People v. Crandall CA1/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 29, 2013
DocketA134591
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Crandall CA1/2 (People v. Crandall CA1/2) 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. Crandall CA1/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 10/29/13 P. v. Crandall CA1/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, A134591 v. CHRISTOPHER CRANDALL, (San Francisco County Super. Ct. No. 201235) Defendant and Appellant.

I. INTRODUCTION After a several-week jury trial (the third such trial for appellant) on a charge of second degree murder, the jury advised the court that it was unable to reach a verdict on that charge. Over the objections of defense counsel, the court granted the prosecution‟s motion to dismiss that charge and amend the information to charge appellant with one count of voluntary manslaughter. The jury found appellant guilty of that charge; he appeals, claiming both instructional error and ineffective assistance of counsel. We reject appellant‟s arguments and affirm his conviction for voluntary manslaughter. II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND On July 27, 2006, the building manager of an apartment building on Polk Street in San Francisco was accompanying a pest control worker, who was working in the various apartments in that building. When the two of them entered apartment No. 204, an apartment leased to Guy West, they noticed “a very strong odor” in the apartment, and promptly found the body of West, covered in blankets on a bed in a walk-in closet in the

1 apartment. The building manager summoned the police, who were advised by neighbors in the building that appellant had recently been “a roommate of the victim.” Early the following month, the police detained appellant after being advised that a “wanted person” was in a nearby store. Two inspectors then interviewed appellant; the interview was videotaped and later played for the jury. During that interrogation, appellant revealed that he had lived with West for about “eight and a half years,” and had initially had a sexual relationship with him, a relationship which later became platonic. During the days, per West‟s directions, appellant would stay away from West‟s apartment until about 5:00 p.m., but then return. During those days, appellant would walk the streets, look for food in garbage cans, and collect cigarette butts. At night, appellant slept on a couch in his clothes, while West used the bed in his apartment. Soon, the friendship of the two men deteriorated, and West would often get angry at appellant when appellant felt he had done nothing wrong. According to appellant, “I was always good to him and he was never good back” and “the man was in a lot of ways a monster . . . and I couldn‟t get away from him.” Indeed, per appellant‟s statement to the police, West would sometimes threaten appellant, and say such things as: “Don‟t make me knock your head off.” More recently, West had allegedly “threatened to kill me a few times.” Appellant was afraid to leave the apartment in the evening, however, because he was homeless and “scared of shelters.” Appellant‟s initial version of events during his questioning by the inspectors was that he had learned from a friend that West had died of natural causes. When the police told him that such was not the case, appellant surmised that a stranger trying to get into the apartment “through our window” might have been responsible. After further questioning by the police, however, appellant admitted that he had been responsible for West‟s death, but that such might have been “some kind of an accident.” Per this version of events, “in the middle of the night” West was, once again, angry with appellant, and had been “screaming and slamming doors.” Appellant told the police that he had “put up with so many years of his crap” and thus completely “lost control,” “snapped,” picked up a glass pitcher and hit West on the side of his head with it;

2 he did so “more than once” and “from behind.” West fell to the floor, made a “weird noise,” and appellant then hit West “other times while he was on the ground” with the pitcher. The police asked if West had said “anything while you were hitting him?” Appellant responded: “No, he did not have a chance . . . I was upset, I lost . . . completely lost control.” Per appellant‟s statement to the police, he told no one about West‟s death or how it happened much less reported it to the authorities because he thought he would be punished for it. He stayed in West‟s apartment a few more days, then moved West‟s body to the bed because “he had already started to decay.” He then left the apartment and stayed in shelters and other such places until his arrest. On March 26, 2007, the San Francisco District Attorney‟s office filed a one-count information charging appellant with first degree murder. Following a five-day jury trial and jury deliberations of the same length, appellant was acquitted of first degree murder but convicted of second degree murder. On appeal to this court, on July 15, 2010, we reversed that judgment and remanded the case to the trial court for a new trial for appellant. (People v. Crandall (A119525, July 15, 2010) [nonpub. opn.].) (Id. 8-27.) At his second trial the following year, the jury found itself deadlocked between verdicts of voluntary manslaughter and second degree murder. On March 8, 2011,1 the court declared a mistrial. The trial the results of which we are now reviewing was, thus, appellant‟s third trial. It started on September 9 and continued until early October. Jury deliberations began on October 5 and continued the following day. On the next day of their deliberations, October 12 (there was apparently a delay because of a sick juror), the jury sent a note to the court indicating it was deadlocked on the issue of second degree murder. Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rule 2.1036, the trial court then directed the jury to continue its deliberations and, in so doing, to consider whether there were any “specific concerns which if resolved might assist them in reaching a verdict.” The jury

1 All further dates noted are in 2011.

3 responded with two questions to which, after conferring with counsel, the court responded. One of those responses was to advise the jury that, pursuant to CALCRIM No. 640, with which it had instructed the jury “you may consider these different kinds of homicide in whatever order you wish, but you cannot reach a verdict on the lesser inclusive of manslaughter until you find the defendant not guilty of second degree murder.” Both counsel agreed to this response to the jury. On October 13, the jury advised the court that it was deadlocked on the principal charge against appellant, i.e., murder in the second degree. The court allowed the district attorney to dismiss that charge and amend the information to charge appellant with voluntary manslaughter. Per the reporter‟s transcript of that day of the trial, the trial court apparently did so because its clerk said: “[T]he information only has one count, so if you‟re dismissing that, how would we enter the 192?” The clerk explained that problem further thusly: “So if we dismiss count one, and it‟s not just the computer, it‟s general, there will be nothing in the information” and thus “[t]here‟s nothing in the system. I can‟t enter the one I need to in the system if it‟s hung.” Defense counsel then objected “to the late amendment . . . if it‟s amended to have a new count one . . . .” The trial court disagreed with defense counsel‟s objection and instructed the jury, via CALCRIM No. 205, that “murder in the second degree no longer needs to be decided in this case.

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Bluebook (online)
People v. Crandall CA1/2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-crandall-ca12-calctapp-2013.