People v. Barnett CA2/5 ( 2022 )


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  • Filed 10/26/22 P. v. Barnett 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    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for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,                                                      B313860
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                               (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No.
    v.                                                      BA492503)
    ANDREW STANTON BARNETT,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los
    Angeles County, Robert C. Vanderet, Judge. Affirmed.
    Micah Reyner, under appointment by the Court of Appeal,
    for Defendant and Appellant.
    Rob Bonta, Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Chief
    Assistant Attorney General, Susan Sullivan Pithey, Senior
    Assistant Attorney General, Scott A. Taryle, Supervising Deputy
    Attorney General, and David A. Voet Deputy Attorney General,
    for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    During a minute-long fight, defendant and appellant
    Andrew Barnett (defendant) stabbed a man outside a hotel where
    defendant was then living. A trial jury convicted defendant of
    assault with a deadly weapon. We consider whether the trial
    court prejudicially erred in any of three asserted respects: by
    declining to instruct the jury it must be unanimous on the act
    constituting the assault, by denying defendant’s motion in limine
    to prevent the prosecutor and witnesses from referring to the
    man defendant stabbed as “the victim,” and by instructing the
    jury in a manner that would in theory permit it to find the knife
    defendant used was an inherently deadly weapon.
    I. BACKGROUND
    A.     The Offense Conduct
    In January 2021, defendant was staying with his mother,
    Darlene Hoopii (Hoopii), at the Rivers Hotel, a single-room
    occupancy (SRO) residence in downtown Los Angeles.
    A man known to many only by his first name, “Gabriel,”
    started frequenting the Rivers Hotel around the summer of 2020.
    Hoopii believed Gabriel was destructive and under the influence
    of drugs, and he tried to get into Hoopii’s room at around 3 or 4
    a.m. one night.1 Another resident of the Rivers Hotel, Leon Clark
    (Clark), also believed Gabriel was a menace and under the
    influence of methamphetamine.
    On January 7, 2021, Gabriel was loitering in the area in
    front of the Rivers Hotel. Manolo Martinez, a security supervisor
    for SROs including the Rivers Hotel, responded to two complaints
    that Gabriel was trying to obtain access to the building that day.
    1
    Defendant was aware Gabriel tried to enter Hoopii’s room.
    2
    Martinez confronted Gabriel twice and told him he could not be
    in the area. Gabriel was hostile, physically aggressive, and
    cursed at Martinez.
    Later that afternoon, Gabriel was lying in the alcove
    outside the front door of the Rivers Hotel. Defendant approached
    the Rivers Hotel from the sidewalk and walked into the alcove.
    Defendant walked up to Gabriel while holding a sheathed knife
    and poked him, causing Gabriel to stir and raise a hand toward
    defendant. Defendant then unsheathed the knife and jabbed it
    toward Gabriel. Gabriel stood up and moved forward slightly,
    and defendant backed up. The two then appeared to have words,
    and defendant walked toward Gabriel again—still with knife in
    hand.
    Gabriel pushed defendant out of the alcove and onto the
    sidewalk. The two men tussled on the ground and defendant
    maneuvered so that he was standing while Gabriel was still on
    the ground. Defendant then swung down with the knife and
    stabbed Gabriel multiple times. The two men separated at that
    point, and walked away in different directions.
    Defendant returned to his mother’s room and called 911.
    Defendant told the 911 operator he had just stabbed someone.
    Defendant reported the person tried to “come at [him]” and stated
    he (defendant) had acted in self-defense.
    Los Angeles Police Department officers responded to the
    scene. Defendant approached them and admitted to stabbing
    Gabriel. Defendant informed the police that the knife he used
    was in Hoopii’s bathroom sink and accompanied them to her
    room to retrieve it. Defendant told the police Gabriel had been
    causing trouble at the Rivers Hotel and had previously tried to
    break into Hoopii’s room.
    3
    The police found Gabriel lying on his back on a street
    corner, bleeding. He identified himself as Gabriel Ortega and he
    was transported to the hospital for treatment of three stab
    wounds to his right shoulder (which the hospital stapled shut)
    and a cracked shoulder blade.
    A police officer attempted to speak to Gabriel at the
    hospital, but that was not possible due to COVID restrictions.
    The officer asked hospital staff to provide Gabriel with his
    contact information, but Gabriel never contacted him. The officer
    was unable to confirm Gabriel’s last name was Ortega, or to
    otherwise confirm his identity using his name and birthdate.2
    B.     The Criminal Proceedings Against Defendant
    The Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office filed a
    one-count information against defendant charging him with
    assault with a deadly weapon (a knife) in violation of Penal Code
    section 245, subdivision (a)(1).
    Prior to the commencement of trial, defendant filed a
    motion in limine asking the court to preclude referring to Gabriel
    as the “victim” because the appellation would be unduly
    prejudicial. The trial court denied the motion and explained the
    jury would be instructed about the presumption of innocence.3
    During trial, the prosecution presented testimony from
    several police officers and admitted in evidence surveillance
    footage from the Rivers Hotel that captured the assault, footage
    2
    A police report prepared in connection with the incident
    identified Gabriel as “John Doe.”
    3
    True to its word, the court so instructed the jury before
    opening statements and again at the conclusion of trial.
    4
    from police officers’ body worn cameras, and an audio recording of
    defendant’s 911 call. Hoopii, Clark, and a medical expert, Dr.
    Ryan O’Connor, testified during the defense case.
    During the prosecution’s opening statement, and as
    permitted by the trial court’s in limine ruling, the prosecutor
    referred to Gabriel as “the victim.” During questioning, the
    prosecutor and the LAPD witnesses also referred to Gabriel as
    “the victim.” During closing argument, the prosecutor referred to
    Gabriel variously as “Gabriel,” “Mr. Ortega,” and “John Doe.”
    The prosecutor also discussed the attack itself during
    closing argument, describing the altercation as a “one minute-
    long . . . attack that occurred on Gabriel where multiple assaults
    with a deadly weapon occurred.” The prosecutor said “it is one
    continuous attack but there are multiple assaults that occur
    during this attack”;4 the prosecutor also clarified “there is only
    one assault with a deadly weapon charged in this case.”
    4
    The prosecutor broke the single charged assault into four
    component assaults: (1) defendant takes out the knife and stands
    over Gabriel while he lays on the ground; (2) defendant jabs
    Gabriel twice as he is getting up the first time; (3) defendant
    lunges at Gabriel with the knife; and (4) defendant stabs Gabriel.
    The prosecutor argued the jury did not have to unanimously
    agree all four of these components occurred. As the prosecutor
    put it, “some of you might believe all four assaults happened.
    Some of you might believe some assaults happened, some were
    not assaults, right? That only the stabbing was an assault or
    that only two of those four qualify under these elements as an
    assault.” The prosecutor also stated, “the key is you do not have
    to all unanimously agree on which one of those was an assault.”
    The prosecutor said again that as long as all the jurors agreed an
    5
    Defendant objected that the prosecution’s argument
    misstated the law. Defendant argued there was a “unanimity
    issue” and the court should instruct the jury that it must
    unanimously determine what act constituted the charged assault.
    The prosecutor countered that there was a continuous course of
    conduct and the jurors therefore did not have to agree on which
    individual component of the conduct was an assault. The trial
    court agreed it was a continuous course of conduct and did not
    instruct on unanimity.
    Before the jury retired to deliberate, the trial court
    instructed the jurors (among other things) that “[a] deadly
    weapon is any object, instrument or weapon that is inherently
    deadly or one that is used in such a way that it is capable of
    causing and likely to cause death or great bodily injury.”5
    The jury found defendant guilty of assault with a deadly
    weapon. Defendant moved for a new trial and argued he was
    prejudiced by the lack of a unanimity instruction. The trial court
    denied the motion, stating a rapidly occurring series of attacks in
    a compressed time frame should be seen as one assault. The
    court did recognize the People created ambiguity on the
    unanimity issue by arguing there were four component assaults,
    but the court believed there was no unanimity problem because it
    was indisputable that the last of the acts, the actual stabbing,
    assault occurred at some point during the continuous course of
    conduct and all other elements were met, defendant was guilty.
    5
    The prosecution asked the trial court to include language
    stating, “[a]n object is inherently deadly if it is deadly or
    dangerous in the ordinary use for which it was designed.” The
    trial court declined.
    6
    was by definition an assault with a deadly weapon. In the trial
    court’s view, the only issue was whether defendant acted in self-
    defense, but self-defense was not available as a matter of law
    both because the defendant initiated the fight and because
    defendant’s stabbing response was not a proportional use of force
    in any event.
    The court sentenced defendant to the upper term of four
    years but suspended execution of the sentence and placed
    defendant on two years’ probation with 364 days in county jail,
    including credit for time served.
    II. DISCUSSION
    Defendant’s three arguments for reversal are unavailing.
    First, the one-minute long assault was a continuous course of
    conduct for which no unanimity instruction was required; the
    prosecutor’s description of the altercation as being comprised of
    four components did not change the nature of the charged crime.
    Second, the trial court did not err, prejudicially or otherwise, by
    declining to prevent the prosecutor or witnesses from referring to
    Gabriel, who defendant admitted to stabbing, as the “victim.”
    Third, though the People correctly concede it was error to instruct
    the jury that the knife in question was an inherently deadly
    weapon, the People are also right that the error was not
    prejudicial under the test our Supreme Court articulated in
    People v. Aledamat (2019) 
    8 Cal.5th 1
     (Aledamat).
    A.     No Unanimity Instruction Was Required
    “In a criminal case, a jury verdict must be unanimous.
    [Citations.] . . . Additionally, the jury must agree unanimously
    the defendant is guilty of a specific crime. [Citation.] Therefore,
    7
    cases have long held that when the evidence suggests more than
    one discrete crime, either the prosecution must elect among the
    crimes or the court must require the jury to agree on the same
    criminal act. [Citations.]” (People v. Russo (2001) 
    25 Cal.4th 1124
    , 1132.) “This requirement of unanimity as to the criminal
    act ‘is intended to eliminate the danger that the defendant will be
    convicted even though there is no single offense which all the
    jurors agree the defendant committed.’ [Citation.]” (Ibid.) “[N]o
    unanimity instruction is required[, however,] if the case falls
    within the continuous-course-of-conduct exception, which arises
    ‘when the acts are so closely connected in time as to form part of
    one transaction’ [citation], or ‘when . . . the statute contemplates
    a continuous course of conduct of a series of acts over a period of
    time’ [citation]. There also is no need for a unanimity instruction
    if the defendant offers the same defense or defenses to the
    various acts constituting the charged crime. [Citation.]” (People
    v. Jennings (2010) 
    50 Cal.4th 616
    , 679; see also People v. Jo
    (2017) 
    15 Cal.App.5th 1128
    , 1178.)
    We review claims of instructional error de novo (People v.
    Johnson (2009) 
    180 Cal.App.4th 702
    , 707), and we hold no
    unanimity instruction was required in this case because the
    charged assault was a continuous course of conduct.
    During the assault, defendant walked up to Gabriel,
    obtained his attention by poking him with a sheathed knife,
    unsheathed the knife, and jabbed Gabriel with it. A tussle
    ensued and culminated in defendant stabbing Gabriel. This
    entire interaction lasted just one minute, give or take. The
    scenario here therefore fits comfortably in the category of
    circumstances where courts have determined there is a
    continuous course of conduct that does not require a unanimity
    8
    instruction. (People v. Williams (2013) 
    56 Cal.4th 630
    , 682
    [unanimity instruction not required where the criminal acts
    “‘took place within a very small window of time’”]; People v.
    Hernandez (2013) 
    217 Cal.App.4th 559
    , 573 [a continuous course
    of conduct exists “when the same actor performs the same type
    of conduct at the same place within a short period of time, such
    that a jury cannot reasonably distinguish different instances of
    conduct”] (Hernandez).)
    Additionally, defendant claimed only one defense (self-
    defense) to the conduct for which he was charged, no matter how
    oddly the case was argued by the prosecutor. That is further
    independent reason to conclude no unanimity instruction was
    required. (See, e.g., People v. Williams, supra, 56 Cal.4th at 682
    [no unanimity instruction required “‘when the defendant offers
    essentially the same defense to each of the acts, and there is no
    reasonable basis for the jury to distinguish between them’”];
    Hernandez, supra, 217 Cal.App.4th at 573 [exception applies
    “when a defendant proffers the same defense to multiple acts
    because the return of a guilty verdict indicates that the jury
    rejected the defendant’s defense in toto.”].)
    Defendant’s arguments to avoid this conclusion are all
    unpersuasive. He emphasizes the prosecution broke the assault
    into four component assaults during closing argument, but the
    prosecution did emphasize that there was only one charged
    offense and there was no evidence (the prosecutor’s argument is
    not evidence—as the jury was instructed) that multiple discrete
    assaults occurred. Defendant also argues the unanimity
    instruction was required because he had different available
    defenses to certain components of the crime identified by the
    prosecution and he believes the jury could have rationally
    9
    concluded there was reasonable doubt regarding whether
    defendant acted in self-defense as to some of the prosecution-
    identified acts. The defenses defendant describes, however, do
    not amount to the sort of distinct defenses that have been found
    to support a unanimity instruction. (See, e.g., People v. Davis
    (2005) 
    36 Cal.4th 510
    , 562 [“the potential defenses to the two acts
    of robbery were entirely different: as to the car, the defense was
    that Boyd was not legally in possession of it; as to the rings, the
    defense was that its taking constituted only the lesser included
    crime of theft”]; Hernandez, supra, 217 Cal.App.4th at 574
    [defense to one alleged incident of possession was that defendant
    did not have a gun; defense to another was that defendant did not
    have dominion or control over the gun].)
    B.     The Trial Court Did Not Err by Declining to Order
    the Prosecutor and Witnesses to Refrain from
    Referring to Gabriel as the “Victim”
    A century and a half ago, in People v. Williams (1860) 
    17 Cal. 142
     (Williams), the defendant argued a jury instruction
    referring to the deceased subject of the case as a “victim”
    prejudiced the jury against him in his murder trial. (Id. at 146.)
    Our antebellum Supreme Court ultimately reversed on other
    grounds, but the Williams court cautioned that the use of “[t]he
    word victim, in the connection in which it appears, is an
    unguarded expression, calculated, though doubtless
    unintentionally, to create prejudice against the accused.” (Id. at
    147.) The court stated it was improper for the trial court to have
    used the word “victim” when instructing the jury because “[i]t
    seems to assume that the deceased was wrongfully killed, when
    10
    the very issue was as to the character of the killing.” (Id. at 147-
    148.)
    In the 1900s, our Supreme Court returned to the issue of
    the word “victim” in People v. Wolfe (1954) 
    42 Cal.2d 663
     (Wolfe).
    There, the defendant and prosecutor referred to the deceased as
    “the victim” during the defendant’s cross-examination. (Id. at
    666.) The defendant argued the prosecutor’s use of the term
    “victim” assumed the defendant’s guilt and created reversible
    error, but our Supreme Court disagreed. (Ibid.) In doing so, it
    distinguished Williams on the grounds that in Wolfe it was the
    prosecutor—not the trial court—who referred to the deceased as
    the victim. (Ibid.) The court also stated the jury was properly
    told it was the sole judge of the value and effect of evidence and
    correctly instructed on the reasonable doubt standard. (Ibid.)
    Relying on Williams, defendant contends the trial court
    abused its discretion by denying his motion in limine to exclude
    reference to Gabriel as the “victim.” Williams, however, is
    inapposite. Here, as in Wolfe, the trial court made no unqualified
    reference to Gabriel as a “victim”; it was the prosecutor and the
    testifying police officers who used the term.6 The distinction is
    important, and Wolfe is the controlling precedent here. There
    was no error.
    C.    The “Inherently Deadly” Knife Instruction Was
    Harmless
    To find a defendant guilty of assault with a deadly weapon,
    a jury must find, among other things, the defendant “did an act
    6
    As we already detailed, the prosecutor also did not
    uniformly refer to Gabriel as the “victim” either.
    11
    with a deadly weapon that by its nature would directly and
    probably result in the application of force to a person.” (Pen.
    Code, §§ 240, 245, subd. (a)(1); People v. Williams (2001) 
    26 Cal.4th 779
    ; CALCRIM No. 875.) The court here instructed the
    jury with former CALCRIM No. 875, which defined “deadly
    weapon” as follows: “A deadly weapon other than a firearm is any
    object, instrument, or weapon that is inherently deadly or one
    that is used in such a way that it is capable of causing and likely
    to cause death or great bodily injury.”
    “An ‘“inherently deadly or dangerous”’ weapon is a term of
    art describing objects that are deadly or dangerous in ‘“the
    ordinary use for which they are designed,”’ that is, weapons that
    have no practical nondeadly purpose.” (People v. Stutelberg
    (2018) 
    29 Cal.App.5th 314
    , 318-319.) Because a knife has
    ordinary, innocent purposes such as cutting food or other items, it
    is not an inherently deadly weapon. (Aledamat, supra, 8 Cal.5th
    at 6.) It may, however, be a deadly weapon within the meaning
    of section 245, subdivision (a)(1) when used in a manner capable
    of causing and likely to cause death or great bodily injury.
    (People v. Brown (2012) 
    210 Cal.App.4th 1
    , 7.)
    Defendant argues, and the People concede, it was error for
    the trial court to instruct the jury that a knife could be an
    inherently deadly weapon. (Aledamat, supra, 8 Cal.5th at 6-7.)
    While the theory that the knife was used in a manner capable of
    causing and likely to cause death or great bodily injury was
    legally correct, the theory that the knife was inherently deadly
    was not.
    The parties disagree on whether the conceded error
    requires reversal. The “alternative-theory error [here] is subject
    to the . . . Chapman harmless error test.” (Aledamat, supra, 8
    12
    Cal.5th at 13.) Accordingly, we “must reverse the conviction
    unless, after examining the entire cause, including the evidence,
    and considering all relevant circumstances, [we] determine[ ] the
    error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.” (Ibid.)
    We conclude, following Aledamat, that the error was indeed
    harmless. That case involved the same error in former
    CALCRIM No. 875 that we have here, and our Supreme Court
    held the error was harmless based on a “number of
    circumstances.” (Aledamat, supra, 8 Cal.5th at 13.) One of those
    circumstances was the wording of former CALCRIM No. 875
    itself, which juxtaposed “inherently deadly” with “used in such a
    way that it is capable of causing injury and likely to cause death
    or . . . great bodily injury” such that the instruction “at least
    indicates what the ‘inherently deadly’ language was driving at.”
    (Aledamat, supra, at 13-14.) Our Supreme Court also looked to
    the prosecution’s closing argument in that case and found it was
    unlikely the jury would view the weapon at issue there (a box
    cutter) as inherently deadly without considering how it was used,
    emphasizing that “no one ever suggested to the jury that there
    were two separate ways it could decide whether the box cutter
    was a deadly weapon.” (Id. at 14.) The Supreme Court
    additionally found it significant that the box cutter’s status as a
    deadly weapon was not really a point of contention: while the
    defense attorney did not concede the box cutter was a deadly
    weapon, the attorney also did not argue it was not. (Ibid.)
    These same circumstances are present here. Aledamat’s
    point about the juxtaposition of the wording in CALCRIM No.
    875 applies equally in this case. In addition, neither the
    prosecution nor the defense “suggested to the jury that there
    were two separate ways it could decide whether the [knife] was a
    13
    deadly weapon.” (Aledamat, supra, 8 Cal.5th at 14.) In closing
    argument, the prosecution simply asserted the knife was a deadly
    weapon with no further embellishment as to the reason and the
    defense did not contest the point during its closing argument.
    (Ibid. [“counsel never argued that, if he did assault the victim
    with the box cutter, the box cutter was not a deadly weapon”].)
    Furthermore, Aledamat reasoned it would have been
    impossible for the jury not to find the box cutter was capable of
    causing and likely to cause death or bodily injury based on other
    facts the jury necessarily found, i.e., that “(1) defendant did an
    act with a deadly weapon (either inherently or as used) that by
    its nature would directly and probably result in the application of
    force; (2) defendant was aware of facts that would lead a
    reasonable person to realize that his act by its nature would
    directly and probably result in the application of force to
    someone; and (3) defendant had the present ability to apply force
    with a deadly weapon to a person.” (Aledamat, supra, 8 Cal.5th
    at 15; see also ibid. [“‘No reasonable jury that made all of these
    findings could have failed to find’ that defendant used the box
    cutter in a way that is capable of causing or likely to cause death
    or great bodily injury”].) The jury here made the same findings
    as the jury in Aledamat. It similarly must have found defendant
    used the knife “in a way that is capable of causing or likely to
    cause death or great bodily injury.” (Ibid.)
    14
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
    BAKER, Acting P. J.
    We concur:
    MOOR, J.
    KIM, J.
    15
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B313860

Filed Date: 10/27/2022

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 10/27/2022