People v. Gailord

13 Cal. App. 4th 1643, 17 Cal. Rptr. 2d 272, 93 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 1735, 1993 Cal. App. LEXIS 218
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 5, 1993
DocketD016034
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 13 Cal. App. 4th 1643 (People v. Gailord) 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. Gailord, 13 Cal. App. 4th 1643, 17 Cal. Rptr. 2d 272, 93 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 1735, 1993 Cal. App. LEXIS 218 (Cal. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

Opinion

HUFFMAN, J.

In this case, we conclude Eugene Gailord and Charles Lamale Allen are entitled to reversal of their enhancement findings based on *1645 Allen being armed with and using a “firearm” (Pen. Code, 2 §§ 12022, subd. (a)(1), 12022.5, subd. (a)) as defined under section 12001, subdivision (b), during the commission of a commercial burglary (§ 459) and three robberies (§ 211). At the time Gailord and Allen committed the underlying crimes, the legal definition of “firearm” had recently been changed to include only devices “designed to be used as a weapon, from which is expelled through a barrel a projectile by the force of any explosion or other form of combustion.” (§ 12001, subd. (b); Stats. 1990, ch. 9, § 1.5.) Because the jury was not instructed under the correct legal definition of “firearm” as of the time of the underlying offenses, the true firearm findings against Gailord and Allen must be reversed.

Accordingly, we affirm Allen’s unchallenged burglary and robbery convictions and reverse the true findings of his firearm enhancements.

As for Gailord, who challenges the sufficiency of the evidence of one of the three robberies and asserts instructional error regarding his aiding and abetting that third robbery, we find no error. We therefore similarly affirm Gailord’s convictions and reverse the true findings of his firearm enhancements. We explain.

Factual and Procedural Background

Gailord and Allen were charged with various crimes stemming from the daytime burglary of Fashion Concepts, a woman’s boutique in Chula Vista, California, on July 18, 1991, about noon. Each admitted to having committed certain crimes at the store on that date. Gailord confessed during an arrest interview to entering the boutique “to boost some [clothing] with the use of a large plastic trash bag.” Allen made a judicial confession during his testimony at trial he entered the shop the same day and time as Gailord to commit a robbery and robbed three separate women within the store.

The only matters for the jury to determine at trial in light of these admissions of guilt were whether Gailord had aided and abetted Allen in the three robberies within the store and whether Allen was in possession of and used a “firearm” when he committed the crimes. The jury found both matters against Allen and Gailord. On appeal, in addition to sentencing issues, Allen, joined by Gailord, challenges the sufficiency of the evidence and jury instructions concerning the firearm allegations. Gailord challenges the sufficiency of the evidence for one of the three robberies inside the store and a related instructional error. We thus set out the facts pertinent to these specific challenges and summarize the others for background of our discussion.

*1646 The owner of the boutique, Josefa Sanchez, and her daughter, Sonia Sanchez, each testified at trial to the events which took place on July 18, 1991. Their testimony painted the following scene. As they were working in the store around noontime, a Black man, later identified as Gailord, walked into the store, asking for some rayon clothing. While he was going through some racks and checking prices, another Black man, later identified as Allen, walked past the store’s front door, looked in, and walked past again. Allen then walked into the store and spoke with Gailord before “he threw himself on” Josefa, holding a pistol to her head and telling Sonia to hang up the telephone and to give him all the money from the business.

After Sonia gave him about $60, Allen said he wanted more and directed both women to the office in back of the store, where Sonia gave him about $100 from Josefa’s purse and a couple of dollars from her own. Allen made both women throw themselves, and their purses, on the floor and directed Sonia to turn the lights out. He told Josefa he would kill them if they did not cooperate. Allen then closed the door and the women heard another woman scream. Shortly, the door opened and the other woman, identified later as Bertha Ramirez, was dragged, pushed and kicked into the room and thrown to the floor by Allen. Allen also threatened to shoot her.

Neither Sonia nor Josefa knew when Gailord left the store. They only knew he was the one who brought out a big trash bag at about the same time Allen pulled out the gun and asked for their money. Gailord began putting clothes in the bag as they were forced by Allen to go to the back room.

On cross-examination, Sonia was unclear whether Allen was with her and her mother behind the closed door when Ramirez screamed or whether he had closed the door and reopened it to shove Ramirez in the back room.

Both Sonia and Josefa identified Gailord and Allen at curbside lineups on the day of the crimes and at trial as the men who entered the store July 18, 1991, and took clothes and money. They identified Gailord as the one who had the bag for the clothes and Allen as the one with the gun. When shown two exhibits concerning the gun, Sonia said the gun was without exhibit No. 14, the barrel, that only the receiver, marked exhibit No. 1, was used by Allen.

Through an interpreter, Bertha Ramirez testified she saw no one when she entered Fashion Concepts around noontime on July 18, 1991. Nor had she seen anyone in or leaving the store while walking to it from her car parked about 15 feet in front of the store. As she began looking at clothing on the store racks, a man put a machine gun to her chest and she asked him, *1647 “What’s happening?” Ramirez, who does not speak or understand much English, said Allen pushed her as she tried to leave the store. He then hit and kicked her as he dragged her inside the office and threw her down on the floor.

Ramirez said Allen took her purse with $3,000 to $4,000 cash as he was pushing and dragging her toward the back room. After Sonia translated Allen’s threat to shoot Ramirez if she did not quiet down, Allen left. After a few minutes, Ramirez opened the back room door and left to find her purse.

Ramirez said she only saw Allen at the store that day and identified him during a curbside lineup after two suspects were caught, at the preliminary hearing and at trial.

When shown exhibit No. 1, the receiver of the gun, Ramirez said the gun was bigger; it also included the part identified as exhibit No. 14. Asked to demonstrate how the gun looked, Ramirez held “the gun with the second part, court’s exhibit number fourteen, as if it had been halfway into the gun—in other words, as if it was a little longer, but not all the way in.”

A man who lived across the street from the store testified that on July 18, 1991, between 11:30 a.m. and noon, he saw from his apartment two men in jackets talking before crossing the street to enter the boutique. His suspicions aroused by the jackets worn by the men in the heat, he came out to the sidewalk and saw one of the men coming out of the store with a black trash bag and then saw the other man running out of the store with his arms across his chest.

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Related

People v. Arnold
52 Cal. Rptr. 3d 545 (California Court of Appeal, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 Cal. App. 4th 1643, 17 Cal. Rptr. 2d 272, 93 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 1735, 1993 Cal. App. LEXIS 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-gailord-calctapp-1993.