People v. Barrios

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 23, 2021
DocketB302847
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Barrios (People v. Barrios) 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
People v. Barrios, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 2/22/21; See dissenting opinion CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

THE PEOPLE, B302847

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. KA116550) v.

JOSE MARCOS BARRIOS,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Mike Camacho, Judge. Remanded to modify sentence.

Paul Couenhoven, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant.

Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Susan Sullivan Pithey, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Steven D. Matthews and Rama R. Maline, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent. __________________________ Jose Marcos Barrios hijacked I. Hsiung and his car for a robbery. Barrios took the cash from Hsiung’s wallet and ordered Hsiung to drive them both to ATMs for more cash. This nighttime affair lasted some two hours. It included freeway travel and a long interval of inaction while Barrios persisted in holding Hsiung. Barrios awaited the stroke of midnight in hopes it would bring Hsiung a new daily ATM withdrawal limit and so would allow Barrios to rob Hsiung of yet more cash. Police rescued Hsiung after he texted for help. The jury convicted Barrios of several crimes. Pertinent now are two: kidnapping for robbery and robbery. Each conviction, with its gun enhancement, meant a separate sentence of 25 years to life plus 10 years. (Pen. Code, § 12022.53, subd. (b).) The court did not stay either sentence, but ordered them to be consecutive: 50 years to life plus 20 years. The whole sentence, including a five-year prior conviction enhancement (Pen. Code, § 667, subd. (a)(1)), was 75 years to life. If many offenses were incident to one objective, Barrios may be punished for any of the offenses but not for more than one. (People v. Goode (2015) 243 Cal.App.4th 484, 492; Pen. Code, § 654.) Here, robbery was an incident to Barrios’s kidnapping for robbery. Because the kidnapping had no objective but robbery, the robbery sentence and its enhancement must be stayed. I Hsiung was parked on the street at about 10:30 p.m. Out of the dark, Barrios approached on foot wearing sunglasses, a mask, and a hat. He tapped the car window with a gun and told Hsiung to open his car or lower the window. Hsiung lowered the window.

2 Barrios asked if Hsiung had money in the car. Hsiung said he had cash in his wallet and “I will just give you that.” After getting this cash, Barrios told Hsiung he wanted to get in Hsiung’s car to go to an ATM to withdraw money. Barrios got in back and made Hsiung drive to an ATM. Barrios, not Hsiung, raised the topic of ATMs. The two drove to a Bank of the West. Hsiung told Barrios he could withdraw only his daily limit of $500. Barrios ordered Hsiung to make the withdrawal and to keep the car door open so Barrios could shoot if Hsiung ran. Hsiung got $500 and gave it to Barrios. Barrios told Hsiung they would wait until after midnight, “so technically it’s another day.” Barrios wanted to see if Hsiung could withdraw more money after midnight. They parked a ways off and waited. Astonishingly, robber Barrios took a nap. Hsiung texted friends for help. A text time stamp showed 11:50 p.m. After midnight, Barrios awoke and they started to return to the ATM. On the way there were police. Barrios told Hsiung to drive to the freeway. After five minutes on the freeway, Barrios told Hsiung to exit and they drove to a Bank of America. Hsiung tried but could not withdraw money from the ATM there. At Barrios’s command, Hsiung kept driving until a police roadblock ended the episode. II Whether Barrios can be imprisoned for both robbery and for kidnapping to commit robbery calls for an interpretation of Penal Code section 654, which says an “act” punishable in different ways by different legal provisions shall be punished under the provision providing the longest potential term of imprisonment,

3 but in no case shall the “act” be punished under more than one provision. We must interpret the statutory word “act.” Was Barrios’s venture one “act” or more than one “act?” Obviously Barrios performed many different physical actions over these two hours: he tapped with his gun, he issued commands, he napped, he awoke, and so on. Yet the question is legal and not physical: within the meaning of Penal Code section 654, was this course of conduct but a single “act?” This question of statutory interpretation is a question of law. The facts in this case are undisputed because Barrios testified to an exculpatory version that the jury, to convict, had to reject. Barrios does not press his version on appeal. We are left with only Hsiung’s version, which is uncontested. When facts are undisputed, the application of Penal Code section 654 raises a question of law. It is purely a question of statutory interpretation. Our review is independent. (People v. Corpening (2016) 2 Cal.5th 307, 312.) This remains true whether the statutory “act” is or is not a course of conduct that violates more than one statute and thus poses the problem of whether the course of conduct comprises a divisible transaction that can be punished under more than one statute within the meaning of section 654. (People v. Beamon (1973) 8 Cal.3d 625, 637 (Beamon).) The Beamon decision, for instance, grappled with facts similar to those here. We detail the similarity in the next paragraph. First we note Beamon used an independent standard of review: “We are compelled to the conclusion as a matter of law that on the record here both crimes were committed pursuant to a single intent and objective, i.e., to rob Ashcraft of the truck or

4 its contents.” (Beamon, supra, 8 Cal.3d at p. 639 [italics added]; cf. People v. Coleman (1989) 48 Cal.3d 112, 162 & 163 [citing Beamon]; Coleman, at p. 128 [“Defendant [Coleman] testified. His account corroborated most of the prosecution testimony but differed in certain crucial respects.”].) We now detail how the facts of the Beamon case resemble this case. Victim Ashcraft drove a liquor truck and got out for a delivery. When Ashcraft returned to the driver’s seat, Beamon entered the passenger side with a gun. The two drove a distance and then fought. Ashcraft fled and called police, who later arrested Beamon. The episode lasted about 20 minutes and covered about 15 blocks. (Beamon, supra, 8 Cal.3. at pp. 630– 631.) The jury convicted Beamon of robbery and kidnapping for robbery. The Supreme Court had “little difficulty” with the case: Beamon “was convicted of [kidnapping] for the purpose of robbery and for the commission of that very robbery. We are compelled to the conclusion as a matter of law that on the record here both crimes were committed pursuant to a single intent and objective, i.e., to rob Ashcraft of the truck or its contents.” (Id. at p. 639.) Beamon “may therefore be punished for only one of such crimes. As punishment for second degree robbery is the lesser punishment for the two crimes, its execution must be stayed.” (Id. at pp. 639–640.) Beamon governs. It is not identical to this case, but the facts of this Supreme Court precedent are close. Under Beamon, Barrios’s robbery sentence and his sentence for the associated enhancement must be stayed. The prosecution cites People v. Porter (1987) 194 Cal.App.3d 34, which itself cited Beamon. (Porter, at p. 38.) The

5 Court of Appeal, however, made no effort to distinguish Beamon; Porter merely asserted every case must be decided on its own facts. (Porter, at p. 38 [application of Pen. Code, § 654 “to any particular case depends upon the circumstances of that case”].) This treatment of a factually similar Supreme Court precedent is baffling. If you kidnap people to rob them, robbing them is the whole point. The project has no other goal.

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Related

People v. Beamon
504 P.2d 905 (California Supreme Court, 1973)
Neal v. State of California
357 P.2d 839 (California Supreme Court, 1960)
People v. Latimer
858 P.2d 611 (California Supreme Court, 1993)
People v. Coleman
768 P.2d 32 (California Supreme Court, 1989)
People v. Porter
194 Cal. App. 3d 34 (California Court of Appeal, 1987)
People v. Jones
127 Cal. Rptr. 2d 319 (California Court of Appeal, 2002)
People v. Andra
67 Cal. Rptr. 3d 439 (California Court of Appeal, 2007)
People v. Capistrano
331 P.3d 201 (California Supreme Court, 2014)
People v. Goode
243 Cal. App. 4th 484 (California Court of Appeal, 2015)
People v. Jackson
376 P.3d 528 (California Supreme Court, 2016)
People v. Corpening
386 P.3d 379 (California Supreme Court, 2016)
People v. Hardy
418 P.3d 309 (California Supreme Court, 2018)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
People v. Barrios, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-barrios-calctapp-2021.