People v. Pompa CA4/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 10, 2015
DocketG050441
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Pompa CA4/2 (People v. Pompa CA4/2) 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. Pompa CA4/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 2/10/15 P. v. Pompa CA4/2

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

THE PEOPLE,

Plaintiff and Respondent, G050441

v. (Super. Ct. No. RIF1202010)

MARIO RIVAS POMPA, OPINION

Defendant and Appellant.

Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Riverside County, Charles J. Koosed, Judge. Affirmed. Christopher Nalls, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant. Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Dane R. Gillette, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General, Steve Oetting, Tami Falkenstein Hennick and Junichi P. Semitsu, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.

* * * A jury convicted defendant Mario Rivas Pompa of attempted murder (count 1), and five counts of assault with a deadly weapon, to wit, a car (counts 2 through 6). The trial court sentenced defendant to 13 years in state prison. Defendant contends the court’s failure to give a unanimity instruction constituted prejudicial error and that insufficient evidence supported the assault with a deadly weapon counts. We disagree and affirm the judgment.

FACTS

After 25 years of marriage, Imelda Pompa divorced defendant due to his cocaine addiction and refusal to seek treatment. She moved herself and their four children and granddaughter out of the family home into an apartment. Unless Pompa saw defendant was under influence of drugs, she allowed him to help care for their youngest son. On the morning he committed the charged crimes, defendant threatened Pompa that she would lose her home, kids, and job if she did not allow him into the apartment. When Pompa refused to let him take their youngest son, defendant said that would be the last time she hugged him. Around 10:00 p.m. that evening, defendant returned to Pompa’s apartment complex where Nakita Manai was sitting in her car. Defendant smashed his car into Pompa’s parked car, pinning it against a tree. Manai had never seen defendant or his car before and began driving away. Defendant followed and struck the back of her car. Manai pulled over to the side of the road, thinking she “was just in his way.” But defendant came at her fast and looked like he was going to hit her so she pulled out onto the road and pressed on the gas. Defendant rammed her car two more times. When Manai slowed down for a sharp curve, defendant clipped her back bumper causing her car to flip over a curb and roll several times onto a grassy area.

2 Manai blacked out from the crash and woke up lying on the grass outside her car, which was on its side with the engine still running. Manai jumped up, scared. She saw defendant had turned his car and was “driving directly towards” her, “trying to jump the curb with his car” about three or four times. If defendant had not turned his car toward Manai, his car would not have been hitting the curb. Manai was afraid defendant was going to run her over. Defendant eventually drove away. The distance from where defendant started chasing Manai to where her car rolled over was “[p]robably around a mile and a half.” The entire incident occurred within three or four minutes. Defendant then drove back to Pompa’s apartment complex. After circling the parking lot while yelling loudly, defendant drove over the sidewalk and “hit[] the apartment with his car,” knocking down the front door. The impact caused the dead bolt to break the doorjamb and the wooden frame. The part of the door with the handle “was gone.” Defendant’s teenage son was in the living room “right next to the front door” when defendant smashed through it. Pompa and the rest of the family members were in the back of the small apartment, about 15 feet away from the front door. Although defendant appeared to be preparing to crash into the apartment again, he drove away instead. Defendant testified he had been high on methamphetamine for the four days leading up to the crimes. He was hallucinating, hearing voices, seeing things, and not sleeping.

DISCUSSION

1. Unanimity Instruction Defendant contends his attempted murder conviction should be reversed because the court prejudicially erred in failing to give an instruction, sua sponte, that the jury must unanimously agree on the acts forming the basis for the charge. We disagree.

3 A criminal defendant has a constitutional right to a unanimous jury verdict. When a defendant is charged with a single act, but the evidence shows more than one instance of the charged crime, either the prosecution must select the particular act upon which it relies to prove the charge, or the jury must be instructed that it unanimously must agree beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant committed the same specific act. (People v. Russo (2001) 25 Cal.4th 1124, 1132.) If the prosecution does not make a selection, the court must give the instruction sua sponte. (Ibid.) The omission of a unanimity instruction is reversible error if, without it, not all jurors may have believed the defendant was guilty based on the same act. (Ibid.) Here, the court failed to give a unanimity instruction, and the Attorney General admits “[t]he prosecutor made no clear election of what act o[r] acts he was relying on” for the attempted murder charge. Defendant cites several distinct acts upon which the conviction could have been based: (1) striking the back of Manai’s car; (2) speeding toward her car after she had pulled over to the roadside; (3) ramming her twice at high speed; (4) clipping her bumper, which caused her car to flip over; and (5) attempting to “‘jump the curb’” with his car. The prosecutor acknowledged any of the acts could support the count. But “[t]he unanimity instruction is not required when the acts alleged are so closely connected as to form part of one transaction. [Citations.] The ‘continuous conduct’ rule applies when the defendant offers essentially the same defense to each of the acts, and there is no reasonable basis for the jury to distinguish between them.” (People v. Stankewitz (1990) 51 Cal.3d 72, 100.) “The ‘continuous course of conduct’ exception—when the acts are so closely connected that they form one transaction—is meant to apply not to all crimes occurring during a single transaction but only to those ‘where the acts testified to are so closely related in time and place that the jurors reasonably must either accept or reject the victim’s testimony in toto.’” (People v. Melendez (1990) 224 Cal.App.3d 1420, 1429, disapproved of by People v. Majors (1998)

4 18 Cal.4th 385, 408, to the extent it would require jurors in a murder case to unanimously agree on a theory of murder.) Here, the evidence showed defendant rammed Manai’s car several times and the curb in an effort to drive his car at her within a short period of time (three to four minutes) and a close geographical area (a mile and a half). The acts alleged were so closely connected in both time and place that no unanimity instruction was required. Defendant maintains the continuous conduct rule does not apply because the act of ramming Manai’s car is “significant[ly] differen[t]” from that of hitting the curb, and defense “counsel offered different explanations for both.” Defense counsel did not argue the acts did not occur or that they were subject to different defenses. Rather, he asserted at trial that defendant may not have had the necessary mental state required for attempted murder during each act.

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Related

People v. Clark
261 P.3d 243 (California Supreme Court, 2011)
People v. Riel
998 P.2d 969 (California Supreme Court, 2000)
People v. Majors
956 P.2d 1137 (California Supreme Court, 1998)
People v. Valdez
175 Cal. App. 3d 103 (California Court of Appeal, 1985)
People v. Melendez
224 Cal. App. 3d 1420 (California Court of Appeal, 1990)
People v. Russo
25 P.3d 641 (California Supreme Court, 2001)
People v. Stankewitz
793 P.2d 23 (California Supreme Court, 1990)
People v. Chance
189 P.3d 971 (California Supreme Court, 2008)

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Bluebook (online)
People v. Pompa CA4/2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-pompa-ca42-calctapp-2015.