Filed 11/19/20 P. v. Amaya 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NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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, E074093
v. (Super.Ct.No. RIF1201528)
ARMANDO AMAYA, OPINION
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. Becky Dugan, Judge.
Affirmed with directions.
Robert L.S. Angres, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant.
Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Chief Assistant Attorney
General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General, Arlene A. Sevidal and Randall D.
Einhorn, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
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Armando Amaya challenges the denial of his petition to reclassify his felony
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burglary conviction as misdemeanor shoplifting under Penal Code section 1170.18,
which California voters enacted as part of the Safe Neighborhoods and Schools Act
(Proposition 47). (Voter Information Guide, Gen. Elec. (Nov. 4, 2014) text of Prop. 47,
pp. 70-74.) In 2013, Amaya was convicted of robbery and burglary after the prosecution
presented evidence that he and his brother committed an armed robbery of a convenience
store clerk, stole her wallet and phone, and took about $80 from the cash registers and a
few packs of beer. In 2019, the trial court summarily denied Amaya’s section 1170.18
petition because his burglary conviction was premised on his entry into the store with an
intent to commit robbery, a violent crime.
On appeal, Amaya contends the court’s ruling was error because his burglary
qualifies as misdemeanor shoplifting, a new offense created by Proposition 47 and
codified in section 459.5. We disagree. Shoplifting is defined as entering a commercial
establishment with intent to commit low-value theft while that establishment is open
during regular business hours. (§ 459.5, subd. (a) [value of property taken must be less
than $950]; People v. Gonzales (2017) 2 Cal.5th 858 (Gonzales) [§ 459.5 applies to all
types of theft, not just larceny].) In this case, Amaya and his brother did not take the
property by theft but by robbery, which is a violent, aggravated form of theft unaffected
by the ameliorative provisions in Proposition 47. Amaya also argues that the trial court
miscalculated his presentence custody credits when it modified his sentence on remand
1 Unlabeled statutory citations refer to the Penal Code.
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from his direct appeal, and the People correctly concede on this point. We therefore
affirm the denial of Amaya’s section 1170.18 petition but modify the judgment to correct
the presentence custody credits.
I
FACTS
We take the facts of the incident from the trial transcript, which is part of Amaya’s
record of conviction. (People v. Washington (2018) 23 Cal.App.5th 948, 953.) On
November 20, 2011, at about 2:00 a.m., Amaya and his brother, Robert, committed an
armed robbery of a Circle K in Riverside, and it was caught on surveillance video. The
store was open but the doors were locked because the clerk was on a break. Amaya asked
the clerk to let him in the store and, going against her better judgment, she obliged
because he didn’t look threatening. The clerk locked the door behind Amaya, but when
she wasn’t looking he unlocked it so his brother could enter.
Robert entered the store wearing a mask and carrying a semiautomatic gun. He
pointed the gun at the clerk, pushed her to the ground, and told her to open the cash
registers. To speed things up, Robert and Amaya took turns kicking her to “move [her]
along like a dog.” After she opened the registers and they took the money (which totaled
about $80), one of the brothers leaned over her as she was lying on the floor and took her
wallet from one of her back pockets and her cell phone from the other. He told her they
now knew where she lived, which she took as a threat to her life were she to tell anyone
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about the incident. The other brother grabbed three packs of beer, then they told the clerk
“Nice doing business with you,” and left.
The jury convicted Amaya of robbery and found true the allegation that a principal
was armed (§§ 211, 12022, subd. (d)), burglary (§ 459), and dissuading a witness
(§136.1, subd. (b)(1).) The trial court sentenced him to 25 years to life for the robbery,
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plus one year for a prior prison conviction. In an unpublished opinion, we affirmed the
judgment in all respects except we remanded to the trial court to either strike or
pronounce judgment on the firearm enhancement attached to the robbery conviction.
(People v. Amaya (Cal.Ct.App., Jan. 9, 2015, E059609) 2015 WL 133744, at *1.) On
remand, the trial court struck the enhancement.
Following the enactment of Proposition 47, Amaya filed a section 1170.18 petition
seeking to have his burglary conviction reclassified as misdemeanor shoplifting. He
alleged he was convicted of robbery “for taking three 18 packs of beer” and that his
burglary conviction was premised on taking the “same property.” He argued that, as a
result, his felony burglary conviction qualifies as misdemeanor shoplifting under section
459.5. The trial court summarily denied his petition, concluding the burglary was not a
qualifying offense under Proposition 47 because it was premised on an intent to commit
robbery, which is a violent felony.
2The court also imposed a concurrent sentence of 25 years to life for the
dissuading conviction, and it stayed the sentence for the burglary under section 654
because it arose from the same occurrence as the robbery.
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II
ANALYSIS
In November 2014, the California voters approved Proposition 47, an initiative
that reclassified as misdemeanors certain nonviolent drug and theft offenses previously
cast as felonies. (People v. Valenzuela (2019) 7 Cal.5th 415, 418.) Proposition 47 also
created a petitioning procedure making those changes available to offenders who had
previously been convicted of reclassified offenses. (§ 1170.18.) To obtain relief under
this procedure, the petitioner must demonstrate they “would have been guilty of a
misdemeanor . . . had [Proposition 47] been in effect at the time of the offense.”
(§ 1170.18, subd. (a).)
As relevant here, Proposition 47 added section 459.5 to the Penal Code—the
misdemeanor shoplifting provision Amaya argues applies to his case. That section
provides: “(a) Notwithstanding Section 459 [burglary], shoplifting is defined as entering
a commercial establishment with intent to commit larceny while that establishment is
open during regular business hours, where the value of the property that is taken or
intended to be taken does not exceed nine hundred fifty dollars ($950). Any other entry
into a commercial establishment with intent to commit larceny is burglary.” (§ 459.5,
subd. (a), italics added.) Section 459.5 also contains a charging limitation. It directs that
“[a]ny act of shoplifting as defined in subdivision (a) shall be charged as shoplifting” and
that “[n]o person who is charged with shoplifting may also be charged with burglary or
theft of the same property.” (§ 459.5, subd. (b), italics added.)
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Amaya argues he would have been guilty of shoplifting had Proposition 47 been in
effect when he committed the burglary because he entered the convenience store with an
intent to steal property worth less than $950. According to Amaya, the fact his burglary
“transform[ed] into a robbery after entry” should not impact whether the offense qualifies
as shoplifting. We are unpersuaded.
The record contains substantial evidence to support a finding that Amaya entered
the convenience store with the intent to commit armed robbery, not simple theft. The
sequence of events shows the brothers had a plan. Amaya was their ticket inside the store,
and Robert was the closer. The clerk told the jury she had been hesitant to let Amaya
inside, but ultimately decided to do so because he looked like an “average Joe” and didn’t
seem threatening. Once inside, Amaya unlocked the door so his brother, who was masked
and armed, could enter. This evidence does not support a finding that Amaya entered the
store with only an intent to steal some beer, as he claimed in his petition. Instead, the
evidence provides strong support for the jury to conclude that he entered the store with an
intent to take all the money in the cash registers by means of an armed robbery.
This is fatal to Amaya’s petition because Proposition 47 does not apply to violent
felonies, like robbery. (See People v. Romanowski (2017) 2 Cal.5th 903, 907, quoting
Harris v. Superior Court (2016) 1 Cal.5th 984, 992 [“One of Proposition 47’s primary
purposes is to reduce the number of nonviolent offenders in state prisons, thereby saving
money and focusing prison on offenders considered more serious under the terms of the
initiative”]; see also § 667.5, subd. (c)(9) [defining robbery as a violent felony].) Though
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robbery includes theft, it requires the additional element of the use of force or fear,
making the offense an aggravated theft, or a “theft-plus” crime. (See People v. Soto
(2018) 23 Cal.App.5th 813, 822.) As the court explained in Soto, Proposition 47 applies
to nonviolent theft cases, not to violent or aggravated forms of theft—like robbery—
which require additional elements beyond the elements that make up a theft. (Soto, at
p. 822.) “A robber might take property by larceny worth less than $950,” but to construe
a robbery as a theft offense affected by Proposition 47 “would thwart [the initiative’s]
objective to reduce sentences for nonviolent crimes while shifting spending toward more
serious offenses.” (Soto, at pp. 822-823.)
Amaya’s assertion that Gonzales mandates a different conclusion is incorrect. In
Gonzales, the defendant was convicted of burglary for cashing a forged check for $125 at
a bank, and our Supreme Court had to decide whether entering a commercial
establishment with an intent to cash a low-value forged check—which isn’t a form of
larceny—nevertheless qualified as shoplifting under section 459.5. The court held that
even though section 459.5 references larceny only, the electorate intended the provision
to also apply where a defendant enters a commercial establishment with an intent to
commit nonlarcenous theft, such as theft by false pretenses or embezzlement. (Gonzales,
supra, 2 Cal.5th at p. 862.) In the part of Gonzales Amaya relies on, the court rejected the
Attorney General’s argument that the defendant could still be convicted of burglary
because there was substantial evidence he entered the establishment with the intent to
commit identify theft. In dicta, the court reasoned that “the shoplifting statute would have
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precluded a burglary charge based on an entry with intent to commit identity theft here
because the conduct underlying such a charge would have been the same as that involved
in the shoplifting, namely, the cashing of the same stolen check to obtain less than $950.”
(Id. at pp. 876-877, italics added.) Amaya claims this reasoning “illustrates that so long as
the defendant enters a building with the intent to commit a [low-value] theft,” section
459.5’s charging limitation applies and the defendant cannot be charged with burglary,
only shoplifting.
Amaya reads Gonzales too broadly. The court held that section 459.5 applies to
entry into a commercial establishment with an intent to commit any type of theft. What
the court did not hold is that the provision applies to entry to commit a violent or
aggravated form of theft, which is what occurred here. The court explicitly acknowledged
that “[a] felony burglary charge could legitimately lie if there was proof of entry with
intent to commit a nontheft felony or an intent to commit a theft of other property
exceeding the shoplifting limit.” (Gonzales, supra, 2 Cal.5th at p. 877, italics added.)
Indeed, after Gonzales, our high court had to decide the hypothetical the Attorney
General raised in Gonzales—whether misuse of personal identifying information in
violation of section 530.5 (sometimes colloquially called “identity theft”) qualifies as
theft for purposes of the shoplifting provision. (People v. Jimenez (2020) 9 Cal.5th 53,
59.) The court held that misuse of personal identifying information is, despite its
colloquial description, “not a theft offense because criminal liability pivots on how the
information was used rather than how it was acquired. The offense therefore evinces a
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concern with the panoply of harms occurring when personal information is no longer
personal.” (Ibid., italics added.) So, too, with robbery, which evinces a concern not just
with the unwanted taking of property but also with the use of assaultive behavior. And, in
any event, Amaya’s comparison to Gonzales is inapt because unlike cashing a forged
check and misusing personal identifying information, “the conduct underlying” the act of
obtaining $80, beer, and a clerk’s personal property by theft is not “the same” as
obtaining that property by armed robbery. (Gonzales, at p. 877.)
When it approved Proposition 47 and section 459.5, the electorate “carv[ed] out”
of burglary the “lesser crime” of shoplifting. (People v. Colbert (2019) 6 Cal.5th 596,
602, italics added.) Nothing in the initiative indicates that the California voters intended
to eliminate the crime of burglary premised on an intent to engage in violent, assaultive
conduct. (See Gonzales, supra, 2 Cal.5th at p. 870 [observing that Proposition 47
“expressly states an intent to ‘[r]equire misdemeanors instead of felonies for nonserious,
nonviolent crimes like petty theft and drug possession”], italics added.) We therefore
conclude the court properly denied Amaya’s petition.
As a final issue, the parties agree that the trial court miscalculated Amaya’s
presentence custody credits when it resentenced him on remand from his direct appeal.
When a trial court modifies a defendant’s sentence during the term of imprisonment, it
must credit all the time the defendant has already served against the new sentence.
(People v. Buckhalter (2001) 26 Cal.4th 20, 23; § 2900.1.) The court failed to do so at
Amaya’s resentencing in this case when it struck the firearm enhancement. When the
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court originally sentenced Amaya on July 22, 2013, it awarded him 463 days of
presentence custody credits and 69 days of good behavior credits. When the court
resentenced him on April 17, 2015, it awarded the same amount of presentence custody
credits (463 days), but it should have added the 634 days Amaya had spent in custody
since the original sentencing. We therefore direct the trial court to prepare an amended
abstract of judgment to reflect a presentence custody credit of 1,166 days (that is, 1,097
days of confinement credits plus 69 days of good behavior credits). (People v. Terrell
(1999) 69 Cal.App.4th 1246, 1260.)
III
DISPOSITION
We affirm the denial of Amaya’s petition but modify the judgment to reflect an
award of 1,166 days’ presentence credit. We direct the clerk of the superior court to
prepare an amended abstract of judgment accordingly and forward it to the Department of
Corrections and Rehabilitation.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
SLOUGH
J.
We concur:
CODRINGTON
Acting P. J.
MENETREZ
J.
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