Court Opinion

ID: 2643428
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-11-21 18:38:49.288245+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:51:55.478022
License: Public Domain

Filed 11/21/13 P. v. Encallado CA6
                      NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
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              IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                      SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

THE PEOPLE,                                                          H038459
                                                                    (Monterey County
         Plaintiff and Respondent,                                   Super. Ct. No. SS102676A)

         v.

NOAH RYAN ENCALLADO,

         Defendant and Appellant.

         A jury found Noah Encallado (appellant) guilty of three counts of inflicting
corporal injury on a cohabitant (Pen. Code, § 273.5, counts one and three, victim Jane II,
count eleven, victim Jane I),1 one count of kidnapping (§ 207, count two, victim Jane II),2
four counts of making criminal threats (§ 422, count four, victim Jane II, counts seven,
eight, 10 and 12, victim Jane I) one count of evading an officer (Veh. Code, § 2800.2,
count five), one count of possession of a controlled substance (Health & Saf. Code
11377, count, six), and one count of possession of a firearm by a felon (former §12021,
subd. (a), repealed by Stats.2010, ch. 711, § 4, operative Jan. 1, 2012, count 13). In
addition, the jury found appellant not guilty of one count of inflicting corporal injury on a
cohabitant (count nine, victim Jane I), but guilty of the lesser included offense of battery

1
         We refer to the victims in this case as Jane I and Jane II to protect their anonymity.
2
         All unspecified section references are to the Penal Code.
on a cohabitant (§ 243, subd. (e)), and not guilty of possession of ammunition by a
prohibited person (former § 12316, subd. (b)(1), count 14). As to counts seven through
13, the jury found true an on bail enhancement (former § 12022.1, repealed by
Stats.2010, ch. 711, § 4, operative Jan. 1, 2012).
       Subsequently, the court found true the allegations that appellant had suffered two
prior strike convictions—one for arson and one for making criminal threats. (§ 1170.12,
subd. (c)(2).)
       After the court denied in part appellant's Romero motion,3 the court imposed
consecutive three strikes terms of 25 years to life on counts one, two, five, seven, eight,
10 and 12, concurrent three strikes terms of 25 years to life on counts three, four, 11 and
13. The court granted the Romero motion as to count six. Accordingly, the court
imposed a concurrent two year term on count six. The court imposed a term of 365 days
on count nine and two years for the on bail enhancement. Appellant's total un-stayed
indeterminate term amounts to 175 years to life.
       Appellant filed a timely notice of appeal. On appeal, appellant challenges the
admission of evidence that the court admitted pursuant to Evidence Code section 1109;
argues that the court abused its discretion in denying his Romero motion, and contends
that his sentence of 177 years to life amounts to cruel and/or unusual punishment. For
reasons that follow we affirm the judgment.
                                Testimony Adduced at Trial
       We set forth the evidence adduced at trial in the light most favorable to the
judgment. (People v. Ochoa (1993) 6 Cal. 4th 1199, 1206.)
Jane II's Relationship with Appellant
       Jane II testified that she met appellant in July 2007 at the Salinas rodeo after
which they started dating. In September they went to Reno together; one evening she fell

3
       People v. Superior Court (Romero) (1996) 13 Cal. 4th 497.
                                              2
asleep and when she awoke the next day, her car and appellant were gone. Appellant did
not telephone her until she was on a bus returning to the Bay Area. Later she found out
that appellant spent over $1000 on her credit card.
       Jane II tried to break off the relationship with appellant, but he apologized and
said that he would not do it again. When appellant tried to borrow her car, she refused
and appellant became angry and pushed her so that she fell to the floor and her face
smashed into the tile. This happened more than once.
       Jane II testified that one night when appellant wanted to take her car he got angry
and hit her on the legs with a hanger; another time he threw a cellular telephone at her
after she questioned appellant about "communicating with other women."
       Appellant would hit Jane II on the left side of the arm, which caused bruising.
Whenever he would hit her it was always on the left side of the arm; he did this four or
five times. At one point, appellant became "paranoid" and installed a security system so
that he could see people coming in and out of the house.
       On three occasions in December, appellant told Jane II to go into the bedroom and
take off her clothes. Appellant examined her internally to see if she had had sex with
anyone. Jane II did not tell anyone about what was happening because appellant
threatened to rape Jane II's daughter and kill her son. Jane II described another incident
in which appellant was pacing the floor with a tool larger than, but similar to a hatchet; he
threatened to hit her with it.
       Jane II described an incident in which appellant became very angry at her and
kicked the left side of her leg. During this incident, Jane II called appellant's
grandparents. Appellant's grandfather arrived and was able to calm down appellant. At
this point, Jane II tried to leave but appellant became angry and threw a dresser across the
room. Appellant grabbed her by the hair; appellant's grandparents were able to get her
out of the house and drive her away.

                                              3
       Later, appellant found Jane II and after appellant apologized they went home
together. Appellant insisted that Jane II take a "drug test," Jane said that she did not take
drugs so there was no need to take a drug test. Appellant went to the kitchen and took out
a butcher's knife; he told her to go to the bathroom where she had to urinate in a cup
while appellant watched with the knife in his hand. Appellant examined the sample and
stated that he could see she was taking drugs.
Evidence as to Counts One through Four
       Jane II described her relationship with appellant in January 2008 as "becoming
very volatile."
       On January 9, 2008, Jane II had turned off her telephone line after appellant had
taken her car again. Appellant returned and punched her on the side of her arm, shoved
her to the floor and kicked the left side of her thigh, which left her with bruises on the
side of her leg. The next time she saw appellant, Jane II was sitting at her desk.
Appellant came straight up to Jane, slapped her "upside the head" and knocked her to the
floor. When Jane II got up, appellant threw a pen at her and it stuck in her head.
       Appellant told Jane II to change her clothes; he said " 'You're coming with me.' "
Jane II told appellant she did not want to go, she just wanted her car. Appellant grabbed
Jane II and they started walking to her car. Appellant ordered Jane to get in and he drove
onto Highway 101 to a friend's apartment. When they arrived, Jane II told appellant that
she did not want to go in; appellant told her she was coming in. Jane II went with
appellant because she wanted to get her car back. Appellant told Jane II to sit on the
coach. Other people arrived at the house and they began to play hacky sack; they moved
the sofa so that it was blocking the door and they began to smoke methamphetamine.
Jane said that she wanted to go home, but appellant refused to give the keys to her car to
her as well as her cellular telephone; he told her to stay and sit.
       At one point, Jane II went into the bedroom that was in the apartment. Appellant
walked in and went into the bathroom where Jane II saw him get a toothbrush and clean
                                               4
his teeth. Jane thought that this meant that appellant was seeing the girl that owned the
apartment they were in. She confronted appellant. Appellant laughed, came over to
where Jane II was sitting, put his arm around her and then punched her in the side of the
head. Jane II got very angry and so did appellant; Jane II tried to get up to leave, but
appellant pushed her and told her that she needed to stay there. Later, appellant left, but
kept Jane II's cellular telephone and car keys and told her if she left he would come and
find her; Jane II stayed because she was scared.
       When appellant returned, he and the others smoked more methamphetamine and
moved the coach in front of the door again. Appellant told everyone, " 'This way I can
keep her in here.' " They left the apartment at approximately 3:30 a.m. Jane II walked
down the stairs first. Appellant grabbed her in the back of the head by her hair and said,
" 'You need to come with me. Because you're not running.' " Appellant forced Jane II
into the car; when she started to resist appellant pulled harder.
       In the car, appellant hit Jane II in the side of her head so hard that her head hit the
side of the car. Jane II became angry and hit appellant. Appellant grabbed the back of
her head and slammed her face down into the seat and began punching the back of her
head. Appellant told Jane II he was going to take her somewhere and make "$250 off
[her] by having somebody have sex with [her]." When Jane II told appellant that was not
going to happen, he responded by hitting her in the head, grabbing her by the mouth so
hard that she began to black out. At one point, Jane II tried to get out of the car, appellant
told her that he would hunt her down and slit her throat.
       When appellant stopped the car at a gas station, he told Jane II that if she ran he
would shoot her in the back. However, Jane II ran across the street to an Arco Station
and told a person to call the police. Jane spoke to the 911 dispatcher and a recording of

                                              5
the conversation was played to the jury.4 An officer arrived and Jane was taken to the
hospital in an ambulance.
       Salinas Police Officer Kimberley Butz5 testified that she responded to Jane II's 911
call. She described Jane II as crying and shaking; Jane II was so upset that she was
unable to answer many of the questions that Officer Butz put to her. Officer Butz stated
that after Jane II was taken to hospital, Jane II told her that appellant injured her over the
course of the night; Jane II said that when she and appellant left an apartment, appellant
held Jane II by the hair because he did not want her to run away and he struck her
repeatedly, pushed her head down and demanded to know the name of the man with
whom she was cheating. Jane II told Officer Butz that appellant had kicked her and
pushed her earlier in the week. Officer Butz detected a slight odor of alcohol on Jane II,
but she did not appear to be under the influence of alcohol.
       A staff nurse at the Natividad Medical Center testified that Jane II told her she was
slapped, punched and choked at home. Jane II had a black eye, a laceration above her left
eye, scratches on her cheek, neck and both arms as well as reddened areas on her left
knee, right thigh and back. Hospital records did not indicate that Jane II had been
drinking.
       On January 14, 2008, Jane II went to the house belonging to appellant's
grandmother to retrieve some of her belongings; appellant was there. Appellant came
outside, got into Jane II's car and would not leave. Jane II drove to the hospital to deal
with some paper work. When she came back to her car appellant was in the driver's seat.
       Appellant drove Jane II's car. In response to Jane II's suggestion that he turn
himself in to the police, appellant said he was not ready. Jane II saw a police car behind

4
        During the 911 telephone call, Jane II said that her boyfriend was beating her and
threatening to kill her. Jane II told the dispatcher that appellant had beaten her on her
face and that he had smoked crack.
5
        Kimberley Butz was retired from the Salinas Police Department at the time of
trial. However, for ease of reading we will refer to her as Officer Butz.
                                               6
them. When the police officer in the car turned on the lights, appellant drove into a side
street. Before the officer could get out of the car, appellant drove off. Appellant drove
through stop signs and almost hit a motorcyclist. Jane II wanted appellant to stop, but he
said he wanted to go to his grandmother's house. Appellant was driving at speeds of 50
m.p.h. or faster. Eventually, appellant pulled over and jumped out of the car.
       Officer Patrick Haney testified that on January 14, 2008, he was on patrol when he
saw a vehicle that matched the description of a vehicle in a suspected domestic violence
case. Officer Haney activated his lights and siren. As he did so, the suspect vehicle
made a right turn and then another right turn and stopped. Officer Haney opened his
driver's side door, but the suspect vehicle drove away.
       Officer Haney saw the vehicle go through an intersection without stopping at the
stop sign. Again, Officer Haney activated his lights and siren. During a chase, the
vehicle he was pursuing was going at speeds of 50 or 55 m.p.h. in a 25 m.p.h. zone. The
vehicle failed to stop at a stop sign. Briefly, Officer Haney lost sight of the vehicle, but
then saw the tail end of the vehicle as it made a right turn without stopping at a stop sign.
The car came to a stop and the driver got out of the car and fled.
       Officers located appellant hiding underneath a nearby vehicle. Near appellant's
location, the officers located a pill bottle with a scale. Inside the pill bottle was a
crystalline substance. Having seen the substance "dozens" of times before, Officer
Haney believed that the substance was methamphetamine. Officer Haney took appellant
into custody.
       After appellant was arrested, he admitted to Officer Haney that he saw the red
lights on the police car and heard the siren; he said he fled because he was scared.
Appellant told Officer Haney that he drove through six or seven stop signs; he admitted
ownership of the pill bottle the officers found. Appellant said that he thought what was
in the paper bindle in the pill bottle was "dope."

                                               7
       Laura Walker, a senior criminalist at the Department of Justice, examined the pill
bottle that had been located close to where appellant was arrested. She determined that it
contained a quantity of methamphetamine; the net weight of the sample was .15 grams—
a usable amount.
       After appellant was arrested, Jane II's car was impounded. Since she could not
pay the impound fees, the car was sold. When appellant was in jail, he called Jane II and
told her he expected her to stay by the telephone and to find a way to bail him out. At
this time, Jane II was living with appellant's grandparents because she had no job and no
money. When appellant would telephone Jane II, appellant would tell Jane II that it was
her fault that he was in jail.6
Evidence as to Counts Five through Fourteen
       Jane I testified that she met appellant in October 2010. They lived together for a
while in her car, at the house of appellant's grandmother and in hotels. During the time
they were together, appellant told her that he would kill her by putting a pillowcase over
her head if she was conspiring against him. Jane I was intimidated by appellant because
he was physically violent and verbally abusive.
       On October 31, 2010, Jane I tried to leave appellant and move into her sister's
house. However, she returned to appellant because Jane I's sister told her that if she
wanted to stay with her Jane I would have to stop any involvement with appellant; at that
time Jane I was not prepared to do that.
       During the weekend of November 19-20, 2010, appellant and Jane I went to Pismo
Beach to visit appellant's sister Regina. While they were there, around two or three

6
       Jane II admitted that she told a very different story about what had happened when
she testified at appellant's preliminary hearing. However, she explained that she was very
frightened at that time because appellant had called her, threatened her, and told her that
she had to say she made up everything. At trial, Jane II testified that the story she made
up that her injuries were inflicted by a horse was not true; it was appellant who inflicted
the injuries.
                                             8
o'clock in the morning, they were on the beach when appellant grabbed Jane I and Regina
by the arms and pulled them toward the ocean; appellant threatened to drown them if they
were conspiring against him. Jane I had bruises on her arms and the sleeve of her coat
was torn off by appellant.
       Jane I ran back to her SUV, but realized that she did not have her keys so she
waited for appellant and his sister to return. They got into the SUV and went to a
different location. At some point, Jane I asked for her telephone since appellant had
borrowed it. Appellant said that he did not know where it was. Later, Jane I saw the
telephone in the vehicle; Jane I tried to use the telephone but the SIM card or battery was
missing. Jane saw that the telephone had SOS on it so she pressed the button and started
to call the police, but hung up. Appellant became very upset and grabbed the telephone
and threw it. Jane I and appellant stayed in Pismo Beach for approximately two days.
Jane I admitted that they used methamphetamine together along with appellant's sister.
       During the course of their relationship, appellant would not let Jane I drive her
SUV. On the way back from Pismo Beach, Jane I's SUV started to have problems. Jane
I testified that appellant was "yelling" at her about conspiring against him by doing
something to the vehicle. They stopped at a gas station where they spent the night in the
SUV. The next morning someone appellant knew from the past came along and was able
to get the car started. Appellant asked Jane I if she knew the person; when Jane I said she
did not, appellant told her she was lying and that he was going to kill her if he found out
she had anything to do with the person being there.
       Jane I had to go to use the bathroom. Appellant perceived that she had taken too
long. When he asked Jane I why she spent so long in the bathroom, Jane I explained that
she had started her period. Appellant followed her into the bathroom, accused her of
sleeping with other men, and dumped out the garbage can looking for evidence that Jane I
had slept with another man the night before.

                                               9
       Eventually, they drove back to the house belonging to appellant's grandmother.
Appellant went inside the house while Jane I stayed in the SUV. Jane I swallowed a
bottle of pills that she had in her glove compartment. She explained that she did so
because she felt worthless and helpless and had nowhere to go; she believed appellant
was going to kill her.
       Jane I was hospitalized for approximately one week. Appellant was there with her
"every minute of every day" when she was awake. After she left the hospital, she went
with appellant to a hotel. She tried to see her children; at the time they were living with
their father because she was in an abusive relationship and was taking drugs. She was
having supervised visitation through the court system. On the Tuesday after she got out
of the hospital she had a supervised visit with the children. Usually, on these visits
appellant insisted on accompanying her, but on November 30, she went alone. Jane I was
away from appellant for approximately an hour and 30 minutes. Appellant sent a text
message to Jane I's ex-husband to find out when Jane I would be heading home.
       When Jane I got back to the hotel room she shared with appellant, he accused her
of sleeping with the father of her children. Appellant grabbed Jane I by the face and
throat and threw her on the bed. Appellant attempted to rip off her clothes so he could
find evidence of sexual activity. During the struggle, appellant hit Jane I with his fist on
her mouth, which caused an injury. Appellant grabbed Jane I's belongings and threw
them outside the door; Jane I gathered them up and started to leave. Appellant started to
cry and begged her not to leave. Jane I decided to stay because she had nowhere else to
go.
       Afterwards, appellant continued to threaten Jane I by saying that if she was
conspiring against him or sleeping with anyone else he would kill her by putting a
pillowcase over her head.
       On December 2, a man in the room next to Jane I and appellant's room asked if
they wanted to buy marijuana. When the man left, appellant accused Jane I of looking at
                                             10
the man in a sexual way. Appellant told Jane that if it was true, he was going to kill both
of them; she believed him because he had been physically abusive to her.
       Jim Fisher, a family relationship investigator for the Superior Court, testified that
he met with Jane I on December 3. He described her as being very quiet and very fearful.
He saw a swelling on her lip. Mr. Fisher took Jane I and her ex-husband into his office as
Jane I's appearance bothered him. Jane I told him that after she got out of the hospital
appellant struck her; she pointed to her lip. Jane I told Mr. Fisher she did not want to be
with appellant, who was waiting outside the office, so he consulted with one of the judges
at the court and he was advised to call the police.
       Salinas Police Officer Justin Salinas interviewed Jane I on December 3, 2010. He
testified that she was shaken and fearful. He interviewed her the next day and noticed
two "semi-vertical horizontal scabs" on her upper right lip. On the inside of her upper lip
there were white plaque type markings approximately one inch in length that were
directly behind the scab on the outside of her lip. Officer Salinas thought the injuries
were due to blunt force trauma and were approximately five to seven days old. At trial he
identified photographs of Jane I's injuries; the photographs were shown to the jury.
       Jane I testified that appellant had guns in a duffel bag in her SUV; he brought
them from his grandmother's garage and was going to sell them. Jane I told appellant she
did not want them in her SUV, but she could not remember how appellant responded.
       Jane I's sister testified that in October 2010, she received text messages from her
sister where she said that she was afraid of appellant. When Jane I stayed with her, she
searched Jane I's SUV and found approximately 10 bullets in a shoe box; she gave them
to her ex-husband so that he could dispose of them.
       The parties stipulated that appellant had a prior conviction for a felony and was
released on bail from June 13, 2010 to December 4, 2010.

                                             11
        Pursuant to Evidence Code section 1109,7 Jane III testified that she had a
relationship with appellant for less than one year and that he was abusive to her. On one
occasion, he barricaded her in his room and strip searched her looking for a "bug"; he
conducted a cavity search on her. When she tried to leave the room he pushed her down
and would not allow her to leave. They were both using methamphetamine at the time.
Jane III was afraid of appellant.
        Jane III tried to end the relationship with appellant, but he would not let her; he
would go to her worksite and tell her that he was sorry and that he wanted her to be there
for him emotionally. Jane III moved into her family's home when she found out she was
pregnant; eventually, she miscarried. Jane III tried to end the relationship and told
appellant not to contact her anymore, but appellant had an aunt "three way" call her and
appellant would leave abusive messages on her message machine. Jane III left the family
home.
        Eventually, because she was afraid of appellant, Jane III told him to get his things
from her residence. Jane III was in Reno, Nevada at this time. Appellant was supposed
to report to Salinas and when he came to her residence she encouraged him to return
there. Appellant became agitated and Jane III encouraged him to leave, but appellant
accused her of waiting for another man to come over. When she told him that was not
true, appellant tore apart her bed looking for evidence that she had been cheating on him;
appellant looked in her closet to see if there was a man hiding there. Appellant went
through the photographs in her telephone; when she asked for her telephone back they
struggled and the telephone broke in half. Jane III ran down the stairs and tried to call

7
       "Evidence Code section 1109 allows the introduction of evidence of [a]
defendant's commission of prior acts of domestic violence in a criminal action charging
[the] defendant with an offense involving domestic violence." (People v. Poplar (1999)
70 Cal. App. 4th 1129, 1138.)
                                              12
911 on a cordless telephone she had there. Appellant stopped her and threw the
telephone against the wall and the batteries came out.
         Eventually, Jane III ran for the front door and screamed for help. Appellant
grabbed her and threw her against the wall. He covered her mouth and nose with his
hand; she could not breathe. Appellant picked up Jane III by her waist and told her to get
upstairs. When she would not go, appellant picked up Jane III and tried to force her
upstairs. They fought on the stairs, but Jane III could not get away. Even though she fell
down the stairs appellant grabbed her by the hair and throat and carried her back upstairs.
Ultimately, appellant locked her in her bedroom, and threw her on the bed. Appellant
became more and more angry and poked her in the eye with the telephone antenna.
         Jane III still had her cellular telephone in her hand and she noticed that the light
was still on so she pushed the number one to speed dial a friend; she talked hoping that
someone would hear her. Then, she dropped the telephone. Jane III ran for the bedroom
door to try to unlock it. Appellant stopped her so she ran for the sliding glass door and
tried to run through it but she could not. Appellant started tying belts together as a noose
and tested the loop to see if it would hold. Jane III was very afraid and began to black
out. The next thing she remembers was being in the corner of her room with her friend
and the police. Appellant was not there.
         The next day, Jane III moved out of her residence and filed for a restraining order
against appellant. Appellant telephoned her and asked her if she had called the police.
Jane III told him she did not call the police, but someone had called them. Appellant told
her that she had ruined his life and that she was now his number one enemy and was
going to pay; he was going to find her. Jane III changed her telephone number and went
into hiding. A protection order was served on appellant and she never heard from him
again. In the past appellant had joked about a restraining order just being a piece of
paper.
                                           Discussion
                                               13
I.     Evidence Code Section 352 Challenge to the Testimony of Jane III.
       Before Jane I and Jane II testified, Jane III testified as noted ante. Before trial,
appellant moved to exclude evidence of any incidents of domestic violence against
anyone other than Jane I and Jane II.
       The prosecution's offer of proof as to Jane III was as follows:
       "On June 6, 2005 (Sparks Case No. 05-7209), the defendant was released from
Nevada prison and paroled to Salinas. The defendant came to [Jane III's] home instead of
going to Salinas. She tried to persuade him to obey the order to report to Salinas but he
accused her of cheating on him, searched her cell phone for proof and later broke her cell
phone. When she tried to use her home phone he grabbed it away. She tried to leave the
house but he dragged her up the stairs, took her to the bedroom where he locked the door
and pushed her on the bed. She asked him to leave. He told her if she called the police
he would find her and that a restraining order meant shit, that it was just a piece of paper.
He poked her with the antenna from the home phone. He took off his belt and tied it in a
noose with another belt he took from her closet. He tested it with his foot. Jane [III]
dialed her friend's number and unbeknownst to [her] left the line open which generated a
voice mail [on which he] could hear Jane [III] pleading with the defendant not to hurt her.
Shortly after the defendant tied the belts together, Jane [III]'s friend came to the home and
told the defendant to get out which he did. Both Jane [III] and her friend obtained Orders
of Protection to prevent further contact. However, the defendant called Jane [III] and
asked her if she had called the police. He told her he had ruined her, she was his number
one enemy that she could not hide, he would find her and she would pay. [¶] Jane [III]
applied for and was granted a Temporary Order For Protection Against Domestic
Violence on 7/25/07 and on August 30, 2007 received an Extended Order For Protection
Against Domestic Violence. Jane [III's] friend received a Temporary Order For
Protection Against Stalking, Aggravated Stalking or Harassment on July 24, 2007 and an
Extended Order on August 21, 2007 until August 21, 2008."
                                              14
       The court ruled that the prosecutor would not be allowed to elicit evidence from
all the women who allegedly had abusive relationships with appellant, but that the
prosecutor could present the proffered evidence that had occurred in 2005 involving Jane
III.8 The court balanced the probative value of the evidence against the prejudice to
appellant. Specifically, with regard to the incident involving Jane III, the court found that
the events were similar, were within the 10 year time limit, and were not cumulative.
Further, the events were probative because the events demonstrated "defendant's power
and control over victims and domestic violence victims." The court found that it would
not involve an undue consumption of time. As to prejudice, the court found that the
evidence would not "uniquely tend to evoke an emotional bias against the defendant any
more so than the 1109 evidence that's coming in because he's got two Jane Does that are
being charged in this matter. And it is probative. It is evidence that provides the jury
with a clear picture of the defendant's relationships with other women." Accordingly, as
noted Jane III was allowed to testify.
       Appellant argues that the court abused its discretion in admitting the Evidence
Code section 1109 evidence and thereby violated his federal and state constitutional
rights. Respectfully, we disagree.
       As noted, "[e]vidence Code section 1109 allows the introduction of evidence of [a]
defendant's commission of prior acts of domestic violence in a criminal action charging
[the] defendant with an offense involving domestic violence." (People v. Poplar, supra,
70 Cal.App.4th at p. 1138.) Specifically, subdivision (a)(1) of Evidence Code section
1109 provides in part (with exceptions not applicable here): "[I]n a criminal action in
which the defendant is accused of an offense involving domestic violence, evidence of

8
       In addition to the incidents involving Jane III, the prosecutor's trial brief showed
two more victims of appellant's domestic violence; the first victim appears to have
suffered abuse in 1994, the second victim appears to have suffered abuse starting in 1996
and ending in 1999.
                                             15
the defendant's commission of other domestic violence is not made inadmissible by
[Evidence Code] Section 1101 if the evidence is not inadmissible pursuant to [Evidence
Code] Section 352."
        Evidence Code section 1109 creates an exception to the general rule codified in
Evidence Code section 1101, subdivision (a) that precludes admission of uncharged
misconduct to show the defendant had a propensity to commit crimes. (Evid. Code,
§ 1109, subd. (a)(1); see also People v. Johnson (2000) 77 Cal. App. 4th 410, 417.)
        "The admissibility of evidence of domestic violence is subject to the sound
discretion of the trial court, which will not be disturbed on appeal absent a showing of an
abuse of discretion. [Citations.]" (People v. Poplar, supra, 70 Cal.App.4th at p.1138.)
        Under Evidence Code section 352, evidence is properly excluded if its probative
value is " 'substantially outweigh[ed]' " by the probability that its admission will
necessitate undue consumption of time or create a substantial danger of undue prejudice,
of confusing the issues, or of misleading the jury. (People v. Cudjo (1993) 6 Cal. 4th 585,
609.)
        "The prejudice which exclusion of evidence under Evidence Code section 352 is
designed to avoid is not the prejudice or damage to a defense that naturally flows from
relevant, highly probative evidence. '[A]ll evidence which tends to prove guilt is
prejudicial or damaging to the defendant's case. The stronger the evidence, the more it is
"prejudicial." The "prejudice" referred to in Evidence Code section 352 applies to
evidence which uniquely tends to evoke an emotional bias against the defendant as an
individual and which has very little effect on the issues. In applying [Evidence Code]
section 352, "prejudicial" is not synonymous with "damaging." ' [Citation.]" (People v.
Karis (1988) 46 Cal. 3d 612, 638.)
        Appellant compares the situation here to that in People v. Harris (1998) 60
Cal. App. 4th 727 (Harris); he argues that just as in Harris, Jane III's testimony was more
egregious than the evidence of the offenses charged in the instant case and was remote,
                                             16
inflammatory, nearly irrelevant, likely to confuse the jury and distract the jury from
consideration of the charged offenses.
       Harris was a case in which the defendant, a mental health nurse who worked at a
mental health treatment center, was convicted of several sex offenses; he had been
accused of preying on women who were vulnerable due to their mental health condition.
(Harris, supra, 60 Cal.App.4th at pp. 730-731.) The Court of Appeal found an abuse of
discretion in admitting evidence under Evidence Code section 1108. However, the facts
in Harris were entirely different from those here. In Harris, the prior offense was
forcible and the evidence of it was "inflammatory in the extreme." (Id. at p. 738.)9 The
charged sexual offenses were, by contrast, not forcible but involved breaches of trust.
Thus, the charged offenses were "of a significantly different nature and quality than the
violent and perverse attack on a stranger that was described to the jury." (Ibid.)
Moreover, "[t]he facts of the prior conduct were redacted to a point that the jury must
have come away with a misleading impression of what happened . . . ." (Id. at p. 733.)
The prior offense occurred 23 years before the charged offenses, a factor the Court of
Appeal found weighed in favor of exclusion. (Id. at p. 739.) The circumstances found in
Harris do not exist here. Nothing in Harris compels the conclusion that the court abused
its discretion in admitting the evidence here.
       Simply put, Jane III's testimony describing appellant's prior acts of domestic
violence was no more inflammatory than Jane I and II's testimony. There was no
probability of confusing the jury with the evidence of prior acts of domestic violence.
The incident Jane III described was relatively recent in relation to the acts involving Jane

9
       According to the Harris court, "the evidence of the 1972 incident described a
viciously beaten and bloody victim who as far as the jury knew was a stranger to the
defendant. The defendant's role in the attack and his subsequent conviction for burglary,
while apparently violent and sexual, is unexplained. The jury is simply told that
defendant was convicted of burglary with the infliction of great bodily injury." (Harris,
supra, at p. 738.)
                                             17
I and II—and the testimony required just 30 pages of trial transcript, including cross
examination, redirect, recross and further redirect. The evidence was extremely
probative, showing appellant's propensity for violence—aggressive, abusive and
possessory conduct— against intimate partners in an effort to control their behavior. The
prior incident of domestic violence was not the sort to evoke an emotional bias against
appellant as was the prior incident in Harris. (See Harris, supra, 60 Cal.App.4th at pp.
737–741.)
       Finally, the fact that the jury found appellant guilty of only the lesser offense of
battery on count nine and not guilty on count 14 (possession of ammunition by a felon),
actually bolsters the conclusion that the jury based its verdicts on the evidence presented
at trial rather than being prejudiced against appellant by the prior domestic violence
incident about which Jane III testified. Evidently, the jury carefully weighed the
evidence and found some of it deficient.
II.    Denial of Appellant's Romero Motion
       As noted, after the court found appellant's prior convictions were strikes, appellant
filed a motion to strike one of the two strikes—a prior conviction for arson. Defense
counsel argued that the arson conviction involved the lowest form of arson because it
involved burning gasoline on a portion of a driveway and a section of a wooden fence
that ran along the side of the driveway. Counsel argued that the crime should have been
charged as unlawfully causing a fire under section 452. Counsel alleged that appellant's
conduct was influenced by abuse he witnessed and experienced as a child.
       In opposition to the Romero motion, the prosecutor argued that a three strikes
sentence was presumptively correct and that while the court had discretion to grant a
motion to a strike a prior strike conviction that discretion was limited. The prosecutor
pointed out that the factors the court had to consider pursuant to People v. Williams
(1998) 17 Cal. 4th 148, 162, did not warrant granting the motion.

                                             18
       The prosecutor 's version of the arson incident involved appellant, after having
drunk 24 beers and having used crack and cocaine, leaving a voicemail message
threatening to kill his former girlfriend—who was pregnant with his child—and then
driving to her house at 3:30 a.m. There appellant entered her garage, deflated her tires
and stole her purse, day planner and CDs. Appellant broke the windshield wipers on her
car and stuffed rags in the vehicle's tailpipe. The prosecutor described what happened
next: "The defendant then took a container of gasoline out of the garage and poured it
onto the driveway and fence and lit them on fire. The owner of the house and all her
children were in the home asleep during the fire. The defendant was aware that people
were asleep in the house because he looked inside. However, the defendant did not
express any remorse over his actions. The probation officer stated 'it is amazing to this
officer that the defendant still cannot see that the fire that he set could not only have
destroyed someone else's residence but human beings that were inside.' "
       The prosecutor described appellant's criminal history and violations of probation
stretching back to 1994. In 2002, appellant was incarcerated in a Nevada prison after a
violation of probation.
       The probation officer's report, which the court had before it at the Romero hearing,
showed that appellant had prior convictions in Nevada for robbery in 1999, and attempted
burglary in 2000 for which he received suspended state prison sentences. The probation
officer considered appellant's performance on probation to be unsatisfactory—the report
showed that appellant's probation had been revoked three times. The probation officer
characterized appellant as a serial batterer who engaged in violence against multiple
victims, which indicated he was a danger to society. Appellant's first conviction in 1994
was for misdemeanor battery/domestic violence.
       As noted, the court granted the Romero motion as to only count six. The court
discussed defense counsel's reasons for the striking the strike, but noted that the court's
discretion was "not absolute." The court stated that it was required to "consider the
                                              19
interest of society as well as the rights of the defendant and balance those." The court
went on to say the considerations the court was required to look at included "the nature
and circumstances of the present felonies, the nature and seriousness of the felonies" that
appellant had committed in the past as well as particulars of appellant's background,
character and his prospects for rehabilitation.
       The court noted that the crimes did not result in great bodily injury, but did not
consider that fact to require granting the motion. Specifically, the court stated,
"However, I have to look beyond whether or not there were physical injuries here,
because the other injuries, the threats of violence to obtain power over the victims, the
use of truly inhumane and demeaning acts to create fear and create the lack of self worth
and the sense of powerlessness in these victims created a mental injury that can't be
quantified. You could tell just in watching these women testify—and I will not—
although I don't consider Jane [III]'s testimony in the nature and circumstances in this
offense, her description of the fear and powerlessness and lack of self worth were exactly
the same as what you observed in Jane [I] and [II]. They are the types of injuries that a
CAT scanner at an x-ray cannot view, but they are lasting injuries that these women will
carry with them for the rest of their lives. So the injuries I do find to be significant in
these cases, although they weren't injuries that were discernible so much by a medical
team. [¶] And also the commonality of the selection of vulnerable victims in this matter
cannot be overlooked by this Court. The defendant was finding women who he could use
for all sorts of reasons. Use for monetary reasons. Use for drug reasons. Use to
complete something in him that required him to have power over these women. So I do
find that the nature and circumstances of the current offense are ones that would make . . .
this case appropriate as a Three Strikes case."
       The court looked at appellant's prior criminal history and concluded, "although I
will [ac]knowledge that when you look at a 451 bare, it is less serious than most strikes.
And I will [ac]knowledge that it was from 1996. However, the thing that makes this 451
                                              20
different than most is that . . . it is a domestic violence crime, because it's similar conduct.
It's a situation where the defendant is trying to instill fear and terror in one of the people
that was an intimate partner. So the conduct is similar. The surrounding circumstances
where he vandalizes a car, pours gasoline on the fence and sets it on fire is . . . similar in
that it is instilling terror and fear, and it's also dangerous. There's danger here to multiple
victims. I don't care whether he was there and watched the fire go out. Every one of us
have heard about fires or seen or had the experience of a fire that went out reigniting and
starting again and causing dramatic injury not only to property but also to people. So the
seriousness and dangerousness of this particular 451 cannot be overlooked."
       The court looked at appellant's background and noted that although he may have
had a difficult childhood involving drugs and alcohol, in light of the fact that his other
family members had "become positive supportive contributing members of their
community," it was "not something that [appellant] couldn't have overcome."
       The court felt that it could not overlook appellant's "continuous history of
domestic violence." The court pointed out that appellant had "been with numerous
women since 1994. And I don't know how many there have been, but there certainly
have been numerous that have endured the defendant's same pattern of terrorizing
conduct. And he's not someone that is so small that he needs to use terror or threats. It's
something that he uses alongside with the physical violence that is above and beyond
what we see in most of these cases. If this was something that was a childhood[,] a
young man's way of dealing with women, it should have been something that he had out
grown. Mr. Encallado has been given every opportunity by the Court to either out grow
or be educated beyond this type of conduct or be penalized so that he knows that if he
does it again he's going to go back to . . . custody. And he has chosen to ignore all those
options. The criminal justice system has a variety of different things that it uses to try to
encourage people to do the right thing. Some of it is education. Some of it is programs.
You've had domestic violence programs. You've had drug programs. Some of it is
                                              21
penalizing so that you realize jail is not that great a place, maybe you won't do it. Maybe
you won't do it again. So that you realize how bad jail is. None of those seem to have
worked. And the last thing we do is we incarcerate people just to keep them away from
the public. That's our last ditch effort. And that's what we're left with here."
        The court concluded that looking at all factors the court was required to consider,
the court could not find this to be a situation where appellant "has shown any reason to do
anything other than follow the legislative plan that has been provided for people who are
continuing recidivists who continue to be violent and dangerous and terrorize people in
our community." Accordingly, the court denied the request to strike appellant's prior
strike convictions as to all charges except the Health and Safety Code violation (count
six).
        Appellant argues that the court decided his Romero request without giving
meaningful consideration to his abusive childhood, his future prospects, and other factors
such as the age of his prior strike convictions. Appellant contends that a ruling by the
court in these circumstances must be considered an abuse of discretion. Respectfully, we
disagree with appellant's characterization of what the court did in this case.
        Under section 1385, subdivision (a), a "judge . . . may, either on his or her own
motion or upon the application of the prosecuting attorney, and in furtherance of justice,
order an action to be dismissed." In Romero, supra, 13 Cal. 4th 497, our Supreme Court
held that a trial court may strike or vacate an allegation or finding under the Three Strikes
law that a defendant has previously been convicted of a serious and/or violent felony, on
its own motion, in furtherance of justice pursuant to section 1385, subdivision (a). (Id. at
p. 504.) The Romero court held that a court's discretionary decision to dismiss or to
strike a sentencing allegation under section 1385 is reviewable for abuse of discretion.
(Ibid.) In People v. Carmony (2004) 33 Cal. 4th 367 (Carmony), the court held that a
sentencing court's refusal to dismiss or strike a prior conviction allegation is also subject
to review under the "deferential abuse of discretion standard." (Id. at p. 376.)
                                             22
       The court's discretion to strike a prior strike is limited; it is guided by "established
stringent standards" designed to preserve the legislative intent behind the "Three Strikes
law." (Carmony, supra, 33 Cal.4th at p. 377; § 1385, subd. (a).) As the Romero court
explained, "the Three Strikes initiative, as well as the legislative act embodying its terms,
was intended to restrict courts' discretion in sentencing repeat offenders." (Romero,
supra, 13 Cal.4th at p. 528.) Thus, in determining whether to strike a prior strike
conviction in the interests of justice the court "must consider whether, in light of the
nature and circumstances of his present felonies and prior serious and/or violent felony
convictions, and the particulars of his background, character, and prospects, the
defendant may be deemed outside the scheme's spirit, in whole or in part, and hence
should be treated as though he had not previously been convicted of one or more serious
and/or violent felonies." (People v. Williams (1998) 17 Cal. 4th 148, 161 (Williams).)
       "In reviewing for abuse of discretion, we are guided by two fundamental precepts.
First, ' "[t]he burden is on the party attacking the sentence to clearly show that the
sentencing decision was irrational or arbitrary. [Citation.] In the absence of such a
showing, the trial court is presumed to have acted to achieve legitimate sentencing
objectives, and its discretionary determination to impose a particular sentence will not be
set aside on review." ' [Citations.] Second, a ' "decision will not be reversed merely
because reasonable people might disagree. 'An appellate tribunal is neither authorized
nor warranted in substituting its judgment for the judgment of the trial judge.' " '
[Citations.] Taken together, these precepts establish that a trial court does not abuse its
discretion unless its decision is so irrational or arbitrary that no reasonable person could
agree with it." (Carmony, supra, 33 Cal.4th at pp. 376–377.)
       Appellant's reliance on People v. Bishop (1997) 56 Cal. App. 4th 1245 (Bishop) to
argue that there was an abuse of discretion here is misplaced. There, the defendant was
charged with petty theft with a prior theft-related conviction that had resulted in his
incarceration (§ 666); the information alleged, inter alia, that he had sustained three prior
                                              23
strike convictions. (Id. at pp. 1247–1248.) The trial court granted the defendant's motion
to strike two of three prior strikes alleged in the information which it deemed "remote (17
to 20 years old)" (id. at p. 1248) and thereafter sentenced the defendant to a 12–year
prison term. (Id. at pp. 1248–1249.) The appellate court rejected the People's claim that
the court erred because it placed undue weight on mitigating factors and did not properly
weigh factors in aggravation that supported the imposition of a three-strikes sentence.
(Id. at p. 1250.) The Bishop court observed that the People's analysis was flawed because
it "fail[ed] to accord the trial court the breadth of discretion that it has traditionally
possessed under section 1385." (Ibid.) The Bishop court found no abuse of discretion;
the court explained that while the trial court must consider that a defendant's qualification
as a three-strikes offender is a factor in aggravation, "the nature and timing of a
defendant's crimes may also operate as mitigation, such as in this case where the present
crime is a petty theft and the prior violent offenses are remote." (Id. at p. 1251.)
       Bishop is distinguishable, both procedurally and factually. The court there was
concerned with whether the granting of a Romero motion constituted an abuse of
discretion. Here, we consider whether the court abused its discretion in denying
appellant's motion, thereby concluding that this case did not present "extraordinary"
circumstances under which appellant, as " 'a career criminal[, should] be deemed to fall
outside the spirit of the very scheme within which he squarely falls once he commits a
strike as part of a long and continuous criminal record . . . .' " (Carmony, supra, 33
Cal.4th at p. 378.)
       Second, Bishop predates Williams, supra, 17 Cal. 4th 148. Consequently, it did not
apply the appropriate standard: whether the defendant should be deemed to fall outside
the scheme's spirit. Instead, the Bishop court indicated the nature of the present crime
and the remoteness of the defendant's prior violent offenses operated to mitigate his
Three Strikes sentence. However, the Three Strikes law provides: "The length of time
between the prior serious and/or violent felony conviction and the current felony
                                               24
conviction shall not affect the imposition of sentence." (§ 667, subd. (c)(3).) Thus,
remoteness does not take a defendant outside the spirit of the very law that expressly
rejects remoteness as a basis for avoiding it. Indeed, the Supreme Court in Williams
found "not significant" the fact that 13 years passed between the defendant's prior serious
and/or violent felony convictions and the current felony conviction, because the
defendant did not refrain from criminal activity during that span of time. (Williams,
supra, 17 Cal.4th at p. 163.)
       Here, the court's comments indicate that it carefully balanced the relevant factors
and reached an impartial decision in conformity with the spirit of the Three Strikes law.
The court gave due consideration to appellant's abusive childhood, but found that factor
did not outweigh the violent, obsessive, and abusive nature of his current felonies and
prior felony convictions. The incidents of domestic violence in which appellant has been
involved stretched over a period of some 15 years.
       In sum, based on appellant's age (36), his unrelenting history of violence toward
women with whom he is intimate, which has spanned just under half his life, his prior
commitments to jail and prison, the failed attempts at probation, his failure to benefit
from domestic violence programs, and the nature of the current felony offenses involving
violence, a threat of violence and complete indifference to the risk of harm to an intimate
partner—some of which were carried out while he was out on bail—the trial court did not
abuse its discretion in denying the Romero motion. (See e.g., People v. Williams, supra,
17 Cal.4th at pp. 162–164; People v. Humphrey (1997) 58 Cal. App. 4th 809, 812–813 [the
defendant has not led a legally blameless life since his prior convictions].)
       We cannot say the court's ruling was irrational or arbitrary let alone so irrational or
arbitrary no reasonable person could agree with it. There was no abuse of discretion.
III.   Alleged Cruel and Unusual Punishment
       Finally, appellant seeks remand and resentencing on the ground that his
sentence—177 years to life in prison—is cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the
                                             25
Eighth Amendment and article I, section 17, of the California Constitution. As he did not
raise this objection below, it is forfeited. (People v. Kelley (1997) 52 Cal. App. 4th 568,
583; People v. Norman (2003) 109 Cal. App. 4th 221, 229.) Nevertheless, since appellant
has raised a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, briefly, we shall reach the merits
under the relevant constitutional standards.
       In support of much of his argument he relies on a concurring opinion by Justice
Stanley Mosk, which expressed that justice's view that a "multicentury" sentence,
"impossible for a human being to serve," violates the Eighth Amendment of the federal
Constitution and article I, section 17 of the California Constitution. (People v. Deloza
(1998) 18 Cal. 4th 585, 600–601 (conc. opn. of Mosk, J.).) Nevertheless, this opinion
lacks the agreement of a majority of the court; thus it has no value as precedent. (People
v. Stewart (1985) 171 Cal. App. 3d 59, 65.)
       On the other hand, the court in People v. Sullivan (2007) 151 Cal. App. 4th 524,
572, held that the fact a defendant may not be able to serve the entirety of his or her
sentence does not in itself make the punishment inappropriate. In practical effect a
defendant is in the same position as one sentenced to life without possibility of parole—
and the latter sentence has been held in appropriate cases not to violate the prohibition
against cruel and unusual punishment under either the federal or California Constitution.
(Id. at p. 572.)
       The general rule is that a sentence violates the Eighth Amendment if it is "grossly
disproportionate to the severity of the crime." (Rummel v. Estelle (1980) 445 U.S. 263,
271.) To make this determination a reviewing court examines the gravity of the offense
and the harshness of the penalty. (Solem v. Helm (1983) 463 U.S. 277, 290–291.) In
addition, a court may be guided by comparisons with sentences imposed in the same
jurisdiction for other offenses, and with sentences imposed in other jurisdictions for the
same offense. (Id. at pp. 291–292.)

                                               26
       Here appellant suffered three convictions for crimes involving violence against
intimate partners, one conviction for kidnapping one of his victims, and four convictions
for crimes involving the threat of violence to those same victims; his sentence is based
not only on these convictions but also on his prior convictions for arson, which involved
setting a fire at the home of an intimate partner, and making criminal threats—both
convictions holding the potential for violence and representing appellant's recidivism. A
sentence imposed in this manner under the three strikes law is not necessarily grossly
disproportionate so as to violate the Eighth Amendment. (See Ewing v. California (2003)
538 U.S. 11, 30–31.) For his part, appellant does not appear to present one of those "rare
cases" in which a threshold comparison of his crimes and his sentence is sufficient in
itself to infer that the sentence is grossly disproportionate. (Id. at p. 30.) Appellant
provides no argument or jurisdictional comparisons to persuade us otherwise, except to
argue that his term far exceeds his life expectancy. As such we see no merit in his
forfeited claim that his sentence violates the Eighth Amendment.
       To succeed on a challenge under the cruel or unusual punishment provision of the
California Constitution, a defendant must show that the punishment is so disproportionate
that it "shocks the conscience and offends fundamental notions of human dignity." (In re
Lynch (1972) 8 Cal. 3d 410, 424 (Lynch).) A reviewing court must examine the nature of
the offense and/or the offender, with particular regard to the degree of danger both
present to society; compare the challenged punishment to punishments for more serious
crimes in the same jurisdiction; and compare such challenged penalty with the
punishments prescribed for the same offense in other jurisdictions having a similar
constitutional provision. (Id. at pp. 425–427.)
       Appellant makes no showing on the second and third Lynch factors, which require
the comparison of appellant's punishment with punishments in California for more
serious crimes and the punishment imposed with punishments in other states. Again,
when we look to the offender and his offenses, we see a serial batterer who has little
                                              27
regard for his intimate partners; a batterer who uses violence, threats of violence, and
intimidation to control his partners for the purpose of achieving absolute power and
control over them. Although no victim was seriously permanently physically injured, the
psychological damage appellant has inflicted on his victims is immeasurable.
       In sum, we do not find appellant's punishment to be out of all proportion with the
offenses and so disproportionate as to "shock[ ] the conscience and offend[ ] fundamental
notions of human dignity." (Lynch, supra, 8 Cal.3d at p. 424.)
       Finally, appellant asserts that if this court concludes that any of the relief he has
requested cannot be granted because his counsel failed to preserve the issue for review,
he did not receive the effective assistance of counsel. Since we have addressed all
appellant's issues, even the one that was forfeited, it is not necessary to address his
ineffective assistance of counsel argument.
                                         Disposition
       The judgment is affirmed.

                                              28
                                 _________________________________
                                 ELIA, J.

WE CONCUR:

______________________________
RUSHING, P. J.

______________________________
PREMO, J.

                                   29