People v. Zevallos CA1/1 ( 2021 )


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  • Filed 1/21/21 P. v. Zevallos CA1/1
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or
    ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    A156332
    v.
    ADAIR JERU ENRIQUEZ                                                    (San Mateo County
    ZEVALLOS,                                                              Super. Ct. No. 16SF014091)
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Defendant Adair Jeru Enriquez Zevallos was convicted by jury of
    murder (Pen. Code, § 187, subd. (a)1) and assault on a child causing death
    (§ 273ab, subd. (a)). It was further alleged, and the trial court found,
    defendant was ineligible for probation because he personally inflicted great
    bodily injury (§ 1203.075, subd. (a)). He raises two issues on appeal—that
    the prosecutor committed “Griffin”2 error during closing argument, and the
    trial court committed “Dueñas”3 error in imposing fines and fees without
    determining defendant’s ability to pay. We affirm.
    All further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless
    1
    otherwise designated.
    2    Griffin v. California (1965) 
    380 U.S. 609
     (Griffin).
    3    People v. Dueñas (2019) 
    30 Cal.App.5th 1157
     (Dueñas).
    1
    DISCUSSION4
    “Griffin” Error
    The rule established in Griffin, 
    supra,
     
    380 U.S. 609
    , prohibits a
    prosecutor from commenting upon a defendant’s failure to testify. (People v.
    Thomas (2012) 
    54 Cal.4th 908
    , 945 (Thomas).) A prosecutor indirectly
    violates the rule “ ‘if he or she argues to the jury that certain testimony or
    evidence is uncontradicted, [and] if such contradiction or denial could be
    provided only by the defendant. . . .’ ” (Ibid.) Similarly, under the Griffin
    rule, a prosecutor “cannot refer to the absence of evidence that only the
    defendant’s testimony could provide.” (People v. Brady (2010) 
    50 Cal.4th 547
    ,
    565–566, italics added.)
    However, the rule does not otherwise forbid comment on the absence of
    defense evidence. (See People v. Taylor (2010) 
    48 Cal.4th 574
    , 632–633 [no
    Griffin error in prosecutor’s comments on defendant’s failure to call any
    witnesses, such as a hypothetical friend or neighbor, to provide nonfelonious
    reason for defendant’s entry into victim’s home]; Thomas, supra, 54 Cal.4th
    at p. 945 [no Griffin error in prosecutor’s comments on absence of alibi
    evidence “framed in terms of the failure to call some person other than
    defendant”]; People v. Sanchez (2014) 
    228 Cal.App.4th 1517
    , 1526–1527
    (Sanchez) [no Griffin error in prosecutor’s comments emphasizing defense’s
    failure to explain defendant’s presence at crime scene, where other logical
    witness could have testified on the subject].)
    Defendant complains about the following portion of the prosecutor’s
    closing argument:
    “So let’s talk about the evidence that we’ve got. I want to
    4 We address the pertinent facts and procedural history in connection
    with our discussion of the issues raised on appeal.
    2
    start with what Dr. Tayama [the People’s child abuse
    expert] would characterize as the history. What she told us
    is that in the course of her job duties, she is making
    evaluations about whether a child is suffering from child
    abuse. One of the many things she considered and one of
    the things I’m asking you to consider, although I want you
    to consider every single thing in this case and totality of the
    circumstances, is the history that we know regarding what
    happened to Leia. And it’s not much.
    “Here is a quote, and this is verbatim from the 911 call of
    what the defendant told the dispatcher in the 911 call.
    Quote, ‘Okay. So I just got finished feeding my daughter
    food and I made her go to the bathroom and she went No. 2.
    And then she got off the toilet, laid down on the bed, and she
    turned really, really pale. She is unresponsive, very faint,
    breathing, and she looks like she is in pain. And she is like
    very, very—like she is lethargic. She is floppy and’—and
    then a word that we couldn’t make out. That’s it. That’s the
    history from the 911 call.
    “There is no explanation as to anything that might have
    caused the trauma or the bruising that we see on Leia’s
    body. So what else do we know that he said that day? So
    the paramedics, again, no indication of any trauma. This
    vague sort of I put her down and then she was having all
    these weird symptoms.
    “Does that seem strange that the people who are treating
    this girl who is obviously in severe medical distress, that
    there is a complete absence to the treating doctors or
    paramedics of what may have caused this so that they can
    actually treat her? And what we call that is a consciousness
    of guilt. That he is telling the 911 dispatcher and the
    paramedics only a part of the story because there must have
    been something significantly more based on the trauma to
    her body.
    “What did he tell [the child’s mother]? What did he tell the
    mother of Leia? ‘I don’t know what happened.’ She said he
    made reference to some possible choking that he thought he
    heard the paramedics maybe say. Of course, we heard from
    3
    Dr. Rogers [(the pathologist who performed the autopsy)]
    there is no evidence of anything choking related that
    caused her death or caused any of her injuries. He just
    repeatedly said ‘I don’t know.’
    “And that’s it. That is the history as given to the 911 call
    taker, as given to the treating paramedics who were on
    scene desperately trying to save her life and as told to the
    mother who wanted to know what in the world happened to
    my daughter that she died? When I left, she was perfectly
    fine with no medical symptoms whatsoever.
    “And this is what Dr. Tayama was talking about when
    considering the history and the absence of a history that
    might explain the injuries, the absence of, well, this child
    was in a fall or got hit with something or struck with
    something or was in a car accident or whatever the history
    might be to explain it, the absence of that or the
    inconsistency of the story presented is one of the factors
    that she considers in making a determination as to whether
    or not this is a case of child abuse. And that’s exactly what
    we have here is there is the absence in these three
    statements to explain any type of potential trauma of the
    type that we saw on Leia’s body.”
    Defendant maintains the prosecutor was effectively urging the jury to
    infer guilt based on his failure to testify and provide an explanation for the
    child victim’s condition. Specifically, defendant maintains the prosecutor was
    chastising him for not introducing “direct[]” evidence that proved his actions
    at the time, which he claims could come only through “his own testimony.”
    The Attorney General asserts defendant forfeited any claim of error
    because he failed to object to the prosecutor’s argument. It is well-
    established that a claim of Griffin error is forfeited in the absence of a timely
    objection. (See People v. Valdez (2004) 
    32 Cal.4th 73
    , 127; People v. Brown
    (2003) 
    31 Cal.4th 518
    , 554.)
    4
    Defendant claims he did not forfeit the issue because any objection
    would have been futile, pointing out that one of the issues he raised in a new
    trial motion was the prosecutor’s alleged Griffin error. He cites no authority,
    however, for the proposition that belatedly raising the issue is sufficient to
    preserve the issue on appeal. (See People v. Bonilla (2007) 
    41 Cal.4th 313
    ,
    336 [“We have never expanded the futility exception to encompass a situation
    where, as here, the defendant made a belated objection after forgoing
    multiple earlier opportunities to object, and we decline to do so here”].)
    We therefore conclude defendant forfeited the issue. Anticipating this,
    defendant urges us to consider his Griffin error claim as one of ineffective
    assistance of counsel.
    “ ‘ “In order to establish a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel,
    defendant bears the burden of demonstrating, first, that counsel’s
    performance was deficient because it ‘fell below an objective standard of
    reasonableness [¶] . . . under prevailing professional norms.’ [Citations.]
    Unless a defendant establishes the contrary, we shall presume that ‘counsel’s
    performance fell within the wide range of professional competence and that
    counsel’s actions and inactions can be explained as a matter of sound trial
    strategy.’ [Citation.] If the record ‘sheds no light on why counsel acted or
    failed to act in the manner challenged,’ an appellate claim of ineffective
    assistance of counsel must be rejected ‘unless counsel was asked for an
    explanation and failed to provide one, or unless there simply could be no
    satisfactory explanation.’ [Citations.] If a defendant meets the burden of
    establishing that counsel’s performance was deficient, he or she also must
    show that counsel’s deficiencies resulted in prejudice, that is, a ‘reasonable
    probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the
    5
    proceeding would have been different.’ ” ’ ” (People v. Henderson (2020)
    
    46 Cal.App.5th 533
    , 549 (Henderson).)
    The record does not disclose why defense counsel remained silent, and
    there certainly is a “plausible tactical reason” for the absence of an
    objection—namely, “counsel could have decided to refrain from objecting to
    avoid drawing the jury’s attention to arguments detrimental to the defense
    case. (See, e.g., People v. Harris (2008) 
    43 Cal.4th 1269
    , 1290. . . .) The
    decision whether to object to an argument is an inherently tactical one that is
    not ordinarily reviewable on appeal. (Harris, at p. 1290. . . .) And usually,
    ‘ “where counsel’s trial tactics or strategic reasons for challenged decisions do
    not appear on the record, we will not find ineffective assistance of counsel on
    appeal unless there could be no conceivable reason for counsel’s acts or
    omissions.” ’ (People v. Nguyen (2015) 
    61 Cal.4th 1015
    , 1051. . . .)”
    (Henderson, supra, 46 Cal.App.5th at p. 549.) There is nothing in the record
    before us to suggest we should reach a contrary conclusion here.
    Indeed, there was no cause for an objection because no Griffin error
    occurred. The prosecutor made no express reference to defendant’s failure to
    testify, nor did she allude to any exculpatory evidence explaining the cause of
    the child’s death that only defendant, himself, could have supplied. Rather,
    the challenged passage is from that part of the prosecutor’s argument urging
    that this was not a case of criminal negligence, but of implied malice—if “this
    is actually conscious disregard [of human life] when you consider the location
    of all the injuries, the number of all of the injuries, all of the evidence in this
    case.” The prosecutor then reviewed, in painstaking detail, all the evidence
    in the case, from store video that morning showing the child toddling after
    defendant, to the text to the mother around noontime expressing great
    frustration with the child, to the Facetime call to the mother less than 30
    6
    minutes later telling her something was wrong with the child, to the
    defendant’s 911 call (which mother had told him to make), to the testimony of
    the paramedics, and the graphic testimony of the pathologist and photos of
    the extensive, brutal injuries suffered by the child. All of the evidence,
    argued the prosecutor, established far more than reasonable provocation and
    showed conscious disregard of “human life of a human who stands three feet
    tall and weighs 30 pounds.” In short, in the challenged portion of the
    argument, the prosecutor was focusing on what defendant said at the time,
    and why that evidence, along with all the other evidence, was important in
    terms of whether it was a case of manslaughter or murder. This was
    commentary on the evidence, not Griffin error. (See Sanchez, supra,
    228 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1526–1527.)
    In fact, the prosecutor readily acknowledged the evidence did not show
    “exactly what” defendant did to the victim. What was critical, however, said
    the prosecutor, was that both the pathologist and the child abuse expert
    testified “your pancreas does not spontaneously split in half. That does not
    happen absent blunt force trauma,” and the evidence established that trauma
    of that sort, regardless of its exact nature, occurred shortly before defendant
    called 911. The prosecutor continued, “We know her pancreas was not split
    in half in the hour before he called 911, and we know her bowel did not
    become detached from her mesentery and she did not go into cardiac arrest
    spontaneously. Some act caused those things to happen, and we may not be
    able to pinpoint exactly what that act was, but that doesn’t matter as long as
    you believe for purposes of these instructions that the defendant did some act
    that caused those injuries. That is the critical inquiry in a case like this.”
    Furthermore, even had an objection been warranted, any supposed
    error was not prejudicial. The complained-of comments were a fraction of the
    7
    prosecutor’s argument. The jury was instructed on defendant’s right not to
    testify (CALCRIM No. 355) and we must presume the jury followed the
    instructions given. (People v. Bennett (2009) 
    45 Cal.4th 577
    , 596.) And there
    was overwhelming evidence supporting the convictions. The child was in
    defendant’s care at the time, and around lunchtime, he texted the mother
    expressing great frustration with the child. Less than 30 minutes later,
    defendant Facetimed mother saying “something” was wrong with the child;
    mother told him to call 911. When paramedics arrived, the child was in
    critical condition, and continued to deteriorate. At the hospital, the child was
    declared dead. The autopsy revealed extensive bruising on her face, neck,
    head, left hand and forearm, both legs, chest, abdomen, and back. The
    pathologist believed most of the bruising was inflicted within three days of
    her death, and perhaps within minutes of it. In addition, her small bowel
    mesentery was damaged, and her pancreas had been “broken in two.” He
    testified the cause of death was “blunt injuries to the abdomen.” In short,
    any error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. (See Chapman v.
    California (1967) 
    386 U.S. 18
    , 24.)
    “Dueñas” Error
    The court imposed a $60 court facilities assessment (Gov. Code,
    § 70373), an $80 court operations assessment (§ 1465.8), and a $10,000
    restitution fine (§ 1202.4). Citing Dueñas, supra, 
    30 Cal.App.5th 1157
    ,
    defendant claims the trial court violated his constitutional rights by imposing
    the assessments and restitution fine without holding a hearing on his ability
    to pay.
    In Dueñas, the defendant was a chronically-ill, unemployed homeless
    woman with cerebral palsy and a limited education who supported her two
    children through public aid. (Dueñas, supra, 30 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1160–
    8
    1161.) She had lost her driver’s license because of her inability to pay her
    juvenile citations and then had acquired three misdemeanor convictions for
    driving without a license because the accumulating fines and fees prevented
    her from clearing the citations and recovering her license. (Id. at p. 1161.)
    She experienced a series of “cascading consequences” due to “a series of
    criminal proceedings driven by, and contributing to, [her] poverty,” and she
    had already been ordered to pay the charges by the end of her probation
    period. (Id. at pp. 1160, 1163–1164.) The Court of Appeal reversed the
    challenged assessments, holding “the assessment provisions of Government
    Code section 70373 and Penal Code section 1465.8, if imposed without a
    determination that the defendant is able to pay, are . . . fundamentally unfair
    [and] imposing these assessments upon indigent defendants without a
    determination that they have the present ability to pay violates due
    process. . . .” (Dueñas, at p. 1168.) It also ordered the trial court to stay the
    restitution fine “unless and until the People prove that [the defendant] has
    the present ability to pay it.” (Id. at pp. 1172–1173.)
    The Attorney General maintains defendant also forfeited his “Dueñas”
    challenge since he failed to object on ability to pay grounds in the trial court.
    Defendant claims his failure to object should be excused (a) because
    imposition of the assessments and fine without first determining his ability
    to pay constitutes legal, indeed constitutional, error, which is correctible
    despite his failure to preserve the issue on appeal, and (b) Dueñas
    represented a “dramatic” and “unforeseen” change in the law and any
    objection would have been futile.
    Since the briefing was completed in this case, the majority of appellate
    courts have distinguished or disagreed with Dueñas, and the Supreme Court
    has granted review to consider its analysis. (People v. Kopp (2019)
    9
    
    38 Cal.App.5th 47
    , review granted Nov. 13, 2019, S257844.) However, we
    need not weigh in on the merits of Dueñas’s analysis.
    In cases where the trial court imposes a restitution fine exceeding the
    statutory minimum and the defendant voices no objection on ability to pay
    grounds, as was the case here, the courts have concluded the defendant has
    forfeited any complaint that the trial court failed to hold an ability to pay
    hearing.
    Section 1202.4 requires the imposition of a restitution fine upon
    conviction of a crime, unless the court “finds compelling and extraordinary
    reasons for not doing so.” (§ 1202.4, subd. (b).) The minimum restitution fine
    for felony convictions is $300, and the maximum fine is $10,000. (Id., subd.
    (b)(1).) The statute expressly provides that “[a] defendant’s inability to pay
    shall not be considered a compelling and extraordinary reason not to impose
    a restitution fine.” (Id., subd. (c).) However, “[i]nability to pay may be
    considered . . . in increasing the amount of the restitution fine in excess of the
    minimum fine pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (b).” (Ibid.) The
    burden of demonstrating such inability to pay lies with the defendant. (Id.,
    subd. (d).)
    Defendant concedes he did not object to imposition of the maximum
    restitution fine. Such an objection clearly would not have been futile as trial
    courts are statutorily authorized to consider a defendant’s inability to pay
    any restitution fine above the statutory minimum. (§ 1202.4, subds. (c) &
    (d).)
    We therefore conclude defendant forfeited any Dueñas challenge not
    only to the restitution fine, but also to the other minimal assessments
    imposed by the court. (See People v. Smith (2020) 
    46 Cal.App.5th 375
    , 395;
    People v. Gutierrez (2019) 
    35 Cal.App.5th 1027
    , 1033 [“As a practical matter,
    10
    if Gutierrez chose not to object to a $10,000 restitution fine based on an
    inability to pay, he surely would not complain on similar grounds regarding
    an additional $1,300 in fees.” The court also noted that “even before Dueñas
    a defendant had every incentive to object to imposition of a maximum
    restitution fine based on inability to pay. . . .”]; People v. Frandsen (2019)
    
    33 Cal.App.5th 1126
    , 1154 [“Given his failure to object to a $10,000
    restitution fine based on inability to pay, Frandsen has not shown a basis to
    vacate assessments totaling $120 for inability to pay.”].)
    Finally, even if defendant had objected on failure to pay grounds and
    even assuming Dueñas’s analysis is sound and applicable, the record
    demonstrates any supposed error in failing to hold an ability to pay hearing
    was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. (See People v. Aviles (2019)
    
    39 Cal.App.5th 1055
    , 1075–1077 [rejecting Dueñas claim where, although no
    ability to pay hearing was held, record showed any error was harmless].)
    Defendant was sentenced to a prison term of 25 years to life. Nothing in the
    record indicates he will be ineligible for or unable to perform prison work
    assignments. Prior to the offenses, defendant worked in retail,
    restaurant/bar service, and the automotive repair trade. His health at the
    time of sentencing was good. One can therefore reasonably infer that over
    the course of more than two decades in prison and thereafter, he will earn an
    amount sufficient to pay the fees and fines. (See People v. Johnson (2019)
    
    35 Cal.App.5th 134
    , 139–140 [concluding any Dueñas error was harmless
    given long prison term and no evidence of inability to work].)
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is AFFIRMED.
    11
    _________________________
    Banke, J.
    We concur:
    _________________________
    Humes, P.J.
    _________________________
    Margulies, J.
    A156332, People v. Zevallos
    12