People v. Dungo12/12/12 SC

CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 2012
DocketS176886M
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Dungo12/12/12 SC (People v. Dungo12/12/12 SC) 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. Dungo12/12/12 SC, (Cal. 2012).

Opinion

Filed 12/12/12

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA

THE PEOPLE, ) ) Plaintiff and Respondent, ) ) S176886 v. ) ) Ct.App. 3 C055923 REYNALDO SANTOS DUNGO, ) ) San Joaquin County Defendant and Appellant. ) Super. Ct. No. SF100023A ___________________________________ )

ORDER MODIFYING OPINION AND DENYING PETITION FOR REHEARING THE COURT:

The opinion in this case, filed October 15, 2012, and appearing at 55 Cal.4th 608, is modified as follows: 1. The third full paragraph of text on page 613 of 55 Cal.4th is modified to read:

The police arrested defendant, and he eventually admitted killing Pina. He said: After he and Pina left the Torres‘s home the night of April 14, 2006, they argued at Pina‘s home. Pina told him to leave and began throwing some of his belongings in a box. She punched defendant lightly on the chin, pushed him, and threw some children‘s toys at him. He grabbed her by the throat and strangled her. He then wrapped her body in a blanket, put it in her SUV, and drove around aimlessly, eventually abandoning the SUV on the Stockton street where the police later found it. 2. Footnote 5, at page 620 of 55 Cal.4th, is modified to read:

Defendant contends that even if the statements in nontestifying Dr. Bolduc‘s autopsy report lacked the requisite formality, the Sixth Amendment‘s confrontation right also applies to what Justice Thomas called ― ‗technically informal statements‘ ‖ if those statements were ― ‗used to evade the formalized process.‘ ‖ (Williams, supra, 567 U.S. at p. ___, fn. 5 [132 S.Ct. at p. 2260, fn. 5] (conc. opn. of Thomas, J.).) Defendant argues that this exception applies here. We need not decide the issue, however. Justice Thomas has made clear, in the language quoted above, that any such exception applies only to the formality requirement for testimonial out-of-court statements. But formality is not enough to make an extrajudicial statement testimonial; the statement must also have a primary purpose pertaining to the investigation and prosecution of a crime. (People v. Lopez, supra, 55 Cal.4th 569, 582 [―all nine high court justices agree that an out-of-court statement is testimonial only if its primary purpose pertains in some fashion to a criminal prosecution‖ (italics added)].) As we will explain (see text discussion, post), the autopsy statements upon which Dr. Lawrence relied for his opinions had no such primary purpose. These modifications do not affect the judgment. The petition for rehearing is denied.

Corrigan, J., is of the opinion the petition should be granted. Filed 10/15/12 (unmodified version) (see lead case, S177046, and companion case, S176213, also filed 10/15/12)

THE PEOPLE, ) ) Plaintiff and Respondent, ) ) S176886 v. ) ) Ct.App. 3 C055923 REYNALDO SANTOS DUNGO, ) ) San Joaquin County Defendant and Appellant. ) Super. Ct. No. SF100023A ___________________________________ )

The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution grants a criminal defendant the right to confront adverse witnesses. This is the second in a trio of cases before us involving that right. The two companion cases are People v. Lopez (Oct. 15, 2012, S177046) ___ Cal.4th ___, and People v. Rutterschmidt (Oct. 15, 2012, S176213) ___ Cal.4th ___. At defendant Reynaldo Santos Dungo‘s murder trial, a forensic pathologist testifying for the prosecution described to the jury objective facts about the condition of the victim‘s body as recorded in the autopsy report and accompanying photographs. Based on those facts, the expert gave his independent opinion that the victim had died of strangulation. Neither the autopsy report, which was prepared by another pathologist who did not testify, nor the photographs were introduced into evidence. Unlike the Court of Appeal, we conclude that the expert‘s testimony did not give rise to a right by defendant to question the preparer of the autopsy report.

1 I A. Facts Defendant and Lucinda Correia Pina became romantically involved in 2005. Pina lived in Stockton, San Joaquin County, and was in the process of divorcing her husband. Defendant and his daughter also lived in Stockton, but his wife and son were staying with his wife‘s grandparents in Seaside, Monterey County. Defendant‘s wife viewed this as a temporary separation, and she talked regularly to defendant, but defendant told Pina that he and his wife were divorced. In April 2006, defendant‘s friends noticed that he was exhibiting ―controlling behavior‖ towards Pina. Pina told friends and relatives that defendant was ―smothering her‖ and she wanted to end their relationship. That same month, defendant, while at Pina‘s house, answered a telephone call to Pina from Isaac Zuniga, who had a prior sexual relationship with Pina; defendant threatened to kill Zuniga if he continued to call Pina. Later, on April 14, Zuniga told Pina about the call. That evening, defendant and Pina went to visit Felipe and Angelique Torres. Pina complained to Angelique that defendant had told Zuniga to stop calling her, and Pina said she was considering raising the issue with defendant. The next morning, defendant went to see Pina‘s mother and asked if she knew where Pina was. Defendant said that while he was at Pina‘s house the previous night, Pina received a telephone call from Zuniga and then left to meet Zuniga. Pina‘s sport utility vehicle (SUV) was not at her house. Pina‘s mother then tried repeatedly to reach Pina on her cellphone, without success. That afternoon, the mother called the police. Local news media reported Pina‘s disappearance, and they described Pina and her SUV. Thereafter, a Stockton resident told the police that an SUV matching the description was parked on her street. Police officers found Pina‘s body in the vehicle. The police arrested defendant, and he eventually admitted killing Pina. He said: After he and Pina left the Torres‘s home the night of April 14, 2006, they argued at

2 Pina‘s home. Pina punched defendant lightly on the chin, pushed him, and threw some children‘s toys at him. She told him to leave and began throwing some of his belongings in a box. He grabbed her by the throat and strangled her. He then wrapped her body in a blanket, put it in her SUV, and drove around aimlessly, eventually abandoning the SUV on the Stockton street where the police later found it.

B. Trial Court Proceedings Defendant was charged with Pina‘s murder. Before trial, the prosecution informed the trial court that pathologist George Bolduc, who had performed the autopsy of Pina‘s body, would not be called as an expert witness. Instead, the prosecution‘s witness would be forensic pathologist Robert Lawrence, who at the time of trial was Dr. Bolduc‘s employer.1 The prosecution did not indicate that Dr. Bolduc was unavailable to testify. Defendant objected to the prosecution‘s proposed substitution of its expert witness and asked for an evidentiary hearing on the matter. (See Evid. Code, § 402, subd. (b).) The trial court granted the request. At the pretrial evidentiary hearing, Dr. Lawrence testified on cross-examination by the defense that Dr. Bolduc had at one point been a coroner in Kern County but ―was fired,‖ a fact not disclosed in Bolduc‘s résumé. Also, in his previous employment as a coroner for Orange County, Dr. Bolduc had resigned ―under a cloud.‖2 As a result of these incidents, Dr. Lawrence said, some newspaper articles asserted that Dr. Bolduc was

1 At trial, Dr. Lawrence testified to being a pathologist for the San Joaquin County coroner‘s office and owning Forensic Consultants Medical Group, which provides pathologists, including Dr. Bolduc, to act as coroners in several counties and also offers private consultation. 2 In People v. Beeler (1995) 9 Cal.4th 953, an Orange County capital murder case, Dr. Bolduc performed an autopsy of the murder victim but did not testify at trial.

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