Filed 6/9/15 P. v Davis CA4/2
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION TWO
THE PEOPLE,
Plaintiff and Respondent, E060920
v. (Super.Ct.No. FVI1200972)
EUGENE HOUSTON DAVIS, OPINION
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL from the Superior Court of San Bernardino County. Debra Harris,
Judge. Affirmed with directions.
Michael B. McPartland, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant
and Appellant.
Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General,
Eric A. Swenson and Allison V. Hawley, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and
Respondent.
1
A jury convicted defendant, Eugene Davis, of two counts of willful, premeditated
and deliberate attempted murder (Pen. Code, §§ 664/187, subd. (a)),1 during which he
inflicted great bodily injury (§ 12022.7, subd. (a)) and during one of which he used a
firearm (§ 12022.5, subds. (a) &(d)) and discharged a firearm causing great bodily injury
(§ 12022.53, subd. (d)) and during the other, used a knife (§ 12022.7, subd. (a)); assault
with a firearm (§ 245, subd. (a)(2)), during which he used a firearm and inflicted great
bodily injury; assault with a deadly weapon (§ 245, subd. (a)(1)), during which he
inflicted great bodily injury, and possessing a firearm by someone who had been
convicted of a violent offense (§ 29905). In bifurcated proceedings, defendant admitted
having suffered a strike prior (§ 667, subds. (b)-(i)), a serious prior (§ 667, subd. (a)(1))
and two priors for which he served prison terms (§ 667.5, subd. (b)). The trial court
sentenced defendant to prison2 and he appeals, claiming insufficient evidence supports
his conviction of the attempted murder of one victim and the jury was misinstructed as to
the attempted murder of the other. We reject his contentions and affirm, while directing
the trial court to clear up ambiguities in its sentence and to correct court minutes and the
abstract of judgment.
FACTS
The female victim testified that she had known defendant, who, like her, was
“homeless,” for a few years and she was unaware of any problems he might have had
1 All further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise indicated.
2 See the disposition for a description of the sentence imposed.
2
with her. Defendant lived at a trailer park/campground near the bed of the Mojave River.
At 6:45 a.m. on April 19, 2012, the female victim awoke to the barking of a dog she and
her boyfriend, the male victim, kept outside their tent in the riverbed. She got up, went
outside and looked around, but saw nothing and started to go back into the tent when she
heard a whistle. She looked in the direction from which the whistle came and saw
defendant standing 15 feet away, with a shotgun wrapped in a blanket slung over his
shoulder. The female victim addressed defendant by his first name and asked him what
he was doing in her camp with a gun. Defendant called the female victim “Jamie”—the
name of defendant’s girlfriend at the time—who looked nothing like the female victim.
Jamie prostituted herself, sometimes for drugs. The female victim told defendant that she
was not Jamie, asked him why he was calling her “Jamie” and told him that she and he
had had no problems and he needed to leave her camp with the gun. Defendant told the
female victim to get the male victim, who was in the tent. Defendant seemed angry. The
female victim went back into her tent and told the male victim to go outside because
defendant had a gun. She laid down on her bed, but in a position opposite how she
usually slept, in order to hear what was about to transpire between defendant and the
male victim. By this time, defendant was “right at” the tent. He suggested to the male
victim that they go for a walk and have a cigarette. The male victim declined, saying he
was not going anywhere with defendant with a gun. He asked defendant what was
wrong. Defendant repeated his suggestion that they go for a walk and a cigarette. The
male victim repeated his response. Defendant sounded increasingly angry, but the male
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victim was not. The male victim suggested they “sit down right here,” meaning on chairs
near the barbeque pit and have a cigarette. The shotgun went off, hitting the female
victim’s back. She was airlifted to the hospital, where she remained for four days.
The male victim testified that he had known defendant for two years, the two had
gotten along and there was no on-going argument between them. When the former went
outside his tent, after being told by the female victim that defendant was there with a gun,
the shotgun was not wrapped in the blanket and defendant was standing at the edge of the
platform on which the 14 foot by 16 foot tent rested, ten feet from the front of the tent.
Defendant held the shotgun in his right hand, with his finger on the trigger, and the stock
under his right arm. The shotgun was pointed at the tent, but the male victim was not in
the line of fire. Defendant asked the male victim if Jamie, whom the male victim had not
seen in over a year, was there. The male victim told defendant he did not know where
Jamie was. Although defendant did not appear to be angry at the male victim at that
moment, he appeared to be a little angry when he then asked the male victim to go for a
walk with him. Defendant seemed to get more angry and was agitated and upset when
the male victim did not agree to the walk and defendant asked him, perhaps, another two
times, with the male victim declining each time. The male victim approached defendant
to ask why defendant was there and defendant appeared to be “spaced out.” The male
victim was to the left of defendant and not in the line of fire. Defendant held the shotgun
with both hands, keeping his right hand on the trigger. The male victim opined that a
shotgun had to be held in both hands in order to be fired—if held in just one hand, firing
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it would knock the shooter “on [his] butt.” For two or three minutes, defendant and the
male victim conversed, with the male victim saying that Jamie was not there and asking
defendant to leave. The shotgun, which had to have been pumped to fire, went off,
hitting the female victim’s left shoulder. The male victim opined that defendant had not
fired the gun accidentally. The female victim called out that she had been hit and the
male victim went into the tent to check on her. She was hysterical. The male victim
went back outside, stood next to defendant and asked him two or three times why he had
shot the female victim. Defendant said nothing and he did not seemed shocked or
surprised. The male victim reached for the barrel of the shotgun, grabbed it and pulled it
down so defendant could not fire it again and he and defendant began struggling over it.
Defendant turned around and stabbed the male victim in the right side of his neck,
inflicting two stab wounds, while asking the male victim if it hurt. The male victim was
unarmed and was doing nothing to defendant to inflict serious pain. The male victim
responded that it did not hurt and he grabbed the knife out of his neck, where it had
become lodged, and stabbed defendant. He asked defendant if it hurt. Defendant and the
male victim wrestled with each other. The male victim asked defendant if defendant had
had enough. Both released the gun and defendant took off. One of the stab wounds was
one-sixteenth of an inch from the male victim’s spinal cord. The male victim received
five stitches and was released from the hospital that night.
Defendant admitted at trial unintentionally dropping the shotgun as he made his
way back to his camp, but he denied trying to hide it, although he conceded that the
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police were unable to find it. He testified that the night before the crimes, his girlfriend,
Jamie, had been out all night, after leaving at 7:00 p.m. and telling defendant that she was
going shopping, and when she returned at 6:30 a.m. the next day, she told him something
so upsetting that he was convinced that he needed to contact all the people that she had
been with the night before and check out her story,3 and, if it was true, he would have to
do and/or say something, but if it was a lie, he would have to terminate his relationship
with her. Defendant said that he and Jamie left their place of residence about the same
time that morning, but, curiously, he also testified that when he eventually returned, she
was still there, never having left. Defendant’s first stop was the tent of the female and
male victims, because Jamie had told him that she had gone to the river bed camp first the
night before. In fact, defendant first went to the tent of the victims’ neighbor, asked him
where the male victim was and the neighbor roused the female victim for defendant.
Defendant testified that near the tent, he found the shotgun covered with a blanket and he
inspected it, finding it was loaded. He claimed that although he was a parolee and knew
possessing a shotgun would land him back in prison, he picked it up because he feared
people who brought their children to play in the riverbed would find it.4 He also claimed
that he did not remove the shotgun shells from the shotgun because he had other metal
objects in his pockets that he feared would “set off” the bullets if placed in close
3 Apparently, it was a harrowing story, as defendant testified that Jamie was
“frightened in the face” as she was telling it to him.
4 His testimony was contradicted by the testimony of a sheriff’s department
detective who, during a dozen trips to the riverbed, never saw a child there.
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proximity to them.5 He asserted that he wrapped the shotgun in his hoodie to prevent
people who didn’t like him from reporting that he had possession of it. He testified that
even though the female victim had known him for six or seven years, when she came
outside her tent and saw him, she asked him who he was. Defendant asked for the male
victim, with whom he wanted to discuss Jamie. The female victim went back inside the
tent and the male victim, whom defendant had known also for six or seven years, came
outside. Defendant told the male victim that he wanted to discuss Jamie “and what
happened last night” and he asked the male victim if the latter wanted to sit down and
have a cigarette. The male victim told defendant he had nothing to say to him.
Defendant claimed that he struggled to keep control of the shotgun, the male victim asked
him what the shotgun “was doing,” defendant said he did not know and the male victim
asked to see the shotgun. Defendant pulled it over the front of his head, unwrapped it and
as it came down, it accidentally went off. Although he heard the female victim react to
being shot by him and he saw blood on her, he said nothing because he was stunned. The
male victim told defendant that he needed to leave. Defendant backed up and the male
victim charged at him, grabbed the shotgun with both hands and tried to turn it, while
defendant held onto the butt. The knife defendant kept under his watchband began to fall
out while the male victim was struggling with defendant and defendant stabbed the male
victim “out of instinct” and because he was afraid the male victim would turn the shotgun
5 This testimony was contradicted by the testimony of the detective, who said that
no items were recovered from defendant’s person upon his arrest.
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around and shoot defendant. Defendant claimed he intended to stab the male victim in
the deltoid muscle6 to stop the latter from pulling on the shotgun, but he got as close to
that muscle as he could. He testified that he asked the male victim if it hurt because he
knew if it hurt, the latter would stop and he wanted to know when the latter was going to
stop trying to turn the shotgun on him. Defendant lost his grip on the knife due to the
struggle and it fell. The male victim then stabbed defendant in the ribs two times with it.
ISSUES AND DISCUSSION
1. Insufficient Evidence of Intent to Kill the Female Victim
Defendant claims there was insufficient evidence that he intended to kill the
female victim. We disagree. Much of what defendant did made no sense, so there is no
point trying to take a logical view of his actions. This means that the fact that he did not
make a second attempt to kill her as she went to the next camp to seek aid after being
shot does not make the jury’s conclusion unsupportable. First, there was no testimony
about the coincidence of events, i.e., whether the female victim left her tent and went to
the next camp while defendant was busy talking with, stabbing or being stabbed by the
male victim. If that was the case, it would explain defendant’s failure to make a second
attempt at killing the female victim that has nothing to do with his intention towards her.
Even if defendant was not otherwise engaged, the fact that he did not make a second
attempt on her life is of no moment to the jury’s finding that he intended to kill her when
6 It is at the shoulder.
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he fired the shotgun. He could have changed his mind or he could have been distracted
by his interaction with the male victim.
Additionally, the fact that he seemed to have been angry with the male victim, and
not with the female victim, does not require a finding of insufficient evidence. The
female victim testified that defendant appeared to be angry when he was talking to her,
even before the male victim came out of the tent. The male victim testified that
defendant became increasingly angry when he refused to take a walk with him, just
before defendant fired the shotgun. Although one could assume that a rational person
would not normally direct his anger at the wrong person, i.e. the female victim, defendant
was not behaving rationally that day, and, according to the male victim was “spaced out.”
The fact remains that defendant, a self-proclaimed armed forces expert in firearms held
what he knew to be a loaded shotgun in both hands, at some point pumped it, aimed at
and fired it into a 14 foot by 16 foot canvas tent, knowing that the female victim was
inside. Even though defendant was originally seeking out the male victim, and, at the
time he fired, the male victim was closer to him than the female victim, he did not fire the
shotgun at the former, but, rather, at the direction of the latter. From this, the jury could
reasonably infer that, whatever the angry defendant’s illogical reason for wanting to kill
the female victim, he, in fact, intended to do just that.
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2. Failure to Instruct on the Lesser Included Offense of Attempted Voluntary
Manslaughter Based on Unreasonable Self-Defense
Based on defendant’s testimony that he stabbed the male victim twice because he
was afraid the male victim would shoot him with the shotgun, the jury was instructed as
to perfect self-defense for the attempted murder of the male victim and the assault on him
with the knife. Defendant here contends that the trial court had a sua sponte duty to
instruct on attempted voluntary manslaughter on the theory that he stabbed the male
victim in the unreasonable belief that he needed to defend himself. Specifically, the
instructions on imperfect self-defense provide, “The difference between
complete . . . self-defense . . . and imperfect . . . self-defense . . . depends on whether the
defendant’s belief in the need to use deadly force was reasonable. [¶] The defendant
acted in imperfect . . . self-defense . . . if: [¶] . . . [t]he defendant believed
that . . . he . . . was in imminent danger of being killed or suffering great bodily injury[]
[¶] and [¶] . . . [t]he defendant believed that the immediate use of deadly force was
necessary to defend against the danger[] [¶] but [¶] . . . [a]t least one of the defendant’s
beliefs was unreasonable.” (Judicial Council of California Criminal Jury Instructions,
CALCRIM No. 604.)
Defendant’s argument that there was substantial evidence (People v. Breverman
(1998) 19 Cal.4th 142, 162) to support the giving of an unreasonable self-defense
instruction is lacking. Defendant correctly points out that “there was clear evidence that
[he] actually believed that he was in imminent danger of suffering great bodily injury and
10
that he had to use deadly force to defend himself against that danger.” However,
defendant points to no evidence whatsoever that either of these beliefs was unreasonable
under the circumstances. Defendant offered no evidence that either of these asserted
beliefs was unreasonable and no inference could be made from any of the evidence
offered at trial that they were. Therefore, there was no substantial evidence to support the
giving of this instruction.
“Where . . . the defendant’s version of events, if believed, establish [perfect] self-
defense, while the prosecutor’s version, if believed, negates both [perfect] and imperfect
self-defense, the court is not required to give the [imperfect self-defense] instruction.”
(People v. Szadziewicz (2008) 161 Cal.App.4th 823, 834.) In People v. Duff (2014) 58
Cal.4th 527, the defendant confessed to shooting two victims and explained that he and
one of them were in the process of trading guns for drugs when both victims pulled guns
on him and demanded his guns and money. (Id. at p. 535.) The defendant told the
victims that he did not want trouble and was leaving when someone fired a shot and the
defendant returned fire, eventually killing both victims. (Ibid.) Rejecting the defendant’s
claim that the trial court erred in refusing to instruct on imperfect self-defense, the
California Supreme Court held, “[T]he jury could have credited [the] version of events
[defendant gave during his confession] . . . . But the problem, at least for finding an
obligation to instruct on voluntary manslaughter, is that if believed, [the defendant’s]
version could lead only to a finding of justifiable homicide and a total acquittal on the
homicide charges. The use of lethal force in response to being shot at . . . is perfect self-
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defense and no crime. [Citations.] While [the defendant] argues the jury could have
concluded he unreasonably misperceived the situation, the circumstances described by
[the defendant] leave no room for such shades of gray. Either he was attacked, in which
case he committed no crime, or he was not, in which case he committed murder.” (Id. at
p. 562.) Defendant here does not even attempt to make the argument that he
unreasonably misperceived the need to defend himself. Even if he had, he would still not
have been entitled to the instruction, as the circumstances defendant described leave no
room for a finding that his belief that the male victim would turn the gun on him and
shoot him was unreasonable under the circumstances.7
Similarly, in People v. Valenzuela (2011) 199 Cal.App.4th 1214, 1227-1230,
1232, the appellate court rejected the defendant’s contention that the trial court had a sua
sponte duty to instruct on imperfect self-defense thusly, “It cannot be said . . . that if the
jury credited [the defendant’s] testimony, his actual belief that he was in imminent danger
might also be deemed unreasonable. [The defendant testified that] the [car containing the
7 The People offer a different reason why defendant was not entitled to an
imperfect self-defense instruction, i.e., the fact that he was the initial aggressor and the
male victim trying to stop him from using the gun again was legally justified. (People v.
Seaton (2001) 26 Cal.4th 598, 664 (Seaton); In re Christian S. (1994) 7 Cal.4th 768, 773,
fn. 1.) In Seaton, the defendant, who was angry at the victim, went to the latter’s house,
and hit him with his fist. (Seaton, at p. 629.) The victim got a hammer, which the
defendant grabbed and used to kill the victim. (Ibid.) In rejecting the defendant’s claim
that the jury should have been instructed, sua sponte, on voluntary manslaughter on the
theory of unreasonable self defense, the Supreme Court held, “[the] defendant’s
testimony showed him to be the initial aggressor and the victim’s response [was] legally
justified . . . .” (Id. at p. 664.) The only problem with this is that if defendant’s testimony
was believed by the jury, he was not the initial aggressor, as he claimed he shot the
female victim accidentally.
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victims] was following him, the occupants shouted an insult to his gang and the name of
a rival gang, [he] heard a popping sound which he believed was shooting, and when the
[car containing the victims] tried to block [his] car from moving, a passenger in [that car]
with a black object in his hand started to open the door. A reasonable jury could not
conclude that [the defendant]’s actual fear of imminent death or great bodily injury was
unreasonable. [¶] [He] argues that his testimony provided a factual basis on which a jury
could conclude that his actual fear . . . was unreasonable . . . [in that] he did not testify
that he actually saw a gun pointed at him, and that his car was not entirely blocked off by
[the victims’ car]. [His] belief that he was being pursued by rival gang members with a
gun, however, need not have been definitely proven true . . . . His belief must only have
been reasonable, and there was no evidence that it was otherwise. . . . [N]o principle of
law required the trial judge . . . to disregard the evidence in order to find that the jury
should consider a theory not supported by the evidence. [Citation.] This is especially
true when, as in this case, the evidence actually introduced on the point—the defendant’s
own testimony—was to the contrary. [¶] [The defendant’s] testimony, if the jury
believed him, could only lead to a conclusion that he acted in justifiable self-defense . . . ,
not to a conclusion that he acted in imperfect self-defense. If the jury believed the
prosecution’s theory . . . it is inconceivable that they would conclude that [the defendant]
actually believed he needed to defend himself . . . .”
Defendant further asserts that in convicting him of attempted murder, and thereby
rejecting his defense of perfect self-defense, the jury “possibly determine[ed] that it was
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unreasonable for [him] to believe that [the male victim] was going to take the gun away
from him and shoot him with it.” First, what the jury possibly determined is not the same
as the presence of substantial evidence, requiring the giving of an instruction. Second, it
is an even greater possibility that the jury simply did not believe defendant’s claim that
he feared the male victim was going to take the gun and shoot him with it, but, instead,
believed the male victim’s testimony that he grabbed the gun and pulled it down for the
sole purpose of preventing defendant from firing it again and defendant tried to stop him
from doing this, so they struggled over the weapon.
DISPOSITION
The trial court is directed to make the following corrections: In the minutes for
October 31, 2012, reference to “special circumstances” attached to count one is to be
deleted. In its place, it shall be noted that the jury found true the allegation that the
attempted murder was willful, deliberate and premeditated. The same notation shall be
made for the count two attempted murder. The reference to the trial court striking the
section 12022.53, subdivision (b) allegation as to count one and the 2001 prison prior true
finding shall be deleted, as the trial court made no such order on October 31, 2013. In
fact, the jury failed to return a true finding as to the section 12022.53, subdivision (c)
allegation and defendant admitted having suffered the 2001 prison prior conviction. The
reference to the priors being admitted by defendant should be changed from defendant
admitting priors number one and number three to defendant admitting priors number one,
two, three, and four.
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As to the enhancement for defendant’s prior serious felony conviction, the
sentencing court said, “Five years for the [section] 667[, subdivision] (a)(1) prior, which
is stayed pursuant to [section] 654.” However, in supplemental briefing, the parties agree
that the sentencing court had no authority to stay this enhancement and defendant asserts
that the trial court actually intended to impose the five year term, but simply misspoke in
doing otherwise. Therefore, the trial court is directed to impose the five year term for this
enhancement and to note that in the minutes of the sentencing hearing and the abstract of
judgment. The minutes of the sentencing hearing shall also be amended to omit the
reference to the sentencing court imposing a one year sentence for “prior #1.” In fact,
prior number one is the strike prior. Although prior number two is the prison prior, the
sentencing court said nothing about it at sentencing. Section 667.5, subdivision (b)
carries a one year term. In their supplemental brief, the People assert that the trial court
had discretion to either impose or strike the term for this enhancement, citing People v.
Garcia (2008) 167 Cal.App.4th 1550, 1560, 1561, and we should remand the matter to
allow the trial court to exercise its discretion in this regard. Defendant did not respond to
this assertion in their reply to the People’s contention, therefore, they appear to have
conceded the point. The matter is remanded to allow the trial court to exercise its
discretion in this regard and to reflect its decision in the minutes of the sentencing
hearing and the abstract of judgment. If the sentencing court chooses to strike the term, it
must state its reasons for doing so on the record. (People v. Superior Court (Romero)
(1996) 13 Cal.4th 497, 531, 532.) We further direct the trial court to amend the abstract
15
to omit the references that a five year term was imposed for the section 667.5,
subdivision (b) enhancement and a one year term for the section 667, subdivision (a)(1)
enhancement.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
RAMIREZ
P. J.
We concur:
McKINSTER
J.
CODRINGTON
J.
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