People v. DeSantis

831 P.2d 1210, 2 Cal. 4th 1198, 9 Cal. Rptr. 2d 628, 92 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6188, 92 Daily Journal DAR 9772, 1992 Cal. LEXIS 3178
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 13, 1992
DocketS004706. Crim. 25187
StatusPublished
Cited by235 cases

This text of 831 P.2d 1210 (People v. DeSantis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. DeSantis, 831 P.2d 1210, 2 Cal. 4th 1198, 9 Cal. Rptr. 2d 628, 92 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6188, 92 Daily Journal DAR 9772, 1992 Cal. LEXIS 3178 (Cal. 1992).

Opinion

Opinion

MOSK, J.

A jury convicted defendant of the first degree murder of Edward Davies (Pen. Code, § 187). 1 The jury specially found that defendant personally and intentionally committed the murder with premeditation and deliberation. The jury found that the murder was committed during a burglary, a special circumstance (§ 190.2, subds. (a)(17)(vii) & (b)), and during a robbery, also a special circumstance (§ 190.2, subds. (a)(17)(vii) & (b)). The jury found defendant guilty of the attempted murder of Grace Davies, Mr. Davies’s wife (§§ 664 & 187, subd. (a)). The jury also found defendant *1210 guilty of the second degree burglary of the Davies residence (§ 459), of the robberies of Mr. and Mrs. Davies (§ 211), of the unlawful taking of a vehicle (Veh. Code, § 10851), and of conspiracy to commit robbery (§ 182).

The court found true allegations that defendant had suffered five prior felony convictions: 1967 convictions for grand theft auto and for receiving stolen property, a 1973 conviction for first degree robbery, a 1975 conviction of escape from state prison, and a 1977 Oklahoma conviction for robbery with the use of a firearm. The court found not true a sixth allegation—that defendant was convicted in Oklahoma for injury to a public building, a felony.

The jury deadlocked at the penalty phase and a second jury was impaneled. That jury found that the aggravating factors outweighed the mitigating, and fixed the penalty at death. After denying motions for new trial, to strike the findings of special circumstances, and to reduce the penalty, the court sentenced defendant to death on the murder charge, and imposed prison terms on the other counts.

For reasons that will appear, we affirm the judgment in its entirety.

I. Facts

A. Guilt Phase Facts.

1. Undisputed Facts. .

Grace and Edward Davies, an elderly couple known to have a cache of precious metals on the premises of their Sacramento home, were eating lunch and watching television in the kitchen in the early afternoon of December 9, 1981, when the doorbell rang. Mrs. Davies survived to relate the events that follow. Mr. Davies did not.

Mrs. Davies answered the call of the bell. A man outfitted with a hard hat and wearing a red or orange jacket or safety vest and a utility belt stood at the door. An accomplice waited in a telephone company truck parked outside. The man at the door, who would soon rob the couple, said he was from the telephone company and needed to repair the Davieses’ instrument. Mrs. Davies allowed him to enter. A neighbor observed the truck’s arrival from across the street and was in turn noticed by both robbers.

The man located a phone near the kitchen table, stood for a few seconds with his back to the Davieses, and turned around. Mrs. Davies saw he was aiming a small gun at them.

*1211 The man ordered the Davieses to lie down on the floor and bound them with handcuffs and cords. He placed towels and other objects over Mrs. Davies’s head, apparently to obscure her vision. Later Mrs. Davies felt an object against her throat and heard a voice tell her husband, “I’ll cut your old woman’s throat if you don’t tell me where the gold is.”

Sometime thereafter Mrs. Davies heard a noise that she believed to be a gunshot. It came from the direction in which her husband lay. She then felt something placed against her ear through a cloth that was covering her head, and heard the noise of the gunshot that wounded her. She apparently lost consciousness. After coming to, she realized she was touching her husband’s leg and could feel it twitch. She called out to him several times, but he did not answer. Perhaps aware that somebody else was in the room, she called out for her painful wrist bindings to be loosened. She then heard another noise, after which she no longer felt her husband’s leg twitch. Someone then cut her wrist bindings and took off the handcuffs. Thereafter, Mrs. Davies heard the opening of a door leading from the kitchen to the garage and someone wandering in the house, though she still could not see.

The man who initially came to the door did so about 1:15 to 1:30 p.m. It had become dark outside when Mrs. Davies realized she no longer heard any noises in the house. Though seriously wounded, she retrieved a knife and cut the cords binding her ankles. She tried to call for help but discovered the telephone handset had been cut from the rest of the instrument. Unable or unwilling to go outside in the December cold, she lay on a sofa throughout the night; when dawn broke she crawled out to the sidewalk, where a woman discovered Mrs. Davies’s condition and called the police. She was hospitalized for about one month and suffered total loss of hearing in one ear, permanent paralysis on one side of her face, the inability to close one eye, and impairment of her sense of balance.

A pathologist concluded that Mr. Davies probably died from the effect of gunshot wounds to the brain. There was one wound on the left side of his head and one on the right; the left wound was not likely to have been the fatal one. The bullets that inflicted the wounds appeared to be .22-caliber; one was copper—and one lead-colored, but both were too damaged to determine if they were fired from a specific gun.

The robbery netted a considerable amount of property, including silverware, jewelry, silver coins, silver ingots, and guns.

Defendant and his cousin Gary Masse, who the court instructed the jury was an accomplice as a matter of law, planned and executed the Davies *1212 robbery together. Masse had heard from Gloria Killian, reputedly a law student, that the Davieses had a large cache of valuable property on the aboveground premises and might have more buried in the backyard. Killian and others wanted to have someone execute the robbery, split the proceeds with the robbers, and reward them by giving them information that would allow them to commit a much larger robbery in the future.

2. Prosecution Case.

The prosecution successfully contended that defendant was the man who went to the Davieses’ door, the man who shot the couple as Mr. and Mrs. Davies lay on the floor, and the man who later returned to fire the fatal shot into Mr. Davies’s head.

The prosecution theorized that Masse and defendant went to the Davies home in a telephone company truck that defendant had stolen the night before. Defendant was wearing telephone company paraphernalia, including a hard hat and utility belt he had shown Masse during a chance meeting in the parking lot of a Sacramento restaurant six days earlier.

Defendant was carrying a small .22-caliber pistol. Masse had been in possession of a larger .22-caliber handgun earlier in the day in preparation for the robbery, but after a previous pass by the Davies residence the two had agreed Masse’s gun was too large. They drove to the home of defendant’s brother, Robert DeSantis, and left Masse’s gun in a van parked in the yard.

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831 P.2d 1210, 2 Cal. 4th 1198, 9 Cal. Rptr. 2d 628, 92 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6188, 92 Daily Journal DAR 9772, 1992 Cal. LEXIS 3178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-desantis-cal-1992.