People v. Sta Ana

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 21, 2021
DocketH046864
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Sta Ana (People v. Sta Ana) 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. Sta Ana, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 12/21/21 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

THE PEOPLE, H046864 (Santa Clara County Plaintiff and Respondent, Super. Ct. No. C1761829)

v.

MARK JAYSON STA ANA,

Defendant and Appellant.

Defendant Mark Jayson Sta Ana had sex with a woman while she was intoxicated and unconscious. A jury convicted him of rape of an intoxicated person and rape of an unconscious person. On appeal from the judgment sentencing him to three years in prison, defendant argues the interrogating officers violated his rights under Miranda v. Arizona (1966) 384 U.S. 436 (Miranda); the trial court made improper comments when questioning an expert witness; defense counsel provided ineffective assistance by not objecting to a nurse’s qualifications to testify as an expert; the jury instructions did not correctly define consent; the trial court erred in resolving a jury deadlock; punishment for rape of an unconscious person should have been stayed; and that the various errors were cumulatively prejudicial. We agree that punishment for rape of an unconscious person must be stayed under Penal Code section 654, but find no basis for reversal. We will modify the judgment to stay that punishment and affirm the judgment as modified. I. TRIAL COURT PROCEEDINGS Both charged counts (rape of an intoxicated person (Pen. Code, § 261, subd. (a)(3)) and rape of an unconscious person (Pen. Code, § 261, subd. (a)(4))) related to defendant’s conduct with one woman on one night in April 2017. (Unspecified statutory references are to the Penal Code.) We will refer to the victim as K.D. in the interest of privacy. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.90(b)(4).) A. TRIAL EVIDENCE 1. Prosecution Case K.D. testified that she was born in 1994 in the Philippines and had immigrated to the United States with her family in 2002. In 2017 she lived in an apartment with her parents, her brother, and her three-year-old son. Her parents went to the Philippines for about a month around April 2017. K.D. had met defendant at a party earlier in 2017. Defendant was a friend of Glen, whom K.D. was dating. After K.D. learned that defendant had moved out of his family home and was living in his car, she invited him to stay in her parents’ bedroom while they were out of the country. She made the offer both to give him a place to stay and because she wanted someone else staying at the apartment. He agreed, and she gave him a key because she trusted him. K.D. and defendant had consensual sex on two occasions before the incident that resulted in criminal charges. She testified that on the first occasion they had been drinking, “we got a little tipsy and drunk, and he picked me up from the chair that I was sitting [sic], and he took me to my parents’ room with him.” She testified that she could not recall many details from the interaction, but she confirmed that they had sexual intercourse that night. She acknowledged on cross-examination that she told defendant she did not want to kiss or receive oral sex, and that he complied with those requests. That encounter occurred the first night defendant spent at the apartment. The second encounter occurred on another evening when K.D. and defendant were drinking at the apartment with a male friend. K.D. went to her parents’ bedroom to sleep and defendant followed her. They had sex. K.D. testified that the morning after the second encounter she told defendant she did not want to have a sexual relationship anymore because she was dating their mutual friend, and defendant agreed. K.D. testified that during both 2 encounters her level of intoxication was an eight on a scale of one being totally sober to ten being passed out drunk. K.D. sent defendant a text message a few days later on Easter Sunday because he had not come back to the apartment. He informed her he was staying with his family again. She texted defendant that she was drinking with some friends at her apartment. (K.D. later gave the police access to her phone, and some of her text messages with defendant and others were admitted into evidence at trial. We reproduce the messages here verbatim, with any errors in the original.) She sent defendant the message, “Im drunk.” He responded, “Looks like ur fck up.” He told her he was coming over, and she acknowledged the message. There was a later text message from defendant that said, “Damn girl ur out lol.” K.D. did not remember that message. K.D. testified that she had consumed a lot of drinks, and felt “[r]eally drunk.” She decided to go to bed, and told her friends they could stay at the apartment. She testified that when she went to bed that night she was an eight out of ten on the intoxication scale. She fell asleep next to her son. K.D. testified that the next thing she remembered was “getting shaked, and my body was shaking, and I was wondering why. And realized that I was getting penetrated.” She opened her eyes and saw defendant on top of her, and she felt his penis inside of her vagina. She then felt liquid dripping near her vagina, at which point defendant pulled her pants back up. K.D. had fallen asleep with underwear and pajama pants on. She testified that she did not say anything to defendant because she was afraid that he might hurt her. She stated she was “too shocked to even know what I was thinking.” She testified that she felt more intoxicated upon waking up, a nine out of ten. After she felt him pull her pants back up she lost consciousness and passed out because she was “too intoxicated.” K.D. awoke later and called 911. Defendant was asleep in her parents’ room and she wanted him out of the apartment. A recording of the 911 call was admitted into

3 evidence and played for the jury. K.D. also texted a friend that morning that defendant “raped me last night while I was knocked out.” Officers arrived and arrested defendant. Defendant was interrogated by two detectives at the police station after waiving his Miranda rights. (Defendant argues on appeal that the Miranda advisement was defective, which we address in Part II.A.) A video of the interrogation was admitted into evidence and played for the jury. Defendant told the detectives that he and K.D. had a sexual relationship and that she had told him she no longer wanted to have a sexual relationship. He initially told them he had sex with K.D. just one time, but eventually admitted having sex on the three occasions K.D. described at trial. Regarding Easter Sunday, defendant told the detectives that K.D. had been texting him during the day asking whether he was coming to the apartment. She seemed drunk. Defendant decided to go to K.D.’s apartment. Defendant initially told the detectives that he went directly to sleep after K.D.’s friends left the apartment. A detective told defendant DNA had been collected from K.D. and asked him whose DNA he thought it would match. He responded, “I think it’s going to be me.” Asked to elaborate, defendant said after K.D.’s friends left he “went there in her room and have sex with her while she’s sleeping that’s it.” Elaborating further, defendant stated he grabbed K.D., took off her pants, and “put my penis into her pussy.” Asked what K.D. was doing, defendant stated “[s]he was sleeping.” Asked why defendant had sex with K.D. despite her having previously told him she no longer wanted to have a sexual relationship, defendant stated: “So I don’t know what happened to me like that. I feel like -- I don’t know. I feel very horny that night.” K.D. underwent a sexual assault response team (SART) examination by a sexual assault forensic nurse.

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Bluebook (online)
People v. Sta Ana, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-sta-ana-calctapp-2021.