People v. Kelly

76 Cal. Rptr. 3d 316, 162 Cal. App. 4th 797, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 658
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 30, 2008
DocketE042607
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 76 Cal. Rptr. 3d 316 (People v. Kelly) 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. Kelly, 76 Cal. Rptr. 3d 316, 162 Cal. App. 4th 797, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 658 (Cal. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Opinion

RAMIREZ P. J.

In our opinion upon remand in People v. Kelly (Sept. 29, 2006, E036170) [nonpub. opn.] (Kelly I), we conditionally affirmed defendant’s convictions for driving/taking a vehicle (Veh. Code, § 10851, subd. (a)), evading a police officer (Veh. Code, § 2800.2, subd. (a)) and misdemeanor hit and run (Veh. Code, § 20002, subd. (a)); the findings that he had suffered three priors for which he served prison terms (Pen. Code, § 667.5, subd. (b)) and three-strike priors (Pen. Code, § 667, subds. (b)-(i)); and his sentence of two consecutive terms of 25 years to life, plus three years. The condition was that the trial court, on remand, “allow the prosecutor to state her reasons for exercising the peremptory challenges of which [defendant] complained below. If she offers a race-neutral explanation, the [trial] court . . . must try to evaluate that explanation and determine ‘whether [defendant] has proved purposeful racial discrimination. ... If it finds this prosecutor exercised [her] peremptory challenges in a permissible fashion, it should re[in]state the judgment^ ’ [citation] .... If the trial court is unable to make this ruling, ‘it should set the case for a new trial.’ [Citation.]” (Kelly I, supra, E036170.) On January 9, 2007, the trial court conducted such a hearing, determined that the prosecutor’s use of peremptori.es was proper and reinstated the judgment. Defendant here contends that the hearing was conducted in a manner that was so fundamentally unfair as to render it void. We reject his contentions and affirm the trial court’s ruling.

The facts concerning defendant’s crimes, which are recited in our prior opinion, are irrelevant to this appeal.

I.

Issues and Discussion

1. Defendant’s Representation at the January 9, 2007 Hearing

A deputy public defender represented defendant at an October 12, 2006 appearance preceding this hearing and continued to represent him during five *800 more appearances until the January 9, 2007 hearing. At that hearing, defendant objected to being represented by the deputy public defender, and the trial court ordered an attorney from the conflict panel to then represent him. Other members of the conflict panel had authored defendant’s July 25, 2003 and February 11, 2004 motions for a new trial, 1 both alleging Wheeler 2 error. The latter motion had gone to hearing and had been denied on April 30, 2004. Both the July 25, 2003 and February 11, 2004 new trial motions referenced the transcript of the jury voir dire. Therefore, that transcript existed from, at least, July 25, 2003, on. A copy of the transcript was given to defendant’s deputy public defender on October 12, 2006.

Although, as defendant points out, the conflict panel attorney who represented him at the January 9, 2007 hearing had just been appointed to the case, at defendant’s insistence, defendant had been represented by the deputy public defender from October 12, 2006, on, and that attorney had been in possession of a transcript of the voir dire from that date. On December 11, 2006, the deputy public defender stated that he was trying to get in touch with defendant’s trial attorney, who had since retired, but he did not believe that attorney was going to respond to him. He also said he would do his best to contact “the attorneys,” 3 presumably meaning the attorneys who had authored defendant’s new trial motions.

At the January 9, 2007 hearing, the trial court granted defendant’s request to speak to his newly appointed conflicts panel attorney. Thereafter, defendant requested to be allowed to represent himself. However, he refused to sign that portion of the waiver of counsel that stated he could not appeal on the basis of incompetency of counsel and he withdrew his request. Defendant’s conflict panel attorney sought a continuance on the basis that defendant’s appellate attorney had advised defendant that he should tell his conflict panel attorney certain things. The trial court denied the continuance, saying, “[We are] here for one purpose. That one purpose is for the prosecutor to put on the record the reasons for the excusáis of those three [potential] jurors.”

The prosecutor, who had represented the People during the 2001 voir dire, then stated on the record her reasons for peremptorily dismissing the three potential jurors in question. Defendant’s conflict panel attorney stated that defendant had concerns that the prosecutor had had time, in the six years that *801 elapsed between the voir dire and this hearing, to contrive nonracial reasons for excusing these potential jurors. Defendant’s conflict panel attorney also disputed, on the basis of defendant’s memory, some of the factual statements made by the prosecutor concerning the excused potential jurors. To counter the assertion that the prosecutor’s reasons were contrived, the prosecutor stated that she had the page numbers from the transcript of the voir dire to support her explanations and she pointed out that they were identical to the reasons she had given in her response to defendant’s February 2004 motion for a new trial; thus, defendant’s assertion that her excuses were contrived over the years was unfounded. Defendant’s conflict panel attorney stated that defendant said that she had not given the same reasons on both occasions. He added, “[Defendant’s] requesting the record. Id [sic] the Court reviewed the record of jury selection and that it would impeach the People’s statement as to the responses of the [potential jurors].”

The trial court, which had conducted the voir dire, recalled it and confirmed that the facts the prosecutor said had motivated her to excuse the potential jurors in question had, in fact, occurred. The trial court concluded that the prosecutor had exercised her peremptories in a permissible fashion.

Defendant contends that the January 9, 2007 hearing was fundamentally unfair because the conflicts panel attorney who represented him had just been appointed to do so and the latter lacked “firsthand information about the contested voir dire examination.” First, the voir dire examination itself was not contested. What occurred there, presumably, was accurately reflected in the transcript, which defendant’s attorneys had had access to since 2003. What was contested was whether the prosecutor’s statement of the reasons she excused the potential jurors at issue was factually supported by that transcript and whether those reasons were, in fact, the reasons upon which she relied in excusing those potential jurors. Defendant’s conflicts panel attorney raised both issues at the January 9, 2007 hearing. He never once asked the trial court for a few minutes in which, to review the voir dire transcript to determine the veracity of the prosecutor’s representations about its contents. 4 The trial court interrupted the proceedings on that date to give defendant and his conflict panel attorney an opportunity to converse. There *802

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 Cal. Rptr. 3d 316, 162 Cal. App. 4th 797, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-kelly-calctapp-2008.