Filed 11/15/18
CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION THREE
THE PEOPLE,
Plaintiff and Respondent,
A148828
v.
MAURICE CALDWELL, (City & County of San Francisco
Super. Ct. No. 1260545)
Defendant and Appellant.
Appellant Maurice Caldwell’s 1991 second degree murder conviction was
reversed when the trial court granted his habeas corpus petition. Caldwell’s habeas
petition alleged various grounds for relief—including the actual innocence claim at issue
here—but the sole basis for granting the petition was the ineffective assistance of his trial
counsel. Caldwell filed a subsequent Penal Code section 1485.551 motion for a finding
of factual innocence (factual innocence motion), which the trial court denied. Caldwell
appeals. The People contend that the order is not appealable. We hold that the order is
appealable, review the record de novo and affirm the trial court’s decision.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
A. The murder and investigation
On June 30, 1990, at approximately 2:30 a.m., Judy Acosta was murdered, and his
friend, Domingo Bobila, was injured when they were shot during a drug deal in the
Alemany Housing Project in San Francisco. Acosta and Bobila drove to the 900 block of
*
Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1105(b) and 8.1110, this opinion is
certified for publication with the exception of parts II and III of the Discussion.
1
All further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise noted.
1
Ellsworth Street with their friends Eric Aguirre and Dominador Viray. Having spent the
evening drinking beer, the men decided to buy crack cocaine in the Alemany projects, an
area known for drug sales and violent crime. During the drug buy, a drug seller punched
Bobila in the face. Marritte Funches then shot Acosta several times in the chest at close
range with a handgun. The People presented evidence—which Caldwell disputes—that
Caldwell arrived and fired a shotgun at Acosta and Bobila. As they were hit by the
shotgun pellets, Bobila pulled Acosta into the car and drove to a nearby gas station where
Acosta died from multiple gunshot and shotgun wounds.
Initially, Caldwell told police that, having heard five to six gunshots, he ran to the
scene, arriving after the shooting ended. He later said that he arrived on the scene and
saw Henry Martin carrying the shotgun. In support of his habeas petition, Caldwell
submitted a declaration stating that he saw Martin firing the shotgun. During a
deposition in his civil rights case,2 Caldwell retracted that statement and said that he did
not see Martin firing.
San Francisco Police Department Inspectors Arthur Gerrans and James Crowley
responded to the gas station, investigated the murder scene, and spoke with witnesses,
many of whom were unresponsive; no one identified the suspects. During a police
interview in the hospital, Bobila described the dealers as young black men and thought he
could identify them from their photographs. The inspectors questioned the two
passengers, Aguirre and Viray, who corroborated Bobila’s version of the events. Aguirre
described one of the suspects as a black male, with a Jheri-curl hairstyle, and five feet,
four to six inches tall, which matched Caldwell’s appearance at that time.
On July 12, 1990, San Francisco Police Captain Diarmuid Philpott received an
anonymous tip—which he provided to Gerrans and Crowley—to “check out” Maurice
Caldwell because he’s “been shooting off guns in the projects.” The police canvassed the
area and Gerrans interviewed Mary Cobbs. During a taped interview inside her
2
On April 16, 2012, Caldwell filed a federal lawsuit against the City and County
of San Francisco and various San Francisco Police officers involved in the murder
investigation (federal case).
2
apartment, Cobbs told Gerrans that on the night of the murder, awakened by gunshots,
she looked out her window, and she saw a shirtless, light-skinned black male, aged 21-25,
five feet, four inches tall, weighing 150 pounds, wearing dark sweat pants, firing a
shotgun at the departing victims’ car. Cobbs’s description of the shotgun shooter
matched that given by Bobila and fit Caldwell’s appearance at the time. Her description
of admitted handgun shooter Funches also matched his appearance at the time of the
murder. Cobbs said she did not think the shooters were from the area.
On July 18, 1990, Caldwell told the inspectors that he was not present at the
murder scene, that he had been inside at “Debbie’s house” during the shooting, and that
the victims’ car was driving away when he came outside.
On July 26, 1990, Cobbs positively identified Caldwell during a photographic
lineup. She told the inspectors that she “heard they call him Twan” and that twice the
previous week Caldwell had threatened her, saying: “Bitch, we gonna’ fuck you and
your family up if you talk to the police.”
On July 27, 1990, during a photographic lineup, Bobila selected Caldwell’s
photograph as the person he thought he was talking to during the drug deal and who
punched him in the face, although he was not “100% sure.”
On September 21, 1990, Caldwell was arrested for the murder of Acosta and
attempted murder of Bobila. During an interview with police that same day, Caldwell
said that he was at his aunt’s house with a woman named Tina during the murder and that
he ran outside after the shooting ended. He claimed not to know his aunt’s last name or
her address. Caldwell also refused to provide Tina’s last name.
After the arrest, police conducted a live lineup attended by Cobbs, Bobila,
Aguirre, and Viray. Cobbs identified Caldwell as the shotgun shooter; Bobila and
Aguirre each put a question mark next to Caldwell on the lineup card; and Viray did not
identify Caldwell. At trial Bobila testified that he identified Caldwell during the lineup
as the person whose photograph he had selected from the photographic lineup.
The inspectors interviewed Caldwell’s aunt, Deborah Rodriguez, who told them
that she spoke to Caldwell while he was in jail. She said Caldwell was at her house the
3
night of the murder and that, after a few gunshots, he ran out of her house without a shirt
on. Jacqueline Williams, Rodriguez’s friend who was at her house the night of the
murder, said that Caldwell was upstairs with a woman named Linda and that he ran out of
the apartment shirtless.
On October 17, 1990, Caldwell’s trial attorney provided the inspectors with
Caldwell’s version of the events: Funches had the handgun, Erick Brown punched
Bobila, and Martin had the shotgun. The inspectors showed Cobbs, Bobila, Aguirre, and
Viray three different photo spreads that variously included photographs of Funches,
Brown, and Martin; they could not identify anyone in the photo spreads.
The inspectors searched unsuccessfully for Funches, Brown, and Martin. Martin
did not fit the witnesses’ description of the shotgun shooter.
B. The criminal case
On December 3, 1990, the court conducted the preliminary hearing, at which
Cobbs and Bobila testified. Caldwell’s trial counsel cross-examined Cobbs extensively.
He attempted to impeach Cobbs’s testimony both with her statements to the police and
with questions about statements she allegedly made to a neighbor, Dorothy Wiggins—a
witness he anticipated calling. Caldwell was held to answer on the charges. On
December 14, 1990, the San Francisco District Attorney charged Caldwell with murder
(Count 1; § 187), attempted first degree murder (Count 2; §§ 664/187), and felony
discharge of a firearm at an occupied vehicle (Count 3; § 246). As to each count, the
information alleged that Caldwell used a firearm to inflict great bodily injury on the
victims (§ 12022.5, subd. (b)), and that the offenses were serious felonies (§ 1192.7,
subd. (c)(8)). Aguirre also testified that Caldwell resembled one of the people present at
the shooting.
Cobbs testified that she was positive Caldwell was the shotgun shooter. She
clearly saw Caldwell, without a shirt on, holding the shotgun; a street light illuminated
the area; there were no obstructions; and she recognized him from his presence in the
area before the shooting. Cobbs testified that the interview with Gerrans in her apartment
was interrupted by a knock on the door (by Sergeant Crenshaw), and the only person she
4
saw outside was another police officer.3 (See People v. Maurice A. Caldwell
(Aug. 27, 1992, A053626) [nonpub. opn.].) Cobbs also testified about Caldwell’s threats
to her and her family.
Caldwell’s defense was that the shotgun did not cause Acosta’s death and that he
was not present during the murder. Rodriguez testified that Caldwell ran out of her
apartment after the initial shots wearing a T-shirt and that he did not have a shotgun.
Alice Carruthers testified that she observed Funches fire a handgun at the victims and that
she heard more shots as she ran home. Betty Jean Tyler testified that at the time of the
shooting, Caldwell had been living in her apartment at 949 Ellsworth, next door to
Cobbs’s apartment. Caldwell did not testify, and he did not challenge Cobbs’s
identification at trial.
On March 20, 1991, the jury found Caldwell guilty of second degree murder,
attempted murder, and discharging a weapon at an occupied vehicle and found two of the
personal-use-of-a-firearm enhancement allegations to be true. This court affirmed
Caldwell’s conviction.
C. The habeas proceedings
In 2009, Caldwell filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus alleging his
imprisonment was unlawful because: 1) newly discovered evidence undermined the
People’s case; 2) he was convicted on false testimony; 3) he was denied effective
assistance of counsel; 4) these cumulative errors denied him due process; and 5) he is
actually innocent.
3
Caldwell claims that Cobbs’s identification of him was tainted by the police
bringing him to Cobbs’s door during the interview. During trial, Cobbs testified on direct
examination that the only person who came to the door while speaking to Gerrans was
another officer which was consistent with her preliminary hearing testimony. At trial,
Gerrans confirmed that when Sergeant Crenshaw knocked on the door he was alone. At
oral argument, counsel contended that Caldwell was denied the opportunity to question
Cobbs about that event, but the record is clear that she was cross-examined about it
during the preliminary hearing and counsel could have revisited the issue at trial but
apparently chose not to do so.
5
In support of his habeas petition, Caldwell submitted: (1) a declaration from his
trial counsel, Craig Martin, stating that he did not hire investigators to work on the case;
(2) his own declaration stating that he observed Henry Martin fire the shotgun;
(3) Marritte Funches’s4 declaration stating that he shot the handgun, that one of his
“homeboys” fired the shotgun, that Caldwell was not present, and that one of the victims
advanced on him with a knife before Funches shot him; (4) Demetrius Jones’s declaration
stating that Caldwell was not present, Funches shot the handgun, and Henry Martin fired
the shotgun; (5) Marcus Mendez’s declaration that when he looked out of his mother’s
apartment after shots were fired, he saw Caldwell running towards the group with nothing
in his hands; and (6) Maurice Tolliver’s declaration describing the shooting.
Tolliver stated that he observed at close range the entire incident from the arrival
of the victims’ car through its speedy departure. Tolliver observed the drug sale, the
argument between the Filipino buyer and the seller, and Funches shooting the “Filipino
guy” with a handgun. “After [Funches] started shooting, [Martin], who had stayed at the
side of the building, started shooting a larger gun that he held with two hands.” Funches
continued shooting as the victims tried to escape. “As the guys in the car were trying to
do a u-turn to get out of there, [Martin] passed the gun that he had been firing to a taller
guy who went toward the corner of the building by Ellsworth and shot at the car some
more as they were trying to leave.
The trial court granted Caldwell’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus on the sole
ground that he received ineffective assistance of counsel.
The San Francisco District Attorney refiled the murder case against Caldwell.
Because Cobbs died in 1998, the People moved to admit her trial testimony. The defense
objected and the trial court excluded her testimony because the People could not locate
the diagram Cobbs used to describe the incidents; the trial court did not find Cobbs’s
testimony unreliable. As a result of the court’s evidentiary ruling, the People were unable
4
Funches was convicted of murder and is serving a life sentence in Nevada.
6
to proceed with the trial, and moved to dismiss the case. Caldwell was released from
custody on March 28, 2011.
D. The federal case and Victim Compensation Board claim
On April 16, 2012, Caldwell filed a federal lawsuit against the City and County of
San Francisco and various San Francisco police officers involved in the murder
investigation (federal case). During the federal case, Caldwell developed evidence that
he submitted in support of his factual innocence motion, including: (1) Tina McCullum’s
2013 declaration stating that she was with Caldwell the night of the murder, and that after
Caldwell left the bedroom, no more shots were fired; (2) Caldwell’s 2013 declaration in
support of his section 4900 claim for compensation stating that he saw Martin at the
scene of the murder holding a shotgun; (3) Caldwell’s habeas counsel’s 2013 declaration5
that, if given immunity, Martin would provide a statement that Caldwell was not present
at the shooting and—from her observation of Cobbs’s apartment—Cobbs could not have
seen the events about which she testified at trial; and (4) various deposition excerpts,
articles, and items from the original investigative file.
On March 21, 2013, Caldwell filed a section 4900 claim with the California State
Victim’s Compensation and Government Claims Board (now Victim’s Compensation
Board (Board)) (claim).
On March 2, 2016, in the federal case the district court granted the defendants’
motion for summary judgment. Caldwell appealed that ruling to the Ninth Circuit Court
of Appeals, which affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded the matter to the
district court.6 (Caldwell v. City and County of San Francisco (2018) 889 F.3d 1105,
1120.)
5
The declaration was submitted in support of Caldwell’s section 4900 claim.
The Ninth Circuit’s decision has no bearing on our analysis here. The court
6
found that summary judgment on Caldwell’s action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 was
improper because there were genuine issues of material fact concerning Caldwell’s
claims that Sergeant Crenshaw fabricated evidence against him. (Caldwell v. City and
County of San Francisco, supra, 889 F.3d at pp. 1112–1118.) Under the standard of
review governing motions for summary judgment, the Ninth Circuit made no findings of
7
E. Factual innocence motion
Caldwell filed a motion for finding of factual innocence on August 3, 2015, and
supplemented the evidence submitted in support of the habeas petition with evidence
developed during the federal case, including declarations and deposition testimony from
additional witnesses and Caldwell. In his 2009 habeas petition, Caldwell declared that,
upon arriving at the scene of the shooting, “I saw Henry Martin standing at the corner of
the 947 Ellsworth Street building in which Mary Cobbs lived, firing a shotgun. I could
not see what he was shooting at. I saw him fire one shot and then take off running down
Ellsworth Street.” In his 2013 declaration supporting his section 4900 petition, Caldwell
stated, “I saw Henry Martin running away with a shotgun.” Asked about the discrepancy
during his 2015 federal case deposition, Caldwell acknowledged that the statement in his
2009 declaration was false and that he did not see Martin shoot the shotgun.
In a detailed discussion of the evidence, the court noted the inconsistencies among
the trial testimony, habeas declarations and federal case evidence. The court “thoroughly
reviewed the materials presented by both sides,” was “not convinced by a preponderance
of the evidence that [Caldwell] is innocent” and, on May 31, 2016, denied “the motion
for a finding of innocence pursuant to Penal Code section 1485.55, subdivision (b).” On
July 12, 2016, Caldwell timely filed his notice of appeal.
The California Victim Compensation Board postponed its decision on Caldwell’s
claim pending our deciding the appeal.7
fact and did not consider the issue of Caldwell’s innocence under a preponderance of the
evidence standard.
7
We take judicial notice of In the Matter of the Claim of Maurice Caldwell,
Notice of Decision, Victim Compensation Board of the State of California (Board),
Claim No. 13-ECO-01 (Oct. 25, 2017). (Evid. Code, § 451.)
8
DISCUSSION
I. The order is appealable.
The People contend we must dismiss this appeal because an order denying a
factual innocence motion is not appealable. They cite People v. Loper (2015) 60 Cal.4th
1155, 1159 for the proposition that a party may only appeal where that right is express in
the statute. They reason that the absence of a specific appeal mechanism in section
1485.55 evidences the Legislature’s intent that an order denying relief not be appealable.
(In re Anthony (2015) 236 Cal.App.4th 204, 215 (Anthony) [a section 1485.55 order is
not appealable by the People].) The People urge us to read the legislative intent as
inimical to allowing defendants to appeal: “[T]he legislative intent behind section
1485.55 . . . ‘was “to streamline and clarify the process for compensating exonorees
[Citation.] In addition, the changes were intended to ‘ “make the system” ’ ‘ “[l]ess
expensive by saving taxpayer money spent on years of costly litigation where innocence
has already been proven.” ’ (People v. Etheridge (2015) 241 Cal.App.4th 800, 807
(Etheridge).)” The People warn of “[c]ostly litigation” resulting from affording Caldwell
appellate rights and argue that an exonerated defendant can ask the Victim Compensation
Board to decide his innocence.
Caldwell disagrees, distinguishing the broad appellate rights section 1237,
subdivision (b) affords defendants from the constraints imposed on the People by section
1238, subdivision (a)(5), on which Anthony was decided. Finding no authority on point,
Caldwell relies on Etheridge, where the court decided the merits of defendant’s appeal
from denial of his section 1488.55, subdivision (b) motion without specifically holding
that the order was appealable. Because an appellate court is “duty bound” to consider
appealability before deciding a case, Caldwell argues that the Etheridge court must
necessarily have determined sub silentio that an order denying section 1485.55 relief is
appealable.
We agree that Anthony is inapposite. That section 1238, subdivision (a)(5) does
not authorize the People’s appeal (from an order granting defendant’s factual innocence
motion) does not inform our decision on a defendant’s appeal under section 1237,
9
subdivision (b). (Anthony, supra, 236 Cal.App.4th at p. 206.) “ ‘The prosecution’s right
to appeal in a criminal case is strictly limited by statute. [Citation.] Long-standing
authority requires adherence to these limits even though “the People may thereby suffer a
wrong without a remedy.” [Citation.] The circumstances allowing a People’s appeal are
enumerated in section 1238.’ ” (Anthony, supra, 236 Cal.App.4th at p. 211, quoting
People v. Chacon (2007) 40 Cal.4th 558, 564.) “ ‘ “[C]ourts are precluded from so
interpreting section 1238 as to expand the People's right of appeal into areas other than
those clearly specified by the Legislature.” ’ ” (Ibid.) In contrast, a criminal defendant
may appeal “[f]rom any order made after judgment, affecting the substantial rights of the
party.” (§ 1237, subd. (b).)
We agree with Caldwell that, mindful of its jurisdictional duties, the Etheridge
court necessarily determined that the order was appealable before deciding the merits.
(Olson v. Cory (1983) 35 Cal.3d 390, 398; Baker v. Castaldi (2015) 235 Cal.App.4th
218, 222 [“[i]t is the duty of an Appellate Court on its own motion to dismiss an appeal
from an order which is not appealable”].) We also agree with the Etheridge court’s
implicit conclusion that the trial court’s denial of his motion “affect[ed] [Etheridge’s]
substantial rights.” (§ 1237, subd. (b).)
Lacking controlling authority as to the appealability of section 1488.55 orders, we
look to our high court’s application of section 1237, subdivision (b) to statutes which do
not expressly afford defendants appellate rights. The Supreme Court regularly allows
defendants to appeal notwithstanding the absence of a specific appellate mechanism in
the statute under which they seek relief and liberally interprets section 1237, subdivision
(b)’s requirement that the challenged order must affect the defendant’s substantial rights.
“[A] postjudgment order ‘affecting the substantial rights of the party’ (§ 1237, subd. (b))
does not turn on whether that party’s claim is meritorious, but instead on the nature of the
claim and the court’s ruling thereto.” (Teal v. Superior Court (2014) 60 Cal.4th 595, 600,
italics added [orders under section 1170.126 and the Three Strikes Reform Act of 2012
“create a substantial right to be resentenced” and are appealable]; cf. People v. Mena
(2012) 54 Cal.4th 146, 152–153 [order denying lineup motion affected “ ‘substantial right
10
of the defendant,’ ” allowing appeal]; People v. Gamache (2010) 48 Cal.4th 347, 375,
fn. 13 [“[s]ection 1259 permits appellate review of claimed errors to the extent they
‘affected the substantial rights of the defendant’ ” (italics added)]; People v. Totari
(2002) 28 Cal.4th 876, 887 [an order denying an immigrant defendant’s section 1016.5
motion to vacate the judgment is appealable under section 1237, subdivision (b)].
Imprisoned for more than twenty years due to the ineffectiveness of his assigned
counsel, Caldwell is pursuing a “substantial right” by asking us to reconsider his factual
innocence claim. The possibility of obtaining monetary relief in the pending Board claim
does not diminish the importance to Caldwell of appellate review of the trial court’s
decision. We conclude that a defendant may appeal denial of a factual innocence motion
pursuant to section 1237, subdivision (b).
II. The trial court properly admitted Cobbs’s trial testimony.
Caldwell argues the trial court should not have admitted Cobbs’s trial testimony
under section 1291 of the Evidence Code because his trial counsel’s ineffective assistance
denied him a meaningful opportunity to cross-examine Cobbs at trial. Caldwell contends
his trial counsel’s “failure to investigate the possibility that [he] was actually innocent
and talk to the alleged perpetrators and possible witnesses” directly interfered with
defense counsel’s ability to challenge Cobbs’s testimony on cross-examination. We
disagree. Cobbs’s prior testimony was admissible under section 1291.8
Evidence Code section 1291, subdivision (a) provides: “Evidence of former
testimony is not made inadmissible by the hearsay rule if the declarant is unavailable as a
8
The People do not address whether Cobbs’s testimony was admissible under
Evidence Code section 1291, contending hearsay is admissible in considering motions
under that statute. The People rely on Etheridge for the proposition that section 1485.55
motions are analogous to those under section 851.8, for which they contend hearsay is
admissible by pointing to language that “any judicial determination of factual innocence
made pursuant to this section may be heard and determined upon declarations, affidavits,
police reports, or any other evidence submitted by the parties which is material, relevant,
and reliable. (§ 851.8, subd. (b).) The People suggest it thus follows that courts may also
consider hearsay evidence in deciding section 1485.55 motions. We agree with Caldwell
that there is no authority for the People’s argument. There is no language providing for
11
witness and . . . [¶] . . . [¶] (2) The party against whom the former testimony is offered
was a party to the action or proceeding in which the testimony was given and had the
right and opportunity to cross-examine the declarant with an interest and motive similar
to that which he has at the hearing.”
There is no dispute that Cobbs was unavailable at the time of Caldwell’s motion;
she died in 1998. (Evid. Code, § 240, subd. (a)(3) [“unavailable as a witness” includes
that the witness is “[d]ead or unable to attend or to testify at the hearing because of then-
existing physical or mental illness or infirmity”].) The only issue is whether Caldwell
“had the right and opportunity to cross-examine” Cobbs “with an interest and motive
similar to that which he” had at the factual innocence hearing. Caldwell does not address
the “interest and motive” component, contending instead that his trial counsel’s
ineffectiveness deprived him of an adequate opportunity to cross-examine Cobbs at trial.
“ ‘As long as defendant was given the opportunity for effective cross-
examination, the statutory requirements [of section 1291 are] satisfied; the admissibility
of this evidence [does] not depend on whether defendant availed himself fully of that
opportunity. [Citations.]’ ” (People v. Wilson (2005) 36 Cal.4th 309, 346.) “[I]t is the
opportunity and motive to cross-examine that matters, not the actual cross-examination.”
(People v. Smith (2003) 30 Cal.4th 581, 611.)
Courts have found an insufficient opportunity for cross-examination under section
1291 where a witness refuses to answer questions (People v. Faolima (2015)
239 Cal.App.4th 1376, 1390–1391), where the translation of a non-English speaking
witness was inaccurate (People v. Johnson (1975) 46 Cal.App.3d 701, 704), where the
witness was not mentally competent at the earlier hearing (Stevenson v. Superior Court
(1979) 91 Cal.App.3d 925, 930), and where “counsel had been appointed only five
the admissibility of hearsay in section 1485.55 itself, and the People cite no case
authority for that proposition. Etheridge is inapposite, because the appellate court there
concluded that sections 851.8 and 1485.55 apply different standards and are not
analogous. (Etheridge, supra, 241 Cal.App.4th at p. 808, fn. 3.)
12
minutes before the preliminary hearing and was thus unable to conduct an adequate
cross-examination” (People v. Brock (1985) 38 Cal.3d 180, 190, citing People v. Gibbs
(1967) 255 Cal.App.2d 739).
“ ‘The presence and participation of counsel . . . do not necessarily ensure the
opportunity’s adequacy. Qualitative factors play a role. The nature of the proceeding;
the character of the witness and [his or her] connection with the events; the extent and
subject of his direct testimony; the time and preparatory opportunities available to the
accused and his attorney—these are some of the influential factors.’ ” (Stevenson v.
Superior Court, supra, 91 Cal.App.3d at p. 929.) Insufficient opportunity based upon the
ineffectiveness of counsel, however, need not render former testimony inadmissible
unless the ineffective assistance affected the cross-examination. (People v. Jones (1998)
66 Cal.App.4th 760, 766 (Jones).)
In Jones, the Court of Appeal held that “defendant’s opportunity to cross-examine,
albeit through appointed counsel, at the first trial was sufficient to satisfy the
requirements of” section 1291. (Jones, supra, 66 Cal.App.4th at p. 764.) Jones had
argued the witness’s testimony was inadmissible because the court denied Jones the
opportunity to represent himself and the witnesses “weren’t confronted in the manner that
[he] would have done, that [he] would have chosen nor [he] would have liked.”
(Id. at p. 765.) The court concluded Jones had failed to show that the prior cross-
examination of witnesses was insufficient: “Although he claimed he would have cross-
examined differently, he never explained precisely what he would have done differently.
Therefore, he never showed his cross-examination would have been any more effective.”
(Id. at p. 768.)
Here, too, Caldwell’s defense counsel had ample opportunity to cross-examine
Cobbs at trial and did so. We note that of the 128 transcript pages of Cobbs’s trial
testimony, 75 contain defense counsel’s cross-examination; but our analysis is
qualitative, not quantitative.
13
Counsel thoroughly cross-examined Cobbs at the preliminary hearing and used
that testimony at trial to impeach her with prior inconsistencies.9 First he meticulously
established every detail of Cobbs’s version of the events. He ascertained that Cobbs
knew Caldwell by his nickname “Twan” and had seen him between 15 and 20 times as of
the time of the murder. He confirmed that she lived at 947 Ellsworth; the murder
occurred on the 900 block of Ellsworth. He established that she was in bed in her
bedroom which faced the street; was awakened by the sound of breaking glass and the
gunfire; heard four shots fired; and then went to the window where she saw two people in
a car that was attempting to depart. She testified that the view from her window was the
sidewalk, the street and car in front of her window and that Caldwell was standing about
six feet behind the car when a shot was fired which hit the car window.
Having pinned down every pertinent detail of Cobbs’s statement, he questioned
her extensively about the street light location relative to her window and the crime scene
and whether she had taken medication. He impeached her with statements from her
police interviews. Next, he laid a foundation about her conversations about Caldwell
with a neighbor, Dorothy Wiggins, whom he intended to call as a witness. Counsel
examined Cobbs about the police interview, the presence of inspectors and others to
support Caldwell’s argument about the over-suggestive identification.
Caldwell does not contend his opportunity for cross-examination was hampered by
inadequate time for counsel to prepare or by Cobbs’s refusal to answer questions, but
rather that the failure to investigate rendered the cross-examination of Cobbs ineffective.
Our Supreme Court has “recognized that in an extraordinary case, it might be
‘ “necessary to explore the character of the actual cross-examination to ensure that an
adequate opportunity for full cross-examination had been afforded to the defendant.” ’ ”
(People v. Valencia (2008) 43 Cal.4th 268, 294, quoting Wilson, supra, 36 Cal.4th at
pp. 346–347.) “In Ohio v. Roberts, the [United States Supreme Court] explained that in
9
Again, while we do not engage in a numerical analysis, we observe that the
direct examination of Cobbs at the preliminary hearing consumes less than three pages,
the cross-examination occupies 21 pages; there was no redirect.
14
an ‘extraordinary’ case, for example, where had court had already determined that a
defendant received ineffective representation from counsel appointed only four days
before trial [citation], ‘it was necessary to explore the character of the actual cross-
examination to ensure than an adequate opportunity for full cross-examination had been
afforded to the defendant.’ ” (Wilson, supra, 36 Cal.4th at pp. 346–347.) “Absent such
‘unusual circumstances,’ no inquiry into effectiveness is required.” (Id. at p. 347.)
The trial court’s habeas finding that Caldwell’s defense counsel was ineffective
constitutes an extraordinary circumstance which warrants the thorough analysis of the
cross-examination we have undertaken. The trial court summarized the ineffectiveness of
Caldwell’s counsel as his “failure to investigate the possibility that petitioner was actually
innocent and talk to alleged perpetrators and possible witnesses,” concluding that this
failure “made petitioner’s trial unfair and rendered the verdict unreliable.” The trial court
explained, “It could very well be that one or all of these potential witnesses would’ve
been more credible than the witnesses who did testify.” The trial court did not identify
trial counsel’s cross-examination of Cobbs as a basis for its ineffective-assistance finding.
Caldwell contends trial counsel’s failure directly affected his cross-examination of
Cobbs. Caldwell cites trial counsel’s failure: to locate and interview known witnesses
and participants; to interview Cobbs or investigate the scene from her perspective; and to
investigate police misconduct in obtaining Cobbs’s testimony. Caldwell points to post-
conviction evidence, presented in support of his habeas petition, that conflicted
significantly with or cast doubt on Cobbs’s testimony, implicated others in the crimes of
which he was accused, and exposed Cobbs’s identification of him as “the product of
police misconduct.” Caldwell argues that, “[a]s a direct consequence of these
acknowledged failures, Caldwell’s counsel could not conduct an effective and
meaningful cross-examination of Cobbs.”
We are not persuaded. At trial defense counsel thoroughly cross-examined Cobbs
on all the material topics, including what she saw and heard on the night of the incident
and the threats she received thereafter. Specific topics of cross-examination included:
the number, type, and timing of shots Cobbs heard fired; Cobbs’s familiarity with
15
Caldwell, his appearance, and his nickname of “Twan,” and that he formerly lived next
door to her; Gerrans’s July 13, 1990 interview with Cobbs, including playing the
recording of the interview and challenging her statement to Gerrans that the shooters
were “not from around here”; Caldwell’s actions during the incident, including his
distance from, and the damage his shots caused to, Acosta’s car; and further details about
the timing of the threats against her and Caldwell’s participation in making them.
Defense counsel laboriously highlighted inconsistencies in Cobbs’s testimony, often
referring back to Cobb’s preliminary hearing testimony on the same topics.
Had trial counsel investigated, his cross-examination of Cobbs may have been
more persuasive, but having read that testimony—and its extensive reliance on the
preliminary hearing cross-examination—we disagree that his investigative failures
rendered it inadequate. Trial counsel’s exacting preliminary hearing cross examination
provided what an out-of-court interview often achieves but had the added benefit of being
under oath. Caldwell’s conclusory claims that counsel could have developed evidence to
“challenge[ ] Cobb’s identification of Caldwell” or the reliability of her testimony are
speculative. Caldwell’s habeas counsel conducted an exhaustive investigation which lead
to the successful habeas petition. As we discuss below, counsel developed evidence
which disputes Cobbs’s testimony, it does not render it unreliable, and in some cases it
corroborates her statements.
Caldwell also argues that his due process right was violated by admitting Cobbs’s
testimony without the photographs and crime scene diagrams she marked at trial. He
contends that the trial judge should have excluded Cobbs’s testimony at the factual
innocence hearing, just as he did before the retrial. But, the trial judge’s sole basis for
excluding her testimony at retrial was the People’s loss of the diagrams about which she
testified, as he said, “I certainly didn’t make any adverse rulings with respect to the
credibility of Mary Cobbs.” The reliability of such evidence is a question for the finder
of fact and goes “ ‘to the weight of the evidence, not its admissibility.’ ” (People v.
Valencia, supra, 43 Cal.4th at p. 295, quoting People v. Anderson (2001) 25 Cal.4th 543,
587.)
16
Caldwell contends that “[l]acking the exhibits, there is no context for Cobbs’ (sic)
testimony. . . . [and] no way for the trier of fact to weigh her overall testimony against the
post-conviction evidence of other eyewitnesses regarding the scene that night or of what
she could physically see from her claimed vantage point because the testimony is
incomplete and also subject to question in light of this new evidence.”
We independently analyzed Cobbs’s testimony and, like the trial judge, were able
to evaluate it in light of all the countervailing post-conviction evidence. The trial court
properly admitted it. Having carefully reviewed the record, we find Caldwell had a
legally-sufficient opportunity to cross-examine her at trial.
III. The trial court properly denied Caldwell’s factual innocence motion.
The trial court decided Caldwell’s motion based on the pleadings and exhibits
without an evidentiary hearing. “Because the trial court’s findings were based solely
upon documentary evidence, we independently review the record.” (In re Rosenkrantz
(2002) 29 Cal.4th 616, 677.)
A. Procedural considerations
As an initial matter, Caldwell has not satisfied his burden to show that the trial
court erroneously discounted certain evidence or applied the wrong burden of proof in
deciding his motion. “ ‘A judgment or order of the lower court is presumed correct. All
intendments and presumptions are indulged to support it on matter as to which the record
is silent, and error must be affirmatively shown. . . . ’ ” (People v. Wiley (1995) 9 Cal.4th
580, 592, fn. 7, quoting Denham v. Superior Court (1970) 2 Cal.3d 557, 564.) Caldwell
argues that the court’s detailed analysis of the evidence indicates that it inappropriately
discounted its import: “[D]ecades later, some previously silent witnesses to the shooting
have provided declarations that state Caldwell was not the shotgun shooter. Those
witnesses did not testify at trial, claiming they either were not contacted by Caldwell’s
attorney to testify, or simply did not want to get involved at that time.” Caldwell claims
that his failure to “mention . . . three critical post-conviction eyewitnesses who provided
testimony that Caldwell was not the shotgun shooter and was not involved in the Acosta
murder” indicates the judge did not consider their testimony. Caldwell also contends the
17
trial court limited itself to considering the state of the evidence as it existed at earlier
times, such as his 1991 trial or his 2009 habeas petition, rather than the evidence as it
existed at the time of his factual innocence motion.
These arguments are not supported by the record. As the People demonstrate, the
trial court explicitly referred to “the evidence now presented” and Caldwell’s “new
evidence in the form of declarations and depositions related to his federal civil rights
action and his action for compensation for unlawful incarceration.” The court stated that
it looked “at portions of the trial transcript, declarations supporting the 2009 petition for
writ of habeas corpus, and declarations recently obtained from [Caldwell’s] civil cases”
and that it “thoroughly reviewed the materials presented by both sides,” including “the
new evidence presented by Petitioner.” Twice the court referenced the “preponderance
of the evidence” standard, in both setting forth and applying the burden of proof under
section 1485.55.
Given the court’s express statements to the contrary, as well as the detailed nature
of the order and its factual findings, we find no support for Caldwell’s contention that the
trial court implicitly ignored or discounted certain evidence or applied an incorrect
burden of proof in deciding his motion.
B. Substantive determination
Nor has Caldwell met his burden to show that the trial court erred by denying his
motion on its merits. “[I]f the court grants a writ of habeas corpus and did not find the
person factually innocent in the habeas corpus proceedings, the petitioner may move for a
finding of factual innocence by a preponderance of the evidence that the crime with
which he or she was charged was either not committed at all or, if committed, was not
committed by him or her.” (§ 1485.55, subd. (b).) “Preponderance of the evidence”
means that “the evidence on one side outweighs, preponderates over, is more than, the
evidence on the other side, not necessarily in number of witnesses or quantity, but in its
effect on those to whom it is addressed.” (People v. Miller (1916) 171 Cal. 649, 652.)
The question in claims of factual innocence “ ‘is not whether there is sufficient evidence
to establish culpability, but whether or not claimants can establish they are not
18
culpable.’ ” (Tennison v. California Victim Comp. & Government Claims Bd. (2007)
152 Cal.App.4th 1164, 1191.) Thus, to obtain relief under section 1485.55, Caldwell had
to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that he did not commit the crimes with
which he was charged.
Our independent review of the record confirms the trial court’s conclusion that
Caldwell did not satisfy his burden. As Caldwell notes, the main dispute is whether he
was the shotgun shooter. Caldwell maintains that a preponderance of the evidence shows
that Martin, not he, was the shotgun shooter.10 We disagree.
At oral argument, Caldwell contended that “you have eleven independent
witnesses who all say Maurice Caldwell was not there when the shooting occurred.”
“You have five eyewitnesses to the shooting who say that the shooters were Marritte
Funches (sic) shot the handgun and Henry Martin shot the shotgun.”
Among the five eyewitnesses, counsel counts Caldwell. During his initial police
interviews, Caldwell adamantly asserted that he arrived on scene after the last shots were
fired. In his declaration supporting his 2009 habeas petition, Caldwell declared that,
upon arriving at the scene of the shooting, “I saw Henry Martin standing at the corner of
the 947 Ellsworth Street building in which Mary Cobbs lived, firing a shotgun. I could
not see what he was shooting at. I saw him fire one shot and then take off running down
Ellsworth Street.” Yet, in his 2013 declaration supporting his section 4900 petition,
Caldwell stated only, “I saw Henry Martin running away with a shotgun.” Asked about
the discrepancy during his 2015 federal case deposition, Caldwell acknowledged that the
statement in his 2009 declaration was false and that he did not see Martin shoot the
shotgun. Caldwell’s contradictory statements about his presence and Martin’s role
support the trial court’s implicit finding that Caldwell’s testimony was not credible.
10
Contrary to habeas counsel’s prediction that Martin would exonerate Caldwell,
Martin declared, “I did not shoot the shotgun or any other gun at any person during this
incident.” Martin denies ever having offered to state that he was the shooter, and states
Caldwell attempted to induce Martin’s admission that he was the shotgun shooter with a
bribe: “Maurice Caldwell contacted me after he was released from prison and offered me
money if I would testify that he was not the shooter.”
19
The record includes statements from Funches, Marcus Mendez, Maurice Tolliver
and Demitrius Jones—presumably the other four eyewitnesses referenced by counsel.
Mendez states he saw Caldwell run towards the group after the shots were fired and he
was not holding a gun. Mendez does not identify Martin as the shotgun shooter. Tolliver
and Jones do state that Martin fired the shotgun. But counsel omits the following critical
sentence from Tolliver’s declaration: “As the guys in the car were trying to do a u-turn
(sic) to get out of there, Henry [Martin] passed the gun that he had been firing to a taller
guy who went toward the corner of the building by Ellsworth and shot at the car some
more as they were trying to leave.” (Italics added.) There is no conflict between the
“eyewitness” declarations about Martin’s role and Cobbs’s testimony that she saw
Caldwell firing the shotgun. Mendez saw Caldwell running toward the scene without the
shotgun. Jones saw Martin fire the shotgun. Tolliver saw Martin fire and then hand the
shotgun to a second shooter who “shot at the car some more as they were trying to leave.”
That Caldwell was the second shooter seen by Tolliver and identified by Cobbs resolves
any discrepancy on which Caldwell relies. And, contrary to habeas counsel’s statement,
Cobbs’s description of the vantage point from which she observed Caldwell is consistent
with her testimony.
The post-conviction evidence does not refute compelling evidence that Caldwell
was the shotgun shooter. In her initial interview with Gerrans, Cobbs provided a detailed
physical description of the shotgun shooter that matched Caldwell’s appearance. Cobbs
also identified Caldwell as the shotgun shooter in subsequent lineups, and she
unequivocally identified Caldwell as the shotgun shooter during trial. Both Cobbs and
Martin testified that the shotgun shooter was not wearing a shirt at the time of the
shooting. Cobbs was consistent from her initial recorded interview when she said: “And
there was one that was holding the gun . . . looked like a shotgun to me. And he didn’t
have no shirt on.” Martin also noted this detail about the shotgun shooter, declaring: “I
observed this other person fire the shotgun at least 2-3 times at the car as [it] tried to drive
away. The shooter was not wearing a shirt. He was bare back.” Cobbs repeated this
detail at trial, connecting it specifically to Caldwell: “He didn’t have no shirt on.”
20
Caldwell’s alibi witnesses, Rodriguez and Williams, corroborated Cobbs’s testimony on
this point, telling investigating officers that “Caldwell ran outside toward the shooting
and . . . that he had no shirt on.” Caldwell’s initial alibi was that he was in an upstairs
bedroom of Rodriguez’s home at the time of the shooting and that he left the home only
after all shots had been fired. Caldwell contradicted that statement when he said he saw
Martin with the shotgun, then that Martin shot the gun, and ultimately admitted to the
falsity of those accusations. While contradictory in some respects, all his post-trial
testimony places him at the scene of the crime when the shots were being fired.
Caldwell’s innocence claim is further belied by evidence of his effort to intimidate
Cobbs to prevent her from cooperating with the investigation into the incident and
testifying. Cobbs testified at trial that Caldwell himself directly threatened her, after the
shooting: “He told me, if I talked, they were going to fuck me and my family up.” She
also testified that associates of Caldwell had made similar threats, earlier the same day, to
“kill” her and her family if she kept “talking to the police.” Funches confirmed that a
note was delivered to Cobbs warning her to stop talking to police about the incident.
Funches also confirmed that Cobbs’s cooperation with police against Caldwell might
have been reason, based on his mentality at that time, to kill Cobbs. In a memorandum,
Caldwell’s habeas attorneys noted that Funches told them he was involved in a plan to
kill Cobbs and that, though Caldwell “did not know the specifics, he knew that [Funches]
would do whatever it took.”
After reciting the evidence he reviewed, the trial court concluded: “These
examples are only a fraction of the inconsistent declarations and testimony presented over
the 25-plus year history of this case.”
The evidence supporting Caldwell’s contention that he was not the shotgun
shooter is eclipsed by the evidence of his role in the murder. Caldwell did not prove his
innocence by a preponderance of the evidence.
DISPOSITION
The order denying Caldwell’s factual innocence motion is affirmed.
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_________________________
Ross, J.*
We concur:
_________________________
Siggins, P.J.
_________________________
Jenkins, J.
A148828
*
Judge of the San Francisco Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice
pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
22
People v. Caldwell
(A148828)
Trial court: City & County of San Francisco
Trial Judge: Hon. Charles F. Haines
Attorneys: Gross Belsky Alonso, Terry Gross, Adam C. Belsky, and Monique
Alonso for Defendant and Appellant.
Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, Gerald A. Engler, Chief Assistant
Attorney General, Jeffrey M. Laurence, Senior Assistant Attorney
General, Barton Bowers, Acting Supervising Deputy Attorneys
General, Sharon E. Loughner, Deputy Attorney General for
Respondent.
23