People v. Brown

CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 2, 2023
DocketS257631
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Brown (People v. Brown) 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. Brown, (Cal. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. HEATHER ROSE BROWN, Defendant and Appellant.

S257631

Third Appellate District C085998

Shasta County Superior Court 15F2440

March 2, 2023

Justice Groban authored the opinion of the Court, in which Chief Justice Guerrero and Justices Corrigan, Liu, Kruger, Jenkins, and Cantil-Sakauye* concurred.

* Retired Chief Justice of California, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution. PEOPLE v. BROWN S257631

Opinion of the Court by Groban, J.

Defendant Heather Rose Brown gave birth to a baby girl in a hotel room. In the fifth day of her life, while lying face down between her sleeping parents who were both under the influence of heroin, Brown’s newborn daughter stopped breathing. When Brown woke and noticed, she directed her daughter’s father to call 911. Brown administered CPR, following the dispatcher’s instructions, until the ambulance arrived. Further efforts to resuscitate Brown’s daughter were unsuccessful. An autopsy revealed traces of heroin-derived morphine and methamphetamine in the baby’s body fluids and the contents of her stomach. The District Attorney charged Brown with first degree murder and prosecuted the charge on the theory that Brown had poisoned her newborn daughter by feeding her breast milk after smoking heroin and methamphetamine. The trial court instructed the jurors that to convict Brown of first degree murder they had to find she committed “an act” with the mental state of malice aforethought that was a substantial factor in causing her baby’s death and that she “murdered by using poison.” The instructions did not require the jury to find that Brown acted with any particular, heightened mental state when she fed her baby her breast milk. They thus allowed the jury to convict Brown of first degree murder if it found that she acted with malice — a mental state that normally would only support a conviction of second degree murder — and that poison was a substantial factor in causing her baby’s death. Based on these instructions, the jury

1 PEOPLE v. BROWN Opinion of the Court by Groban, J.

convicted Brown of the first degree murder of her newborn daughter, for which the court imposed a sentence of 25 years to life in prison. Brown argues that the jury instructions were incomplete because they did not require the jury to find she fed her daughter her breast milk with a mental state equivalent in turpitude to the willfulness, deliberation, and premeditation that generally distinguishes first degree murder from second degree murder. The Attorney General argues that the instructions were complete, because, in his view, proof that a defendant used poison is sufficient to elevate a murder to the first degree, without any proof of mental state beyond the showing of malice required for all murder convictions. We conclude Brown has the better argument. When dividing the common law offense of murder into two degrees, the Legislature reserved for the first degree types of murders that are “cruel and aggravated” and thus “deserving of greater punishment” than other malicious or intentional killings, which are punishable only as second degree murder. (People v. Sanchez (1864) 24 Cal. 17, 29 (Sanchez).) From the beginning, those murders have included all murder “perpetrated by means of poison, or lying in wait, torture, or by any other kind of wilful, deliberate and premeditated killing.” (1 Hittell’s Cal. Gen. Laws from 1850 to 1864, par. 1425, § 21 (1872) (Hittell’s); id. at par. 1423, § 19.) We previously have interpreted this language to require proof of a mental state more culpable than the malice required for second degree murder, in keeping with the Legislature’s determination that murders perpetrated by these means warrant the greater punishment reserved for first degree murder. For torture murder, the prosecution must show “wilful, deliberate and premeditated

2 PEOPLE v. BROWN Opinion of the Court by Groban, J.

intent to inflict extreme and prolonged pain.” (People v. Steger (1976) 16 Cal.3d 539, 546 (Steger).) For lying in wait murder, the prosecution must show the defendant performed the acts of watching, waiting, and concealment with the intent to take the victim by surprise to facilitate the infliction of injury likely to cause death. (People v. Webster (1991) 54 Cal.3d 411, 448 (Webster); People v. Gutierrez (2002) 28 Cal.4th 1083, 1149, fn. 10 (Gutierrez).) However, since in a typical first degree murder by poison case there is no question that the defendant acted with willfulness, deliberation, and premeditation, we have never addressed whether there is a mental state component of first degree poison murder. We now clarify that to prove first degree murder by means of poison, the prosecution must show the defendant deliberately gave the victim poison with the intent to kill the victim or inflict injury likely to cause death. The trial court’s instructions did not include this element of first degree poison murder. This was error. And because a rational jury could have concluded the prosecution did not prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Brown deliberately gave her newborn daughter the poisonous substances in her breast milk with the intent to kill her or inflict injury likely to cause her death, the error was prejudicial. Accordingly, we reverse Brown’s first degree murder conviction. I. BACKGROUND A. Trial Court Proceedings 1. Evidence of Events Leading to Baby’s Death In a recorded interview played for the jury, Brown told a police investigator she met her husband, Daylon Reed, when she was twenty years old. Reed dealt and used drugs, including marijuana, methamphetamine, and heroin, and soon after meeting

3 PEOPLE v. BROWN Opinion of the Court by Groban, J.

him, Brown began to use heroin. A few months into their relationship, Brown learned she was pregnant. Brown continued to use heroin during her pregnancy and occasionally also used methamphetamine. Brown had almost no prenatal care and she and Reed made no arrangements for their baby’s birth. When Brown went into labor, the couple got a hotel room and Brown called a friend and asked her to find a midwife. Brown’s friend called a friend of hers, a doula who had assisted a midwife with some deliveries, who agreed to attend the birth. Brown smoked heroin while in labor, believing it would help with the pain, hiding that she was doing so from the doula and her mother, who also was present for the birth, by smoking in the bathroom. At trial, several witnesses testified that Brown said she did not want to give birth in a hospital because she was afraid that if she tested positive for drugs the baby would be taken away. Reed’s sister Michelle testified that she had given birth to a baby boy at a local hospital not long after meeting Brown. The baby experienced withdrawal, Child and Family Services became involved, and Michelle voluntarily relinquished custody. Brown’s daughter, Dae-Lynn Rose, appeared healthy at birth, but a couple days later began to appear ill. The doula, Brown’s mother, and Brown’s father and stepmother all advised Brown and Reed to take the baby to a doctor, but they did not do so. Brown admitted to the police investigator that she believed that if she gave birth at the hospital or took her baby to a doctor, her baby would be taken from her. Nevertheless, Brown said she had been planning to take Dae-Lynn to a doctor on the day she died. Brown also admitted that after Dae-Lynn’s birth, she and Reed smoked heroin almost every day. She said they smoked in

4 PEOPLE v. BROWN Opinion of the Court by Groban, J.

the bathroom so the baby would not inhale it. When confronted, she admitted that she also smoked methamphetamine once during her daughter’s life. Brown fed Dae-Lynn both breast milk and infant formula.

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People v. Brown, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-brown-cal-2023.