Filed 3/19/13 P. v. Balinton CA1/4
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION FOUR
THE PEOPLE,
Plaintiff and Respondent,
A132571
v.
DELPHINO BALINTON, (City & County of San Francisco
Super. Ct. Nos. 2383839/209447)
Defendant and Appellant.
In August 2009, the San Francisco District Attorney charged appellant Delphino
Balinton with five sex crimes: (1) kidnapping to commit rape, sodomy, and oral
copulation; (2) forcible rape; (3) forcible oral copulation; (4) forcible oral copulation of a
minor; and (5) assault with intent to commit sodomy. In connection with counts two and
three, the information further alleged that appellant kidnapped the victim. As well, the
information alleged that appellant suffered two serious felony strike convictions.
A jury convicted appellant of forcible rape, forcible oral copulation, and forcible
oral copulation of a minor, and found the kidnapping enhancements true as to counts two
and three. Additionally, the jury convicted appellant of simple assault, a lesser included
offense to count five. The jury was unable to reach a verdict on count one and hence the
court declared a mistrial on that count. Finally, the court found true the allegation that
appellant suffered a prior robbery conviction in 1985.
The court sentenced appellant to an aggregate term of 55 years to life. Appellant
challenges the jury instructions on the kidnapping enhancements. We affirm the
judgment.
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I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
A. The Crimes and Investigation
In the summer of 2001, 16-year-old C.C. came to San Francisco from Montana, to
attend a summer art program offered through the Academy of Art Institute. On the
evening of July 21, 2001, C.C. left her dorm after dinner to go for a walk. She was on
Sixth Street where it intersects with Jessie Street when she saw someone standing and
mumbling, but she kept walking. A person grabbed C.C. from behind and pulled her
―back a ways, back into the alleyway.‖ C.C. was not able to get away. The assailant
pulled her inside a large cardboard box with openings cut out and pieces of cloth hanging
over the openings. C.C. first said she guessed that he pulled her 40 to 50 feet into the
alley. Later she described the distance as the distance between the witness stand and the
prosecutor‘s table.
The assailant pushed C.C. down and pulled her pants to her ankles; C.C. tried to
push him away but could not. The assailant raped C.C.; he was not wearing a condom
but she was unsure if he ejaculated. He also forced her to orally copulate him, ejaculated
in her mouth and forced her to swallow. Finally, when she was on her knees and pushing
against the concrete, he slightly penetrated her anus. C.C. tried to knock him back,
without success. The assailant sat up and pulled C.C. onto his lap. At that point she got
up and ran back to the dorm.
Later that evening, C.C. was taken to a hospital where she was examined by a
sexual assault nurse. With respect to hymenal trauma, C.C. had ―mild swelling.‖ She
also suffered some ―tiny superficial tears or abrasions‖ of the labia. Swabs were taken
from C.C.‘s mouth, vagina, and anus. The swabs, along with C.C.‘s underwear from the
night of the attack, were preserved in a locked freezer under police custody.
C.C. described the assailant as an African-American male, about 45 years old, five
feet nine inches tall, weighing around 220 pounds with a ―big belly.‖
C.C. did not want to testify and signed an ―affidavit of release of prosecution.‖
The case was placed on inactive status pending identification of the suspect.
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In 2008, a ―cold hit‖ of DNA from sperm found on C.C.‘s underpants matched a
reference sample of appellant‘s DNA. The police contacted and interviewed appellant in
San Quentin. Appellant indicated he was in the area during the period of the sexual
assaults. He denied having sex within anyone in the alleys south of Market Street. He
had a girlfriend at the time, and they would go to a hotel to have sex. Shown a
photograph of C.C., appellant said he did not recognize her. When asked if there was any
chance that his DNA could end up in evidence collected in the present sexual assault
case, he said ―no.‖
B. Defense
Appellant‘s primary defense was that he was not the assailant. In his opening
statement, defense counsel cited the fact that C.C. described the assailant as having a ―big
belly‖ and weighing 220 or 245 pounds, which was inconsistent with appellant‘s
appearance. Further, he argued that there was no ejaculate from the rape, C.C. was
forced to swallow the ejaculate, and therefore the stain on her underwear could not come
from having sex with appellant. Rather, the ejaculate came from the cardboard box. She
was attacked at a time when appellant frequented the alleys south of Market Street, was
addicted to crack cocaine, and would trade sex for drugs.
Appellant testified, denying that he attacked C.C. During the summer of 2001, he
spent time in the area of Jessie and Sixth Streets south of Market Street. He traded drugs
for sex, and had sex ―on the spot in the alley.‖ He would use whatever was in the alley—
mattresses, cardboard, and sleeping bags.
Appellant denied telling the police in 2008 that he would not have sex in the street
or alleys. Further, the police did not discuss DNA results with him or ask how his DNA
might have ended up in C.C.‘s underwear.
In 2001, appellant was underweight because he was using drugs.
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II. DISCUSSION
A. Introduction
Penal Code1 section 667.61 provides that the punishment for a conviction of rape,
oral copulation, and certain other specified crimes is 25 years to life in state prison where
―[t]he defendant kidnapped the victim of the present offense and the movement of the
victim substantially increased the risk of harm to the victim over and above that level of
risk necessarily inherent in the underlying offense.‖ (§ 667.61, subds. (a), (d)(2).)
The court delivered the following instruction on the kidnapping enhancement,
patterned after CALCRIM No. 3175:
―If you find the defendant guilty of the crimes charged in Counts Two and Three,
you must then decide whether, for each crime, the People have proved the additional
allegation that the defendant kidnapped [C.C.], increasing the risk of harm to her. You
must decide whether the People have proved this allegation for each crime and return a
separate finding for each crime.
―To prove this allegation, the People must prove that:
―1. The defendant took, held, or detained [C.C.] by the use of force or by
instilling reasonable fear;
―2. Using that force or fear, the defendant moved [C.C.] or made her move a
substantial distance;
―3. The movement of [C.C.] substantially increased the risk of harm to her
beyond that necessarily present in the crimes of rape and/or forced oral copulation.
― ‗Substantial distance‘ means more than a slight or trivial distance. The
movement must be more than merely incidental to the commission of rape and/or forced
oral copulation. In deciding whether the distance was substantial and whether the
movement substantially increased the risk of harm, you must consider all the
circumstances relating to the movement.‖ The verbal instruction tracked the written
instruction submitted at trial.
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Unless otherwise noted, all statutory references are to the Penal Code.
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Appellant complains that the instruction as written did not correctly inform the
jury of the statutory requirements because without commas around the clause ―or made
[C.C.] move,‖ the ending phrase ―a substantial distance‖ does not modify ―moved
[C.C.].‖ Thus, he reasons that the written instruction did not apprise the jury that the
―substantial distance‖ element applied if the defendant ―moved [C.C.],‖ as contrasted to
making her move, and therefore the case was submitted to the jury on an invalid
alternative theory. Moreover, he contends the purported error was prejudicial because the
―movement‖ element was not supported by overwhelming evidence, and the issue of
whether the victim was moved a substantial distance was not resolved against appellant
because the jury deadlocked on that issue in connection with the substantive kidnapping
charge.
B. Standard of Review
The question whether a challenged instruction accurately conveys the legal
requirements of a particular offense is one of law which we independently review.
(People v. Waidla (2000) 22 Cal.4th 690, 733.) When scrutinizing an ambiguous or
purportedly ambiguous instruction under the United States Constitution or California law,
we inquire ―whether there is a reasonable likelihood that the jury misconstrued or
misapplied the words in violation‖ of such laws. (People v. Clair (1992) 2 Cal.4th 629,
662-663.) In deciding the issue, we consider the specific language challenged, the whole
of the instructions, and the jury‘s findings. (People v. Cain (1995) 10 Cal.4th 1, 35-36.)
Arguments of counsel may also shed light on whether the jury correctly understood the
law as presented by the instructions as a whole. (See People v. Kelly (1992) 1 Cal.4th
495, 526-527.) Where the jury is misinstructed on an element of the offense, reversal is
required unless we are able to conclude that the error was harmless beyond a reasonable
doubt. (Id. at p. 527.)
Appellant did not object to the instruction as written or request a clarifying
instruction. A defendant may not contend on appeal that jury instructions are
impermissibly ambiguous without first requesting a clarifying instruction at trial. Failure
to make such a request waives the claim on appeal. (People v. Hart (1999) 20 Cal.4th
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546, 622.) Nonetheless, appellant urges that we review the issue of asserted instructional
error on the merits because it affected his federal due process rights by misstating the
movement element of the penalty provision. (§ 1259; People v. Rogers (2006) 39 Cal.4th
826, 881, fn. 28.) As we explain, at most we are dealing with an instruction infected with
a bit of ambiguity due to grammatical imprecision—namely, the elimination of a comma
between the two types of movement. Hence we examine the claim of error under the
―reasonable likelihood‖ test.
C. Analysis
Appellant‘s contention that the instruction on the ―movement‖ element of section
667.61, subdivision (d)(2), prejudicially misled the jury does not withstand scrutiny. To
begin with, we cannot divine from a cold record whether the trial court read the
instruction in a way that corrected the grammatical imprecision of the written instruction,
that is, did the court pause between the term ―moved [C.C.]‖ and the term ―or made her
move?‖ Such a pause would have signaled that there was a comma between the two
elements as appellant asserts there must be. We presume the court properly performs its
judicial duties, including knowing and applying the correct statutory law, and properly
presenting the instructions to the jury. (See Evid. Code, § 664.)
Moreover, the instructions as a whole conveyed that the substantial distance
applied whether the assailant moved the victim or made her move. The instruction
explained that the People must prove that the movement of C.C. substantially increased
the risk of harm and ―the movement must be more than merely incidental to the
commission‖ of the offense. Further, the jury was advised to ―consider all the
circumstances relating to the movement‖ in deciding whether the distance was substantial.
(Italics added.) There is no logic to the argument that the jury would conclude that the
substantial distance element applied only when making the victim move as opposed to
actually moving the victim. We presume that jurors are intelligent persons, capable of
correlating and understanding jury instructions. (People v. Brock (2006) 143 Cal.App.4th
1266, 1277.) A reasonable juror would not interpret the instruction as appellant suggests,
namely that because there is no comma between the two forms of movement, the
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substantial distance component does not apply if the perpetrator actually moved the
victim. Such an interpretation is nonsensical.
Additionally, the arguments of counsel assisted in eliminating any potential
ambiguity. The prosecutor‘s closing argument made it clear that the ―substantial
distance‖ factor applied to moving the victim, not just making the victim move: ―The
defendant . . . took the person by force—I think it is real clear that that happened in this
case. [¶] Moved the person a substantial distance, beyond merely incidental to the
commission of these crimes.‖ (Italics added.)
Defense counsel in turn underscored that the substantial distance factor pertained
to appellant‘s act of moving C.C. to the alley: ―[W]e have to think that the reason the
assailant dragged [C.C.] into the alley was for one purpose and that‘s sexual assault. So I
would suggest the element to focus on is element No. 3 . . . : ‗Using that force or fear the
defendant moved the other person or made the other person move,‘ . . . – this is the
reason I bring this jury instruction up. Made the other person move a substantial
distance. [¶] Now distance—substantial distance is actually defined . . . . [¶] And I will
tell you that I agree. Forty to fifty feet is a substantial distance for anyone to go
anywhere. But remember when [C.C.] moved away from her estimation of how far it
was in terms of number of feet and visualized the distance while she was on the witness
stand? You remember that distance . . . shrunk to the distance between where she was
seated in the witness chair and the end of [the prosecutor‘s] table? [¶] Is that in fact a
substantial distance? Are you convinced of that beyond a reasonable doubt?‖
The prosecutor in rebuttal continued to present the evidence as showing that
appellant moved the victim a substantial distance: ―[Defense counsel] indicated . . . there
wasn‘t a substantial movement in the case. . . . We weren‘t there. We weren‘t [C.C.]. It
is a pretty substantial distance for her. Took her out of public view. Took her out of any
hope for being helped. Put Mr. Balinton in a position where no one would interfere with
what he was doing. [¶] Not too dissimilar to walking down the sidewalk, the door open,
pull you in, close the door. You could be in another world, folks. No help is coming.
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You are completely out of view. You are at the mercy of who dragged you there.
Substantial distance for a sixteen-year old girl, absolutely.‖
Appellant argues that the instruction on the substantive kidnapping charge and the
section 667.61, subdivision (d)(2), instruction both suffered the same grammatical error,
but in the substantive kidnapping charge, element 4 clarified that any movement of the
victim had to be for a distance more than incidental to the commission of the sex crime.
From this appellant concludes: ―Since a properly instructed jury dealing with the same
issue was unable to agree whether the movement was for a substantial distance, there is at
least a reasonable chance the true finding on [the section] 667.61[, subdivision] (d)(2)
charge was based on the legally invalid theory that appellant moved [C.C.].‖
Appellant‘s contention is not accurate. Some background is in order. The jury
submitted a note asking the court to identify and clarify the phrase, ― ‗merely incidental
to the commission of rape or oral copulation or sodomy‘ ‖ with respect to the substantive
kidnapping count. The court responded: ― ‗This is a question of fact for you to decide.
You must consider the totality of circumstances in making this decision.‘ ‖ Later, the
jury asked: ― ‗What happens if we cannot reach a unanimous decision on a greater
charge, [section] 209 [kidnapping for rape or other sex offenses], specifically on point
No. 4?‘ ‖ The court noted that item 4 states: ― ‗The other person was moved or made to
move a distance beyond . . . that merely incidental to the commission of rape or oral
copulation or sodomy.‘ ‖ The court queried whether the jury was hopelessly deadlocked
on that count; it was not, and thus deliberations continued, but ultimately the jury did
deadlock and a mistrial was declared as to the substantive kidnapping charge.
We relate this sequence to illustrate that the jury was not confused, and apparently
did not deadlock, on the issue of the scope of the substantial distance component of
section 209, subdivision (b)—that is, did the component pertain to both forms of
movement or just one? That point was covered in item three of the instruction, namely:
―Using that force of fear, the defendant moved the other person or made the other person
move a substantial distance.‖ No question was asked about item three.
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Moreover, that the jury hung on the substantive kidnapping charge does not
suggest that it was confused. ―An inconsistency may show no more than jury lenity,
compromise, or mistake, none of which undermines the validity of a verdict.‖ (People v.
Lewis (2001) 25 Cal.4th 610, 656.) Inconsistent verdicts most likely result from
compromise in the jury room, or the extension of mercy or leniency to the defendant.
(People v. Pahl (1991) 226 Cal.App.3d 1651, 1656.) Section 954 could not be clearer:
―An acquittal of one or more counts shall not be deemed an acquittal of any other count.‖
In sum, for all these reasons there is no reasonable likelihood the jury would have
misconstrued or misapplied the instruction in the impermissible manner appellant
suggests.
Appellant also urges that the omission of a comma did more than render the
instruction ambiguous—it misstated an element of the charge, and thus the resulting
instruction violated his due process rights. As we explained above, no reasonable juror
would understand the instruction as removing the substantial movement element in
circumstances where appellant actually moved the victim as opposed to making her
move. There was no due process violation here.
III. DISPOSITION
We affirm the judgment.
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_________________________
REARDON, J.
We concur:
_________________________
RUVOLO, P. J.
_________________________
BASKIN, J.*
*
Judge of the Contra Costa Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant
to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
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