People v. Silva CA4/2 ( 2021 )


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  • Filed 5/10/21 P. v. Silva CA4/2
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                      E073970
    v.                                                                      (Super.Ct.No. SWF1907139)
    BRYAN SILVA,                                                            OPINION
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. Samah Shouka, Judge.
    Affirmed.
    Eric E. Reynolds, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
    Appellant.
    Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Chief Assistant Attorney
    General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General, Michael Pulos, and Teresa
    Torreblanca, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    1
    A jury convicted Bryan Silva of inflicting corporal injury resulting in a traumatic
    condition, assault with a deadly weapon, leaving the scene of an accident involving
    injury, and dissuading a witness. The trial court sentenced him to a total aggregate term
    of seven years, which it arrived at in part by staying the assault conviction under Penal
    Code section 654. The court also imposed various fines and fees.
    On appeal, Silva argues the trial court erred by sentencing him on the leaving the
    scene conviction because it arose from the same act or an indivisible course of conduct
    with the assault and corporal injury convictions. He also contends the court erred by
    imposing certain fines and fees. We affirm.
    I
    FACTS
    Silva and Diana G. dated off and on for roughly two years. They lived separately
    the entire time, and because Silva didn’t have a car he would sometimes borrow his
    brother’s white truck to drive to Diana’s. Diana broke up with Silva for good in
    February 2019 after an incident of domestic violence where he refused to let her drive
    home, took her keys to prevent her from doing so, forced her into the car after she tried to
    escape, and hit her. When Diana called to tell him it was over, Silva insisted it wasn’t.
    Afterwards Silva called Diana 20 to 30 times a day. When she blocked his
    number, he would call from unknown numbers. She told him to stop calling, but he
    didn’t. When she turned off her phone, he called her friends and family.
    2
    On February 24, Diana pulled into her driveway and saw a white truck behind her.
    She watched the pickup enter her cul-de-sac, turn around, and leave. She thought she
    recognized the pickup as Silva’s brother’s, and decided to follow it to get its license plate
    number and report it to the police. She caught up to the pickup and found it parked with
    Silva sitting in the driver’s seat. She pulled in front of him and parked with the two
    vehicles facing each other and called 911.
    Silva got out of the pickup and approached Diana while she was calling 911. He
    tried to open her passenger side door, told her he wanted to talk, and insisted she open the
    door. Diana tried to drive away but stopped because Silva grabbed her roof rails. Diana
    cracked the window and told him she was calling the police, but he used the opportunity
    to reach through the opening in the window and unlock the door. Silva got in the car,
    turned off the ignition, and took the keys. Diana told him she was calling the police. Silva
    grabbed for her phone and was eventually able to wrest it from her. Silva got out of the
    car and returned to his pickup, taking Diana’s phone with him.
    Diana got out of her car and went to the driver’s side of Silva’s pickup. She yelled
    at him to give her phone back. The driver’s side door was open, and Diana reached into
    Silva’s pocket to try to get her phone back. Silva blocked her but held on to either her
    shirt or hand. Silva then started driving away, first driving forward and forcing Diana to
    walk alongside the pickup, then reversing to get around her car. Eventually Silva started
    driving faster while Diana’s arm was still in the pickup, forcing her to run alongside to
    3
    keep up. Eventually Diana fell. Silva dragged her for a bit before running her over with
    the pickup’s back tire.
    Silva stopped the pickup, got out, and tried to pick Diana up. When it was clear
    Diana couldn’t stand, Silva uttered an expletive, got back in the pickup, and left.
    Bystanders called 911.
    Diana ended up in the hospital for seven days with 11 broken ribs, a punctured left
    lung, a cut to her left ankle, a bruised and swollen right hand, and abrasions all over her
    body. While Diana was in the hospital her sister received text messages from Silva asking
    her to tell Diana not to talk to the police, among other things.
    The Riverside County District Attorney charged Silva with inflicting corporal
    injury resulting in a traumatic condition (Pen. Code, § 273.5, subd. (a), unlabeled
    statutory citations refer to this code), assault with a deadly weapon (Pen. Code, § 245,
    subd. (a)(1)), stalking (Pen. Code, § 646.9, subd. (a)), leaving the scene of an accident
    involving an injury (Veh. Code, § 20001, subd. (a)), and dissuading a witness (Pen. Code,
    § 136.1, subd. (b)(1)). The corporal injury and assault charges also had additional
    allegations that Silva inflicted great bodily injury, and the assault charge had the
    additional allegation that Silva personally used a deadly weapon. (Pen. Code, § 12022.7,
    subd. (e).)
    In September 2019, a jury found Silva not guilty of stalking but guilty on all other
    charges and found all the additional allegations true. The trial court sentenced Silva to
    seven years in prison, composed of the low term of two years for the corporal injury, plus
    4
    four years for the enhancement, plus a consecutive year for the conviction for leaving the
    scene. The court stayed the two-year sentence for the assault conviction under
    section 654 and ordered the four-month sentence for the dissuading a witness conviction
    to run concurrently. The court also imposed $160 in court security fees, $120 in court
    facilities fees, a $300 restitution fine, and imposed but stayed a $300 parole revocation
    fine.
    Silva timely appealed.
    II
    ANALYSIS
    Silva argues the trial court violated section 654’s prohibition against multiple
    punishments because the corporal injury and leaving the scene convictions were for a
    single act, or in the alternative were incident to a single objective. He also argues the trial
    court erred by imposing certain fines and fees without holding an ability to pay hearing,
    or that in the alternative his attorney provided ineffective assistance of counsel by failing
    to object to the imposition of these fines and fees.
    A.      Section 654
    “ ‘Section 654 does not preclude multiple convictions but only multiple
    punishments for a single act or indivisible course of conduct.’ ” (People v. Pinon (2016)
    
    6 Cal.App.5th 956
    , 967, quoting People v. Miller (1977) 
    18 Cal.3d 873
    , 885 (Miller),
    overruled on other grounds as recognized in People v. Oates (2004) 
    32 Cal.4th 1048
    ,
    1067-1068, fn. 8.) “Whether a defendant may be subjected to multiple punishment under
    5
    section 654 requires a two-step inquiry . . . . We first consider if the different crimes were
    completed by a ‘single physical act.’ [Citation.] If so, the defendant may not be punished
    more than once for that act. Only if we conclude that the case involves more than a single
    act . . . do we then consider whether that course of conduct reflects a single ‘ “intent and
    objective” ’ or multiple intents and objectives.” (People v. Corpening (2016) 
    2 Cal.5th 307
    , 311-312.)
    We review the trial court’s decision whether to stay a conviction under section 654
    for substantial evidence. The trial court’s “findings on this question must be upheld on
    appeal if there is any substantial evidence to support them.” (People v. Hutchins (2001)
    
    90 Cal.App.4th 1308
    , 1312.) This applies to its determination whether the conduct
    constituted a single act or an indivisible course of conduct. (See People v. Kopp (2019)
    
    38 Cal.App.5th 47
    , 91 (Kopp), review granted Nov. 13, 2019, S257844; People v. Kwok
    (1998) 
    63 Cal.App.4th 1236
    , 1252-1253.)
    “A single physical act occurs when ‘the same physical action . . . completed the
    actus reus of each charged crime.’ ” (Kopp, supra, 38 Cal.App.5th at p. 91.) To be
    convicted of inflicting corporal injury resulting in a traumatic injury a defendant must
    inflict a physical injury on a current or former romantic partner that results in a traumatic
    condition, and the defendant mustn’t have been acting in self-defense when they did so.
    (CALCRIM No. 840.) To be convicted of leaving the scene of an accident causing injury,
    a defendant must have been involved in an accident while driving, that accident must
    have caused serious injury, the defendant must know the accident caused serious injury,
    6
    and the defendant must have failed to perform one of a number of duties including
    providing reasonable assistance to the injured person. (CALCRIM No. 2140.)
    Here there were multiple acts that satisfied the elements of each crime. First, the
    act of injuring Diana satisfied the injury elements of both charged crimes. But that did not
    satisfy all the elements of both crimes. The conviction for fleeing the scene required an
    additional act, namely leaving after stopping and observing Diana’s injuries. Because
    multiple acts were involved, section 654 only requires the trial court to stay one of the
    convictions if those separate acts “comprise an indivisible course of conduct engaged in
    with a single intent and objective.” (People v. Alvarado (2001) 
    87 Cal.App.4th 178
    , 196.)
    A course of conduct is indivisible, and thus not subject to multiple punishment under
    section 654, “ ‘if all the offenses are incident to one objective.’ ” If the offenses a
    defendant commits during the course of conduct “ ‘are incident to one objective,’ ” they
    may be punished for any one of them, but not more than one. (Miller, supra, 18 Cal.3d at
    p. 885.) On the other hand, “[w]hen the criminal acts forming the basis for convictions of
    multiple substantive offenses are divisible—i.e., reflecting separate intents, objectives or
    events—then section 654 has been held inapplicable.” (People v. Wooten (2013) 
    214 Cal.App.4th 121
    , 130.)
    Here there is substantial evidence that Silva had multiple criminal objectives. The
    facts suggest that Silva injured Diana partially accidentally, and partially as an act of
    intimate partner violence. Silva’s intent was, at minimum, to harass Diana for leaving
    him. Her injury was incident to that objective, whether he intended to hurt her or not.
    7
    However, any continuous conduct or objective ended when Silva ran Diana over.
    Getting out of his pickup and moving as if to render aid shows he was no longer acting
    out of a desire to harass, annoy, or hurt Diana. The evidence supports the inference that
    Silva’s decision to flee was about avoiding the consequences of his actions, not a part of
    any continuous course of conduct or single objective.
    Silva argues the continuous objective was to get away from Diana. That is, Silva
    argues that driving away while Diana was hanging on to the car, and driving away after
    running her over, were both actions taken with the intent of escaping Diana. But there is
    evidence Silva was keeping Diana trapped in his car by holding on to her arm, suggesting
    he was not trying to escape but actually trying to hurt her. Even setting this aside though,
    “[a] defendant may be punished multiple times for the same act without violating
    section 654 . . . if a series of acts are committed within a period of time during which
    reflection was possible.” (People v. Kelly (2016) 
    245 Cal.App.4th 1119
    , 1136.) Here
    there is evidence not just of time for reflection, but that Silva actually did reflect on his
    actions before fleeing. Silva got out of his pickup and approached Diana. When it became
    clear she couldn’t move, he uttered an expletive and left the scene. This evidence is more
    than sufficient to allow the trial court to conclude Silva both had time to, and actually did,
    stop to think about what he had done, and made a conscious decision to commit another
    criminal act.
    B.     Fines and Fees
    8
    Silva argues the trial court erred under People v. Dueñas (2019) 
    30 Cal.App.5th 1157
     (Dueñas), which held that imposition of certain fines and fees on indigent
    defendants, without any finding as to ability to pay, violates the due process guarantees in
    the United States Constitution and the California Constitution. (Dueñas, at p. 1168.) He
    argues we must reverse the fees, stay the imposed fines, and remand the case to the trial
    court to allow it to conduct an ability to pay hearing. The People argue Silva forfeited any
    error, that Dueñas was flawed, and that in any case any error was harmless. We agree
    with the People that any error was harmless, and so don’t reach their other arguments.
    Section 1202.4 requires the sentencing court to impose a minimum fine of $300
    for all felony convictions “unless it finds compelling and extraordinary reasons for not
    doing so.” (§ 1202.4, subd. (c).) However, the statute instructs that “inability to pay shall
    not be considered a compelling and extraordinary reason not to impose a restitution fine,”
    and “may be considered only in increasing the amount of the restitution fine in excess of
    the minimum.” (§ 1202.4, subd. (c), italics added.) In other words, section 1202.4
    prohibits courts from considering a defendant’s ability to pay if they are imposing the
    minimum restitution fine. In a similar vein, Penal Code section 1465.8 and Government
    Code section 70373 require mandatory assessments on every criminal conviction except
    parking convictions, without reference to any consideration of the defendant’s ability to
    pay. (Dueñas, supra, 30 Cal.App.5th at p. 1164.)
    But Dueñas changed the law and found unlawful section 1202.4’s prohibition on
    considering inability to pay for minimum restitution fines. Indeed, the Dueñas court
    9
    found that due process required an ability to pay hearing. The court held “that although
    Penal Code section 1202.4 bars consideration of a defendant’s ability to pay unless the
    judge is considering increasing the fee over the statutory minimum, the execution of any
    restitution fine imposed under this statute must be stayed unless and until the trial court
    holds an ability to pay hearing and concludes that the defendant has the present ability to
    pay the restitution fine.” (Dueñas, supra, 30 Cal.App.5th at p. 1164.)
    The Dueñas court reached a similar conclusion with respect to assessments
    imposed under Penal Code section 1465.8 and Government Code section 70373. Those
    provisions mandate assessments on every criminal conviction except parking convictions,
    without regard to the defendant’s ability to pay. (Dueñas, supra, 30 Cal.App.5th at
    p. 1164.) However, the court concluded “that due process of law requires the trial court to
    conduct an ability to pay hearing and ascertain a defendant’s present ability to pay before
    it imposes court facilities and court operations assessments under Penal Code
    section 1465.8 and Government Code section 70373.” (Ibid.)
    Under Dueñas, a trial court’s failure to consider ability to pay is not reversible per
    se, but instead subject to harmless error analysis. (People v. Jones (2019) 
    36 Cal.App.5th 1028
    , 1034-1035 (Jones).) Because an alleged error under Dueñas involves a violation of
    due process, we consider whether the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
    (Jones, at p. 1035; see Chapman v. California (1967) 
    386 U.S. 18
    , 24.) In two recent
    cases from our division, we concluded the alleged Dueñas errors were harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt because of the defendants’ good health, young age, and ability to earn
    10
    prison wages. (Jones, at p. 1035; People v. Cervantes (2020) 
    46 Cal.App.5th 213
    , 229
    (Cervantes).)
    We reach the same conclusion here. The trial court chose the statutory minimum
    for each fee and fine it imposed, for a total of $580. Any inquiry into Silva’s ability to
    pay this amount must consider his future earning capacity, and specifically his ability to
    obtain prison wages during his incarceration and after his release. (People v. Hennessey
    (1995) 
    37 Cal.App.4th 1830
    , 1837; see Jones, supra, 36 Cal.App.5th at p. 1035; People
    v. Johnson (2019) 
    35 Cal.App.5th 134
    , 138-139.)
    “[E]very able-bodied prisoner” must work while imprisoned. (§ 2700.) Prison
    wages range from $12 to $56 per month, depending on the job and skill level involved.
    (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 15, § 3041.2, subd. (a)(1).) At the time of sentencing, Silva was
    27 years old. Nothing in the record indicates he has any health conditions that would
    prevent him from working. Even if he was not earning any wages at the time of
    sentencing, he can potentially earn a minimum of $12 per month while incarcerated, at
    least $6 of which must go to paying his $300 restitution fine. (Jones, supra, 36
    Cal.App.5th at p. 1035.) Silva was sentenced to seven years in prison, with 263 days of
    custody credits. Rounding down, this means Silva will serve approximately 72 months in
    prison and could earn a minimum of $864 during that time. We recognize that “[a]n
    inmate’s assignment to a paid position is a privilege dependent on available funding, job
    performance, seniority and conduct” (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 15, § 3040, subd. (k)), but
    because Silva is young, there is a strong likelihood he will hold a paid position long
    11
    enough to satisfy his financial obligation. (Cervantes, supra, 46 Cal.App.5th at p. 229.)
    On this record, we find the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
    III
    DISPOSITION
    We affirm the judgment.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    SLOUGH
    J.
    We concur:
    RAMIREZ
    P. J.
    MILLER
    J.
    12
    

Document Info

Docket Number: E073970

Filed Date: 5/10/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 5/10/2021