People v. Harris CA1/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 7, 2016
DocketA144857
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Harris CA1/1 (People v. Harris CA1/1) 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. Harris CA1/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Filed 1/7/16 P. v. Harris CA1/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, A144857 v. IRA BERNARD HARRIS, (Contra Costa County Super. Ct. No. 5-150039-6) Defendant and Appellant.

A jury convicted Ira Bernard Harris of felony first- and second-degree residential burglary and of misdemeanor receiving stolen property.1 The trial court imposed a low- term sentence of two years in state prison for first-degree residential burglary, a 16-month sentence in state prison for second-degree residential burglary, which was stayed, and a concurrent sentence of six months in county jail for receiving stolen property. Harris’s appellate counsel has asked this court for an independent review of the record to determine whether there are any arguable issues. (People v. Wende (1979) 25 Cal.3d 436.) We have reviewed the record and have found no errors. We therefore affirm. FACTS On the afternoon of June 16, 2014, Vince Ruso was in the garage of his home on Minert Road in Contra Costa County. The garage faces the street, and the garage door

1 The felony first- and second-degree residential burglary convictions were based on Penal Code sections 459 and 460, subdivision (a). The receiving stolen property charge was based on Penal Code section 496, subdivision (a). All further statutory references are to the Penal Code.

1 was open. Ruso heard someone honking a car horn at a slow-moving car ahead of it. The slow-moving car, a white, older model, four-door Mercedes sedan, then pulled over and parked across the street from Ruso’s house. Two young men got out of the Mercedes, one of whom Ruso identified at trial as Harris. Ruso saw the men cross the street and walk up to the front door of the home of his next-door neighbor, Mary Tuchscherer. Ruso lost sight of the men when they entered the porch area. A short time later, Ruso realized that the two men were in Tuchscherer’s back yard. He became suspicious, but he could not see clearly what they were doing because a fence blocked his view. He alerted his wife and asked her to call the police. Before the police arrived, Ruso and his wife saw Harris go back to the Mercedes, retrieve a small grey bag or pouch, and return to Tuchscherer’s yard. Two officers arrived on the scene while the men were still there. One of the officers, Daren Billington, reached over the tall gate at the side of Tuchscherer’s house to undo the latch. As he did so, he saw Harris’s accomplice, later identified as Tarell Smith, come around a corner at the rear of the house and walk toward the gate. Billington made eye contact with Smith, who abruptly stopped, turned around, and retreated. After Billington opened the gate, the officers entered the back yard, but no one was there. A shed in the garden contained two separate banks of file cabinets, which had been ransacked with drawers pulled open and papers strewn about. A black neoprene glove was found in the yard near the rear of the shed. A screen on a window at the back of the house had been cut in an L-shaped pattern along the frame. The cut had been made on the left side of the screen, running approximately 12 inches down the side of the screen and over six inches along the bottom of the screen. The smoothness of the cut on the screen showed the incision was made by a cutting tool. Police officers searched the property of the neighbor on the far side of Tuchscherer’s property and found Harris hiding behind a tree in the back yard. After Harris was apprehended, Billington located the white Mercedes with its engine still running. The vehicle appeared to be in working order, and Billington saw no smoke coming from under the hood. In a subsequent search of the Mercedes, police

2 found jewelry and electronics, including a pillowcase in the trunk containing jewelry, a Ziploc bag containing jewelry, two Amazon Kindles, a camera, Bose headphones, a De La Salle high school soccer ring, and another soccer ring with the name Dolan inscribed on it. There was also medical paperwork related to Tarell Smith in the car. Billington obtained a photograph from Smith’s driver’s license from the Department of Motor Vehicles records and immediately recognized Smith as the person Billington saw when he was trying to open the gate to Tuchscherer’s back yard. Later, Billington searched Harris at the Concord jail and found a class ring for De La Salle high school in Harris’s front right pants pocket. Tuchscherer returned home on the day of the burglary to find police officers in front of her house. When police allowed her to go inside, Tuchscherer inspected the premises. She noticed that a screen in the living room window had been cut. She had left the window open a few inches when she left the house earlier that day, but she had locked the window in position so it could not be opened wider. The shed in the back yard had been ransacked, but no one appeared to have physically entered the home, and no property from inside the house was missing. Several witnesses who lived in Contra Costa County testified that their homes had been burglarized within a month of the incident at Tuchscherer’s home. All of them identified property recovered from Harris’s vehicle as belonging to them. These witnesses included Patrick Dolan who testified that his four championship soccer rings, two from De La Salle high school and two from UC Berkeley, were stolen from his home and later returned to him by police. The UC Berkeley rings were inscribed with Dolan’s name and shirt number. Harris testified that in June 2014 he was homeless and living in his car (the white Mercedes). He kept all his belongings in the vehicle. His friend, Tarell Smith, was also homeless at the time, and Smith stayed in the Mercedes with Harris at least three nights per week and stored some of his property in the vehicle. Harris testified about the events leading up to his arrest. He testified that he was driving the Mercedes slowly because it was overheating and smoke was coming from the

3 engine. He pulled over on Minert Road after the driver behind him honked at him. As he pulled over, Smith said that he knew the person who lived in the house across from where they were parked who could help with the car. Smith said the person would leave the sliding glass door in the back open for him if the front door was locked. After Smith and Harris knocked on the front door and no one answered, they went around back. Smith tried to open the sliding glass door while Harris looked for a hose to get some water for the car. Harris found a hose but it was not long enough to reach the car, so he went back to the Mercedes to look for a container that could hold water. Finding none in the car, he returned to the back yard. Smith then suggested they look in the garden shed for some coolant for the car. Harris followed Smith into the shed, did not see anything that would be helpful, and came back out. Harris made a few calls on his cell phone to try to get some help with the car; he talked with Jerome Monroe, a friend who lived in North Concord and whose next-door neighbor was a mechanic. While Harris was on the phone he did not notice what Smith was doing; he did not see Smith cut the screen window and did not see Smith with any sharp implements that day. At one point while Harris was on the phone, Smith ran toward him yelling, “Run.” Harris jumped over the side fence into a neighboring yard and hid. Smith jumped over the back fence.

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Bluebook (online)
People v. Harris CA1/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-harris-ca11-calctapp-2016.