People v. Wear

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 4, 2020
DocketA152732
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Wear (People v. Wear) 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. Wear, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 2/4/20 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, A152732 v. JAMES HENRY WEAR, (Alameda County Super. Ct. No. H58247) Defendant and Appellant.

Defendant James Wear arranged to meet an acquaintance, Ryan Rossknecht, and went to the meeting with a friend, Brandon Lowell. Wear apparently intended to buy or steal a gun from Rossknecht and possibly to supply him with heroin. The evidence suggested that an argument arose during the meeting, and Rossknecht, who had two guns with him, shot Lowell once with one of them. Wear, who was unarmed, then seized that gun, shot Rossknecht twice with it, and fled with the other gun. Lowell and Rossknecht died of their injuries. Wear was charged with the murders of both Lowell and Rossknecht. As to the charge involving Lowell, the jury was unable to return a verdict. As to the charge involving Rossknecht, the jury found Wear guilty of first degree murder and found true an allegation that Wear personally and intentionally discharged a firearm causing the death, but it was unable to return a verdict on a special-circumstance allegation that Wear murdered Rossknecht during a robbery. After Wear admitted two prior convictions, one of which was a strike, the trial court sentenced him to 80 years to life in prison. On appeal, Wear claims there was insufficient evidence to convict him of first degree murder of Rossknecht on either of the theories presented: felony murder during a robbery and premeditated murder. We conclude there was sufficient evidence of felony

1 murder but insufficient evidence of premeditated murder. Because the record affirmatively shows that some jurors convicted Wear based on the insufficiently supported premeditated-murder theory, we must reverse.1 I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND A. Background Wear and Lowell grew up in Livermore and were good friends. At the time of the killings on March 1, 2015, they had recently begun living together, along with their respective girlfriends, in a home in Mountain House. Wear, who was 28 years old, and Lowell, who was around the same age, regularly used and sold drugs, including heroin. Wear and 22-year-old Rossknecht, who was also from Livermore, were acquaintances. Rossknecht was addicted to heroin and on probation for selling drugs, and he had entered a drug rehabilitation program in Hayward about two weeks before his death. He sometimes visited his parents’ house in Livermore and, because he did not have a cell phone, used their home phone to make and receive calls. Taylor O. was a mutual acquaintance of Rossknecht and Wear’s and also grew up in Livermore. Her boyfriend at the time had been friends with Rossknecht since childhood. Two days before the killings, Rossknecht talked with Taylor O. on the phone. He wanted to hang out with her and her boyfriend, who were also heroin addicts, and wanted to obtain a small amount of heroin. Taylor O. and her boyfriend were unavailable because they were staying at a Tracy hotel, and she told Rossknecht he could probably get heroin from Wear, whom she knew sold it. Taylor O. was aware that Wear and Rossknecht “didn’t really like each other too much.” Both men had independently talked to her about “a falling out” they had at least

1 The parties agree that we therefore need not reach Wear’s other claims, including that his trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to present evidence on the meaning of a slang phrase—“hitting a lick”—Wear used in a text message sent shortly before the killings. In a separate matter, Wear filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in which he claims that counsel rendered ineffective assistance based on the same omission. By separate order in the habeas matter, No. A157630, we deny the petition as moot.

2 a year before the killings over a drug “transaction that went bad.” Taylor O. had not, however, heard either Wear or Rossknecht threaten the other. Rossknecht asked for Wear’s contact information, and Taylor O. decided she had to check with Wear first. She immediately called Wear, who, despite any dislike of Rossknecht, responded “enthusiastic[ally]” when Taylor O. asked if she could give Rossknecht his phone number. A minute later, Rossknecht called her again, and she gave him Wear’s number. Phone records showed that after his phone calls with Taylor O., Rossknecht had four calls with Wear over the next hour or so, one of which lasted over 10 minutes. The two men also spoke twice the following evening, which was the night before the killings. B. March 1 On March 1, around 2:00 p.m., Rossknecht used his parents’ home phone to call Taylor O.’s boyfriend, who put the call on speakerphone so Taylor O. could join the conversation. Taylor O. testified that Rossknecht “wanted someone to go with him” to meet an unidentified person to “sell [a] gun because he needed money and whatever, just wanted to get rid of it.”2 Taylor O. and her boyfriend told Rossknecht they could not go with him because they were at her parents’ house trying to withdraw from heroin. Rossknecht said he was about to leave his parents’ house to conduct the gun sale, and he did not seem too concerned that the couple could not accompany him. Rossknecht’s mother indicated that around 3:00 p.m. she saw her son talking on the home phone and heard him say, “Silver 4” or “400.” Phone records showed that Rossknecht spoke to Wear at 2:49 p.m. Phone records also showed that after this call with Wear, Rossknecht repeatedly called Xavier C., a childhood friend. At 3:13 p.m., Xavier C. returned Rossknecht’s call and spoke to him for about a minute. Xavier C. testified that Rossknecht asked to hang out, and Xavier C. said he was not at home but

2 At the time she testified, Taylor O. recalled that both a silver gun and a black gun were mentioned during the conversation, but she could not remember which Rossknecht intended to sell. Shortly after the killings, however, Taylor O. told the police that Rossknecht was planning to sell a silver .357 revolver.

3 could meet after he returned. Rossknecht immediately had another call with Wear, told his mother he was going to see Xavier C., and left. Rossknecht’s father testified that after his son’s death, Xavier C. told him that Rossknecht had two guns stored at Xavier C.’s house. According to Rossknecht’s father, Xavier C. said that on the day in question he had arranged to go with Rossknecht “to meet two guys to sell this gun.” Rossknecht’s father also testified that Xavier C. had told him that Rossknecht “wanted Xavier to be there [for the sale] ‘cause in his words, he said those two guys were sketchy.” At trial, Xavier C. denied that Rossknecht mentioned selling guns, that he had stored guns for Rossknecht, or that he had told Rossknecht’s father anything to this effect. Xavier C. did admit, however, that he found Rossknecht’s keys in his house after the shootings, establishing that Rossknecht had been there that day while Xavier C. was out. That afternoon, Wear and Lowell went to meet Rossknecht. Neither Wear nor Lowell brought a gun to the meeting. Lowell had won a significant amount of money at Livermore Casino the night before, and he planned to return to the casino that afternoon with a good friend, Jason M. Shortly after 3:00 p.m., Lowell, who had spent the night at the Mountain House residence, texted Jason M. that he was about to leave. Lowell’s girlfriend testified that Wear and Lowell left together in Lowell’s car, a white Honda. The evidence tended to show that Wear, Lowell, and Rossknecht met up around 3:20 p.m. A surveillance video recording played for the jury showed that around that time, “a white vehicle” pulled into a McDonald’s parking lot, “two subjects . . .

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People v. Wear, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-wear-calctapp-2020.