Filed 10/22/21 P. v. Davis CA5
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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
FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
THE PEOPLE,
F081559
Plaintiff and Respondent,
(Super. Ct. No. BF163173A)
v.
STEPHEN LEON DAVIS, OPINION
Defendant and Appellant.
THE COURT*
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Kern County. John D.
Oglesby, Judge.
Jonathan E. Berger, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant.
Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Chief Assistant Attorney
General, Michael P. Farrell, Assistant Attorney General, Eric L. Christoffersen and
Craig S. Meyers, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
-ooOoo-
* Before Peña, Acting P. J., Meehan, J. and Snauffer, J.
INTRODUCTION
This matter returns to us after we affirmed the underlying judgment on appeal but
remanded for the court to consider whether to strike or dismiss a prior serious felony
conviction under Senate Bill No. 1393 (2017–2018 Reg. Sess.) (Senate Bill No. 1393),
which became effective while this case was pending. Defendant Stephen Leon Davis
now appeals again after the trial court denied the motion to strike the prior serious felony
conviction and contends the trial court erred in imposing five-year prior felony
enhancements under Penal Code section 667, subdivision (a) (section 667(a) or
§ 667(a))1 separately to each count sentenced to indeterminate terms. Defendant argues
that because he was not sentenced as a third-strike offender under the Three Strikes law
(§§ 667, subds. (b)–(i), 1170.12, subds. (a)–(d)), the trial court was limited to imposing a
single section 667(a) enhancement to the aggregate of his determinate and indeterminate
sentences. We disagree and affirm.
BACKGROUND
Defendant was charged and tried for multiple offenses stemming from sexual
assaults against three different women, identified herein as Doe 1, Doe 2 and Doe 3, on
three separate occasions. Doe 1 was assaulted in February 2016; Doe 2 was assaulted in
2008; and Doe 3 was assaulted in January 2016.
Defendant was convicted by jury of all 11 offenses charged, as follows: two
counts of rape (§ 261, subd. (a)(2) (count 1 (Doe 1) & count 10 (Doe 3)); five counts of
oral copulation by means of force and violence (former § 288a, subd. (c)(2)(A))2
(counts 2, 3 & 4 (Doe 1), count 9 (Doe 2) & count 11 (Doe 3)); one count of kidnapping
1 All further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless indicated otherwise.
2 Effective January 1, 2019, former section 288a was renumbered to section 287. (Stats.
2018, ch. 423, § 49, pp. 88–91.) The information here was filed in April 2016 and charged all
counts of oral copulation (counts 2, 3, 4, 9 & 11) pursuant to “288A (2) (A).” The information
as to these counts was subsequently amended in April 2017 to indicate these counts were brought
pursuant to section 288a, subdivision (c)(2)(A).
2.
to commit rape (§ 209, subd. (b)(1) (count 5 (Doe 1)); one count of robbery (§ 212.5,
subd. (c) (count 6 (Doe 1)); one count of assault with intent to commit rape (§ 220,
subd. (a)(1) (count 7 (Doe 2)); and one count of forcible sexual penetration (§ 289,
subd. (a)(1) (count 8 (Doe 2)).
For purposes of the alternative sentencing scheme set forth in section 667.61,
known as the One Strike law, the jury found the following special allegations true:
defendant kidnapped the victim (§ 667.61, subds. (d)(2), (e)(1) (counts 1–4)); defendant
committed the offense during the commission of burglary (§ 667.61. subds. (d)(4), (e)(2)
(counts 8 & 9)); defendant personally used a dangerous or deadly weapon or firearm in
the commission of the offense (§ 667.61, subd. (e)(3) (counts 1–4 & 8–11)); and there
were multiple victims (§ 667.61, subd. (e)(4) (counts 1–4 & 8–11)). As to count 5, the
jury found true the enhancement allegation that defendant committed a felony while
using a deadly or dangerous weapon (§ 12022, subd. (b)(1)); and in a bifurcated
proceeding, the trial court found true that defendant suffered a prior serious felony
conviction for attempted robbery within the meaning of the Three Strikes law (§§ 667,
subds. (a) & (c)–(j), 1192.7, subd. (c)(19) & (39)).
The trial court sentenced defendant to a total indeterminate term of 300 years to
life in prison plus a total determinate term of 45 years, as follows. On counts 1, 4, 8, 9,
10 and 11, the court sentenced defendant to fully consecutive indeterminate terms of
25 years to life, doubled to 50 years to life under the Three Strikes law, plus an additional
five years on each count for the prior serious felony enhancement. (§§ 667.61, subds. (a),
(i), 667, subds. (a), (e)(1), 667.6, subd. (d).) On counts 2 and 3, defendant was sentenced
to indeterminate terms of 25 years to life, doubled to 50 years, plus five years on each
count for the prior serious felony conviction enhancement, to be served concurrently with
the sentence on count 1. On count 6 (robbery), defendant was sentenced to a consecutive
upper term of five years, doubled to 10 years, plus an additional five years for the prior
3.
serious felony enhancement. The sentences on counts 5 and 7 were stayed pursuant to
section 654.
On appeal, we remanded under Senate Bill No. 1393, which took effect on
January 1, 2019, so that the court could consider whether to exercise its discretion to
strike the prior serious felony under amended section 1385. In all other respects, the
judgment was affirmed.
In July 2020, about a month before the hearing took place on defendant’s motion
to strike his prior serious felony conviction, the trial court received a letter from the
Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR), indicating the section 667(a)
enhancements applied to the entire case and not to individual counts.3 The court denied
defendant’s motion on August 11, 2020, and refused to strike the prior serious felony or
strike the additional punishments for the enhancement, and the original sentence
remained unchanged. (See § 1385, subd. (b)(1).) There was no mention of the CDCR
letter at that hearing. Defendant appeals, arguing the sentence was unauthorized because
it added a prior serious felony conviction enhancement to each separate indeterminate
term imposed.4
DISCUSSION
Defendant had one prior serious felony conviction under section 667(a), and he
was subject to second-strike sentencing under the Three Strikes law. The section 667(a)
enhancement was added to his aggregate determinate term and the enhancement was
3 The CDCR letter was dated June 11, 2020, stamped “RECEIVED” by the trial court on
July 2, 2020, but was not marked “FILED” by the court until August 27, 2020, a few weeks after
resentencing.
4 The record has been supplemented with an amended indeterminate abstract of judgment
issued by the trial court on September 30, 2021. The prior indeterminate abstract of judgment,
issued on August 27, 2020, did not contain an attachment page indicating the sentences imposed
for counts 9, 10 and 11.
4.
added separately to each of his indeterminate terms. Defendant challenges the imposition
of the section 667(a) enhancement to each indeterminate term.
I. Relevant Law
Section 667(a)(1) provides, in relevant part, as follows:
“Any person convicted of a serious felony who previously has been convicted of a
serious felony … shall receive, in addition to the sentence imposed by the court for the
present offense, a five-year enhancement for each such prior conviction on charges
brought and tried separately. The terms of the present offense and each enhancement
shall run consecutively.”
In 1984, the Supreme Court held that a status-based prior conviction enhancement
may be added only once to multiple new determinate-term offenses under the determinate
sentencing law (§ 1170 et seq. (DSL)). (People v. Tassell (1984) 36 Cal.3d 77, 90–91
(Tassell), overruled on another ground in People v. Ewoldt (1994) 7 Cal.4th 380, 386–
387.) The court explained that determinate terms were governed by section 1170.1,
which distinguished between status enhancements (related to the offender) and conduct
enhancements (related to the offense), and the statute made clear that status
enhancements do not attach to particular counts, but are added just once as the final step
in computing the total sentence. (Tassell, supra, at p. 90.) Although Tassell did not
involve the prior serious felony enhancement under section 667(a), the Supreme Court
has since extended Tassell’s holding to section 667(a). (People v. Gutierrez (2002) 28
Cal.4th 1083, 1163–1164.)
In People v. Williams (2004) 34 Cal.4th 397 (Williams) the court held the
limitation articulated in Tassell did not apply to indeterminate terms imposed on a third-
strike offender under the Three Strikes law. (Williams, supra, at pp. 402–403.) Williams
distinguished Tassell for its reliance on section 1170.1 and observed that section 1170.1
applies only to determinate sentences, and not to multiple indeterminate sentences
imposed under the Three Strikes law. (Williams, supra, at p. 402.) Because the Three
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Strikes law did not distinguish between status-based enhancements and conduct-based
enhancements in the same way as section 1170.1, and because the Three Strikes law
“generally discloses an intent to use the fact of recidivism to separately increase the
sentence imposed for each new offense” (Williams, supra, at p. 405.), the court held
section 667(a) enhancements are to “be applied individually to each count of a third strike
sentence.” (Williams, supra, at p. 405.)
Two years after Williams, the Fourth District Court of Appeal extended Williams
to a second-strike offender sentenced under the Three Strikes law in People v. Misa
(2006) 140 Cal.App.4th 837 (Misa). There, the defendant was sentenced to a determinate
term for an assault conviction and an indeterminate life term for a torture conviction
under section 206. (Misa, supra, at pp. 841, 846.) Due to a prior conviction for a serious
or violent felony (a strike), the sentences were doubled under section 667,
subdivision (e)(1) (section 667(e)(1) or § 667(e)(1)), of the Three Strikes law. (Misa,
supra, at p. 846.) The court then imposed the section 667(a) enhancement to both the
determinate sentence and the indeterminate sentence. (Misa, supra, at p. 846.) Misa
acknowledged Williams was not “directly dispositive” of the issue because Misa was
subjected to an indeterminate sentence because of the torture count, not because of the
Three Strikes law. (Misa, supra, at p. 846.)
Misa nonetheless concluded a logical application of the Williams analysis would
apply to second-strike offenders with indeterminate terms. (Misa, supra, 140
Cal.App.4th at p. 846.) The court noted that section 667(e), on which Williams relied in
part, applies equally to second-strike offenders—namely, that second- and third-strike
punishments are to apply in addition to any other enhancement or punishment provisions
that apply. (Misa, supra, at p. 846, citing Williams, supra, 34 Cal.4th at p. 402.) Also
equally applicable to second-strike offenders with indeterminate terms was Williams’s
reasoning that the section 667(a) enhancement was enacted as part of a statutory scheme
intended to increase sentences for recidivist offenders, and that adding the five-year
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enhancement separately to a third-strike sentence for each new serious felony conviction
is not inconsistent with the intent to increase sentences for recidivist offenders. (Misa,
supra, at pp. 846–847.) Finally, just as relevant to second-strike offenders with
indeterminate terms was Williams’s rationale that the Three Strikes law does not draw
any distinction between status enhancements and conduct enhancements, and generally
discloses an intent to use the fact of recidivism to separately increase the sentence
imposed for each new offense. (Misa, supra, at pp. 846–847, citing Williams, supra, at
pp. 402, 404–405.) Misa concluded that, although Misa was a second-strike offender
rather than a third striker, he was nonetheless a recidivist and subject to the section 667(a)
enhancement on the torture count even though he received another five-year
section 667(a) enhancement on that assault count. (Misa, supra, at p. 847.)
In 2015, the Supreme Court considered in People v. Sasser (2015) 61 Cal.4th 1
(Sasser) whether a determinate, second-strike sentence is free of the constraints of the
DSL regarding status-based enhancements because the defendant is also being sentenced
under the Three Strikes law. (Sasser, supra, at pp. 6–7.) The court concluded the DSL
applies even though the sentence was doubled as a second strike under the Three Strikes
law. (Sasser, supra, at p. 7.) The court explained the key to determining whether
section 1170.1 applies is not whether the defendant is being sentenced under the Three
Strikes law, the DSL, another alternative sentencing scheme or some combination of all
of them. (Sasser, supra, at p. 13.) The fundamental question is whether the defendant is
being sentenced to a determinate term or an indeterminate term. (Ibid.) Because the
relevant counts in Sasser were subject to determinate terms, the Three Strikes law did not
abrogate the DSL by doubling those determinate terms, and those counts remained
governed by section 1170.1 and the limitation on status-based enhancements.
II. Section 667(a) Enhancement Imposed on Each Indeterminate Term
As noted above, defendant was subject to multiple indeterminate life terms under
the One Strike law because aggravating circumstances surrounding the sexual assaults he
7.
committed were found true, as well as an indeterminate life term for count 5, kidnapping
to commit rape, as mandated by section 209, subdivision (b)(1).5 The court also imposed
two determinate terms for count 6 (robbery, § 212.5) and count 7 (assault with intent to
commit rape, § 220, subd. (a)(1)).
Then, defendant was subject to the Three Strikes law because he had a serious
prior felony for attempted robbery that was found true; as a result, all of the indeterminate
and determinate terms were doubled. (§ 667(e)(1) [“If a defendant has one prior serious
or violent felony conviction …, the determinate term or minimum term for an
indeterminate term shall be twice the term otherwise provided as punishment for the
current felony conviction.”]; People v. Acosta (2002) 29 Cal.4th 105, 128 [One Strike
law and Three Strikes law are applied cumulatively].)
Finally, the court imposed a separate five-year enhancement under section 667(a)
to each count with indeterminate terms, and added one 5-year section 667(a)
enhancement to the aggregate determinate term.6
Defendant contends Williams applies only to third-strike sentences in the wake of
Sasser, and that Sasser is fatal to Misa, which relied on Williams and the character of the
Three Strikes law to justify the imposition of multiple section 667(a) enhancements in the
second-strike context.
Sasser did not abrogate Williams’s reasoning or render it inapplicable to second-
strike sentencing of indeterminate terms. The crux of Sasser was that the doubling of
Sasser’s determinate terms under the Three Strikes law did not abrogate the DSL and its
5 Section 209, subdivision (b)(1), provides that “[a]ny person who kidnaps or carries away
any individual to commit robbery, rape, spousal rape, oral copulation, sodomy, … shall be
punished by imprisonment in the state prison for life with the possibility of parole.”
6 When asked by the court during the original sentencing in April 2017 about the multiple
section 667(a) enhancements recommended by probation, the probation officer explained that
enhancement could be imposed “as to each indeterminate count but only once for—per
determinate count.”
8.
limitation on status-based enhancements under section 1170.1 as articulated in Tassell.
(Sasser, supra, 61 Cal.4th at p. 15 [“Once it is understood that Sasser’s enhancements for
prior convictions are governed by section 1170.1, Tassell’s interpretation of that statute
controls.”].) But indeterminate terms, like that of third-strike offenders, are completely
outside the ambit of the DSL and its limitations. (Tassell, supra, at p. 8 [“Today, most
sentences are imposed under the DSL, and only death sentences and sentences of life
imprisonment fall entirely outside its ambit.”]; § 1170, subd. (a)(3) [the DSL does not
“affect any provision of law that … expressly provides for imprisonment in the state
prison for life”]; Williams, supra, 34 Cal.4th at p. 402 [§ 1170.1 applies only to
determinate sentences]; People v. Felix (2000) 22 Cal.4th 651, 659 [a sentence for some
number of years to life is an indeterminate sentence not subject to the DSL].) This is
what sets Sasser apart from Williams, despite that both involved application of the Three
Strikes law.
Pursuant to Tassell, Williams, and Sasser, when a defendant is subject to multiple
sentencing schemes, how the section 667(a) prior serious felony enhancement applies
does not hinge on whether the sentence at issue was imposed under the Three Strikes law.
(Sasser, supra, 61 Cal.4th at p. 13.) The essential inquiry is whether the sentence is
determinate, which is subject to the limitations of the DSL, or an indeterminate sentence,
which is not. (Sasser, supra, at p. 13.)
Defendant argues that when a crime is punished with an indeterminate term for a
reason other than the Three Strikes law, the indeterminate term is not based on concerns
about recidivism, so it should not compel the court to construe the law to impose the
longest possible sentence. Yet, as Sasser made clear, defendant’s indeterminate terms—
whether imposed by virtue of third-strike sentencing (as in Williams) or pursuant to
another statute (as in Misa and this case)—fall entirely outside the ambit of the DSL and
the limitations of section 1170.1. Defendant has not identified any analogous component
of the One Strike law or section 209, subdivision (b)(1) (count 5), that would limit
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application of the section 667(a) enhancement to those indeterminate terms in the same
manner as section 1170.1.
Moreover, the Three Strikes law also applies here, so Williams’s analysis of the
interplay between section 667(a) enhancements and the Three Strikes law is not
irrelevant. As explained in Williams, there is nothing in the Three Strikes law that
precludes application of multiple section 667(a) enhancements to defendant’s
indeterminate terms. Applying section 667(a) enhancements to multiple indeterminate
terms is consistent with the intent of section 667(a) and logical in light of how second-
and third-strike offenders are subject to increased punishment on each new offense, and
that punishment is to be in addition to any other enhancement or punishment provisions
that may apply. (Williams, supra, 34 Cal.4th at pp. 404–405.) Misa’s extension of
Williams’s reasoning in the context of doubling an indeterminate term under the Three
Strikes law does not run afoul of Sasser.
Here, defendant’s determinate terms, even though doubled under the Three Strikes
law, were still subject to the DSL and section 1170.1’s limitation on status enhancements.
Pursuant to Tassell and Sasser, the section 667(a) enhancement was applied only once to
defendant’s aggregate determinate term. Defendant has identified nothing in the One
Strike law that dictates a similar result with respect to defendant’s indeterminate terms.
Nor does the Three Strikes law, as Williams explained, limit the application of
section 667(a) enhancements to multiple indeterminate terms. The trial court did not err
in imposing the section 667(a) enhancement to each of defendant’s indeterminate terms.
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
10.