People v. Helsema CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 30, 2014
DocketC073323
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Helsema CA3 (People v. Helsema CA3) 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. Helsema CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 1/30/14 P. v. Helsema CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Butte) ----

THE PEOPLE, C073323

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. Nos. CM036062, CM036509) v.

JOHN LAWRENCE HALSEMA,

Defendant and Appellant.

A jury found defendant John Lawrence Halsema guilty of second degree murder, sustaining an allegation that his personal use of a gun resulted in death. While trial in the present matter was pending, another jury convicted defendant in a case of manufacturing a controlled substance (CM036509), for which he received a three-year county prison term. The trial court resentenced defendant to a determinate state prison term for the drug conviction, and imposed a consecutive indeterminate 40-year state prison term for

1 the present offense (CM036062). As is pertinent in this appeal, the court also imposed a restitution fine of $280 and a general fine of $200 (with $580 in fees and assessments).

On appeal, defendant contends the trial court erred in failing to instruct sua sponte on a theory of voluntary manslaughter as a result of provocation. He also contends the trial court reimposed a general fine in connection with his drug conviction, which this court held to be unauthorized in defendant’s prior appeal, of which we have granted judicial notice in this appeal. (People v. Halsema (July 31, 2013, C072318) [nonpub. opn.].) We agree there is substantial evidence of provocation, which the trial court found credible in connection with an instruction on deciding the degree of murder, but the court otherwise mistakenly believed instructions on voluntary manslaughter were inapplicable. We must therefore reverse the judgment for retrial. For guidance in the event of resentencing, unlike the prior appeal, it is proper to impose a general fine pursuant to Penal Code section 6721 in connection with the homicide conviction (which is what the trial court in fact did) and, on our own motion, we note that the minimum restitution and parole revocation fines applicable to the 2012 crime are $240, respectively, not $280.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Defendant had been living in his “best friend’s” residence since 2011, several months before the shooting. It is undisputed that defendant called a dispatcher in February 2012 to report that he had fatally shot his housemate, Craig Davies (the victim), by accident nine days earlier, who was still lying where he fell. He told the dispatcher that he had not reported the death to anyone. There was a large knife found in the victim’s hand, which the pathologist considered to be staged because it should have fallen from the victim’s hand after he was shot. The autopsy determined that the victim had bled to death within minutes from a single gunshot wound to his back, which passed

1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code.

2 through his body on a slightly downward trajectory from right to left. The victim had methamphetamine in his system. Defendant gave numerous accounts of what had happened.

The first account was to a mutual friend of the two who had stopped by the home about a week after the shooting to borrow defendant’s guitar. Defendant was outside. He told the friend he had killed the victim because the victim was going to kill defendant’s dog. The friend knew that defendant was devoted to his dog, but was surprised that the animal-loving victim would have attempted to harm it. Defendant gave the friend the guitar, and told the friend to return and take defendant’s truck and tools as well, in order to keep them from being seized. (Defendant testified that he offered the friend any of his belongings, including his dog.) Defendant made it clear that he intentionally shot the victim, who was in a rage at the time, but had not meant to kill him. The friend had noticed that the victim recently “was getting kind of violent,” and had been complaining about defendant’s dog biting a neighbor (which was a source of tension between defendant and the victim).2

A second account was to a deputy who responded to the dispatch. The deputy spoke with defendant at the scene. Defendant told the deputy the victim had borrowed his gun to euthanize an old stray dog on the property, but had been unable to perform the act and put the gun back on the bed in defendant’s room. Defendant brought the gun out of the bedroom and told the victim that it was not appropriate to leave a loaded gun on defendant’s bed, intending to demonstrate how to unload it. The victim knocked a glass out of defendant’s hand, and defendant went to kick the victim in the rear end. Defendant

2 About six months earlier, defendant’s dog had leaped over a fence into the neighbor’s yard and killed a dog; it also bit the neighbor when he was visiting. Defendant paid the neighbor several hundred dollars in compensation. The victim demanded that defendant keep his dog tied up, because he was concerned about being sued if the dog bit anyone else.

3 stumbled and accidentally fired the gun when he grabbed at it after it fell out of his hand. Defendant said the encounter had not been confrontational; they had been “horsing around.” Defendant had only a rambling and nonresponsive answer about the victim’s eating habits when the deputy asked about the knife found in the victim’s hand. Defendant did not mention his own dog having any involvement in the shooting. Defendant said that he had held off making any official report of the death in order to receive his Social Security check, which he intended to give to the victim’s daughter (reiterating this explanation in a later interview). At trial, on cross-examination, defendant did not recall anything about this statement to the deputy.

A third account was when defendant was interviewed by Detective Philip Wysocki later that day. Defendant first said that he and the victim had been engaging in “horseplay”—he again mentioned the victim slapping a drink out of his hand and his trying to kick the victim in the rear end, in the process of which defendant lost his grip on the gun he was holding (which fired when he grabbed at it). He did not mention anything about his dog being involved or claim that he felt the victim posed any threat to defendant. When asked about the knife found in the victim’s hand, defendant at first said he had not seen a knife until after the shooting. Defendant eventually admitted to the detective that he had put the knife in the victim’s hand because he wanted to make it appear that the victim had been the aggressor and defendant had been acting in self- defense, but he decided simply to tell the truth.3

In an interview with Detective Wysocki two days later, defendant’s account changed. He abandoned his claim of horseplay. He was holding the gun because he wanted to reproach the victim for leaving it loaded on the bed, where defendant’s dog had knocked it on the floor. During what defendant called a temper tantrum (in which the

3 At trial, defendant conceded that he had not shot the victim in self-defense.

4 victim was briefly turning in circles while holding a knife after knocking the drink out of defendant’s hand), the victim was insisting that defendant kill the stray dog that had come onto the property, or else the victim would kill defendant’s dog.

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People v. Helsema CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-helsema-ca3-calctapp-2014.