Filed 4/10/14 P. v. Valenzuela CA2/8
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION EIGHT
THE PEOPLE, B247658
Plaintiff and Respondent, (Los Angeles County
Super. Ct. No. MA057002)
v.
MANUEL VALENZUELA,
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County,
Richard E. Naranjo, Judge. Affirmed.
Thomas Owen, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant.
Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Dane R. Gillette, Chief Assistant Attorney
General, Lance E. Winters, Assistant Attorney General, Mary Sanchez and Rene
Judkiewicz, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
******
Appellant Manuel Valenzuela challenges his sentence following his conviction for
one count of making criminal threats and one count of assault by means likely to produce
great bodily injury with a great bodily injury enhancement. We affirm.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Appellant was charged in an amended information of the following six counts:
count one, corporal injury to a spouse/cohabitant/child’s parent (Pen. Code, § 273.5,
subd. (a))1; count two, criminal threats (§ 422, subd. (a)); count three, felon in possession
of a firearm with five priors (§ 29800, subd. (a)(1)); count four, possession of
ammunition (§ 30305, subd. (a)(1)); count five, assault with a firearm (§ 245, subd.
(a)(2)); and count six, assault by means likely to produce great bodily injury (§ 245, subd.
(a)(4)). For counts one through five, it was alleged pursuant to section 1170.12,
subdivisions (a) through (d) and section 667, subdivisions (b) through (i) that appellant
suffered two prior serious or violent felony convictions, and pursuant to section 667.5,
subdivision (b) that appellant suffered and served a prison term for four prior convictions.
For counts one and six, it was alleged appellant personally inflicted great bodily injury
within the meaning of section 12022.7, subdivision (a). For count five, it was alleged
appellant personally used a firearm within the meaning of sections 12022.5, 1192.7,
subdivision (c), and 667.5, subdivision (c).
The trial court bifurcated the trial on the priors, and held a jury trial on the counts
in the amended information. During trial, the court granted the prosecution’s motion to
dismiss counts one and five and the accompanying personal use allegation pursuant to
section 1385. Appellant also waived his right to a jury trial on the priors. The jury found
appellant guilty of counts two and six and not guilty of counts three and four, and found
true the allegation in count six that appellant personally inflicted great bodily injury.
Appellant waived a bench trial on his priors and admitted them.
The trial court sentenced appellant to a total prison term of 11 years eight months,
which consisted of the high term of four years for count six, plus three years for the great
1 All further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise noted.
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bodily injury enhancement, plus one year for each of appellant’s four prior convictions,
and eight months consecutive for count two (one-third of the midterm of two years).
Appellant was awarded custody and conduct credits not at issue here. The court also
imposed various fines and fees.2 Appellant timely appealed.
STATEMENT OF FACTS
Appellant’s conviction arose out of a domestic assault that occurred on June 15,
2012, between him and victim Candace Molina. On that night, Molina went to her
apartment manager, Michelle Calzada. Molina was crying and upset, and Calzada saw
Molina’s face was bleeding and swollen. To Calzada, Molina looked scared. Molina
told her, “He beat me up.” Calzada called 911.
Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department Deputies Monica Alburez and Brandon
Jacobs responded to the 911 call that there was a “273.5,” that is, a crime of domestic
violence, at Molina’s apartment complex, and that the victim was being chased with a
firearm. The deputies entered Molina’s apartment and found a bag containing a rifle and
ammunition on the living room floor.
On the 911 call, Molina said her head hurt and she felt nauseous; she also vomited.
She was taken to the hospital by ambulance. While there, she was diagnosed with a
2 Among other fines and fees, the court orally imposed a $50 criminal conviction
assessment fee and a $40 court security fee for count six, and a $30 criminal conviction
assessment and a $40 court security fee for count two. The sentencing minutes reflected
slightly different fees of $40 for the court operations assessment for each count pursuant
to section 1465.8, subdivision (a)(1) and $30 for the criminal conviction assessment for
each count pursuant to Government Code section 70373. Consistent with the sentencing
minutes, the abstract of judgment reflects an $80 court operations assessment and a $60
conviction assessment for both counts under those same code sections. Although the
court’s oral pronouncement was incorrect, the sentencing minutes and the abstract of
judgment were correct, so we need not correct the abstract of judgment. (§ 1465.8, subd.
(a)(1) [“To assist in funding court operations, an assessment of forty dollars ($40) shall
be imposed on every conviction for a criminal offense,” with certain exceptions not
pertinent here]; Gov. Code, § 70373 [requiring $30 assessment for each felony “[t]o
ensure and maintain adequate funding for court facilities”]; People v. Sencion (2012) 211
Cal.App.4th 480, 483-484 [separate fees apply to each count].)
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broken nose and a facial fracture. Deputy Alburez spoke with Molina at the hospital and
saw she had extreme injuries, including that she was bleeding from her nose, lip, and
eyelid; her eye was swollen shut; her mouth was very swollen; and her nose was swollen
and tilted to the side. Molina was crying and complained that her head hurt, but was
speaking clearly and able to understand Deputy Alburez.
At the time, Molina told Deputy Alburez she went to a club called Crave that
night, and while there she spoke with a man named Fernando. Appellant was Molina’s
boyfriend who had just gotten out of prison and was living with her, and he came to the
club and saw Molina talking to Fernando, so he hit Fernando and they got into a fight.
Security escorted the men out of the club. At the same time, Molina went to her car.
Appellant showed up there, told Molina’s friend Casey to get out of the car, and got in.
Appellant got into an argument with Molina, punched her in the face several times, and
threatened that he would “end her” if she did not drive to her apartment. She did not
want to obey because she feared for her life, but she did so because appellant threatened
to kill her if she disobeyed him. Either on the way to the apartment or at the apartment,
appellant told her, “Tonight is the night you’re going to die.” Inside the apartment,
Molina thought appellant was grabbing for a gun, so she ran to the apartment manager.
Appellant chased her with what she thought was a firearm. Molina told Deputy Alburez
appellant had just been released from prison for domestic violence against her, so she
knew what he was capable of doing, and she knew he owned a gun.
Molina eventually recanted this story. Two or three days later she told Deputy
Alburez she had been lying about what happened and she had actually gotten into a fight
with a woman in the restroom of the club. Deputy Alburez asked why Molina changed
her story, and Molina said she did not remember what happened. She also could not
remember anything about the woman, or whether she fought back. Deputy Alburez did
not believe Molina’s story, so she told Molina to speak with the detective on the case. In
Deputy Alburez’s experience, it was not uncommon for domestic violence victims to
recant their stories.
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Molina later spoke with Detective Nelson Rios of the Los Angeles Sheriff’s
Department, telling him she had gotten into a fight with a woman in the restroom at
Crave. She could not provide a description of the woman. She said she did not know
why she initially lied about appellant hitting her.
At trial, Molina continued to deny appellant had threatened her or hit her on
June 15, 2012. She testified she went to Crave by herself and was drunk and dancing
with Fernando when appellant hit him. As appellant was being escorted out of the club,
Molina noticed a girl being “real chummy” with him. Molina became irritated and ended
up fighting the girl in the bathroom. She drove home by herself, and when she got there
and saw her injuries, she went to her manager’s apartment and got back at appellant by
making up a story about appellant hitting her.
She admitted approximately a year earlier appellant had punched her in the head,
which resulted in him pleading guilty to a crime and serving a one-year prison term.
Nevertheless, Molina continued to talk to him while he was in prison and they got back
together, even though they argue and appellant can be jealous. He was released on
June 12, 2012, three days before the assault at issue in this case.
One of the owners of Crave, Dan Baldeo, testified he remembered seeing Molina
at the club on June 15, 2012. He testified there was a fight between appellant and
Fernando, but no other fights, including any between women. He would have known if a
fight took place in the bathroom because bathroom checks were conducted throughout the
night. That night there was no evidence a fight took place in the women’s bathroom,
such as blood on the floor. He also saw no facial injuries on Molina when she was at
Crave.
Appellant did not testify, but he called two witnesses. Evelyn Alvarez worked as a
hostess on the restaurant side of Crave and as a promoter on the club side. She testified
that on June 15, 2012, she saw a “rumble of females fighting” in the parking lot of Crave
and they were on top of someone who looked like Molina, although she could not be
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sure.3 She stated there was no way Molina’s injuries could have occurred at the club
because if they had, she would have known about them because the bouncers would have
“been on it.” She had never met appellant.
Casey Loya knew Molina through mutual friends for about five years. He saw
Molina the night of the incident and she appeared to have been drinking. He testified he
was not with her the entire night and did not get into her car at the end of the night, nor
did appellant attempt to pull him out of her car. He did not see her when she left and he
did not see her get attacked by appellant or get into a fight with anyone else that night.
He picked Molina up from the hospital the next morning and she looked like she had
been in a fight. Molina told him she had been in a fight with multiple females at the club,
and she may have told him the fight occurred in the bathroom. He knew appellant
through Molina and considered him a “gangster.” He did not see appellant at the club
that night.
DISCUSSION
Appellant argues the trial court abused its discretion in sentencing him in two
respects. First, he claims the trial court improperly used the fact that he inflicted great
bodily injury on Molina both to impose the upper term of four years on count six and to
impose three years for the great bodily injury enhancement pursuant to section 12022.7,
subdivision (c). Second, he claims the trial court erred by failing to state on the record
the reasons for running his sentence on count two consecutively to his sentence on count
six.
Appellant forfeited both contentions by not raising them at the time of sentencing.
(People v. Scott (1994) 9 Cal.4th 331, 353; People v. Powell (2011) 194 Cal.App.4th
1268, 1297-1298 (Powell) [failure to articulate reasons for consecutive sentence]; People
v. de Soto (1997) 54 Cal.App.4th 1, 8-9 [dual use of facts to impose upper term and
enhancement].) Recognizing his forfeiture problem, appellant argues his counsel
3 On cross-examination, she testified she could not be sure she saw this fight on
June 15, 2012, and it could have been another day during that summer.
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provided ineffective assistance by failing to object. In order to show ineffective
assistance of counsel, appellant must show “deficient performance under an objective
standard of professional reasonableness and prejudice under a test of reasonable
probability of an adverse effect on the outcome.” (Powell, supra, at p. 1298, citing
Strickland v. Washington (1984) 466 U.S. 668, 687.)
1. Background
At the sentencing hearing, the prosecutor urged the court to impose the upper term
for count six and a consecutive term for count two, pointing out appellant had severely
beaten Molina, including breaking her nose, after he forced her to drive to her apartment,
all of which occurred within a week of him being let out of prison on a prior domestic
violence conviction. He then listed factors in aggravation supporting the upper term for
count six: “the crime involved great violence or bodily harm”; the victim was
particularly vulnerable, in that she was appellant’s girlfriend and “under his power”; and
appellant took advantage of his position of trust or confidence to commit the offense.
Appellant had also engaged in “prior violent conduct that indicates [he is] a serious
danger to the victim as well as society. His prior convictions as an adult are numerous
and have increased in seriousness.” The prosecutor also noted appellant was on
supervised release when he committed the current assault.
In recommending the upper term, the probation report cited appellant’s “extensive
prior criminal record that dates back to 1999,” including two juvenile adjudications for
assault with a deadly weapon, two convictions for assault with a deadly weapon as an
adult, and two convictions for being a felon in possession of a firearm. The report further
noted that three days after being released he “violently attacked his girlfriend.” Then he
was arrested again in August 2012 for possession of a controlled substance. The
probation report concluded, “[o]bviously, the defendant has absolutely no intentions of
becoming a law abiding citizen as he continues to commit crimes in the community and
continues to inflict emotional and physical pain to his girlfriend and others.” It further
listed the following specific factors in aggravation: (1) the crime involved great violence,
great bodily harm, threat of great bodily harm, or other acts disclosing a high degree of
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cruelty, viciousness, or callousness; (2) appellant was armed with or used a weapon at the
time of the commission of the crime; (3) the victim was particularly vulnerable; (4) the
manner in which the crime was carried out indicates planning, sophistication, or
professionalism; (5) appellant took advantage of a position of trust or confidence to
commit the offense; (6) appellant has engaged in violent conduct that indicates a serious
danger to society; (7) appellant’s prior convictions as an adult or sustained petitions in
juvenile delinquency proceedings are numerous or of increasing seriousness; (8)
appellant has served a prior prison term; and (9) appellant’s prior performance on
probation or parole was unsatisfactory. The report listed no factors in mitigation.
The trial judge addressed appellant directly before sentencing him. The judge
explained he listened to jailhouse recordings of appellant and Molina, and those
recordings were “very damning” for appellant. He felt appellant still had manipulative
power over Molina “in getting her to do things to a point where, I think, she committed
perjury.” He also noted appellant’s extensive criminal history demonstrated appellant
had not “remained custody-free . . . for any length of time.” Appellant had an adult
criminal history dating back to 2003 and juvenile matters prior to that. And the judge
noted appellant had assaulted Molina “within days, weeks at the most of getting out from
a previous assault of Ms. Molina.”
In pronouncing appellant’s sentence, the trial court stated it was imposing the
upper term for count six plus four years for the great bodily injury allegation under
section 12022.7 “based on the circumstances in aggravation which [the prosecutor]
enumerated plus what is in the probation report, balancing that against the circumstances
in mitigation, which I don’t find any whatsoever.” It imposed the sentence on count two
as “eight months consecutive” without further explanation.
2. Dual Use of Great Bodily Injury for Upper Term and Enhancement
Section 1170, subdivision (b) states in pertinent part, “When a judgment of
imprisonment is to be imposed and the statute specifies three possible terms, the choice
of the appropriate term shall rest within the sound discretion of the court. . . . The court
shall select the term which, in the court’s discretion, best serves the interests of justice.
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The court shall set forth on the record the reasons for imposing the term selected and the
court may not impose an upper term by using the fact of any enhancement upon which
sentence is imposed under any provision of law.” Rule 4.420(c) of the California Rules
of Court states in turn, “To comply with section 1170(b), a fact charged and found as an
enhancement may be used as a reason for imposing the upper term only if the court has
discretion to strike the punishment for the enhancement and does so. The use of a fact of
an enhancement to impose the upper term of imprisonment is an adequate reason for
striking the additional term of imprisonment, regardless of the effect on the total term.”
We need not decide whether the trial court violated these provisions by using the
fact of great bodily injury to support both the upper term and the great bodily injury
enhancement for count six because appellant cannot show prejudice and therefore cannot
show ineffective assistance of counsel. “‘Improper dual use of the same fact for
imposition of both an upper term and a consecutive term or other enhancement does not
necessitate resentencing if “‘“[i]t is not reasonably probable that a more favorable
sentence would have been imposed in absence of the error.”’” (People v. Osband (1996)
13 Cal.4th 622, 728 (Osband).)
Because a single factor may justify imposing the upper term (Osband, supra, 13
Cal.4th at p. 728), even without the fact of great bodily injury, the trial court’s selection
of the upper term was well supported by several other significant factors, such as
Molina’s vulnerability; appellant’s power to manipulate her and take advantage of his
position of trust with her, so much so she perjured herself for him; his criminal history,
which included a prior conviction for domestic violence against Molina; and the fact that
the current assault occurred only three days after he was released from prison on the prior
domestic violence conviction. Given the severity of Molina’s injuries (a broken nose, a
facial fracture, bleeding from her nose, lip, and eyelid, an eye was swollen shut, and a
swollen mouth) and the seriousness of the other factors the court identified, we have no
doubt the trial court would have imposed the great bodily injury enhancement and relied
on any one of those other factors to impose the upper term for count six.
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3. Failure to Explain Consecutive Term
Section 1170, subdivision (c) requires in relevant part that “[t]he court shall state
the reasons for its sentence choice on the record at the time of sentencing.” Rule 4.406(a)
of the California Rules of Court states, “If the sentencing judge is required to give
reasons for a sentence choice, the judge must state in simple language the primary factor
or factors that support the exercise of discretion or, if applicable, state that the judge has
no discretion. The statement need not be in the language of these rules. It must be
delivered orally on the record.” Rule 4.406(b)(5) requires the trial court to state reasons
for imposing consecutive sentences. And “[a]ny circumstances in aggravation or
mitigation may be considered in deciding whether to impose consecutive rather than
concurrent sentences,” except, as relevant here, “[a] fact used to impose the upper term”
or “[a] fact used to otherwise enhance the defendant’s prison sentence.” (Cal. Rules of
Court, rule 4.425(b)(1)-(2).)
Although the trial court did not explain its reasons for imposing a consecutive
sentence for count two at the moment it announced the sentence would be consecutive
(and it would have been better practice to do so), it is apparent the trial court relied on the
factors listed in the probation report and set forth at the sentencing hearing, which the
court thoroughly reviewed just prior to announcing appellant’s sentence. Appellant
argues if the court did so, the
n it improperly used the same facts to impose both a consecutive sentence and an upper
term. But as with imposing an upper term, a single factor is enough to impose a
consecutive sentence, so “the court could have selected disparate facts from among those
it recited to justify the imposition of both a consecutive sentence and the upper term.”
(Osband, supra, 13 Cal.4th at pp. 728-729.) Because there were plenty of serious factors
in the record to support imposing both an upper term and a consecutive sentence without
the trial court having to use any factor twice, we are confident it would have imposed a
consecutive sentence for count two based on factors not already used to impose the upper
term for count six.
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Thus, appellant has demonstrated neither error nor prejudice on this point, so his
ineffective assistance of counsel claim fails.4
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
FLIER, J.
WE CONCUR:
RUBIN, Acting P. J.
GRIMES, J.
4 Appellant relies on two older cases finding errors from the dual use of facts at
sentencing, but neither case addressed whether the defendants were prejudiced by those
errors, so we do not find them applicable here. (People v. Ratcliffe (1981) 124
Cal.App.3d 808, 821-822 [remanding for resentencing because trial court used same facts
for both upper term and consecutive sentence]; People v. Roberson (1978) 81 Cal.App.3d
890, 893 [remanding for resentencing because trial court used same fact for both upper
term and enhancement], overruled on other grounds by People v. Crowson (1983) 33
Cal.3d 623, 632, fn. 10.)
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