People v. Davis

102 Cal. App. 4th 377, 125 Cal. Rptr. 2d 519, 2002 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 9873, 2002 Daily Journal DAR 11121, 2002 Cal. App. LEXIS 4678
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 24, 2002
DocketNo. B150778
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 102 Cal. App. 4th 377 (People v. Davis) 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. Davis, 102 Cal. App. 4th 377, 125 Cal. Rptr. 2d 519, 2002 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 9873, 2002 Daily Journal DAR 11121, 2002 Cal. App. LEXIS 4678 (Cal. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Opinion

JOHNSON, Acting P. J.

A jury convicted defendant on three counts of failing to comply with the sex offender registration and notification requirements in Penal Code section 290, subdivisions (a)(1)(A) and (f)(1). The principal issue on appeal is whether a person commits a separate failure-to-register offense under Penal Code section 290, subdivision (a)(1)(A) each time he enters the same jurisdiction and fails to register within the specified period. We hold each failure to register constitutes a separate offense. Therefore we affirm defendant’s two convictions for violating the statute’s registration requirement. However, we reverse defendant’s conviction for failure to inform the last registering agency of his change of address upon leaving the jurisdiction due to insufficiency of the evidence and instructional error. Finally, we find defendant is entitled to two additional days of presentence credit.

Facts and Proceedings Below

Anthony M. Davis was convicted of rape in 1980. After his release from prison, he moved to Fairfield, California in 1983 and registered as a sex [380]*380offender under Penal Code section 290. In June 1997, Davis moved to Ventura County and registered with the Ventura County Sheriff.

On October 31, 1997, Davis and his wife rented an apartment in Canoga Park. The apartment manager saw Davis in the apartment four days later when she came to make some repairs. Davis’s wife testified that after he helped her move into the apartment he went to Cleveland, Ohio and Germany, and she did not see him again until the following year.

Evidence showed Davis again lived in Fairfield from October 1998 to February 1999. There was also evidence Davis went to a Department of Motor Vehicles office in Los Angeles County in October 1998 to renew his driver’s license. He gave the Canoga Park address as his residence. A month later, Davis was involved in an accident in Los Angeles while driving his wife’s car. In completing the accident report to the police he gave the Canoga Park address as his residence.

Davis first came to the attention of the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) on August 8, 1999, when he was questioned as a possible rape suspect and released. A subsequent investigation, however, revealed Davis’s prior rape conviction and the fact he had not registered with the LAPD as a sex offender. Police officers went to the Canoga Park address given them by Davis during the August 8 questioning. While the officers were standing outside the apartment building, Davis drove up in his wife’s car. One of the officers asked Davis if he lived in the building and Davis admitted he did. He told the officer, “We have been here about two years.”

The officers instructed Davis to go to the West Valley police station to register as a sex offender. When he did he was arrested.

At trial, Davis’s wife testified Davis had not stayed at the Canoga Park apartment during August 1999. She was impeached with her testimony from the preliminary hearing where she testified Davis had stayed in Canoga Park from August 8th through 20th.

A jury convicted defendant of two violations of Penal Code section 290, subdivision (a)(1)(A),1 which requires sex offenders to register their residence or location with the local law enforcement agency within five working days of entering the jurisdiction. The first violation was failure to register with the LAPD during the period October 20, 1998, to August 5, 1999. The second violation was failing to register with the LAPD during the period August 6, 1999, to August 30, 1999. The jury also convicted defendant of [381]*381failing to report a change of address when he left Los Angeles in violation of section 290, subdivision (f)(1). The trial court sentenced defendant to an unstayed prison term of three years, four months.

Discussion

I. Davis’s Two Convictions for Failing to Register Were Based on Two Separate Duties.

Section 290, subdivision (a)(1)(A) states in relevant part: “Every person [convicted of specified sex offenses], for the rest of his or her life while residing in, or, if he or she has no residence, while located within California . . . shall be required to register with the chief of police of the city in which he or she is residing . . . within five working days of coming into [that city].” Any person who willfully violates any requirement of section 290 “is guilty of a continuing offense.”2

The jury could have found from the evidence Davis was in the City of Los Angeles for at least five consecutive working days between October 20, 1998, and August 5, 1999, and failed to register with the LAPD, as alleged in count one of the information. The jury could also have found Davis left Los Angeles for at least five consecutive working days prior to August 6, 1999, and then returned to Los Angeles for at least five consecutive working days between August 6 and August 30 1999, and failed to register with the LAPD as alleged in count three of the information.

Davis does not dispute the sufficiency of the evidence to support these findings. Rather, he challenges the legal significance of his comings and goings. Because failing to register is a “continuing offense,” Davis argues, he is guilty of only one violation of section 290, subdivision (a)(1)(A). This violation began when he failed to register after being in Los Angeles for five consecutive business days in November 1998 and ended when he was arrested in August 1999. Davis relies on the rule that “[i]n the case of continuing offenses, only one violation occurs even though the proscribed conduct may extend over a [sc] indefinite period.”3 Thus, where a defendant acts “in a constant fashion with but a single intent and objective in mind,” i.e., the intent not to register as a sex offender, he commits only a single offense.4

Davis’s argument misses the point. The question here is not whether a continuous offense can be parsed into multiple violations (it can’t) but [382]*382whether a separate offense is committed each time a person required to register as a sex offender enters the same jurisdiction and fails to register within the specified period. For the answer to this question we look to the definition of a “continuous offense” and the purpose of the sex offender registration requirement.

In Wright v. Superior Court, our Supreme Court held a continuous offense ordinarily “ ‘is marked by a continuing duty in the defendant to do an act which he fails to do.’ ”5 The offense continues “ ‘as long as the duty persists and there is a failure to perform that duty.’ . . ,”6

Clearly the duty here is the duty to register with the local law enforcement agency. We can determine how long this duty persists by looking at the purpose of the registration requirement. This purpose is well established. It is “ ‘to assure that persons convicted of the crimes enumerated therein shall be readily available for police surveillance at all times because the Legislature deemed them likely to commit similar offenses in the future.’ . . .”7

Given the purpose of section 290, to allow local law enforcement agencies to keep known sex offenders under surveillance, the duty to register arises when the sex offender enters a jurisdiction and ends when he leaves the jurisdiction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 Cal. App. 4th 377, 125 Cal. Rptr. 2d 519, 2002 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 9873, 2002 Daily Journal DAR 11121, 2002 Cal. App. LEXIS 4678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-davis-calctapp-2002.