Packer v. Superior Court , 60 Cal. 4th 695 ( 2014 )


Menu:
  • Filed 12/11/14
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA
    JOSHUA GRAHAM PACKER,               )
    )
    Petitioner,              )
    )                              S213894
    v.                       )
    )                        Ct.App. 2/6 B245923
    THE SUPERIOR COURT OF               )
    VENTURA COUNTY,                     )
    )                          Ventura County
    Respondent;              )                  Super. Ct. Nos. 2010013013 &
    )                             2012015764
    THE PEOPLE,                         )
    )
    Real Party in Interest.  )
    ____________________________________)
    Penal Code section 1424 permits a defendant to seek to recuse a prosecutor
    for an alleged conflict of interest.1 The statute establishes a two-stage process.
    Initially, the defendant files a notice of motion containing ―a statement of the facts
    setting forth the grounds for the claimed disqualification and the legal authorities
    relied upon by the moving party‖: The factual allegations must be supported by
    ―affidavits of witnesses who are competent to testify to the facts set forth in the
    affidavit.‖ (§ 1424, subd. (a)(1).) The district attorney and the Attorney General
    may file affidavits in opposition to the motion. (Ibid.) After reviewing the motion
    1      Unless otherwise noted, all further unspecified statutory references are to
    the Penal Code.
    and affidavits, the trial court exercises its discretion in determining whether the
    second stage, an evidentiary hearing, is necessary. (Ibid.) An evidentiary hearing
    may be required if the defendant‘s affidavits establish a prima facie showing for
    recusal; that is, if the facts demonstrated by the affidavits, if credited, would
    require recusal. (Spaccia v. Superior Court (2012) 
    209 Cal.App.4th 93
    , 111-112
    (Spaccia).) In some instances, the affidavits might present disputed material facts,
    the resolution of which may depend largely upon the affiants‘ veracity and
    credibility under circumstances that can be determined only by holding an
    evidentiary hearing. If those credibility and veracity determinations, resolved in
    defendant‘s favor, would demonstrate that the conflict is so grave as to make a fair
    trial unlikely, the trial court abuses its discretion by failing to hold an evidentiary
    hearing.
    In the present case, we conclude the trial court abused its discretion.
    Accordingly, the trial court shall be directed to hold an evidentiary hearing.
    I. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    A. The Crimes and Petitioner’s Arrest for a Triple Homicide
    On May 20, 2009, a man wearing a motorcycle helmet entered the Faria
    Beach home of Brock and Davina Husted while they and their nine-year-old son
    and 11-year-old daughter were home. Their nine-year-old son witnessed the man
    rob his parents, and after the killer fled he found his parents‘ bodies. They had
    been stabbed numerous times, resulting in their deaths. Davina Husted had also
    been sexually assaulted. Davina had been four- to five-months pregnant, and her
    fetus was also killed.
    DNA profiles were extracted from samples taken from Brock Husted‘s
    fingernail scrapings and from a motorcycle helmet visor found at the scene. The
    crimes were unsolved until petitioner Joshua Graham Packer was arrested on
    2
    unrelated felony charges more than six months later, in mid-January 2010.
    Because of that arrest, petitioner‘s DNA profile was obtained and that profile was
    eventually matched to the profiles derived from the Husted crime scene.
    Petitioner was subsequently charged in an indictment with three counts of
    first degree murder, two counts of first degree robbery (§ 211), and one count of
    first degree burglary (§§ 459, 460, subd. (a)). The murder counts include
    allegations that petitioner personally used a deadly weapon (former § 12022,
    subd. (b)(1)), and committed the crimes while engaged in the commission of
    robbery or attempted robbery (§ 190.2, subd. (a)(17)(A)), and burglary or
    attempted burglary (§ 190.2, subd. (a)(17)(G)). The indictment also includes a
    multiple-murder special-circumstance allegation. (§ 190.2, subd. (a)(3).) The
    prosecutor is seeking the death penalty.
    After further testing of samples taken from a towel found near Davina‘s
    body and of an oral swab collected from her, additional DNA evidence matching
    petitioner‘s profile to those samples was identified. As a result, the grand jury
    returned a second indictment against petitioner, including charges of first degree
    murder (§ 187) of Davina Husted, forcible oral copulation (§ 288a, subd. (c)(2)),
    use of a knife (former § 12022, subd. (b)(1)), and a special circumstance allegation
    that her murder was perpetrated during the commission of an act of forcible oral
    copulation (§ 190.2, subd. (a)(17)(F)).
    In June 2012, the trial court consolidated both cases against petitioner.
    B. The Motion to Recuse the Prosecutor
    In September 2012, petitioner filed a written motion to recuse Chief Deputy
    District Attorney Michael Frawley (Frawley or the prosecutor), the lead prosecutor
    on the case, pursuant to section 1424 on the following grounds: (1) the prosecutor
    appears to have known Davina Husted through Frawley‘s former wife, Lisa West;
    3
    (2) two of Frawley‘s adult children, Kyle and Elizabeth, knew petitioner through
    their involvement in a youth group and would be called as witnesses by the
    defense at the penalty phase if petitioner is found guilty; and (3) Frawley‘s
    daughter Elizabeth dated petitioner‘s friend, Thomas Cathcart, a proposed
    prosecution and defense penalty phase witness, and also knows Oscar Martinez
    and Steven Infante, both of whom had been identified as proposed witnesses for
    the prosecution at the penalty phase.
    In support of his recusal motion, petitioner submitted 54 pages of affidavits
    from eight people, along with 350 pages of attachments. Petitioner also filed a
    separate motion objecting on compulsory process grounds to section 1424,
    subdivision (a)(1)‘s requirement that he use ―affidavits of witnesses who are
    competent to testify to the facts set forth in the affidavit‖ to make his prima facie
    showing, claiming that the affidavit procedure is insufficient for him to access
    witnesses who otherwise refuse to meet with the defense.2
    In opposing petitioner‘s motion, the district attorney presented 70 pages of
    attachments, including affidavits from two people, one from the prosecutor
    himself. The Attorney General joined in opposing petitioner‘s motion.
    Petitioner continued to investigate the matter and filed a reply to the district
    attorney‘s and Attorney General‘s oppositions, alleging two additional related
    grounds for the prosecutor‘s conflict of interest — that the prosecutor had actively
    interfered with the defense‘s efforts to contact the prosecutor‘s children and their
    2      The United States and California Constitutions grant a defendant the right
    ―to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor.‖ (U.S. Const.,
    6th Amend.; see Cal. Const., art. I, § 15 [affording ―the right . . . to compel
    attendance of witnesses in the defendant‘s behalf‖].)
    4
    friends, and that the prosecutor has a personal interest in not having his children
    testify at petitioner‘s penalty phase.
    The parties moved to strike portions of each other‘s affidavits and
    attachments on several grounds, including speculation, lack of foundation, and
    inadmissible hearsay. The trial court partially granted the motions to strike and
    redacted various portions of the exhibits and affidavits.
    C. The Trial Court’s Ruling and Subsequent Review
    In November 2012, the trial court overruled petitioner‘s compulsory
    process objection, denied his request for an evidentiary hearing, and denied his
    motion to recuse the prosecutor. The trial court stated that its decision denying an
    evidentiary hearing would be the same even if it had considered all of the
    unredacted material.
    Petitioner challenged the trial court‘s ruling in a petition for writ of
    mandate in the Court of Appeal, which summarily denied relief. Petitioner sought
    review in this court, and we granted review and transferred the matter to the Court
    of Appeal with directions to vacate its order denying mandate and to issue an
    alternative writ. The Court of Appeal gave the trial court an opportunity to
    reconsider its ruling, but it declined to do so. The Court of Appeal issued an order
    to show cause and set the matter for oral argument. In late August 2013, the Court
    of Appeal upheld the trial court‘s ruling and denied the requested writ of mandate
    in a published opinion.
    Petitioner sought review of the Court of Appeal‘s decision, and we granted
    review in December 2013, limiting review to the issue whether the trial court
    abused its discretion by denying petitioner‘s request for an evidentiary hearing on
    the ground that petitioner had failed to make a prima facie showing that recusal
    was warranted.
    5
    II. THE FACTS AND ALLEGATIONS RAISED IN THE MOTION TO RECUSE
    In April 2010, four months after petitioner had been arrested for the
    underlying crimes, Frawley e-mailed petitioner‘s counsel, disclosing that his
    (Frawley‘s) children Kyle and Elizabeth had been acquaintances of petitioner
    while in high school. Although his children had attended a high school different
    from petitioner, Frawley explained that the three had associated with one another
    through their mutual participation in a youth group known as Young Life.
    Frawley stated that, in 2005, Kyle went on a four-day ski trip sponsored by the
    youth group and had shared a room with petitioner and four other individuals.
    Around this same time period, Young Life also sponsored a weeklong camping
    trip that was attended by petitioner, Kyle, and Elizabeth. Frawley also revealed
    that petitioner had visited the Frawley‘s residence ―on two or more occasions‖ in
    which the Frawley family had hosted Young Life gatherings. According to
    Frawley, he learned that, in 2006, Elizabeth had hosted a social gathering in the
    backyard of the Frawley home, which petitioner attended ―though he was not
    invited.‖ Frawley, however, stated he did not recall ever meeting petitioner. He
    added that his ―children have had no relationship with [petitioner] outside of the
    events described above.‖ Finally, Frawley stated that petitioner‘s contact with his
    children would not have any bearing on his role as the lead prosecutor in this
    criminal case.
    Petitioner‘s counsel responded by e-mail, asking Frawley how he had
    learned of petitioner‘s prior acquaintances with his children, what impressions his
    children had of petitioner, and whether there was a problem with petitioner being
    at the Frawley home uninvited. Frawley responded by stating he believed that,
    legally or ethically, no further disclosure was required on his part, except to state
    that he had mentioned that petitioner had not been expressly invited ―only to avoid
    6
    the impression that there was actually a relationship‖ between petitioner and his
    children.
    During the subsequent 30 months of pretrial discovery and investigation,
    the parties collected and then presented the following evidence in the affidavits
    and exhibits that were submitted for purposes of the motion filed by petitioner
    under section 1424.3
    A. The Prosecutor’s Relationship to Davina Husted
    Frawley and his ex-wife, Lisa West, divorced in 1997. In 2009, at the time
    of the charged offenses, West served on the board of directors of the National
    Charity League Juniors (Junior League) and victim Davina Husted was the Junior
    League‘s president. West also was on Davina Husted‘s Christmas card
    distribution list for 2008. A January 2008 spreadsheet recovered from Davina
    Husted‘s computer listed Frawley and his current wife as Junior League
    supporters.
    In response to the foregoing facts, Frawley‘s affidavit emphasized that he
    had never met Davina Husted. He did not recall whether he had contributed to the
    Junior League, but stated that, in any event, the existence of such a contribution
    would not affect his handling of this case. He was also unaware that his ex-wife
    3       As previously stated, despite its extensive redaction of the affidavits and
    exhibits, the trial court nevertheless stated that it would have reached the same
    conclusion even if it considered all of the proffered evidence. In light of the trial
    court‘s statement, the Court of Appeal considered all of the proffered evidence in
    reaching its conclusion. Yet, section 1424 states that the recusal motion ―shall be
    supported by affidavits of witnesses who are competent to testify to the facts set
    forth in the affidavit.‖ (§ 1424, subd. (a)(1), italics added.) On appeal, the parties
    do not dispute the correctness of the trial court‘s redactions, and accordingly, in
    determining whether the trial court abused its discretion in denying the recusal
    motion without holding an evidentiary hearing, we will not consider those portions
    of the record redacted by the trial court.
    7
    was on Davina Husted‘s Christmas card list, but maintained that any relationship
    between Davina Husted and his ex-wife would not affect his handling of this case
    because he and his ex-wife had divorced some 15 years earlier.
    B. The Prosecutor’s Children’s Relationship with Petitioner
    Young Life is a Christianity-based youth group for high school students
    from various schools. According to Kristy Benscoter‘s affidavit, submitted by
    petitioner in support of his motion to recuse, she and Frawley‘s children, Kyle and
    Elizabeth, all participated in the group for several years along with petitioner and
    mutual friends Thomas Cathcart, Steven Infante, and Oscar Martinez.4 In addition
    to camping and snowboarding trips, the group would meet every Monday,
    primarily for Bible study. Petitioner, Kyle, Elizabeth, Benscoter, Cathcart,
    Infante, and Martinez would attend these meetings. Some of these meetings were
    held at the Frawley home.5 According to Benscoter, she, petitioner, Cathcart, and
    other Young Life members were at the Frawley residence ―all the time.‖ She
    recalled they that would socialize around the pool in the yard of the Frawley
    home. Elizabeth hosted many such parties at the Frawley residence, outside of
    any connection with the Young Life group, which Benscoter attended along with
    the ―boys,‖ including petitioner. She recalls Elizabeth‘s mother being present
    during those parties with Mr. Frawley being ―more in the background.‖
    4      The prosecution has listed Cathcart, Infante, and Martinez as witnesses for
    its penalty phase against defendant regarding an incident the day after the Husteds
    were killed in which petitioner allegedly punched Cathcart.
    5      Frawley‘s current spouse, Linda Frawley, actively participated in Young
    Life as a committee member and eventually became co-chair in 2003, while
    petitioner was still involved in the organization.
    8
    According to Benscoter, she, Elizabeth, and their other girlfriends were
    ―totally comfortable around‖ petitioner. She described him as a kind, protective
    ―gentleman,‖ who flirted with them in a ―silly, goofy way that was endearing to all
    of us.‖
    One of the exhibits attached to the motion to recuse was a defense
    investigator‘s report of an interview with Kyle Frawley, a report that had been
    reviewed, corrected and signed by Kyle.6 According to the report, during the
    interview Kyle described petitioner as behaving appropriately at Young Life
    gatherings and stated that petitioner ―was aggressive, but not in a bad way.‖ On
    one occasion during a snowboarding trip, Kyle stayed with petitioner in a cabin
    that was ―attacked‖ in a pillow fight by members of another cabin. According to
    Kyle, petitioner was the first person in the cabin to defend their cabin against the
    attack. In addition, during a Young Life camping trip, Kyle described a night in
    which petitioner declared that he had made a ―breakthrough and accepted
    religion,‖ accepting Jesus for the first time in his life. Kyle recalled petitioner
    being at the Frawley home for a Young Life meeting. Kyle also remembered that
    petitioner had attended his younger sister Elizabeth‘s birthday party at the Frawley
    home, although Elizabeth had not invited him. Kyle acknowledged that he was
    among a group of people who signed up on a Prayer for Josh Web site offering
    support for petitioner following his arrest in the underlying proceedings.
    Petitioner‘s motion also included copies of numerous photographs taken
    during a Young Life camping trip featuring group photos of petitioner, Kyle,
    6       According to the defense investigator, Kyle reviewed the typed report,
    made minor handwritten changes to it, and signed the report. Although Kyle did
    not sign the report under penalty of perjury (Code Civ. Proc., § 2003), the
    prosecution lodged no objection to the trial court‘s consideration of any part of
    this statement.
    9
    Elizabeth, Benscoter, Cathcart, Infante, and Martinez. In some of these photos,
    petitioner is posing with Elizabeth and Benscoter or is lying across the lap of
    Elizabeth and Benscoter. One photo had been posted to a MySpace page run by
    Elizabeth, Benscoter, and a mutual friend who also had participated in Young
    Life.
    In its opposition to the recusal motion, the prosecutor submitted his own
    report of an interview of Kyle conducted by a prosecution investigator after Kyle‘s
    interview with the defense investigator. The prosecution investigator‘s report is
    not signed by Kyle, but the defense lodged no objection to the trial court‘s
    consideration of this report for purposes of the section 1424 motion. According to
    the prosecution investigator‘s report, Kyle told the prosecution investigator that he
    (Kyle) had felt pressured to sign the defense investigator‘s report of his prior
    interview and that he did not want to testify in court about this case. Despite the
    fact that Kyle had reviewed the defense investigator‘s report and had made a few
    handwritten changes to that report, the prosecution investigator‘s report states that
    Kyle did not believe the defense report was accurately written, but rather was
    ―slanted.‖ According to the prosecution investigator‘s report, during the
    prosecution investigator‘s interview Kyle described petitioner as having a
    reputation for fighting. Kyle stated that petitioner was ―overly aggressive‖ in the
    pillow fight Kyle had previously described to the defense investigator,
    characterizing it as the most ―brutal‖ pillow fight Kyle had ever seen. The
    prosecution investigator‘s report states that Kyle remembered petitioner attending
    most of the weekly Young Life meetings during the 2004-2005 school year, along
    with Infante and Benscoter. According to the prosecution investigator‘s report,
    Kyle made clear that he and petitioner were not ―personal friends,‖ but just
    acquaintances. The prosecution investigator‘s report also stated that petitioner did
    not tell Kyle personally that he had accepted Jesus; instead petitioner had made
    10
    that statement in a group discussion. The prosecution investigator‘s report does
    not indicate that during the interview the investigator asked Kyle, or that Kyle
    mentioned, anything about his sister Elizabeth. Finally, the investigator‘s report
    discloses that Frawley was present in the room during his son‘s interview with the
    investigator.
    According to the district attorney‘s opposition, at least 56 other children
    participated in Young Life with petitioner. The opposition maintained that
    because these other individuals might have known petitioner better than Frawley‘s
    children, Frawley‘s children were not important or critical witnesses for the
    defense penalty phase. The opposition claimed that the defense manufactured an
    apparent conflict by listing Frawley‘s children as possible witnesses. In his
    affidavit, Frawley states that his children‘s prior acquaintance with petitioner has
    not affected, impacted, or influenced any of his decisions in the present case. In a
    later supplemental filing, the prosecution stated its intention to have another
    deputy prosecutor cross-examine Kyle and Elizabeth should the defense call them
    as witnesses.
    C. Thomas Cathcart and His Relationship with Elizabeth, Petitioner,
    and Frawley
    The trial court‘s rulings redacted much of the evidence the defense
    proffered concerning Cathcart‘s relationship with Elizabeth and Cathcart‘s
    interactions with the defense investigators. According to Benscoter‘s affidavit,
    Elizabeth and Cathcart had been romantically involved. Cathcart had been
    interviewed by investigators for both parties, but ultimately neither party
    submitted an affidavit by Cathcart in support of or in opposition to the recusal
    motion. The defense alleged that before Cathcart‘s interview with the prosecution
    was recorded, the prosecution‘s investigator advised him not to mention Elizabeth.
    According to defense counsel‘s affidavit, the prosecution‘s interview of Cathcart
    11
    was recorded and on that recording there is no reference to Elizabeth or to
    Cathcart‘s relationship with her.
    According to Frawley‘s affidavit, Cathcart and petitioner were friends and
    played football together in high school. Frawley‘s children knew Cathcart, but he
    could not confirm whether Cathcart and Elizabeth had a dating relationship.
    Frawley admitted to being present when the prosecutor‘s investigator interviewed
    Cathcart. In their opposition, the prosecution denied the defense claim that
    Cathcart was told not to mention Elizabeth during the recorded part of the
    interview. According to the prosecution, ―there was no professional reason to ask
    Mr. Cathcart about Elizabeth Frawley.‖ Later in the same motion, however, the
    prosecution acknowledged that ―Mr. Cathcart was told his interview with the
    prosecution investigator would not include information about Elizabeth Frawley.‖
    But the motion further stated that Cathcart ―was never admonished to keep that
    relationship a secret.‖
    D. The Prosecutor’s Alleged Interference with the Defense
    Investigation
    Petitioner‘s investigators failed in numerous attempts to contact Elizabeth
    and petitioner claims that the prosecutor actively frustrated the defense‘s ability to
    contact her. During the time petitioner‘s recusal motion was being litigated,
    Elizabeth was a college student in South Bend, Indiana. According to Frawley‘s
    affidavit, he provided the defense with ―the name of the state [in which] my
    daughter resides,‖ and he gave Elizabeth the name and telephone number of the
    defense investigator.
    Elizabeth did not contact the defense investigator. On May 30, 2012, a
    ―tweet‖ on Elizabeth‘s Twitter account stated, ―landing in LAX Aug 4-18.‖ On
    12
    August 6, 2012, a tweet on Elizabeth‘s twitter account stated, ―really over not
    being able to tweet my whereabouts. This better pay off. #attorneyfatherprobs.‖7
    On August 13, 2012, a defense investigator delivered a subpoena for
    Elizabeth that was to be served by the Ventura County Sheriff‘s civil unit at the
    Frawley residence. On August 17, 2012, however, Deputy Scott Baugher returned
    the subpoena to the defense, stating that the service on Elizabeth had failed and
    marked off a box indicating that ―[t]he person has moved and the forwarding
    address is not known.‖ Deputy Baugher listed only one attempt to serve Elizabeth
    with the subpoena.
    According to a defense investigator‘s report dated in late August 2012,8 a
    defense investigator spoke with Deputy Baugher about the failed service.
    According to the defense investigator, Deputy Baugher appeared agitated and told
    him that the obligation to serve the subpoena had ―put the department in a huge
    bind‖ and that the investigator should have informed the sheriff‘s department that
    the subpoena was for the daughter of a ―high official‖ in the district attorney‘s
    office. According to the defense investigator‘s report, Deputy Baugher said that
    the defense had put him ―in danger‖ and that they were ―playing games‖ by trying
    to make Frawley‘s children witnesses in the case. Deputy Baugher told the
    defense investigator that he tried to serve the subpoena three times, and then
    conducted his own investigation and learned that the address was the residence of
    7      The latter portion of the tweet, ―#attorneyfatherprobs,‖ is called a
    ―hashtag.‖ This is a method by which a user can categorize his or her tweets by
    subject for other Twitter users to comment on. Thus, by adding the hashtag,
    ―#attorneyfatherprobs,‖ the user presumably intended to create a topic on Twitter
    regarding problems with attorney fathers that others may view, approve,
    disapprove, and/or comment on.
    8     The trial court did not redact this defense investigator‘s report and found it
    admissible as prior inconsistent statement of Deputy Baugher.
    13
    Michael Frawley of the district attorney‘s office. Deputy Baugher indicated that
    he had subsequently telephoned the residence and had spoken with Frawley
    himself, Frawley said that Elizabeth no longer lived there and that he did not know
    where his daughter lived.
    In late October 2012, another defense investigator asked Deputy Baugher to
    sign an affidavit derived from the contents of the late August 2012 defense
    investigator‘s report. Deputy Baugher reviewed both the late August report and
    the defense-drafted affidavit, but refused to sign the affidavit.
    Frawley later presented an affidavit from Deputy Baugher. In this affidavit,
    Deputy Baugher stated that he was assigned to serve a subpoena for Elizabeth and
    that he determined that the address listed for her was the same as the address for
    Chief Deputy District Attorney Frawley. Deputy Baugher then called Frawley
    who stated that Elizabeth was an adult and no longer lived at his residence.
    According to Deputy Baugher‘s affidavit, ―[i]t is not my practice to inquire about
    forwarding addresses and I did not do so when I spoke with Mr. Frawley.‖
    Deputy Baugher denied telling the defense investigator that Frawley claimed not
    to know Elizabeth‘s current address. In his affidavit, Deputy Baugher explained
    that he told the defense investigator that she should have informed him that the
    address listed in the subpoena was for an official in the district attorney‘s office
    because, in his experience, ―persons involved in law enforcement often own
    firearms and for that reason not knowing Mr. Frawley‘s position could have
    created an unsafe situation.‖ Deputy Baugher denied telling the defense
    investigator that the defense was ―playing games,‖ and explained that he did not
    sign the defense-drafted affidavit because it did not reflect his recollection of the
    events described.
    14
    Although Thomas Cathcart had previously cooperated with the defense, by
    November 2012, Cathcart refused further attempts by the defense to contact him
    or to review and sign a draft affidavit.
    In his affidavit, Frawley stated that he never interfered with the defense
    efforts to interview his children. Frawley also stated that he told his children that
    they should feel free to speak with the defense.
    E. The Prosecutor’s Personal Interest in Not Having His Children
    Testify
    Petitioner contends that the prosecutor has a personal and emotional bias in
    the noninvolvement of his children in the penalty phase — to prevent his children
    from being maligned by their association with a triple murderer. As evidence of
    this bias, petitioner points to the prosecutor‘s statements to the press, his motions
    to strike evidence presented in petitioner‘s motion to recuse, and his litigation of
    various discovery issues.
    In late July 2012, approximately one week before the initial date set for
    trial, the defense filed a revised witness list listing Kyle and Elizabeth Frawley as
    witnesses for the defense penalty phase. In response, the prosecutor sent defense
    counsel an e-mail in which he complained of the late discovery and requested any
    witness reports and the contact information for some of the proposed defense
    witnesses, including his own children. Defense counsel responded in an e-mail to
    the prosecutor the next day, explaining that the defense would provide its witness
    reports and contact information in the coming days. Although the parties were
    aware of an impending defense motion for a continuance, Frawley filed a motion
    seeking to hold defense counsel in contempt for providing untimely discovery.
    The trial court granted the defense‘s request for continuance and delayed
    the trial for five months. After this hearing, the prosecutor told a reporter for a
    local newspaper that his ―children have nothing to do with this case‖ and that they
    15
    would not have been mentioned if he was not the prosecutor. When asked about
    his children‘s association with petitioner in the Young Life group, the prosecutor
    told the reporter, ―I am not going to answer specific questions about that but it‘s
    probably the lowest sort of trial tactics I‘ve ever seen.‖
    A few days later, soon after the ―really over not being able to tweet my
    whereabouts‖ message on Elizabeth‘s Twitter account, the prosecutor served a
    subpoena duces tecum on defense counsel‘s office seeking materials related to the
    subpoenas of defense witnesses. At a trial court hearing, defense counsel argued
    that a subpoena duces tecum was a mechanism for obtaining discovery from third
    parties, not from an opposing party, and that its use would circumvent the
    reciprocal discovery statutes. In response, the prosecutor stated that the request
    sought information concerning when the defense actually anticipated calling these
    witnesses at trial and that this factor would be useful for the court in deciding a
    future motion for contempt based on providing untimely discovery. In his
    affidavit, the prosecutor explained that he believed that the defense had delayed its
    disclosure of its witnesses ―in order to gain tactical advantage.‖ He further
    declared that he filed the motion to hold defense counsel in contempt and for no
    other reason. In his affidavit, Frawley does not explain why he utilized a
    subpoena duces tecum to seek discovery from defense counsel‘s office.
    Additionally, the prosecutor filed motions to strike various portions of the
    defense‘s affidavits and investigation reports. Taken together these motions
    sought to exclude all portions of Benscoter‘s statements that described Elizabeth‘s
    romantic relationship with Thomas Cathcart, that Benscoter, petitioner, and other
    Young Life participants had been at the prosecutor‘s residence ―all the time,‖
    including attending parties that were unrelated to Young Life events, and that
    Benscoter and Elizabeth felt comfortable around petitioner, enjoyed his company,
    and that he was protective of them. Last, the prosecutor objected to the
    16
    introduction of the message, ―really over not being able to tweet my whereabouts‖
    that had appeared on Elizabeth‘s Twitter account, arguing that ―there has been no
    showing that the ‗tweet‘ can be attributed to Elizabeth Frawley.‖
    In addition, the prosecutor stated in his affidavit that all of his decisions in
    this case ―have been made in the usual and customary manner‖ and that he had not
    made any decision under the influence of the allegations of the recusal motion or
    under any ―extraordinary or unusual pressure.‖ The prosecutor further explained
    that his relationship with his adult children would not cause him to exercise his
    ―discretion and professional duties differently‖ than if they had never met
    petitioner.
    III. DISCUSSION
    A. Applicable Legal Standards for a Motion to Recuse
    Section 1424, subdivision (a)(1) provides, in part, that a motion to recuse
    the district attorney ―may not be granted unless the evidence shows that a conflict
    of interest exists that would render it unlikely that the defendant would receive a
    fair trial.‖
    In interpreting this section, we have held that a ―conflict‖ exists, for
    purposes of section 1424, ―whenever the circumstances of a case evidence a
    reasonable possibility that the DA‘s office may not exercise its discretionary
    function in an evenhanded manner.‖ (People v. Conner (1983) 
    34 Cal.3d 141
    ,
    148.) Moreover, ―there is no need to determine whether a conflict is ‗actual,‘ or
    only gives an ‗appearance‘ of conflict.‖ (Ibid.)
    However, the mere existence of a conflict, by itself, is not sufficient to
    require recusal of the district attorney. (People v. Eubanks (1996) 
    14 Cal.4th 580
    ,
    594.) Section 1424 does not authorize disqualification merely because the defense
    has shown that the prosecutor‘s involvement ―would be unseemly, would appear
    17
    improper, or would tend to reduce public confidence in the impartiality and
    integrity of the criminal justice system.‖ (Id. at p. 592.) Instead, it is defendant‘s
    burden to allege facts which, if credited, establish: (1) a ―conflict of interest‖; and
    (2) that the conflict is ―so grave as to make a ‗fair trial‘ unlikely.‖ (Id. at p. 593.)
    ―Thus, the first half of the inquiry asks only whether a ‗reasonable possibility‘ of
    less than impartial treatment exists, while the second half of the inquiry asks
    whether any such possibility is so great that it is more likely than not the defendant
    will be treated unfairly during some portion of the criminal proceedings.‖
    (Haraguchi v. Superior Court (2008) 
    43 Cal.4th 706
    , 713.)
    As previously described, the statutory procedure established by section
    1424 prescribes a two-stage process. At the first stage, the defendant must file a
    notice of motion containing ―a statement of the facts setting forth the grounds for
    the claimed disqualification and the legal authorities relied upon by the moving
    party,‖ and those allegations must be supported by ―affidavits of witnesses who
    are competent to testify to the facts set forth in the affidavit.‖ (§ 1424,
    subd. (a)(1).) In opposition to the motion, the district attorney and the Attorney
    General may also file affidavits. (Ibid.) After considering the motion and
    affidavits, the trial court then decides whether or not the second stage, an
    evidentiary hearing, is necessary. (Ibid.) An evidentiary hearing may be ordered
    if the defendant‘s affidavits establish a prima facie case for recusal — that is, if the
    defendant‘s affidavits, if credited, would require recusal. (Spaccia, supra, 209
    Cal.App.4th at p. 112.)
    The decision whether to hold an evidentiary hearing ―contemplates an
    exercise of discretion on the part of the trial court in determining whether a
    hearing is necessary,‖ and we review a trial court‘s decision not to hold an
    evidentiary hearing for an abuse of that discretion. (Spaccia, supra, 209
    Cal.App.4th at p. 109.) We have explained that, under this standard of review,
    18
    ―[t]he trial court‘s findings of fact are reviewed for substantial evidence, its
    conclusions of law are reviewed de novo, and its application of the law to the facts
    is reversible only if arbitrary and capricious.‖ (Haraguchi v. Superior Court,
    
    supra,
     43 Cal.4th at pp. 711-712, fns. omitted.) The same standard applies in
    capital cases. (Hollywood v. Superior Court (2008) 
    43 Cal.4th 721
    , 728.)
    In Spaccia, the Court of Appeal examined the legislative history of section
    1424, which at one point contained language that limited evidentiary hearings to
    the sole circumstance of when ― ‗there are disputed issues of material fact that
    cannot be resolved through the use of affidavits.‘ ‖ (Spaccia, supra, 209
    Cal.App.4th at p. 109, quoting Assem. Bill No. 154 (1999–2000 Reg. Sess.) as
    introduced Jan. 15, 1999, p. 2, italics omitted.) But as enacted, the evidentiary
    hearing provision of section 1424 simply states: ―The judge shall review the
    affidavits and determine whether or not an evidentiary hearing is necessary.‖
    (§ 1424, subd. (a)(1).) The Court of Appeal in Spaccia concluded that because
    ―the language limiting hearings was ultimately rejected in favor of language
    leaving the issue of whether to hold a hearing to the trial court‘s discretion, we can
    infer that the Legislature expressly chose not to limit evidentiary hearings to only
    those situations in which there exist disputed issues of material fact which could
    not be resolved on affidavits alone.‖ (Spaccia, supra, at pp. 110-111.)
    Thus, it is clear that the Legislature intended that trial courts exercise broad
    discretion in deciding whether to hold evidentiary hearings under section 1424.
    B. Application to This Case
    In the present case, the prosecution conceded that an apparent conflict
    existed because the prosecutor‘s children are on the defense witness list, but
    argued that the defense had ―manufactured‖ the apparent conflict.
    19
    The trial court accepted the prosecution‘s concession that petitioner had
    demonstrated an apparent conflict of interest because the prosecutor‘s children did
    have ―some degree of relationship‖ with petitioner and that they ―may very well
    have positive‖ mitigating penalty phase evidence ―that will be admissible‖ at trial.
    But the trial court concluded that petitioner had failed to show ―a disabling
    conflict of interest‖ because, in the court‘s view, ―[t]here is a lapse in the link
    between the apparent conflict, conflict, and unfairness on behalf of the
    prosecution.‖ The court further stated that petitioner‘s submissions had raised
    only ―speculation and innuendo‖ and that ―the court is not going to allow an
    evidentiary hearing to support the allegations made at this stage of the
    proceedings.‖
    In reviewing the trial court‘s ruling, the Court of Appeal held that that court
    had not abused its discretion. The Court of Appeal did not find a disabling
    conflict based on the fact that the prosecutor‘s children might become witnesses in
    the penalty phase. It reasoned that the prosecution would likely not contest the
    prosecutor‘s children‘s credibility, but instead would question the significance of
    their testimony on the question of whether death is the appropriate penalty for
    petitioner. The Court of Appeal also found petitioner‘s affidavits disclosed no
    conflict of interest on the part of the prosecutor relating to Cathcart. It concluded
    that there was no reason why Cathcart‘s prior relationship with the prosecutor‘s
    daughter would cause the prosecution to treat petitioner unfairly. In addition, the
    Court of Appeal concluded that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in
    finding no disabling conflict arising from the prosecutor‘s minimal links to the
    Junior League organization that victim Davina Husted had managed in various
    capacities. On each of these points, we agree with the Court of Appeal that the
    trial court did not abuse its discretion in finding that denial of the recusal motion
    was warranted without an evidentiary hearing.
    20
    We disagree, however, with the lower court rulings that no evidentiary
    hearing was warranted concerning the more substantial issue of whether the
    prosecutor had become so personally involved in the case ― ‗ ― ‗as to render it
    unlikely that [petitioner] will receive fair treatment during all portions of the
    criminal proceedings.‖ ‘ ‖ ‘ (Haraguchi v. Superior Court, supra, 43 Cal.4th at
    p. 713.) In the Court of Appeal‘s view, petitioner ―presented no direct evidence
    that the prosecutor had any role in Elizabeth‘s, Kyle‘s, Cathcart‘s or the
    prosecution investigator‘s conduct‖ or that the prosecutor‘s actions were
    motivated by a personal grievance against petitioner. The Court of Appeal
    acknowledged that the trial court ―could have reasonably inferred that the
    prosecutor was upset with [petitioner] and was grinding that personal axe by
    tampering with witnesses and taking positions in pretrial litigation unhelpful to the
    defense.‖ But the Court of Appeal further observed that ―the trial court could also
    reasonably infer that the prosecutor‘s litigation positions were zealous but
    evenhanded discretionary calls, that the prosecutor had nothing to do with the
    witnesses‘ reluctance to fully cooperate with either party, and that the prosecutor‘s
    statements constituted public posturing in a high-profile case rather than an
    admission of a personal vendetta.‖ The Court of Appeal concluded that it could
    not take issue with ―the trial court‘s decision to draw one reasonable inference
    over another,‖ relying in part on language in a prior decision of this court stating
    that the trial court ―is in a ‗better position‘ than we are to ‗evaluate the
    consequences of a potential conflict in light of the entirety of a case.‘ ‖ (Ibid.)
    However, we believe that on the facts of this case the trial court‘s choice of
    one inference over another was improperly made without hearing testimony,
    evaluating credibility, and resolving factual disputes that were key to determining
    the relative reasonableness of the alternative inferences raised by the parties‘
    affidavits. An evidentiary hearing would address questions concerning whether
    21
    the defense had manufactured a conflict, questions concerning defense discovery
    tactics, the prosecutor‘s pretrial conduct, the effect — if any — of Frawley‘s role
    as a prosecutor upon his children‘s potential penalty phase testimony, and the
    gravity of the prosecutor‘s conflict — if any — as it related to the fairness of
    petitioner‘s trial.
    There were at least four significant factual disputes that, if resolved in
    petitioner‘s favor, could show that the conflict was so grave as to make a fair trial
    unlikely.
    First, there was a factual dispute concerning how frequently petitioner
    visited the prosecutor‘s home to socialize with Elizabeth Frawley and her friends.
    According to the affidavit of Kristy Benscoter, petitioner was at the Frawley
    residence ―all the time‖ with her, Elizabeth, and their other friends, and they all
    enjoyed his company. This is in contrast to Frawley‘s statements that petitioner
    had been to his residence only on ―two or more occasions‖ and that he did not
    want to convey ―the impression that there was actually a relationship‖ between
    petitioner and his children. The nature and closeness of the relationship between
    petitioner and the prosecutor‘s children would certainly have a bearing on the
    gravity of the prosecutor‘s conflict of interest as it related to his adult children‘s
    potential penalty phase testimony.
    Second, there is a factual dispute concerning whether the prosecution‘s
    investigator told Thomas Cathcart, before their interview, that he should not
    mention Elizabeth. The prosecutor was in the room during the recording of the
    interview, and, in that interview, Cathcart does not mention Elizabeth. Although
    the district attorney‘s opposition to the recusal motion denied the defense‘s
    assertion that Cathcart was told not to mention Elizabeth, the district attorney‘s
    opposition itself lends some credence to the defense claim by explicitly
    acknowledging that ―Mr. Cathcart was told his interview with the Prosecutor
    22
    would not include information about Elizabeth Frawley.‖ Under the
    circumstances, an evidentiary hearing would shed light on whether the prosecutor
    used his influence to steer the prosecution investigator‘s interview with Cathcart to
    minimize his daughter Elizabeth‘s connection with petitioner and his friends.
    Third, there was a clear factual dispute concerning whether the prosecutor
    had interfered with service of a subpoena on Elizabeth: The defense claimed the
    prosecutor refused to provide the process server with Elizabeth‘s current address.
    According to the affidavit of the process server, he did not ask Frawley for
    Elizabeth‘s current address. In contrast, according to a defense investigator, the
    process server told the defense investigator that he had asked Frawley for
    Elizabeth‘s current address, but Frawley said he did not know it.9
    Finally, there was a conflicting depiction of petitioner‘s character and
    background in the reports of Kyle‘s interviews with defense and prosecution
    investigators. In his interview with the defense investigator, Kyle described
    petitioner in generally favorable terms. The defense investigator allowed Kyle to
    review the report and make changes, which he did. In contrast, in Kyle‘s
    interview with the prosecution investigator, at which Kyle‘s father was present,
    Kyle largely disavowed the defense investigator‘s report and described petitioner
    9       In its brief, amicus curiae, the California District Attorneys Association,
    specifically recognizes this factual conflict, yet maintains that ―the lack of an
    evidentiary hearing with live testimony did not deny petitioner anything in terms
    of presenting to the court the content of the supposed inconsistent statements.‖
    But, in a similar scenario in which a petitioner on habeas corpus has the burden of
    proving entitlement to relief, we have recognized that ―the reason we require
    habeas corpus petitioners to prove their disputed allegations at an evidentiary
    hearing, rather than merely decide the merits of the case on declarations, is to
    obtain credibility determinations.‖ (In re Scott (2003) 
    29 Cal.4th 783
    , 824.) By
    failing to hold an evidentiary hearing, the trial court failed to make any credibility
    determinations in support of its ruling.
    23
    in generally negative terms. The stark conflict between the two reports and the
    circumstances of the interviews should have caused the court to hold a hearing to
    determine whether the prosecutor exercised undue influence over the potential
    witness.
    The trial court neither acknowledged these factual disputes nor resolved
    them in its ruling. The trial court failed to make any credibility findings
    concerning these disputes. Given the material factual disputes here and the
    inconsistencies in affiants‘ statements, it seems apparent that this motion could not
    be resolved without live testimony. These disputes, if resolved in petitioner‘s
    favor, would lend credence to the defense claim that Frawley had actively
    interfered in the defense‘s pretrial ability to contact Elizabeth and discover
    whether she could offer significant mitigating evidence at petitioner‘s penalty
    phase. In assessing the likelihood of prejudice stemming from an asserted conflict
    of interest under section 1424, we consider ―the conflict‘s effect on ‗the DA‘s
    discretionary powers exercised either before or after trial.‘ ‖ (People v. Eubanks,
    
    supra,
     14 Cal.4th at p. 593, quoting People v. Conner, supra, 34 Cal.3d at p. 149.)
    A prosecutor‘s use of his or her position to attempt to unfairly interfere with the
    defense‘s pretrial efforts to investigate a potentially significant penalty phase
    witness would be a genuine disabling conflict, especially when that witness is the
    prosecutor‘s child.
    To be sure, the defense‘s initial decision to single out the prosecutor‘s
    children as potential penalty phase witnesses on petitioner‘s behalf could
    reasonably be viewed, from one perspective, as simply a disingenuous effort on
    the part of defense counsel to create a conflict where none otherwise existed. We
    have no doubt that a trial court would have discretion to deny a motion to recuse a
    district attorney that was proffered on behalf of a criminal defendant whose
    counsel engaged in improper gamesmanship by proposing to call only marginally
    24
    relevant witnesses who have a strong personal connection to the prosecutor simply
    as a means of creating a conflict for purposes of section 1424.
    In this case, however, defense counsel maintained that there were legitimate
    reasons for choosing Kyle and Elizabeth as penalty phase witnesses: they were
    more likely to be viewed as without bias in favor of petitioner than other Young
    Life members and thus a jury would more likely be favorably impressed by their
    testimony regarding petitioner‘s character and background. Under the
    circumstances, we do not believe the trial court could dismiss defense counsel‘s
    conduct as simply impermissible gamesmanship without an evidentiary hearing.
    Moreover, as the defense investigation proceeded, the accumulating affidavits
    increasingly indicated that Elizabeth and petitioner had been friends for a
    sustained period and that she might offer significant favorable mitigating evidence
    concerning petitioner‘s background and character at the penalty phase, if the trial
    proceedings reached that stage.
    Furthermore, as the defense made further efforts to learn more details of
    Elizabeth‘s relationship with and attitude toward petitioner, other evidence
    surfaced suggesting that Frawley may have actively encouraged Elizabeth not to
    cooperate with the defense or otherwise thwarted their access to her.
    Particularly significant in this regard was the tweet on Elizabeth‘s Twitter
    account in which she claimed to be ―really over not being able to tweet [her]
    whereabouts. This better pay off. #attorneyfatherprobs.‖ This message could
    reasonably support the inference that Elizabeth had been directed not to disclose
    her whereabouts because her concealment would ―pay off‖ for her attorney father.
    Moreover, even if an evidentiary hearing shows that Frawley played no role
    in his daughter‘s refusal to cooperate with the defense, it could be inferred that
    Elizabeth‘s refusal to speak with the defense was motivated by her father‘s
    capacity in prosecuting the matter, inasmuch as any testimony by her favorable to
    25
    petitioner might adversely affect her father‘s interest, as lead prosecutor, in
    seeking the death penalty against petitioner. The same can be said of Kyle. In
    either scenario, Frawley‘s continuing role as lead prosecutor in this matter could
    have the effect of interfering with the defense‘s ability to present relevant and
    potentially significant mitigating evidence at the penalty phase of this capital case.
    Additionally, should Frawley‘s children become defense witnesses at the
    penalty phase, it is not speculative to worry that his personal knowledge of his
    children‘s interactions with petitioner might influence the jury‘s assessment of
    their testimony. Presumably, the prosecutor would take care not to convey his
    knowledge of facts outside the record during cross-examination or closing
    statements. Nonetheless, one or more jurors might infer that any attempt to
    dispute the children‘s testimony or limit its significance is based in part on
    personal knowledge stemming from their close personal relationship. At the very
    least, these prospects bear on whether the prosecutor should be recused.
    The People argue that there are other persons from the Young Life group
    who are more familiar with petitioner and would make ample alternative witnesses
    in mitigation for petitioner at any penalty phase. But the district attorney and
    Attorney General submitted no affidavits from any such alternative witnesses to
    support that assertion. Moreover, because the defense was not able to interview
    Elizabeth or to question her at an evidentiary hearing to learn the extent of any
    mitigating evidence she might have to offer, it is impossible to make any relative
    comparisons with the testimony that might be presented by other potential
    witnesses. An evidentiary hearing might well reveal that Kyle and Elizabeth have
    little significant mitigating evidence to offer or that their cooperation and
    testimony would not be affected by the relationship with their father, and thus
    diminish the potential gravity of the conflict. But we believe that the trial court
    erred in dismissing the prospect of any actual likelihood of unfairness without
    26
    holding an evidentiary hearing to obtain the relevant testimony and resolve issues
    of credibility that are necessary to evaluate petitioner‘s concerns.
    There may well be some scenarios in which judicial economy would justify
    a trial court‘s decision not to hold an evidentiary hearing under section 1424 when
    the allegations contained in an affidavit lack credulity on their face. For example,
    a trial court may reasonably deny a motion under section 1424 without an
    evidentiary hearing if the record as a whole conclusively resolves an assertedly
    disputed fact or the defendant‘s factual allegations are entirely without credibility.
    But here petitioner presented plausible evidence suggesting that the
    prosecutor‘s personal entanglement in the case had interfered with and was likely
    to continue to interfere with the defense‘s ability to investigate and present
    potentially significant mitigating evidence. Under these unique circumstances, the
    credibility of petitioner‘s evidence cannot be determined without an evidentiary
    hearing to examine the disputed facts, which if resolved in petitioner‘s favor,
    would entitle him to relief under section 1424. The full extent of Elizabeth‘s
    relationship with petitioner, the issue of whether the prosecution had advised
    Cathcart not to mention Elizabeth at the prosecutor‘s behest, and whether the
    prosecutor influenced Kyle‘s potential testimony or actively engaged in thwarting
    the defense‘s effort to subpoena Elizabeth are all serious factual disputes that will
    illuminate the gravity of the conflict at issue here.
    It is not difficult to understand and to sympathize with a parent‘s strong
    inclination to protect his or her children from being drawn into the role of witness
    in a death penalty case, and a prosecutor who is a parent is, of course, not immune
    from such feelings. At the same time, however, a criminal defendant‘s right to
    present potentially favorable witnesses on his behalf is a fundamental right — a
    right that takes on added significance in the capital setting. In light of the
    affidavits submitted in support of and in opposition to petitioner‘s motion to
    27
    recuse the prosecutor under section 1424, and the conflicts and contradictions
    reflected in those affidavits, we conclude that the trial court abused its discretion
    in declining to hold an evidentiary hearing. A hearing was necessary to determine
    whether the conflict in this case would render it unlikely that petitioner would
    receive a fair trial if the prosecutor is not recused as lead prosecutor in the
    underlying proceeding.
    IV. DISPOSITION
    We reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeal and order the appellate
    court to issue a writ of mandate to the trial court directing that court to conduct
    further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    CANTIL-SAKAUYE, C. J.
    WE CONCUR:
    BAXTER, J.
    WERDEGAR, J.
    CHIN, J.
    CORRIGAN, J.
    LIU, J.
    WOODS, J.*
    _______________________________
    *      Associate Justice of the Court of Appeal, Second Appellate District,
    Division Seven, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of
    the California Constitution.
    28
    See next page for addresses and telephone numbers for counsel who argued in Supreme Court.
    Name of Opinion Packer v. Superior Court
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Unpublished Opinion
    Original Appeal
    Original Proceeding
    Review Granted XXX 
    219 Cal.App.4th 226
    Rehearing Granted
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Opinion No. S213894
    Date Filed: December 11, 2014
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Court: Superior
    County: Ventura
    Judge: Patricia M. Murphy
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Counsel:
    Stephen P. Lipson, Public Defender and Michael C. McMahon, Chief Deputy Public Defender, for
    Petitioner.
    No appearance for Respondent.
    Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Dane R. Gillette, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Lance E. Winters,
    Assistant Attorney General, Steven D. Matthews and Zee Rodriguez, Deputy Attorneys General; Gregory
    D. Totten, District Attorney, and Michelle J. Contois, Deputy District Attorney, for Real Party in Interest.
    Mark L. Zahner and Albert C. Locher for California District Attorneys Association as Amicus Curiae on
    behalf of Real Party in Interest.
    1
    Counsel who argued in Supreme Court (not intended for publication with opinion):
    Michael C. McMahon
    Chief Deputy Public Defender
    800 South Victoria Avenue
    Ventura, CA 93009
    (805) 477-7114
    Steven D. Matthews
    Deputy Attorney General
    300 South Spring Street, Suite 1702
    Los Angeles, CA 90013
    (213) 897-2367
    Michelle J. Contois
    Deputy District Attorney
    800 South Victoria Avenue, Suite 314
    Ventura, CA 93009-2730
    (805) 654-3078
    2
    

Document Info

Docket Number: S213894

Citation Numbers: 60 Cal. 4th 695, 339 P.3d 329, 181 Cal. Rptr. 3d 41, 2014 Cal. LEXIS 11290

Judges: Cantil-Sakauye

Filed Date: 12/11/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/3/2024