People v. Super. Ct. (Fernandez)

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 1, 2023
DocketE078405
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Super. Ct. (Fernandez) (People v. Super. Ct. (Fernandez)) 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. Super. Ct. (Fernandez), (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

See Dissenting Opinion

Filed 2/1/23 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

THE PEOPLE,

Petitioner, E078405

v. (Super.Ct.No. INF2000098)

THE SUPERIOR COURT OF OPINION RIVERSIDE COUNTY,

Respondent;

LEONARDO DANIEL ALVARADO FERNANDEZ,

Real Party in Interest.

ORIGINAL PROCEEDINGS; petition for writ of mandate. Dale R. Wells,

petition granted.

Michael A. Hestrin. District Attorney, and John F. Pomeroy, Deputy District

Attorney for Petitioner.

No appearance by Respondent.

Dolan Law Offices and John Patrick Dolan for Real Party in Interest. When Leonardo Fernandez arrived at the hospital with his son Marco, the child

was 13 weeks old and already dead. During Marco’s brief life, he had sustained 18

separate rib fractures and bruises spattered his body. Blunt forces had caused several

skull fractures and contusions on his brain. An expert later testified that Marco died from

a blow to the left side of his skull.

The issue before us is whether at the preliminary hearing the People demonstrated

a rational ground for concluding that Fernandez intended to kill Marco, an element

necessary to charge the torture-murder special circumstance. We conclude that showing

was made and grant a writ of mandate to order the charge reinstated.

I. BACKGROUND

Marco was born on October 16, 2019, and died just 13 weeks later, on January 16,

2020. At 4:08 a.m. that day, Marco’s parents, Leonardo Fernandez (the Real Party in

Interest on this petition) and Zue Flores, arrived with him at a hospital where staff found

him cold to the touch, displaying no pulse and dilated eyes. He did not revive with CPR,

a breathing bag, or intravenous medications meant to stimulate his heart. He was

declared dead on arrival, and by 5:00 a.m. a deputy coroner was examining him.

In the immediate police investigation, the parents offered a story about Fernandez

falling with Marco while hiking, which they said was either the previous day or two days

earlier. But in later police interviews, both parents admitted they were lying about the

hiking fall. They instead asserted that Marco’s hospital trip resulted from Fernandez’s

shaking the baby to stop his crying in a car seat the previous night. Upon the shaking,

2 Marco’s body purportedly “went limp,” he began breathing shallowly, and his “trouble

breathing” caused them to take him to the hospital.

When asked why Marco’s body showed injuries, Fernandez admitted to police

officers that he had struck Marco. He admitted punching Marco on the ribcage, whipping

him with a towel in the eye, and slapping and squeezing his leg. He stated that the baby

had once fallen off a bed onto a tile floor on his back. Flores acknowledged seeing

Fernandez use a pole to bruise the bottom of the baby’s feet. Flores explained that

because Marco was born paler than their other children, Fernandez accused her of

infidelity. She said that Fernandez called the baby by a nickname, the Spanish word for

gopher.

Five days after Marco’s death, the People filed a felony complaint charging

Fernandez with the premeditated murder of Marco (Pen. Code, § 187, subd. (a)) and the

special circumstance of a murder that was intentional and involved the infliction of

torture (id., § 190.2, subd. (a)(18)).1 A magistrate judge held a preliminary hearing that

included four days of testimony from law enforcement officers and medical personnel;

this hearing provided the facts that are before us. At the hearing’s end, the magistrate

found sufficient evidence to hold Fernandez as to the murder charge, but not as to the

special circumstance. In particular, the magistrate focused on the lack of evidence of

1 Further statutory citations are to the Penal Code. The complaint and the later- filed information contained other charges against Fernandez and charges against Flores that are not relevant here.

3 precisely how Marco died, concluding that he did not “have enough information before

me to say at that point [Fernandez] had an intent to kill.”

The People later filed an information charging Fernandez with Marco’s murder, as

well as with the torture-murder special circumstance. Fernandez moved to set aside the

special circumstance charge pursuant to section 995. At a hearing on that motion, the

trial court said it believed that “the evidence does show that Mr. Fernandez had a specific

intent to kill Marco and that he had a specific intent to torture Marco to that end.” But

the trial court stated that it was not allowed to “substitute my judgment as to the weight

of the evidence” for the magistrate’s judgment, so it granted Fernandez’s motion and

struck the special circumstance from the information. The People filed the instant

petition for a writ of prohibition or mandate and requested that we order the special

circumstance reinstated.

II. STANDARD OF REVIEW

After a criminal complaint has been filed, a magistrate must determine pursuant to

section 872 whether “sufficient cause” justifies holding the defendant to answer for the

offense. (People v. Slaughter (1984) 35 Cal.3d 629, 636 (Slaughter).) The standard,

equated with probable cause, is “quite distinct” from the burden needed to convict the

defendant. (Id. at p. 637.) The magistrate is to decide if there is ““‘some rational ground

for assuming the possibility that an offense has been committed and the accused is guilty

of it.’”” (Ibid. [quoting People v. Orin (1975) 13 Cal.3d 937, 947].)

4 In making a probable cause determination “magistrates do not themselves decide

whether the defendant is guilty,” so a magistrate’s personal opinion about a defendant’s

guilt “is of no legal significance” as the case proceeds. (Cooley v. Superior Court of

Alameda County (2002) 29 Cal.4th 228, 251.)

Once a magistrate has issued a commitment order, under section 739 the

prosecution may charge in an information “a different but related crime shown by the

evidence taken before the magistrate.” (Parks v. Superior Court (1952) 38 Cal.2d 609,

612.) The crime is related if it arose out of the transaction that was the basis for the

magistrate’s holding order. (Jones v. Superior Court (1971) 4 Cal.3d 660, 665.) The

prosecution may charge a related offense even where the magistrate concluded “that the

evidence did not show probable cause that such offense had been committed.” (Parks v.

Superior Court, supra, 38 Cal.2d at pp. 613-614.)

Consequently, when, as here, a magistrate strikes a special circumstance allegation

for lack of sufficient cause, that “does not preclude the prosecutor from later filing an

information charging the same matter omitted by the magistrate from the order of

commitment.” (People v. San Nicolas (2004) 34 Cal.4th 614, 653, 657 (San Nicolas).

“So long as the additional offense was supported by the evidence taken before the

magistrate, it may be included in the information—even if the magistrate did not see fit

herself to include such offense.” (Id. at p. 654, fn.8.) In San Nicolas, accordingly, our

Supreme Court upheld “the reinstatement of the special circumstance allegation,

notwithstanding the magistrate’s earlier dismissal.” (Id. at p. 657; see Ramos v. Superior

5 Court (1982) 32 Cal.3d 26, 35 [where a magistrate dismisses a special circumstance, the

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People v. Super. Ct. (Fernandez), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-super-ct-fernandez-calctapp-2023.