People v. Mendonsa

137 Cal. App. 3d 888, 187 Cal. Rptr. 363, 1982 Cal. App. LEXIS 2180
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 1, 1982
DocketCrim. 24005
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 137 Cal. App. 3d 888 (People v. Mendonsa) 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. Mendonsa, 137 Cal. App. 3d 888, 187 Cal. Rptr. 363, 1982 Cal. App. LEXIS 2180 (Cal. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

Opinion

ELKINGTON, J.

A jury found Mendonsa guilty of three counts of discharging a firearm into an occupied dwelling. (Pen. Code, § 246.) He has appealed from a judgment under which he was sentenced to state prison, which was rendered upon the jury’s verdicts.

His contentions of error may reasonably be narrowed to three: (1) that the evidence was not sufficient to support the jury’s verdicts, (2) that his motion for a change of venue was erroneously rejected, and (3) that sentencing error occurred.

As to the first of the contentions, we once again become concerned with the substantial evidence rule by which Mendonsa and this court are strictly bound.

When a jury’s finding of fact is attacked on the ground that there is not any substantial evidence to sustain it, the power of an appellate court begins and ends with the determination as to whether, on the entire record, there is any substantial evidence, contradicted or uncontradicted, which will support the finding of fact, and when two or more inferences can reasonably be deduced from the facts, a reviewing court is without power to substitute its deductions for those of the jury. It is of no consequence that the jury, believing other evidence or drawing other inferences, might have come to a contrary conclusion. (People v. Johnson (1980) 26 Cal.3d 557, 576-577 [162 Cal.Rptr. 431, 606 P.2d 738]; Grainger v. Antoyan (1957) 48 Cal.2d 805, 807 [313 P.2d 848].)

We state the evidence with reasonable inferences therefrom under the substantial evidence rule, as it could have been, and presumably was, found true by the jury.

Defendant Mendonsa was a white Caucasian, heavy set, with a beard or goatee and long brown or blonde hair. He was the “Exalted Cyclops” of the *892 local Klavern of the Ku Klux Klan, and he was the owner of a “dark primer gray [pickup] truck with a white camper shell and tinted bubble windows.” Apartments located at 1120, 1122, and 1124 Mariposa Street of the community of Rodeo in Contra Costa County were occupied by tenants who were black. An incident occurred not far from 1120 Mariposa Street around the midevening of July 25, 1980. Two men had emerged from an automobile. One yelled at a nearby black who started to run. One fired a shot at the black while the other, identified as Mendonsa by the victim at the trial, tossed a “throwing knife” at him. (Such a throwing knife was later found in Mendonsa’s home.) Later that evening, the same automobile and Mendonsa’s distinctively colored and configured pickup truck were driven past the 1120, 1122, 1124 Mariposa Street apartments. Volleys from .30 caliber military carbines and a .45 caliber pistol were fired into the building. Then a short time later, the vehicles returned and the gunfiring operation was repeated. Mendonsa was identified by one of the apartment’s occupants (who some time before as a newspaper boy had known him) as the driver of the pickup truck during the shooting.

A .30 caliber carbine was later seized by police officers during an unrelated arrest of one to whom it was later returned. At the time of the shooting, the gun had been in the possession of one Gary, of whom more will soon be said. Upon Mendonsa’s inquiry as to what had happened to the gun, he appeared relieved to learn that the police no longer had it. An expert witness testified that upon the firearm’s repossession by the police, he had compared it with bullets fired during the shooting, and concluded that it had there probably been used. The above-mentioned Gary and Mendonsa were admittedly together around the time of the shooting. Yet another witness testified that Mendonsa was possibly the driver of the involved pickup truck, and Gary was an occupant of the same vehicle.

During the course of their investigation, police officers talked to many witnesses, in addition to the above-mentioned two who had closely identified Mendonsa with the charged crimes.

One of them told an officer that his brother-in-law, Mendonsa, admitted to him that he was with the shooting party in the “projects,” but that he was secure from arrest and prosecution because the police could not find the guns. At the trial where he was exposed to cross-examination, he denied making the statements.

Another, one Danny, had told an investigating officer that on the day after the shooting, Mendonsa had boasted about shooting up the “projects,” and chasing a “nigger” and throwing a knife at him. Mendonsa had then said to him that he got “as many Klan members as possible to show force and let the ‘niggers’ know they cannot run the projects.” (Among those so recruited, he said, was *893 Gary.) “They went down the street, shot them up, went to the end of the street, came back and shot them up again. . . . Mendonsa said two .30 [caliber] carbines and at least one .45 were used. One of the carbines and the .45 came from the Klan members . . . , the other carbine was owned by a guy . . . who was arrested a couple of days after the shooting and the gun had been seized but later returned. He said [the police] had them pegged but could not prove it. ” At the trial, Danny could not “remember” making such statements to the officer.

Danny’s wife had also spoken to an officer, telling him that she overheard Danny, Mendonsa, Gary, and others conversing in her home. Mendonsa and Gary had said that one of the group “was crazy . . . and they needed an alibi for him because he had been identified. ” Before the “preliminary” she iterated that her earlier statement was accurate, but at the trial she could not “say whether Mendonsa said he participated in the shooting or what he said.”

Mendonsa denied his guilt, and denied that he had made the above-mentioned statements attributed to him. By the clearest of implications, his testimony was that not he, but his five-foot wife (he was six feet tall), who also had long blonde hair, had used his pickup truck, in shooting up the project. And it was she, he testified, and not himself who said the police “will never catch us.” His wife, he also said, had left him about two months before with the children and he did not know where she was.

On the issue of substantial evidence, even without the repudiated, or partially repudiated, declarations of the three recanting witnesses, we are of the opinion that the jury’s verdict was abundantly supported by such evidence. With it, the evidence of Mendonsa’s guilt was overwhelming.

Further, no contention is made that the declarations of the recanting witnesses, with their examination and cross-examination, were inadmissible for their substantive probative value. (See Evid. Code, §§ 791, 1235; People v. Green (1971) 3 Cal.3d 981 [92 Cal.Rptr. 494, 479 P.2d 998], passim; and see People v. Chavez (1980) 26 Cal.3d 334, 349-361 [161 Cal.Rptr. 762, 605 P.2d 401

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Bluebook (online)
137 Cal. App. 3d 888, 187 Cal. Rptr. 363, 1982 Cal. App. LEXIS 2180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mendonsa-calctapp-1982.