People v. Nwafor

46 Cal. App. 4th 39, 53 Cal. Rptr. 2d 564, 96 Daily Journal DAR 6546, 96 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 4086, 1996 Cal. App. LEXIS 539
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 5, 1996
DocketB086245
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 46 Cal. App. 4th 39 (People v. Nwafor) 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. Nwafor, 46 Cal. App. 4th 39, 53 Cal. Rptr. 2d 564, 96 Daily Journal DAR 6546, 96 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 4086, 1996 Cal. App. LEXIS 539 (Cal. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

Opinion

WOODS, J.

*42 Procedural and Factual Background

By amended information appellant was charged with 14 offenses; 13 involved victim Uchenna O., 1 involved her older sister Ihunna. The jury convicted appellant of twelve, acquitted him of one, and hung on one, the sole offense involving Ihunna.

As to these 12 offenses, all involving Uchenna O., 4 were alleged to have occurred during the period June 1, 1988, through August 31, 1989. Counts I, II, and III were acts of sexual intercourse in violations of Penal Code section 288, subdivision (a). (Statutory references, unless otherwise noted, are to the Penal Code.) Count IV (§ 288, subd. (a)) involved masturbation of appellant.

Counts V and VI (§ 288, subd. (c)), intercourse and masturbation, were alleged to have occurred during the period June 1, 1990, through August 31, 1990.

Counts VII (§ 288, subd. (c): sexual intercourse), VIII (§ 288, subd. (c): masturbation), and IX (§ 286, subd. (b)(2): sodomy) were alleged to have occurred during the period June 1, 1991, through August 31, 1991.

Counts X (§ 288a, subd. (b)(1): oral copulation) and XI (§ 288, subd. (c): sexual intercourse) were alleged to have occurred during the period April 22, 1990, through April 21, 1992.

Finally, count XIII (§ 261.5, subd. (a): unlawful sexual intercourse with a minor, a misdemeanor) was alleged to have occurred on April 15, 1993.

Despite the length of the trial (6 weeks: April 13, 1994, to May 24, 1994) and size of the record (705 pages of clerk’s transcript and 2,239 pages of reporter’s transcript) the essential facts may be stated briefly. Our perspective favors the judgment. (People v. Barnes (1986) 42 Cal.3d 284, 303-304 [228 Cal.Rptr. 228, 721 P.2d 110].)

The victim’s mother and appellant’s wife had lived in the same village in Nigeria and the two families, appellant’s and the victim’s, were close friends in the United States. Appellant was the victim’s godfather and his wife her godmother.

In 1987 appellant worked for Prudential as an insurance agent and sometime in 1988, while still working for Prudential, started his own insurance business on Crenshaw Boulevard. The victim began working for appellant *43 during the summer of 1988 when she was 12 years old. 1 She worked for him each of the following three summers. During each of these summers sex acts with appellant occurred, always at his office on Crenshaw.

During the summer of 1992, when the victim was 16 years old, she did not work for appellant, she worked at McDonald’s. Several times that summer, appellant picked up the victim from McDonald’s, took her to his office, and had sex with her.

Other sexual acts occurred in early 1993. The last act of sexual intercourse occurred on April 15, 1993, an Easter Thursday, at appellant’s office. That night the victim and her younger brothers slept at appellant’s house because the next day appellant was to take them, and his own children, to Disneyland.

Friday morning, April 16, 1993, before leaving for Disneyland, the victim was showering when appellant entered the bathroom and closed the door. Immediately, appellant’s wife opened the door and saw the two of them. Appellant left. Later that morning, appellant’s wife asked the victim if anything had happened and the victim said no.

Still suspicious, appellant’s wife called the victim’s mother and told her what she had seen. The victim’s mother said she wanted appellant to bring the victim home Friday night, when they returned from Disneyland. But it was late when appellant and the children returned from Disneyland Friday night and they slept at appellant’s house. The victim’s mother called again and said she wanted her daughter brought home Saturday morning.

Saturday afternoon, April 17, 1993, when the victim’s mother returned home from work, she asked the victim if anything had happened between her and appellant. The victim said no. There was more questioning and more denials. The victim’s mother telephoned her husband and he spoke to the victim. Then the victim and her mother went upstairs to her parents’ bedroom where the victim told her mother she and appellant had had intercourse.

The victim’s mother became hysterical, ran to the stairway and shouted to her older daughter “. . . your sister has killed me, your sister has killed me.” She then started beating the victim with her husband’s shoe. The victim said, “I’m sorry, mommy” but when the beating continued she ran out of the house.

On Sunday, April 18, 1993, no one in the victim’s family spoke to the victim. The family went to church, as usual, but no one—during the regular church ritual—shook hands with her.

*44 On Monday, April 19, 1993, the victim’s mother took her to the police station, where Officer Linda Compton interviewed the victim. Appellant was arrested later that day.

Discussion

1. Were counts I, II, III, and IV committed during the alleged period June 1, 1988, through August 31, 1989?

What first happened and where it happened was not in doubt. The victim’s testimony was detailed and consistent.

She was in appellant’s office on Crenshaw when he started massaging her shoulders. Appellant then removed her shorts and panties, took off his own lower garments, sat in his armless desk chair, and had the victim sit on his lap with his erect penis painfully entering her vagina.

When this happened was in doubt. The victim was sure it occurred during the summer, from mid-June through August, but whether in 1988 when she was 12 or 1989 when she was 13, the victim was unsure.

Appellant, in his two-part argument, contends it is inherently improbable this first offense occurred in the summer of 1988. Respondent disagrees.

Although there was some evidence this first offense might have occurred in 1988, we would hesitate to characterize this evidence as substantial. The most persuasive evidence established appellant first rented his Crenshaw office in August 1988 and, at that time, his wife and young children were frequently there.

We agree with the first part of appellant’s argument: the first offense occurred during the summer of 1989.

The second part of appellant’s argument is based upon the assumption that the conduct involved in counts II, III, and IV occurred in 1990, the summer after the first offense. If so, these counts were outside the alleged period and cannot be sustained. Appellant’s assumption is mistaken.

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Bluebook (online)
46 Cal. App. 4th 39, 53 Cal. Rptr. 2d 564, 96 Daily Journal DAR 6546, 96 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 4086, 1996 Cal. App. LEXIS 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-nwafor-calctapp-1996.