People v. Hall CA1/5 ( 2024 )


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  • Filed 6/28/24 P. v. Hall CA1/5
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or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
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FIVE
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    A165142
    v.
    ANDREW ALBERT HALL,                                                (Contra Costa County
    Super. Ct. No. 01001959303)
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Defendant Andrew Albert Hall appeals from a judgment of conviction
    and sentence imposed after a jury found him guilty of assault with a firearm
    (Pen. Code, § 245, subd. (a)(2)).1 He contends the trial court erred by
    excluding evidence of an internal Sheriff’s Department report that had
    cleared him of violating departmental policy and expert testimony confirming
    that he violated no policy. Hall further contends the court erred by failing to
    instruct the jury on defense of others as to the assault charge. We will affirm
    the judgment.
    I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    The Contra Costa County District Attorney filed an Information
    charging Hall, a Contra Costa County Deputy Sheriff at the time, with
    1    Except where indicated otherwise, all statutory references are to the
    Penal Code.
    1
    voluntary manslaughter (§ 192, subd. (a); count 1) and assault with a firearm
    (§ 245, subd. (a)(2); count 2) after he shot and killed a suspect following a
    vehicle pursuit. As to both counts, the Information alleged that Hall
    personally used a firearm (§ 12022.5, subd. (a)). As to count 2, the
    Information alleged that Hall personally inflicted great bodily injury
    (§ 12022.7, subd. (a)). The matter proceeded to a jury trial.
    A. Prosecution’s Case
    1. Dispatch Call
    Around 11:00 a.m. on November 3, 2018, dispatch for the Contra Costa
    County Sheriff’s Department issued a call to patrolling units with a report of
    a suspicious person—subsequently identified as Laudemer Arboleda. The
    reporting party had called the police because Arboleda rang her doorbell and
    then walked around Laurel Drive in Danville.
    Contra Costa County Sheriff’s Deputies Nicholas Muller and Sonasi
    Maka responded in a patrol car as the primary unit. Deputy Charles Caruso,
    who had a civilian ride-along, advised that he would also address the call.
    Hall told dispatch he was making a vehicle stop of an unrelated vehicle.
    2. Units Investigate and Pursue Arboleda
    Deputies Muller and Maka arrived at the scene and observed Arboleda
    entering a silver Honda. They walked toward the Honda to make contact,
    and Arboleda drove away. Deputy Caruso, who also arrived at the scene,
    noted Arboleda’s license plate.
    The deputies followed the Honda without activating their lights. Based
    on the license plate number provided by Deputy Caruso, dispatch advised
    that the Honda was not reported stolen or associated with any warrants or
    alerts.
    2
    Eventually Arboleda stopped. Deputy Muller got out of his patrol car
    and tried to wave Arboleda down, but he drove away. The deputies followed
    him. Arboleda increased his speed to approximately five miles over the speed
    limit, and the deputies attempted to initiate a formal traffic stop by
    activating their overhead lights and emergency equipment.
    Arboleda stopped again, and Deputies Muller and Maka attempted to
    contact him. Arboleda, however, drove away again. The two units followed
    Arboleda and attempted to pull him over, taking turns being primary and
    secondary units, but Arboleda continued driving.
    Around this time, Sergeant Chris Martin—the supervisory deputy on
    shift—left the station and drove toward the pursuit in case the responding
    units required assistance, advising dispatch.
    Meanwhile, Arboleda ran a stop sign and turned onto Laurel Drive. At
    this point, he was driving “a little over” the speed limit. On Laurel Drive, the
    deputies pulled him over. Deputy Muller got out of his patrol vehicle and
    drew his firearm, but Arboleda drove away again.
    Arboleda then turned onto Hartz Way and parked. Deputies Muller,
    Maka and Caruso exited their patrol cars with guns drawn and ordered him
    to stop. Muller thought Arboleda looked “zombie-ish, kind of maybe out of it.”
    Thinking Arboleda did not present a danger to the deputies, Muller said, “ ‘let
    him go, don’t shoot, don’t shoot’ ” as Arboleda drove off once again, going
    westbound on Hartz Way. Muller advised dispatch that they had approached
    Arboleda at gunpoint but he drove away.
    Arboleda turned onto Front Street, and the two assigned patrol units
    continued their pursuit. Deputy Muller was again in the lead vehicle and
    advised dispatch they were traveling north on Front Street at speeds of 30 or
    35 miles per hour in light traffic.
    3
    3. Hall Joins the Chase and Kills Arboleda
    Near the intersection of Front Street and Diablo Road, Sergeant Martin
    and Hall converged on Arboleda. As Sergeant Martin approached, he saw
    Hall’s patrol car turning onto Diablo Road. Martin turned behind Hall, just
    as Arboleda and the two assigned units arrived at the location from the other
    direction. Hall stopped in front of Arboleda’s Honda and got out of his
    vehicle. Sergeant Martin stopped some feet away from Hall’s car, leaving a
    narrow gap between the two patrol vehicles, but stayed in his vehicle.
    Arboleda’s Honda began to roll forward while Hall walked to the back of his
    patrol car. Martin thought that Hall had entered the gap between Hall’s
    vehicle and Martin’s vehicle, that Arboleda was attempting to maneuver
    through that gap, that the gap was too narrow for him to do so, and that his
    Honda was going to hit Hall. Deputy Muller also thought Hall was at risk of
    being hit. Deputy Caruso saw Arboleda driving in Hall’s direction and did
    not think Arboleda would fit through the gap.
    Hall, who had already drawn his firearm, fired 10 shots at Arboleda.
    Sergeant Martin heard the gunshots as Arboleda was driving between the
    two patrol vehicles. Because the shots were coming from Hall toward
    Arboleda and Martin’s vehicle, Martin, who was still sitting in his vehicle,
    was afraid that he (Martin) would be hit by gunfire. Nine of Hall’s shots hit
    Arboleda, and one of them was fatal. After Arboleda was shot, his car
    continued moving and crashed into a bystander vehicle. The Honda never
    struck Hall, Hall’s vehicle, or Martin’s vehicle.
    4. Accident Reconstruction
    California Highway Patrol Officer Victor Ruiz, an investigator with the
    Multi-Disciplinary Accident Investigation Team specializing in accident
    reconstruction, testified that Arboleda was traveling approximately six miles
    4
    per hour five seconds before the crash. Four and a half seconds before the
    crash, Arboleda was engaging the brake pedal. Three and a half seconds
    before the crash, Arboleda’s car was traveling at five miles per hour. Two
    and a half seconds before the crash, Arboleda’s car was traveling 11 miles per
    hour. By the time of the crash, it was traveling 25 miles per hour. Ruiz
    confirmed that Arboleda braked after entering the gap between the patrol
    vehicles and then accelerated after a couple of seconds. He also agreed that
    video from Hall’s body-worn camera showed the wheels of Arboleda’s car were
    pointed toward Hall.
    5. Evidence of Policies on Pursuit, Stops, and Shooting
    Sergeant Martin testified regarding the Danville Police Department
    pursuit policy at the time.2 “Normally pursuits should be limited to two
    units, a primary and a secondary unit, unless in the supervisor’s judgment
    additional units are necessary.” (Bolding omitted.) Although other units who
    hear the broadcast about the pursuit are to move to the area to assist and
    “remain alert to the pursuit progress and location,” they should “stay off the
    air and away from the pursuit.” (Bolding omitted.) “Barricading a roadway
    should be avoided unless necessary to safely end a pursuit and shall not be
    undertaken unless authorized by the patrol supervisor.” Martin
    acknowledged that it was standard for officers to draw their weapons at the
    end of a pursuit.
    Mark Johnson, a Lieutenant at the Contra Costa County Sheriff’s
    Department (Sheriff’s Department), testified about the California Peace
    Officer Standards and Training and the training Hall received. Johnson
    2     Sergeant Martin explained that “the town of Danville is a contract city
    for the sheriff’s office; the sheriff’s office supplies their sworn personnel.
    Their police officers are also sheriff’s deputies.”
    5
    explained that a vehicular pursuit usually results in a high-risk stop, in
    which a primary officer typically gives commands to the suspect and a
    secondary officer ensures that the primary officer and bystanders are not in
    danger. Hall was trained to communicate with fellow officers and dispatch
    before and during a high-risk stop, to know the location of other officers and
    civilians so cross-fire and injury can be avoided, to maintain 20–30 feet
    between his patrol car and the suspect vehicle, to conduct the stop from
    behind the vehicle, to weigh whether the need for immediate apprehension
    outweighs the danger created by the pursuit, and to not drive straight toward
    the suspect vehicle. Hall was also trained on barricade policy, which provides
    that barricading a roadway should be avoided unless necessary to safely end
    a pursuit and shall not be undertaken unless authorized by the patrol
    supervisor, in order to avoid a collision or the suspect’s flight into other traffic
    lanes or onto a sidewalk. Johnson confirmed that officers who are not
    primary or secondary units are to stay away from the pursuit unless they
    have permission to join.
    Johnson further testified that officers are trained not to discharge a
    firearm at a moving vehicle except in defense of self or others. As Johnson
    explained, “[i]f a vehicle is moving and you shoot the driver, that vehicle has
    to go somewhere. Basically no one’s in control of the car.”
    B. Defense Case
    Deputy Caruso testified that one of the times the deputies stopped
    Arboleda, Caruso stood in front of Arboleda’s car and pointed a gun at him.
    Arboleda rolled forward toward Caruso, and Caruso moved out of Arboleda’s
    way, returned to his patrol vehicle, and continued the pursuit. Later he
    observed that Hall “had come off of Diablo and canted his car on Front Street
    . . . which stopped [Arboleda’s] silver Honda from being able to go right there
    6
    in that direction.” Then Sergeant Martin arrived and stopped alongside
    Hall’s patrol car.
    Dr. Rajeev Kelkar testified as an expert in accident reconstruction and
    biomechanics. According to Dr. Kelkar, nine seconds elapsed from the time
    Arboleda’s car started moving to the time of impact with the bystander car on
    Diablo Road. According to the video footage, “five seconds before the impact,
    the Honda is in a sharp right steer maneuver to get past the front-end of the
    Martin police vehicle” and lightly braking. The speed of Arboleda’s car
    increased “from about 6 miles per hour to between 12 and 15 miles per hour”
    during this time frame. Hall started shooting at Arboleda approximately 4.4
    seconds after Arboleda began moving and stopped shooting approximately 2.2
    seconds later. Arboleda’s speed was six miles per hour when Hall first shot
    him and had increased to 12 miles per hour at the last shot. In short, Hall
    started firing about a half-second after Arboleda maneuvered around
    Martin’s vehicle and toward Hall.
    On cross-examination, Dr. Kelkar confirmed that Arboleda was braking
    as he drove around the front of Sergeant Martin’s vehicle and did not fully
    depress the gas pedal until after Hall shot him. A study performed by The
    Foundation for Traffic Safety on the Impact Speed and a Pedestrian’s Risk of
    Severe Injury or Death showed a near zero percent risk of severe injury from
    a vehicle traveling 10 miles per hour.
    Jason Fries testified as a 3-D video reconstruction expert. Although he
    lacked expertise in accident reconstruction, he testified that Hall fired all ten
    rounds in 2.16 seconds, that Hall’s center of mass was approximately six or
    seven inches from Arboleda’s Honda less than a second after the first shot,
    and Hall was 0.6 feet from the Honda when he fired the third shot and 1.2
    feet from the Honda when he fired the fifth shot.
    7
    C. Jury Verdict and Sentence
    The jury deadlocked as to count 1 (voluntary manslaughter), with seven
    of 12 jurors voting for acquittal, but convicted Hall of count 2 (assault with a
    firearm). The jury also found true the allegations of personal use of a firearm
    and personal infliction of great bodily injury. The trial court sentenced Hall
    to six years in prison. Hall filed a timely notice of appeal.
    II. DISCUSSION
    Hall contends the trial court erred by precluding him from introducing
    evidence that he did not violate departmental policy, which he claims was
    relevant to the prosecutor’s arguments that Hall acted unreasonably and
    excessively. He further contends the court erred by not instructing sua
    sponte on defense of others on the count 2 charge for assault with a firearm.
    Relevant to both of these arguments are several instructions the court
    provided to the jury.
    As to count 1 (voluntary manslaughter), the trial court instructed
    pursuant to CALCRIM No. 572. That instruction required the People to
    prove (1) that Hall committed an act that caused Arboleda’s death and
    unlawfully intended to kill someone, or (2) that Hall intentionally committed
    an act that caused Arboleda’s death and the natural consequences of that act
    were dangerous to human life, that Hall knew when he acted that the act was
    dangerous to human life, that Hall “deliberately acted with conscious
    disregard for human life,” and that Hall “killed without lawful excuse or
    justification.” (Italics added.)
    Based on CALCRIM No. 505, the trial court also instructed on self-
    defense or defense of another as applied to manslaughter: “The defendant is
    not guilty of manslaughter, which is charged in Count 1, if he was justified in
    killing someone in self-defense or defense of another. [¶] The defendant acted
    8
    in lawful self-defense or defense of another if: [¶] 1. The defendant
    reasonably believed that he or Sergeant Martin was in imminent danger of
    being killed or suffering great bodily injury; [¶] 2. The defendant reasonably
    believed that the immediate use of deadly force was necessary to defend
    against the danger; and [¶] 3. The defendant used no more force than was
    reasonably necessary to defend against that danger. [¶] . . . [¶] The
    reasonableness of a particular use of force by a police officer must be judged
    from the perspective of a reasonable police officer with the same knowledge
    and training as the defendant rather than with the 2020 vision of
    hindsight. . . . The People have the burden of proving beyond a reasonable
    doubt that the killing was not justified. If the People have not met this
    burden, you must find the defendant not guilty of manslaughter.”
    Regarding count 2 (assault with a firearm), the trial court instructed
    pursuant to CALCRIM No. 875. That instruction required the People to
    prove that Hall acted with a firearm willfully and in a way that would by its
    nature directly and probably result in the application of force to a person,
    that Hall was aware of facts that would lead a reasonable person to realize
    that his acts by its nature would directly and probably result in the
    application of force to someone, that Hall had the present ability to apply
    force with a firearm to a person, and that Hall “did not act in self-defense or
    in defense of someone else.” (Italics added.)
    The trial court thereafter instructed the jury with CALCRIM No. 3470,
    which gives the court the option of instructing on self-defense, defense of
    others, or both. This time, the court only chose to instruct on self-defense,
    and not defense of others: “Self-defense is a defense to voluntary
    manslaughter and to assault with a firearm. [¶] The defendant is not guilty
    of these crimes if he used force against the other person in lawful self-
    9
    defense. [¶] The defendant acted in lawful self-defense if: [¶] 1. The
    defendant reasonably believed he was in imminent danger of suffering bodily
    injury or was in imminent danger of being touched unlawfully while in a
    vehicular pursuit; [¶] 2. The defendant reasonably believed that the
    immediate use of force was necessary to defend against that danger; and
    [¶] 3. The defendant used no more force than was reasonably necessary to
    defend against that danger. [¶] Belief in future harm is not sufficient no
    matter how great or how likely the harm is believed to be. The defendant
    must have believed there was imminent danger of violence to himself.
    Defendant’s belief must have been reasonable and he must have acted
    because of that belief. [¶] The defendant is only entitled to use that amount
    of force that a reasonable person would believe is necessary in this situation.
    [¶] If the defendant used more force than reasonable, the defendant did not
    act in lawful self-defense. [¶] When deciding whether the defendant’s beliefs
    were reasonable, consider all the circumstances as they were known to and
    appeared to the defendant and consider what a reasonable person in a similar
    situation with similar knowledge would have believed.” (Italics added.)
    In light of these instructions, the issues for the jury included whether
    Hall acted with conscious disregard for life, whether he reasonably believed
    the immediate use of force was necessary, and whether he used more force
    than was reasonably necessary, based in part on Hall’s knowledge at the
    time. Germane to the first issue on appeal—the exclusion of defense
    evidence—the prosecution attempted to prove these facts by emphasizing
    that Hall acted contrary to what he knew from his training, including
    departmental policy, and therefore acted with the mens rea needed for
    voluntary manslaughter and unreasonably for purposes of self-defense.
    Pertinent to the second issue on appeal—purported instructional error—the
    10
    trial court instructed under CALCRIM No. 875 that self-defense and defense
    of others were defenses to the assault with a firearm charge, but CALCRIM
    No. 3470 referred only to self-defense.
    A. Exclusion of Evidence
    Hall contends the trial court precluded him from introducing evidence
    relevant to the departmental policies relied upon by the prosecution.
    Specifically, he complains that he should have been able to introduce
    evidence of an internal investigation conducted by the Sheriff’s Department,
    which found he had not violated departmental policy in regard to Arboleda’s
    killing. He further contends the court precluded him from introducing expert
    testimony that he had not violated those policies. We conclude that, if any
    error occurred, it was harmless.
    1. Procedural Background
    Before trial, the prosecution moved to introduce evidence of the
    training Hall received on the use of force, high-speed pursuits, and high-risk
    stops. The prosecution also moved to exclude the evidence of Hall being
    cleared by the Sheriff’s Department of violating internal departmental
    policies. Hall, meanwhile, moved in limine to exclude any “evidence or
    testimony that would claim or allege [he] violated departmental policies when
    he used force against Mr. Arboleda.”
    As characterized in Hall’s opening brief, the 300-page Sheriff
    Department’s report described an internal affairs investigation into the
    shooting. According to Hall, the report concluded: “The investigation did not
    reveal any violations of Contra Costa County Office of the Sheriff Policies and
    Procedures. Viewed objectively, the actions . . . concerning Mr. Arboleda were
    legal, proper, and in congruence with Contra Costa [County] Office of the
    Sheriff Policies and Procedures.”
    11
    The trial court granted the prosecution’s request to introduce evidence
    of Hall’s training, as relevant to his state of mind. The court further agreed
    with the prosecution that the Sheriff Department’s internal investigation was
    not relevant to the issues at trial. In addition, the court granted Hall’s
    motion to exclude “references to alleged policy violations, . . . because it’s not
    going to be couched in terms of policy violation or no violations, but it goes
    back to what kind of training did Deputy Hall have and then the jury will
    take that information and factor it in in determining whether or not Deputy
    Hall acted reasonably on the day in question.” The court observed, “I don’t
    think anyone should be testifying about whether or not there was a violation
    of sheriff’s policy here.” (Italics added.) The court explained: it is “not
    relevant that the department may have cleared him,” and “[t]his is a criminal
    trial and it will be up to 12 jurors to decide whether or not he acted
    reasonably in his use of force.” For the same reason, the court precluded any
    expert testimony as to whether Hall acted in lawful self-defense.
    In her opening statement, the prosecutor began to recite the Sheriff
    Department’s policy on vehicle pursuits, and Hall’s attorney objected. The
    trial court noted the objection and stated it would be addressed at another
    time, and the prosecutor continued her opening statement, interspersing
    departmental policy with her descriptions of Hall’s conduct.
    Outside the presence of the jury, Hall’s attorney explained his
    objection, complaining that the prosecutor stated that Hall had violated
    policy. The trial court correctly observed that the prosecutor had not actually
    said Hall violated the policy but merely stated what the policy was, although
    the implication was that Hall had violated it. The court reiterated its ruling:
    “Let it be clear though that I did grant the in limine that there was to be no
    argument and no evidence presented as to Deputy Hall violating Contra
    12
    Costa policy. The policies can be put into evidence. The conduct of Deputy
    Hall can be put into evidence. And then the jury has to make a
    determination.”
    Defense counsel asserted that, if the prosecutor was going to argue that
    Hall violated policy, the defense should be able to “bring in evidence that he
    didn’t violate policy, including the fact that there was a full investigation
    conducted.” The trial court confirmed that “whether or not Deputy Hall
    violated department policy is not an issue that’s to be litigated here. So, the
    People walk a fine line here because on the one hand it is relevant to the
    issue of reasonableness, whether a police officer is conducting himself in
    accordance with department policies; on the other hand, you run the risk of
    invading the province of the jury on the issue of reasonableness because the
    issue is[,] was Deputy Hall reasonable in his belief that he needed to use
    deadly force to [meet] deadly force. It’s not whether or not he violated some
    technical aspects of vehicle pursuit policy. So, are we clear, Prosecution?”
    The prosecutor replied, “Yes.” As described above, the prosecutor thereafter
    introduced evidence of Hall’s training and departmental policies on vehicle
    pursuits, barricading, high-risk stops, and use of force.3
    In sum, the trial court allowed evidence of the departmental policies on
    which Hall was trained, precluded evidence of the department’s
    3      While testifying, Sergeant Martin expressed confusion as to what he
    could say given the in limine rulings. The trial court explained, “What you
    are allowed to testify about—or I shouldn’t say allowed, or what this case is
    really about in terms of the jury is policies, what were the policies, what’s the
    training, and then the jury will factor that policy training along with other
    facts and determine whether or not Deputy Hall’s actions were reasonable at
    the time. So they’re not going to be asked to determine whether or not any
    policy was violated, they’re going to be asked to determine whether or not
    Deputy Hall’s actions were reasonable under the circumstances.”
    13
    determination that he had not violated any policies, generally prohibited
    evidence or argument as to whether any policies were “violated,” but allowed
    argument that Hall acted inconsistent with the policies on which he was
    trained and therefore his conduct was unreasonable.
    2. Abuse of Discretion
    Respondent insists that the prosecution’s evidence of Hall’s training on
    high-risk stops, pursuit policy, barricading, and use of force was relevant to
    determine his mens rea. For the voluntary manslaughter charge, Hall’s
    training was germane to whether he knew his actions were dangerous to
    human life and whether he deliberately acted with conscious disregard for
    human life when he shot and killed Arboleda. It was also relevant to
    whether Hall acted in lawful self-defense, which required the jury to consider
    what a reasonable person in a similar situation and with similar knowledge
    would have believed, and whether he applied reasonable force.
    Hall’s point, however, is not that the prosecutor’s evidence was
    irrelevant, but that even though the prosecution was allowed to produce
    evidence that Hall violated departmental policy (and therefore acted
    unreasonably and with conscious disregard for life), Hall was not allowed to
    produce evidence that he did not violate policy and that his conduct was
    therefore reasonable, particularly for purposes of his self-defense theory. We
    review these evidentiary rulings for abuse of discretion.
    a. The Internal Department Report and Ruling
    The trial court did not abuse its discretion in excluding evidence of the
    Sheriff Department’s report that had cleared Hall of departmental violations.
    This internal investigation, including its conclusion as to whether Hall
    departed from departmental policy, would have risked the jury deciding the
    case based on the department’s evaluation of whether Hall followed internal
    14
    protocol, rather than on the jury’s own evaluation of whether Hall acted
    reasonably under the circumstances. (See Thompson v. City of Chicago (7th
    Cir. 2006) 
    472 F.3d 444
    , 458; People v. Brown (2016) 
    245 Cal.App.4th 140
    ,
    168–170 (Brown) [jury would look to an internal affairs investigator and
    member of the police department’s use-of-force board as a better judge than
    they of the reasonableness of the officer’s tactics].)
    b. Other Evidence That Hall Did Not Violate Policy
    Hall and respondent assume that, for Hall to introduce other evidence
    that he did not violate department policy, Hall would have needed to call an
    expert in police procedures. For expert witness testimony to be admissible, it
    must be “[r]elated to a subject that is sufficiently beyond common experience
    that the opinion of an expert would assist the trier of fact.” (Evid. Code,
    § 801, subd. (a).) Even then, an “expert must not usurp the function of the
    jury” (People v. Humphrey (1996) 
    13 Cal.4th 1073
    , 1099), and it is the
    exclusive province of the jury to resolve any conflicts in the evidence (see
    People v. Ochoa (1993) 
    6 Cal.4th 1199
    , 1206).
    The parties debate whether expert testimony that Hall did not violate
    policy would have been permissible under Evidence Code section 801. Hall
    contends that whether his actions were consistent with the Sheriff
    Department’s Policy and Procedure Section 1.06.52, regarding vehicle
    pursuits (including barricading), and Policy and Procedure Section 1.06.61,
    regarding the use of force, were subjects sufficiently beyond common
    experience that expert testimony would have been useful. Respondent
    disagrees.
    Respondent points us to Brown, 
    supra,
     
    245 Cal.App.4th 140
    , which
    held it was error to allow an expert to testify about officer training on the use
    of force and opine that the force used by the officer was justified. The court of
    15
    appeal explained that the testimony was improper because at issue was not a
    specialized law enforcement tool, but the officer’s use of his fists, which the
    jury could evaluate without the need for expert testimony. The testimony
    also improperly summarized the law and invaded the province of the jury to
    evaluate the reasonableness of the force employed. (Id. at pp. 165–169.)
    Both parties try to find support in People v. Sibrian (2016) 
    3 Cal.App.5th 127
     (Sibrian). There, the defendant had refused to exit his
    vehicle after a traffic stop and officers punched, tased, and handcuffed him.
    (Id. at pp. 129–130.) The trial court ruled that an expert could not testify
    that the officers’ conduct was reasonable or constituted excessive force, which
    would be for the jury to decide. (Id. at p. 134.) But it allowed the prosecutor
    to call an expert “in the area of law enforcement training, law enforcement
    tactics, and law enforcement procedures regarding the use of force” and
    opine, based on a hypothetical similar to the facts of the case, that the
    officers’ conduct was consistent “with the industry standard.” (Id. at p. 131.)
    The court of appeal affirmed because “jurors would not necessarily know
    about the need for escalating force in response to a noncompliant suspect.”
    (Id. at p. 134.)
    Hall’s case, involving his training on high-speed pursuits and high-risk
    stops, is arguably closer to Sibrian than it is to Brown, which only involved
    an evaluation of an officer’s use of his fists. If so, Hall should have been
    allowed to present expert testimony on whether he complied with the policies
    that the prosecutor insisted he breached. In fairness, since the prosecutor
    elected to prove that Hall acted unreasonably by showing his conduct was
    contrary to the departmental policy with which he was trained, the defense
    should have been allowed to call an expert to explain why Hall’s conduct
    actually conformed with that policy—not to prove whether or not a policy was
    16
    violated, but to equip the jury to decide whether Hall’s conduct was
    reasonable or in conscious disregard for human life. Indeed, the fact that the
    prosecution introduced the policies through other peace officers who, in effect,
    testified as experts arguably compounded the unfairness to Hall.
    That said, the record is not clear that Hall ever asked to present an
    expert on the specific issue of whether his conduct was consistent with the
    policies with which he was trained—or that the trial court would have
    rejected such a request. Hall sought admission of the internal departmental
    report that concluded he did not “violate” policy, and the court indicated it
    would not allow evidence or argument that departmental policy was (or was
    not) violated. But the court was open to evidence and argument that Hall
    acted consistent with his training. It cannot be said that the court abused its
    discretion if it was never asked to exercise it.
    Ultimately, we need not decide whether the trial court abused its
    discretion in ruling as it did. As discussed next, even if the court erred, the
    error was harmless.4
    3. Harmless Error
    Where a trial court has erroneously excluded evidence under state
    evidentiary rules, we consider whether it is “reasonably probable the jury
    would have reached a result more favorable to” the appellant if the evidence
    had been admitted. (People v. Alcala (1992) 
    4 Cal.4th 742
    , 791; People v.
    Richardson (2008) 
    43 Cal.4th 959
    , 1001, quoting People v. Watson (1956) 46
    4      Respondent argues that the evidence was also inadmissible under
    Evidence Code section 352 because it would have caused an undue
    consumption of time and confusion for the jury. Although the trial court did
    not rely on that reasoning, we may affirm the court’s ruling on any ground.
    (People v. Chism (2014) 
    58 Cal.4th 1266
    , 1295, fn. 12.) But since we conclude
    that any error in excluding the evidence was harmless, we need not decide
    this alternative theory of exclusion.
    
    17 Cal.2d 818
    , 836 (Watson) [Watson harmless error standard applies in cases of
    erroneous admission or exclusion of evidence].)
    Here, both counts required the prosecutor to prove that Hall “did not
    act in self-defense.” On this issue, evidence that Hall’s conduct was
    consistent with his training and departmental policy may have been relevant
    to whether Hall reasonably believed that the immediate use of force was
    needed and whether Hall used no more force than was reasonably necessary
    for purposes of self-defense. The question, therefore, is whether the
    admission of the evidence would have led a juror to conclude that Hall acted
    reasonably in firing 10 shots at Arboleda as Arboleda’s Honda rolled through
    the gap at approximately six miles per hour.5
    Hall fails to establish this. Although Hall states generally that the
    trial court precluded evidence that he did not violate departmental policy, he
    does not point to any offer of proof that he had an expert prepared to testify
    or what the testimony would have been. Absent such an offer of proof, it is
    impossible for us to determine whether any erroneously excluded evidence
    would have been prejudicial. Even if we assumed that Hall could have found
    an expert to testify along the lines of the opinions in the Sheriff Department’s
    report, Hall does not provide a record citation for the report—which does not
    appear to be in the record. Nor does Hall identify any specific opinion in the
    report, or any policy to which Hall adhered, that would have led a juror to
    find a reasonable doubt as to his guilt.
    5     Although the trial court did not instruct the jury on defense of others as
    to count 2, that does not change the analysis here, because the analysis is the
    same as to both self-defense and defense of others.
    18
    Hall argues that this was a close case on the issue of self-defense or
    defense of others because of the amount of time jurors spent on the issue and
    the questions they asked during deliberations. (Citing People v. Woodard
    (1979) 
    23 Cal.3d 329
    , 341 [six-hour deliberation and conflicting evidence
    suggested the case was close]; People v. Pearch (1991) 
    229 Cal.App.3d 1282
    ,
    1295 [juror questions and requests for readback indicated a close case].) He
    also points to the fact that the jury voted 7–5 to acquit on the voluntary
    manslaughter count. (Citing People v. Epps (1981) 
    122 Cal.App.3d 691
    , 698
    [verdict reflecting jury’s selective belief in the evidence indicated prejudicial
    error].) It is true that the jurors asked questions pertaining to CALCRIM
    No. 505 (self-defense or defense of others) as to count 1, and one of those
    questions asked whether, in deciding voluntary manslaughter, they should
    take into account all evidence “(including police policies, procedures, etc.)” or
    just the “moments of the actual shooting.” But we cannot discern from the
    record what portion of the jury’s deliberations pertained to self-defense or
    defense of others. Moreover, there is no indication that the jurors’ concerns
    had anything to do with the subject of the excluded evidence—whether Hall’s
    actions complied or did not comply with departmental policy. Jurors asked
    whether they could consider police policies, but that does not mean they were
    on the fence as to whether Hall complied with them. In any event, absent an
    offer of proof, we cannot determine whether the excluded evidence would
    have tipped the balance regardless of how close the issue was for the jury.
    Hall also argues that the prosecutor, especially in closing argument,
    relied heavily on the idea that Hall’s acts were inconsistent with
    departmental policy. Specifically, Hall contends the prosecutor “explicitly
    argued that [he] did not follow the Sheriff department’s ‘pursuit policy,’ or the
    department rules regarding (1) barricading (2) pursuit or (3) the use of force.”
    19
    There is nothing wrong, however, with the prosecutor arguing the
    significance of the evidence. The trial court allowed defense counsel to do the
    same, explaining to Hall’s lawyer outside the jury’s presence that, although
    he could not argue there was no evidence Hall violated his training or
    departmental policies, he could argue that Hall “did not act inconsistently . . .
    with his training.” In response, defense counsel said, “I got it, that’s fine.”
    Counsel proceeded with his closing. Hall fails to show that unspecified expert
    testimony would have made his arguments so much more persuasive that
    any juror, otherwise convinced of his guilt, would have found a reasonable
    doubt.
    Hall further contends that the exclusion of the evidence not only
    violated state evidentiary rules but also infringed on his constitutional rights
    to a fair trial and due process, and therefore the issue of harmless error
    should be evaluated under Chapman v. California (1967) 
    386 U.S. 18
    , 24
    (Chapman) [requiring “harmless beyond a reasonable doubt” for errors of
    constitutional dimension]. We disagree.
    The exclusion of expert testimony as to whether Hall violated specific
    departmental policies did not constitute “the complete exclusion of evidence
    intended to establish an accused’s defense.” (People v. Cunningham (2001) 
    25 Cal.4th 926
    , 999.) Hall was free to—and did—make the case that his conduct
    was consistent with his training on high-risk stops and pursuits and that he
    fired in self-defense. Even without expert testimony that he did not violate
    departmental policy, Hall had a meaningful opportunity to present his
    defense. (See Crane v. Kentucky (1986) 
    476 U.S. 683
    , 690 [the Constitution
    guarantees criminal defendants “ ‘a meaningful opportunity to present a
    complete defense’ ”].) Accordingly, there was no federal constitutional error,
    and Chapman does not apply.
    20
    B. Jury Instruction
    As to voluntary manslaughter, the trial court instructed on self-defense
    and defense of Sergeant Martin pursuant to CALCRIM No. 505. As to
    assault with a firearm, the court instructed pursuant to CALCRIM No. 875
    that the prosecutor had to prove Hall “did not act in self-defense or in defense
    of someone else,” but that instruction did not set forth the elements of those
    defenses. In instructing further with CALCRIM No. 3470—which can be
    used to state the elements of self-defense and defense of others—the
    instruction given by the court mentioned only self-defense, not defense of
    others. Hall argues that the specific instruction (CALCRIM No. 3470)
    prevailed over the more general instruction (CALCRIM No. 875), and
    therefore the instruction—specifically, the court’s inclusion of self-defense but
    not defense of others in its reading of CALCRIM No. 3470—improperly
    allowed jurors to convict on count 2 without finding that the attempt to
    commit an injury was “unlawful.” Hall’s argument has no merit.
    1. Forfeiture
    The parties and the trial court discussed CALCRIM No. 3470 before it
    was read to the jury. The court stated it would include the language that
    “defendant reasonably believed he was in imminent danger of suffering bodily
    injury or was in imminent danger of being touched unlawfully ‘while engaged
    in a lawful vehicular pursuit,’ ” leaving no question that the instruction
    would cover only self-defense. (Italics added.) Hall’s attorney replied, “[t]hat
    works for the defense” and did not take issue with the instruction or request
    that it refer to the defense of Sergeant Martin.
    Respondent argues that defense counsel’s agreement to CALCRIM
    No. 3470 forfeited Hall’s current claim. Hall counters that appellate review
    is proper because the purported error affected his substantial rights and
    21
    therefore no objection was required. (§ 1259; People v. Campbell (2020) 
    51 Cal.App.5th 463
    , 499; People v. Rivera (1984) 
    162 Cal.App.3d 141
    , 146.)
    Further, Hall argues that once the trial court instructed on self-defense, it
    had a sua sponte duty to do so fully and correctly. Because “[a]scertaining
    whether claimed instructional error affected the substantial rights of the
    defendant necessarily requires an examination of the merits of the claim,” we
    will proceed to the merits. (People v. Anderson (1994) 
    26 Cal.App.4th 1241
    ,
    1249.)
    2. The Trial Court Did Not Err
    The trial court must instruct on general principles of law relevant to
    the issues and necessary for the jury’s understanding of the case. (People v.
    Brooks (2017) 
    3 Cal.5th 1
    , 73.) Nonetheless, “[a] trial court’s duty to instruct,
    sua sponte, on particular defenses arises ‘ “only if it appears that the
    defendant is relying on such a defense, or if there is substantial evidence
    supportive of such a defense and the defense is not inconsistent with the
    defendant’s theory of the case.” ’ ” (People v. Maury (2003) 
    30 Cal.4th 342
    ,
    424, italics added.)
    CALCRIM No. 3470, entitled “Right to Self-Defense or Defense of
    Another (Non-Homicide),” bears this out. It speaks of “lawful (self-defense/
    [or] defense of another),” indicating that the trial court may choose whether
    defense of others should be included in the instruction or not. The Use Note
    explains: “The court must instruct on a defense when the defendant requests
    it and there is substantial evidence supporting the defense. The court has a
    sua sponte duty to instruct on a defense if there is substantial evidence
    supporting it and either the defendant is relying on it or it is not inconsistent
    with the defendant’s theory of the case. . . . Substantial evidence means
    evidence of a defense, which, if believed, would be sufficient for a reasonable
    22
    jury to find a reasonable doubt as to the defendant’s guilt.” (Italics added,
    bolding removed.)
    Here, the trial court had no obligation to include a reference to defense
    of others in its reading of CALCRIM No. 3470, because Hall never relied on
    that defense and because there was no substantial evidence to support it.
    a. Hall Did Not Rely on Defense of Others
    Hall represents that “the defense was that the shots Officer Hall fired
    during [a] 2.16 second interval were in self-defense/defense of another,” and
    the “ ‘another’ ” was Sergeant Martin. To the contrary, Hall did not assert a
    defense of others theory in opening statement, in negotiating the jury
    instructions on count 2, or in closing argument.
    In opening statement—long before the jury instruction conference—
    Hall’s attorney repeatedly stated it was a “self-defense” case. She
    emphasized that Arboleda’s car was heading directly at Hall, the tires were
    pointed in his direction, and Hall faced serious injury. She never mentioned
    any concern for Sergeant Martin or anyone else.
    In closing argument, Hall’s counsel only argued self-defense, not
    defense of others. Indeed, counsel repeatedly emphasized that Hall shot
    Arboleda to protect himself. For example, counsel stated: “The inquiry is as
    narrow as that gap between those two patrol cars and everything unfolded
    rapidly in an intense situation. Andrew Hall fired those shots to protect
    himself from being run over by a car.” (Italics added.) Counsel later argued:
    “Here are the three elements of self-defense, but here’s the proper lens to look
    at them through. He is not guilty unless the prosecution can prove beyond a
    reasonable doubt that . . . he did not reasonably believe he was in imminent
    danger. . . .” (Italics added.) “If it was reasonable for Deputy Hall to believe
    he was going to be hit by the Honda and injured seriously or killed, the
    23
    Honda did not actually have to have hit him. He just has to have a
    reasonable belief.” (Italics added.) “[H]e began firing his weapon in order to
    stop the Honda from running him over.” (Italics added.) “[T]raining says you
    can shoot at a moving vehicle in defense of your life.” (Italics added.) Finally,
    counsel concluded: “Andrew Hall is not guilty because he was reasonably
    defending himself.” (Italics added.) Not once during his closing argument did
    defense counsel suggest that Hall believed he was defending Sergeant
    Martin.
    b. No Evidence of Defense of Others
    Moreover, there was no evidence—let alone substantial evidence—that
    Hall reasonably believed Sergeant Martin was in danger and acted
    reasonably to defend him.
    Hall did not testify. He refers us to Sergeant Martin’s testimony that
    the gap between Martin’s and Hall’s vehicles was “narrow,” Martin “saw Mr.
    Arboleda’s car coming in [his] direction” as he pulled in, Martin was afraid
    Arboleda would “ ‘ram him’ ” because he “drove right at [Martin],” and he
    thought Arboleda was going to hit him. However, Hall’s depiction of the
    testimony is inaccurate.
    Sergeant Martin actually testified that, while he initially believed
    Arboleda was going to run into his vehicle, Arboleda instead made a “hard
    right” and attempted to go through the gap between Hall’s and Martin’s
    vehicles.6 Martin thought Arboleda was not going to make it and was going
    6      Sergeant Martin did say that he lacked a clear view of Hall’s location
    because Martin was “looking at the car that was driving at me.” But he also
    testified that, by the time he heard the shots fired, the Honda was going
    through the gap between the cars. Martin explained: “I thought [Arboleda]
    was going to hit me, but then he turned and went into that gap between our
    two vehicles.” (Italics added.)
    24
    to hit Hall, believing that Hall was standing in the gap. When Hall started
    shooting, Arboleda was venturing through the gap and Martin’s concern was
    not that Arboleda was going to hit him with his vehicle, but that Hall was
    going to hit him with gunfire. Other percipient witnesses, namely Deputies
    Muller and Caruso, suggested that Hall was at risk of being hit by Arboleda.
    Officer Ruiz—on cross-examination by defense counsel—agreed that the
    wheels of Arboleda’s car were pointed at Hall .
    Moreover, even if a juror could conclude that Hall reasonably believed
    the Honda heading for him posed some imminent danger to Sergeant Martin,
    there is no substantial evidence that Hall “used no more force than was
    reasonably necessary to defend against that danger.” (CALCRIM No. 3470.)
    Arboleda was driving through the gap toward Hall at roughly six miles per
    hour, while Martin remained inside his patrol vehicle. No juror would
    reasonably conclude that Hall firing 10 shots at Arboleda—including shots in
    Martin’s general direction—was a reasonable defense against whatever little
    harm Martin faced from Arboleda. No substantial evidence supported a
    defense of others theory as to count 2.7
    Because Hall did not rely on a defense of others theory and there was
    no substantial evidence to support that theory, the trial court was not
    obligated to instruct sua sponte on defense of others. Hall fails to establish
    that the court erred in not including “defense of Sergeant Martin” in its
    reading of CALCRIM No. 3470 as to count 2.
    7      Hall assumes that, since the trial court mentioned defense of Sergeant
    Martin in instructing on defenses pertaining to voluntary manslaughter, the
    court must have found substantial evidence that Hall acted in Martin’s
    defense. But Hall does not point to anywhere in the trial where the
    sufficiency of the evidence for defense of others was raised as an issue for the
    court to decide. As such, the mention of Martin in the CALCRIM No. 505
    instruction bears no significance here.
    25
    3. Harmless Error
    Even if we were to assume that the trial court should have mentioned
    “defense of Sergeant Martin” in reading CALCRIM No. 3470, or that some
    error arose because the instruction under CALCRIM No. 3470 contained no
    explicit reference to defense of others while the earlier instruction under
    CALCRIM No. 875 did, the failure to reference defense of others in
    CALCRIM No. 3470 would not compel reversal. We evaluate instructional
    error under Watson, supra, 
    46 Cal.2d 818
    . (People v. Molano (2019) 
    7 Cal.5th 620
    , 670 [court’s failure to instruct on the affirmative defense of
    unreasonable belief in consent evaluated under Watson]; People v. Beltran
    (2013) 
    56 Cal.4th 935
    , 955 [“ ‘ “[M]isdirection of the jury, including incorrect,
    ambiguous, conflicting, or wrongly omitted instructions that do not amount to
    federal constitutional error are reviewed under the harmless error standard
    articulated” in Watson’ ”].)
    Just as the jury rejected Hall’s claims of self-defense on count 2, the
    jury would have rejected a claim of defense of Sergeant Martin, especially
    since Hall was outside his patrol vehicle and far more exposed to Arboleda’s
    car than Martin was. Again, we see no probability that a rational juror
    would have found that Hall was reasonably acting in Martin’s defense when
    he fired 10 times, including in Martin’s general direction, while Arboleda
    drove through the gap toward Hall at roughly six miles per hour and Martin
    was inside his own patrol car.
    In contending the purported instructional error was prejudicial, Hall
    points us to the 7–5 vote for acquittal on the manslaughter charge. He
    argues that jurors were instructed on self-defense on the assault charge and
    found him guilty, so they must have rejected the self-defense theory. As to
    the manslaughter charge, however, jurors were instructed on self-defense
    26
    and defense of others, and seven jurors voted for acquittal. Thus, he urges,
    the rational explanation for the two verdicts is that the seven jurors voting
    for acquittal found that Hall acted in defense of another, and Hall would have
    obtained the same vote on count 2 if only the trial court had mentioned
    defense of Sergeant Martin in CALCRIM No. 3470.
    We disagree. Given the absence of evidence supporting a defense of
    others theory, the 7–5 split on the manslaughter charge is not logically
    attributable to a juror’s belief that Hall acted to defend Sergeant Martin.
    Instead, it is most likely attributable to the fact that manslaughter, unlike
    assault with a firearm, requires proof beyond a reasonable doubt that the
    defendant possessed a mens rea of intent to kill or conscious disregard for
    human life. Any error arising out of the court’s instruction under CALCRIM
    No. 3470 was harmless.8
    C. Cumulative Error
    Reversal is required when the cumulative effect of errors deprives the
    defendant of a fair trial and due process. (People v. Williams (2009) 
    170 Cal.App.4th 587
    , 646.) Hall contends that reversal is required here due to
    the combined effect of the errors alleged in his opening brief. Not so.
    As we have explained, there was no instructional error, and any error
    in the exclusion of evidence was harmless. We further conclude that, even if
    8      Hall argues that the Chapman standard applies because jurors were
    given both proper and improper instructions on the “ ‘unlawful attempt’ ”
    element of assault. (Citing In re Lopez (2023) 
    14 Cal.5th 562
    , 591 [state must
    prove that no “rational juror who made the findings reflected in the verdict
    and heard the evidence at trial could have had reasonable doubt regarding
    the findings necessary to convict the defendant [absent the instructional
    error]”].) We disagree with Hall’s premise, but in any event we would affirm
    even if Chapman applied. No rational juror could have had a reasonable
    doubt that Hall’s conduct was unlawful based on a defense of others theory.
    27
    there was instructional error, that error was also harmless, and the two
    reputed errors collectively did not deprive Hall of a fair trial. (See People v.
    Mincey (1992) 
    2 Cal.4th 408
    , 454 [“A defendant is entitled to a fair trial, not a
    perfect one”].) We find no cause to reverse the judgment.
    III. DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed.
    CHOU, J.
    We concur.
    JACKSON, P. J.
    SIMONS, J.
    People v. Hall / A165142
    28
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A165142

Filed Date: 6/28/2024

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 6/28/2024