1 charge of conspiracy to murder. The People argue Cook was wrongly decided
    and this court should follow 
    Fenenbock, supra
    , 
    46 Cal. App. 4th 1688
    , in which the court
    held that the trial court was not required to instruct on any lesser conspiracy crimes. As
    noted by the People, there is a split of authority as to whether the overt acts allegations in
    the accusatory pleading can be considered when determining whether the court must
    instruct sua sponte on a lesser included conspiracy offense under the accusatory pleading
    test. 
    (Cook, supra
    , at p. 920.)
    In Fenenbock, the defendants argued the trial court erred in not sua sponte
    instructing on conspiracy to commit assault, battery, and mayhem as lesser included
    offenses of conspiracy to commit murder. At the outset, the parties in Fenenbock agreed
    that the target offense of assault, battery, and mayhem did not qualify as offenses
    included within the statutory definition of murder under the elements test. The
    defendants, however, argued that the offenses qualified as lesser included target offenses
    under the accusatory pleading test “by virtue of language in the information describing
    the overt acts.” (
    Fenenbock, supra
    , 46 Cal.App.4th at p. 1707.) The Fenenbock court
    disagreed, stating: “Here, in the context of deciding whether the trial court was obligated
    to instruct sua sponte on lesser included offenses, we conclude that allegations of overt
    15
    acts committed in furtherance of the alleged conspiracy do not provide notice of lesser
    included target offenses.” (Id. at p. 1708.) This is because the criminal act in a
    conspiracy is the agreement. (Ibid.)
    Fenenbock explained that a conspiracy agreement is not punishable unless an
    overt act is committed in furtherance of the conspiracy. (
    Fenenbock, supra
    , 46
    Cal.App.4th at p. 1708; §§ 182, subd. (b), 184.) “[D]ue process principles require that
    overt acts be pleaded with particularity to give the defendant notice of the prosecution’s
    theory.” (
    Fenenbock, supra
    , at p. 1708.) But “[i]t is the agreement, not the overt act in
    furtherance of the agreement, which constitutes the offense.” (Id. at p. 1709.) The
    Fenenbock court concluded that, “[b]ecause overt acts need not be criminal offenses or
    even acts committed by the defendant, the description of the overt acts in the accusatory
    pleading does not provide notice of lesser offenses necessarily committed by the
    defendant.” (Ibid.) Therefore, under Fenenbock, “it is the description of the agreement
    within the accusatory pleading, not the description of the overt acts, which must be
    examined to determine whether a lesser offense was necessarily the target of the
    conspiracy.” (Ibid.)
    Defendant urges this court to decline to follow 
    Fenenbock, supra
    , 
    46 Cal. App. 4th 1688
    , and instead follow 
    Cook, supra
    , 
    91 Cal. App. 4th 910
    . In Cook, the defendants
    appealed their convictions, which included conspiracy to commit assault with a firearm
    as a lesser included offense of conspiracy to commit murder. Relying on Fenenbock, the
    Cook defendants argued that the trial court violated their right to notice and due process
    16
    by instructing the jury that if they had a reasonable doubt that the defendants were guilty
    of conspiracy to commit murder, they could convict the defendants of the lesser included
    offense of conspiracy to commit assault with a firearm. 
    (Cook, supra
    , at p. 913.)
    The Cook court rejected this contention, holding that “the trial court may look to
    the overt acts pleaded in a charge of conspiracy to determine whether the charged offense
    includes the lesser included offense. Under the accusatory pleading test for determining
    lesser included offenses, we find that conspiracy to commit assault by means of a firearm
    is a lesser included offense of conspiracy to commit murder as that offense was pleaded
    in the accusatory pleading. The overt acts alleged in the information gave notice to
    defendants of the lesser included offense, and the defendants do not claim the facts
    shown at the preliminary hearing failed to give them notice of the lesser offense or that
    they were surprised by the evidence presented at trial.” 
    (Cook, supra
    , 91 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 914.)
    
    Cook, supra
    , 
    91 Cal. App. 4th 910
    is distinguishable. In Cook, the defendant
    appealed on the ground the trial court erred in instructing on conspiracy to commit
    assault with a firearm as a lesser included offense of murder, whereas, here, defendant
    appeals the trial court’s failure to instruct sua sponte on any lesser included offenses to
    conspiracy to commit murder. Unlike in the instant case, the Cook defendants argued
    their notice and due process rights were violated by the court instructing on the lesser
    included offense based on the overt acts allegations. Also, in Cook, the People conceded
    instructional error and requested reversal of the defendants’ conspiracy convictions. The
    17
    Cook court nevertheless upheld the trial court’s instruction on the lesser included offense,
    concluding the accusatory pleading provided sufficient notice of the lesser included
    offense of conspiracy to commit assault with a firearm. (Id. at p. 913.)
    We agree with Cook to the extent that the trial court may consider overt act
    allegations when determining whether sua sponte instruction on a lesser included
    conspiracy offense is required. Even though overt acts need not be criminal offenses or
    acts committed by the defendant, there may be overt act allegations establishing that the
    defendant has agreed or conspired to commit lesser included target offenses. It is
    therefore not error for the trial court to consider the overt act allegations when
    determining whether the conspiracy count allegations as a whole require sua sponte
    instruction on a lesser included conspiracy offense. The Cook court recognized that, “[t]o
    the extent an accusatory pleading fails to allege overt acts sufficient to give notice of a
    lesser included offense, the trial court may not rely on the pleading as a basis to instruct
    on lesser included offenses not included in the allegations of that pleading. Nevertheless,
    the possibility that some pleadings charging conspiracy may fail to give sufficient notice
    of lesser included offenses is not cause to hold, as a matter of law, that no pleading
    charging conspiracy gives sufficient notice of lesser included offenses.” 
    (Cook, supra
    , 91
    Cal.App.4th at p. 921.)
    18
    We disagree, however, with Cook’s holding that the pleadings, including the overt
    act allegations, required an instruction on the lesser included offense of conspiracy to
    commit assault with a firearm. 
    (Cook, supra
    , 91 Cal.App.4th at p. 922.) In Cook, as in
    the instant case and in Fenenbock, the accusatory pleading did not allege that the
    defendants agreed to commit any crime, other than murder. There were no allegations,
    even in the overt acts allegations, that the defendants agreed to commit merely an assault.
    The Cook accusatory pleading alleged the four defendant’s conspired to commit murder
    and in doing so, committed the following overt acts: Two of the defendants purchased a
    gun to carry out the object of the conspiracy, and all four defendants met and discussed
    killing the two victims. All four defendants then went to the victims’ apartment and one
    of the defendants shot both victims, killing one of them. The other victim survived.
    
    (Cook, supra
    , at p. 919, fn. 22.)
    Assuming under Cook that the trial court could properly consider the alleged overt
    acts in determining whether a conspiracy charge encompasses other, lesser target
    offenses, the overt acts alleged in this case did not render defendant’s allegedly lesser
    offenses necessarily included. The description of the conspiratorial agreement to commit
    murder cannot be fairly read to describe or encompass either conspiracy to commit
    assault with a firearm or conspiracy to shoot at an inhabited dwelling. Therefore, the trial
    court was not required to instruct sua sponte on either of these offenses, because the
    accusatory pleadings did not place defendant on notice of prosecution of any conspiracy
    offense, other than conspiracy to commit murder. (Schmuck v. U.S. (1989) 
    489 U.S. 705
    ,
    19
    717; 
    Cook, supra
    , 91 Cal.App.4th at p. 921.) Although the overt acts allegations describe
    acts that would support charges for assault and shooting at an inhabited dwelling, such
    allegations are insufficient to support conspiracy charges based on those target offenses,
    because there are no allegations of the requisite element of defendant agreeing or
    conspiring to commit those target offenses. Therefore, the trial court did not err in not
    sua sponte instructing on conspiracy to commit assault or shoot at an inhabited dwelling
    as lesser included offenses of conspiracy to commit murder.
    The fact that defendant was charged with the substantive offense of assault with a
    firearm for the Perez shooting (count 4) does not mean the conspiracy charge necessarily
    encompassed that offense as a lesser target offense of conspiracy to commit murder, as
    defendant argues. Defendant and Saavedra could have agreed at the outset to commit
    murder and then planned to accomplish the murder by ambushing and shooting at Perez
    and Barrera. They could have then committed the substantive offense of assault with a
    firearm when Saavedra shot at Perez and Barrera and missed them. (§ 254, subd. (a)(2).)
    Their commission of assault with a firearm would not have changed the original nature of
    their conspiracy, which was to commit murder, and it did not render assault with a
    firearm a necessarily included target offense of the conspiracy to commit murder.
    E. Insufficient Evidence to Support Instruction on Lesser Included Offenses
    Even if the accusatory pleading allegations supported instruction on the offenses
    of conspiracy to commit assault and shooting at an inhabited dwelling, there was
    insufficient evidence to support such instructions. A trial court is not obligated to instruct
    20
    the jury on a necessarily included offense without substantial evidence or with no
    evidence that the offense was less than charged. (People v. Mendez (1999) 
    19 Cal. 4th 1084
    , 1100-1101, 1106.) Here, there was insufficient evidence that, if there was a
    conspiracy as alleged, it was for anything other than murder. There was evidence that
    defendant was in a feud with Barrera, Perez’s son-in-law. Perez was related by marriage
    to Valle’s wife. On the evening of the shootings, defendant and Saavedra ambushed
    Perez and Barrera at an intersection near Perez’s home, and Saavedra fired a gun at
    Perez’s car. Then, defendant and Saavedra drove to Valle’s house and, using a rifle and a
    handgun, together fired approximately 30 bullets into the house, perforating the walls
    from floor to ceiling and the house from front to back. No reasonable juror could have
    found from the foregoing evidence that defendant and Saavedra did not conspire to kill
    someone but conspired only to assault someone with a firearm or to shoot at the Valle
    residence (§§ 240, 254, subd. (a)(2)), or shoot at an inhabited dwelling (§ 246).
    Furthermore, defendant did not claim at trial that he committed the two lesser
    offenses. Rather, defendant testified he did not conspire with Saavedra to commit any
    offense at all. Instead, Saavedra abruptly fired the handgun at Perez’s car without there
    being any agreement or discussion with defendant. The Valle shooting occurred because
    someone fired on defendant and Saavedra first. Because substantial evidence was
    lacking to support an instruction on either allegedly lesser target offense, the trial court
    was not required to instruct the jury on them.
    21
    Defendant’s federal constitutional claim also fails because defendant’s asserted
    offenses were not necessarily included within the charged offense of conspiracy or
    supported by substantial evidence. (People v. Valentine (2006) 
    143 Cal. App. 4th 1383
    ,
    1386-1388 [rejecting claim that failure to instruct on an offense not necessarily included
    within the charged offense violated defendant’s right to present a complete defense, as
    that failure “simply reflected the fact that the prosecutor chose not to file on the other
    charge.”].) Our Supreme Court has also made clear that the failure to instruct on a
    necessarily included offense in a noncapital case is remediable only under state law, not
    under federal constitutional law. (See People v. Breverman (1998) 
    19 Cal. 4th 142
    , 165
    [no federal constitutional right to a necessarily included offense instruction in a
    noncapital case].)
    F. Harmless Error
    Finally, if there was any error in not instructing on conspiracy to commit assault
    with a firearm or conspiracy to shoot at an inhabited dwelling, it was harmless because it
    was not reasonably probable a more favorable verdict would have occurred but for the
    error. (People v. 
    Breverman, supra
    , 19 Cal.4th at p. 162, citing People v. Watson (1956)
    
    46 Cal. 2d 818
    , 836; People v. Lasko (2000) 
    23 Cal. 4th 101
    , 111.) The record establishes
    that the jury based defendant’s conviction for conspiracy to commit murder on the Valle
    shooting, because the jury specifically found that defendant personally and intentionally
    discharged a firearm in committing that offense.
    22
    Also, there was overwhelming evidence supporting defendant’s conviction for
    conspiracy to commit murder. Defendant admitted at trial that he and Saavedra were
    armed when they went to the Valle residence. A witness testified that both people shot at
    the house and that defendant, the heavier person, was shooting the rifle. The shell
    casings at the scene had been fired from defendant’s rifle. Defendant presented his
    chosen defense by testifying at trial that he did not conspire to commit any crime and he
    shot at the Valle residence only in response to being fired upon. Defendant did not
    request an instruction on either lesser conspiracy offense and instead argued that the
    evidence raised a reasonable doubt of his guilt of conspiracy as charged or was otherwise
    insufficient to establish guilt. (See People v. Rogers (2006) 
    39 Cal. 4th 826
    , 872.)
    Since the record demonstrates that the conspiracy conviction was based on the
    Valle shooting and was supported by substantial evidence, any error in failing to instruct
    the jury on the allegedly lesser conspiracy offenses was also harmless, because the
    evidence did not support a finding that defendant committed either lesser conspiracy
    offense instead of conspiracy to commit murder. No reasonable juror would have found
    defendant guilty of any conspiracy crime less than conspiracy to commit murder.
    IV
    SELF-DEFENSE INSTRUCTION
    Although defendant agreed the trial court should not give his requested instruction
    on self-defense, he now argues the trial court erred. The trial court did not include a self-
    defense instruction in its final instructions and defendant argued to the jury that defendant
    23
    and Saavedra had not intended or conspired to commit murder at the Valle residence but
    that Saavedra had instead simply returned fire. In spite of defendant’s forfeiture of this
    issue, the trial court was not required to give that instruction because it duplicated other
    instructions given and it would have confused the jury with irrelevant issues.
    The doctrine of invited error prohibits a reversal on appeal because of an error
    made by the trial court at defendant’s behest. (People v. Wickersham (1982) 
    32 Cal. 3d 307
    , 323-324, disapproved on other grounds in People v. Barton (1995) 
    12 Cal. 4th 186
    ,
    201.) While defendant initially requested a self-defense instruction, he explicitly agreed
    with the trial court’s explanation why the instruction should not be given because the
    instruction was inconsistent with his defense. A trial court has a sua sponte duty to
    instruct the jury on any defense upon which the defendant relies or that which is
    supported by substantial evidence and is not inconsistent with the defense theory of the
    case. (People v. Anderson (2011) 
    51 Cal. 4th 989
    , 996, citing People v. Gutierrez (2009)
    
    45 Cal. 4th 789
    , 824.) Defendant’s self-defense claim was an attempt to negate or rebut
    the prosecution’s proof on an element of the charged offense of conspiracy. A jury
    finding of self-defense would have rendered the prosecution’s case legally insufficient or
    exceedingly weak. Because defendant’s claim of self-defense was proffered to negate or
    rebut an element of the conspiracy charge, the trial court had no sua sponte duty to give
    it; rather, a request was necessary. 
    (Anderson, supra
    , at p. 996; see People v.
    Covarrubias (2016) 1 Cal.5th 838, 874 [trial court not required to sua sponte instruct jury
    on claim-of-right defense that served only to negate mental state element of charged
    24
    offense of robbery].) The record shows defendant functionally withdrew his self-defense
    instruction request. Defendant’s claim of error is therefore forfeited. (People v. Ramirez
    (2006) 
    39 Cal. 4th 398
    , 474.)
    Notwithstanding forfeiture, the trial court was correct not to instruct the jury on
    self-defense. A court has a duty to refrain from issuing an instruction that is duplicative
    of other instructions or potentially confusing. (People v. Gurule (2002) 
    28 Cal. 4th 557
    ,
    659; see People v. Satchell (1971) 
    6 Cal. 3d 28
    , 31, fn. 10, overruled on other grounds in
    People v. Flood (1998) 
    18 Cal. 4th 470
    , 484-490.) Here, the instruction would have been
    duplicative. The trial court fully instructed the jury on the elements of conspiracy and the
    target offense of murder. To convict, the jury had to find defendant and Saavedra
    intended to conspire to commit murder. Defendant’s contrary claim would have, if
    believed by the jury, negated the intent element of conspiracy and compelled acquittal.
    But if the jury found defendant and Saavedra conspired to commit murder, that finding
    would have contradicted any form of self-defense, perfect or imperfect. The trial court’s
    instructions on the offense of conspiracy therefore encompassed defendant’s self-defense
    claim, rendering any self-defense instruction superfluous and unnecessary. (See People
    v. Canizalez (2011) 
    197 Cal. App. 4th 832
    , 857 [pinpoint instructions unnecessary where
    standard instructions fully and adequately advise the jury on a particular issue].) The
    jury, of course, is presumed to have understood and correctly applied the instructions
    given. (People v. Carey (2007) 
    41 Cal. 4th 109
    , 130.) A self-defense instruction would
    have confused the jury by introducing irrelevant legal principles about the reasonableness
    25
    of the need to use and extent of deadly force. Therefore, the trial court did not err in not
    giving a self-defense instruction. (See People v. Watie (2002) 
    100 Cal. App. 4th 866
    ,
    883.)
    Furthermore, any error was harmless. In convicting defendant, the jury found that
    defendant agreed and intended to commit murder, a factual finding incompatible with any
    form of self-defense, perfect or imperfect. Having previously agreed to commit murder,
    defendant cannot then claim his intent to kill arose from a belief in the need to defend
    himself or someone else. The jury’s conspiracy verdict “necessarily impl[ies] a complete
    rejection of all the self-defense evidence presented by defendant.” (People v. Crandell
    (1988) 
    46 Cal. 3d 833
    , 875, disapproved on another ground in People v. Crayton (2002)
    
    28 Cal. 4th 346
    , 364-365.) There is no reasonable probability a self-defense instruction, if
    given, would have resulted in a more favorable outcome for defendant. Any error was
    thus harmless. (People v. 
    Watson, supra
    , 46 Cal.2d at p. 836.)4
    4 The absence of a self-defense instruction also did not violate defendant’s federal
    constitutional right to present a complete defense. Not only was the instruction irrelevant
    and confusing, defendant was still able to present the defense he chose. No federal
    constitutional violation occurred.
    26
    V
    SUBSTANTIAL EVIDENCE OF FIREARM ENHANCEMENT
    Defendant next argues substantial evidence does not support the jury’s finding that
    he personally and intentionally discharged a firearm in the commission of the offense of
    conspiracy to commit murder.5 According to defendant, the jury had to find the gun
    discharge aided in the completion of an element of conspiracy and the shooting at the
    Valle residence could not have aided in completing a conspiracy element because the
    crime of conspiracy was already completed at the time. However, section 12022.53,
    subdivision (c), does not require that a gun discharge aid in the completion of a
    conspiracy element, as defendant argues. The statute requires only that the gun discharge
    be a part of the same continuous transaction of which the underlying offense is a part.
    Defendant’s claim involves a question of statutory interpretation on the meaning
    of the phrase “in the commission of” as used in the firearm enhancement statute, which is
    subject to de novo review. (People v. Prunty (2015) 
    62 Cal. 4th 59
    , 71.) If clear and
    unambiguous, the statutory language is effectuated without resort to statutory
    construction; otherwise, it is construed within the context of the statutory scheme of
    which it is a part, and in a manner that best fulfills legislative intent. (People v. Pieters
    (1991) 
    52 Cal. 3d 894
    , 898-899.) This court reviews the sufficiency of the evidence to
    support a firearm enhancement finding using the same standards applicable to a criminal
    conviction. (People v. Carrasco (2006) 
    137 Cal. App. 4th 1050
    , 1058 (Carrasco).) We
    5That finding resulted in an additional, consecutive, 20-year prison term for
    defendant. (§§ 12022.53, subd. (c), 1192.7, subd. (c)(8).)
    27
    presume every fact in support of the judgment the trier of fact could have reasonably
    deduced from the evidence. (People v. Rayford (1994) 
    9 Cal. 4th 1
    , 23.)
    Defendant challenges whether section 12022.53 applies to conspiracy to commit
    murder. Section 12022.53, subdivision (a), includes among the offenses specified “[a]ny
    felony punishable by death or imprisonment in the state prison for life.” (§ 12022.53,
    subd. (a)(17).) Conspiracy to commit murder is punishable by life in prison. (See
    §§ 190, subd. (a) [first degree murder punishable by death or life imprisonment], 182,
    subd. (a)(6) [conspiracy to commit an offense is punishable “in the same manner and to
    the same extent as is provided for the punishment of that felony.”].) Section 12022.53,
    subdivision (a), thus clearly and unambiguously includes conspiracy to commit murder.
    In particular, section 12022.53, subdivision (c), provides as follows:
    “Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any person who, in the commission of a
    felony specified in subdivision (a), personally and intentionally discharges a firearm,
    shall be punished by an additional and consecutive term of imprisonment in the state
    prison for 20 years.” The express legislative purpose was to effect deterrence by
    imposing longer sentences for violent crimes committed with a firearm. (People v.
    Garcia (2002) 
    28 Cal. 4th 1166
    , 1172.) The statute “is to be construed expansively, not
    narrowly.” (People v. Frausto (2009) 
    180 Cal. App. 4th 890
    , 898 (Frausto); People v.
    Chambers (1972) 
    7 Cal. 3d 666
    , 672.)
    28
    The Court of Appeal held in Frausto, that “a firearm is discharged ‘in the
    commission of’ a felony within the meaning of section 12022.53[, subdivision] (d) if the
    underlying felony and the discharge of the firearm are part of one continuous transaction,
    including flight after the felony to a place of temporary safety.” 
    (Frausto, supra
    , 180
    Cal.App.4th at p. 902; see People v. Mejia (2012) 
    211 Cal. App. 4th 586
    , 616, fn. 5
    [§ 12022.53, subd. (c) requires only that the firearm discharge be part of the same
    continuous transaction as the underlying offense].) Under this approach, “the discharge
    of a gun before, during, or after the felonious act may be sufficient if it can fairly be said
    that [it] was a part of a continuous transaction.” 
    (Frausto, supra
    , at p. 902.)
    A reasonable juror could have found from the trial evidence that defendant and
    Saavedra conspired to commit murder when they drove to the Valle residence and
    together fired more than 30 bullets into the residence. Based on this, a reasonable juror
    could have found that defendant’s act of firing a rifle into the residence was part of the
    same continuous transaction as was his commission of the offense of conspiracy to
    commit murder. Defendant thus discharged his firearm in the commission of the
    conspiracy, triggering the section 12022.53, subdivision (c), firearm enhancement.
    (People v. Jones (2001) 
    25 Cal. 4th 98
    , 108-110; 
    Frausto, supra
    , 180 Cal.App.4th at p.
    902.)
    The cases of 
    Carrasco, supra
    , 
    137 Cal. App. 4th 1050
    and People v. Masbruch
    (1996) 
    13 Cal. 4th 1001
    do not establish a requirement that the firearm use aid defendant
    in completing an essential element of conspiracy to commit murder. Instead these cases
    29
    describe how a defendant can be deemed to have used a firearm in the commission of a
    felony if the firearm use “aids the defendant in completing one of [the charged offense’s]
    essential elements.” (
    Carrasco, supra
    , at p. 1059; 
    Masbruch, supra
    , at p. 1012.)
    Carrasco and Masbruch involved situations in which the defendant initially displayed or
    used a firearm but committed the charged offenses some time later without displaying or
    using the gun. Both cases held that the defendants’ initial use of the firearm carried over
    to the time of the offenses, so that such use could be deemed to have been “in the
    commission of” the offenses for firearms enhancement purposes because “[a] firearm use
    enhancement attaches to an offense, regardless of its nature, if the firearm use aids the
    defendant in completing one of its essential elements.” (
    Masbruch, supra
    , at p. 1012;
    
    Carrasco, supra
    , at p. 1059.) In Carrasco, the initial display or use of the gun satisfied
    the force or fear element of the charged offense of robbery (
    Carrasco, supra
    , at pp. 1057,
    1060); in Masbruch, it satisfied the force or fear element of forcible rape and sodomy
    (
    Masbruch, supra
    , at p. 1011). Neither Carrasco nor Masbruch established a uniform
    requirement that the firearm use must have aided the defendant in completing an essential
    element of the charged offense.
    Instead, the California Supreme Court has rejected such a construction of the
    weapons enhancement statutes. (People v. 
    Jones, supra
    , 25 Cal.4th at pp. 101-102, 109-
    111; People v. Fierro (1991) 
    1 Cal. 4th 173
    , 225-227.) There is no requirement that the
    gun use specifically aid the defendant in committing an offense element. Instead, all that
    is required is that the firearm use be part of the same continuous transaction as the
    30
    underlying offense. (
    Jones, supra
    , at pp. 108-110; 
    Frausto, supra
    , 180 Cal.App.4th at p.
    902.) Here, defendant’s firing of the bullets into the Valle residence was part of the same
    continuous transaction as was his conspiracy to commit murder.
    Second, the fact defendant’s discharge of the firearm was part of the same
    continuous transaction as the conspiracy itself renders invalid defendant’s claim that the
    conspiracy was already completed at the time of the discharge. (People v. 
    Jones, supra
    ,
    25 Cal.4th at pp. 108-110; 
    Frausto, supra
    , 180 Cal.App.4th at p. 902.) The “‘classic
    example of a continuing offense is conspiracy.’” (Wright v. Superior Court (1997) 
    15 Cal. 4th 521
    , 537, quoting U. S. v. McGoff (D.C. Cir. 1987) 
    831 F.2d 1071
    , 1078.)
    Because conspiracy is by nature a continuing offense, the period during which a firearms
    enhancement may attach to such an offense is “very broad.” (See People v. Becker
    (2000) 
    83 Cal. App. 4th 294
    , 298.) Here, defendant’s conspiracy to commit murder was
    still operative and continuing at the time defendant fired his gun into the Valle residence.
    Defendant’s violent and dangerous behavior is what section 12022.53, and the other
    firearm enhancement statutes, is intended to deter. Substantial evidence supports the
    jury’s finding that defendant personally and intentionally discharged a firearm in the
    commission of conspiracy to commit murder.
    31
    VI
    FIREARM ENHANCEMENT
    During sentencing, the trial court imposed a 20-year sentence enhancement on
    count 1 under section 12022.53, subdivision (c), for personal and intentional discharge of
    a firearm. On October 11, 2017, the Governor signed Senate Bill No. 620, amending
    section 12022.53, subdivision (h). This amendment provides the trial court with new
    discretion under section 1385 to strike the section 12022.53, subdivision (c), firearm
    enhancement. The amendment became effective January 1, 2018.
    While the instant appeal was pending, and after enactment of Senate Bill No. 620,
    this court permitted the parties to file supplemental briefing on the issue of whether
    amended section 12022.53, subdivision (h), applies retroactively to defendant’s case. In
    their supplemental briefs, the parties agree, as does this court, that recently amended
    section 12022.53, subdivision (h), applies retroactively to this case, because the judgment
    was not final when the amendment to section 12022.53, subdivision (h), became
    effective. We agree with the parties that this matter should therefore be remanded for the
    purpose of allowing the trial court to exercise its discretion as to whether to strike
    defendant’s section 12022.53, subdivision (c), firearm enhancement.
    32
    VII
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment of conviction is affirmed. The judgment of sentence is reversed and
    this matter is remanded to the trial court for resentencing, with instructions to the trial
    court to (1) strike the one-year section 12022, subdivision (a)(1), enhancement as to the
    assault with a firearm count (count 4); (2) stay under section 654 the one-year section
    12022, subdivision (a)(1), enhancement as to the conspiracy count (count 1); (3) elect
    under section 654 to stay separate punishment either on count 2 or count 5; and (4)
    exercise its discretion under recently amended section 12022.53, subdivision (h), as to
    whether to strike defendant’s section 12022.53, subdivision (c), firearm enhancement
    (count 1).6
    CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION
    CODRINGTON
    J.
    We concur:
    RAMIREZ
    P. J.
    MILLER
    J.
    6 We express no opinion as to how the trial court should exercise its discretion
    under section 12022.53, subdivision (h), on remand.
    33