Filed 6/18/20
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION TWO
THE PEOPLE,
Plaintiff and Respondent, E071585
v. (Super.Ct.No. SWF1700598)
YI CHIH CHEN, OPINION
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. James S. Hawkins, Judge.
Affirmed.
Timothy Allen Scott and Nicolas O. Jimenez, for Defendant and Appellant.
Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General,
Michael P. Pulos, Seth M. Friedman and Joseph C. Anagnos, Deputy Attorneys General,
for Plaintiff and Respondent.
Good fences make good neighbors, but here the attempted replacement of a fence
led defendant to threaten his neighbors with a shotgun. Following a jury trial, defendant
was acquitted on felony charges but convicted on a misdemeanor brandishing charge and
sentenced to 36 months of summary probation. At trial, his position was that he acted in
defense of property. We affirm, holding that displays of deadly force are an unreasonable
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means of defending property where there is no home invasion or threat of death or
serious bodily harm. Nineteenth century California law established this proposition,
which remains valid today.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In September 2017, defendant and appellant Yi Chih (Steve) Chen called the
Riverside County Sheriff’s Department for assistance with a neighbor dispute. When
deputy sheriff Christina Weber arrived at Chen’s home in Temecula, Chen asked that she
stop his neighbors from taking down a shared fence that day. The neighbors, a married
couple, sought to replace the fence and had hired contractors, but Chen objected to the
plan. Weber explained to everyone that it was “a civil issue” and that they should take
the matter up in civil court. The fencing company hired by the neighbors arrived at
around this time. Before leaving, and perhaps sensing the tension between Chen and his
neighbors, Weber told Chen, “please do not make any poor decisions and going and
attacking people and . . . doing anything criminally [so] that I have to come back out.”
Instead of heeding Weber’s advice, Chen went upstairs to his bedroom and began
pointing a shotgun from his window toward the neighbors and two of the contractors.
The neighbors, who captured the incident on video, called 911. Weber, who had only
driven “maybe a half a block to a block away,” was sent back to the scene and ultimately
arrested Chen.
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Chen was charged with four counts of assault with a firearm (Pen. Code, § 245,
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subd. (a)(2)), a felony, and one count of brandishing a firearm (§ 417, subd. (a)(2)), a
misdemeanor. The jury acquitted Chen on the assault charges and convicted him on the
misdemeanor. The trial judge granted Chen summary probation for 36 months and
allowed him to serve, via an ankle monitor, the three months of mandatory jail time
required by the Penal Code for brandishing. (See § 417, subd. (a)(2)(B).)
II. ANALYSIS
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Chen raises three issues on appeal, which we address in turn.
A. Suppression of Evidence
Chen contends that evidence obtained during the warrantless search of his home,
conducted while Chen was handcuffed and in Weber’s patrol vehicle, should have been
suppressed. Whether or not the search violated the Fourth Amendment, admitting the
evidence was harmless error.
At issue is the admission into evidence of the shotgun, its ammunition, and video
footage captured by Chen’s wife, rather than the video shot by the neighbors. At the
suppression hearing, Weber testified that while searching Chen’s home, she noticed a
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Further undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code.
2
We have jurisdiction even though the Superior Court’s appellate division has
jurisdiction over most misdemeanor appeals. The Court of Appeal has appellate
jurisdiction over “felony case[s]” (§ 1235), which means “a criminal action in which a
felony is charged and includes a criminal action in which a misdemeanor or infraction is
charged in conjunction with a felony” (§ 691, italics added). (See also People v. Morales
(2014) 224 Cal.App.4th 1587, 1594-1599.)
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camera mounted on a tripod in Chen’s bedroom. After Weber had entered the home,
Chen’s wife gave Weber permission to view the footage from that camera, which
depicted the incident from a different angle than that of the neighbors, and Weber
captured the footage by using her cell phone to record the camera’s display screen.
Weber’s video was played for the jury, as was the video the neighbors recorded.
We agree with Chen that Weber’s search was not justified under either the
“exigent circumstances” exception to the warrant requirement or the exception for a
“protective sweep.” “In terms that apply equally to seizures of property and to seizures
of persons, the Fourth Amendment has drawn a firm line at the entrance to the house.
Absent exigent circumstances, that threshold may not reasonably be crossed without a
warrant.” (Payton v. New York (1980) 445 U.S. 573, 590.) In order to show exigent
circumstances based on a “risk of danger to police officers or others on the scene,” a
warrantless entry into a home “must be supported by probable cause to believe that a
dangerous person will be found inside.” (People v. Celis (2004) 33 Cal.4th 667, 678,
second italics added.) The People do not even attempt to argue that Weber had the
requisite probable cause here. Although the People contend instead that Weber
conducted a protective sweep, which “can be justified merely by a reasonable suspicion
that the area to be swept harbors a dangerous person” (ibid.), Weber had no “articulable
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It is possible Weber knew about the camera in the bedroom before the search; at
one point during her first visit, she told Chen: “And I see—and I see you recording and
I—like I told them, if you’re going—if there’s going to be an issue, I highly recommend
you record because you don’t wanna have your word against their word.”
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facts which, taken together with the rational inferences from those facts, would warrant a
reasonably prudent officer in believing that the area to be swept harbors an individual
posing a danger to those on the arrest scene” (Maryland v. Buie (1990) 494 U.S. 325,
335). As Weber testified at the suppression hearing, she saw no signs that Chen’s wife
posed a danger and had no information indicating to her that anyone else was in the
home. The mere fact she could not exclude the possibility of a dangerous person in the
home, without more, fails to justify a protective sweep. (See, e.g., People v. Celis, supra,
33 Cal.4th at pp. 679-680 [protective sweep unjustified where officers had no information
“‘as to whether anyone was inside the house’” and no indication that anyone was armed];
People v. Werner (2012) 207 Cal.App.4th 1195, 1207 [protective sweep unjustified
where “there was no evidence that deputies were aware of any ongoing criminal activity
in the home, or that there were others even present inside, let alone that it ‘harbor[ed] a
dangerous person’”].)
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However, as the People observe, in People v. Mitchell (1990) 222 Cal.App.3d
1306, the Court of Appeal held that suppression of evidence was not warranted, in part
because the defendant told officers a firearm was in the house. (Id. at p. 1313.)
According to the court, because the officers were retrieving the firearm and the defendant
had told the officers where it was, the police “‘were not “searching” for anything,’” and
defendant “gave up any reasonable expectation of privacy” “as to the presence of the
shotgun within his home” by acknowledging its location. (Id. at
pp. 1313-1314.) Mitchell even involved defendant brandishing a shotgun at his neighbor
over “property lines and a wall.” (Id. at p. 1309.)
In reaching its holding on the suppression of evidence, however, Mitchell relied on
a case not involving the warrantless entry of a home. (See Mitchell, supra, 222
Cal.App.3d at p. 1313, citing People v. Haugland (1981) 115 Cal.App.3d 248 [search of
weapon in briefcase].) This is problematic, as “[i]t is axiomatic that the ‘physical entry
of the home is the chief evil against which the wording of the Fourth Amendment is
directed.’” (Welsh v. Wisconsin (1984) 466 U.S. 740, 748; see also Kyllo v. United States
(2001) 533 U.S. 27, 31 [“With few exceptions, the question whether a warrantless search
of a home is reasonable and hence constitutional must be answered no”].)
We need not ultimately resolve the propriety of Weber’s search or the merits of
Mitchell here, for even if we were to assume that the search violated the Fourth
Amendment, admission of the evidence was harmless error. “Admission of unlawfully
seized evidence is not reversible per se, but rather is subject to harmless error analysis.”
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(People v. Kraft (2000) 23 Cal.4th 978, 1036.) The Penal Code proscribes, other than in
self-defense, “draw[ing] or exhibit[ing]” in the presence of another person “any firearm,
whether loaded or unloaded, in a rude, angry, or threatening manner, or . . . in any
manner, unlawfully us[ing] a firearm in any fight or quarrel.” (§ 417, subd. (a)(2).)
There was no real dispute that Chen drew his shotgun in a threatening manner here. The
neighbors’ video, indisputably admissible, captured Chen pointing his shotgun out the
window for about a minute, while he and the neighbors maintained a tense, hostile
conversation. Although Chen asserted that he pointed the shotgun directly at the fence
and not at any person, he agreed with the People’s assessment that he “wanted them to
feel like maybe [he] was going to shoot them if they didn’t stop” working on the fence.
His only defense, as indicated in his closing argument, was that he was acting in defense
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of his property. None of the evidence taken from Weber’s warrantless search (i.e.,
Weber’s video, the shotgun, and the ammunition), however, could have affected the
conviction here, including the jury’s rejection of Chen’s defense of property theory,
which we address below. On this record, “[w]e have no doubt that the jury would have
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From his closing argument: “Now, I want to make a concession to you. If Mr.
Chen was in a bowling alley or on a street corner or in a different situation, him holding
the gun in the way that he did would be a textbook example of brandishing a firearm and
he would be guilty of [section] 417. That’s just the truth, and I’m not going to argue to
you otherwise. [¶] But that’s not this case. This case is a situation where he is defending
his own property from his own home when they’re trying to destroy property over his
explicit objection. There is a defense of property instruction that the Court has given
you. That is the law of our land, that you are permitted to defend your property if it’s in
danger of imminent destruction.”
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reached the same verdict had the evidence . . . not been admitted at trial.” (People v.
Moore (2011) 51 Cal.4th 1104, 1138.)
B. Exclusion of Evidence
Chen next contends that the trial court erred in excluding evidence about the
neighbors’ alleged failure to comply with either the homeowners association rules or the
Good Neighbor Fence Act of 2013 (Civ. Code, § 841, added by Stats. 2013, ch. 86,
§ 3). Chen argues that the neighbors’ noncompliance would have shown that he acted
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reasonably in defending his property. Not so. Whether or not the neighbors complied
with civil rules and statutes, the law does not entitle Chen to brandish a shotgun to protect
against the removal of the fence.
The Restatement Second of Torts states that in order for use of deadly force to be
justified as a defense, the intrusion must threaten death or serious bodily harm. (See
Rest.2d Torts, § 79, com. d [“One is no more privileged to use [force intended or likely to
cause death or serious bodily harm] to prevent another from intruding upon his dwelling
place than he is to use similar force to prevent the other from intruding upon his
possession of any other land. In either case, he may use such force if the intrusion
threatens death or serious bodily harm to the occupiers or users of the land. In neither
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Section 417, subdivision (a)(2) states that “[e]very person who, except in self-
defense, in the presence of any other person, draws or exhibits any firearm, whether
loaded or unloaded, in a rude, angry, or threatening manner, or who in any manner,
unlawfully uses a firearm in any fight or quarrel” is punishable by law. At trial, the jury
was told that “[t]he owner or possessor of real property may use reasonable force to
protect that property from imminent harm.” (See § 693; CALCRIM No. 3476.)
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case may he do so unless the intrusion threatens such consequences.”], italics added.) A
leading criminal law treatise similarly notes that, where harm to only property is
threatened, it is unreasonable to defend using deadly force. (See 2 LaFave, Substantive
Criminal Law (3d ed. 2018) § 10.6(a) [“[E]ven when it is reasonable to use some force, it
is not reasonable to use deadly force to prevent threatened harm to property, such as a
mere trespass or theft, even though the harm cannot otherwise be prevented.”], footnote
omitted.) And our Supreme Court long ago held that “[o]ne is not justified in taking
human life to prevent the commission of a mere trespass.” (People v. Hecker (1895) 109
Cal. 451, 461; see also People v. Flanagan (1881) 60 Cal. 2, 3 [“It is undoubtedly true, as
a legal proposition, that human life can not be taken to prevent a mere trespass upon
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property.”].) The above authorities all speak in terms of using deadly force, but the
principles they invoke apply to threats of deadly force as well. (See, e.g., Rest.2d Torts,
§ 80 [“The actor is privileged intentionally to confine another or put him in apprehension
of a harmful or offensive contact for the purpose of preventing or terminating the other’s
intrusion upon the actor’s possession of land or chattels under the same conditions as
create a privilege to inflict a harmful or offensive contact or other bodily harm upon the
other for the same purpose.”], italics added; Commonwealth v. Alexander (Va. 2000) 260
Va. 238, 241 [rejecting notion that “these principles do not apply when there is a mere
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Depending on the circumstances, trespass is sometimes a tort and sometimes a
crime. (See, e.g., § 602 [misdemeanor trespass]; Intel. Corp. v. Hamidi (2003) 30 Cal.4th
1342, 1350-1360 [discussing tort of “trespass to chattels”].)
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threat to use deadly force in protection of personal property”]; State v. Buckley (Vt. 2016)
202 Vt. 371, 384-389 [same].)
There are at least two reasons why such principles remain wise. For one, “the
preservation of human life is more important to society than the protection of property.”
(LaFave, supra, § 10.6(a), footnote omitted; see also People v. Doud (Mich. 1923) 223
Mich. 120, 130 [“The law forbids such a menacing of human life for so trivial a cause.”].)
For another, the use or threat of deadly force may cause the threatened person to “defend
himself by the use of a deadly weapon,” which could “‘lead[] in dangerous progression to
an unacceptable conclusion.’” (Commonwealth v. Alexander, supra, 260 Va. at p. 242.)
Importantly, this is not a situation involving a home invasion, nor even a defense
against some other crime potentially involving death or serious bodily harm. Section
198.5 provides a statutory presumption of “reasonable fear” when one uses deadly force
against someone who has “unlawfully and forcibly entered the residence” and is not a
member of the family or household. Likewise, a defense against a person committing
some other crime could warrant deadly force, depending upon the facts. As our Supreme
Court concluded in People v. Ceballos (1974) 12 Cal.3d 470, even in defending against
someone committing a felony, where the “‘character of the crime, and the manner of its
perpetration’” “‘do not reasonably create a fear of great bodily harm,’” “there is no cause
for exaction of a human life [citations], or for the use of deadly force.” (Id. at pp. 477-
479.) Using or threatening deadly force is presumptively acceptable in a home invasion
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situation covered by section 198.5 and may be acceptable when another serious crime is
being committed, depending upon the facts.
But it is never acceptable to use or threaten deadly force solely to defend property.
Here, nothing in the record indicates that the neighbors forcibly entered Chen’s home or
that they committed any felonies, much less any that threatened death or serious bodily
harm. Instead, the neighbors simply sought to remove and replace a shared fence.
Accordingly, whether or not the neighbors complied with homeowners association rules
or the Civil Code, Chen was not legally justified in brandishing a deadly firearm.
In contending that defense of property is a defense to brandishing, Chen relies on
three cases, but none of them convince us that defense of only property can involve
threats of deadly force. First, Chen relies on Fawkes v. Reynolds (1922) 190 Cal. 204,
where our Supreme Court stated that a defendant “had the undoubted right to protect the
property in his possession by the use of all force reasonably necessary for that purpose.”
As an abstract statement, the rule is accurate and uncontroversial. (See, e.g., Kentucky
Fried Chicken of Cal., Inc. v. Superior Court (1997) 14 Cal.4th 814, 829 [“Both article I,
section 1 of the California Constitution and Civil Code section 50 recognize the right of
any person to defend property with reasonable force.”], fns. omitted.) That does not
mean, however, that displays of deadly force can be reasonably necessary to protect a
threat that is made solely to property. Second, Chen relies on People v. Kirk (1986) 192
Cal.App.3d Supp. 15, 17-19, where the court held that the brandishing statute is subject
to a defense of others exception as well as an exception for self-defense. But again, even
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if defense of other people defeats a brandishing charge, it does not necessarily follow that
one may generally use deadly force to defend property. And third, Chen relies on Lorenz
v. Hunt (1928) 89 Cal.App. 6, 12, disapproved on another ground in Vaughn v. Jonas
(1948) 31 Cal.2d 586, 606, where the Court of Appeal stated that the plaintiff’s display of
a loaded revolver was reasonable to prevent “the forcible and unlawful entry of the
defendant.” In that case, however, before the plaintiff retrieved the revolver, the
defendant had struck her, shoved her over a fence, and repeatedly threatened her with a
“violent temper,” saying that he would “fix” her and “lay [her] out.” (See Lorenz v.
Hunt, supra, at p. 9.) Thus, the case refers to a “forcible” entry that involved both the
actual use of physical force against the gun-brandisher and the threatened imminent use
of further force; the gun was not drawn merely to defend property.
C. Reopening the People’s Case-in-chief
Lastly, Chen contends that the trial court should not have allowed the People to
reopen its case-in-chief. We disagree.
On this we begin with some additional background. In the morning after the
People rested its case, but before Chen began his, the People sought to reopen to clear up
a point of potential confusion. Weber had originally testified that she believed the
ammunition retrieved from Chen’s shotgun was birdshot, even though the prosecutor
personally believed it was buckshot based on personal experience and the information
printed on the shells. The People wanted to reopen to allow Weber to clarify because
they believed there was “a good chance that one juror or more . . . will know the
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difference and it will be this funky thing where the evidence says one thing and they
think it’s something else.” The trial court allowed the People to reopen and Weber
testified that, since her prior testimony, she had come to believe the ammunition could
potentially be buckshot. Weber also testified that she refers to ammunition as birdshot
whenever it contained pellets, even if doing so may be inaccurate.
Chen contends that the trial court abused its discretion in reopening the case for
three reasons: first, that Weber lacked personal knowledge about the subject matter of
her testimony; second, that it brought undue attention to whether the ammunition was
buckshot (which the parties appear to agree is more dangerous than birdshot); and third,
that it “unfairly” undermined Chen’s credibility given that he testified it was birdshot.
The trial court has “‘broad discretion to order a case reopened and allow the
introduction of additional evidence’” (People v. Riley (2010) 185 Cal.App.4th 754, 764),
and it did not abuse its discretion here. First, on recall, Weber testified as to how she
refers to ammunition, a matter undeniably within her personal knowledge. Her testimony
also made clear that the prosecutor had approached her regarding the ammunition after
her initial testimony, which likely provided at least part of her basis for stating on recall
that it was possibly buckshot. If the jury found such basis lacking, it was free to discredit
her testimony on that point, but allowing Weber to testify on such a basis was not an
abuse of discretion. Second, whether the ammunition was buckshot or birdshot would
not have influenced the jury on the brandishing charge, as liability does not turn on the
type of ammunition a firearm was loaded with, or even whether it was loaded at all. (See
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§ 417, subd. (a)(2) [brandishing of firearm prohibited whether the firearm is “loaded or
unloaded”].) And finally, there is no possibility that Weber’s testimony on recall could
have cast doubt on Chen’s credibility in an unfair way given that Chen testified after
Weber. Chen could not have, for instance, been misled by Weber into saying it was
birdshot.
III. DISPOSITION
The judgment of conviction is affirmed.
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
RAPHAEL
J.
We concur:
RAMIREZ
P. J.
CODRINGTON
J.
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