Salisbury v. County of Orange

31 Cal. Rptr. 3d 831, 131 Cal. App. 4th 756, 2005 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6719, 2005 Daily Journal DAR 9168, 2005 Cal. App. LEXIS 1188
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 28, 2005
DocketG032270
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 31 Cal. Rptr. 3d 831 (Salisbury v. County of Orange) 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
Salisbury v. County of Orange, 31 Cal. Rptr. 3d 831, 131 Cal. App. 4th 756, 2005 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6719, 2005 Daily Journal DAR 9168, 2005 Cal. App. LEXIS 1188 (Cal. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Opinion

SILLS, P. J. —

Chad Salisbury was convicted of felony assault with a hate crime enhancement. He obtained a new trial based on newly discovered evidence and the ineffective assistance of his counsel, an Orange County deputy public defender. On retrial, he was acquitted. Salisbury then brought this action for legal malpractice against the public defender.

The trial court bifurcated the issue of Salisbury’s actual innocence and tried it without a jury; it found Salisbury had not met his burden of proof and entered judgment against him. On appeal, Salisbury contends he was entitled to a jury determination of his actual innocence because the decision rests on the credibility of witnesses. We agree and reverse.

FACTS

Salisbury was charged with assault with a deadly weapon, plus enhancements for inflicting great bodily injury and the commission of a hate crime. The charges arose out of the August 1995 beating of Mark David following a rock concert in Orange. At trial, Salisbury was represented by an Orange County deputy public defender. A jury found him guilty of assault with a deadly weapon and the hate crime enhancement; it found him not guilty of the infliction of great bodily injury. After his conviction, Salisbury retained private counsel, who brought a motion for new trial based on newly discovered evidence and the ineffective assistance of counsel. The motion was granted and a new trial ordered. The jury in the second trial found Salisbury not guilty of any of the charges.

Subsequently, Salisbury filed this action against the Orange County Public Defender’s Office for legal malpractice. He alleged he was not guilty of the charged offenses, and but for the negligence of the public defenders, he would not have been convicted. At the commencement of trial, the court determined that the question of Salisbury’s factual innocence, a prerequisite to a claim of malpractice based on a criminal case, was a question of fact for *760 the trial court, not the jury. Notwithstanding, a jury was impaneled, and both it and the court heard evidence from numerous witnesses.

Scott Troske testified that on August 5, 1995, he was a member of a punk rock band called Drain Bamaged. His band was one of four in the show at a venue in Orange. He noticed some “Nazi Skinheads” in the crowd, whom he identified by their clothing and behavior. While his band was playing, the “Nazi Skinheads” were “throwing seig hells,” “pushing people around. Being a little more rough than the rest of the people who were just trying to have fun dancing.” When the lead band, Fear, took the stage, the problems escalated. Fear’s lead guitar player was an African American, and the Nazi Skinheads began calling him “nigger.” One jumped up on the stage and swung at the guitarist, causing the band to stop playing. A fight broke out and the security guards began to clear the hall.

Troske went up on the stage to talk to Fear’s singer; Salisbury was also there, talking to the singer. Troske then went outside to guard Fear’s van and saw “an attack on a dark complected male,” whom he identified as Mark David. Troske knew David from other concerts, and the two were friends. Some of the Nazi Skinheads spotted David and a Caucasian male standing by a car. One said, “Look, there is one of them. Let’s get him.” A group of them ran over and jumped on David, kicking and stomping on his head and body. Although Troske was afraid for himself, he ran to the scene and “started pulling people off, pushing them out of the way. Yelling at them, cursing and swearing. Just getting them off him and trying to get them to leave him alone because I thought they were going to kill him. It did not look good.” The situation was chaotic, but Troske got a “fairly good look” at the people he was pulling off, “for the most part.” He did not see Salisbury during the attack. Troske thought he was the only person pulling people off David, but he admitted he “may not have noticed” if there were someone else “at the end of the car or side of the car also pushing, knocking people out of the way . . . .”

About 15 or 20 minutes later, the police determined that Salisbury was a suspect and asked Troske to assist in a field I.D. When asked whether Salisbury was the person that committed the attack, Troske said, “No.” Someone to his right, however, identified Salisbury as one of the attackers.

Shannon Sherman testified she was 15 at the time of the incident, and she went to the show with her boyfriend and some other friends. After security cleared the hall, Sherman was walking toward their car when she saw someone being attacked. “I observed somebody run under the car and get drug out from the car and then somebody jumped off the top of the car onto his chest. And they began hitting him, kicking him.” She identified the person *761 jumping onto the victim as Kevin Dale, whom she knew through her boyfriend. Other people were also jumping off the car onto the victim, and still others were beating him, but none of them was Salisbury. Sherman knew Salisbury “by sight,” also through her boyfriend.

Salisbury testified he was raised as a Jew and currently held that religious belief; he would never be a member of a group that supported the killing of Jews. On the night of the show, he left the hall when directed to do so. Outside, he found a “chaotic” situation, which he avoided by moving to “the other side of the parking lot and waiting] for my friends.” After a few minutes, however, he decided to go back inside to talk to Fear’s lead guitarist. When he re-emerged, he was accused of being “one of the people” and was detained by an officer. Subsequently, he was arrested.

Gene Reil testified that he attended the show on August 5, 1995. At that time, he was a U.S. Marine, living on base at Camp Pendleton. He noticed Salisbury, whom he had never seen before, “walking around inside the facility” during a break in the show, before Fear came on stage. Salisbury attracted Reil’s attention because of his tattoos. Reil had been at the venue about half an hour when the “commotion” started. He identified the group of people “screaming profanities and seig hells” as Skinheads. “They started chanting zeig hells and they repeatedly used the word ‘nigger, nigger, nigger’ over and over again. Things of that nature.” Like Troske, Reil testified that one of the Skinheads jumped on the stage and a fight broke out.

Reil went outside to wait by Fear’s van so he could help them load their equipment. He saw an angry group of skinheads pounding on the now-locked doors to the hall, “chanting ‘let the nigger out.’ ” One of the Skinheads “grabbed a kid and said, ‘Hey, I got one, I got one, I got one.’ ” Reil later learned this was Mark David. The Skinhead who grabbed David pulled him toward a car; 15 or 20 other Skinheads joined him. When they disappeared from view behind the car, Reil and “the other guy from the musical group that was playing, we started going over and yelling the cops were coming, trying to scare them away.”

As Reil came around the car, he saw “people swinging their arms, kicking.” He then saw two men jumping over the front of the car on the hood and then down into the crowd of people beating David. One of these men was Salisbury. Reil saw him “swinging his fists down towards where Mr. David was.” He was “hunched down towards the victim swinging. [(j[| . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 Cal. Rptr. 3d 831, 131 Cal. App. 4th 756, 2005 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6719, 2005 Daily Journal DAR 9168, 2005 Cal. App. LEXIS 1188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salisbury-v-county-of-orange-calctapp-2005.