P. v. Sorto CA5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 18, 2013
DocketF063821
StatusUnpublished

This text of P. v. Sorto CA5 (P. v. Sorto CA5) 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
P. v. Sorto CA5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 6/18/13 P. v. Sorto 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NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for 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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

THE PEOPLE, F063821 Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. VCF199947) v.

DOUGLAS CASTELLANOS SORTO, OPINION Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Tulare County. Kathryn T. Montejano, Judge. Jean M. Marinovich, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant. Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Dane R. Gillette, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Michael P. Farrell, Assistant Attorney General, Charles A. French and Michael A. Canzoneri, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent. -ooOoo- A jury convicted defendant Douglas Castellanos Sorto of first degree burglary (Pen. Code,1 §§ 459, 460) after he was found inside a neighbor‟s house. He contends that the trial court erred, first, by allowing the prosecutor to impeach him by stating he had been convicted of a “serious and violent” felony and, second, by instructing the jury on sexual battery as a possible intended target offense for the charged crime of burglary. Sorto also claims there was insufficient evidence of intent to commit either theft or sexual battery to support the burglary conviction. We affirm the judgment. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORIES Around 8:00 p.m. on January 19, 2008, Visalia police officers responded to a report that a man had broken into a house on East Sunnyview Avenue. Maria Murphy and her daughter, Julia Garza, reported that a man had been in their house; he left through a window. Sorto was arrested and charged with one count of first degree burglary. (People v. Sorto (Mar. 15, 2011, F058933) [nonpub. opn.], pp. 1-2.) In the first trial, a jury found Sorto guilty, and the court sentenced him to nine years in prison. (Id. at p. 6.) We reversed and remanded because the trial court erroneously admitted evidence that Sorto committed a burglary five years earlier. (Id. at p. 7.) A second jury trial began on August 30, 2011. Prosecution’s case Murphy testified that she lives in a house on East Sunnyview Avenue with her roommate Shelly Havner. It is a two-story house, and Havner‟s bedroom is upstairs and Murphy‟s is downstairs. Havner always locks her bedroom door. In January 2008, Murphy‟s two daughters were both living with her and they shared the downstairs bedroom with her.

1Subsequent statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise stated.

2. On January 19, 2008, Murphy and her older daughter, Julia Garza, were at home watching television in the living room. Murphy‟s younger daughter was away with her father, and Havner had gone to the coast with her boyfriend. Murphy heard a noise. She looked up and saw, through a mirror over the fireplace, that someone was crawling up the stairs behind her. Garza called 911, and Murphy grabbed the man by the back of the shirt and pushed him down the stairs. Murphy recognized the intruder as a person who lived across the street. She asked him what he was doing there, and “he took off running and went out the way he came in.” He went into her bedroom where he had entered and left through the window. Earlier, Murphy had left her bedroom window open to air out the house after she cleaned the bathroom with bleach, but there had been a screen on the window. Now Murphy saw that the screen was off the window. Nothing was missing from her bedroom. Murphy recognized the intruder—later identified as Sorto—because she would see him in front of his house when she was coming home from work. They would wave to each other, but she did not have conversations with him. She recalled that one time when she was in her car, Sorto said that she had almost hit a dog. Another time, Murphy asked Sorto if he had seen her daughter, and he told Murphy she was down the street. Murphy testified that she was not romantically involved with Sorto and she had never invited him over to her house. She had a boyfriend at the time. Garza testified that, while she was watching a movie with her mother, her mother put her hand on Garza‟s shoulder and she looked as though she had just seen a ghost. Murphy then got up and went to the stairs, and Garza saw in the mirror that a grown man was on the stairs. Garza grabbed the telephone and called 911. She heard her mother say, “„How dare you come into our home and break in.‟” The man tried to fight with Murphy and go through the front door to escape, but Murphy was blocking the door. The man said “if she [Murphy] ever did anything that she was going to regret it.” Garza had never

3. seen this man before. The police later showed her a photographic lineup and she was unable to identify the intruder. Garza first called 911 when she saw Sorto in the house, and Murphy called 911 after he had left the house. An audiotape of the 911 calls was played for the jury. Defense case Sorto admitted that he entered the house through the window but claimed he had been invited by Murphy. He testified that he and Murphy had a “side relationship for a while,” meaning they had a sexual relationship.2 The relationship began in the summer of 2007, when Sorto was staying with his brother and sister-in-law, who lived across the street from Murphy. When Murphy would go to work, if Sorto was outside, Murphy would stop in front of his house and talk for a minute. He said they would also talk when she took out the trash or walked her roommate‟s dog. Sorto then went to Long Beach. In January 2008, Sorto spent a couple weeks visiting his brother and sister-in-law. He bumped into Murphy, and they agreed to meet the next day, Saturday, January 19, 2008, at around 7:00 or 7:30 in the evening. Murphy told him she was going to be with her older daughter that weekend and to come through the back. Sorto explained, “She didn‟t want nobody to think wrong of her. Everybody seen her with the guy she‟s actually dating. So she told me she would leave the window open for me to come into the house through the window.” She told him to go upstairs to the upper bedroom. He had not been in the house before. To get to Murphy‟s backyard, Sorto hopped the fence. He entered the house and was halfway up the stairs when Murphy started yelling at him. She locked the front door. He testified, “After she started screaming, I told her what was she … doing? There was no need for whatever reason she was mad at me. There was no need for the cops. No

2On cross-examination, Sorto said he had sex with Murphy “two or three [times] at the most” prior to January 19, 2008, and it “wasn‟t a long-term relationship.” He had never had sex in her home.

4. need for her to make such an exaggeration. I told her there was no need for that.” Sorto saw that Murphy “was getting hysterical,” and he “left the same way [he] came in.” He denied that they struggled on the stairs or that Murphy pulled him down the stairs. Sorto then went to a friend‟s house, not his brother‟s house across the street. He testified that when he went into Murphy‟s house, he did not intend to steal anything or do anything Murphy had not invited him to do. On cross-examination, he agreed that he wanted to have sex with Murphy after he entered her home. Jose Guzman is Sorto‟s brother and lived across the street from Murphy. He testified that he saw Sorto talking to Murphy several times. They were “[h]ugging, touching, real close to each other.” On cross-examination, Guzman said that Sorto was staying with him on January 19, 2008, and he had seen Sorto earlier that day.

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