People v. Quinteros CA3 ( 2014 )


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  • Filed 6/23/14 P. v. Quinteros CA3
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
    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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
    THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
    (Yolo)
    THE PEOPLE,                                                                                  C074831
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                             (Super. Ct. No.
    CR-F-12-2870)
    v.
    GUBANI RODERICO-ROSALES QUINTEROS,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    On August 8, 2011, defendant Gubani Roderico-Rosales Quinteros drove a large
    truck southbound on Interstate 5 in Yolo County at approximately 70 miles per hour.
    After failing to slow or stop at a road construction site, he caused a multiple vehicle
    collision in which three people were killed and others were injured. Defendant gave
    responding officers a false name that he had been using for 15 years. His repeated uses
    of another person’s identity spawned the 20 charges that are at issue in this appeal.
    Following a jury trial that ended without any valid verdicts being returned, the
    parties waived trial by jury and stipulated that the trial court could consider the evidence
    presented at the jury trial. The evidentiary portion of the court trial was relatively brief
    with little cross-examination and no further defense presented. The court found
    1
    defendant guilty on 38 counts including 14 counts of using another person’s identifying
    information without that person’s consent (“unauthorized use”; Pen. Code, § 530.5, subd.
    (a);1 counts 4, 13, 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 28, 30, 32, 34, 36, 38, & 40) and nine counts of
    second degree burglary (§§ 459, 460, subd. (b); counts 16, 20, 24, 27, 31, 33, 35, 37, &
    39) in which he entered Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) buildings with the intent
    to commit fraud-related offenses including unauthorized use of identifying information.
    Defendant was sentenced to prison for an aggregate term of 13 years 8 months, and to jail
    for a consecutive aggregate term of 1 year.
    On appeal, defendant contends the unauthorized use counts are not supported by
    sufficient evidence that he used the information without the person’s consent. We reject
    this contention. Defendant contends, and the People concede, the burglary counts must
    be reversed and dismissed because they were filed beyond the applicable statute of
    limitations. We accept the People’s concession. We remand for resentencing because,
    on several counts, the trial court improperly imposed one-third midterm sentences on
    counts that were stayed pursuant to section 654.
    FACTS
    The horrific and tragic facts of the collision are not relevant to the two issues on
    appeal and need not be set forth in this opinion. We summarize the disputed counts and
    the investigation that brought them to light.
    A. The Disputed Counts
    Count 4: On the date of the collision, defendant presented a driver’s license to
    California Highway Patrol (CHP) Officer Jose Rodriguez. That same day, defendant
    presented a California driver’s license, a Social Security card, and a medical certificate
    1   Undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code.
    2
    for driving a commercial truck to CHP Officer Marco Rivera. The documents identified
    defendant as Carlos Adrain (or Adrian) Quintanilla Hernandez.
    Count 13: On December 9, 2009, defendant was stopped in the City of Colusa for
    a traffic offense. Defendant presented a driver’s license in the name of Carlos Adrain
    Quintanilla Hernandez. On March 22, 2010, defendant testified under oath in Colusa
    County Superior Court that he was Carlos Adrain Quintanilla Hernandez.
    Counts 16 & 17: On January 14, 2008, defendant entered a DMV building,
    identified himself as Carlos Adrain Quintanilla Hernandez, obtained a DMV application
    form, and signed that name on the application.
    Counts 20 & 21: On December 31, 2007, defendant entered a DMV building,
    identified himself as Carlos Adrain Quintanilla Hernandez, obtained a DMV application,
    and forged a signature under penalty of perjury on the application.
    Counts 24 & 25: On May 14, 2004, defendant entered a DMV building, obtained
    a DMV application, and forged a signature under penalty of perjury in the name Carlos
    Adrain Hernandez.
    Counts 27 & 28: On October 2, 2003, defendant entered a DMV building,
    obtained a DMV application, and forged the name Carlos Adrain Quintanilla under
    penalty of perjury on the application.
    Counts 31 & 32: On April 29, 2003, defendant entered a DMV building and
    obtained a driver’s license in the name Carlos Adrain Quintanilla Hernandez.
    Counts 33 & 34: On August 19, 1998, defendant entered a DMV building and
    was issued a driver’s license in the name Carlos Adrain Quintanilla Hernandez.
    Counts 35 & 36: On June 18, 1997, defendant entered a DMV building and was
    issued a driver’s license in the name Carlos Adrain Quintanilla Hernandez.
    Counts 37 & 38: On April 18, 1996, defendant entered a DMV building and was
    issued a driver’s license in the name Carlos Adrain Quintanilla Hernandez.
    3
    Counts 39 & 40: On March 18, 1996, defendant entered a DMV building and was
    issued a driver’s license in the name Carlos Adrain Quintanilla Hernandez.
    B. The Investigation
    The month after the collision, CHP investigator Noel Coady interviewed
    defendant who identified himself as Carlos Quintanilla. He told investigator Coady that
    in 1990 or 1991 an immigration attorney had assisted him in obtaining a temporary
    worker’s permit. The permit allowed him to obtain a Social Security card and be issued a
    Social Security number. With those two documents, defendant was able to obtain a valid
    California driver’s license. Defendant told investigator Coady that his parents were
    Marcelina Ernestina Hernandez and Carlos Quintanilla.
    Investigator Coady discovered that a driver’s license issued on July 26, 1991, to
    Carlos Adrain Quintanilla Hernandez depicts someone other than defendant and bears a
    signature that is different from defendant’s signature. The California driver’s license or
    identification card issued on March 18, 1996, does depict defendant.2
    The real Carlos Adrain Quintanilla Hernandez entered the United States in 1989,
    established residency, and was issued a resident alien card that he renewed annually
    through 1993. The real Carlos Hernandez’s parents were named Marcelina S. Quintanilla
    and Carlos Hernandez.
    Investigator Coady opined that defendant assumed the identity of Carlos Adrain
    Quintanilla Hernandez sometime between 1993 and 1996. There was no documentation
    of the real Carlos Adrain Quintanilla Hernandez after 1993.
    On July 19, 2012, investigator Coady again interviewed defendant. Defendant did
    not claim that his signature was on the original 1991 driver’s license. Defendant
    admitted that he was not the real Carlos Adrain Quintanilla Hernandez, that he had never
    2At the jury trial, the document was referred to as a driver’s license. At the court trial, it
    was referred to as an identification card.
    4
    met the real Carlos Adrain Quintanilla Hernandez, and that he did not know who the real
    Carlos Adrain Quintanilla Hernandez was.
    DISCUSSION
    I
    Insufficient Evidence
    Defendant contends his convictions for unauthorized use are not supported by
    sufficient evidence that he used the information without the other person’s consent. We
    disagree.
    A. Standard of Review
    “In considering a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence . . . , we review the
    entire record in the light most favorable to the judgment to determine whether it contains
    substantial evidence -- that is, evidence that is reasonable, credible, and of solid value --
    from which a reasonable trier of fact could find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable
    doubt. [Citation.] We presume every fact in support of the judgment the trier of fact
    could have reasonably deduced from the evidence. [Citation.] If the circumstances
    reasonably justify the trier of fact’s findings, reversal of the judgment is not warranted
    simply because the circumstances might also reasonably be reconciled with a contrary
    finding. [Citation.] ‘A reviewing court neither reweighs evidence nor reevaluates a
    witness’s credibility.’ [Citation.]” (People v. Albillar (2010) 
    51 Cal. 4th 47
    , 59-60
    (Albillar).)
    “Evidence meeting [the substantial evidence] standard satisfies constitutional due
    process and reliability concerns. [Citations.]” (People v. Boyer (2006) 
    38 Cal. 4th 412
    ,
    480, 479.)
    “Except where additional evidence is required by statute, the direct evidence of
    one witness who is entitled to full credit is sufficient for proof of any fact.” (Evid. Code,
    § 411; see People v. Cuevas (1995) 
    12 Cal. 4th 252
    , 262; People v. Scott (2002)
    
    100 Cal. App. 4th 1060
    , 1064.)
    5
    B. Statutory Framework
    Section 530.5, subdivision (a) provides in relevant part: “Every person who
    willfully obtains personal identifying information, as defined in subdivision (b) of
    Section 530.55, of another person, and uses that information for any unlawful purpose,
    including to obtain, or attempt to obtain, credit, goods, services, real property, or medical
    information without the consent of that person, is guilty of a public offense . . . .” (Italics
    added.)
    Section 530.55, subdivision (b) defines “ ‘personal identifying information’ ” as
    including “any name, address, telephone number, health insurance number, taxpayer
    identification number, school identification number, state or federal driver’s license, or
    identification number [or] social security number . . . .”
    In this case, the evidence showed that defendant obtained various driver’s licenses
    or identification cards by tendering the false name Carlos Adrain Quintanilla Hernandez.
    It is not clear whether he did so by tendering a previous driver’s license or identification
    card. But section 530.55 does not require the use of a prior identification document.
    Rather, defendant’s acquisition of the person’s name, and his tendering it for the unlawful
    purpose of obtaining a fictitious driver’s license without the person’s consent, is
    sufficient. (§ 530.55.)
    C. Trial Court Ruling
    The prosecutor asked the trial court to infer that the real Carlos Adrain Quintanilla
    Hernandez had not consented to defendant’s use of his identity because the two had never
    met and defendant did not know him. The prosecutor argued, “there’s no question that
    when [defendant] was using the driver’s license, the social security card, the resident
    alien cards of Carlos, the real Carlos, he was -- he had gotten someone else’s information
    that wasn’t his, he was willfully using it for an unlawful purpose, and he did it without
    the consent of Carlos. He admitted to you -- or he admitted in the videos of his
    6
    interviews that he did not know Carlos, and if you don’t know Carlos, you can’t get his
    permission.”3
    The trial court accepted the prosecutor’s argument, stating, “[o]bviously he did
    that without the consent of the real Carlos Hernandez since, by the defendant’s own
    admission, he didn’t know that particular person.”
    D. The Parties’ Arguments
    Defendant contends his admission that he was not personally acquainted with the
    real Carlos Hernandez is insufficient to prove the element that Carlos Hernandez did not
    consent to defendant’s use of his identifying information. Defendant claims a “highly
    plausible scenario for [his] possession of the documents is that Carlos Hernandez, after
    leaving the United States, provided those documents to some middleman or broker so that
    they could be provided to someone who needed such documents. . . . Although
    Hernandez would not have been personally acquainted with the ultimate recipient of the
    documents, he would nonetheless have consented to the use of those documents by that
    person by providing them to a middleman for that purpose.”
    Defendant’s argument is not supported by any evidence that Carlos Hernandez
    ever left the United States. Defendant relies on the fact that Carlos Hernandez never
    renewed his resident alien card after 1993. But no evidence ever established the reason
    for the lack of renewal. The United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement had
    no “record that [Carlos Hernandez] had ever left the United States,” and no evidence
    established that he left the country without that agency’s knowledge. As defendant
    concedes in a different context, “[t]hat an event could have happened . . . does not by
    itself support a deduction or inference it did happen.” (People v. Moore (2011)
    
    51 Cal. 4th 386
    , 406.)
    3  In the respondent’s brief, this argument by the prosecutor is mistakenly attributed to the
    trial court.
    7
    Nor was there any evidence that Carlos Hernandez provided his identifying
    documents to a middleman or broker. The trial court could reason that, ordinarily, a
    person would not be so cavalier or uncaring about his identity as to consent to its
    brokerage by a middleman and use by a stranger. While there may be circumstances --
    including the receipt of sufficient compensation -- under which a person or his surviving
    family members would consent, no evidence established that any such circumstance
    existed in this case. Thus, the court could reasonably infer, and not merely speculate, that
    Carlos Hernandez never entrusted his identifying documents to a broker and never
    consented to defendant’s use of his identity. Our standard of review requires us to
    presume in support of the judgment that the trier of fact so inferred. 
    (Albillar, supra
    ,
    51 Cal.4th at pp. 60, 59.) Defendant’s argument that the prosecution “failed to close an
    evidentiary gap mandated by the terms of the statute” has no merit.
    Defendant argues that, even if there was no evidence that he received the personal
    information from an intermediary with Carlos Hernandez’s consent, “[w]hat matters is
    that there was no evidence to the contrary.” Indeed, there was no evidence that defendant
    did not receive the information from a middleman or broker. But there also was no
    evidence that Carlos Hernandez transferred the information to a middleman or broker
    willingly rather than as a result of loss or theft. Defendant’s speculation does not
    undermine the reasonable inference that Carlos Hernandez did not consent to defendant’s
    use of his identity.
    Defendant has not shown that the trial court’s inference of lack of consent is
    speculative or unsupported by sufficient evidence. At most, defendant may have shown
    that “the circumstances might also reasonably be reconciled with a contrary finding.”
    
    (Albillar, supra
    , 51 Cal.4th at pp. 59-60.) But that does not warrant reversal of the
    judgment.
    The People claim defendant’s convictions are further supported by his “false”
    statement to investigator Coady that he had obtained identity papers through the services
    8
    of an “immigration attorney.” Defendant replies to the People’s claim but his argument
    is not clear. We need not join the parties’ debate because our conclusion is not dependent
    upon defendant having made a false statement to investigator Coady. Nor need we
    consider the possibility that the “middleman or broker” referred to in defendant’s
    appellate argument had held himself out as the “immigration attorney” to which
    defendant had referred in his statement.
    Defendant’s unauthorized use convictions are supported by substantial evidence.
    
    (Albillar, supra
    , 51 Cal.4th at pp. 59-60.)
    II
    Statute of Limitations
    Defendant contends his nine convictions of second degree burglary based on his
    entries into DMV offices with intent to commit fraud-related offenses are time-barred and
    must be dismissed. He adds that, if his claim was forfeited in the trial court, then his trial
    counsel rendered ineffective assistance. The People concede that the burglary charges
    were filed beyond the statute of limitations and must be stricken. We accept the People’s
    concession.4
    Second degree burglary is punishable by imprisonment in the county jail not
    exceeding one year or imprisonment pursuant to section 1170, subdivision (h). (§ 461,
    subd. (b).) At the time of the offenses, second degree burglary was punishable by
    imprisonment in the county jail not exceeding one year, or in state prison for 16 months,
    2 years, or 3 years. (Stats. 1978, ch. 579, § 24, p. 1986.)
    Section 801 provides: “Except as provided in Sections 799 [(for offenses
    punishable by death or life without parole)] and 800 [(for offenses punishable by
    imprisonment for eight years or more)], prosecution for an offense punishable by
    4 The statute of limitations on the other offenses at issue in this appeal, violations of
    section 530.5, did not commence to run until the offenses were discovered. (§ 803.5.)
    9
    imprisonment in the state prison or pursuant to subdivision (h) of Section 1170 shall be
    commenced within three years after commission of the offense.” This limit was the same
    at the time of the charged burglaries. (Stats. 1984, ch. 1270, § 2, p. 4335.)
    The most recent burglary was alleged to have occurred on January 14, 2008. The
    felony complaint was filed more than four years later, on July 25, 2012, and defendant
    was arraigned on that day, thus commencing the prosecution for purposes of the statute of
    limitations. (§ 804, subd. (c).) Thus, all nine burglary counts were filed beyond the
    three-year statute of limitations in section 801.
    Section 803, subdivision (c) provides that the statute of limitations for certain
    crimes commences upon the discovery of the offense. This provision applies to listed
    offenses, not including burglary, and to unlisted offenses “punishable by imprisonment in
    the state prison or imprisonment pursuant to subdivision (h) of section 1170, a material
    element of which is fraud or breach of a fiduciary obligation . . . .” (Ibid., italics added;
    see People v. Price (2007) 
    155 Cal. App. 4th 987
    , 996-997 [terming the People’s position
    that burglary is within section 803, subdivision (c) “doubtful” but finding no need to
    resolve the issue].)
    In this case, the complaint alleged that defendant entered DMV buildings with the
    intent to commit crimes a material element of which is fraud. But that allegation does not
    make fraud an element of the antecedent burglary for purposes of section 803,
    subdivision (c). Like the crime of conspiracy, the crime of burglary is a “separate and
    distinct crime from the offense that is the object of the [burglary] and is governed by a
    separate and distinct statute of limitations.” (People v. Milstein (2012) 
    211 Cal. App. 4th 1158
    , 1164-1168.)
    We reverse defendant’s convictions on the burglary counts and direct the trial
    court to enter dismissals of those counts.
    10
    III
    Resentencing on Stayed Counts
    Our review of the record discloses a sentencing error on seven counts of
    unauthorized use. On counts 17, 19, 21, 23, 25, 28, and 30, the trial court imposed one-
    third middle terms of eight months and then ordered those terms stayed pursuant to
    section 654.
    “The one-third-the-midterm rule of section 1170.1, subdivision (a), only applies to
    a consecutive sentence, not a sentence stayed under section 654.” (People v. Cantrell
    (2009) 
    175 Cal. App. 4th 1161
    , 1164.) On remand, trial court shall exercise its discretion
    to impose low, middle, or upper terms and then stay those sentences pursuant to
    section 654.
    DISPOSITION
    Defendant’s convictions on counts 16, 20, 24, 27, 31, 33, 35, 37, and 39 are
    reversed and the trial court is directed to enter dismissals of those counts. In all other
    respects, the judgment of conviction is affirmed. Defendant’s sentence is reversed and
    the matter is remanded for resentencing consistent with this opinion.
    BLEASE                    , Acting P. J.
    We concur:
    NICHOLSON                  , J.
    HOCH                       , J.
    11
    

Document Info

Docket Number: C074831

Filed Date: 6/23/2014

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021