Filed 7/31/23 P. v. Howell CA3
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
(Sacramento)
----
THE PEOPLE, C096275
Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. 20FE020091)
v.
CHARLES CONLEY HOWELL,
Defendant and Appellant.
A jury found defendant Charles Conley Howell guilty of gross vehicular
manslaughter and, in a bifurcated trial, found true that defendant had three prior
convictions. The jury further found true various factors in aggravation. The trial court
dismissed the three prior serious felony enhancements under Penal Code1 section 1385
and sentenced defendant to 25 years to life. Defendant appeals.
1 Undesignated section references are to the Penal Code.
1
Defendant raises two primary contentions on appeal. First, defendant argues the
trial court violated his due process rights and Evidence Code sections 350 and 352 by
allowing the prosecution to use his refusal to submit to a warrantless blood draw as
evidence of his guilt. Second, defendant argues the trial court violated his federal due
process, Sixth Amendment, and Fourteenth Amendment rights, and Penal Code section
1111 because it failed to give an accomplice instruction for a witness. Defendant further
argues the cumulative prejudicial effect of the foregoing errors deprived him of a fair
trial. Finding no merit in these contentions, we affirm.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Ricardo C. was in the car with Santiago D., who was driving, when defendant
drove through a red light at an intersection at approximately 50 to 60 miles per hour and
struck their car in cross-traffic.2 Four witnesses testified regarding their observations of
and experiences relating to the collision.
Defendant struck Santiago’s car on the driver’s side, broadsiding it, and pushing it
up against a pole. Santiago died from his injuries. Ricardo suffered broken ribs and
stayed in the hospital for four to five days under observation. Defendant was transported
to the hospital but suffered minor injuries.
Prior to the collision, Rayshon P. observed defendant “[q]uickly” coming up from
behind him at an intersection located before the intersection where the collision occurred.
Defendant pulled up alongside Rayshon and revved his engine. Rayshon took this to
mean that defendant wanted to race him. Rayshon and defendant engaged in a speed
contest for approximately 10 to 20 seconds, “driving side-by-side, going over 55 miles an
hour.” The speed contest started approximately a quarter mile back from the intersection
where the collision occurred. After defendant cut Rayshon off by moving into his lane,
2 The posted speed limit was 40 or 45 miles per hour.
2
Rayshon “backed off.” Rayshon decided he was not going to be a part of the race
anymore when he saw a car at the stoplight. Defendant continued on and “was following
the white line in the middle [of the road], so [his car] went between cars,” and his car was
half in one lane and half in another. Defendant then drove through the red light and hit
Santiago’s car. Rayshon and another witness could clearly see the red light and the
stopped cars at the intersection, and cross-traffic moving perpendicular to them.
One of the witnesses testified that, as he was approaching the intersection where
the collision occurred, he saw defendant driving up from behind him at approximately 60
miles per hour. The light at the intersection was red and the light for cross-traffic was
green. Defendant did not slow down as he approached the stoplight and was driving half
in one lane and half in the other lane to get around cars. Following the collision, when
the witness went to render assistance, he found defendant next to his car; defendant was
awake and conscious. The witness smelled “alcohol coming from around” defendant and
saw “a bottle of Hennessy” on the ground approximately two or three feet from
defendant.
Videos of defendant approaching the intersection and colliding with Santiago were
also played for the jury. The first video showed defendant’s car traveling toward the
intersection where the collision occurred. That side of the intersection has a right turn
lane, two traveling lanes, and a left turn lane. As defendant was driving toward the
intersection in the left traveling lane at a high rate of speed, three cars were already
stopped at the light—one in the right turn lane, one in the right traveling lane, and the
other in the left turn lane. A fourth car, which was slowing down as it was about to reach
the intersection, was in front of defendant in the left traveling lane. Defendant swerved
around the car in his lane, straddling the white line between the left traveling lane and left
turn lane and then swerved in front of the car in his lane, narrowly missing a collision
with that car and the car in the left turn lane.
3
The second video showed the middle of the intersection and defendant speeding
through the intersection, with no indication of him slowing down, and colliding with
Santiago. The video showed defendant narrowly missing a collision with two other cars
in the intersection before colliding with Santiago; the first slammed on the brakes to
avoid hitting defendant and the second barely got out of defendant’s way. Both videos
further showed there was substantial traffic at the intersection around the time of the
collision.
Sacramento Police Officer Michael Novak spoke with defendant at the hospital.
Although defendant denied having had any alcohol or having taken any drugs prior to the
collision, Officer Novak noticed that defendant’s eyes were bloodshot and watery, and he
had slowed and slurred speech. Officer Novak was unable to conduct the usual field
sobriety tests and thus could not reach a conclusion as to whether defendant was under
the influence because defendant was laying on a gurney with a neck brace on and his
forehead was strapped to the gurney. Officer Novak was, however, able to conduct a
modified version of one of the field sobriety tests—using a pen to analyze defendant’s
eye movements from side-to-side. Officer Novak testified that the modified test
indicated that defendant was under the influence.
Officer Novak asked defendant three times during three hours whether he would
submit to a blood draw; defendant refused each request. Defendant also refused to allow
a doctor to take his blood for medical purposes. Defendant’s blood was ultimately drawn
by way of a “forced blood draw” approximately three hours after the collision. The test
revealed there was no alcohol detected in defendant’s blood.
An expert in “automotive inspections and mechanics” “[r]elated to collisions”
testified there was no mechanical deficiency in defendant’s car that could have caused or
contributed to the collision.
The jury found defendant guilty of gross vehicular manslaughter. Defendant
appeals.
4
DISCUSSION
I
There Was No Prejudicial Error In Admitting
Defendant’s Refusal To Consent To A Blood Draw
Defendant argues the trial court erred in admitting his refusal to consent to a blood
draw to show consciousness of guilt because: (1) his valid assertion of his constitutional
right to refuse the request cannot be used as evidence of his guilt; (2) the implied consent
law (Veh. Code, § 23612) does not provide a basis for inferring his guilt; and (3)
Evidence Code sections 350 and 352 preclude admission of the irrelevant evidence.
Defendant asserts the error was prejudicial under both Chapman v. California (1967)
386 U.S. 18, 24 and People v. Watson (1956) 46 Cal.2d 818, 836-837.
The People argue defendant forfeited his due process claim by failing to object on
that basis in the trial court and “the trial court did not abuse its discretion in finding [the]
evidence” was relevant at trial. (Boldface omitted.) Assuming we reach the merits of
defendant’s due process argument, the People concede “it was error for the trial court to
admit evidence of [defendant’s] refusal to consent to the warrantless blood draw as
evidence of his consciousness of guilt,” citing People v. Wood (2002) 103 Cal.App.4th
803, 808. The People, however, disagree that defendant was prejudiced and argue the
error was harmless under both the Chapman and Watson standards.
We disagree with the People that the due process argument was forfeited.
Defendant filed a motion in limine “to exclude any reference to [defendant] refusing to
submit to a chemical test.” (Capitalization & boldface omitted.) Defendant argued, “Any
refusal to submit to a chemical test is irrelevant to the charges at hand, and should be
excluded for the same reasons and legal grounds articulated above.” In the two preceding
motions in limine, in which defendant argued for exclusion of evidence pertaining to “the
alcohol receptacles found at the scene” and that defendant “may have looked like or
smelled like he had consumed alcohol” (capitalization & boldface omitted), defendant
5
argued, among other things, that admission of the evidence pertaining to alcohol would
violate his due process rights under the California and federal Constitutions and deprive
him of a fair trial. We thus find that defendant preserved his due process argument for
appeal.
Turning to the merits, we do not address whether the trial court erred in admitting
defendant’s refusal to submit to a blood draw into evidence because, assuming but not
deciding error occurred, the evidence against defendant was overwhelming and we agree
with the People that the error was harmless under both the Watson and Chapman
standards.
Gross vehicular manslaughter is defined, in relevant part, as “driving a vehicle in
the commission of an unlawful act, not amounting to a felony, and with gross
negligence.” (§ 192, subd. (c)(1).) During closing argument, defendant conceded he was
guilty of vehicular manslaughter with ordinary negligence; he argued only that he was
not guilty of vehicular manslaughter with gross negligence. Defendant acknowledges the
question presented is thus solely whether defendant was prejudiced as to the finding of
gross negligence. (Compare ibid. with id., subd. (c)(2) [“Driving a vehicle in the
commission of an unlawful act, not amounting to a felony, but without gross
negligence”].)
“Gross negligence is the exercise of so slight a degree of care as to raise a
presumption of conscious indifference to the consequences. [Citation.] ‘The state of
mind of a person who acts with conscious indifferences to the consequences is simply, “I
don’t care what happens.” ’ [Citation.] The test is objective: whether a reasonable
person in the defendant’s position would have been aware of the risk involved.”
(People v. Bennett (1991) 54 Cal.3d 1032, 1036.) In the jury instruction given, which
defendant does not challenge, the trial court instructed the jury consistent with
CALCRIM No. 592: “Gross negligence involves more than ordinary carelessness,
inattention or mistake in judgment. A person acts with gross negligence when: One, he
6
or she acts in a reckless way that creates a high risk of death or great bodily injury; and
two, a reasonable person would have known that acting in that way would create such a
risk. [¶] In other words, a person acts with gross negligence when the way he or she acts
is so different from how an ordinarily careful person would act in the same situation, that
his or her act amounts to disregard for human life or indifference to the consequences of
that act.”
Here, the evidence showed defendant did not care what happened and acted in a
reckless way that created a high risk of death or great bodily injury. Certainly, a
reasonable person would have known that acting in that way created such a risk. Even if
defendant did not intend to race Rayshon, he nonetheless did so on a city street where the
speed limit was either 40 or 45 miles per hour. Rayshon was able to slow down before
reaching the intersection where the collision occurred. Defendant chose not to do so.
Coming up on a busy intersection with a red stoplight against him and where three cars
were already stopped in front of him and the car in his lane was slowing down, defendant
did not slow down or apply his brakes. He instead kept driving approximately 50 to 60
miles per hour—well over the speed limit—and swerved around the car in front of him,
straddled two lanes, and narrowly missed a collision with two cars before entering the
intersection. Even with substantial cross-traffic moving in front of him, defendant still
did not slow down or apply his brakes. He narrowly missed a collision with two more
cars before plowing into Santiago. Defendant’s car had no mechanical deficiency and
witnesses who observed the collision from defendant’s position had no problem seeing
the red stoplight or the cross-traffic. There was further evidence that the smell of alcohol
emanated from around defendant, an alcohol bottle was found within a couple of feet of
him, and he exhibited indications of being under the influence of alcohol to a trained
police officer.
Defendant’s course of conduct demonstrated a complete failure to exercise any
care and showed a conscious indifference to the consequences that might follow from his
7
actions. There was thus no prejudice from any error in admitting defendant’s refusal to
submit to a blood draw under either Watson or Chapman.
II
The Trial Court Had No Duty To Sua Sponte Instruct On Accomplice Testimony
In a single paragraph and without any analysis, defendant asserts the trial court
should have instructed the jury sua sponte with either CALCRIM No. 335, pertaining to
accomplice testimony when a witness was an accomplice as a matter of law, or
CALCRIM No. 334, pertaining to accomplice testimony when it is a question of fact
whether a witness was an accomplice, because Rayshon “engaged in the speed race
which contributed to the victim’s death.” We disagree.
“Section 1111 defines an accomplice as ‘one who is liable to prosecution for the
identical offense charged against the defendant on trial in the cause in which the
testimony of the accomplice is given.’ In order to be chargeable with the identical
offense, the witness must be considered a principal under section 31. That statute defines
principals to include ‘[a]ll persons concerned in the commission of a crime . . . whether
they directly commit the act constituting the offense, or aid and abet in its commission,
or, not being present, have advised and encouraged its commission . . . .’ [Citations.] A
mere accessory, however, is not liable to prosecution for the identical offense, and
therefore is not an accomplice.” (People v. Horton (1995) 11 Cal.4th 1068, 1113-1114.)
“If there is evidence from which the jury could find that a witness is an
accomplice to the crime charged, the court must instruct the jury on accomplice
testimony. [Citation.] But if the evidence is insufficient as a matter of law to support a
finding that a witness is an accomplice, the trial court may make that determination and,
in that situation, need not instruct the jury on accomplice testimony.” (People v. Horton,
supra, 11 Cal.4th at p. 1114.) Here, there was no evidence from which the jury could
find that Rayshon was an accomplice to the crime charged.
8
There was no evidence Rayshon acted “with the intent to encourage or facilitate
the commission of [defendant’s] offense.” (People v. Carrington (2009) 47 Cal.4th 145,
191.) Rayshon testified he participated in the speed race with defendant for 10 to 20
seconds and “backed off” after defendant cut him off by moving into his lane and
Rayshon saw a car at the stoplight. There was no evidence Rayshon knew defendant
would not do the same, i.e., slow down before reaching the red stoplight at the
intersection, and no evidence Rayshon knew defendant would recklessly swerve around
another car and run the red light at 50 to 60 miles per hour into cross-traffic. While
Rayshon’s participation in the speed race was reckless, it did not make him an
accomplice to the gross vehicular manslaughter of Santiago. Indeed, accomplice liability
is not ordinarily associated with the crime of gross vehicular manslaughter “because of
the individual nature of the act and mental state involved.” (People v. Verlinde (2002)
100 Cal.App.4th 1146, 1160, disapproved on other grounds in People v. Cook (2015)
60 Cal.4th 922, 939.) Neither the fact that Rayshon was given immunity for testifying
against defendant nor the prosecution’s statement during closing that the jury could
consider the speed race in the totality of the circumstances as to defendant’s conduct
changes the analysis.
The trial court accordingly had no duty to sua sponte instruct the jury with
CALCRIM No. 334 or CALCRIM No. 335.
III
There Was No Cumulative Prejudicial Effect Requiring Reversal
Defendant argues the cumulative prejudicial effect of the alleged errors requires
reversal because it deprived him of the due process guarantee of fundamental fairness.
Having rejected defendant’s instructional error claim and having found no prejudice with
regard to any error in admitting defendant’s refusal to submit to a blood draw, we discern
9
no prejudice—singly or cumulatively—that warrants reversal. (See People v. Jablonski
(2006) 37 Cal.4th 774, 832.)
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
/s/
ROBIE, Acting P. J.
We concur:
/s/
DUARTE, J.
/s/
MESIWALA, J.
10