People v. Daniels CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 22, 2021
DocketH046156
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Daniels CA6 (People v. Daniels CA6) 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. Daniels CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 10/22/21 P. v. Daniels CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

THE PEOPLE, H046156 (Santa Clara County Plaintiff and Respondent, Super. Ct. No. C1777634)

v.

JAMES EDWARD DANIELS, JR.,

Defendant and Appellant. Defendant James Edward Daniels, Jr. was convicted by a jury of assault by 1 means of force likely to produce great bodily injury (Pen. Code , § 245, subd. (a)(4)), 2 and he admitted three prior strike allegations and one prison prior allegation. The 3 court sentenced him to six years in prison. On appeal, he claims that the trial court prejudicially erred in (1) denying his request for an instruction on defense of property, (2) failing to ensure that a defense witness, who had not been subpoenaed, was available to testify or admit her hearsay 4 statements, and (3) denying his post-trial Marsden motion. He also contends that (4) his trial counsel was prejudicially deficient in failing to seek mental health

1 All statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise indicated. 2 It took the jury less than 40 minutes to reach a verdict. 3 The court refused to strike the strikes, denied defendant’s section 17, subdivision (b) motion, imposed a doubled midterm for the assault count, and struck the punishment for the prison prior. 4 People v. Marsden (1970) 2 Cal.3d 118 (Marsden). diversion, and (5) we should review sealed records to determine whether the trial court should have disclosed additional documents to the defense. We have reviewed the sealed records and found no additional documents that should have been disclosed. We reject defendant’s remaining contentions and affirm the judgment. I. EVIDENCE PRESENTED AT TRIAL Mariam Koshkakaryan was working as a court runner in downtown San Jose on October 27, 2017 shortly after noon. She was crossing the street when she heard defendant, whom she had never met before, making crude comments directed at her. He said: “Hey, baby. You have a fat ass. Let me get at that. You look fine.” He got off his bike and began following her on foot. Defendant came up behind her, and she said “Hey, what’s up.” She told him something like: “Dude, you’re crazy; stay away from me.” Koshkakaryan told defendant to “fuck off” and used other profanities in an attempt to ward him off. Koshkakaryan, who had her phone in her hand, “felt threatened” so she tried to call 911. Defendant “slapped the phone out of [her] hand,” causing it to fall and break. He spit in her face and said: “Oh, you’re a man. I could hit you if I want to because I see you as a man.” She saw a “screwdriver” in the basket of his bike so she grabbed it 5 to keep him from using it on her. She picked her phone back up, called 911, and told defendant that she was calling the police. At that point, he “got really mad.” Koshkakaryan’s 911 call was played for the jury. On the recording, defendant could be heard saying “I’m gonna break . . .” just before Koshkakaryan said “This guy’s threatening me . . . .” She explained to the dispatcher that defendant was “following” her and was “trying to hurt me right now.” Following an inaudible noise,

5 Koshkakaryan explained at trial that she was “not really good with tools or what they are” and therefore called the item, which she later learned was a wrench, a “screwdriver.” “Every tool is a screwdriver to me.”

2 she said: “Ugh, he just fuckin’ hit me across the head.” Koshkakaryan could then be heard crying. She told the dispatcher that defendant had “[s]macked me across the head.” Asked if defendant had any weapons, Koshkakaryan said: “He had a screwdriver . . . I took it from him.” The dispatcher told Koshkakaryan that officers were on the way, but Koshkakaryan emphasized that she was working and needed “to 6 go to work.” Koshkakaryan provided a detailed description of defendant and said she did not need medical attention. She was reluctant to wait for the police because she needed to go to work and “you guys aren’t gonna do anything . . . .” However, the officers then arrived, and the call ended. At trial, Koshkakaryan described how defendant had assaulted her. “[H]e full fisted swung around and whacked me across the head . . . .” Defendant “spun around in a circle and then just whacked me across the head as hard as he could” with a closed fist to the top right of her head above the ear. The blow caused her head to hit the side of a crosswalk pole, and she dropped her phone again. Koshkakaryan testified at trial: “He didn’t deliberately try to hit m[y] head against the pole. . . . [¶] But he took it to a physical level, and he hit me full force across the head that caused me to hit my head” on the pole. Defendant struck her only once; “one strong punch.” He did not kick her. Koshkakaryan had the tool she had taken from defendant in her hand when he punched her. After he punched her, Koshkakaryan screamed and picked up her phone, and defendant fled. She had only a brief encounter with the officers who arrived because she was in a hurry to complete her work assignment and did not feel that the officers were “really listening.” Koshkakaryan thought the officers “just didn’t care.” The police arrived within a few minutes of Koshkakaryan’s call. A portion of their encounter with Koshkakaryan was captured on their body-worn cameras. When

6 Koshkakaryan testified that she needed to go to Palo Alto to serve some papers.

3 the officers arrived in response to her 911 call, they observed that her face was “kind of red” and her eyes were “maybe watery.” The officer did not recall seeing any visible injuries, and Koshkakaryan told the officer that she was “okay, dude.” She told the officer that defendant had “ ‘rammed’ ” her head into a pole, which she pointed out. Koshkakaryan explained to the officer that defendant “did a, like a fucking weird ass turnaround, he gained like, fucking momentum, or something” and then “grabbed my head and he just whacked my head against it.” Koshkakaryan said that defendant had punched her with a closed fist “[l]ike 3 times.” She gave the officers the tool she said she had taken from defendant’s hand. Koshkakaryan also told the police that defendant “started kicking me,” “spit at me,” and “broke my fucking phone.” The officers were not able to locate defendant. After defendant assaulted her, Koshkakaryan was “very dizzy” and “wasn’t thinking straight,” and her “whole body felt sore . . . especially [her] head . . . .” She could not recall which part of her head hit the pole. It was the force of defendant’s punch that propelled her into the pole. She did not see a doctor for her pain because she had only “basic” health insurance that did not cover much. Koshkakaryan testified that “a head injury is not something that you see.” Because she was concerned about getting her job done, she left, drove her car to Palo Alto, and completed her work assignment. She called her boss and told her boss about the incident, and her boss told her to go home, which she did. The next day she had a bump on her head, but she paid no attention to it. Koshkakaryan pointed out that she worked 90 hours a week. On November 5, 2017, Koshkakaryan was returning to her downtown San Jose residence from the grocery store when defendant rode up to her on his bicycle and said: “Hey, I want to make up with you.” She was “scared,” ran into her home, and called 911 to report that defendant was outside her home. She told the dispatcher that defendant “beat the shit outta me” the previous week on the street. “[H]e took my

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