Filed 8/27/14
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION THREE
THE PEOPLE,
Plaintiff and Respondent, G049669
v. (Super. Ct. No. 06WF3671)
DAVID NEIL KENT, OPINION
Defendant and Appellant.
Appeal from a postjudgment order of the Superior Court of Orange County,
Gregg L. Prickett, Judge. Affirmed.
Michelle C. Zehner, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for
Defendant and Appellant.
No appearance for Plaintiff and Respondent.
* * *
A jury convicted David Neil Kent of possessing child pornography
(Pen. Code, § 311.11, subd. (a)(1)), all statutory references are to the Penal Code unless
noted), attempting to distribute child pornography (§ 311.2, subd. (c); § 664), and
distributing child pornography (§ 311.2, subd. (c)). It also convicted him of possessing
methamphetamine for sale (Health & Saf. Code, § 11378) and possessing cocaine (Health
& Saf. Code § 11350).
The court imposed a sentence of three years and four months,1 but
suspended execution of the sentence and placed Kent on probation under various terms
and conditions, including a 365-day jail term and lifetime registration as a sex offender.
We affirmed the judgment. (People v. Kent (Nov. 25, 2013, G047157) [nonpub. opn.].)
In July 2013, the probation officer filed a petition alleging Kent violated
probation. In January 2014, the probation officer filed a second violation petition. The
trial court found Kent violated probation and lifted the suspension of his sentence.
Kent’s appointed counsel filed a brief under the procedures outlined in
People v. Wende (1979) 25 Cal.3d 436 (Wende). Counsel summarized the facts of the
case, the procedural history, and “possible” legal issues with citations to the record and
appropriate authority, but raised no specific issues, and asked this court to review the
record to determine whether there were any arguable issues. Counsel did not argue
against her client or assert the appeal was frivolous. Counsel submitted a declaration
stating she reviewed the case, she advised Kent of the nature of the brief, she sent Kent a
copy of the brief and the appellate record, and informed him he could file a brief on his
own behalf. Counsel did not seek to withdraw, but she advised Kent he could move to
1
At the original sentencing, the trial court misstated the aggregate term as
four years and four months, and we repeated the error in our prior opinion.
2
have her relieved. We gave Kent 30 days to file a supplemental brief, but he has not
responded.
We publish this otherwise routine opinion to emphasize for members of the
bar appointed to represent indigent defendants on appeal that briefs identifying possible
appellate issues in what turn out to be Wende matters remain welcome. Accordingly, we
disagree with any suggestion by a recent panel of this court in People v. Hernandez
228 Cal.App.4th 539 (Hernandez) that appellate counsel should eliminate the practice of
identifying so-called “‘arguable-but-unmeritorious’” issues in Wende briefs. In our view,
the “arguable-but-unmeritorious” label does not reflect the value of these briefs in
resolving Wende appeals while safeguarding the right to counsel for indigent criminal
defendants. While an appellate court need not delve into or even pass on the merits of
issues noted in a Wende brief, presenting those issues can ensure counsel does not
discharge his or her duty in a merely summary fashion, and guides the court to pertinent
legal issues and principles, thereby aiding the court in its Wende review. We therefore
encourage counsel to continue to submit such briefs.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On July 19, 2013, the probation department filed a petition alleging Kent
violated his probation. According to the petition, a condition of Kent’s probation
required him to submit his person and property to search and seizure by probation
officers or law enforcement personnel. He was also required to “not subscribe to or have
access to any form of on-line internet service, without written permission of the probation
officer.”
According to the petition, on July 17, 2013, Kent failed to provide his
probation officer a pass code to an Apple iPod device found in his bedroom. A search of
the iPod revealed Kent “had multiple automatic Wi-Fi wireless network connections for
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internet access in the vicinity of his residence” and “[t]he device also showed [Kent] had
recent correspondence with use of multiple email accounts and accessed Craiglist’s
personal posting.” Under the heading “Circumstances of the Violation,” the petition
recounted that during the search of Kent’s bedroom, an iPod was found and Kent “was
directed to provide the pass code to the iPod device; however, he claimed he did not
know it and that the iPod belonged to his sister. The undersigned [probation] officer
contacted [Kent’s] sister Susan C. and learned she had two iPod devices, one in her
possession and the other she did not know of its whereabouts.” Susan was evasive about
whether she allowed Kent to use her iPod, but she provided a pass code that unlocked the
device found in Kent’s bedroom. “Upon inspection of the iPod, it was learned the device
had multiple automatic Wi-Fi wireless connections for internet access in the vicinity of
[Kent’s] residence. There were multiple e-mail address accounts with [Kent’s] name and
his mobile phone number was found in some of his e-mail correspondences. The most
recent e-mail correspondence was dated July 15, 2013 between the probationer and a
known associate” of Kent’s. The petition also provided other information indicating
Kent’s performance on probation was “extremely poor” in the probation officer’s
opinion.
On January 8, 2014, the probation department filed a second petition
alleging Kent violated his probation: “On or about December 17, 2013, a forensic search
of the probationer’s Apple iPod 4 was completed in the High Technology Lab of the
Orange County Probation Department. The Extraction Report provided 190 entries of
Internet Web History from April 20, 2013 to July 11, 2013.” Under the heading
“Circumstances of the Violation,” the petition stated a forensic search of the iPod showed
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the device had been used to perform various Internet searches involving sexual matter
and drugs.
Probation officer Jason Doud testified at the January 9, 2014 probation
violation hearing that he and Kent’s probation officer, Con Van Nguyen, searched Kent’s
bedroom on July 17, 2013, and found an iPod, which Doud turned over to the
department’s high technology crime lab. Doud received a forensic or extraction report
reflecting the iPod accessed the Internet on dates ranging from April 20, 2013 through
July 11, 2013.
The court overruled Kent’s objections to the foundation for the extraction
report, and Doud’s qualifications. Counsel noted there were “two separate violations” or
petitions filed, and asked “which one the prosecution is going on.” The prosecutor
responded “both.” Kent apparently provided health records (not in the appellate record)
showing he was hospitalized until June 27 “which was pretty well close to when this
incident happened.”
The court took a recess to review documents (not in the appellate record)
and found Kent violated probation. The court noted it “doesn’t find that [] discussion of
what appears to be consensual – consensual adult contact via e-mail between two people
is in any way a violation.” The court scheduled a sentencing hearing.2
At the sentencing hearing on January 30, 2014, the court stated it had
considered “extensive additional documents” provided by Kent (not in the appellate
record). It lifted the stay of the previously imposed prison sentence. The court credited
2
In early December 2013, Kent file a motion to dismiss the probation
violation proceeding on due process grounds, arguing he had been arrested July 17, and
he had not been provided a hearing within a reasonable time. At the violation hearing,
counsel complained “they waited so long to bring forth this information about the
extraction.” The court evidently denied the motion to dismiss.
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Kent with the actual days spent in jail as a condition of probation and following his arrest
for the probation violation, plus applicable conduct credits.
Kent filed a notice of appeal February 11, 2014, indicating he was
appealing after a contested probation violation. (§ 1237, subd. (b).) Appointed appellate
counsel advised this court of possible issues, including whether Kent’s trial counsel
performed ineffectively, whether sufficient evidence supported Kent’s probation
violation, and whether the court correctly calculated Kent’s custody and conduct credits.
DISCUSSION
In Hernandez, a panel of this court recently criticized “the custom of
raising ‘“‘arguable-but-unmeritorious’ issue[s]” in Anders/Wende appeals.” (Hernandez,
supra, 228 Cal.App.4th at p. 542].) Hernandez drew the phrase from Justice Gardner’s
opinion in People v. Johnson (1981) 123 Cal.App.3d 106, where the Johnson court
“reject[ed] a concept which has crept into our judicial literature— the ‘arguable-but-
unmeritorious’ issue on appeal.” (Id. at p. 109.) Johnson traced the practice to a
perceived dilemma after Anders v. California (1967) 386 U.S. 738, where the high court
observed that if counsel appointed for an indigent criminal appellant “finds his case to be
wholly frivolous, after a conscientious examination of it, he should so advise the court
and request permission to withdraw. That request must, however, be accompanied by a
brief referring to anything in the record that might arguably support the appeal.” (Id. at
p. 744, italics added.) The Supreme Court suggested this procedure would “induce the
[appellate] court to pursue all the more vigorously its own review because of the ready
references not only to the record but also to the legal authorities as furnished it by
counsel.” (Id. at p. 745.)
Some courts, including the Johnson court, perceived in this procedure a
dilemma in which counsel “must present marginal, nay, hopeless issues which at the
same time prevents an independent review by the court.” (Johnson, supra,
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123 Cal.App.3d at p. 110, italics added.) Johnson relied on the fact appellate courts
outside the Anders/Wende context generally do not conduct an independent, whole-record
review when counsel raises discrete issues. Justice Gardner observed: “‘An attorney
who cannot discover an arguable issue thus secures an appellate review of the record
which is not necessarily enjoyed by his more feisty counterpart who raises one or two
frivolous issues, easily disposed of by the inspection of a few pages of transcript.’
[Citation.]” (Id. at p. 111.) Justice Gardner concluded “the answer to this dilemma is to
jettison the concept of ‘arguable-but-unmeritorious’ issues” (ibid.), and Hernandez
agreed. (Hernandez, supra, 228 Cal.App.4th at p. 542.)
But the dilemma the Johnson court posed is a false dilemma precisely
because the so-called “marginal” issues presented in an Anders/Wende brief do not
preclude the appellate court’s whole-record review, but instead aid the appellate court in
that endeavor, as the Supreme Court explained. (Anders, supra, 386 U.S. at p. 745.)
Similarly, we disagree with Johnson’s apparent disdain for Wende briefs
that include “arguable, but unmeritorious issues.” Johnson sought to eliminate from
Wende briefs counsel’s identification of issues that, “in counsel’s professional opinion,”
do not have “a reasonable potential for success.” (Johnson, supra, 123 Cal.App.4th at
p. 109.) The Johnson court apparently excluded from its definition of “success” appeals
that change or clarify the law but do not garner reversal or a sentence modification (see
ibid.), and we disagree with that conclusion. We also disagree with Johnson’s implicit
view that an argument is either meritorious or entirely devoid of merit, and that counsel’s
role in submitting a Wende brief must be to “throw up his hands and say to the court,
‘You look it over, I can’t find anything to argue about.’” (Id. at p. 112.)
While an argument may prove unmeritorious, that is for the court ultimately
to determine, and it is not always obvious at the outset of counsel’s review or the court’s.
Indeed, no appellate matter begins as a Wende case, but instead becomes one as counsel
searches the record and researches the legal issues, finding little to argue or finding that
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further research clarifies and resolves issues that seemed to have merit. Citing in a
Wende brief the potential issues and pertinent legal authorities counsel pursued in his or
her review can alert the court to consider these issues in its own review of the entire
record. It may also point the court to other, related issues it may discover in reviewing
the case. (See, e.g., Anders, supra, 386 U.S. at p. 745 [apt legal citations can aid a court
in “pursu[ing] all the more vigorously its own review”].) This is particularly true in our
adversarial process, where courts do not often confront the bare factual or legal record in
a case without the aid of counsel. We observe that documenting such issues is also fitting
given appointed counsel are paid for their efforts in filing Wende briefs, and the court
should derive what benefit it can from those submissions.
At bottom, however, the purpose of Wende review is to ensure an indigent
criminal defendant is afforded an equal right to counsel on appeal, and the discipline
required of counsel in identifying and briefing potential legal issues serves that purpose.
There can be shades of doubt in counsel’s estimation of an argument’s likely success, and
counsel reasonably may err on the side of prudence in referencing an issue in a Wende
brief instead of abandoning it altogether. In Smith v. Robbins (2000) 528 U.S. 259
(Smith), the high court upheld California’s Wende procedure though it does not
“requir[e] the Wende brief to raise legal issues” (id. at p. 282, italics added), but that does
not mean we must ignore those issues when they are presented, nor bar counsel from
presenting them. As in Hernandez, we may conclude that the issues counsel suggests for
review are “unmeritorious,” and “therefore decline to address them further.” (Hernandez,
supra, 228 Cal.App.4th at p. 543.)
But to the extent Hernandez agreed with Johnson “to jettison the concept of
‘arguable-but-unmeritorious’ issues” (Johnson, supra, 123 Cal.App.3d at p. 111), we part
company with both cases. We see no reason to preclude what neither Wende, nor Smith
in any way discouraged. To the contrary, Wende requires counsel to alert the court “‘to
anything in the record that might arguably support the appeal.’” (Wende, supra,
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25 Cal.3d at p. 439.) And Smith recognizes the purpose of Wende review is to “ensure[]
that a trained legal eye has searched the record for arguable issues,” which “assists the
reviewing court in its own evaluation of the case.” (Smith, supra, 528 U.S. at p. 281.)
Simply put, appellate counsel’s identification of potential issues and citation of pertinent
legal authority aids us in our Wende review of the entire record, and we therefore
encourage the practice.
Here, with the aid of counsel’s brief and following the Wende guidelines,
we have reviewed the entire appellate record and in our independent analysis and
judgment find no arguable issue. Kent has not availed himself of the opportunity to file a
supplemental brief (People v. Kelly (2006) 40 Cal.4th 106 [appellate court must address
issues raised personally by appellant in a Wende proceeding]), nor has he requested to
have appellate counsel relieved. Consequently, we affirm the judgment. (Wende, supra,
25 Cal.3d at p. 443.)
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
ARONSON, J.
WE CONCUR:
O’LEARY, P. J.
FYBEL, J.
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