People v. Hart CA1/5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 12, 2021
DocketA161239
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Hart CA1/5 (People v. Hart CA1/5) 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. Hart CA1/5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 10/12/21 P. v. Hart CA1/5

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 FIVE

THE PEOPLE, A161239 Plaintiff and Respondent, v. JOSEPH PHILLIP HART, (Mendocino County Super. Ct. No. SCUK-CRCR-20-34746-001) Defendant and Appellant.

Joseph Phillip Hart appeals from the judgment entered against him after he was convicted of assault with a deadly weapon (Pen. Code, § 245, subd. (a)(1)).1 Hart argues that the trial court abused its discretion by denying his motion for new trial. We disagree and affirm. BACKGROUND A. In March 2020, J.S. invited Hart to stay with him at a rural property outside Laytonville, where J.S. worked as a caretaker. About two weeks later, J.S. asked Hart to leave. On direct examination, J.S. testified that he asked Hart to leave because Hart had gone through other people’s possessions. J.S. said he offered Hart two weeks to find a new place to stay, but Hart wanted to leave right away. Because it was

1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code. 1 the middle of the night and raining, they agreed that J.S. would drive Hart to Willits the next morning. J.S. testified that Hart was slow to pack his belongings the next day. But, when J.S. insisted that Hart needed to leave, Hart agreed. In the early afternoon, the two men left in a truck. J.S. drove, smoking marijuana from a bong at the same time. Near Laytonville, J.S. stopped so that Hart could urinate. According to J.S., Hart exited and re-entered the truck through its passenger-side door, which functioned normally. After the two had been back on the road only five minutes, Hart asked J.S. to stop again—for another bathroom break. J.S. found this strange, especially since they were now only five to 10 miles from Willits, and refused. Hart continued to demand that J.S. pull over. As they approached the first Willits exit, Hart called 911 and reported that he was being “ ‘kidnapped.’ ” J.S. exited the freeway. When the truck arrived at a stop sign, Hart pinned J.S. to the driver’s side door and stabbed him, with a knife, in the chest, leg, hand, and forehead. J.S. testified that he did not have a knife or a gun that day. He did not recognize either of the two knives police later found in the truck. J.S. also testified that he never pointed a gun at Hart. Although he initially testified that there were no guns at the property where the two had been living, J.S. later said the owners kept a shotgun there. J.S. did not threaten Hart to persuade him to leave. B. The driver of a California Department of Transportation (CalTrans) truck pulled over when he saw two men struggling inside J.S.’s truck. He observed the passenger on top of the driver, punching

2 him, and the driver calling for help. When the driver freed himself, he got into the CalTrans truck and said, “ ‘That guy’s crazy. He stabbed me.’ ” Hart later paced around the CalTrans truck, banged on its window, and screamed. Hart asked the CalTrans driver to call the police and an ambulance. He also claimed that he stabbed J.S. because J.S. “ ‘had a gun.’ ” Hart appeared “really crazy, and aggressive.” Another driver pulled over when he saw J.S. getting out of his truck. He said J.S. was bleeding, scared, and calling for help. He also saw Hart, who yelled “aggressive[ly]” that “it wasn’t his fault” and that “[J.S.] put a gun to his face.” C. Hart first told a responding police officer that he and J.S. got into a fight, during which J.S. pulled out a knife. Hart said he stabbed J.S. to defend himself. Hart later told the same officer that J.S. pulled a .38-caliber pistol on him. Hart directed the officer to the bed of the truck, where the officer found a knife. The officer found a second knife (in a dual-knife sheath) on the truck seat “closer towards the driver.” Officers also found marijuana in the truck, as well as a broken bong underneath. No gun was found at the scene. Officers did not search the property where Hart and J.S. had been living. Officers were able to open the passenger-side door, from the interior of the truck, without trouble. When Hart was interviewed later that same day, he said that J.S. was holding a “.38-caliber snub-nosed pistol” around 11:00 a.m., when J.S. told him to leave. Hart did not claim that J.S. pointed the gun at

3 him. Nor did he know if J.S. brought the gun with him on the drive to Willits; Hart never saw it again. Hart said he was scared because, after the initial stop, J.S. was smoking marijuana and driving 70 miles per hour. When Hart asked J.S. to stop a second time, J.S. slapped him. Hart responded by punching J.S. and pushing him up against the driver’s side door. Hart then saw that J.S. was sitting on a knife. Hart grabbed the knife and stabbed J.S. three times—in the leg, thigh, and face. Hart told the detective that he only wanted to get out of the truck but was unable to open the passenger side door. D. Hart testified, in his own defense, that he and J.S. agreed to grow marijuana and vegetables on the property where J.S. worked. When Hart arrived in March 2020, he bought provisions (including seeds) and “paid the mortgage”—by giving J.S. a pound of marijuana to sell. In exchange, Hart expected a larger return after the fall harvest. Later that same month, Hart confronted J.S. about overwatering some seedlings. J.S. became “belligerent” and told Hart, “people disappear up [here.]” However, Hart testified that this was not “a big argument[]” and that he never screamed at J.S. J.S. simply agreed to take better care of the seedlings and Hart laughed off J.S.’s disappearance comment. The next day, J.S. came into Hart’s room, holding a .38-caliber gun at his side, and screamed that Hart needed to leave the property in an hour, or else J.S. would kill him. When Hart asked J.S. if he was joking, J.S. pointed the gun at Hart. Despite believing that his investment entitled him to stay through the summer, Hart took the

4 threat seriously and agreed to leave. While Hart was packing, J.S. yelled at him again. Hart never saw the gun again, but he assumed J.S. still had it because J.S.’s hand was in his pocket. When Hart took a bathroom break during the drive to Willits, he discovered that he could not open the passenger-side door from the inside. The truck hydroplaned shortly after J.S. resumed driving. Hart was scared because J.S. was smoking marijuana and driving 80 miles per hour in heavy rain. Hart asked J.S. to stop the truck “at least 30 times,” but J.S. refused. When the truck hydroplaned a second time, Hart called 911. Hart told the dispatcher that J.S. “pulled a gun on [him]” earlier in the day, but the call dropped. On the freeway off-ramp at the Willits exit, Hart asked to stop again. J.S. backhanded him and said, “quit being a bitch.” Hart decided he could no longer wait to get out of the truck and punched J.S. Hart testified that he tried to open the passenger-side door, but “it did not open.” Hart pinned J.S. against the driver’s-side door and held J.S.’s right arm, to ensure that “[J.S.] didn’t pull a gun on [him] and shoot [him].” Next, Hart saw J.S. reach down between his legs, towards a double knife pouch. Hart quickly grabbed one of the knives and stabbed J.S. twice in the leg. Hart initially testified that J.S. laughed, “basically grabbed onto that second knife,” and said that he was “going to cut [Hart] up.” At this point, Hart stabbed J.S. in the side and J.S. exited the truck. Later, Hart testified that J.S. “did not actually have that knife in his hand” but was reaching for it. Hart said he initially stabbed J.S.

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People v. Hart CA1/5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hart-ca15-calctapp-2021.