People v. Burgess CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 26, 2022
DocketD078156
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Burgess CA4/1 (People v. Burgess CA4/1) 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. Burgess CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 4/26/22 P. v. Burgess CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

THE PEOPLE, D078156

Plaintiff and Respondent,

v. (Super. Ct. No. SCE392962)

KEVIN BURGESS,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Steven E. Stone, Judge. Affirmed. Gary V. Crooks, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant. Rob Bonta, Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General, Charles C. Ragland and Michael Dolida, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent. INTRODUCTION Over the Fourth of July holiday in 2019, Kevin Burgess strangled his

estranged wife Jane Doe1 to unconsciousness two times, fashioned a noose and put it around her neck, prevented her from leaving the house, and told Jane’s young children he would kill her if they tried to leave the house to get help. He was convicted by a jury of assault, corporal injury to a spouse, false imprisonment by violence or menace, making a criminal threat, and misdemeanor willful cruelty to a child. At trial, the prosecution was permitted to present evidence of three uncharged acts of prior domestic violence, in which Burgess had physically isolated Jane, strangled her, and threatened to kill her. Burgess appeals, claiming the trial court committed evidentiary error when it admitted evidence of his prior acts of domestic violence pursuant to

Evidence Code section 1109, subdivision (a)(1).2 He also contends the court committed instructional error because it failed to inform the jury that it could not consider the prior acts of domestic violence when deciding his guilt of the charged crimes of false imprisonment or willful cruelty to a child. He further contends there was insufficient evidence to support his convictions for false imprisonment and making a criminal threat. We affirm the judgment.

1 Pursuant to rule 8.90(b)(4) of the California Rules of Court, we use an anonymous first name and surname to protect the victim’s identity. In subsequent references, we use only the first initials of the victim’s children, and the name and first initial of the surname of the testifying adult witnesses.

2 All further unspecified statutory references are to the Evidence Code.

2 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND I. The Evidence At Trial Trial began on February 5, 2020. After the prosecution presented its case-in-chief, the defense rested without presenting evidence. We summarize the testimony from the prosecution’s witnesses. A. The Charged Crimes of July 4 and July 5, 2019 1. Jane’s Testimony Jane and Burgess had been in an on-and-off romantic relationship since 2010. They married in April 2018 and were still married at the time of

trial in February 2020.3 Between March and July 2019, they were separated but trying to get back together. Jane lived in a two-story townhome with her five children: S. (age 12), R. (age nine), A. (age eight), B. (age six), and J. (age three). Burgess had moved out and had not lived in the townhome since March 2019.

At around 8:00 a.m. on July 4, 2019,4 Jane and six-year-old B. were asleep in Jane’s upstairs bedroom. Jane was awakened by Burgess yelling at B. to get up and clean her room. Burgess had come into the house uninvited and unannounced, and Jane did not know how he got in. When Jane sat up in bed, she could see Burgess “down the hall . . . yelling at [B.] to clean her room.” Burgess “physically” but not “forcefully” took B. to her room, while the child was “groggy” and “disoriented” from still being “half-asleep.” Jane

3 At the time of the trial, Jane had reconciled with Burgess. She acknowledged she did not want to testify, because despite what Burgess had done to her, she still loved him.

4 All further dates refer to 2019 if no year is specified.

3 started yelling at Burgess, and he yelled back. At some point, he grabbed Jane’s cell phone and “smashed” it on the bathroom counter, breaking it and rendering it inoperable. Burgess then stood blocking the entranceway to her bedroom. Jane “freak[s] out” when an entrance or exit is blocked; it causes her to have “a panic attack” and makes it “hard [for her] to breathe.” But Jane wanted to avoid “hav[ing] this type of day,” so she sat down and played a music video on her bedroom television. The song she played was “Independence Day”⎯a song about “family violence.” Playing that song was Jane’s “passive aggressive” response, a “Fuck You” message, to Burgess’s “drama” of coming in uninvited, screaming at B. and breaking her phone. Hearing the song, Burgess broke the television by throwing the smashed phone at it. Jane pushed past Burgess to get out of the bedroom, and tried to go downstairs. But Burgess followed her. They were “tussling” on the stairs. He was “trying to hold [her] from going downstairs,” and she “was trying to break free of him.” At some point, Burgess “put his hands around [her] neck.” Jane cannot remember “anything after that.” The next thing Jane remembered was waking up at the bottom of the stairs. Her face was wet because Burgess and some of her kids had put water on it. She felt “disoriented and weak.” Burgess was trying to help her get up but she “couldn’t move.” She did not know how long it took until she was able to get up, but eventually, she got to the couch. Later, when she went to the bathroom, she noticed her panties were wet. She had urinated on herself. Jane remained disoriented for “quite a while” the rest of the day. But it was the Fourth of July, and she had changed shifts at work to spend the holiday with her kids. So even though she “was in shock,” she barbecued on the back patio “to try to salvage it for them.”

4 Burgess remained in the house the rest of the day and night. Jane was scared with Burgess in the house, because the kids were there and Burgess “wasn’t himself.” “He was a maniac . . . [l]ike . . . when a bipolar person . . . has . . . like a severe attack, and they’re not all there.” Jane did not feel she could leave the house alone. She did not try because she felt “very, very weak, and very disoriented.” She also believed Burgess “probably wouldn’t have allowed” her to leave without him. In the evening of July 4 or the “early morning” of July 5, inside the garage, Burgess tried to tie her arms together with something, either a zip tie or a shoelace, but she “fought it off.” Jane did not sleep much that night because Burgess was “opening every box and going through everything” in the house. The next morning on July 5, Jane was trying to come up with a plan “to get out of the house without escalation,” but she was having trouble thinking. “[Her] head was going really slow.” And she was trying to get her “gears to move properly,” but “they were not.” Jane did not know how they were going to escape but she told 12-year-old S. to “[b]e dressed [and] ready.” Jane made several attempts to leave the house by going “towards the front door.” But each time, Burgess stopped her. Once, Burgess stopped her from getting through the front door by grabbing her sweater and pulling her back in so that she “went back into . . . the couch or something.” In another attempt to escape, Jane and S. boosted eight-year-old A. over the back patio fence so he could go get help from the children’s babysitter who lived about half a mile away. But after they put A. over the fence, “he didn’t go.” Instead, he came back around to the front door and rang the doorbell.

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People v. Burgess CA4/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-burgess-ca41-calctapp-2022.