People v. Burns

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 21, 2023
DocketD080779
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Burns (People v. Burns) 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. Burns, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 9/21/23

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

THE PEOPLE, D080779

Plaintiff and Respondent,

v. (Super. Ct. No. FSB800199)

BRANDON PARKS BURNS,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of San Bernardino County, Ronald M. Christianson, Judge. Affirmed. Law Offices of James Koester and James Jay Koester for Defendant and Appellant. Rob Bonta, Attorney General, Charles C. Ragland, Assistant Attorney General, Christopher P. Beesley and Michael Dodd Butera, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent. Consistent with common law tradition, California law creates varying levels of culpability for homicide, including first and second degree murder, voluntary manslaughter, and involuntary manslaughter. In People v. McCoy (2001) 25 Cal.4th 1111 (McCoy), the Supreme Court concluded that codefendants in the same homicide could have different levels of culpability for the death, depending on their different mental states. Subsequent cases have recognized that someone who aids and abets a homicide might have greater or lesser responsibility for that result than the perpetrator. (See People v. Samaniego (2009) 172 Cal.App.4th 1148, 1164 (Samaniego); People v. Nero (2010) 181 Cal.App.4th 504, 518 (Nero).) In doing so, these later cases criticized language in a standard jury instruction on aiding and abetting liability, former CALCRIM No. 400, that told jurors “[a] person is equally guilty of the crime, whether he or she committed the crime personally

or aided and abetted the perpetrator who committed it.” 1 (Italics added.) These opinions warned that the “equally guilty” language of the instruction might mislead jurors in some circumstances by suggesting that once they decide the direct perpetrator is guilty of a particular crime (e.g., first degree murder), the aider and abettor is necessarily guilty of the same crime, regardless of his or her mental state. (Samaniego, at p. 1165; Nero, at pp. 517–518.) In August 2010, after the decisions in both Samaniego and Nero, defendant Brandon Parks Burns was convicted on one count of first degree murder arising out of his participation with a codefendant in a gang-related shooting. The jury in Burns’s case was instructed using the now-disapproved

1 The instruction has since been modified to read, “A person is guilty of a crime whether he or she committed it personally or aided and abetted the perpetrator.” 2 version of CALCRIM No. 400, but his counsel did not argue that he was guilty of a lesser crime than the codefendant. Neither did he assert instructional error on appeal. In 2022, however, Burns filed a petition for resentencing under Penal

Code section 1172.6 2 (former section 1170.95), claiming he “could not presently be convicted of murder . . . because of changes made to [sections] 188 and 189, effective January l, 2019.” He argued that based on the error in former CALCRIM No. 400, the jury might have convicted him based on some “other theory under which malice is imputed to a person based solely on that person’s participation in a crime.” (§ 1172.6, subd. (a)(1).) This possibility, he maintained, required that he be granted an evidentiary hearing. (Id., subd. (d).) The superior court disagreed and summarily denied his petition. Even accepting Burns’s legal argument regarding the flaw in the earlier version of CALCRIM No. 400, the alleged error he identifies has nothing to do with the 2018 and 2021 legislative changes that gave rise to section 1172.6’s petition process. Section 1172.6 does not create a right to a second appeal, and Burns cannot use it to resurrect a claim that should have been raised in his 2013 direct appeal. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s decision finding that Burns failed to establish a prima facie case for relief under section 1172.6.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Burns and his codefendant Todd Tibbs were jointly tried for first degree murder and attempted premeditated murder of two victims of two gang- related shootings that took place within three weeks of each other. Initially, both defendants were charged with the murder, but only Tibbs was charged

2 All undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code. 3 with the attempted murder. 3 A first trial ended in a hung jury on the murder charges against both defendants, while Tibbs was found guilty of the attempted premeditated murder. Before the retrial on the murder charges, the prosecutor additionally charged Burns with the attempted premeditated murder. Burns eventually pleaded guilty to that charge, and both defendants proceeded to trial on the murder charge. In the middle of the second trial, Tibbs accepted an offer from the prosecutor, agreeing to plead guilty to voluntary manslaughter as a lesser included offense of murder. The jury ultimately convicted Burns of first degree murder, finding true additional gang and firearm allegations. (§§ 186.22, subd. (b), 12022.53, subd. (b).) We affirmed the judgment on direct appeal. (People v. Parks-Burns (Jan. 11, 2013, No. D059348) [nonpub. opn.].) In 2022, Burns filed a resentencing petition under section 1172.6, seeking to vacate his murder conviction. The trial court denied the request without a hearing, finding that he failed to establish a prima facie case for

relief. 4

3 Both parties’ briefs make reference to the factual summary in our opinion deciding Burns’s 2013 direct appeal (People v. Parks-Burns (Jan. 11, 2013, No. D059348) [nonpub. opn.]) as an accurate reflection of material in the trial court record. On our own motion, we take judicial notice of and directly consider the record in that prior appeal, which is appropriate to review in deciding whether a defendant has filed a facially sufficient petition. (People v. Lewis (2021) 11 Cal.5th 952, 970 (Lewis).) 4 The court noted that McCoy, Samaniego, and Nero were all decided before Burns filed his opening brief on direct appeal. In denying Burns’s petition for relief, the court indicated that had it believed section 1172.6 applied to direct aiders and abettors of murder through the “other theory” language in subdivision (a) of section 1172.6, it would have denied the petition on the ground that the issue identified as the basis for relief should 4 DISCUSSION

When reviewing the denial of a petition for relief under section 1172.6, “[w]e independently review a trial court’s determination on whether a petitioner has made a prima facie showing.” (People v. Harden (2022) 81 Cal.App.5th 45, 52 (Harden).) Relying on the since-discarded “equally guilty” language in the former version of the CALCRIM No. 400 jury instruction that was provided to his jury, Burns argues he may have been convicted of murder based on an “[imputation] of the direct murder perpetrator’s malice mens rea to an aider and abettor defendant without necessarily determining that individual’s personally held malice aforethought.” He cites to language in section 1172.6 as amended by Senate Bill No. 775 in 2021, which extended the availability of statutory relief beyond convictions based on the felony murder rule and the natural and probable consequences doctrine (neither of which concededly were at issue in Burns’s case) to any “other theory under which malice is imputed to a person based solely on that person’s participation in a crime.” (§ 1172.6, subd. (a)(1).) Burns contends that the misleading former version of CALCRIM No. 400 created, in effect, an “other theory” of imputed malice within the meaning of section 1172.6. But in focusing exclusively on subdivision (a)(1), Burns ignores the fact that he was entitled to an evidentiary hearing only if he made a prima facie showing of all three conditions listed in subdivision (a)

have been raised on direct appeal from the conviction but had not been so raised.

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Related

In Re Dixon
264 P.2d 513 (California Supreme Court, 1953)
People v. Nero
181 Cal. App. 4th 504 (California Court of Appeal, 2010)
People v. Samaniego
172 Cal. App. 4th 1148 (California Court of Appeal, 2009)
People v. McCoy
24 P.3d 1210 (California Supreme Court, 2001)
People v. Gentile
477 P.3d 539 (California Supreme Court, 2020)
People v. Lewis
491 P.3d 309 (California Supreme Court, 2021)
People v. Strong
514 P.3d 265 (California Supreme Court, 2022)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
People v. Burns, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-burns-calctapp-2023.