Murderpedia has thousands of hours of work behind it. To keep creating
new content, we kindly appreciate any donation you can give to help
the Murderpedia project stay alive. We have many
plans and enthusiasm
to keep expanding and making Murderpedia a better site, but we really
need your help for this. Thank you very much in advance.
Dr. Polk was a prominent Berkeley
psychologist, who was found with numerous stab wounds in the pool
house at the couple's upscale Orinda, California home in 2002. Susan
Polk, a self-proclaimed "psychic" and believer of fairy tales, left
the mutilated body of Felix Polk for her youngest son to find.
She denied involvement in the
murder until confronted with evidence, and then she insisted that she
was the victim of a vast conspiracy by her children, her mother, the
police, the forensic scientists, the Judiciary, the District
Attorney's office, her lawyers and her husband's lawyers, and an
inexhaustible list of others. Her bizarre defense and her disturbing
antics during her trial led to a media sensation.
Background
In 1972, Susan Bolling was a
troubled student growing up in suburbs of Oakland, California. Her
parents were divorcing and her mother wondered if Susan was trying to
shut out the emotional turmoil of the divorce. Later, a school
counselor at Clayton Valley High School in Concord, California,
recommended therapy for Susan after she refused to attend classes, and
began making preposterous claims regarding her parents. He suggested
an expert in adolescent behavior, Felix Polk.
Life with Felix Polk
Felix Polk began treating Susan
in 1972, when she was 15 years old. Within a year, however, the
doctor-patient relationship changed. After murdering Felix (by then
her husband) some 30 years later, Susan would claim that Felix had
drugged and raped her, a part of her campaign to denigrate Felix to
bolster her bizarre defense. Felix was, at that time, a married father
of two.
In 1982, Polk divorced his wife,
prominent concert pianist Sharon Mann, and married Susan, a woman
literally half his age who could physically threaten Felix. After
murdering her husband, Susan would claim that he was a domineering and
manipulative husband, obsessed with controlling her life.
During her trial, however, no
evidence nor eyewitness accounts supported Susan's allegations;
however, Susan's own children and police reports filed during the
marriage showed that Susan was an abusive spouse and batterer. Susan
and Felix eventually had three sons: Gabriel, Eli, and Adam. Two of
the children testified that Susan was mentally unstable and habitually
spoke of murdering their father. Also during her trial, Susan's
unnaturally close relationship with her son Eli raised many concerns
and questions of a possible incestuous relationship.
In 2001, Susan Polk filed for
divorce. Susan had abandoned her children, her husband, and her home,
and she was looking for a place to live in Montana. Felix Polk went to
court and was awarded custody of their youngest son and retained
exclusive control of the house.
Upon hearing of the court
judgment, Susan Polk returned, illegally broke into Felix Polk's
Orinda home, and threatened Felix and her son. Incredibly, Susan moved
Felix's possessions to the cottage and took up residence in the home.
Felix would tell police and friends that he was afraid of his wife and
that she had threatened to kill him. A few weeks later, Felix was
murdered by his wife, who left the body for her youngest son to find.
Prosecutors argued that the
killing of Felix Polk was a cold, calculated attempt by his wife to
gain control of his multimillion dollar estate. When Susan Polk
permitted others to represent her, the Defense attorneys argued that
Susan Polk had long been controlled, abused and battered by her
husband (although these claims have never been substantiated, and were
contradicted by the couple's children and acquaintances), and she
acted in self-defense when he flew into a rage and attacked her. While
representing herself, Susan Polk made outrageous unsubstantiated
claims, endless recriminations, tales of conspiracy, psychics, fairy
tales and secret government agents.
Susan's former defense attorney,
Daniel Horowitz, claimed that she had long been a battered wife under
the physical and emotional control of her husband.
Trial
Susan Polk was originally
released on bail, however it was subsequently revoked when she
violated the terms of her bail by contacting and threatening one of
her sons. Polk has remained in custody since that time.
The trial began on October 17,
2005, but was declared a mistrial, because of the slaying of Pamela
Vitale, the wife of her lead attorney, Daniel Horowitz.
On January 20, 2006, a judge
removed her lawyer Daniel Horowitz after he said he had a conflict of
interest. Polk, who has fired three other attorneys who have
represented her, said recently that she wanted Horowitz off her case.
On February 27, 2006, jury
selection began in a jury assembly room where 300 prospective jurors
arrived. Judge Laurel Brady has said the trial may last as long as 2
1/2 months.
On March 7, 2006, prosecutor Paul
Sequeira gave his opening statement in what would prove to be a
high-profile trial, with spectators, TV legal analysts and reporters
showing up at a Martinez, Calif. courtroom to watch the spectacle of
Polk representing herself and repeatedly bickering with the judge and
prosecutor. Polk's delusional and confrontational behavior was on full
display with daily recriminations leveled at the judge, the
prosecutor, and anyone else who would contradict her. Polk maintained
her contention that there was a vast web of conspiracy seeking her
conviction, that the crime scene had been tampered with, and that her
husband was a vile man and she was justified in murdering him. Susan
Polk also claimed that she was a psychic who predicted the September
11, 2001 attacks; that her husband was a secret Israeli spy; that
fairy tales are true; and other equally sensational claims. Those who
couldn't attend the trial in person would follow the case daily on
various Internet Web sites and legal talk shows on TV. Adding to the
drama was testimony against Polk by two of her sons, Adam and Gabriel,
and testimony on her behalf by her second son, Eli. Adam and Gabriel
(the son whom Susan let find his father's mutilated body) described
Susan as an angry, delusional and violent person. The testimony by Eli
bordered on the bizarre, and provided a window for people to observe
the unnaturally close relationship between Susan Polk and her son,
leading many to speculate about an incestuous relationship between the
two.
On May 17, 2006, Polk began
testifying in a narrative format.
On May 24, 2006, Eli Polk was
convicted by a jury of misdemeanor battery against an ex-girlfriend,
violating a restraining order and violating probation in connection
with two arrests in March at the home where his father died.
On June 12, 2006, both sides gave
their closing arguments to the jury.
On June 16, 2006, Susan Polk was
found guilty of second-degree murder. The jury would later comment
that neither Susan Polk nor her son Eli were credible witnesses and
they completely dismissed her unsubstantiated attacks on her husband's
character.
Following her conviction,
numerous attorneys declined to represent Polk before her sentencing,
citing their unavailability. Point Richmond attorney Linda Fullerton
has tentatively agreed to represent her pre-sentencing.
On January 30, 2007, a MOTION FOR
A NEW TRIAL; MOTION TO MODIFY VERDICT was filed in the Contra Costa
Superior Court. The motion claims that Judge Laurel Brady allowed
prosecutor Paul Sequeira to illegally dismiss prospective jurors
because they were women; that members of the jury were prejudiced
against Polk because of the extensive media coverage of the case, much
of it critical of Polk; that there is evidence that the jurors were
exposed to media coverage of the trial, and in fact, one juror told
reporters immediately after the verdict was read, "Sometimes the media
was making stuff up;" that Brady improperly reprimanded Polk in front
of jurors and appeared to favor the prosecution; that Judge Brady
failed to instruct the jury on heat-of-passion voluntary manslaughter;
and that Polk's right to represent herself was hampered by her
treatment at the jail and by the claim that on several occasions she
was prevented from consulting with an attorney and her legal
assistant.
On February 23, 2007, the MOTION
FOR A NEW TRIAL; MOTION TO MODIFY VERDICT was argued by both the
defense and prosecution. The motion was denied, and Mrs. Polk was
immediately sentenced to 16 years to life.
Feb
24, 2007
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE
STATE OF CALIFORNIA FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT DIVISION ONE
December 13, 2010
THE PEOPLE, PLAINTIFF AND
RESPONDENT,
v.
SUSAN MAE POLK, DEFENDANT AND APPELLANT.
(Contra Costa County Super. Ct.
No. 031668-7)
The opinion of the court was
delivered by: Margulies, Acting P.J.
CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL
PUBLICATION*fn1
Defendant was convicted of the
second degree murder of her husband following a trial at which she
acted as her own attorney. The husband's body had been found in a
cottage at their home, stabbed repeatedly. Defendant admitted the
stabbing but testified she acted in self-defense.
Defendant argues the trial court
should have dismissed the jury panel after the prosecution was unable
to explain its peremptory challenge of a female juror, erred in
failing to give an instruction on heat of passion voluntary
manslaughter, and should not have admitted her statements to police,
which were obtained in violation of Miranda v. Arizona (1966) 384 U.S.
436 (Miranda). In addition, defendant contends the court, prosecutor,
and jury committed prejudicial misconduct in the course of the trial.
Finding no prejudicial error, we affirm the conviction.
During the proceedings,
defendant executed a promissory note, secured by a lien against the
family home, agreeing to reimburse the County of Contra Costa (County)
for costs incurred in her defense. Following the trial, the County
sought an order compelling defendant to reimburse those costs from the
proceeds of the sale of her interest in the home. Although the trial
court held a hearing with respect to the amount of reimbursable costs
incurred by the County, it refused to consider whether defendant had
the "present ability" to pay those costs, as required by Penal Code
section 987.8, subdivision (b), concluding the presence of the lien
made such a finding unnecessary. We conclude the County's lien did not
obviate the need for the trial court to determine whether defendant
had the financial ability to reimburse the County's expenses, and we
remand for the necessary hearing.
I. BACKGROUND
Defendant was charged in a
single-count indictment, filed August 27, 2003, with the murder of her
husband. (Pen. Code, § 187.) The indictment further alleged defendant
personally used a deadly and dangerous weapon. (Pen. Code, § 12022,
subd. (b)(1).) During defendant's initial trial, she was represented
by counsel, but the court declared a mistrial when her attorney
suffered a family tragedy. Following a second trial in which defendant
represented herself, a jury convicted her of second degree murder,
with a finding she used a deadly and dangerous weapon. The trial court
imposed a sentence of 16 years to life.
Defendant and her husband, Felix
Polk, had been married for 21 years at the time of the killing and had
three teen-aged sons.*fn2 At 71, Felix was 26 years older than
defendant. They first met nine years before their marriage when Felix,
a psychologist, began treating defendant, then a high school student.
In October 2002, when the
killing occurred, the couple was enmeshed in divorce proceedings. When
Felix first retained divorce counsel in 2001, he told his attorney
defendant "could be violent" and was "unpredictable and . . . possibly
dangerous." As the proceedings progressed, Felix became more concerned
about defendant. By August 2002, Felix was "in fear for his life."
According to the couple's youngest son, Gabriel, defendant said on
several occasions she intended to kill Felix and discussed the manner
in which she would do so. As a result of the frequency and intensity
of these threats, a week before the murder Gabriel told his father he
"was scared for his [father's] life."
On October 2, 2002, while
defendant was away in Montana, Felix obtained a court order granting
him custody of Gabriel and exclusive use of the family home in Orinda.
When defendant learned of the court order soon after, she and Felix
had a "heated" telephone call, during which she threatened to kill
him. Felix took the threat seriously enough to report it to the
police.
Defendant returned to Orinda on
October 9. While Felix was at work the next day, she persuaded Gabriel
to help her move Felix's bed and other possessions into a cottage on
the property. After Felix arrived home, they had another angry
argument, during which defendant again threatened to kill Felix. The
police were called, and Felix and Gabriel moved briefly into a hotel.
Three days later, a Sunday, Felix and Gabriel awoke early to drive the
family's oldest son, Adam, to school at UCLA, returning to the Orinda
home late at night. Gabriel went to sleep in the house, while Felix
retired to the cottage.
The next day, Felix did not
return home from work at the expected time and could not be located by
telephone. When Gabriel asked defendant if she knew where Felix was,
she said she did not know. Gabriel eventually became suspicious and,
later in the evening, checked the cottage, finding the front door
locked. When Gabriel returned to the house and again asked defendant
about Felix, she said, "Aren't you happy he's gone? I am," and, later,
"I guess I didn't use a shotgun, did I?" Unnerved by these enigmatic
comments, an hour later Gabriel returned to the cottage, found a
second door unlocked, and entered. Inside, he glimpsed his father
lying motionless on his back, covered in blood. Gabriel returned to
the house, grabbed a telephone, and hiding from his mother outside,
called the police.
When police arrived, they found
the floor of the cottage living room covered in dried blood. Tracked
across the floor were bloody shoeprints matching defendant's shoe
size, along with her bloody footprint. Felix's body, hands still
clutching a clump of defendant's hair, was found, according to the
prosecution's pathologist, to have at least five deep stab wounds,
individually penetrating his right lung, stomach, pericardium,
diaphragm, and the fat near his kidneys. He also had a large number of
superficial stab wounds and defensive cuts to his hands, forearms,
feet, and lower legs and a blunt force injury behind his right ear.
When told of Felix's death by
police, defendant showed no emotion, saying, "Oh well, we were going
to get a divorce anyhow." In a subsequent police interview, she
professed ignorance of Felix's death, evenly recounting her marital
grievances with Felix and claiming to have last seen him early on the
prior morning, before he and Gabriel drove Adam to Los Angeles. Police
examined defendant for fresh wounds and found none.
At trial, defendant acknowledged
killing Felix, characterizing her acts as self-defense. Defendant
described at length her troubled marriage, characterized by Felix's
psychological and physical abuse of her. On the night of the killing,
she testified, she went to the cottage to talk to Felix between 10:30
and 10:45, taking pepper spray as a precaution. For a time, they
discussed financial matters and their children. Felix became angry,
and at some point he walked over and struck defendant in the face.
Defendant sprayed him, but he was undeterred, hitting her again. After
further struggle, he grabbed a knife and stabbed at her leg, piercing
her pants. Afraid for her life, defendant kicked Felix in the groin,
grabbed the knife from him, and began stabbing him. She then took
steps to cover up the killing and denied involvement to the police
because she believed she would be "railroaded" by the criminal justice
system.
The couple's middle son, Eli,
testified in support of defendant. Eli, who was residing at a boys
ranch at the time of the killing, confirmed Felix was violent and
controlling. Contrary to the testimony of his brothers, Eli denied
defendant was ever violent with Felix or had ever threatened him.
Defendant also offered Dr. John
Cooper, an expert on forensic pathology, to opine on the cause of
Felix's death. According to Cooper, Felix died of "acute coronary
insufficiency due to severe coronary artery disease," to which the
multiple stab wounds "were a contributing factor." Cooper reasoned
Felix's wounds, although serious, were not immediately
life-threatening. Felix had, however, serious coronary disease,
including severe blockage of two main arteries, that was the primary
cause of his death. As a result, Cooper believed Felix's death to have
been "natural," rather than the result of a homicide. Cooper also
explained the pattern of Felix's wounds was consistent with
defendant's claim of self-defense. In addition to Cooper, several
other witnesses, including experts, testified for defendant.
II. DISCUSSION
Defendant raises a number of
challenges to her conviction. We consider each in turn.
A. Batson/Wheeler Violation
Defendant first contends the
trial court erred in failing to dismiss the jury panel in response to
an objection under Batson v. Kentucky (1986) 476 U.S. 79 (Batson) and
People v. Wheeler (1978) 22 Cal.3d 258 (Wheeler), disapproved in part
by Johnson v. California (2005) 545 U.S. 162, 173.
1. Procedural Background
Near the close of jury
selection, defendant made a motion under Batson and Wheeler,
contending the prosecution had selectively dismissed women jurors.*fn3
At the time of the motion, the jury consisted of six women and five
men, but 19 of the prosecution's 22 peremptory challenges had been
directed at female jurors. In presenting her argument, defendant
discussed 14 of the 19 dismissed women jurors, contending there was no
legitimate basis for their challenge.*fn4
Without expressly finding a
prima facie showing of discrimination, the trial court asked the
prosecutor to explain the reasons for the dismissals of these jurors.
The prosecutor explained 13 of the 14 challenges. Although the
prosecutor had notes about the 14th juror, he was unable to recall his
reasons for dismissing her.*fn5 During subsequent argument, at least
three additional jurors were addressed. The court found a legitimate,
gender-neutral reason had been offered for each challenge, other than
the forgotten one. Although the trial court made no express finding of
discrimination as to that juror, it was concerned by the prosecution's
inability to explain the dismissal. The trial court granted the
defense one additional peremptory challenge as a remedy, noting it was
unwilling to dismiss the entire panel on this ground. As the court
explained, "I think that we have spent a great deal of time with what
I thought was a good jury pool in order to select this jury, but I
think there has to be a remedy fashioned for that one challenge, which
there is no--there doesn't appear to be an articulatable [sic] reason
for it. [¶] So what I am going to do, because I don't think that
starting from scratch is necessary in this case and having to call a
brand new panel up for that one challenge, is to grant the defense one
additional peremptory challenge as a remedy for that one challenge
where there is no reason articulated." Defendant asked a question to
clarify the scope of the court's relief, and, receiving a reply,
responded, "Thank you." She did not object to the court's remedy, and
jury selection resumed. Defendant later exercised an additional
challenge.
Following selection of the jury,
the parties proceeded to select alternates. When the prosecution
exercised a peremptory challenge to a female alternate, defendant
again objected on Batson/Wheeler grounds, saying, "I'm going to
challenge the entire panel of the jury. I don't believe that the
remedy that the Court provided . . . is sufficient . . . ." After
justifying his challenge to the woman alternate, the prosecutor argued
the remedy fashioned by the court was adequate and it was
inappropriate to discharge an entire jury when no systematic
discrimination had been found. The court acknowledged it had made no
finding of systematic bias, reaffirmed its conclusion a gender-neutral
reason had been provided for all but one of the dismissals, including
the most recent alternate, and denied any further relief.*fn6
2. Applicable Law
"In Batson, the United States
Supreme Court held that the exercise of a peremptory challenge for a
discriminatory purpose offends equal protection under the Fourteenth
Amendment. [Citation.] Years earlier, the California Supreme Court in
Wheeler held that such conduct violated the State Constitution's
guarantee of a trial by a jury drawn from a venire representative of
the community. [Citation.] A prosecutor is presumed to exercise
peremptory challenges in a manner conforming to these constitutional
requirements. [Citation.] Thus, a defendant seeking to challenge a
prosecutor's peremptory challenge on these constitutional grounds
first must raise a timely objection and must show that the relevant
circumstances give rise to an inference that the objectionable
challenge was purposefully discriminatory. Second, if a defendant
makes this prima facie showing, the burden shifts to the prosecutor to
provide permissible race-neutral justifications for the peremptory
challenge. Finally, the trial court must then determine whether the
defendant has proved that the objectionable challenge was based on
purposeful discrimination." (People v. Calvin (2008) 159 Cal.App.4th
1377, 1383.)*fn7
Batson did not require a
particular remedy in the event purposeful discrimination is found in
the exercise of peremptory challenges, expressly leaving
implementation of the decision to the state and lower federal courts.
(Batson, supra, 476 U.S. at p. 99, fn. 24.) Prior to Batson, however,
Wheeler had instructed that, in the event an objection was sustained
as to any peremptory challenge, the court "must dismiss the jurors
thus far selected. So too it must quash any remaining venire . . . .
Upon such dismissal a different venire shall be drawn and the jury
selection process may begin anew." (Wheeler, supra, 22 Cal.3d at p.
282, fn. omitted.)
In a subsequent decision, People
v. Willis (2002) 27 Cal.4th 811 (Willis), our Supreme Court recognized
the need for greater flexibility in remedying discrimination in the
selection of the jury, affirming a trial court's decision to retain an
improperly challenged juror rather than dismiss the panel after
concluding the unlawful challenge was made with the intention of
provoking a mistrial. (Id. at p. 821.) Similarly, in People v. Overby
(2004) 124 Cal.App.4th 1237 (Overby), the court approved the practice
of reseating a challenged juror rather than dismissing the entire
panel, holding that under Willis, remedies short of jury discharge are
acceptable so long as they have the consent of the complaining party.
(Overby, at pp. 1242-1243.)
3. Waiver
Although California decisions
have approved the reseating of a challenged juror in limited
circumstances, the trial court's grant of an additional peremptory
challenge went beyond the remedies approved to date in California.*fn8
We find it unnecessary to decide whether, under these circumstances,
the remedy was appropriate because, as discussed below, defendant
accepted the trial court's grant of an additional peremptory
challenge, thereby waiving any objection to the remedy.
There is no question
Batson/Wheeler error may be waived. In People v. Fudge (1994) 7
Cal.4th 1075, defense counsel withdrew his Wheeler motion prior to its
resolution by the trial court. (Fudge, at p. 1097.) When the defendant
attempted to raise the issue on appeal, the court held any error
waived. (Ibid.) Similarly, in Overby, the court held that the
defendant's acceptance of an alternative remedy waives any later claim
based on the court's failure to discharge the entire jury. (Overby,
supra, 124 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1242-1244.) As the court held, the
waiver need not be express if consent can be implied from the
defendant's conduct. (Id. at p. 1244.)
Defendant's thanking the court
and resuming jury selection without objecting to the court's award of
an alternate remedy constituted implied consent to that remedy and a
waiver of any later request to discharge the jury on the basis of this
claimed Batson/Wheeler violation. Although defendant contends her
silence at this time should not be interpreted as consent, her
decision to thank the court and resume jury selection at a time when
an objection would have been expected if she was dissatisfied with the
court's proposed remedy is open to no other reasonable interpretation.
Not only did her conduct manifest an unmistakable acceptance of the
alternative remedy, she proceeded to exercise an additional peremptory
challenge, thereby taking advantage of the remedy granted to her. She
was not entitled later to withdraw that consent merely because of a
change of heart.
B. Refusal of Voluntary
Manslaughter Instruction
Defendant contends the trial
court erred in concluding the evidence was insufficient to support
giving a jury instruction on the lesser included offense of voluntary
manslaughter as the result of a sudden quarrel or heat of passion.
Defendant initially resisted any
instruction on voluntary manslaughter, but when the court informed the
parties it intended to instruct the jury on voluntary manslaughter as
a result of imperfect self-defense, defendant asked that a sudden
quarrel or heat of passion instruction be given as well. The court
declined, finding insufficient evidence in the record to support the
instruction.
The trial court has a sua sponte
duty to instruct on all principles of law relevant to the issues
raised by the evidence, including every lesser included offense of the
charged offenses supported by the evidence, regardless of whether the
parties request an instruction. (People v. Blair (2005) 36 Cal.4th
686, 744; People v. Breverman (1998) 19 Cal.4th 142, 154.)
Accordingly, a trial court in a murder prosecution is required to
deliver an instruction on voluntary manslaughter as a result of a
sudden quarrel or heat of passion if there is substantial evidence to
support a conviction on that theory. (Blair, at p. 745.) In this
context, "substantial evidence" is "evidence from which a jury
composed of reasonable persons could conclude that the facts
underlying the particular instruction exist." (Ibid.)
" 'The Penal Code defines
manslaughter as "the unlawful killing of a human being without
malice." [Citation.] The offense is voluntary manslaughter when the
killing is "upon a sudden quarrel or heat of passion." ' " (People v.
Manriquez (2005) 37 Cal.4th 547, 583 (Manriquez).) "Heat of passion"
is present when " 'the killer's reason was actually obscured as the
result of a strong passion aroused by a "provocation." ' " (People v.
Lasko (2000) 23 Cal.4th 101, 108 (Lasko).)
"The heat of passion requirement
for manslaughter has both an objective and a subjective component.
[Citation.] The defendant must actually, subjectively, kill under the
heat of passion. [Citation.] But the circumstances giving rise to the
heat of passion are also viewed objectively. . . . '[T]his heat of
passion must be such a passion as would naturally be aroused in the
mind of an ordinarily reasonable person under the given facts and
circumstances.' " (People v. Steele (2002) 27 Cal.4th 1230, 1252.) The
passion aroused need not be anger or rage, but can be any violent,
intense, high-wrought or enthusiastic emotion, other than revenge.
(Lasko, supra, 23 Cal.4th at p. 108.) In addition, the defendant's
passion must be a response to provocation by the victim or by "conduct
reasonably believed by the defendant to have been engaged in by the
victim. [Citations.] The provocative conduct by the victim may be
physical or verbal, but the conduct must be sufficiently provocative
that it would cause an ordinary person of average disposition to act
rashly or without due deliberation and reflection." (People v. Lee
(1999) 20 Cal.4th 47, 59.)*fn9
We review de novo the trial
court's determination not to instruct on a particular lesser included
offense and make an independent determination whether the instruction
should have been given. (Manriquez, supra, 37 Cal.4th at p. 584.)
Defendant focuses most of her
attention on the legal adequacy of Felix's provocation. As suggested
above, the victim's provocation must be substantial to qualify as
legally sufficient to justify a heat of passion manslaughter. (See,
e.g., People v. Moye (2009) 47 Cal.4th 537, 551 (Moye) [fight the
night before and kicking tires of vehicle insufficient provocation];
Manriquez, supra, 37 Cal.4th at pp. 585-586 [insults and taunting
insufficient provocation]; People v. Oropeza (2007) 151 Cal.App.4th
73, 83 [cutting off vehicle in traffic insufficient provocation].)
We decline to decide the issue
of provocation, however, because even if Felix's conduct was legally
sufficient to qualify as provocation, this alone would not demonstrate
error in the trial court's refusal to give the voluntary manslaughter
instruction. To justify the instruction, defendant was also required
to show that substantial evidence supported the "subjective" element
of passion: that, in actual fact, her reason was overcome by extreme
emotion at the time she killed Felix. (People v. Steele, supra, 27
Cal.4th at pp. 1252-1253.) We find insufficient evidence of this
element to support the heat of passion instruction.
The only direct evidence of
defendant's emotional state at the time she killed Felix was her own
testimony. According to this testimony, the "subjective" element of
heat of passion was wholly absent. Defendant testified that, although
fearful for her life, she kept her wits about her when reacting to
Felix's conduct. She was neither angry nor otherwise overcome by
emotion. Defendant confirmed this during argument over the admission
of certain evidence late in the trial, when she denied she "snapped"
at the time of the killing. On the contrary, as defendant
characterized her testimony, "There was no passion. There was fear on
my part, but not passion. I was not angry. I was not enraged. It was
the other way around."
Defendant now contends,
notwithstanding this direct evidence, the jury could have inferred she
acted from passion from the severity of the injuries she inflicted on
Felix, which defendant contends "suggest[] that [she] may have
inflicted the wounds indiscriminately while under the influence of
extreme emotion rather than in an efficient effort to kill him." While
there is no doubt Felix's injuries were extreme, they do not
necessarily indicate a killing in the heat of passion. In addition to
a person overcome by passion, the many wounds are equally consistent
with killing by a person striking out in frantic self-defense, as
defendant testified, or a coolly determined killer, thoroughly intent
on accomplishing her purpose. Given their inherent ambiguity, any
attempt to infer the degree of arousal of the killer's emotions from
the nature of the wounds would have been sheer speculation. The
evidence of Felix's injuries alone was not sufficient for a reasonable
jury to conclude defendant acted from passion. (See People v.
Benavides (2005) 35 Cal.4th 69, 102 [fact that nature of the victim's
injuries suggests they were inflicted by person in a rage is not
substantial evidence to support a voluntary manslaughter
instruction].)
In her reply brief, defendant
contends the jury could have concluded Felix's attack, which "stunned"
her and stimulated her adrenaline, caused her in fact to have acted
from passion. Any such inference, however, was precluded by
defendant's own testimony. She told the jury that while she acted from
fear, her emotions were not overcome; she did not "snap." In light of
this testimony, the only evidentiary basis for an inference that the
circumstances caused defendant to act from passion, contrary to her
testimony, was the nature of the wounds. As noted above, the nature of
the wounds was insufficient to support the instruction.
The situation is
indistinguishable from that of Moye, supra, 47 Cal.4th 537, in which
the defendant beat the victim to death with a bat. The only direct
evidence of the fatal encounter was the testimony of the defendant,
who claimed he acted in self-defense. According to the defendant, the
victim attacked him with the bat, but, after a few blows, he was able
to wrest control from the victim. When the victim continued to charge,
the defendant swung the bat in self-defense. Although the defendant
said he was not in his right mind at the time of the fight, his
testimony made clear this altered state constituted fear and alertness
caused by the threat to his life. As he said, "he was worried about
getting hit by [the victim] because he did not want to 'get beat down
and possibly be killed.' " (Id. at p. 552.) Under these circumstances,
the Supreme Court held, the trial court was correct in refusing to
give an instruction on sudden quarrel or heat of passion. As the court
noted, "[i]n the face of defendant's own testimony, no reasonable
juror could conclude defendant acted ' " 'rashly or without due
deliberation and reflection, and from this passion rather than from
judgment . . . .' " [citations]' [citation] . . . . Although defendant
did testify he was not in a 'right state of mind' when [the victim]
thereafter turned and attacked him . . . , he immediately explained he
was referring to his thought processes being caught up in the effort
to defend himself from [the victim]." (Id. at pp. 553-554.)
Defendant's situation was the
same. The only direct evidence of defendant's mental state was her own
testimony, during which she claimed to have reacted to Felix's anger
and attack in calculated self-defense, not passionate anger. As in
Moye, there was no substantial evidence to support any other
inference. The trial court therefore did not err in refusing to
deliver a heat of passion instruction.
C. Miranda Violation
Defendant contends the trial
court erred in admitting evidence of statements she made to police
during an interrogation following the discovery of Felix's killing
because she was not given proper warnings under Miranda, supra, 384
U.S. 436. The Attorney General effectively concedes the warnings did
not comply fully with Miranda's requirements, a failing that would
have justified exclusion of the statements in the prosecution's
case-in-chief. The Attorney General argues, however, that defendant
forfeited any claim of error by failing to raise this issue at trial
and that any error from admission of the statements was harmless.
1. Background
Defendant was interviewed by
police soon after Felix's body was discovered. The interviewing
officer began by telling defendant she was not free to leave and, as a
result, was entitled to be informed of her legal rights. He then told
her she had "the right to remain silent," to have an attorney present
during questioning, and to an appointed attorney if she could not
afford one. When the officer then asked defendant if she wanted to
discuss "what happened," she said she did, although she complained she
was "very, very tired." Noting he was tired as well, the officer began
to question her. Defendant's subsequent statements were introduced as
evidence during the prosecution's case.
There is no question the
officer's warning did not comply with Miranda, which requires a
criminal suspect to be informed not only that he or she has the right
not to answer questions--to remain silent--but also that if he or she
elects to waive that right, any resulting statements can be used
against the suspect in court. (Miranda, supra, 384 U.S. at p. 469.) If
an interviewing officer fails to give either of these warnings or the
other two warnings mentioned by the officer relating to counsel,
Miranda precludes introduction of the statements in the prosecution's
case-in-chief. (See People v. Bradford (2008) 169 Cal.App.4th 843, 854
(Bradford).) Because the officer did not warn defendant her statements
could be used against her in court, admission of the statements during
the prosecution case was objectionable.
Despite the unambiguous nature
of the officer's error, defendant never raised this issue below. Prior
to the first trial, defendant's retained counsel did move to suppress
her statements to police, but he did not challenge the adequacy of the
Miranda warnings given to defendant, despite making the motion to
suppress under the purported authority of Miranda. Instead, counsel
argued the statements were "coerced" because police pressured
defendant by taking Gabriel into custody at the same time she was
detained. Counsel also challenged the admissibility of statements
defendant made to police prior to being given any Miranda warnings.
An evidentiary hearing was held
prior to the first trial at which defendant and the officer testified.
The trial court ruled defendant was taken into custody at her home,
prior to the formal police interrogation, but it refused to suppress
her comments made at that time because they were not made in response
to police questioning. The court also rejected her claim of coercion
regarding statements made after the Miranda warnings were given.
Although counsel had not challenged the adequacy of the Miranda
warnings given defendant, the court nonetheless noted that it had
reviewed the tape of the interview and concluded "a Miranda, full
Miranda, advisement was given." Defense counsel did not object to or
otherwise comment on the court's unsolicited conclusion that a full
Miranda warning had been given, although he was provided an
opportunity to do so.
During preparation for the
second trial, defendant was initially represented by retained counsel.
When the attorneys were discussing with the court the need for making
in limine motions in preparation for the second trial, the court ruled
that all pleadings, arguments, and rulings of the court from the first
trial would be incorporated into the second trial, "with the
understanding that you're not waiving any objections or . . .
objections to rulings, that you made the first time."
Defendant soon thereafter made a
motion under Faretta v. California (1975) 422 U.S. 806, for leave to
represent herself. At the same time, her attorney declared an actual
conflict had developed with defendant and asked to be relieved of his
representation. The request was granted, and defendant was permitted
to proceed in propria persona. There is no indication in the record
counsel had any continuing role in defendant's case.
At the second trial, after the
testimony of the officers who responded to her home, defendant raised
a general objection "to every non-Mirandized statement," disputing
again the admissibility of the statements she made before being
interrogated at the police station. In response, the court noted, "The
Miranda issue was litigated prior to the first trial. It wasn't
renewed formally. I'm gathering that there's a renewal of that." The
court denied the motion after further argument.
Later, when one of the
interrogating officers testified, defendant objected to admission of
the statements she made to him as "a violation of my Miranda rights."
The court initially responded, "The Miranda issue is one for the
Court, and has already been litigated and decided." When defendant
contended, "I have new evidence," however, the court sent the jury
away and heard argument. Defendant told the court, "I have examined
the . . . transcripts very carefully, and I have done some more
research. And . . . the transcripts indicate that prior to talking to
[the interrogating officer] I told him that I was very, very tired.
That is enough to trigger . . . not just a Miranda warning, but to
indicate to the officers that they should not proceed with the
discussion." In the colloquy that followed, defendant did not
challenge the substantive adequacy of the Miranda warnings, although
she did raise again the issues surrounding the statements she made
before being given the warnings. The court overruled defendant's
objection, in the process reiterating that it had earlier concluded
the Miranda warnings were "properly given."
Based on this record, there is
no question the issue now raised--the substantive adequacy of the
Miranda warnings given to defendant prior to her police
interrogation--was never brought to the attention of the trial court
or asserted as a basis for suppressing her statements during trial.
Defendant cited Miranda, but the only arguments made under the
authority of that decision were the claims her statements given after
the Miranda warnings were coerced and her statements made prior to the
warnings should be suppressed.
2. Waiver
" ' "An appellate court will
ordinarily not consider procedural defects or erroneous rulings, in
connection with relief sought or defenses asserted, where an objection
could have been, but was not, presented to the lower court by some
appropriate method . . . . The circumstances may involve such
intentional acts or acquiescence as to be appropriately classified
under the headings of estoppel or waiver . . . . Often, however, the
explanation is simply that it is unfair to the trial judge and to the
adverse party to take advantage of an error on appeal when it could
easily have been corrected at the trial." ' [Citation.] ' "The purpose
of the general doctrine of waiver is to encourage a defendant to bring
errors to the attention of the trial court, so that they may be
corrected or avoided and a fair trial had . . . ." ' [Citation.] ' "No
procedural principle is more familiar to this Court than that a
constitutional right," or a right of any other sort, "may be forfeited
in criminal as well as civil cases by the failure to make timely
assertion of the right before a tribunal having jurisdiction to
determine it." ' " (People v. Saunders (1993) 5 Cal.4th 580, 589-590.)
Under Evidence Code section 353,
subdivision (a), a judgment can be reversed because of an erroneous
admission of evidence only if the record contains an objection both
"timely made and so stated as to make clear the specific ground of the
objection or motion." (People v. Demetrulis (2006) 39 Cal.4th 1, 20.)
If a defendant fails to make a timely objection on the precise ground
asserted on appeal, the error is not cognizable on appeal. (Ibid.)
Accordingly, unless a defendant asserts in the trial court a specific
ground for suppression of his or her statements to police under
Miranda, that ground is forfeited on appeal, even if the defendant
asserted other arguments under the same decision. (People v. Rundle
(2008) 43 Cal.4th 76, 120-121, overruled on other grounds in People v.
Doolin (2009) 45 Cal.4th 390, 421, fn. 22; People v. Holt (1997) 15
Cal.4th 619, 666; People v. Ray (1996) 13 Cal.4th 313, 339.) Because
she did not raise the issue of the substantive adequacy of the Miranda
warnings in the trial court, defendant has forfeited that issue on
appeal.
Defendant argues she "properly
preserved" the issue by objecting on grounds of Miranda both prior to
the first trial and during the second trial. As the discussion of the
record shows, however, defendant did not merely cite Miranda. She and
her retained counsel carefully articulated their arguments under
Miranda. Both arguments contended her statements to police were
coerced. No mention was made of the warnings themselves. These claims
of coercion are simply not sufficient to preserve the present issue
under Evidence Code section 353, subdivision (a), because they did not
call to the attention of the trial court the substantive inadequacy of
the warnings under Miranda and provide the trial court an opportunity
to avoid error on that ground. On the contrary, as noted above, when
the trial court sua sponte expressed an opinion the warnings were
adequate, retained counsel acceded to the characterization.*fn10
3. Ineffective Assistance of
Counsel
Defendant contends that, if she
has forfeited her right to raise the inadequacy of the Miranda
warnings because the issue was not presented to the trial court, the
failure to raise the issue was a consequence of ineffective assistance
of counsel. Defendant, however, represented herself in the trial
resulting in the judgment presently on appeal. "Defendants who have
elected self-representation may not thereafter seek reversal of their
convictions on the ground that their own efforts were inadequate and
amounted to a denial of effective assistance of counsel." (People v.
Bloom (1989) 48 Cal.3d 1194, 1226.)
Defendant contends the fault for
the failure to raise the inadequacy of the Miranda warnings lay with
her retained counsel, whose motion in limine to suppress the
statements prior to the first trial did not mention it. When a
defendant elects self-representation, however, he or she can cite the
errors of counsel as constituting ineffective assistance only when
counsel has been assigned a particular role in connection with the
proceedings, and only to the extent counsel has performed inadequately
in that role. (People v. Blair, supra, 36 Cal.4th 686, 723; see, e.g.,
People v. Mendoza (2000) 24 Cal.4th 130, 157 [allowing ineffective
assistance claim where defendant officially represented himself, but
his attorneys retained responsibility for pretrial and trial
proceedings].) While it is true, as defendant argues, her counsel was
not merely advisory but responsible for all aspects of her defense at
the first trial, he was relieved of those duties prior to commencement
of the second trial, which led to the judgment here under
consideration. As far as the record reveals, he had no role in that
trial. Rather, defendant took on herself the responsibility for making
all evidentiary objections. It was therefore defendant's own failure
to raise the Miranda issue when her statements to police were offered
into evidence in the second trial that led to the forfeiture. "A
self-represented defendant may not claim ineffective assistance on
account of counsel's omission to perform an act within the scope of
duties the defendant voluntarily undertook to perform personally at
trial." (People v. Bloom, supra, 48 Cal.3d at pp. 1226-1227.)
Defendant contends retained
counsel should be held responsible because he failed to make the
Miranda argument prior to the first trial, arguing the trial court
incorporated its rulings from the first trial into the second. While
we might find some merit in this argument if, at the second trial, the
court had prohibited the making of new arguments on issues covered in
rulings from the irst trial, refused to reconsider rulings made at the
first trial, or otherwise dogmatically held to those rulings, that was
plainly not the case. On the contrary, the trial court's incorporation
of proceedings from the first trial was merely a convenience, intended
to relieve the attorneys of the burden of relitigating issues already
raised and resolved.*fn11 Throughout the second trial, the court
regularly permitted defendant to raise new legal arguments and even to
revisit previously settled issues. In connection with the exclusion of
her statements to police, for example, the court allowed defendant to
reargue her contention the pre-Miranda statements should be
suppressed. While the trial court initially told defendant admission
of the post-Miranda statements was an issue of law that had been
settled prior to the first trial, when defendant told the court she
had "new evidence," the trial court heard defendant out and considered
her new argument. Defendant was therefore free to raise new issues of
law throughout the trial and was in no way bound by her retained
counsel's failure to raise the Miranda issue prior to the first trial.
For that reason, counsel's failure at the first trial to raise the
issue was not the cause of defendant's failure to raise the issue at
the second trial. There is no basis for a claim of ineffective
assistance of counsel on this issue.
4. Prejudice
Even if the trial court's error
in admitting defendant's statements on the prosecution's case-in-chief
had been preserved for appeal, we would find no grounds for reversal
because, under these circumstances, any error in the admission of
those statements was not prejudicial to defendant. In making this
determination, we apply the Chapman standard requiring reversal unless
admission of the statements was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
(Chapman v. California (1967) 386 U.S. 18, 21-22; People v. Lujan
(2001) 92 Cal.App.4th 1389, 1403.)
The evidence of defendant's
guilt, apart from her statements to police, was strong. In the days
prior to the killing, defendant had made a number of threats to kill
Felix. Her son Gabriel, who witnessed the threats, took them seriously
enough to fear for his father's life. Felix was similarly concerned.
Felix was killed in the cottage behind defendant's house, while
defendant was home. Her footprint was found in the dried blood, the
shoe prints matched her size, and clumps of her hair were clenched in
Felix's hands. Further, there was little or no evidence of
self-defense, outside defendant's testimony. The combination of a
blunt force wound to the back of the head, a single stab wound to the
back, and the remaining stab wounds to the front suggested that
defendant set upon Felix from the back. Moreover, she lacked the
wounds that might have been expected had she been attacked. She did
not report the killing to police, as would have been expected if she
had acted in self-defense, falsely pretended ignorance to her son, and
apparently took steps to cover up the killing. Defendant's statements
to police, in which she confirmed the couple had marital problems but
otherwise denied involvement in the killing, added no significantly
inculpatory information to this evidence. Given the strength of the
evidence of guilt, and the minimal inculpatory value of her statements
to police, admission of those statements was harmless beyond a
reasonable doubt.
Defendant contends admission of
the statements was damaging because her various complaints about Felix
to the interrogating officer revealed "[m]ultiple motives" to kill
him. As an example, she cites her comments about Felix's success in
obtaining custody of Eli, his reduction of support payments to her,
his efforts to remove her from the family home, his remark to Gabriel
she was crazy, and his success in winning away Gabriel's loyalty.
Virtually all of these issues, however, were covered by the testimony
of other witnesses, particularly Gabriel and Felix's attorney. There
was ample evidence, apart from defendant's statements to police, that
defendant felt herself wronged by Felix and bore extraordinarily angry
feelings toward him at the time of the killing. Admission of these
statements to police was therefore merely cumulative on issues that,
to a large degree, were not even in dispute.
Defendant also argues "her false
denials of any involvement in Felix's death suggested guilt." While
this may be true, any suggestion of guilt was entirely the result of
the strength of the evidence discussed above. Her denials to police
were not inculpatory in themselves. If they suggested her guilt in
context, it was only because of the strong evidence that she committed
the killing.
In this regard, we do not
consider as prejudicial any effect her statements to police might have
had in refuting defendant's own testimony asserting self-defense.
Defendant cannot rely on prejudice arising out of the tendency of the
statements to rebut her own testimony because the statements would
have been admissible to impeach that testimony, regardless of the
Miranda violation. (See People v. DePriest (2007) 42 Cal.4th 1, 32
[voluntary confession obtained in violation of Miranda admissible for
purposes of impeachment].)
Defendant contends admission of
the statements was particularly harmful because the prosecution made
them a "centerpiece" of its case. A review of the prosecutor's closing
argument shows the true centerpiece of his case was the forensic
evidence, which he argued heavily, along with defendant's prior
threats against her husband. While defendant's statements were cited
in closing argument, they were used to refute defendant's claim she
acted in self-defense. As noted above, there can be no claim of
prejudice regarding such a use of the statements, since they would
have been admitted as impeachment evidence in response to her
testimony.
Defendant acknowledges the
statements would have been admissible as impeachment evidence, but she
contends, citing our decision in Bradford, supra, 169 Cal.App.4th 843,
that their admission can nonetheless be found prejudicial because she
might not have testified had the statements not been admitted. In
fact, we rejected this type of reasoning in Bradford. In that case,
also a murder prosecution, the evidence, apart from the defendant's
statements to police, would have supported any verdict from murder to
voluntary manslaughter and was arguably consistent with a claim of
self-defense. (Id. at p. 855.) The defendant's statements to police,
however, were highly inculpatory, tending to rule out any defense for
the killing. (Id. at pp. 849-850.) The defendant took the stand and
claimed he acted in self-defense, but the jury rejected the testimony
and convicted him of second degree murder. (Id. at p. 850.) We found
prejudice, noting, "Because of the significant bearing of the
confession on the crucial issue of defendant's mental state and the
ample evidence that would have supported a finding of voluntary
manslaughter rather than murder, we cannot say admission of the
confession was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt." (Id. at p. 855.)
In Bradford, the Attorney
General argued the statements to police should not be considered
prejudicial because they would have been admitted to impeach the
defendant's testimony in any event; the defendant responded he would
not have testified if not for the need to counter his statements to
police. We rejected both arguments, recognizing, "Whether defendant
would have testified in the absence of the need to respond to his
confession and, if so, whether the confession would have been admitted
for purposes of impeachment requires us to engage in speculation about
the parties' tactical choices. Because it is impossible to determine
what might have happened had the trial proceeded differently, we
conclude that prejudice should be evaluated on the basis of the
evidence actually presented, while excluding the improperly admitted
confession. On this basis, as noted above, we cannot find the
confession's admission to have been harmless beyond a reasonable
doubt." (Bradford, supra, 169 Cal.App.4th at pp. 855-856.) For the
same reason, we decline to speculate about defendant's decision to
testify here and, as noted, find no prejudice "on the basis of the
evidence actually presented, while excluding the improperly admitted
confession." (Id. at p. 855.)
The two cases are otherwise
poles apart. In Bradford, the defendant's statements to police were
highly inculpatory, while the remaining evidence was ambiguous. Thus,
the evidence presented, minus the statements to police, could have
supported any one of several verdicts, arguably including acquittal.
The defendant's statements to police were prejudicial because they
tended to make the lesser verdicts much less probable by ruling out
self-defense and heat of passion. In comparison, as discussed above,
the evidence of guilt here was strong and unambiguous, and defendant's
statements to police were not in themselves inculpatory. Accordingly,
under the test we articulated in Bradford, admission of the statements
was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
Finally, defendant argues that
if the statements had been admitted solely for impeachment purposes
during her testimony, rather than introduced in the prosecution's
case-in-chief, they would have had less evidentiary force because she
would have been entitled to a jury instruction precluding their
consideration as proof of her guilt. (See, e.g., People v. Coffman and
Marlow (2004) 34 Cal.4th 1, 63.) Such an instruction, however, would
have had little impact on the evidentiary significance of the
statements. Their chief value was not to provide affirmative proof of
defendant's guilt but to cast doubt on her exculpatory testimony of
self-defense. As a result, introduction of the statements in the
prosecution's case-in-chief, rather than as impeachment evidence, did
not change their value as evidence.
D. Use of the Word "Homicide"
Defendant contends the trial
court committed misconduct because, by approving the use of the word
"homicide" in reference to Felix's death, the court "unmistakably
informed the jury that the court had allied itself with the
prosecution by accepting its theory" Felix's death was a killing,
thereby rejecting defendant's claim he died a natural death.
1. Background
As discussed above, Dr. John
Cooper opined on defendant's behalf that Felix's death was not a
homicide because he died as a result "acute coronary insufficiency due
to severe coronary artery disease," to which his wounds "were a
contributing factor." Early in the trial, well prior to Cooper's
testimony, the prosecutor referred to Felix's death as a "murder."
After the trial court sustained defendant's objection to the use of
that term and to his subsequent use of the term "killing," the court
directed that the death could be referred to as a "homicide." In so
doing, it overruled defendant's objection that "homicide" was
inappropriate because "[i]t is not established that there was a
killing. The cause of death has not been established." The matter was
discussed again a few days later, when defendant objected to the
court's reference to a "homicide" during argument outside the jury's
presence. Defendant told the court she had contacted two experts who
claimed Felix died of natural causes. The court responded, "There's no
jury here to be prejudiced by that term. If you'll note in front of
the jury, I'm not using that term."
2. Discussion
A trial court " ' "commits
misconduct if it persistently makes discourteous and disparaging
remarks to defense counsel so as to discredit the defense or create
the impression it is allying itself with the prosecution." ' " (People
v. McWhorter (2009) 47 Cal.4th 318, 373.) It is essential the court
maintain the appearance of neutrality because jurors have "great
confidence [i]n the fairness of judges, and upon the correctness of
their views expressed during trials." (People v. Sturm (2006) 37
Cal.4th 1218, 1233.) Misconduct occurs "[w]hen 'the trial court
persists in making discourteous and disparaging remarks to a
defendant's counsel and witnesses and utters frequent comment[s] from
which the jury may plainly perceive that the testimony of the
witnesses is not believed by the judge.' " (Ibid.) A judgment will be
reversed if "judicial misconduct or bias was so prejudicial that it
deprived defendant of ' "a fair, as opposed to a perfect, trial." ' "
(People v. Guerra (2006) 37 Cal.4th 1067, 1112, overruled on another
ground in People v. Rundle, supra, 43 Cal.4th 76, 151.)
Defendant's claim fails for two
reasons.*fn12 First, there was no misconduct. It is by no means clear
the court's approval of the word "homicide" communicated to the jury a
rejection of defendant's position on this issue. While we agree with
defendant the word "homicide" implies a killing, as opposed merely to
a death, this is a relatively subtle linguistic distinction, one more
apparent to attorneys than laypersons. The incident on which the
argument is based occurred on the first day of testimony, long before
any presentation of evidence by defendant on this issue, and the court
thereafter refrained from using the term "homicide" in front of the
jury. When Cooper testified, the court said nothing to suggest it did
not believe his testimony.
Yet even if we were to accept
defendant's argument that the trial court's approval of the word
"homicide" communicated its rejection of the claim Felix died of
natural causes, the ruling did not constitute the type of persistent
biased conduct necessary to demonstrate judicial misconduct. This
ruling was an isolated event. To rise to the level of judicial
misconduct on the ground of bias, there must be a pattern of judicial
behavior suggesting a more complete rejection of the defendant and his
or her innocence. Yet this single use of the word "homicide" is the
only example of biased conduct cited by defendant. A review of the
trial record shows the court exercised admirable restraint,
maintaining an appearance of neutrality under difficult circumstances.
Defendant relies on People v.
Sturm, supra, 37 Cal.4th 1218, but the cases are very different. The
trial judge in Sturm "engaged in a pattern of disparaging defense
counsel and defense witnesses in the presence of the jury, and
conveyed the impression that he favored the prosecution by frequently
interposing objections to defense counsel's questions." (Id. at p.
1238.) Nothing of the sort occurred here. At most, the court made a
word choice that could be construed to suggest the court did not
accept a particular factual contention of the defense. There was no
disparagement of Cooper or defendant and no hint the court favored the
prosecution more generally.*fn13
Second, any rejection of this
aspect of Cooper's testimony by the court would have been harmless
because his testimony on this issue was insufficient to relieve
defendant of criminal responsibility for Felix's death. To prove
homicide, the prosecution was not required to show that defendant's
criminal conduct was the sole or even the primary cause of Felix's
death, but merely that it was a substantial factor in causing his
death. As the Supreme Court summarized the law to be applied when
there is more than one possible cause of death, "as long as the jury
finds that without the criminal act the death would not have occurred
when it did, it need not determine which of the concurrent causes was
the principal or primary cause of death. Rather, it is required that
the [criminal] cause was a substantial factor contributing to the
result: ' "[N]o cause will receive judicial recognition if the part it
played was so infinitesimal or so theoretical that it cannot properly
be regarded as a substantial factor in bringing about the particular
result." ' [Citations.] [¶] This is true even if the victim's
pre-existing physical condition also was a substantial factor causing
death. [Citation.] 'So long as a victim's predisposing physical
condition, regardless of its cause, is not the only substantial factor
bringing about his death, that condition . . . in no way destroys the
[defendant's] criminal responsibility for the death.' " (People v.
Catlin (2001) 26 Cal.4th 81, 155-156.)
Cooper did not testify that
Felix's coronary artery disease was the sole cause of his death or,
put another way, that Felix would have died that evening of coronary
artery disease even if defendant had not stabbed him deeply and
repeatedly. Rather, Cooper acknowledged the stab wounds played a
crucial role in the death. As he said, "[I]f I were filling out a
death certificate I would--I would put as cause of death acute
coronary insufficiency due to coronary arteriosclerosis. And then
there's a section for significant contributing factors. I would put
multiple stab wounds." Accordingly, even if Cooper's testimony was
fully credited by the jury on this issue, it would not have proven
that a homicide did not occur.*fn14 In the absence of any substantial
evidence Felix's death was not a homicide, the court's reference to it
as such was harmless and did not deprive defendant of a fair trial.
(See People v. Guerra, supra, 37 Cal.4th at p. 1112.)
E. Cross-examination of
Cooper
Defendant contends the trial
court abused its discretion and committed reversible error when it
permitted the prosecutor to cross-examine Cooper extensively about the
unusual events surrounding the disclosure of his litigation file.
1. Background
During Cooper's
cross-examination, it emerged he maintained a file with respect to
defendant's case but had not brought it to California from his home in
Texas. After a contentious exchange regarding the file, which the
prosecution contended should have been turned over prior to Cooper's
testimony, the court dismissed the jury for the day to discuss the
file's disclosure. In response to the court's questioning, Cooper said
that, while most of his file remained at home, in his hotel room was a
letter written by defendant describing the events on the night of the
killing on which Cooper had relied in formulating his opinions, along
with a few other relevant documents. The court asked Cooper to bring
the letter to court the next day.
The next morning, a Friday,
Cooper told the court the letter from defendant was not in his papers
at the hotel, "[w]hich means that it was either taken or I have
misplaced it." He explained the lock on his hotel room door was not
working, which would have allowed for theft of the document.
Alternatively, he thought he might have left it on the airplane. When
the court directed Cooper to have the file sent by overnight mail from
his home, he responded that no one was at home to ship the documents.
After further discussion, the court ordered Cooper to return to court
on the following Monday with his file and to call the airline to
inquire about the lost letter. Cooper answered, "Certainly," giving no
indication he would not comply with the order. Court adjourned at
10:10 a.m.The following Monday morning, Cooper called the court to say
he would not be returning. In a three-page letter sent by e-mail, he
explained he was "withdrawing from any further participation" in the
trial because of "the hostile behavior" of the prosecutor, who "has
contrived to make my record-keeping the central issue." Further,
Cooper wrote, the prosecutor's "stalling tactics have caused me to run
out of time to participate in this trial." The letter also claimed the
prosecution's pathology expert "saw fit to present a distortion of the
autopsy evidence" and made "false representations," accused the
prosecutor of creating a "smokescreen" and seeking to bring about a
mistrial, and claimed Cooper was under no "legal obligation" to bring
the documents to court in the absence of a subpoena. In the course of
his diatribe, Cooper confidently proclaimed defendant's innocence.
The trial court characterized
Cooper's conduct as unprecedented in her experience, noting in
consternation: "I have never had an expert take on the role to such an
extent of an advocate, and then to indicate that he has chosen not to
come back. . . . [¶] . . . [F]or him to do this to [defendant] in the
middle of the testimony is . . . bizarre, and somewhat inexcusable,
because it puts the defendant in an untenable position in some
respects." After denying defendant's request for a mistrial as a
result of the controversy, the court issued an order for Cooper's
reappearance.
When Cooper returned to court,
he was subjected to extensive cross-examination about the foregoing
events, over frequent and vigorous defense objection. The prosecutor
began with questions about the contents of Cooper's file and his use
of various materials from the file in preparation for his testimony,
but he soon moved to the events surrounding Cooper's failure to bring
his file, the conflicting statements he made about the location and
contents of the file, and his sudden withdrawal from the case.
Eventually, Cooper admitted he failed to appear because he was
preparing for testimony in another matter. This led to questions about
his letter to the court and his understanding of his legal obligations
as an expert witness. Eventually, the prosecutor accused Cooper of
withdrawing in order to avoid cross-examination.
2. Discussion
Under Evidence Code section 721,
subdivision (a), an expert witness "may be cross-examined to the same
extent as any other witness and, in addition, may be fully
cross-examined as to (1) his or her qualifications, (2) the subject to
which his or her expert testimony relates, and (3) the matter upon
which his or her opinion is based and the reasons for his or her
opinion." " '[I]t is well settled that the scope of cross-examination
of an expert witness is especially broad; a prosecutor may bring in
facts beyond those introduced on direct examination in order to
explore the grounds and reliability of the expert's opinion.' "
(People v. Loker (2008) 44 Cal.4th 691, 739.) We reverse for error in
the admission of evidence if "it is reasonably probable the verdict
would have been more favorable to the defendant absent the error."
(People v. Watson (2008) 43 Cal.4th 652, 686.)
While we agree with defendant
that a prosecutor's cross-examination of an expert witness about his
or her disclosure of documents would ordinarily be of limited
relevance, we find no abuse of the trial court's exercise of its
discretion in these circumstances. Although defendant characterizes
the disputed cross-examination as addressing Cooper's knowledge of the
rules of discovery, it was both broader and more pertinent than
that.*fn15 Although an experienced expert witness, Cooper failed to
bring his litigation file to court. When asked about it, he claimed
under oath to have left it at home. Then he told the court he had some
of it with him, including a letter from defendant. A day later, he
said the letter was either stolen or left on an airplane. When ordered
to return to court with the file after the weekend, Cooper acceded
without complaint, but when Monday came around he refused to return.
Initially, he attributed his refusal to his treatment by the court and
the prosecutor, but he eventually disclosed he had another litigation
commitment that week. The foregoing conduct was sufficiently irregular
and suggestive of evasion and dishonesty as to bear on his
credibility. Perhaps even more important, the tone of Cooper's letter
was that of an advocate for defendant's acquittal rather than a
dispassionate expert. The exploration of this attitude was highly
relevant to the credibility of Cooper's opinions. There was no abuse
of discretion in permitting cross-examination on these matters.
In any event, there would be no
basis for reversal as a result of the questioning even if permitting
it had constituted error, since it was not prejudicial.*fn16 Because
defendant acknowledged having killed Felix, the primary issue was
whether the killing was in self-defense. The evidence refuting
self-defense was strong, including defendant's threats and avowals of
intent to kill Felix prior his death, the pattern of his injuries, and
her evasive conduct immediately following his death. While Cooper's
testimony regarding the pattern of Felix's injuries was a significant
part of defendant's defense, the disputed cross-examination did not
directly challenge the substance of Cooper's opinion that Felix's
injuries were consistent with self-defense. In light of the strong
evidence of guilt and the marginal impact of this cross-examination on
the substance of Cooper's testimony, there is no reason to believe the
jury's verdict would have been different in its absence.
F. The Prosecutor's Reference
to Court TV
During his cross-examination of
Cooper, the prosecutor asked Cooper whether he was aware his opinions
had been criticized by forensic pathologists interviewed on
television. Although the trial court sustained an objection to this
question and admonished the jury to disregard it, defendant contends
the court erred in not declaring a mistrial.
1. Background
During the cross-examination
discussed in the preceding section, the prosecutor asked Cooper if he
was aware "how many papers" had quoted his letter to the court. In
response, Cooper answered he was unaware, saying, "I haven't read the
papers. I have just been following it on Court TV." The prosecutor
followed up:
"Q. Really? Did you hear them
talking about you on Court TV?
"A. No, I don't watch
television. I get the website.
"Q. Oh. You didn't see all those
forensic pathologists on Court TV saying that your opinion had no
basis?
"[DEFENDANT:] Objection -
"[PROSECUTOR:] You didn't' see
any of that?"
The trial court sustained the
objection and admonished the jury to disregard the question, but the
court denied defendant's motion for a mistrial on grounds of
prosecutorial misconduct.
2. Discussion
The prosecutor's question was an
improper attempt to elicit otherwise inadmissible evidence, and the
trial court properly sustained defendant's objection and admonished
the jury. (See, e.g., People v. Smithey (1999) 20 Cal.4th 936, 960.)
The trial court was required to declare a mistrial if any prejudice
resulting from the prosecutor's question was " 'incurable by
admonition or instruction.' " (People v. Collins (2010) 49 Cal.4th
175, 198.) " 'Whether a particular incident is incurably prejudicial
is by its nature a speculative matter, and the trial court is vested
with considerable discretion in ruling on mistrial motions.
[Citation.]' [Citation.] A motion for a mistrial should be granted
when ' " 'a [defendant's] chances of receiving a fair trial have been
irreparably damaged.' " ' " (Ibid.)
We find no abuse in the trial
court's denial of the motion for mistrial. There was limited, if any,
prejudice from the question. Because defendant intervened before the
witness answered the question, the prosecutor's improper implication
was not confirmed, and the jury was instructed to disregard the
prosecutor's comment in any event. While it was improper to suggest
unnamed experts outside the courtroom had rejected Cooper's opinions,
his opinions were already subject to challenge by the views of the
prosecution's testifying experts. Any prejudice resulting from this
suggestion was minor, at most, and curable.
Defendant characterizes the
question as "unforgettable and therefore incurably prejudicial." She
fails to explain, however, why this question among the thousands posed
at trial was unforgettable and why, even if the question was for some
reason unforgettable, the jury could not follow the court's
instruction to disregard it.
Defendant analogizes the case to
People v. Hill (1998) 17 Cal.4th 800, but in Hill the magnitude of the
prosecutor's misconduct, and the resulting prejudice, was of another
order entirely. Defendant focuses solely on the Hill prosecutor's
references to facts not in evidence. (Id. at pp. 827-828.) In addition
to these references, however, the Hill prosecutor committed additional
misconduct by misstating evidence and mischaracterizing testimony
several times (id. at pp. 823-826), making intentionally confusing
references to particular evidence (id. at pp. 825-826), suggesting the
crimes ceased after the defendant's arrest (id. at p. 828), suggesting
the People had an expert to testify to a matter without calling the
expert (ibid.), misstating the law on at least four occasions (id. at
pp. 829-832), treating defense counsel with derision (id. at pp.
832-833), and intimidating witnesses (id. at p. 834). The Supreme
Court's decision to reverse was based on the cumulative prejudice
resulting not only from this extensive prosecutorial misconduct but
also from a series of other errors in the trial. (Id. at p. 844.)
Assuming the prosecutor's single reference to the Court TV experts was
prejudicial at all, the degree was in no way comparable to the
cumulative prejudice caused by the repeated and persistent misconduct
in Hill.
G. "Were They Lying"
Cross-examination
Defendant contends the
prosecutor committed misconduct by asking defendant during
cross-examination whether she believed certain witnesses were lying
and creating a chart listing the accused liars.
1. Background
During cross-examination, the
prosecutor questioned defendant about her interaction with Gabriel on
the night he discovered Felix's body. After claiming not to recall
certain aspects of Gabriel's account and denying others, defendant
said, "Well, there's a difference between what he has said happened
and what I have said happened." The prosecutor followed up by asking,
"[A]re you saying to this jury that he lied about that conversation?"
After considerable colloquy, with the prosecutor persisting in the
question, defendant answered that she was not accusing Gabriel of
lying. In so doing, she made no formal objection to the question.
After substantial further exploration of Gabriel's testimony, the
prosecutor asked defendant whether, after Gabriel returned from
discovering Felix's body, she said "something to him, like, I guess I
didn't use a shotgun, did I?" When defendant denied making the remark,
the prosecutor responded, "So he's lying?" Without objecting,
defendant responded that Gabriel "was less than truthful on the stand,
yes." Using some type of display, the prosecutor began a tabulation,
writing "Liars" at the top of a page and, beneath it, "Number 1,
Gabe." Defendant objected to the prosecutor's use of the chart,
denying she had called her son a liar.*fn17
The prosecutor soon after began
questioning defendant about a police investigator. After she denied
telling the investigator when informed of Felix's death, "Oh, well, we
were getting a divorce anyhow," the prosecutor asked whether the
investigator was lying. Without objecting, defendant responded, "[He]
is exceedingly deceptive and dishonest."
Two trial days later, still
continuing his cross-examination, the prosecutor asked defendant about
the autopsy testimony. When she denied "stick[ing] the knife in all
the way," the prosecutor asked, "Is [the medical examiner] a liar
also?" Again without objecting, defendant responded, "I like Dr.
Cooper's answer to that, that a gentleman doesn't call someone else a
liar. Hm, I think he said that [the medical examiner] was exceedingly,
hm, dishonest . . . ." Later that day, during an exchange between the
prosecutor and defendant in the course of her testimony, defendant
accused the prosecutor of "attempting . . . to make it look like you
have a case when you don't. And that's the same reason why you
supported [sic] perjured testimony from your witnesses and the
fabrication of evidence by . . . officers on the scene." After the
prosecutor asked, "Who else has perjured themselves, Mrs. Polk," the
defendant named him. The prosecutor then threatened to list his own
name on the chart of "liars," and defendant and the prosecutor
exchanged views of the linguistic distinction between "liars" and
persons who are "deceptive." Defendant denied using the former term,
but she was comfortable with the latter. Defendant again objected to
use of the chart but did not object to the prosecutor's questions.
During continued
cross-examination the next day, defendant explained her belief the
police had tampered with evidence to make it appear she had murdered
Felix by moving furniture, spreading Felix's blood around the cottage,
taking a woman's shoe dipped in blood "and stamp[ing] it all over the
room," and moving the body. In the process, she expressly accused two
of the police investigators of lying. Regarding the second accused
officer, the prosecutor asked whether he could add the investigator to
his list of liars. Without objecting, defendant demurred because "I'm
not sure that he's a habitual liar."
Discussing her sons' testimony
during her own redirect testimony, defendant told the jury, "So, hm, I
don't think of . . . Gabriel and Adam as liars. Hm, that they have
told some lies, a number of lies, hm, I think that that's something
that they have learned to do, and that they have mainly learned to do
in the, hm, three and a half years I have been away from them."
Turning to the prosecutor's "list of liars," defendant commented, "I
think some people tell lies a lot and live their lives around that,
and just about everything is a lie." Defendant then discussed the
listed persons one by one, rejecting the listing of some and accusing
the remainder of giving deceptive testimony. The medical examiner, she
claimed, "knew he was lying, and he did so deliberately." Defendant
reiterated these claims in closing argument, accusing the prosecutor,
her sons, and two police investigators either of lying or of
"fabricat[ing] evidence."
2. Discussion
"A prosecutor who uses deceptive
or reprehensible methods to persuade the jury commits misconduct, and
such actions require reversal under the federal Constitution when they
infect the trial with such ' "unfairness as to make the resulting
conviction a denial of due process." ' [Citations.] Under state law, a
prosecutor who uses deceptive or reprehensible methods commits
misconduct even when those actions do not result in a fundamentally
unfair trial." (People v. Cook (2006) 39 Cal.4th 566, 606.)
Our Supreme Court has rejected
the argument that asking a witness whether another witness was lying
necessarily constitutes prosecutorial misconduct because it invades
the province of the jury. Rather, in People v. Chatman (2006) 38
Cal.4th 344, the court held that "were they lying" questions must be
evaluated individually. (Id. at p. 382.) A defendant who is a
percipient witness to the events at issue may be able to provide
insight into why another witness's testimony differs from his or her
own. On the other hand, to ask a witness with no relevant personal
knowledge of the events whether another witness is lying calls for
irrelevant speculation. (Ibid.) Similarly, asking a defendant whether
an inanimate object is lying, as occurred in Chatman, is purely
argumentative. (Id. at p. 384.) Accordingly, the court directed,
"courts should carefully scrutinize 'were they lying' questions in
context. They should not be permitted when argumentative, or when
designed to elicit testimony that is irrelevant or speculative.
However, in its discretion, a court may permit such questions if the
witness to whom they are addressed has personal knowledge that allows
him to provide competent testimony that may legitimately assist the
trier of fact in resolving credibility questions." (Ibid.; accord,
People v. Hawthorne (2009) 46 Cal.4th 67, 98.)
Initially, defendant has
forfeited any claim of misconduct or error regarding the prosecutor's
"were they lying" questions because she did not object to them.
(People v. Chatman, supra, 38 Cal.4th at p. 380.) Because her only
objection was to the use of the "liar's list," she has forfeited any
argument of impropriety regarding the questions themselves.*fn18
Even if defendant had not
forfeited the argument, we would find no prosecutorial misconduct. As
discussed above, "were they lying" questions are appropriate in some
circumstances. Defendant's admitted personal knowledge of the events
here raised the possibility she would be able to provide relevant,
admissible testimony in response to this type of question. Further, as
suggested above, one element of her defense was the claim she was
being persecuted. Accordingly, there is no indication the prosecutor
was intentionally seeking inadmissible evidence by asking the
questions, and therefore no indication of misconduct. (People v.
Chatman, supra, 38 Cal.4th at pp. 380, 382-384.)
Defendant cites Zambrano, supra,
124 Cal.App.4th 228, in which officers testified they saw the
defendant sell drugs to another person. (Id. at pp. 234-235.) When the
defendant denied the charge, the prosecutor asked him whether the
officers were lying. (Ibid.) Because the defendant had no particular
knowledge of the arresting officers, the court held, asking him
whether they were lying was improper because it called for
foundationless lay opinion about the officer's veracity. (Id. at pp.
240-241.) In contrast, regarding her sons, defendant had personal
knowledge not only of the subject of their testimony, but also their
character, and therefore might have provided insight into the reasons
for their falsehoods. Indeed, in her redirect testimony she suggested
they had been influenced by others during her time in jail. The case
is less clear for the investigators and the medical examiner, but
because defendant had acted as her own attorney, and therefore had
reason to have examined their conduct and testimony closely, there was
a reasonable possibility defendant could shed light on their veracity.
In fact, defendant testified freely on redirect about their mendacity,
accusing them of participating in a conspiracy to frame her for
murder, and repeated these claims in her closing argument. Given
defendant's willingness to accuse other witnesses of lying, there was
no error in permitting her to be questioned in this manner.
Even if these questions had been
improper and objection to them preserved, there would be no grounds
for reversing the conviction because the questions were not
prejudicial under the Watson test. (See Zambrano, supra, 124
Cal.App.4th at p. 243.) Defendant made no secret of her contention
various witnesses were giving false testimony. Explaining the
discrepancies between her own testimony and that of the various
prosecution witnesses was an important aspect of her defense, and one
of her explanations was that certain other witnesses were lying. Far
from prejudicial, the prosecutor's questions gave defendant an
opportunity to testify about this aspect of her defense. There is no
possibility that, in the absence of the questions, the verdict would
have been different.*fn19
H. Cumulative Error
Because we have found little or
no preserved error in the proceedings, there is no basis for
considering the cumulative prejudice of the error.
I. Limitations on Defendant's
Self-representation
Defendant contends her
conviction must be reversed, without a showing of prejudice, because
her ability to conduct her defense was hampered by conditions imposed
upon her as a result of her incarceration and restrictions imposed by
the court.
1. Background
Following her conviction,
defendant moved for a new trial on the ground her defense had been
hampered in various ways. In a declaration, Valerie Harris, who acted
as "legal runner and a case manager" for defendant, stated that she
was denied "full contact" visits with defendant at the jail and was
allowed non-contact visits only with seven-day advance notice. She
also said that paperwork dropped off at the jail was subject to
examination and she was not guaranteed privacy during telephone
conversations. Harris also noted defendant was frequently tired
because she was awakened early and sometimes during the night. Harris
contended defendant's exhaustion interfered with preparation for her
cross-examination and her closing argument, although she cited no
specific examples. Defendant was also unable to keep all her
preparation materials in her cell, was denied daily transcripts, and
was denied more than one change of clothes at a time. Again, no
particular prejudice was cited arising from these limitations.
Harris's declaration was at odds
with her comments when the issue of visitation was raised at trial.
Harris's access to defendant was part of a protocol worked out with
the jail. Early in the trial, defendant complained about the need to
make arrangements seven days in advance to see Harris at the jail.
Harris, however, told the court it was generally unnecessary for her
to visit defendant in jail because she saw defendant daily at trial
and was able to transfer materials at that time. In fact, the court
noted later, Harris sat at counsel table with defendant "[f]or a good
part of the time."
The new trial motion was also
supported by a declaration from Gary Wesley, who was appointed to
serve as defendant's advisory counsel just prior to her
cross-examination. At that time, defendant asked the court to appoint
Wesley as her co-counsel, allowing him to make objections during
cross-examination. The court declined to permit the arrangement
requested by defendant, which would allow both her and Wesley to
exercise the courtroom privileges of counsel simultaneously. Instead,
the court stated, defendant had the option of having Wesley appointed
either advisory counsel, "who usually sits in the audience and is only
available for advice and counsel, but doesn't participate," or
counsel, "which means that it takes away from [defendant] the ability
to object, argue, et cetera, for that period of time." The prosecutor,
however, objected to allowing Wesley to be appointed counsel, noting
that because of the complexity of the trial, Wesley, who had not even
sat in on defendant's direct examination, let alone the remainder of
the trial, was not in a position to provide effective assistance as
defendant's attorney.
Accepting the validity of the
prosecutor's argument, the court denied the request to have Wesley
appointed temporary counsel, but it consented to Wesley's acting as
advisory counsel during the cross-examination. Defendant was to retain
the privileges and responsibilities of counsel, such as making
objections. Defendant agreed to the arrangement, telling the court,
"that sounds good." The court allowed Wesley to sit behind defendant
during her cross-examination, but it refused defendant's request that
he be permitted to tap her on the shoulder to alert her to objections.
Instead, defendant was required to initiate contact, turning to Wesley
if she wanted to consult. In his declaration, Wesley stated this
arrangement prevented some objections from being made because he was
unable to alert defendant to objectionable questions, but he cited no
specific forfeited objections.
After one day of this
arrangement, defendant declined without explanation to have Wesley
continue to sit with her on the stand. In a declaration filed with the
new trial motion, she explained she was concerned turning to consult
him would make it look as though she was "trying to evade the
questions." Following the second day of cross-examination, Wesley was
denied a confidential visit with defendant at the jail, apparently
because notice of his appointment as advisory counsel had not been
communicated to the jailers.
Finally, during one of the days
of cross-examination, defendant complained to the court she had been
awakened unnecessarily around 3:00 a.m., saying she "had very little
sleep." After the jury entered the courtroom, defendant announced, "I
didn't hardly get any sleep last night, and I'm sorry. I was awakened
in the middle of the night by a sergeant on a rampage." In the new
trial motion, defendant claimed the early wake-up call decreased her
effectiveness, but she did not cite any examples of adverse events
occurring that day as a result of her inattention.
In denying the motion for a new
trial, the court cited the various allowances made for defendant,
noting defendant "was afforded more accommodations than any other pro
per or represented defendant that I have known in ten years on the
bench, by far," including being housed alone (the only prisoner
permitted this privilege), allowed extra written materials in her cell
(contrary to jail policy and fire department directives), given extra
time for preparation in the morning, granted her own holding cell next
to the courtroom, provided access to the courtroom before and after
courtroom hours, and allowed to store documents at court. Also, the
court saw no indication her self-representation was ever hindered by
fatigue.
2. Discussion
Because "[r]estrictions on pro.
per. privileges in custody are not unusual," one of the risks of
self-representation is "custodial limitations on the ability to
prepare a defense in jail." (People v. Butler (2009) 47 Cal.4th 814,
827, 828.) "[A] defendant who is representing himself or herself may
not be placed in the position of presenting a defense without access
to a telephone, law library, runner, investigator, advisory counsel,
or any other means of developing a defense [citation], but this
general proposition does not dictate the resources that must be
available to defendants. Institutional and security concerns of
pretrial detention facilities may be considered in determining what
means will be accorded to the defendant to prepare his or her
defense." (People v. Jenkins (2000) 22 Cal.4th 900, 1040.) "In the
final analysis, the Sixth Amendment requires only that a
self-represented defendant's access to the resources necessary to
present a defense be reasonable under all the circumstances." (People
v. Blair, supra, 36 Cal.4th at p. 733.) In addressing a claim such as
defendant's, the issue is "whether [the defendant] had reasonable
access to the ancillary services that were reasonably necessary for
his [or her] defense." (Id. at p. 734.)
In making her argument,
defendant does not even attempt to demonstrate she was denied
"reasonable access" to "reasonably necessary" services. Because
defendant had access to Harris each day at trial, requiring her to
arrange in advance to see Harris at the jail did not unreasonably
impair her access to the runner. Significantly, she points to no way
in which her defense was prejudiced by this restriction.
Similarly, defendant had
reasonable access to her advisory counsel, Wesley. The role of
advisory counsel is limited, and "[t]he court retains authority to
exercise its judgment regarding the extent to which such advisory
counsel may participate." (People v. Bradford (1997) 15 Cal.4th 1229,
1368.) Defendant could have had Wesley at her elbow throughout her
cross-examination; it was her own choice to have him remain in the
audience after the first day. Requiring defendant actively to seek
Wesley's consultation, rather than permitting him to interrupt
examination by tapping her on the shoulder or otherwise, was within
the court's discretion. Any other rule risked Wesley's interference
with defendant's self-representation during a critical part of the
trial. Again, no specific prejudice from this restriction, or any
other aspect of Wesley's role, has been shown.*fn20
Finally, we find no grounds for
reversal in defendant's being awakened early one morning, particularly
in the absence of any specific showing of prejudice. There is no
contention defendant was commonly denied sleep without justification,
and any single day's exhaustion would not have rendered the trial
fundamentally unfair.
Defendant argues "[t]he
effectiveness of her case manager, Valerie Harris, and her advisory
counsel, Gary Wesley, was greatly diminished by rules imposed by the
court, sheriff, and jail personnel, which were arbitrary, unjustified,
and unreasonable." There is no evidence to support any of these
assertions. As discussed above, there is no indication Harris's
effectiveness was significantly affected. If Wesley was ineffective,
it is because defendant chose not to consult him, not because of the
court's restrictions. The excuse she provided for not consulting
him--that she believed it would look evasive to the jury--would have
been present regardless of whether he initiated the consultations or
she did. It was inherent in the nature of advisory counsel, and, as
noted, defendant does not challenge the decision to restrict Wesley's
role to advisory counsel. Finally, there was no showing the
restrictions imposed by the sheriff and jail authorities were
arbitrary, unjustified, or unreasonable. The record contains no
evidence one way or another regarding the reasons for the restrictions
placed on defendant. All we know for certain is that defendant was
provided privileges never before afforded to a pro se defendant by the
Contra Costa County jail, at least in the experience of the trial
court.
There is no doubt defendant
suffered inconveniences as a result of her incarceration that made
preparation of her defense more difficult. A greater showing than
inconveniences is necessary, however, to demonstrate that her right of
self-representation was infringed. We find no error in the trial
court's conclusion defendant was not denied reasonable access to
necessary services. Further, defendant has demonstrated no prejudice
from whatever inconveniences occurred.*fn21
J. Possible Juror Misconduct
Defendant's new trial motion
also included evidence suggesting juror misconduct. She contends the
trial court abused its discretion in declining to conduct an
evidentiary hearing with respect to the possibility of such
misconduct.
1. Background
The claim of possible misconduct
was based on jurors' comments during a press conference conducted in
the courthouse after the verdict was announced. The jurors were
informed of the conference by the trial court while still in the
courtroom, and the nine who elected to participate were escorted to
the conference by court officials after the jury was discharged. In
support of her claim of juror misconduct, defendant submitted a
declaration from a spectator at the trial that day, stating the
spectator "quickly made [her] way downstairs" to attend the press
conference after the jurors were discharged. According to the
spectator, the jurors who participated in the conference "arrived
within minutes."
One of the topics addressed
during the press conference was defendant's decision to act as her own
attorney. When asked how her self-representation affected the jury's
decisionmaking, one juror commented, "Well we all kind of talked about
it, and we decided . . . that whether we liked her or not, umm, or her
antics or not, was really not . . . a question for us. We didn't have
to like her . . . to make a decision." When asked to evaluate her
performance as counsel, two jurors expressed the opinion that
defendant would have been better off with an attorney. After one juror
noted defendant was "extremely smart," another said, "Well she's . . .
very smart. And we've been asked--I've been asked that question a lot,
. . . and I say that I think she would have been better off with
representation." Responding to a follow-up question, the juror
explained defendant was subject to frequent warnings from the court
regarding the scope of her examinations and an attorney would have
been more likely to stay on relevant topics and "maybe ma[k]e a lot of
better points." The jurors nonetheless seemed to believe the evidence
was sufficiently convincing that representation by an attorney would
not have made a difference in their verdict.
After several questions about
their decision-making process, discussion turned to the jurors
themselves. In response to the question, "How do you feel about all
the media attention," a woman juror said, "I want to respond to . . .
we didn't read anything . . . we didn't watch anything . . . but we
heard there were rumors that [a male juror] and I . . . [at this
point, the juror made a gesture suggesting gossiping] . . . which is
SO false. . . . He's getting married, loves his fiancee, so that's the
only thing that the media was making stuff up, or if you weren't
making it up, you know, exaggerating things, that were so
far-fetched." The same juror later said the jury consented to the
press conference because "we've not been allowed to talk for four
months."
In declining to order an
evidentiary hearing regarding the possibility of misconduct, the trial
court noted, "There must be a threshold of some evidence, not mere
speculation, to justify an evidentiary hearing. . . . The hearing is
not a discovery expedition to see what might happen and what might
come out of it. [¶] In my opinion, there is no evidence here. There is
merely speculation based on a couple of cryptic comments that were
made during a press conference after the verdict was rendered. [¶] If
I had been presented with declarations from former jurors or witnesses
to misconduct that might be sufficient to then inquire further.
Nothing has been presented here, in my opinion, that rises to the
level of misconduct." The court also noted the possibility the jurors
discussed the case with outsiders during the time between announcement
of the verdict and the press conference, since they were led to the
press conference through hallways "packed with media and spectators"
and "were free to use their cell phones" during that time. The court
concluded, "There is no showing in what has been presented to me that
those two comments [on which the new trial motion was based] during
the press conference don't reflect conversations between the jurors
themselves about unrelated collateral matters . . . that occurred
after the verdict."
2. Discussion
A defendant has the right to
trial by unbiased, impartial jurors. (People v. Nesler (1997) 16
Cal.4th 561, 578.) To preserve their impartiality, jurors are
prohibited from discussing the case, even among themselves, until all
evidence has been presented and the jury has retired to deliberate.
(Pen. Code, § 1122, subd. (a); People v. Wilson (2008) 44 Cal.4th 758,
838.) A violation of that prohibition through discussion with a
nonjuror prior to rendering a verdict is viewed as serious juror
misconduct. (Wilson, at p. 838.) "Juror misconduct gives rise to a
presumption of prejudice [citation]; the prosecution must rebut the
presumption by demonstrating 'there is no substantial likelihood that
any juror was improperly influenced to the defendant's detriment.'
[Citations.]" (People v. Gamache (2010) 48 Cal.4th 347, 397.)
The disapproval of juror
conversations with nonjurors derives largely from the risk the juror
will gain information about the case that was not presented at trial.
(See, e.g., In re Lucas (2004) 33 Cal.4th 682, 696.) Other types of
juror misconduct, for example, include independently investigating the
facts, bringing outside evidence into the jury room, injecting the
juror's own expertise into the deliberations, and engaging in an
experiment that produces new evidence. (People v. Wilson, supra, 44
Cal.4th at p. 829.) Prohibited juror conversations that result in the
communication of extrinsic information are similarly regarded as
presumptively prejudicial. On the other hand, where the juror
conversations involve peripheral matters, rather than the issues to be
resolved at trial, they are generally regarded as non-prejudicial.
(See, e.g., People v. Wilson, at pp. 839-840 ["trivial" comments to a
fellow juror not prejudicial where not meant to persuade]; People v.
Page (2008) 44 Cal.4th 1, 58-59 [circulation of a cartoon in the jury
room that did not bear on guilt not misconduct]; People v. Avila
(2006) 38 Cal.4th 491, 605 [juror statements disparaging counsel and
the court not material because they have no bearing on guilt]; People
v. Stewart, supra, 33 Cal.4th 425, 509-510 [juror who complimented the
appearance of the defendant's former girlfriend committed
non-prejudicial misconduct]; People v. Majors (1998) 18 Cal.4th 385,
423-425 [general comments by jurors that did not address the evidence
found not prejudicial]; People v. Loot (1998) 63 Cal.App.4th 694,
698-699 [juror who asked a public defender whether the prosecutor was
" 'available' " committed " 'technical,' " but non-prejudicial,
misconduct].) When determining whether communications are prejudicial,
the court must consider the " ' "nature and seriousness" ' " of the
misconduct, particularly its connection with evidence extrinsic to the
trial. (People v. Wilson, at p. 839.)
When a defendant has made a
motion for a new trial based on juror misconduct, the trial court has
the discretion to hold an evidentiary hearing to determine the
validity of the charges if there are material, disputed issues of
fact. Such a hearing is not to be used, however, as a " 'fishing
expedition' " to search for possible misconduct. (People v. Avila,
supra, 38 Cal.4th at p. 604.) We review the trial court's decision to
deny a hearing on juror misconduct for abuse of discretion. (Ibid.)
When reviewing the trial court's denial of a motion for a new trial
based on juror misconduct, we exercise independent review on the issue
of prejudice, but we accept the trial court's findings of fact if
based on substantial evidence. (People v. Dykes (2009) 46 Cal.4th 731,
809.)
We find no abuse of discretion
in the trial court's decision not to hold an evidentiary hearing on
the charges of juror misconduct, largely because the matters
purportedly discussed were not prejudicial. Although the first juror
said he had been asked about defendant's decision to represent herself
"a lot," there is no evidence the juror was asked this question by
nonjurors. It is an issue the jurors likely would have discussed among
themselves. In addition, as the court noted, there was time for him to
discuss this issue with others between the jury's dismissal and the
press conference, although, judging from the spectator's declaration,
it was a fairly limited time. The case for misconduct was not
substantial.
Even assuming the first juror
had responded to questions on this issue by a nonjuror, however, this
was, as the trial court noted, a "collateral" matter. Whether
defendant would have been better served by counsel was not an issue
bearing on her actual guilt or innocence. There was no indication in
the juror's statement at the press conference that he or any other
juror had been exposed to information about defendant, the
circumstances of the killing, or the witnesses at trial that was not
admitted at trial. Nor did the juror indicate any belief defendant's
performance as an attorney was related to the issue of her guilt. In
these circumstances, any presumption of prejudice was rebutted because
there is no substantial likelihood that any juror was improperly
influenced to defendant's detriment by the suspected communications.
In the absence of more conclusive evidence of prejudicial misconduct,
there was no duty to hold a hearing.
The evidence suggesting the
second juror, who spoke about media rumors of a romantic relationship
between herself and another juror, committed misconduct was somewhat
stronger. While she denied watching any media reports about the trial,
she acknowledged that someone had told a juror about rumors in the
media. Presumably, that person was a nonjuror who had watched the
media reports. As the trial court noted, however, there was no way to
know whether the communications occurred before or after the verdict
was rendered.
More important, the issue
discussed by the juror--a rumor among the press that she was
romantically involved with another juror--had nothing to do with
defendant's guilt and bore no plausible relation to the jurors'
deliberations. In the context of the trial, it was trivial, and there
was no possibility of prejudice to defendant as a result of the
presumed communications. Accordingly, the trial court properly denied
the motion for a hearing on misconduct. (See, e.g., People v. Wilson,
supra, 44 Cal.4th at p. 840.)
Defendant's arguments that many
more jurors could have been involved in extra-judicial communications
and that the jurors might have learned other things as a result of
their communications are simple speculation, unsupported by any
evidence. There is no basis for inferring that, because the jurors had
conversations on particular topics, they had additional conversations
on other, unrelated topics, as defendant argues. Further, there is no
basis for defendant's speculation the jurors themselves might have
watched media reports. The second juror stated expressly that they had
not heard or seen any such reports. The trial court was not required
to order a hearing merely on the basis of speculation. (See People v.
Avila, supra, 38 Cal.4th at pp. 604-605.)
K. Reimbursement of County
Expenses
Defendant contends the trial
court erred in failing to hold a hearing to determine her ability to
pay before ordering her to reimburse the County for defense costs it
incurred on her behalf.
1. Background
Prior to the second trial,
defendant executed a promissory note to pay the County "the sum as
fixed by the Superior Court for Court Appointed Counsel services and
for any other cost related to my defense." Performance under the note
was secured by a deed of trust against defendant's interest in the
Orinda home she owned with Felix, purchased in 2000. In 2006, their
respective interests were partitioned at the request of his estate,
and in June 2007, a referee was appointed to sell the home.
In August 2007, six months after
defendant's sentencing, the County filed a motion for an order
requiring her to reimburse the County for the costs of defense it had
incurred on her behalf, set at nearly $220,000. The County argued
defendant had both a contractual obligation to reimburse, based on the
promissory note she executed, and a statutory obligation under Penal
Code section 987.8. Although the home had not been sold at the time
the motion was filed, it was listed at $2 million. The County argued
defendant had the ability to reimburse the costs in full because,
according to a schedule it submitted, she would receive more than
$230,000 even if the home sold for only two-thirds of the asking
price.*fn22
Defendant filed an opposition to
the motion, disputing certain of the County's expenses, arguing she
had signed the lien "under duress" and had "revoked it the next day,"
and asserting she had been found to be, and was, indigent. In other
filings and argument before the court, defendant contended she should
be found financially unable to reimburse the County for its costs
because she was incarcerated, lacked funds, and had no way to earn
money.
Although subdivision (b) of
Penal Code*fn23 section 987.8 permits the court to order reimbursement
of defense costs only if a defendant is found to have the "present
ability to pay" them, the trial court declined to make a determination
of defendant's ability to repay the County's expenses. The court
explained it viewed itself as proceeding under subdivision (a) of
section 987.8, which establishes a procedure for securing the
reimbursement of fees for court-appointed counsel through an
attachment of property. The court interpreted subdivision (a) as
requiring an initial hearing to determine whether the defendant was
unable to employ counsel, and, if so, whether the defendant possessed
property that could be used to secure reimbursement of fees. Once that
determination had been made, in the court's view, the defendant was
responsible for reimbursing defense costs to the extent of the value
of the secured property.
After hearing testimony
regarding the various charges claimed by the County, the trial court
found the reimbursable costs to be $212,033, and set that amount as
the value of the lien on defendant's interest in the home. The trial
court's determination of the amount of reimbursable costs is not
challenged on appeal.
2. Legal Background
Section 987.8 establishes the
means for a county to recover some or all of the costs of defense
expended on behalf of an indigent criminal defendant. (Schaffer v.
Superior Court (2010) 185 Cal.App.4th 1235, 1245.) Under subdivisions
(b) and (c) of the statute, an order of reimbursement can be made only
if the court concludes, after notice and an evidentiary hearing, that
the defendant has "the present ability . . . to pay all or a portion"
of the defense costs. (§ 987.8, subds. (b), (c), (e); People v. Amor
(1974) 12 Cal.3d 20, 29; People v. Phillips (1994) 25 Cal.App.4th 62,
72-73.)*fn24 If this finding is made, "the court shall set the amount
to be reimbursed and order the defendant to pay the sum to the county
in the manner in which the court believes reasonable and compatible
with the defendant's financial ability." (§ 987.8, subd. (e).)
"Ability to pay" means "the
overall capability" of the defendant to reimburse all or a portion of
the defense costs. (§ 987.8, subd. (g)(2).) It requires consideration
of the defendant's financial position at the time of the hearing, his
or her "reasonably discernible" financial position over the subsequent
six months, including the likelihood of employment during that time,
and "[a]ny other factor or factors which may bear upon the defendant's
financial capability to reimburse the county." (§ 987.8, subds.
(g)(2)(A)-(D).)*fn25 In calculating ability to pay, "the court [must]
consider what resources the defendant has available and which of those
resources can support the required payment," including both the
defendant's likely income and his or her assets. (People v. Smith
(2000) 81 Cal.App.4th 630, 642; see, e.g., Conservatorship of Rand
(1996) 49 Cal.App.4th 835, 842 [bank account]; People v. Whisenand
(1995) 37 Cal.App.4th 1383, 1394 [real property], but see People v.
McDowell (1977) 74 Cal.App.3d 1, 4 [possibility of a future insurance
recovery cannot be considered].)
Section 987.8, subdivision (a)
(hereafter subdivision (a)), on which the trial court relied in
denying a hearing on defendant's ability to pay, addresses security
for the reimbursement of defense costs.*fn26 Under subdivision (a),
when a court finds "that a defendant is entitled to counsel but is
unable to employ counsel," the court may cause to be determined
"whether the defendant owns or has an interest in any real property or
other assets subject to attachment." If so, the court can impose a
lien on the property, to the extent otherwise permitted by law, and
the county may later foreclose on the lien. (Ibid.)
3. Discussion
We conclude the trial court's
compliance with subdivision (a) did not avoid the need for a hearing
into defendant's "present ability" to pay under subdivision (b). As
discussed below, subdivision (a) provides a means for securing
reimbursement of defense costs, but it is not an independent basis for
awarding reimbursement. As a result, a trial court must comply with
the remaining provisions of section 987.8, including making a
determination of ability to pay under subdivision (b), before
reimbursement may be granted.
a. Enforcement of the
Promissory Note
The Attorney General first
contends a determination of defendant's ability to pay was unnecessary
because the promissory note constituted a contract to reimburse costs
that can be enforced regardless of defendant's ability to pay.
During argument on the motion,
defendant and the trial judge disagreed over the circumstances of the
execution of the promissory note. Defendant contended she had executed
the note after having been found to be entitled to appointment of
counsel as a result of her indigence. The trial judge, speaking from
his own memory of events, recalled no finding of indigence.*fn27
According to the judge, after defendant began acting pro se, she asked
to be assisted by her prior attorney, rather than the public defender.
The attorney declined to accept as payment a security interest in
defendant's home, however, and defendant apparently had no money to
pay him. The court recalled that, in order to secure her choice of
counsel, defendant agreed to execute the secured promissory note,
granting the County reimbursement for his fees from the proceeds of
the sale of the home, if the County would pay the attorney.*fn28
While the Attorney General may
be correct that the promissory note constituted an enforceable
contractual obligation to reimburse the County's defense costs, this
would not provide a basis for affirming the trial court's order.
Contracts are enforced through civil proceedings, following the filing
of a complaint and service of process. Neither the Penal Code nor the
promissory note contains a provision waiving or abbreviating normal
civil process for the enforcement of this type of contractual
obligation. (See Bradley v. Superior Court (1957) 48 Cal.2d 509,
519-520 [spousal support obligation in property settlement could not
be enforced through criminal contempt proceedings].)
Although section 987.8 provides
statutory authority for the court to order a criminal defendant to
reimburse defense costs, any such order must be made pursuant to its
provisions. Section 987.8 makes no mention of a contract between a
county and the defendant. Conversely, there is no statutory provision
for an award of damages for breach of contract through a summary
proceeding in the criminal court, the procedure invoked by the County
to obtain reimbursement. In the absence of any legal authority
permitting enforcement of the promissory note in this manner, the
County was required to proceed in the civil courts, providing
defendant the opportunity to raise her objections to payment as
defenses in a civil action. Because the trial court could not enter an
order of reimbursement on a theory of contract in this proceeding, we
cannot affirm the court's order on that basis.
b. Section 987.8
The Attorney General also
argues, echoing the trial court's reasoning, that an "ability-to-pay"
hearing was unnecessary because the County had followed the procedures
for obtaining a lien under subdivision (a). The absence of any
reference to a defendant's ability to pay in subdivision (a), it is
argued, "demonstrates that the Legislature did not intend to impose an
ability-to-pay requirement in cases where the defendant had signed a
promissory note secured by a lien on real property."
The rules governing statutory
construction are familiar. " ' " '[A]s with any statute, we strive to
ascertain and effectuate the Legislature's intent.' " [Citations.]
"Because statutory language 'generally provide[s] the most reliable
indicator' of that intent [citations], we turn to the words
themselves, giving them their 'usual and ordinary meanings' and
construing them in context [citation]." [Citation.] If the language
contains no ambiguity, we presume the Legislature meant what it said,
and the plain meaning of the statute governs. [Citation.] If, however,
the statutory language is susceptible of more than one reasonable
construction, we can look to legislative history in aid of
ascertaining legislative intent.' " (People v. Allegheny Casualty Co.
(2007) 41 Cal.4th 704, 708-709.)
Subdivision (a) allows the trial
court, upon "a finding . . . that a defendant is entitled to counsel
but is unable to employ counsel," to order a hearing to inquire into
the defendant's ownership of attachable real property. Unlike a
hearing pursuant to subdivision (b), which occurs only after the
conclusion of proceedings, a subdivision (a) hearing can occur at any
time. If such property is found, the court may impose a lien. The
county thereafter is granted "the right to enforce its lien for the
payment of providing legal assistance to an indigent defendant" in the
same manner as any lienholder. The language of the subdivision does
not expressly state that it is an alternative to the procedures
described in the remainder of section 987.8, nor does it state that
lien foreclosure can proceed independent of a determination under
subdivision (b) that cost reimbursement is appropriate because the
defendant has a "present ability" to pay.
Subdivision (a) is lacking
important provisions one would expect if it provided a basis for
reimbursement of defense costs independent of the procedures in the
remainder of the statute. Most prominently, although subdivision (a)
states the county may "enforce its lien for the payment of providing
legal assistance to an indigent defendant," there is no provision for
determining the amount of the defendant's obligation, either the
amount of defense costs incurred by the county or the share of those
costs the defendant is required to reimburse. As a result, subdivision
(a) lacks any provision for determining the amount of the costs that
can be recovered upon lien foreclosure. Similarly, subdivision (a)
does not provide for the entry of an order requiring repayment.
Enforcement of a lien for the payment of defense costs would be
difficult, if not impossible, without some type of order or judgment
establishing the debt. Given these omissions, subdivision (a) arguably
lacks the due process guarantees required before an indigent defendant
can be charged for the costs of his or her defense. (E.g., People v.
Amor, supra, 12 Cal.3d at p. 29 [implying the requirement of notice
and a hearing into an earlier version of section 987.8 as a matter of
constitutional necessity]; People v. Phillips, supra, 25 Cal.App.4th
at pp. 72-73.)
The trial court assumed that, in
the absence of any provision for determining the amount of recoverable
defense costs, cost recovery is permitted up to the value of the lien
interest in the property. The language of subdivision (a), however,
contains no such direction. More important, under the trial court's
interpretation the statute provides no authority for the reimbursement
of defense costs that exceed the value of the lien interest in the
property. The trial court held the County was limited in its recovery
of costs to the value of the lien interest, but there is nothing in
the statutory language requiring such a limit. Further, there is no
reason why, if a defendant is financially able to reimburse the county
from other income sources, the county should be so limited in its
recovery.
These problems are avoided if
the remaining subdivisions of section 987.8 are interpreted as
supplying the content missing from subdivision (a). Under this
interpretation, subdivision (a) allows the court to impose a lien on a
defendant's assets early in the criminal proceedings, when the
decision to provide counsel is made, thereby securing later
reimbursement. The remaining provisions of section 987.8 provide for
the determination and documentation of the amount of the obligation
for which the subdivision (a) lien provides security. These
subdivisions describe the means for determining the collectible amount
of the defendant's debt, prescribe the procedural requirements
applicable to that determination, and provide for the entry of an
enforceable order requiring payment. This reading, of course, requires
the trial court to find the defendant has a "present ability" to pay
before an order of repayment can be entered, regardless of whether a
subdivision (a) lien has been secured. (§ 987.8, subds. (b), (e).)
Given the incomplete nature of subdivision (a), the Legislature does
not appear to have intended it as an alternative to the remainder of
the statutory procedures, but rather as a supplement.
While not conclusive, the
statutory history of subdivision (a) provides support for this
reading. Subdivision (a) was added in 1988, at a time when the other
provisions of section 987.8 already existed in substantially their
present form. (Stats. 1988, ch. 871, § 1, p. 2807.) It was intended to
ensure that if counsel was appointed for a defendant who owned real
property but had insufficient liquid assets to pay an attorney,
reimbursement for public expenditures on counsel could be obtained at
a later date from the defendant's property. As a Senate committee
analysis of the bill stated, the purpose of the amendment was "to
facilitate the recapture of expenditures arising from the defense of
individuals entitled to counsel at public cost." (Sen. Com. on
Judiciary, analysis of Sen. Bill No. 2577 (1987-1988 Reg. Sess.) Apr.
26, 1988, p. 2.)
As originally proposed, the
subdivision would not have amended section 987.8, but section 987,
which governs the appointment of counsel. Subdivision (c) of section
987 permits the court to require a defendant to execute a financial
statement to assist the court in determining "whether a defendant is
able to employ counsel." With substantially its current language,
subdivision (a) was to be added as a new subdivision "(d)" of section
987, permitting a hearing with respect to attachable assets in
addition to the financial statement required under subdivision (c).
(Sen. Bill No. 2577 (1987-1988 Reg. Sess.) as introduced Feb. 19,
1988.) In this form, the subdivision appears to have been envisioned
as an alternative to the procedures of section 987.8. (See Sen. Com.
on Judiciary, analysis of Sen. Bill No. 2577 (1987-1988 Reg. Sess.)
Apr. 26, 1988, at p. 1.)
As so constituted, the bill was
criticized both because the existence of two means for obtaining
reimbursement "will be confusing to the judicial system" and because
the bill "present[ed] a significant equal protection problem," lacking
the procedural guarantees of section 987.8. (Assem. Com. on Public
Safety, analysis of Sen. Bill No. 2577 (1987-1988 Reg. Sess.) Aug. 1,
1988, at p. 3.) Prior to enactment, the bill was amended to insert the
new provision in its present location as subdivision (a) of section
987.8, rather than in section 987. The legislative history contains no
explanation for this change of codification, but it is plausible to
conclude the insertion into section 987.8 was intended to address the
two criticisms by incorporating subdivision (a) into the existing
section 987.8 procedures. By integrating the provision for security in
subdivision (a) into section 987.8, the change removed the possibility
of confusion arising from the creation of a second means for
determining reimbursement. In addition, by making subdivision (a)
subject to the procedural protections already present in section
987.8, the change removed any constitutional concerns.*fn29
Incorporating subdivision (a) into section 987.8 did not impair the
purpose envisioned for it, since the new provision continued to
provide counties a means for aiding the recapture of defense costs.
Requiring a hearing into a
defendant's ability to pay prior to the enforcement of a lien for
repayment of defense costs is consistent with the overall statutory
scheme. By enacting section 987.8 to govern reimbursement of defense
costs, the Legislature demonstrated its intent to require
reimbursement only from those defendants with the means to repay.
While the ownership of attachable real property is certainly evidence
of an ability to repay, it is not conclusive. A trial court could
determine, for example, that forced sale of a personal residence would
bring extreme hardship on a defendant's dependents. Alternatively, if
the attached property supports an income-producing asset, such as a
personal business, seizure of the real property to satisfy a defense
cost obligation could compromise the defendant's livelihood and
jeopardize his or her rehabilitation. There is no indication in
subdivision (a) the Legislature intended the real property of a
defendant to be sold without regard to the impact of the seizure on
the defendant's family, life, or livelihood, the nature of the asset,
or the defendant's other personal and financial circumstances.
Requiring a hearing into these matters by virtue of subdivision (b)
prevents an inflexible and potentially counterproductive application
of the attachment provisions of subdivision (a).
In the present circumstances,
our holding may be largely academic. Defendant, serving an
indeterminate prison term with a minimum duration of 16 years, owns an
asset that appears to be sufficient to cover her debt to the County.
Based on this evidence, the trial court may well conclude defendant
has the present ability to pay the debt. Nonetheless, defendant is
entitled to a hearing at which she can present evidence and argument
to persuade the court that, notwithstanding the value of her interest
in the home and her present circumstances, she should not be required
to reimburse all or a portion of the County's expenses.*fn30
III. DISPOSITION
The trial court's judgment of
conviction is affirmed, but the court's order requiring reimbursement
of the County's defense costs is vacated. The matter is remanded to
the trial court solely for the purpose of holding a hearing to
determine defendant's present ability to pay all or a portion of the
$212,033 in reimbursable defense costs determined by the trial court
and entering an appropriate order under section 987.8, subdivision
(e).
We concur: Dondero, J. Banke, J.
A117633
People v. Polk
Trial Court: Contra Costa County Superior Court
Trial Judge: Hon. Laurel L. Brady.