People v. Bryant ( 2014 )


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  • Filed 12/18/13 (Opn. following remand from Supreme Court; Ct. of Appeal pub. order 1/14/14 [see last page])
    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    THE PEOPLE,                                                   D057570
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    v.                                                    (Super. Ct. No. SWF014495)
    AMALIA CATHERINE BRYANT,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Riverside County, Timothy F.
    Freer, Judge. Affirmed.
    Anthony J. Dain, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
    Appellant.
    Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Dane R. Gillette, Chief Assistant Attorney
    General, Gary W. Schons, Senior Assistant Attorney General, James H. Flaherty III, and
    Kristen Kinnaird Chenelia, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    I.
    INTRODUCTION
    Amalia Catherine Bryant killed her boyfriend with a knife. A jury found Byrant
    not guilty of first degree murder, but guilty of second degree murder (Pen. Code, §§ 187,
    subd. (a), 189).1 The jury also found that Bryant personally used a deadly or dangerous
    weapon within the meaning of section 12022, subdivision (b)(1), in committing the
    murder. The trial court sentenced Bryant to an aggregate term of 16 years to life in
    prison.
    In her initial briefing on appeal, Bryant claimed that the trial court erred in failing
    to instruct the jury sua sponte on involuntary manslaughter as a lesser included offense of
    murder, on the theory that she killed unlawfully while committing the misdemeanor
    offense of brandishing a weapon or performing a lawful act with criminal negligence.
    After the People filed their respondent's brief, we requested supplemental briefing
    concerning whether the trial court committed reversible error by not instructing the jury
    sua sponte that an unintentional killing without malice during the course of an inherently
    dangerous assaultive felony constitutes voluntary manslaughter. (See People v. Garcia
    (2008) 
    162 Cal. App. 4th 18
    , 31 (Garcia) [stating that "an unlawful killing during the
    commission of an inherently dangerous felony, even if unintentional, is at least voluntary
    manslaughter" (italics added)].) We further instructed the parties to assume that the
    1     Unless otherwise specified, all subsequent statutory references are to the Penal
    Code.
    2
    People were correct that Bryant committed, at a minimum, a felony assault with a deadly
    weapon.
    Bryant filed a supplemental brief in which she argued that the trial court should
    have instructed the jury on voluntary manslaughter, based on the theory set forth in our
    request for supplemental briefing, and that the error was prejudicial. The People
    responded that there was no evidentiary basis for the instruction and, alternatively, that
    any error in failing to instruct the jury on this theory of voluntary manslaughter was
    harmless. In our initial opinion in this matter, we reversed Bryant's murder conviction,
    concluding that "the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury on the lesser included
    offense of voluntary manslaughter, based on the theory articulated in Garcia." (People v.
    Bryant (Aug. 9, 2011, D057570), review granted and opn. ordered nonpub. Nov. 16,
    2011, S196365.)2
    The Supreme Court granted the People's petition for review and reversed our
    judgment. (People v. Bryant (2013) 
    56 Cal. 4th 959
    , 971 (Bryant).) The Supreme Court
    concluded:
    2      We rejected Bryant's claims that the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury
    sua sponte on involuntary manslaughter as a lesser included offense of murder on the
    theory that Bryant killed unlawfully in the commission of misdemeanor brandishing a
    weapon or in the commission of a lawful act committed with criminal negligence,
    reasoning that the evidence established that Bryant committed, at a minimum, an assault
    with a deadly weapon. (People v. 
    Bryant, supra
    , D057570.)
    3
    "A defendant who has killed without malice in the commission of an
    inherently dangerous assaultive felony[3] must have killed without
    either an intent to kill or a conscious disregard for life. Such a
    killing cannot be voluntary manslaughter because voluntary
    manslaughter requires either an intent to kill or a conscious disregard
    for life. To the extent that 
    [Garcia, supra
    , 162 Cal.App.4th at page
    31] suggested otherwise, it is now disapproved.
    "Because a killing without malice in the commission of an inherently
    dangerous assaultive felony is not voluntary manslaughter, the trial
    court could not have erred in failing to instruct the jury that it was."
    
    (Bryant, supra
    , at p. 970.)
    The Supreme Court expressly "decline[d] to address [Bryant's] alternative
    contention that, because assault with a deadly weapon is not an inherently dangerous
    felony, the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury on the theory of involuntary
    manslaughter recognized in [People v. Burroughs (1984) 
    35 Cal. 3d 824
    (Burroughs)]."
    
    (Bryant, supra
    , 56 Cal.4th at pp. 970-971, italics added.) The Bryant court remanded the
    matter to this court for proceedings consistent with its opinion. (Id. at p. 971.)
    In a concurring opinion, Justice Kennard concluded that "[b]ecause the defense
    here presented evidence from which the jury could have reasonably concluded that
    defendant lacked malice, but killed while committing an assault with a deadly weapon
    [citation], a jury instruction on involuntary manslaughter as a lesser offense necessarily
    included within the charged crime of murder would have been proper." 
    (Bryant, supra
    ,
    56 Cal.4th at p. 975 (conc. opn. of Kennard, J.), italics added.) However, Justice
    Kennard further concluded that the trial court did not have a sua sponte duty to provide
    3      Elsewhere in its opinion, the Supreme Court stated that "assault with a deadly
    weapon [is] an offense we assume to be inherently dangerous." 
    (Bryant, supra
    , 56
    Cal.4th at p. 966.)
    4
    such an instruction in this case because the legal principle on which the instruction would
    be based "has been so 'obfuscated by infrequent reference and inadequate elucidation' that
    it cannot be considered a general principle of law." (Ibid., quoting People v. Flannel
    (1979) 
    25 Cal. 3d 668
    , 681(Flannel).)
    On remand, Bryant claims that the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury
    sua sponte that an unlawful killing committed without malice in the course of an
    assaultive felony constitutes the crime of involuntary manslaughter.4 In light of Supreme
    Court authority concerning a trial court's sua sponte instructional duties, we must reject
    Bryant's contention.
    The Supreme Court has repeatedly held that a trial court has no sua sponte duty to
    instruct on a legal principle that has been "obfuscated by infrequent reference and
    inadequate elucidation." 
    (Flannel, supra
    , 25 Cal.3d at p. 681; see also People v.
    Michaels (2002) 
    28 Cal. 4th 486
    , 529 (Michaels) [a "trial court . . . has no duty
    to . . . instruct on doctrines of law that have not been established by authority"].) In this
    case, it is undisputed that there is no authority holding that an unlawful killing committed
    without malice in the course of an assaultive felony constitutes the crime of involuntary
    manslaughter. Thus, even assuming that the jury instruction that Bryant proffers in her
    4       Our rejection in People v. 
    Bryant, supra
    , D057570, of Bryant's argument that the
    trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury sua sponte on involuntary manslaughter as a
    lesser included offense of murder on the theory that she killed unlawfully in the
    commission of misdemeanor brandishing a weapon or in the commission of a lawful act
    committed with criminal negligence remains valid in the wake of the Supreme Court's
    reversal of our prior opinion on other grounds. Bryant does not contend otherwise.
    5
    briefing on remand is a correct statement of the law, under binding authority, the trial
    court had no sua sponte duty to provide such an instruction in this case. Accordingly, we
    affirm the judgment.
    II.
    FACTUAL BACKGROUND5
    "On November 24, 2005, neighbors responded to the apartment in which
    defendant lived with her boyfriend Robert Golden to find defendant screaming and
    Golden lying facedown in the front doorway. Defendant was pleading with Golden to
    'wake up.' Golden had a stab wound to the chest and no pulse; he was later pronounced
    dead at the hospital. During two police interviews and in testimony at trial, defendant
    recounted [the events that led to Golden's death]. She stated that during a physical
    altercation, she grabbed a knife from the kitchen and threatened to hurt Golden if he did
    not let her leave. Golden lunged for the knife, and the two struggled over it. Defendant
    broke free with the knife in her hand. When Golden [advanced] toward defendant, she
    made a thrusting motion at him with the knife, and it went into his chest. Defendant
    claimed that she never intended to kill Golden.
    "The trial court instructed the jury on first degree premeditated murder, second
    degree murder, and voluntary manslaughter based upon heat of passion and unreasonable
    self-defense, as well as the defense of reasonable self-defense. The jury convicted
    defendant of second degree murder and found true the allegation that she personally used
    5     Our factual background is taken from the Supreme Court's opinion in this matter.
    
    (Bryant, supra
    , 56 Cal.4th at pp. 963-964.)
    6
    a deadly weapon. The trial court sentenced defendant to 15 years to life in prison for
    murder, plus a consecutive year for the weapon enhancement." 
    (Bryant, supra
    , 56
    Cal.4th at pp. 963-964.)
    III.
    DISCUSSION
    The trial court did not err in failing to instruct the jury sua sponte that an unlawful
    killing committed without malice in the course of an assaultive felony constitutes the
    crime of involuntary manslaughter
    Bryant claims that the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury sua sponte that
    an unlawful killing committed without malice in the course of an assaultive felony
    constitutes the crime of involuntary manslaughter.
    A.       The People's contention that this court should not address Bryant's claim is
    without merit
    The People maintain that this court should not consider Bryant's jury instruction
    claim on remand, and offer two reasons in support of this contention. First, the People
    maintain that Bryant's claim is not within the scope of the Supreme Court's remand. In
    support of this argument, the People contend that Bryant raised the same claim in the
    Supreme Court, and the Supreme Court declined to consider the claim and remanded the
    matter to this court "for further proceedings consistent" with its opinion. 
    (Bryant, supra
    ,
    56 Cal.4th at p. 971.) We are not persuaded. Our considering on remand an issue not
    addressed by the Supreme Court is not inconsistent with the Supreme Court's opinion.
    Accordingly, we conclude that Bryant's claim is not outside the scope of the Supreme
    Court's remand.
    7
    The People also contend that Bryant is presenting this claim for the first time on
    remand, and that in doing so, she is "engaging in piecemeal litigation that is prejudicial to
    the People." We agree that Bryant did not offer this theory of instructional error6 in her
    initial briefing on appeal, but we exercise our discretion to consider her claim,
    notwithstanding any possible forfeiture, for the following reasons. First, at the time
    Bryant filed her initial briefing on appeal, the Court of Appeal in Garcia had concluded
    both that "[a]n unintentional killing, without malice, during the commission of an
    inherently dangerous felony does not constitute involuntary manslaughter" 
    (Garcia, supra
    , 162 Cal.App.4th at p. 26, italics altered) and that "an unlawful killing during the
    commission of an inherently dangerous felony, even if unintentional, is at least voluntary
    manslaughter." (Id. at p. 31.) However, in Bryant, our Supreme Court disapproved
    Garcia to the extent that it suggests that "[a] defendant who has killed without malice in
    the commission of an inherently dangerous assaultive felony" has committed voluntary
    manslaughter. 
    (Bryant, supra
    , 56 Cal.4th at p. 970.) Further, in her concurring opinion
    in Bryant, Justice Kennard expressly stated that "an assault with a deadly weapon [can]
    constitute an unlawful act that makes a killing occurring during the assault involuntary
    manslaughter." 
    (Bryant, supra
    , at p. 971 (conc. opn. of Kennard, J.).) Justice Kennard
    also observed that although the issue is not "a ground on which [the Supreme Court]
    granted review," it is an issue "closely connected to the facts of this case." (Ibid.) We
    6       Bryant did contend in her initial briefing on appeal that the trial court erred in
    failing to instruct the jury sua sponte on involuntary manslaughter, albeit for reasons
    different from those that she asserts on remand from the Supreme Court. (See fns. 2 and
    4, ante.)
    8
    conclude that there has thus been a material change in the law, warranting our exercise of
    discretion to consider Bryant's claim, despite her failure to present this argument in her
    initial briefing on appeal.
    With respect to the People's contention that Bryant has engaged in "piecemeal
    litigation," we note that the position that the People took in the Supreme Court in this
    matter is directly contrary to the position they previously advocated in their opposition to
    Bryant's appeal in this court. As noted previously, after the initial briefing on appeal in
    this court was complete, we asked the parties to submit supplemental letter briefs
    addressing the following question: "Did the trial court commit reversible error by not
    instructing the jury sua sponte that an unintentional killing without malice during the
    course of an inherently dangerous assaultive felony constitutes voluntary manslaughter?
    (See 
    [Garcia, supra
    , 
    162 Cal. App. 4th 18
    ].)"
    In their response to our request, the People conceded the existence of such a sua
    sponte duty, stating in their supplemental letter brief, "[T]he trial court [had] a sua sponte
    duty to instruct on the Garcia theory of voluntary manslaughter if there were substantial
    evidence that appellant did not subjectively appreciate that her conduct endangered
    [Robert's] life." Notwithstanding their concession in this court of the existence of a trial
    court's sua sponte duty to instruct on the Garcia theory of voluntary manslaughter, where
    factually supported, the People argued in the Supreme Court that "the Garcia [court] did
    not articulate an additional theory of manslaughter" and that this court "adopted the
    Garcia theory of voluntary manslaughter as if [by] divine writ . . . ."
    9
    Accordingly, in light of the material change in the law, the significant change in
    the People's litigation posture, and the People's failure to demonstrate any actual
    prejudice caused by Bryant's failure to raise this claim in her initial briefing on appeal,
    we exercise our discretion to consider Bryant's claim that the trial court erred in failing to
    instruct the jury sua sponte that an unlawful killing committed without malice in the
    course of an assaultive felony constitutes the crime of involuntary manslaughter,
    notwithstanding her failure to raise this claim in her initial briefing on appeal.
    B.     The trial court did not have a sua sponte duty to instruct on Bryant's novel theory
    of involuntary manslaughter
    1.     A trial court has no duty to instruct on a legal principle that has been so
    "obfuscated by infrequent reference and inadequate elucidation" that it
    cannot be considered a general principle of law 
    (Flannel, supra
    , 25 Cal.3d
    at p. 681.)
    In 
    Flannel, supra
    , 
    25 Cal. 3d 668
    , the court considered whether a "[trial] court
    erred in failing to instruct the jury sua sponte that defendant's honest but unreasonable
    belief that he must defend himself from deadly attack negates malice so that the offense
    is reduced from murder to manslaughter." (Id. at p. 672.) The Flannel court
    acknowledged that "decisions, including those of this court, recognize, albeit without full
    discussion, that one who holds an honest but unreasonable belief in the necessity to
    defend against imminent peril to life or great bodily injury does not harbor malice and
    commits no greater offense than manslaughter." (Ibid.) The Flannel court further
    observed "it has been legal doctrine, even though infrequently applied in the past, that a
    genuine but unreasonably held belief negates the mental state of malice aforethought that
    is necessary for a murder conviction." (Id. at p. 682.)
    10
    Despite the existence of such doctrinal underpinnings, the Flannel court held that
    the trial court in that case had no sua sponte duty to instruct the jury on the law of
    imperfect self-defense. 
    (Flannel, supra
    , 25 Cal.3d at p. 682.) The Flannel court
    reasoned:
    "[A] trial court's duty to instruct sua sponte on this defense[7] arises
    only in a case in which the evidence presents issues relevant to
    'general principles of law.' When a rule applies so seldom that
    courts have found no occasion to give it full, substantive discussion
    and California Jury Instructions, Criminal (CALJIC) has not set it
    out as a standard instruction, we decline to proclaim that, heretofore,
    the rule expressed a general principle. We conclude that the court
    did not err in failing to instruct of its own motion." (Id. at p. 672.)
    The Supreme Court explained its holding that a trial court has no sua sponte duty
    to instruct on novel legal theories, stating that such theories have not received sufficient
    elucidation to constitute a "general principle[] of law." 
    (Flannel, supra
    , 25 Cal.3d at p.
    681.) The Flannel court reasoned:
    "[T]he sua sponte 'rule seems undoubtedly designed to promote the
    ends of justice by providing some judicial safeguards for defendants
    from the possible vagaries of ineptness of counsel under the
    adversary system. Yet the trial court cannot be required to anticipate
    every possible theory that may fit the facts of the case before it and
    instruct the jury accordingly. The judge need not fill in every time a
    litigant or his counsel fails to discover an abstruse but possible
    theory of the facts.' [Citation.] Given the undeveloped state of the
    unreasonable belief rule, we cannot impose upon the instant trial
    court so formidable a duty as to conceive and concoct an instruction
    7      In People v. Barton (1995) 
    12 Cal. 4th 186
    , 200, the Supreme Court explained that
    " 'unreasonable self-defense' is . . . not a true defense; rather, it is a shorthand description
    of one form of voluntary manslaughter."
    11
    embodying that rule. 'The duty of the trial court involves
    percipience—not omniscience.' [Citations.]"8 (Id. at p. 683.)
    Similarly, in 
    Michaels, supra
    , 
    28 Cal. 4th 486
    , the Supreme Court concluded that a
    trial court did not have a sua sponte duty to instruct on "unreasonable or imperfect
    defense of others" (id. at p. 529), because a "trial court . . . has no duty to so instruct on
    doctrines of law that have not been established by authority." (Ibid.) In reaching this
    conclusion, the Michaels court applied Flannel and its progeny:
    "Flannel held that a trial court was not required to instruct on
    imperfect self-defense until that defense was recognized by
    California decisions. ([
    Flannel, supra
    , 25 Cal.3d at pp. 680–683].)
    Applying the same analysis, courts have refused to require a trial
    court to instruct on its own motion that an unreasonable belief one is
    acting under duress is a partial defense to robbery (People v.
    Bacigalupo (1991) 
    1 Cal. 4th 103
    , 125–126 (Bacigalupo I)); that
    imperfect self-defense is a defense to the crime of torture (People v.
    Vital (1996) 
    45 Cal. App. 4th 441
    , 446); or that imperfect self-defense
    is a defense to the crime of mayhem (People v. Sekona (1994) 
    27 Cal. App. 4th 443
    , 451).
    "This reasoning governs here. At the time of defendant's trial, the
    concept of imperfect defense of others was not a commonly known
    and established defense. We acknowledge that this concept follows
    logically from the interplay between statutory and decisional
    law. . . . But the trial court here was not required to so instruct on its
    own motion, because the doctrine of imperfect or unreasonable self-
    defense was not a well-established legal doctrine under California
    law." (
    Michaels, supra
    , 28 Cal.4th at p. 530.)
    In sum, the Supreme Court has repeatedly held that a legal concept that has been
    referred to only infrequently, and then with " 'inadequate elucidation,' " cannot be
    8      Although the Flannel court concluded that the trial court did not have a sua sponte
    duty to instruct the jury in that case concerning the doctrine of imperfect self-defense, the
    Flannel court stated that in all subsequent cases, trial courts would have such duty.
    
    (Flannel, supra
    , 25 Cal.3d at p. 683.)
    12
    considered a general principle of law requiring a sua sponte jury instruction. 
    (Flannel, supra
    , 25 Cal.3d at p. 681; accord In re Christian S. (1994) 
    7 Cal. 4th 768
    , 774 ["We
    observed in [
    Flannel, supra
    , 25 Cal.3d at page 681] that the doctrine [of imperfect self-
    defense] had been 'obfuscated by infrequent reference and inadequate elucidation' and
    thus, before the trial in that case, had not become a general principle of law requiring a
    sua sponte instruction"].)
    2.     The trial court had no sua sponte duty to instruct the jury that an unlawful
    killing committed without malice in the course of an assaultive felony
    constitutes the crime of involuntary manslaughter
    In her supplemental brief on remand, Bryant offers two theories in support of her
    contention that the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury sua sponte that an
    unlawful killing committed without malice in the course of an assaultive felony
    constitutes the crime of involuntary manslaughter. First, she argues that such an
    instruction was required pursuant to 
    Burroughs, supra
    , 
    35 Cal. 3d 824
    . In Burroughs, the
    Supreme Court stated, "[A]n unintentional homicide committed in the course of a
    noninherently dangerous felony may properly support a conviction of involuntary
    manslaughter, if that felony is committed without due caution and circumspection." (Id.
    at p. 835.) Second, Bryant argues that because manslaughter functions as a " 'catch-all'
    concept," which includes "all unlawful homicides that do not amount to murder . . . this
    Court should conclude that an unlawful killing without malice in the course of a felony
    assault with a deadly weapon is necessarily involuntary manslaughter . . . ."
    Bryant does not dispute that there is no authority holding that an unlawful killing
    committed without malice in the course of an assaultive felony constitutes the crime of
    13
    involuntary manslaughter, pursuant to either theory.9 In light of the lack of authority in
    support of either theory of involuntary manslaughter, it is clear that pursuant to the
    Supreme Court law cited above, the trial court did not have a sua sponte duty to instruct
    the jury that an unlawful killing committed without malice in the course of an assaultive
    felony constitutes the crime of involuntary manslaughter.10 (See e.g., 
    Michaels, supra
    ,
    28 Cal.4th at p. 529 ["trial court . . . has no duty to instruct on doctrines of law that have
    not been established by authority"]; accord 
    Flannel, supra
    , 25 Cal.3d at p. 682.)11
    IV.
    9      Bryant expressly acknowledges that "there appears to be no currently valid
    published case which addresses the issue of whether the crime of assault with a deadly
    weapon is a felony inherently dangerous to life." Bryant also does not cite any case in
    which a court has relied on the "catch-all" nature of manslaughter to conclude that an
    unlawful killing committed without malice in the course of an assaultive felony
    constitutes the crime of involuntary manslaughter.
    10     In her concurring opinion in Bryant, Justice Kennard persuasively articulates why
    such an instruction is a proper statement of the law. 
    (Bryant, supra
    , 56 Cal.4th at pp.
    971-975 (conc. opn. of Kennard, J.).) However, we need not expressly decide whether
    such an instruction is or is not a proper statement of the law, because even assuming that
    Justice Kennard's view is correct, there was no sua sponte duty to instruct in this case, for
    the reasons stated in the text. (See 
    Bryant, supra
    , 56 Cal.4th at p. 975 (conc. opn. of
    Kennard, J.) [stating that while "a jury instruction on involuntary manslaughter as a lesser
    offense necessarily included within the charged crime of murder would have been
    proper," the trial court had no sua sponte duty to provide such an instruction, citing
    Flannel].)
    11      Bryant's supplemental brief contains a single sentence in which she argues, "[T]o
    the extent a request for such an instruction from trial counsel was required . . . appellant
    received the ineffective assistance of counsel." Bryant did not present this claim in her
    initial briefing on appeal, and she has not adequately briefed the issue of ineffective
    assistance of counsel in her supplemental briefing on remand. Accordingly, we deem
    Bryant's claim of ineffective of assistance of counsel forfeited for purposes of this appeal,
    and decline to consider the merits of that claim.
    14
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed.
    AARON, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    NARES, Acting P. J.
    McINTYRE, J.
    15
    AARON, J. concurring:
    While Bryant's claim fails in light of the Supreme Court authority discussed in the
    majority opinion, I write separately to express my disagreement with the "inadequate
    elucidation" doctrine (People v. Flannel (1979) 
    25 Cal. 3d 668
    , 681) and to urge that it be
    reconsidered. In my view, a trial court's obligation to instruct sua sponte should turn not
    upon the frequency with which a principle appears in case law, but rather, upon the
    clarity of the legal principle involved and whether that principle applies to a given set of
    facts. (Cf. People v. Sedeno (1974) 
    10 Cal. 3d 703
    , 715 [" 'It is settled that in criminal
    cases, even in the absence of a request, the trial court must instruct on the general
    principles of law relevant to the issues raised by the evidence. [Citations.] The general
    principles of law governing the case are those principles closely and openly connected
    with the facts before the court, and which are necessary for the jury's understanding of
    the case.' [Citation.]"].)
    To conclude otherwise allows the possibility that a defendant may stand convicted
    of an offense merely because the facts of the defendant's case do not fall within well-
    established doctrine, even if the law does not support the conviction. The fact that no
    court has previously articulated the validity of the defendant's appellate claim is not a
    sufficient reason to deny that defendant a new trial at which the jury is properly
    instructed. Most fundamentally, case law to the effect that a defendant is entitled only to
    jury instructions that are rooted in "well-established legal doctrine" (People v. Michaels
    (2002) 
    28 Cal. 4th 486
    , 530) represents, in my view, an unwarranted departure from the
    ordinary rule that decisions that "explain or refine the holding of a prior case, those which
    apply an existing precedent to a different fact situation, even if the result may be said to
    'extend' the precedent, or those which draw a conclusion that was clearly implied in or
    anticipated by previous opinions," apply fully to a defendant's case on appeal. (People v.
    Guerra (1984) 
    37 Cal. 3d 385
    , 399; see e.g., Correa v. Superior Court (2002) 
    27 Cal. 4th 444
    , 463, fn. 5 ["Our holding is applicable to defendant's case and applies fully
    retroactively, as is the norm for judicial decisions"].)
    Courts ordinarily apply even a change in the law on direct appeal, regardless of
    whether the trial court could have reasonably been expected to have anticipated such a
    change. (See, e.g., People v. Carter (2005) 
    36 Cal. 4th 1114
    , 1144 ["the general rule [is]
    that judicial decisions, even those overruling prior authority, have full retroactive
    effect"].) For example, if a trial court, relying on past Supreme Court precedents,
    instructs on an offense, that trial court is deemed to have erred if the Supreme Court
    overrules those precedents on appeal. (People v. Chun (2009) 
    45 Cal. 4th 1172
    , 1200-
    1201 (Chun).) In Chun, the court stated:
    "We overrule People v. Robertson [(2004)] 
    34 Cal. 4th 156
    , and the
    reasoning, although not the result, of People v. Randle [(2005)] 
    35 Cal. 4th 987
    . This conclusion means the trial court erred in this case
    in instructing the jury on the second degree felony-murder rule."
    
    (Chun, supra
    , at p. 1201.)
    In a footnote following this quotation, the Chun court explained that the trial court
    in that case had erred, even though the court had correctly applied the law as it existed at
    the time of trial:
    "When we say the trial court erred, we mean, of course, only in light
    of our reconsideration of past precedents. As of the time of
    trial, . . . ample authority supported the trial court's decision to
    2
    instruct on felony murder." 
    (Chun, supra
    , 45 Cal.4th at p. 1201, fn.
    8.)
    I agree that, where warranted by an evolution in the law, a trial court may be
    reversed for instructional error even if the trial court correctly applied binding precedent
    in giving the instruction in question. If this is the case, then a trial court should be held to
    have committed reversible error for failing to instruct in accordance with the logical
    evolution of the law, where there is no controlling authority to the contrary. In short, the
    principal rationale that the Supreme Court has provided—the unfairness of requiring a
    trial court to anticipate developments in the law 
    (Flannel, supra
    , 25 Cal.3d at p. 683)—is,
    in my view, an insufficient justification for creating an exception to the ordinary rule that
    "a trial court must instruct on the general principles of law governing the case, i.e., those
    principles relevant to the issues raised by the evidence." (Id. at pp. 680-681.)
    A court commits error where it acts contrary to a higher court's articulation of the
    law, even if such error is understandable given the state of the law at the time the lower
    court acted. (See, e.g., 
    Chun, supra
    , 45 Cal.4th at pp. 1200-1201; People v.
    Hendrix (2013) 
    214 Cal. App. 4th 216
    , 239 ["We conclude that the trial court's legal
    analysis here was erroneous. The error is understandable because this case presents a
    significantly different context for the application of the decisional law related to
    [Evidence Code] section 1101, subdivision (b)"]; People v. Torres (2005) 
    127 Cal. App. 4th 1391
    , 1400-1401 ["As modified, the instruction thus required defendant to
    meet the burden of proving he was incapable of distinguishing right from both legal and
    moral wrong at the time he committed the crimes. This was error. [¶ ]The trial court's
    3
    focus on moral wrong was understandable in light of case law on the matter"].) I see no
    reason to employ a different rule with respect to the asserted instructional error of the
    type at issue in this case.
    In sum, in my view, the novelty of application of a legal principle is not a
    sufficient basis upon which to conclude that a defendant should be deprived of the benefit
    of otherwise legally correct instruction on the applicable law. I would urge the Supreme
    Court to reconsider this aspect of Flannel and its progeny, while recognizing that, in the
    interim, this court remains bound by such precedent.
    AARON, J.
    4
    Filed 1/13/14
    OPINION ON REMAND FROM THE CALIFORNIA SUPREME COURT
    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    THE PEOPLE,                                       D057570
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    v.                                        (Super. Ct. No. SWF014495)
    AMALIA CATHERINE BRYANT,                         ORDER CERTIFYING OPINION
    FOR PUBLICATION
    Defendant and Appellant.
    THE COURT:
    The opinion filed on December 18, 2013, is ordered certified for publication.
    NARES, Acting P. J.
    5