P. v. Leon CA3 ( 2013 )


Menu:
  • Filed 3/21/13 P. v. Leon CA3
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
    (Yuba)
    ----
    THE PEOPLE,                                                                               C071886
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                 (Super. Ct. No. CRF03-243)
    v.
    BENNY LEON, JR.,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    After the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled that defendant
    Benny Leon, Jr.’s, 11-year upper term state prison sentence for voluntary manslaughter
    had resulted from prejudicial Blakely error (Blakely v. Washington (2004) 
    542 U.S. 296
    [
    159 L.Ed.2d 403
    ]), the trial court modified the sentence from 11 years to the middle
    term of six years. We concluded the trial court erred in believing the federal courts had
    curtailed its discretion to reimpose an upper term, and remanded for resentencing. On
    remand, the trial court imposed the upper term of 11 years. Defendant appeals,
    contending the trial court abused its discretion because it relied upon reasons that are
    1
    “legally improper” and/or not supported by substantial evidence. Defendant also
    contends the court erred on resentencing in failing to calculate the total number of days in
    custody. Only the latter contention has merit. We shall remand for this amendment and
    affirm as modified.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Our statement of facts is taken from both our opinion in the direct appeal, case
    No. C047003 (People v. Leon (Aug. 11, 2005, C047003) [nonpub. opn.]), and our prior
    opinion on resentencing, case No. C068005 (People v. Leon (Apr. 5, 2012, C068005)
    [nonpub. opn.]).
    Defendant and the victim, Rosalie Reyes, lived together in a Marysville apartment
    at the time of the offense. On the evening of April 2, 2003, their acquaintance,
    Antonio L., accompanied them to a home on Highway 113. While there, Antonio
    overheard Reyes tell defendant something about money he had borrowed from her.
    Defendant left. Ten minutes later, defendant telephoned Antonio and informed him that
    defendant would not be able to return to pick them up because “some group of
    gangbangers confronted him about something.”
    Approximately 40 minutes after defendant departed, Amber M. drove Antonio and
    Reyes back to defendant’s apartment. The trio arrived around 1:00 a.m., got out of the
    car and approached the door. Reyes, who apparently had no key, knocked on the
    apartment door but received no answer. Reyes began “kicking, knocking, cussing,” and
    yelling at the door. There was still no answer, so Reyes moved to a window where she
    knocked and yelled some more. Reyes then placed a call on Amber’s cellular telephone.
    Antonio heard a telephone ringing inside the apartment. Amber overheard Reyes say into
    the phone “[o]pen the front door.” Then Reyes returned the phone to Amber. Antonio
    heard footsteps inside walking toward the door.
    2
    Defendant opened the door, looked outside, saw Amber and nodded at her.
    Defendant told Reyes to “[g]et the ‘F’ in here” as if he were trying to hurry her. He also
    said something to the effect she was making too much noise. As Reyes started into the
    apartment, defendant nudged her into the doorjamb and a shot was fired.
    Reyes fell to the floor and defendant reached down to pick her up. Defendant told
    Reyes to get up and to stop “playing around.” He was screaming and hysterical and
    exclaimed that he had shot her. While holding Reyes in his arms, defendant said,
    “[d]on’t die. I love you. I’ll change.”
    Antonio entered the house, grabbed a telephone and called 911. Then he picked
    up a handgun from the floor and threw it over a fence. Police later recovered the
    handgun.
    The bullet from the single gunshot struck Reyes in the neck and she died as a
    result of the wound. The gun had been fired from a distance of zero to six inches. A
    firearms expert testified at trial that the weapon used by defendant had a trigger pull of
    11.5 to 12 pounds, whereas a typical firearm has a trigger pull of three to seven pounds.
    The handgun was in working order at the time.
    A jury acquitted defendant of first degree murder while lying in wait (Pen. Code,
    §§ 187, 190.2, subd. (a)(15))1 and second degree murder, convicted him of voluntary
    manslaughter (§ 192, subd. (a)), and found that he used a firearm in the commission of
    the offense (§ 12022.5, subd. (a)).
    The probation report listed three circumstances in aggravation. (Cal. Rules of
    Court, rule 4.421(a).)2 First, the “crime involved great violence and a high degree of
    1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code.
    2 Further references to rules are to the California Rules of Court.
    3
    cruelty, viciousness, and callousness. The defendant shot the victim in her throat. The
    means of death was internal arterial bleeding and asphyxiation. Additionally, the victim
    did not initially die. The victim had to suffer [through] drowning on her own blood for
    several minutes.” (See rule 4.421(a)(1).)
    Second, the probation report stated the “victim was particularly vulnerable in that
    she was attempting to enter the residence she shared with the defendant. The defendant
    exited a non-lit apartment, while [the] victim attempted to enter from a lit porch.” (See
    rule 4.421(a)(3).)
    Third, the probation report stated the “manner in which the crime was carried out
    indicates planning and sophistication. The defendant waited several minutes inside the
    un-lit apartment, before opening the door and shooting the victim, who was outside in a
    lighted area. The defendant held the loaded [.38-]caliber [semiautomatic] handgun to the
    victim’s neck and pulled the trigger. The handgun was loaded with hollow point
    ammunition, which is designed to cause the maximum amount of damage to living
    tissue.” (See rule 4.421(a)(8).)
    The trial court (Judge Curry) sentenced defendant to state prison for the upper
    term of 11 years plus 10 years for firearm use. In denying defendant probation, the trial
    court stated: “[Rule 4.]414(a)(3), [defense counsel] urges that the victim was not
    vulnerable, that it was an unintentional act on the Defendant’s part. The jury found no
    evidence of planning or lying in wait, having acquitted him of first degree [murder]. The
    People urge, in fact, she was vulnerable, and Court believes that she was. Given the
    basic facts that she is standing in a small area outside the door of the apartment, it is
    well lit, based on the believable evidence. [Defendant] is inside a dark apartment. Given
    the time of day, this occurred without artificial light being on in the apartment when he
    opened the door. The victim is totally visible. He is basically invisible because of the
    difference.” (Italics added.)
    4
    Thereafter, the trial judge imposed the upper term of imprisonment, and adopted
    two of the three suggested circumstances in aggravation, stating that “[t]he crime does
    involve great violence, high degree of cruelty, viciousness and callousness” and that the
    victim “was particularly vulnerable for all the reasons that I stated as I was going through
    the [rule 4.]414 analysis.” The court added that the aggravating factors greatly
    outweighed defendant’s lack of a prior record or any other mitigating factor.
    In his direct appeal to this court (People v. Leon, supra, C047003), defendant
    claimed his sentence violated Blakely because the upper term was improperly based on
    facts (violence, cruelty, viciousness and callousness; and particular vulnerability) neither
    submitted to the jury nor proved beyond a reasonable doubt. Under compulsion of the
    then recent decision in Black I, we rejected the contention (People v. Black (2005)
    
    35 Cal.4th 1238
     (Black I), vacated sub nom. Black v. California (2007) 
    549 U.S. 1190
    [
    167 L.Ed.2d 36
    ]; see People v. Black (2007) 
    41 Cal.4th 799
     (Black II)).
    After defendant’s federal habeas petition was denied by the United States District
    Court for the Eastern District of California, defendant appealed. The Ninth Circuit
    remanded the matter to the federal district court with instructions to grant the petition for
    writ of habeas corpus (Leon v. Kirkland (Nov. 17, 2010, No. 09-15696) [nonpub. opn.].)
    In doing so, the Ninth Circuit concluded that “[t]he manner that the victim was attacked
    in this case is analogous to being attacked from behind. None of the characteristics that
    California courts have used to support a finding of particular vulnerability are present
    here.” The District Court granted habeas relief, ordering that defendant be released from
    custody unless the State of California elected to retry or resentence him.
    At resentencing, the sentencing court (Judge Smith) stated that he, like Judge
    Curry, believed that the victim was particularly vulnerable, but “the Ninth Circuit has
    said no. . . . [¶] . . . And I’m of the opinion that the District Court’s order granting the
    writ precludes this Court from imposing the upper term for voluntary manslaughter. I
    5
    think it’s justified, but I believe that the order from the Federal District Court precludes
    this Court from imposing the upper term. [¶] . . . Specifically, it reads ‘The trial court
    made a sentencing error of constitutional magnitude when it imposed the upper term for
    voluntary manslaughter.’ It doesn’t say that the trial court erred in finding the victim
    particularly vulnerable. If they had said that, I think we’d have a different situation. But
    what was said is it was constitutional error to impose the upper term.” Judge Smith
    imposed the midterm of six years on the voluntary manslaughter conviction, and the
    upper term of 10 years on the firearm enhancement.
    The People appealed, contending the trial court erred by failing to exercise its
    discretion to select an appropriate term of imprisonment from the three possible terms.
    We agreed, and remanded the matter for resentencing. (People v. Leon, supra,
    C068005.) In so doing, we noted that “[o]n this record, the trial court could find
    callousness in that, even if defendant was entitled to possess a loaded firearm in his home
    as his counsel argued, defendant had sufficiently been put on notice—both by the
    telephone call and by his observation of Reyes upon opening the door—that the
    ‘gangbangers’ were not present and no reason for an armed conflict existed. Escalating
    his and Reyes’s prior argument about money into an armed confrontation at the doorstep
    demonstrated an utter disregard for the safety and well-being of Reyes and her
    companions. [¶] In People v. Gutierrez (1992) 
    10 Cal.App.4th 1729
     the appellate court
    found a high degree of cruelty, viciousness, and callousness where the defendant stalked
    and pursued his victims for several blocks while riding a motorcycle. (Id. at pp. 1735-
    1736.) The court noted this ‘expos[ed] the passengers, other drivers, and pedestrians to
    the dangers of a traffic accident.’ (Ibid.) [¶] Here, keeping a firearm at the ready after
    receiving the telephone call and after observing Reyes (as opposed to ‘gangbangers’) at
    the threshold exposed Reyes and her companions to the dangers of a firearm incident
    even before defendant evidently elected to fire the weapon under circumstances
    6
    constituting voluntary manslaughter. The trial court could find that this showed even less
    regard for the safety of Reyes and her companions than the defendant had shown in
    Gutierrez. At resentencing, the trial court would be entitled, albeit certainly not
    compelled, to find that the offense involved a high degree of callousness.”
    At resentencing, defense counsel argued that the facts do not support a finding that
    the crime involved a high degree of cruelty, viciousness and callousness because “all the
    facts that could [otherwise have] justified that finding are consumed and subsumed” by
    facts that constitute the offenses and “there are no facts except the gravamen of the
    offense.” The People urged the trial court to adopt Judge Smith’s reasoning, including
    that Reyes was a particularly vulnerable victim.
    The sentencing court (Judge Scrogin) imposed the upper term on both the
    substantive offense and the firearm enhancement. “[I] am basing my imposition of the
    upper term of 11 years for the voluntary manslaughter on the fact that according to [rule]
    4.421(a)(1) I do find the crime involved a high degree of callousness. Callousness, a
    feeling or showing of no sympathy for others with a hardened heart, is the Webster’s
    definition. [¶] Even if the defendant was entitled to possess this firearm in his house,
    again his castle, the defendant had sufficiently been put on notice by the telephone call.
    According to [the] probation report, Rosalie Reyes came to the apartment complex with
    her friends Amber [M.] and Antonio [L.] They walked her to her apartment. No lights
    were on in the residence and the door was locked. The porch light was on from the front
    door. The door to the apartment had a peephole for the occupants to look out. [Reyes]
    banged on the door of the apartment and began yelling and cussing for the defendant to
    open the door. [Reyes] uses Amber [M.]’s cell phone to call the defendant inside the
    apartment. One witness stated they heard the phone ring inside the apartment. Another
    witness said they heard [Reyes] talking to someone on the cellular phone. [Reyes] waited
    outside the apartment for approximately five minutes after initially arriving. Then the
    7
    defendant opens the door and states the quote that I previously referred to ‘You’re
    making too much noise. Get the F word in here.’ She steps into the apartment doorway.
    Antonio and Amber began to walk away. Then the defendant placed—then he shot her
    with the .38. He had been significantly put on notice both by the call and his own
    personal observation of [Reyes], the victim, upon opening the door, that it was [Reyes]
    and not the gangbangers from the gas station. There was no reason for them to have an
    armed conflict over the argument about money that had occurred 45 minutes before. [¶]
    He escalated their argument about money to an armed confrontation at the doorstep. This
    demonstrated an utter disregard for the safety and well-being of [Reyes] and her
    companions. This was callousness.
    “I am making the finding that his conduct put everybody else at risk. It was
    foolish. It was hard-hearted. He had no reason to have a gun to open the door for
    [Reyes]. It was obvious she wasn’t a gangbanger. She just talked to him on the phone.
    He was swearing at her. He wasn’t swearing at the gangbangers. This is the factor which
    the Third District Court of Appeal has noted. And the argument which the Third District
    Court of Appeal has already stated could justify the upper term. [¶] I concur with the
    Third District Court of Appeal. I have reviewed People [v.] Gutierrez [(1992)
    
    10 Cal.App.4th 1729
    ] noted by the Third District Court of Appeal in their opinion on this
    case where the appellate court found a high degree of callousness. And I believe the
    Gutierrez case is indistinguishable from this case, and I am following it.”
    DISCUSSION
    I. Imposition of the Upper Term for Voluntary Manslaughter
    Defendant first contends the trial court’s decision to impose the upper term for
    voluntary manslaughter was an abuse of discretion.
    8
    He is correct that we review a trial court’s decision to impose an upper term for an
    abuse of discretion. (People v. Sandoval (2007) 
    41 Cal.4th 825
    , 847.) We must affirm
    unless there is a clear showing that the chosen sentence was arbitrary or irrational.
    (People v. Hubbell (1980) 
    108 Cal.App.3d 253
    , 260.)
    Voluntary manslaughter is punishable by imprisonment for three, six, or 11 years.
    (§ 193, subd. (a).) Rule 4.420(a) requires the court to select the upper, middle, or lower
    term. Rule 4.420(b) states that in exercising its discretion, the trial court may consider
    any aggravating or mitigating circumstances. The trial court may consider the case
    record, the probation officer’s report, other specified reports, statements in aggravation
    and mitigation, and other evidence introduced at the sentencing hearing. (Rule 4.420(b);
    § 1170.)
    One of the aggravating circumstances, and the one the trial court relied on here, is
    that “[t]he crime involved great violence, great bodily harm, threat of great bodily harm,
    or other acts disclosing a high degree of cruelty, viciousness, or callousness.” (Rule
    4.421(a)(1).) The trial court is vested with broad discretion in weighing the aggravating
    and mitigating factors, and a single factor in aggravation will support imposition of the
    upper term. (Black II, supra, 41 Cal.4th at p. 813; People v. Steele (2000) 
    83 Cal.App.4th 212
    , 226.)
    Defendant claims that the trial court relied upon improper factors in imposing the
    upper term sentence on his voluntary manslaughter conviction. First, he contends the
    court’s statement that defendant “escalated their argument about money to an armed
    confrontation at the doorstep” demonstrates the court shared the prosecutor’s view that
    defendant “committed first degree murder,” notwithstanding that the jury rejected
    theories that defendant had lain in wait or premeditated a murder, and convicted him only
    of voluntary manslaughter. Whatever the prosecutor’s view, the record does not suggest
    the trial court shared it.
    9
    The quoted language defendant finds objectionable derives from our prior opinion
    on resentencing (People v. Leon, supra, C068005), and we disagree that it reflects a
    misunderstanding or refusal to accept the crime of which defendant was convicted.
    Defendant need not have premeditated a murder to have had his earlier disagreement with
    Reyes over money contribute to his irritation with her making too much noise as she
    yelled at him to open the door; his irritation is reflected in his cursing at her and demand
    that she come into the house. And, in any event, defendant’s carrying a weapon to the
    door after he knew she was there waiting to be let in “demonstrated an utter disregard for
    the safety and well-being of [Reyes] and her companions.” The trial court’s conclusion
    was neither arbitrary nor irrational, and it did not abuse its discretion in so finding.
    Nor did the trial court abuse its discretion, as defendant urges, in finding that the
    shooting was callous. Defendant’s actions, i.e., keeping a firearm at the ready when he
    opened the door, represented an utter disregard for the safety and well-being of Reyes
    and her companions, because defendant knew Reyes—not “gangbangers”—was at the
    door: She had yelled to be let in; he had spoken to her by cell phone; and he saw her
    when he opened the door, if not before through the peephole. Callousness as an
    aggravating factor can be established with evidence the defendant recklessly “exposed
    [the victims] to danger.” (People v. Gutierrez, supra, 10 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1735-1736.)
    Under the circumstances, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in concluding
    defendant acted without sympathy for others, and with a hardened heart.
    II. Calculation of Custody Credits
    Defendant also contends the trial court erred in failing at resentencing to calculate
    the total number of actual days served in custody. The People concede the error, and we
    agree. (People v. Buckhalter (2001) 
    26 Cal.4th 20
    , 23 [“When, as here, an appellate
    remand results in modification of a felony sentence during the term of imprisonment, the
    10
    trial court must calculate the actual time the defendant has already served and credit that
    time against the ‘subsequent sentence.’ ”].)
    The August 13, 2012 abstract of judgment correctly reflects that defendant is
    entitled only to conduct credit for time served in jail prior to his sentence, i.e., 421 days
    of actual time and 63 days of conduct credit (pursuant to § 2933.1). But the abstract fails
    to reflect that defendant is entitled to an additional 2,996 days of actual custody credit for
    the time he served in prison between the initial sentencing and the resentencing, for a
    total award of actual custody credit of 3,417 days—421 days of presentence actual
    custody credit plus 2,996 days of actual custody credit for time spent in a state institution
    following the original sentencing. The August 13, 2012 abstract of judgment must be
    amended accordingly.
    DISPOSITION
    The matter is remanded to the trial court with instructions to amend the August 13,
    2012 abstract of judgment to reflect: Defendant is entitled to 3,417 days of actual
    custody credit and 63 days of presentence conduct credit, for a total award of custody
    credits of 3,480 days. As modified, the judgment of conviction is affirmed. A certified
    copy of the amended abstract of judgment shall be forwarded to the Department of
    Corrections and Rehabilitation.
    BUTZ                    , J.
    We concur:
    RAYE                       , P. J.
    DUARTE                     , J.
    11