People v. Blakeley

999 P.2d 675, 96 Cal. Rptr. 2d 451, 23 Cal. 4th 82, 2000 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 4305, 2000 Daily Journal DAR 5785, 2000 Cal. LEXIS 4414
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 2000
DocketS062453
StatusPublished
Cited by113 cases

This text of 999 P.2d 675 (People v. Blakeley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Blakeley, 999 P.2d 675, 96 Cal. Rptr. 2d 451, 23 Cal. 4th 82, 2000 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 4305, 2000 Daily Journal DAR 5785, 2000 Cal. LEXIS 4414 (Cal. 2000).

Opinions

Opinion

KENNARD, J.—

In the companion case of People v. Lasko (2000) 23 Cal.4th 101 [96 Cal.Rptr.2d 441, 999 P.2d 666], we hold that a defendant who, with conscious disregard for life and the knowledge that such conduct endangers the life of another, unintentionally but unlawfully kills in a sudden quarrel or the heat of passion is guilty only of voluntary manslaughter rather than murder. Here, we hold in a case of first impression that voluntary manslaughter is also committed when a defendant, acting with conscious disregard for life and the knowledge that the conduct is life-endangering, unintentionally but unlawfully kills while having an unreasonable but good faith belief in the need to act in self-defense.

I

On October 25, 1994, defendant George John Blakeley and his friend, David Fraire, spent the early afternoon drinking brandy in a park in Vallejo, California. They then went to defendant’s home. Also there were Steven Blakeley (defendant’s brother), Tony Santiago, and Lionel Vallo (a friend of Santiago’s). Fraire passed around bottles of beer, and Vallo bought $20 worth of methamphetamine from defendant.

Vallo, who had been drinking, asked about the quality of the methamphetamine, saying that some methamphetamine he had recently bought from Santiago had been “bunk.” Santiago told Vallo, “fuck you,” and Vallo replied, “fuck you.” Defendant said to both Santiago and Vallo, “shut the fuck up”; Vallo told defendant, “you shut the fuck up.”

Defendant told Vallo to leave the house. Vallo, who was six feet tall and weighed 205 pounds, swung a beer bottle at defendant, who was five feet five inches tall and weighed 140 pounds, but missed. Defendant then hit Vallo in the head with an unopened bottle of beer. The bottle shattered, [86]*86cutting Vallo’s cheek. After throwing a beer bottle at defendant, but missing him, Vallo charged at defendant. Defendant drew a large knife from a sheath on his belt and a struggle ensued. Santiago pulled Vallo off defendant. Vallo was bleeding heavily from a stab wound to the chest. Fraire told defendant “let’s go,” and defendant, weeping, drove Fraire home.

After telling his friend Vallo, “You dying, ain’t nothing I could do, you got it to the heart,” Santiago asked Steven Blakeley (who had been out of the room during the fight) to “call 911” and then left. The police and paramedics soon arrived but were unable to save Vallo, who died shortly thereafter from a single stab wound to the heart. Defendant fled, eventually turning up at his uncle’s home in San Bernardino. His uncle called the police.

At trial, eyewitness accounts of the stabbing differed. Vallo’s friend Santiago testified defendant had made a motion “like an uppercut” with the knife as Vallo charged him, and Vallo almost immediately went limp, falling on top of defendant. Fraire, defendant’s friend, testified that after Vallo attacked defendant the two struggled for “half a minute or so”; he did not see defendant stab Vallo. Defendant, who testified on his own behalf, claimed he drew his knife to defend himself when Vallo charged him, that the two of them fought and went down on the floor, and that Vallo apparently impaled himself on the knife during the struggle. He did not realize Vallo had been stabbed until after the fight was over.

The trial court instructed the jury on the charged crime of murder as well as the lesser included offenses of voluntary and involuntary manslaughter. As to voluntary manslaughter, the trial court explained: “Every person who unlawfully kills another human being without malice aforethought but with an intent to kill is guilty of voluntary manslaughter .... There is no malice aforethought if the killing occurred in the honest but unreasonable belief in the necessity to defend oneself against imminent peril to life or great bodily injury.” (Italics added.) The court refused to give defendant’s requested instruction that a killing is involuntary manslaughter when the killer, acting in an unreasonable but good faith belief in the necessity of self-defense, unintentionally causes the victim’s death.1 Instead, the court gave the jury [87]*87CALJIC No. 8.45, the standard instruction on involuntary manslaughter.2 The jury convicted defendant of voluntary manslaughter.

The Court of Appeal affirmed the conviction. The court reasoned: “[Unreasonable self-defense] has no special bearing on the crime of involuntary manslaughter. It neither allows a conviction of this crime, nor prevents one.” Because “[t]here was no instruction . . . that prevented the jury from considering involuntary manslaughter,” the Court of Appeal said, the trial court did not have to give defendant’s requested instruction. We granted review.

n

As we did in the companion case of People v. Lasko, supra, 23 Cal.4th 101, we begin our analysis by exploring the differences between murder and the lesser offense of manslaughter. Murder is the unlawful killing of a human being with malice aforethought. (Pen. Code, § 187, subd. (a).)3 Malice may be either express or implied. It is express when the defendant manifests “a deliberate intention unlawfully to take away the life of a fellow creature.” (§ 188.) It is implied “when no considerable provocation appears, or when the circumstances attending the killing show an abandoned and malignant heart.” (Ibid.) This statutory definition of implied malice, we have said, “has never proved of much assistance in defining the concept in concrete terms” (People v. Dellinger (1989) 49 Cal.3d 1212, 1217 [264 Cal.Rptr. 841, 783 P.2d 200]), and juries should be instructed that malice is implied “when the killing results from an intentional act, the natural consequences of which are dangerous to life, which act was deliberately performed by a person who knows that his conduct endangers the life of another and who acts with conscious disregard for life” (id. at p. 1215). As in the companion case of People v. Lasko, for convenience we shall describe this mental state as “conscious disregard for life.”

Manslaughter is “the unlawful killing of a human being without malice.” (§ 192.) A defendant lacks malice and is guilty of voluntary manslaughter in “limited, explicitly defined circumstances: either when the [88]*88defendant acts in a ‘sudden quarrel or heat of passion’ (§ 192, subd. (a)), or when the defendant kills in ‘unreasonable self-defense’—the unreasonable but good faith belief in having to act in self-defense (see In re Christian S. (1994) 7 Cal.4th 768 [30 Cal.Rptr.2d 33, 872 P.2d 574]; People v. Flannel [(1979)] 25 Cal.3d 668 [160 Cal.Rptr. 84, 603 P.2d 1]).” (People v. Barton (1995) 12 Cal.4th 186, 199 [47 Cal.Rptr.2d 569, 906 P.2d 531].) At issue here is the second type of voluntary manslaughter: when a defendant kills in unreasonable self-defense. (The other form of voluntary manslaughter— when the defendant kills in a sudden quarrel or heat of passion—is addressed in the companion case of People v. Lasko, supra, 23 Cal.4th 101.)

A person who intentionally kills in unreasonable self-defense lacks malice and is guilty only of voluntary manslaughter, not murder. (People v. Barton, supra,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

People v. Vannesse
232 Cal. Rptr. 3d 800 (California Court of Appeals, 5th District, 2018)
United States v. Melvin Martinez-Lopez
864 F.3d 1034 (Ninth Circuit, 2017)
People v. Price
8 Cal. App. 5th 409 (California Court of Appeal, 2017)
People v. White
386 P.3d 1172 (California Supreme Court, 2017)
People v. Sotelo-Urena
4 Cal. App. 5th 732 (California Court of Appeal, 2016)
People v. Johnson
244 Cal. App. 4th 384 (California Court of Appeal, 2016)
People v. Wright
242 Cal. App. 4th 1461 (California Court of Appeal, 2015)
People v. Woods
241 Cal. App. 4th 461 (California Court of Appeal, 2015)
People v. McDonald
238 Cal. App. 4th 16 (California Court of Appeal, 2015)
People v. Beatrice Bros.
236 Cal. App. 4th 24 (California Court of Appeal, 2015)
People v. Campbell
233 Cal. App. 4th 148 (California Court of Appeal, 2015)
People v. Boyce
330 P.3d 812 (California Supreme Court, 2014)
People v. Whitmer
329 P.3d 154 (California Supreme Court, 2014)
People v. Elmore
325 P.3d 951 (California Supreme Court, 2014)
People v. Rodarte
223 Cal. App. 4th 1158 (California Court of Appeal, 2014)
People v. John Z.
223 Cal. App. 4th 1046 (California Court of Appeal, 2014)
People v. Bryant
301 P.3d 1136 (California Supreme Court, 2013)
People v. Mills
286 P.3d 754 (California Supreme Court, 2012)
People v. Cravens
267 P.3d 1113 (California Supreme Court, 2012)
People v. Valenzuela
199 Cal. App. 4th 1214 (California Court of Appeal, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
999 P.2d 675, 96 Cal. Rptr. 2d 451, 23 Cal. 4th 82, 2000 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 4305, 2000 Daily Journal DAR 5785, 2000 Cal. LEXIS 4414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-blakeley-cal-2000.