People v. Cameron

30 Cal. App. 4th 591, 36 Cal. Rptr. 2d 656, 94 Daily Journal DAR 16813, 94 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 9073, 1994 Cal. App. LEXIS 1214
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 29, 1994
DocketC011856
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 30 Cal. App. 4th 591 (People v. Cameron) 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. Cameron, 30 Cal. App. 4th 591, 36 Cal. Rptr. 2d 656, 94 Daily Journal DAR 16813, 94 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 9073, 1994 Cal. App. LEXIS 1214 (Cal. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinions

Opinion

BLEASE, Acting P. J.

Defendant was convicted by a jury of murder of the second degree and found to have used a deadly weapon in the commission of the offense. The trial court struck the enhancement and imposed the term prescribed by law. Defendant’s salient contention on appeal is that the trial court prejudicially erred in giving an instruction which implied that voluntary intoxication has no bearing on the offense of murder in the second degree with implied malice.

In the published portion of the opinion1 we conclude that the contention has merit. We will modify the judgment to conviction of involuntary manslaughter, the lowest offense of which the defendant would have been convicted but for the error, reinstate an enhancement which had been stricken, and give the People the option of retrial.

Facts and Procedural Background

Early in the morning of November 4,1990, defendant stabbed Harold Moe in the leg. Moe bled to death soon thereafter.

On the evening of November 3, Paula Taylor-Costa (who testified under a grant of immunity) and defendant went in a limousine to a bar with some men. Both women were drinking alcoholic beverages and Taylor-Costa testified that defendant was drunk. Defendant testified she had drunk a glass [595]*595of champagne and two and one-half beers and that she was feeling “tipsy” but was not drunk. She also testified that she was “sobering up” late in the evening prior to leaving the bar.

Taylor-Costa testified that sometime during the evening she and defendant had a conversation with a man named Joe and agreed to meet at midnight with Joe and his roommate John Halen at their house. Taylor-Costa had spoken to Halen about meeting him around midnight and he had agreed. Defendant and Taylor-Costa departed for that location about 11:30 p.m. They obtained a ride from two strangers.

When defendant and Taylor-Costa arrived at Halen’s residence they walked straight in. Jessica McNeil and Laura Kling were standing behind the kitchen counter. McNeil and Kling testified that Taylor-Costa and defendant walked directly upstairs and came back down less than five minutes later. Taylor-Costa introduced herself and asked if Kling was Halen’s girlfriend. Kling affirmed this. Taylor-Costa announced that she loved Halen, had almost married him, and that she had a black Corvette. Her manner was rude, “snotty,” and she appeared to be attempting to provoke Kling. Defendant did not participate in the conversation.

Halen and Moe, who was McNeil’s boyfriend, had been outside; they entered the room. The situation was “uncomfortable,” Halen and TaylorCosta spoke with each other. Taylor-Costa said she and defendant were “going to leave now.” But Halen suggested that Taylor-Costa go upstairs with him to talk. She, Halen, and defendant went upstairs. Kling was angry; McNeil thought Halen was rude and should have allowed Taylor-Costa and defendant to leave.

Halen, Moe, Kling, and McNeil had been drinking alcoholic beverages during the evening. They had all been in a good mood. Moe was under the influence of the alcohol; his posthumous blood-alcohol level was .16, indicating consumption of approximately 7.6 ounces of vodka. Moe talked with Kling and McNeil about their desire that Taylor-Costa and defendant leave when Halen went upstairs with them. Moe’s mood changed a little bit during this conversation; he was annoyed by the disruption caused by Taylor-Costa and defendant.

When Halen and Taylor-Costa went upstairs, after a couple of minutes of conversation, they began “kissing and all that.” (Taylor-Costa recognized that she had placed defendant in a difficult situation, however, she was drunk and “pretty preoccupied.”) Defendant was uncomfortable observing the foreplay and went downstairs.

[596]*596When she rejoined the others Moe told her she should “get out.” Moe and defendant quarreled loudly. Kling gave the following account of the dialogue. “He would call her a bitch, and she would say fuck you, and he would call her a whore. And she would say don’t mess with me.” Kling said defendant repeatedly warned Moe not to “mess with” her, referring to him as “little boy.” Defendant was 29 years old; Moe was 18 years old.

McNeil seconded Kling’s account. McNeil testified that Moe then called defendant “something that stung” and defendant slapped him across the face. Moe slapped her back; McNeil told the police in her initial statement that Moe hit defendant back about “four times as hard as she hit him.” At trial McNeil testified that she did not think his slap was harder, rather it was only louder because of the way that it hit. Kling testified defendant’s slap was hard and Moe’s equally hard. She said defendant grabbed her face and looked shocked, surprised, and angry that Moe had slapped her back. Kling and McNeil testified that McNeil stepped between the defendant and Moe and told Moe he “shouldn’t hit girls.” Defendant went back upstairs.

Defendant’s testimony about this portion of the incident is dissimilar in the following respects. Moe hit her back significantly harder than she hit him. She fell back a couple of steps and Moe advanced and slapped her a second time. She then ran up the stairs.

Moe was 5 feet 10 inches tall and weighed 150 pounds. Defendant is five feet one inch tall and weighed about one hundred pounds.

When defendant arrived upstairs she knocked down a door that Halen had propped up and found Taylor-Costa and Halen lying on the floor preparing for copulation. Taylor-Costa testified that defendant was crying and was very upset. Defendant also appeared very angry. Defendant told TaylorCosta that ‘they” were humiliating her and harassing her. Taylor-Costa testified she was preoccupied with the desire to copulate and “like I didn’t really want to hear her.”

Defendant dumped the contents of her purse on the floor and took up a folding knife containing a single-edged blade measuring three and one-half inches in length. Taylor-Costa testified that defendant remarked, “ ‘I’m not going to take this anymore. They don’t know who they are fucking with. I’m going to stick the little mother fucker. I’m going to stick him.’ ” TaylorCosta also testified that defendant also expressed in some manner that she was scared, afraid.

Defendant testified: “From what I can recall, as I was walking down the stairs, I said if I can’t get out I was going to stick him.” She also testified [597]*597that as she was coming down the stairs she heard Moe say “something about they were going to kick my ass, and that I deserved everything I was going to get.” Kling and McNeil denied that Moe threatened to “beat up” defendant at any point in the evening.

Kling gave the following account of the events after defendant returned downstairs. Defendant walked up to Moe with the knife in her right hand and the quarrel resumed. She reiterated her earlier remarks about not “messing” with her and told Moe her boyfriend was going to “kick his ass.” He replied by yelling at her to “get the fuck out of here” and continuing to call her “names.” Moe pushed the defendant with both hands “up against the shoulders like a shove.” She stepped or stumbled back a few steps. They were still arguing. Defendant said: “Don’t fuck with me, little boy. I’ll kill you.” On cross-examination Kling testified defendant said: “Don’t touch me or I’ll kill you.” Defendant and Moe reached the threshold of Halen’s house. Defendant was outside, on a step lower than Moe.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 Cal. App. 4th 591, 36 Cal. Rptr. 2d 656, 94 Daily Journal DAR 16813, 94 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 9073, 1994 Cal. App. LEXIS 1214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-cameron-calctapp-1994.