People v. Clements

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 4, 2021
DocketE073965
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Clements (People v. Clements) 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. Clements, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 2/4/21

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

THE PEOPLE,

Plaintiff and Respondent, E073965

v. (Super.Ct.No. SICRF1989169810)

JODY ANN CLEMENTS, OPINION

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from the Superior Court of Inyo County. Brian Lamb, Judge. Affirmed.

Reed Webb, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and

Appellant.

Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Chief Assistant Attorney

General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General, Robin Urbanski and Meredith S.

White, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.

1 In 1989, after appellant Jody Ann Clements solicited her ex-husband and her

boyfriend to assault her 16-year-old brother, the two killed the brother by stabbing him

and bludgeoning him with a rock and then buried his body in the desert. A jury convicted

Clements of second degree murder in 1990 after the trial judge instructed them on both

natural and probable consequences and implied malice theories of murder.

In 2018, the Legislature enacted Senate Bill No. 1437 (2017-2018 Reg. Sess.)

(SB 1437), which, among other things, amended the definition of murder to eliminate the

natural and probable consequences doctrine. (Pen. Code, §§ 188, subd. (a)(3); 189, subd.

(a), unlabeled statutory citations refer to this code.) The Legislature also added a new

provision to the Penal Code, which establishes a procedure for vacating murder

convictions predating the amendment if they could not be sustained under the amended

definition of murder. (§ 1170.95; Stats. 2018, ch. 1015, § 4.)

Clements filed a petition arguing she was convicted of second degree murder

under a natural and probable consequences theory and could not be convicted under the

current law. After a hearing, at which the parties agreed to limit the evidence to the

record of conviction, the trial judge looked to our decision in Clements’ original appeal

and other portions of the record of conviction and made two alternative determinations

that: (1) substantial evidence supported the determination that Clements could have been

convicted of second degree murder under an implied malice theory and (2) Clements in

fact committed implied malice second degree murder beyond a reasonable doubt. The

trial judge therefore denied her petition on each of these independent, adequate grounds.

2 Clements argues the trial judge erred by considering this court’s opinion in her

original appeal, by misconstruing the nature of the eligibility determination it was

required to make under the new statute, and by denying her petition in the absence of

substantial evidence supporting a finding of implied malice.

We hold an appellate opinion is part of the record of conviction and may be relied

on in deciding a section 1170.95 petition on the merits, so the trial judge did not err in

doing so in this case. We also hold the trial judge sits as a fact finder at a hearing under

section 1170.95, subdivision (d) and that substantial evidence supports the trial judge’s

finding beyond a reasonable doubt that Clements committed implied malice second

degree murder. The trial judge correctly denied Clements’ petition for resentencing for

that reason.

I

FACTS

A. The Facts as Set Out in the Opinion from Clements’ First Appeal

The facts in this part of the opinion come directly from the unpublished opinion

we issued in 1994, affirming Clements’ conviction in case No. E008001.

In January 1988, Clements and her ex-husband located the victim at a juvenile

facility in New Mexico. Clements and the victim, who were brother and sister, had been

separated during childhood. The three traveled some and eventually settled in Texas,

during which time sexual relations took place between Clements and the victim, and

between all three at once. This caused fighting between Clements and her ex-husband,

3 and Clements returned to California with the victim in late April or early May.

The relationship between Clements and the victim soured in California. After the

murder, Clements admitted she had been envious because the minor victim received

money from the social security system due to the death of their father and she, because of

her majority, did not. Although Clements was, by May before the murder, having a

sexual relationship with her new boyfriend, and was not interested in continuing to have

sex with the victim, the latter did not share her feelings and resented her relationship with

her boyfriend. According to Clements, the victim was taking drugs (although she also

admitted supplying them to him), drinking, hot-rodding his car, and being abusive to her

and her mother, all of which additionally upset her. Clements and the victim often

argued, and two fights in particular erupted into physical confrontations, during one of

which Clements said to the victim, “I’ll see you dead, you son of a bitch, and my friends

will do it.” At some point, Clements told a relative that she never hated anyone in her life

as much as she hated the victim and she feared she would kill him if they got into another

fight.

Clements’ boyfriend testified at trial that Clements told him during this time that

she wanted the victim dead. He stated that in late June, she called her ex-husband in

Texas, reported to him her extreme unhappiness with the victim and asked him to come

out and kill the victim. According to the boyfriend, Clements also asked him to help in

the killing, after her ex-husband arrived in California and made clear his intention to

proceed with the murder, and they discussed together the various ways this could be

4 accomplished. The boyfriend stated that on July 5, after Clements’ ex-husband had twice

informed her that he and the boyfriend were going to kill the victim that night, the two

men took the victim to a remote area of the desert, stabbed the victim and bludgeoned

him with a rock, and buried him in a grave they had dug earlier in the day. Upon their

return to Clements’ home, the boyfriend testified, the ex-husband told her what they had

done.

Clements’ mother and her boyfriend’s mother testified that Clements lied to the

latter twice that night about the boyfriend’s whereabouts. Clements’ mother also testified

that after the men left that night to get the victim, Clements told her that they had gone to

kill the victim. Clements’ mother confirmed the boyfriend’s testimony that Clements was

told about the killing when the men returned to the house. Clements, herself, admitted at

trial that she tried to wipe the victim’s blood off her ex-husband’s shoes and body, and

she went with him twice in the days following the killing to destroy evidence. She also

admitted that she and her mother took some of the victim’s possessions when the men

returned from the murder scene with them.

A relative testified that in the weeks following the killing, Clements and her ex-

husband attempted to obtain the victim’s social security checks, which were still coming

because the body had not yet been discovered.

Months later, Clements admitted to her boyfriend’s then new girlfriend that she

and the boyfriend had killed the victim because she did not like him.

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Bluebook (online)
People v. Clements, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-clements-calctapp-2021.