People v. Felix

23 Cal. App. 4th 1385, 28 Cal. Rptr. 2d 860
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 29, 1994
DocketDocket Nos. G013002, G014705
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 23 Cal. App. 4th 1385 (People v. Felix) 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. Felix, 23 Cal. App. 4th 1385, 28 Cal. Rptr. 2d 860 (Cal. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

Opinion

SILLS, P. J.

Mark Anthony Felix was convicted of two counts of residential burglary by a jury. The court found he had four prior serious felony convictions and sentenced him to serve twenty-five years and four months in prison. He contends evidence that he was a heroin user was improperly admitted and that the prosecutor prejudicially commented on his addiction. He also argues the court failed to instruct sua sponte that he was not guilty of burglary of his sister’s home because she implicitly consented to his entering her home and taking whatever he wanted. 1 In a consolidated action, he petitions us for a writ of habeas corpus claiming he was denied effective *1390 representation of counsel because his attorney failed to object to the evidence of his heroin use. Although trial counsel also used the drug evidence to support a defense to the burglary charge, she provided Felix with a declaration after conviction to the effect she failed to object to the prosecutor’s evidence out of ignorance. Concluding this type of Monday morning quarterbacking should not result in a touchdown nunc pro tunc, we deny his petition and affirm the judgment.

I

Facts

On January 2, 1992, Beatrice Gutierrez left her home in Santa Ana with her child, locking the door as she left. When she returned, the place was in disarray. Several items were missing: the video-cassette recorder (VCR), the compact disc (CD) player, a black leather jacket, a Nintendo game and her wedding ring. She also noticed that the sliding glass door was ajar: She promptly reported the crime to the police, telling them no one had permission to enter her home while she was gone. 2 The police lifted a latent fingerprint from an open soda can on the counter. The print matched one of Felix’s—Beatrice’s brother.

On January 27, 1992, Daniel Garza left his apartment for work. Upon his return that evening, he found the sliding glass door open and the doorpost scratched. His microwave, telephone, watch, some food and clothes were missing. He called the police and reported the burglary; they had him identify his property and then returned all but his watch.

Around noon on the same day, Santa Ana Police Officer Julio Jaramillo saw Felix pushing a grocery cart laden with nongrocery items. Knowing Felix was wanted for the burglary of Beatrice’s home, Jaramillo wheeled his car around as Felix abandoned his cart and ran. Jaramillo gave chase, apprehending him a short distance away. Jaramillo’s partner retrieved the cart laden with a microwave, telephone, food and clothes, all items owned by Garza.

*1391 Officer Brian Zell interviewed Felix for about an hour after advising him of his Miranda 3 rights and obtaining the requisite waiver. Zell began the interview by asking Felix questions about the burglary at Beatrice’s house. At first, Felix denied even being at his sister’s house since Thanksgiving, saying he sometimes lived with his mother on the same block as Garza and would occasionally visit his sister. When Zell showed him the match between his fingerprint and that found on the soda can, he admitted he had lied to them saying, “[I] can’t deny that shit. I was hoping to try to talk to [his sister and brother-in-law]. I guess it’s too late for that now.” He admitted he burglarized her home on January 2, after entering through a back window when he knew she was at work. Zell asked him if he could recover any of the items, but he could not as he had already sold them. Zell asked him why he did it; did he do it to get money to buy drugs? He admitted receiving about $90 for the items to buy heroin.

Although he discussed the burglary of his sister’s place, he refused to discuss the burglary of the Garza house. However, the items in the abandoned grocery cart, which he was pushing when first spotted by the police, were identified as those taken from Garza’s residence that same day. 4

At the time of the investigation, Beatrice told the police no one had permission to enter her home that day. After the fingerprint analysis showed the burglar was her brother, Beatrice told the police her mother had a key to her place, but that her brother did not have permission to be in her home when she was gone.

At trial, Beatrice’s testimony—as well as her husband’s—contradicted those earlier statements. She testified any member of her family—Felix included—had her permission to take any of her things at any time, although this would make her mad. She knew Felix occasionally lived with her mother who had a key to Beatrice’s place, and she had lent them her VCR in the past. She had also let Felix wear her husband’s leather jacket on two occasions.

On cross-examination, however, she had difficulty explaining some of the discrepancies between her earlier statements and her direct testimony. For example, in response to direct examination, she testified she had lent her mother and brother her VCR in the past. But to do this, they had always telephoned her first and then come by in her mother’s car to pick it up. They *1392 had never entered her home while she was gone and taken it without notice. And she had never given him permission to use—much less take—either the CD player or her wedding ring. She tried to explain why she told the officers no one had permission to enter; she thought a stranger had burglarized her home. But she could not explain why, on learning the fingerprints on the soda can were her brother’s, she continued to insist her brother did not have permission to be there, while at trial she was insisting he did. Finally, Beatrice conceded no one had ever given Felix express permission to come and take whatever he wanted; it was merely a silent family understanding.

Discussion

II

Admission of the Evidence of Heroin Use

Felix complains on appeal that the trial court improperly admitted evidence of his heroin use. The evidence was presented in two ways: (1) through the cross-examination testimony of Beatrice who conceded she was distressed at the time of the burglary by her brother’s heroin problem, and felt he needed treatment; and (2) through Detective Zell’s testimony about the interview with Felix in which Felix said the reason he burglarized his sister’s place was to steal something, and buy heroin with the proceeds from its sale. Felix opines the evidence is inherently prejudicial and so inflammatory in nature that any jury would convict anyone of anything once it knew the person was a drug user. He argues evidence of narcotics use is “uniformly held to be inadmissible.” Furthermore, because his counsel failed to object to any of this testimony, he petitions for a writ of habeas corpus based on ineffective assistance of counsel.

A. The Admission of the Heroin Use

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 Cal. App. 4th 1385, 28 Cal. Rptr. 2d 860, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-felix-calctapp-1994.