In re Charles N. CA1/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 5, 2014
DocketA138332
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re Charles N. CA1/2 (In re Charles N. CA1/2) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Charles N. CA1/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 6/4/14 In re Charles N. CA1/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

In re CHARLES N., a Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law.

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. A138332 CHARLES N., (Contra Costa County Defendant and Appellant. Super. Ct. No. J1201417)

In this Welfare and Institutions Code section 602 proceeding, the juvenile court adjudged minor Michael N.1 a ward of the court and ordered him to complete a residential sex offender treatment program after it sustained two counts of committing a lewd and lascivious act on a minor under the age of 14 in violation of Penal Code section 288, subdivision (a). Michael appeals from the dispositional order, asserting the following four arguments: (1) the juvenile court failed to find that he understood the wrongfulness of his conduct, as required by Penal Code section 26(One); (2) the juvenile court’s finding of intent to gratify lust was unsupported by substantial evidence; (3) the

1 Although the minor’s first name is Charles, he apparently goes by his middle name, Michael. For purposes of consistency with the proceeding below and the briefing on appeal, and to avoid confusion with his older brother who is also named Charles, we will refer to the minor as Michael. 1 questioning by the prosecutor and the court of one of the victims violated Michael’s federal constitutional right to due process; and (4) the dispositional order placing Michael in a residential sex offender treatment program away from his family violated his right to due process. We conclude Michael’s arguments lack merit, and we affirm the dispositional order. EVIDENCE AT THE JURISDICTIONAL HEARING In July 2012, sisters C.R., who was five years old, and L.R., who was six years old, lived in a house in Hercules with their mother, Amy Y., their three-year-old brother, and multiple other relatives, including their 13-year-old cousin Michael.2 On the evening of July 27, Amy went to work, leaving her mother and aunt in charge but asking Michael to keep an eye on and feed her three children. The aunt wanted to go to a party, so she paid Michael $5.00 to watch the children and put them to bed. After Michael fed the children dinner, he sat down with them and his younger brother to watch television. The five of them then went into the bedroom the three children shared with their mother and played hide-and-go-seek. When it was time to go to sleep, the three children all climbed into the bed and tried to settle down, but they were very excited because they were going to an amusement park the next day. Michael stayed in the room to put the children to sleep, while his younger brother apparently left. According to L.R., as she was lying in bed with her siblings, Michael reached over and touched her with his finger under her pajama bottoms. Later, on a diagram, she circled her genital area—where she goes “pee”—to identify where he touched her. It hurt and she told him to stop. She then saw Michael do the same thing to C.R. When C.R. told Michael to stop, L.R. pushed him out of the room and locked the door. The three siblings then went to sleep. C.R., who was still five years old at the time of the jurisdictional hearing, testified that she remembered the night Michael was watching her and her siblings while their mother was at work. Something happened that she did not like very much, and she also

2 The father of the three children, Brandon R., had separated from their mother about a week earlier and was living at a friend’s house. 2 saw Michael do something to L.R. While she would not verbalize what she saw, she repeatedly touched the vaginal area of a doll with a pen. After attempts by the prosecutor to elicit a description of what happened without C.R. verbalizing a response, counsel for Michael interjected that “I think we’re done. For the record we’ve had no response for quite a while.” Just as the prosecutor and court agreed the questioning was done, C.R. stated, “He touched it,” pointing to her vaginal area. When asked who touched it, she pointed to Michael. Two days after the incident, Brandon took his three children to the park and out for ice cream. As they were eating their ice cream cones, C.R. told her father she did not want to go home. When he asked her why, she responded, “Michael touched me the other night.” Brandon asked where he touched her, and she responded, “He touched me on my private area, Dad.” Brandon asked for details about what happened, and C.R. described how Michael had been in their bedroom and had put his hand in her underpants and touched her in her private area. She told her father that Michael had said he was just patting her on her bottom, and she corrected him, telling him, “No, you’re not,” that he was putting his hands down the front of her underwear. Brandon asked L.R. if Michael had done this, and she initially answered that he had touched her, too, expressing concern that she was going to get in trouble. When he asked L.R. if Michael had really touched her, she said he had not, that it had only happened to C.R. She later told her father that Michael did in fact put his hand down her underpants when she was lying in bed with her siblings. She told him that she had retracted what she said initially because she was afraid she was going to get in trouble. After learning what Michael had done, Brandon became extremely angry, immediately driving to the house so he could tell Amy’s mother (Michael’s aunt) what had happened. When he told her Michael had touched C.R., she did not want to hear it, punching him twice in the face instead. He left with his three children and went back to his friend’s house. He called Amy, who left work and met them at the house. Once there, she took C.R. into a separate room and asked her what had happened. Her daughter told her Michael touched her under her clothes “down there” and she told him it

3 hurt. She claimed the same thing had happened to L.R. When Amy asked L.R. if Michael had touched her, she said no. Amy took C.R. to the Hercules police department that evening. Later that same night, she moved with her children to San Bruno, never to return to the house in Hercules. Michael testified to a different version of the incident. According to him, after he cooked dinner, his aunt asked him to watch the three children. He was not happy about it, but he agreed. He watched television with his younger brother and the children, and then they all went into the bedroom the children shared with their mother to play hide- and-go-seek. At some point, Michael’s older brother, Charles, came into the room and said it was time for the children to go to bed. Michael tried to put them to bed, but “they were all hyper and stuff.” To get them to go to sleep, he “patted their butt like what we usually do.” Michael recalled telling a police officer that he accidently patted C.R. in the front of her body, testifying, “When I was patting her butt she started moving, and she turned around and accidently pat her [sic].” She turned over, and he continued to pat her bottom because he knew she was still awake. He left when he thought all three children were asleep. Michael also recalled the officer asking him if his hand might have gone down C.R.’s pants when she was wiggling around, but he did not remember nodding in response to that question. On cross-examination, Michael claimed that the girls had asked him to pat their bottoms because that was what their grandmother did. He said that C.R.

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Bluebook (online)
In re Charles N. CA1/2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-charles-n-ca12-calctapp-2014.