People v. Black CA2/2 ( 2014 )


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  • Filed 11/24/14 P. v. Black CA2/2
    Opinion following rehearing
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    THE PEOPLE,                                                          B249727
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                   (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. MA056966)
    v.
    DARNELL BLACK,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County.
    Eric Harmon, Judge. Modified, remanded with directions and affirmed.
    Davina T. Chen, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
    Appellant.
    Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Dane R. Gillette, Gerald Engler, Chief
    Assistant Attorneys General, Lance E. Winters, Assistant Attorney General, Yun K. Lee,
    Margaret E. Maxwell and Peggy Z. Huang, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and
    Respondent.
    ___________________________________________________
    INTRODUCTION
    In an opinion filed on October 27, 2014, we affirmed the judgment of conviction
    and held, among other things, that six prior prison terms were served separately by
    appellant Darnell Black, which was the basis for the enhancement, by six years, of
    appellant’s sentence. Appellant filed a petition for rehearing in which he pointed out that
    the probation report showed that two of the six prior prison terms were served
    concurrently, not separately. We requested a reply to the petition for rehearing. In the
    reply, respondent cites the certified RAP sheet, which was People’s exhibit 13, that
    indicates, as we discuss in detail in section 4 of the Discussion part of our opinion, that
    the probation report is in error and that the sentences were served separately. We agree
    with respondent that this factual conflict should be resolved by the trial court and
    therefore remand the case with directions to the trial court to determine whether the
    sentences on the two prior convictions in question were served separately.
    Having granted appellant’s petition for rehearing, we issue this opinion that is
    identical to the opinion filed on October 27, 2014, with four exceptions. They are the
    addition of the Introduction section, a change in the text of footnote 5, a new section 4 of
    the Discussion part of this opinion and a new Disposition section.
    With the exception of the modification already noted in our previous opinion
    striking prior conviction case No. VA039282 and the remand with directions to
    determine whether the sentences on the two prior convictions were served separately, we
    affirm the judgment.
    STATEMENT OF THE CASE
    In an information filed on August 23, 2012, appellant Darnell Black was charged
    with two counts of second degree burglary in violation of Penal Code, section 211,1
    involving two victims (counts 1 & 2) and with second degree commercial burglary in
    1      All further statutory references are to the Penal Code.
    2
    violation of section 459 (count 5).2 Appellant was also charged with seven prior felony
    convictions for which he served prison terms.3
    Appellant pleaded not guilty, but a jury found him guilty of all three charges.
    Appellant admitted six of the prior prison term allegations.
    The court imposed the upper term of five years on count 1 and one-third the
    midterm on count 2, i.e., a consecutive sentence of one year. The court stayed the eight-
    month sentence on count 3 pursuant to section 654. The abstract of judgment shows that
    appellant’s sentence was enhanced by six 1-year terms for the six prior terms he
    admitted. Thus, appellant was sentenced to the total of 12 years in prison. Various fines
    and assessments were imposed and custody credits were awarded, none of which are
    challenged on appeal.
    This appeal is from the judgment.
    STATEMENT OF FACTS
    Appellant concedes that there is sufficient evidence showing that on July 30, 2012,
    he stole seven cell phones from a Target store in Lancaster. He does not challenge his
    conviction for the second degree robbery of Gerald Roberts (count 1), Target’s loss
    prevention officer. However, he contends he could not be convicted of the second degree
    robbery of Evan Ramsey (count 2), a Target protection specialist, because by the time
    Ramsey arrived on the scene, appellant no longer had the cell phones and was merely
    trying to get away. We reject this contention for the reasons set forth below.
    The record shows that Roberts was observing appellant on security cameras while
    appellant, whose photograph was already posted on the wall as a suspicious person to
    watch, would stop and pull cell phones attached to metal rods from the wall and drop the
    phones into a shopping cart. Roberts instructed Ramsey, who was in uniform, to monitor
    appellant. Ramsey proceeded to the floor where appellant was operating in order to
    2      Only three counts were charged; counts 3 and 4 were not utilized.
    3      Originally, six prior felonies were charged. A seventh was added following the
    verdict.
    3
    observe him on the security camera. As appellant candidly explained on the witness
    stand, his modus operandi was to take the cell phones off the wall, hide them in the store
    itself and return at a later time to pick them up. True to his plan, on July 30, 2012,4
    appellant eventually jettisoned the shopping cart and he walked out of the store without
    anything in his hands. He was carrying seven cell phones in his pockets.
    Roberts left the store and waited for appellant to appear, and, when he did, he
    identified himself and told appellant to stop and to return to the store. Appellant said,
    “Hell, no” and a physical tussle ensued which consisted of appellant trying to escape
    toward the parking lot and Roberts hanging on to his arm. The encounter was violent as
    both men eventually ended up on the ground. Ramsey arrived when appellant and
    Roberts were still standing, with Roberts hanging on to appellant’s left arm and appellant
    trying to pull away. Ramsey grabbed appellant’s right arm, and in the melee it appeared
    to Ramsey as if appellant was trying to head-butt him. All three men fell to the ground.
    At some point, cell phones started to come out of appellant’s pockets. Target
    employees on the scene started to pick up the cell phones. Not surprisingly, Roberts was
    unable to recall how many cell phones fell out, although he did testify that by the time
    appellant was placed in custody by the sheriff, all seven cell phones had come out.
    The struggle continued on the ground in that Roberts and Ramsey tried to
    handcuff appellant. When Deputy Sheriff Lee Warren arrived, appellant was in
    handcuffs on the ground and Ramsey and Roberts were on either side of him. After
    Warren had patted down appellant, appellant continued to resist and even attempted to
    escape.
    DISCUSSION
    1. Appellant’s conviction of the robbery of Ramsey is supported by the evidence.
    Appellant asks this court to infer that by the time that Ramsey arrived on the scene
    of the struggle between appellant and Roberts, all of the cell phones had dropped out of
    4      Appellant had been in the Target store on July 27 and 29, 2012, as well.
    4
    appellant’s pockets and that, for this reason, the robbery was effectively over, with the
    result that Ramsey could not be the victim of a robbery.
    The flaw in appellant’s argument is that, on appeal, inferences are to be drawn in
    favor and in support of the judgment and not contrary to the judgment that was entered.
    This has been the rule for some time. (Bancroft-Whitney Co. v. McHugh (1913) 
    166 Cal. 140
    , 142; Crawford v. Southern Pac. Co. (1935) 
    3 Cal. 2d 427
    , 429.) This rule has been
    followed by cases too numerous to cite. (See generally 9 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (5th ed.
    2008) Appeal, § 365, pp. 422-424.)
    There is certainly some evidence from which it can be inferred that by the time
    Ramsey arrived, all the cell phones had fallen out of appellant’s pockets. As an example,
    Ramsey testified he thought he saw six cell phones on the ground when he came out of
    the store, which is not implausible (but which would still leave one on appellant’s person,
    as respondent notes). Roberts testified that while he saw cell phones falling during the
    fight, “I’m not sure if all of them fell out at that time. But by the time he was arrested
    when he was in the sheriff’s custody, he did not have any more phones at all.” In other
    words, it is also quite possible that not all of the phones fell out before Ramsey joined in
    the fight. Given the circumstance that Ramsey joined in the fight evidently within
    seconds, it is perfectly reasonable to think that there were still cell phones in appellant’s
    pockets when Ramsey arrived. Under the rule stated above, this is the inference that this
    court is required to draw.
    Common sense, however, provides an even more convincing answer. Given that
    appellant was trying to escape while Roberts and Ramsey were trying to overpower him,
    the fact is that appellant was trying to get away with whatever loot he could, which
    means that he was doing his best to deprive Target of its property. And that intent is an
    element of the crime of robbery. (People v. Hodges (2013) 
    213 Cal. App. 4th 531
    , 543
    [intent to deprive owner permanently of property is a necessary element of robbery].)
    Thus, unlike the defendant in Hodges, the case appellant relies on where the shoplifter
    threw the contraband away (id. at pp. 535-536), appellant was doing everything in his
    5
    power to get away with the cell phones. This means that while the three men were
    fighting, the robbery was still in progress.
    2. The amendment adding a seventh conviction was neither erroneous nor prejudicial.
    During the sentencing hearing, the People moved to amend the information with a
    seventh prior conviction, case No. VA039282. This was done over the defense’s
    objection that this was “disingenuous” and “vindictive.” On appeal, appellant contends
    that this was error in that he had a right to have a jury determine this issue.
    During the trial, the parties stipulated that appellant had suffered seven prior
    convictions, including in case No. VA039282. In explaining this stipulation to appellant,
    the trial court noted that the issue of the prior convictions had been bifurcated and the
    court then ascertained that appellant was waiving his right to a jury trial on the matter of
    the prior convictions. This ends the matter, save for the point that the trial court stated
    during the argument on this amendment that it would not “max him out,” meaning that he
    would not impose an additional one-year sentence, which, in fact, he did not do.
    Appellant’s sentence was enhanced by six, not seven, prior convictions.
    Respondent correctly points out that the one-year enhancement under subdivision
    (b) of section 667.5 is mandatory and, if not imposed, it must be stricken. (People v.
    Langston (2004) 
    33 Cal. 4th 1237
    , 1241.) Accordingly, we strike as a prior conviction
    case No. VA039282, which removes all possibility of error.5
    Appellant goes on to contend that, in the event we hold that defense counsel’s
    objection to this amendment did not preserve the issue for review, counsel was
    ineffective. We need not address this contention in that we have assumed that the
    objection to the amendment was procedurally effective. The fact of the matter is that the
    objection was substantively without merit since the amendment had no effect on the
    5       We disagree with respondent’s statement in its opposition to the petition for
    rehearing that there is a conflict between the statement that adding the seventh conviction
    was not error and striking that conviction. The addition of this conviction was not error
    for reasons pointed out in the text. It is only when it turned out later that an enhancement
    for this conviction was not imposed that it had to be stricken.
    6
    sentence and thus could not be said to have been “vindictive.” Finally, we decline to
    address as too trivial the claim that it was error to change prior conviction MA073924 to
    NA073924.
    3. The trial court fully advised appellant of the consequences of waiving a jury on the
    prior convictions.
    Appellant claims that, when he waived a jury on the priors, he was not advised of
    his right against self-incrimination or his right to confront adverse witnesses.
    This claim is refuted by the record. The trial court clearly told appellant that he
    had the right to “confront and cross-examine witnesses” and that he also had the
    “privilege against self-incrimination. All of the rights that apply to this normal trial
    would also apply to the jury trial on the priors.”
    4. It appears from the record that appellant served separate sentences for the six prior
    felony convictions.
    It is an element of the enhancement under subdivision (b) of section 667.5 that the
    prior prison term was served separately. (People v. Welge (1980) 
    101 Cal. App. 3d 616
    ,
    623.) In this case, the information does not allege that the six prior prison terms were
    served separately and appellant did not expressly admit this fact when he admitted the six
    prior convictions. We previously held that where “it appears from the record in some
    manner” that the prior prison terms were separately served, the enhancements under
    subdivision (b) of section 667.5 will be affirmed. (People v. James (1978) 
    88 Cal. App. 3d 150
    , 162.) Since the information reflects six conviction dates from 1993 to 2007, with
    the years of the convictions separated by a minimum of two years, we concluded that
    the six convictions were separately served.
    In the petition for rehearing, appellant pointed out that, according to the probation
    report, the sentences in case Nos. YA034488 and BA185143 were served concurrently.
    Respondent, however, cites the RAP sheet that shows that appellant was convicted on
    October 24, 1997, in case No. YA034488 and sentenced to three years in prison.
    Confusingly, the RAP sheet also shows that appellant was convicted for the same offense
    on May 13, 1999, and sentenced to three years in prison. As to case No. BA185143, the
    7
    RAP sheet shows appellant was convicted on May 13, 1999, and sentenced to two years
    in prison.
    The trial court must determine whether the sentences in case Nos. YA034488 and
    BA185143 were served separately. If not, the trial court must modify appellant’s
    sentence accordingly.
    DISPOSITION
    The amendment of the information with the conviction in case No. VA039282 is
    vacated and stricken. The case is remanded with directions to determine whether the
    sentences in case Nos. YA034488 and BA185143 were served separately. If not, the trial
    court must modify appellant’s sentence accordingly. In all other respects, the judgment is
    affirmed.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS.
    BOREN, P.J.
    We concur:
    ASHMANN-GERST, J.
    HOFFSTADT, J.
    8
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B249727A

Filed Date: 11/24/2014

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021