Darrell Anthony Gautt v. Gail Lewis, Warden

489 F.3d 993, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 13018, 2007 WL 1615123
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJune 6, 2007
Docket03-55534
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 489 F.3d 993 (Darrell Anthony Gautt v. Gail Lewis, Warden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Darrell Anthony Gautt v. Gail Lewis, Warden, 489 F.3d 993, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 13018, 2007 WL 1615123 (9th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

BERZON, Circuit Judge.

We consider whether Darrell Anthony Gautt’s constitutional due process right to *998 be informed of the charges against him was violated when he was charged with a sentencing enhancement under one statute, section 12022.53(b) of the California Penal Code, 1 but had his sentence enhanced under a second, different statute, section 12022.53(d). The first statute, not the second, was alleged by number and by nearly verbatim description in the information. We hold that Gautt’s due process right was indeed violated when, as a result of this discrepancy, he was sentenced pursuant to a twenty-five-year-to-life enhancement, rather than a ten-year enhancement, and that the California appellate court’s decision to the contrary constituted “an unreasonable application of [ ] clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). We therefore reverse the district court’s denial of Gautt’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus. On remand, the district court shall grant a conditional writ of habeas corpus, ordering that the state release Gautt unless it re-sentences him. 2

I

The barebones facts of Gautt’s crime are that on January 10, 1998, Gautt shot and killed Samantha Fields, after demanding that she pay him $25 for cocaine he had given her the day before. Just prior to the shooting, Gautt had used cocaine. Gautt threatened Fields by holding the gun close to her. The gun went off, but none of the several people in the room saw the shooting. Gautt later maintained that the gun fired only because Fields reached up and knocked either his hand or the gun. Fields died from a single gunshot wound to her chest. Afterwards, Gautt threatened the other people in the room with the gun and made them help him dispose of the body. Further details of the crime do not matter for purposes of the current appeal.

The facts that do matter here are procedural and concern the content of Gautt’s information, the trial court’s instructions to the jury, the closing arguments, the verdict form, and the ultimate judgment, as well as the substance of the two statutory provisions at the center of this case — sections 12022.53(b) and 12022.53(d).

(1) The information charged Gautt with one count of murder and one count of possession of a firearm by a felon under sections 187(a) and 12021(a)(1), respectively. It also charged him with violating sections 1203.06(a)(1), 12022.5(a)(1), and 12022.53(b), each of which imposes additional penalties on defendants convicted of “personally us[ing] a firearm” in the commission of a crime. As stated in the information, a conviction under section 12022.53(b) translates into a ten-year sentence enhancement. 3 The information *999 made no reference to section 12022.53(d). This omission is the pivotal fact in this case.

Sections 12022.53(b) and 12022.53(d) differ in several critical respects. In full, section 12022.53(b) states:

Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any person who is convicted of a felony specified in subdivision (a),[ 4 ] and who in the commission of that felony 'personally used a firearm, shall be punished by a term of imprisonment of 10 years in the state prison, which shall be imposed in addition and consecutive to the punishment prescribed for that felony. The firearm need not be operable or loaded for this enhancement to apply.

Cal. Penal Code § 12022.53(b) (emphasis added).

In contrast, section 12022.53(d) provides: Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any person who is convicted of a felony specified in subdivision (a) ... and who in the commission of that felony intentionally and personally discharged a firearm and proximately caused great bodily injury ... to any person other than an accomplice, shall be punished by a term of imprisonment of 25 years to life in the state prison, which shall be imposed in addition and consecutive to the punishment prescribed for that felony.

Id. § 12022.53(d) (emphasis added).

Crucially, while conviction under section 12022.53(b) requires only that the defendant “personally used a firearm,” conviction under section 12022.53(d) requires considerably more — namely, that the defendant “personally discharged a firearm,” that he did so “intentionally,” and that he “proximately caused great bodily injury.” Commensurate with its less serious nature, conviction under section 12022.53(b) leads to a ten-year sentence enhancement; in contrast, a conviction under section 12022.53(d) generates a far heavier, twenty-five-year-to-life, enhancement.

(2) Despite these major differences, the trial court confused the two statutes when time came to instruct the jury. While ostensibly reciting the elements for section 12022.53(b), the trial judge actually recited those additional elements unique to section 12022.53(d): personal discharge, intentional discharge, and proximate causation of great bodily injury — here, death: 5

*1000 It is alleged in Count One that in the commission or attempted commission of the crime charged therein described, the defendant Darrell Gautt personally discharged a firearm, causing the death of Samantha Fields, within the meaning of Penal Code section 12022.53, subdivision b.
If you find the defendant guilty of the crime of murder, you must determine whether the defendant personally discharged a firearm in the commission or attempted commission of the crime of murder, and whether it proximately caused the death of Samantha Fields.
The word firearm as used in this instruction includes a handgun. The term personally discharged a firearm, as used in this instruction, means that the defendant must have personally and intentionally fired it.

(Emphases added.)

(3) Despite these instructions, the prosecution during its subsequent closing argument specifically disavowed any need to show that Gautt had intentionally discharged the weapon, the requirement unique to section 12022.53(d). Instead, the prosecutor focused solely on Gautt’s use of the handgun, the only showing required under section 12022.53(b). As she told the jury:

He pulled the trigger. I submit to you at that moment he meant to. But that’s not at issue in this case because I’m not asking you to find he intended to do it.
What I’m asking you and hope actually showing you, looking at the law and applying the facts in this case, that killing in this case resulted from the intentional act of pointing a loaded handgun

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Bluebook (online)
489 F.3d 993, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 13018, 2007 WL 1615123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darrell-anthony-gautt-v-gail-lewis-warden-ca9-2007.