People v. Nunez CA4/3 ( 2021 )


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  • Filed 3/17/21 P. v. Nunez CA4/3
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                        G058009
    v.                                                          (Super. Ct. No. 15NF0143)
    DANIEL NUNEZ,                                                         OPINION
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Julian W.
    Bailey, Judge. Affirmed.
    Cathryn L. Rosciam and Arthur Martin, under appointment by the Court of
    Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant.
    Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Chief Assistant
    Attorney General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General, Eric A. Swenson and
    Felicity Senoski, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    *          *          *
    Daniel Nunez appeals from his conviction on one count of committing a
    lewd act on a child under the age of 14. (Pen. Code, § 288 subd. (a).) The jury also
    found true the allegation that he engaged in substantial sexual conduct with his victim.
    (Pen. Code, § 1203.066, subd. (a)(8).) Nunez contends the judgment must be reversed
    because the trial court abused its discretion by (1) admitting evidence of his prior
    uncharged sexual offenses under Evidence Code section 1108, and (2) preventing him
    from cross-examining a witness about her income in an effort to impeach her testimony.1
    The trial court has broad discretion to determine the admissibility of
    evidence, and we find no error in either ruling. We also reject Nunez’s suggestion that
    we “reconsider” whether Evidence Code section 1108, which allows the trial court to
    admit evidence of prior uncharged sexual offenses, amounts to a denial of due process.
    As Nunez acknowledges, our Supreme Court has rejected that contention in People v.
    Falsetta (1999) 
    21 Cal.4th 903
    , 907 (Falsetta), and we are bound by its decision.2 It is
    not within our power to “reconsider” a ruling made by our Supreme Court. (Auto Equity
    Sales, Inc. v. Superior Court (1962) 
    57 Cal.2d 450
    , 455.)
    1
    In his opening brief, Nunez also contended the court erred by admitting
    evidence of the victim’s prior disclosures of the charged crime to third parties, claiming it
    was inadmissible hearsay. However, Nunez explicitly withdrew that claim of error in his
    reply brief.
    2
    We recognize Nunez likely raised this issue as a precursor to seeking
    review of the issue by our Supreme Court. However, as the Attorney General points out,
    the Supreme Court has rejected challenges to its Falsetta ruling several times in recent
    years. (See People v. Molano (2019) 
    7 Cal.5th 620
    , 664, citing People v. Daveggio and
    Michaud (2018) 
    4 Cal.5th 790
    , 827; People v. Loy (2011) 
    52 Cal.4th 46
    , 60-61; People v.
    Lewis (2009) 
    46 Cal.4th 1255
    , 1288-1289.)
    2
    We consequently affirm the judgment.
    FACTS
    In October 2017, Nunez was charged with a single count of lewd conduct
    with a minor under the age of 14. (Pen. Code, § 288, subd. (a).) It was further alleged
    that he engaged in substantial sexual contact with the minor. (Pen. Code, § 1203.066,
    subd. (a)(8).) The offense was alleged to have occurred between February 2010 and
    February 2013.
    At the time of the offense, Nunez was living with his long-term girlfriend,
    Gwendelyn B. The two had been living together since 1986 or 1987. Gwendelyn had
    three children from an earlier relationship—daughters Shannon B. and Jamaica B., and
    son Forrest B. Nunez had helped raise those children, who were adults by the time the
    offense occurred. Gwendelyn and Nunez also had a child together, Gabriel R.
    Gwendelyn and Nunez lived in a mobile home that was also shared, for a
    period of several months, by Forrest. The mobile home was divided into two separate
    residences; Gwendelyn and Nunez lived in the front, while Forrest lived in the back.
    The victim of the charged crime was Forrest’s daughter (and Gwendelyn’s
    granddaughter), V.D., who was an 11-year-old fifth grader at the time. V.D. lived with
    her mother, but sometimes visited her father at the mobile home.
    During one of those visits, V.D. was in the front residence of the mobile
    home, sitting on the bed in the room shared by Nunez and Gwendelyn. She was playing
    with her flip phone when Nunez came into the room and sat on the bed next to her.
    After asking how V.D. was doing, Nunez pulled her closer to him, touched
    her thigh, and rubbed her vaginal area outside of her pants. He unbuttoned her pants and
    pulled down both her pants and underwear. Nunez then rubbed the outside of her vagina
    and put his finger inside. He asked V.D. if she liked it, and she told him she did not and
    that it hurt.
    3
    Nunez warned V.D. not to tell anyone; in response, she shook her head
    apparently to signify she would not. She then ran into her father’s residence, hid in the
    closet, and cried. She did not tell her father what occurred, but she avoided being alone
    with Nunez after that day.
    At some point, V.D. stopped visiting her father at the mobile home; when
    he asked her why she did not want to stay with him, she told Forest she was not
    comfortable around Nunez and Gwendelyn.
    V.D. did not tell anyone what Nunez had done to her for two or three years.
    However, in the period spanning eighth grade to tenth grade, she revealed that Nunez had
    molested her to four different friends. All four of those friends testified at the trial.
    In September 2014, when V.D. was in ninth grade, she told her mother she
    had been molested, but she would not initially reveal the identity of the perpetrator. After
    consistent prodding from her mother over the course of a month, she finally revealed it
    was Nunez.
    V.D.’s mother contacted V.D.’s aunt, Jamaica, who came to talk to V.D.
    The next day, Jamaica and V.D.’s mother took V.D. to the police station to report the
    crime. At the police station, Jamaica also reported Nunez had molested her repeatedly
    when she was between the ages of about eight and twelve years old.
    The police then spoke with Jamaica’s sister, Shannon, who reported Nunez
    also molested her several times when she was between the ages of eight and eleven.
    At trial, the prosecution filed a motion to admit evidence of Nunez’s prior
    uncharged sexual misconduct against Jamaica and Shannon under Evidence Code
    section 1108. The prosecution proffered that Jamaica and Shannon would testify Nunez
    had molested each of them repeatedly over a period of years in the 1980’s—beginning
    when they were around the ages of eight or nine—by digitally penetrating their vaginas
    and touching their breasts and buttocks.
    4
    The prosecutor argued that the evidence of both witnesses was relevant to
    the jury’s evaluation of V.D.’s credibility in this case, as well as to the issues of Nunez’s
    intent and the absence of mistake or accident. The prosecution also asserted that the
    evidence should not be excluded under Evidence Code section 352 because its probative
    value outweighed its prejudicial effect.
    During the in limine hearing, the prosecutor explained that after Jamaica
    and Shannon disclosed the molestations to Gwendelyn, Nunez apologized at a family
    meeting, and the matter was not reported to law enforcement.
    Although Nunez argued the evidence should be excluded because it was too
    prejudicial and too remote, the court found that the similar ages of V.D. and her aunts at
    the time they were molested, as well as the similar familial relationship between Nunez
    and each of the victims, had “significant probative value.” The court consequently
    concluded that the probative value of the evidence outweighed the danger of the jury
    misusing it and ruled it was admissible under Evidence Code section 1108. The trial
    court further noted that the jury would be appropriately instructed as to how to evaluate
    the evidence.
    Both Shannon and Jamaica testified at trial about Nunez’s molestation
    history. They also revealed that after they finally disclosed to a cousin the fact Nunez
    was molesting them, Gwendelyn learned of it and called them together with Nunez to
    address the issue. Jamaica recalled going into a bedroom where Nunez was present on
    his knees. Gwendelyn asked the two girls if Nunez had done anything to them, and they
    said “yes.” Nunez was crying and said he was “sorry.” Gwendelyn asked the girls to
    forgive him. Shannon recalled she and her sister participated in a larger family meeting
    that included their aunt, two cousins, and Forrest. Shannon testified the outcome of the
    meeting was that Nunez apologized and said it would not happen again. They did not
    report the molestation to the police.
    5
    Nunez’s defense was grounded on a theory that V.D. had fabricated the
    allegation against Nunez—allegedly at the behest of Jamaica, who wanted Nunez out of
    the way so she and her five children could move into the mobile home with Gwendelyn.
    During Jamaica’s cross-examination, defense counsel asked her if she worked. When she
    responded, “no,” counsel asked her how she supported her five children.
    After the court sustained a relevance objection to that question, counsel
    explained during a sidebar that “the defense is that these people are making this up. They
    want Daniel Nunez out of the picture so they can live at his place, and I want to know
    how she supports her five children. I think it’s relevant because it would show a motive
    to fabricate.” The court then allowed Nunez’s counsel to question Jamaica outside the
    presence of the jury, to establish how she would have answered.
    Jamaica testified that she supported her children through a combination of
    child support payments and government housing assistance. In response to follow up
    questions, she explained that “housing assistance” meant “[t]he government helps me pay
    for my rent.” She gave the ages of her children, who were between 4 and 20, and
    clarified that she received two child support payments from different people. After
    receiving those answers, defense counsel stated those were the questions he would ask in
    front of the jury; the court once again sustained the prosecutor’s objection and ruled the
    evidence irrelevant.
    The prosecutor asked Jamaica on redirect if she had fabricated her claim of
    sexual assault because she was trying to live in a house Nunez owns; Jamaica answered
    “[n]o.”
    After both sides had completed their presentation of evidence, the court
    turned to the issue of jury instructions. The trial court proposed, without objection, that
    the jury be instructed it could evaluate the evidence of Nunez’s prior uncharged sexual
    misconduct involving Jamaica and Shannon for its tendency to show intent, absence of
    mistake or accident, or common plan under Evidence Code section 1101, subdivision (b),
    6
    as well as for its tendency to show Nunez’s disposition to commit sexual offenses under
    Evidence Code section 1108.
    The trial court subsequently instructed the jury under a modified version of
    CALCRIM No. 375, Evidence of Uncharged Offenses, which directed the jurors to
    disregard the evidence entirely if they concluded the prosecutor failed to establish by a
    preponderance of the evidence that the prior molestation occurred.
    However, the instruction also informed the jurors that if they “decide[d]
    that the defendant committed the offenses, you may, but are not required to, consider that
    evidence for the limited purpose of deciding whether: [¶] The defendant acted with the
    intent of arousing, appealing to, or gratifying the lust, passions, or sexual desires of the
    defendant or [V.D.]; or [¶] The defendant’s alleged actions were not the result of mistake
    or accident; or [¶] The defendant had a plan or scheme to commit the offense alleged in
    this case; or [¶] The defendant was disposed or inclined to commit sexual offenses, and
    based on that decision, also conclude that the defendant was likely to commit and did
    commit the offense charged here. [¶] In evaluating this evidence, consider the similarity
    or lack of similarity between the uncharged offenses and the charged offense.”
    The instruction explicitly directed the jury “not [to] consider this evidence
    for any other purpose except for these limited purposes. [¶] If you conclude that the
    defendant committed the uncharged offenses, that conclusion is only one factor to
    consider along with all the other evidence. It is not sufficient by itself to prove that the
    defendant is guilty of the charged crime or the allegation that the defendant had
    substantial sexual conduct with [V.D.] who was under the age of 14 at the time.
    The People must still prove the charge and every allegation beyond a reasonable doubt.”
    The prosecutor included the instruction’s language in her closing argument,
    and told the jurors that they were not permitted to use the prior act evidence to find the
    defendant was “automatically guilty of sexually assaulting [V.D.] . . . .”
    7
    DISCUSSION
    1.     Standard of Review
    In seeking a reversal of his conviction, Nunez relies on a claim that the
    court abused its discretion in two evidentiary rulings. We observe at the outset of our
    analysis it is difficult to prevail on that argument. “‘In determining the admissibility of
    evidence, the trial court has broad discretion. . . . A trial court’s ruling on admissibility
    implies whatever finding of fact is prerequisite thereto . . . .’ [Citation.] ‘We review the
    trial court’s conclusions regarding foundational facts for substantial evidence. [Citation.]
    We review the trial court’s ultimate ruling for an abuse of discretion [citations], reversing
    only if “‘the trial court exercised its discretion in an arbitrary, capricious, or patently
    absurd manner that resulted in a manifest miscarriage of justice.’”’” (People v. Jackson
    (2016) 
    1 Cal.5th 269
    , 320-321.)
    2.     Admission of Evidence of Prior Uncharged Sex Offenses
    Nunez’s first contention is that the court abused its discretion by admitting
    the evidence of his earlier uncharged sex offenses involving Jamaica and Shannon. He
    argues the evidence should have been excluded under Evidence Code section 352
    because it was substantially more prejudicial than probative.
    “In sexual offense cases, Evidence Code section 1108 creates an exception
    to Evidence Code section 1101’s prohibition against propensity evidence. Under
    Evidence Code section 1108, when a criminal defendant is accused of a sexual offense,
    ‘evidence of the defendant’s commission of another sexual offense or offenses’ is not
    excluded under section 1101 if not inadmissible under Evidence Code section 352.
    [Citation.] For purposes of Evidence Code section 1108, ‘sexual offense’ includes sexual
    assault, lewd acts on a minor, unlawful intercourse with a minor, rape by coercion,
    forcible rape, production of child pornography, and exhibiting pornography to a minor.”
    (People v. Nguyen (2010) 
    184 Cal.App.4th 1096
    , 1115, fn. omitted (Nguyen).)
    8
    Evidence Code section 352 provides the court with discretion to ‘“exclude
    evidence if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the probability that its
    admission will (a) necessitate undue consumption of time or (b) create substantial danger
    of undue prejudice, of confusing the issues, or of misleading the jury.”’ However, “The
    admission of relevant evidence will not offend due process unless the evidence is so
    prejudicial as to render the defendant’s trial fundamentally unfair.” (Falsetta, supra,
    21 Cal.4th at p. 916.)
    In exercising their discretion to admit evidence of prior sexual offenses,
    “trial judges must consider such factors as its nature, relevance, and possible remoteness,
    the degree of certainty of its commission and the likelihood of confusing, misleading, or
    distracting the jurors from their main inquiry, its similarity to the charged offense, its
    likely prejudicial impact on the jurors, the burden on the defendant in defending against
    the uncharged offense, and the availability of less prejudicial alternatives to its outright
    admission, such as admitting some but not all of the defendant’s other sex offenses, or
    excluding irrelevant though inflammatory details surrounding the offense.” (Falsetta,
    supra, 21 Cal.4th at p. 917.)
    In Nguyen, this court characterized the most significant considerations as
    “(1) whether the propensity evidence has probative value, e.g., whether the uncharged
    conduct is similar enough to the charged behavior to tend to show the defendant did in
    fact commit the charged offense; (2) whether the propensity evidence is stronger and
    more inflammatory than evidence of the defendant’s charged acts; (3) whether the
    uncharged conduct is remote or stale; (4) whether the propensity evidence is likely to
    confuse or distract the jurors from their main inquiry, e.g., whether the jury might be
    tempted to punish the defendant for his uncharged, unpunished conduct; and (5) whether
    admission of the propensity evidence will require an undue consumption of time.”
    (Nguyen, supra, 184 Cal.App.4th at p. 1117.)
    9
    Keeping those factors in mind, we find no abuse of discretion in the court’s
    decision to admit the evidence of Nunez’s prior uncharged offenses against Jamaica and
    Shannon. The only factor of the five listed in Nguyen that might militate against
    admission is that the prior acts are fairly remote in time. But as the Attorney General
    points out, similar periods between prior acts of sexual misconduct and the current crime
    were countenanced in People v. Robinson (2012) 
    208 Cal.App.4th 965
    , 992 [34 years];
    People v. Branch (2001) 
    91 Cal.App.4th 274
    , 284 [30 years]; and People v. Pierce (2002)
    
    104 Cal.App.4th 893
    , 900 [23 years].
    Moreover, as pointed out in People v. Pierce, supra, 104 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 900, “‘substantial similarities between the prior and the charged offenses balance out
    the remoteness of the prior offenses.’” And as Nunez concedes, the circumstances of the
    prior uncharged sexual offenses were strikingly similar to the one alleged in this case.
    Hence, rather than attacking the probative value of the evidence, Nunez leans heavily on
    the other factors to support his contention that the evidence was substantially more
    prejudicial than it was probative.
    Nunez also contends the evidence of those offenses was stronger and more
    inflammatory than the evidence supporting the current charge because it involved
    multiple victims and a pattern of incidents over time. Our analysis of the issue differs.
    Both the current crime and the prior offenses were supported by the same type of
    evidence: direct victim testimony. To us, that evidence seems stronger in the current
    case as it is less attenuated. And because the crimes described by all three victims were
    so similar, we view them as equally inflammatory. It is unlikely any juror would have
    concluded that while a single incident of the type described by V.D. was excusable, the
    same conduct committed repeatedly—as described by Jamaica and Shannon—should be
    punished.
    Nunez also argues the evidence related to prior offenses was likely to have
    confused and distracted the jury because he was never punished for those offenses and
    10
    the jury might have decided to convict him on the charge against V.D. as a means of
    holding him accountable for those earlier crimes. However, there is no evidence to
    support such speculation. To the contrary, the court’s instruction to the jury gave clear
    directions about the limited use it could make of the prior offense evidence, and stated
    unequivocally that even if the jury concluded that Nunez had committed those prior
    offenses, that finding could not be the sole basis for convicting him on the current charge.
    We must presume the jury followed those instructions. (People v. Holt (1997) 
    15 Cal.4th 619
    , 662.)
    Finally, Nunez also claims the evidence of the prior offenses required an
    undue consumption of time; again we cannot agree. The evidence consisted almost
    entirely of direct testimony from Jamaica and Shannon, including cross-examination of
    both witnesses. There was little third party testimony about the prior offenses:3 no
    circumstantial evidence, no experts, and no scientific evidence.
    Based on the foregoing, we find no abuse of discretion in the court’s
    determination that the evidence of Nunez’s prior sex offenses was not unduly prejudicial.
    3.       Limitation on Cross-Examination of Jamaica
    Nunez also contends the court abused its discretion by “exclud[ing] this
    line of questioning” about Jamaica’s purported difficulty “providing financially for her
    children.” He contends this alleged error unfairly “restricted [his] counsel’s ability to
    confront and cross-examine a key prosecution witness on an issue relevant to her bias and
    credibility.”
    3
    During his testimony, Forrest was asked if he knew about the “family secret
    where Daniel Nunez was accused of molesting your sister,” and he replied that he did
    know about it, but did not believe it. In her testimony, Gwendelyn explained how she
    became aware of the fact her daughters claimed Nunez had molested them. She also
    described the family meeting in which he apologized for it, and revealed that he had “fled
    to Mexico for one or two months with his mother after the family meeting.” Her direct
    testimony on the issue comprises only nine pages of the reporter’s transcript.
    11
    But the argument misconstrues what actually happened, as well as its
    significance. As the record reflects, Nunez was not stymied on an entire “line of
    questioning” about “an issue relevant to [Jamaica’s] bias and credibility.” Instead, he
    sought to ask what was essentially a single question: how did Jamaica, who apparently
    had no paying job, support her children? Nunez’s stated goal was to demonstrate that
    Jamaica had no means to provide for her children, and was so desperate for housing that
    she orchestrated a criminal conspiracy involving a false accusation of sexual abuse
    against him as a means of removing him from the mobile home he shared with
    Gwendelyn.
    After the prosecutor objected to counsel’s question on relevance grounds,
    Nunez’s counsel was permitted to ask Jamaica his question outside the presence of the
    jury to ascertain what evidence it would reveal. After Jamaica answered the question,
    Nunez’s counsel asked some fairly minor follow-up questions—establishing that she
    relied on two separate child support payments as well as government housing assistance
    to support her five children—before stating those were all the questions he had on the
    subject.
    Contrary to Nunez’s apparent belief, the evidence Jamaica gave in response
    to his questions—i.e., the evidence she presumably would have given before the jury had
    the court not sustained the relevance objection—did nothing to establish her bias.
    Indeed, in the absence of any information about the amounts of child support and housing
    assistance Jamaica received, it did nothing to establish she had difficulty providing
    financially for her children. It was, as the trial court ruled, irrelevant.
    Moreover, as Nunez acknowledges, he was still able to make his larger
    point—which was that Jamaica desired to live in the mobile home with her children—
    through the testimony of Nunez’s sister, who claimed that in 2015 Jamaica had broken
    into the back residence of the mobile home and began living there with her children while
    the sister was still nominally residing there. His counsel relied on that evidence in
    12
    closing argument to support his assertion that Jamaica had a motive to lie about Nunez to
    get him out of the residence. Although the jury was apparently not persuaded by that
    argument, we fail to see how the point would have been materially strengthened by
    allowing the jury to hear that Jamaica supported her children through some combination
    of unspecified amounts of child support and government housing assistance.
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed.
    GOETHALS, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    FYBEL, ACTING P. J.
    THOMPSON, J.
    13
    

Document Info

Docket Number: G058009

Filed Date: 3/17/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 3/17/2021