Court Opinion

ID: 9401726
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-06-13 20:03:24.988227+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:19:54.814194
License: Public Domain

Filed 6/13/23 Acevedo v. Superior Court CA3
                                           NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

                IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
                                      THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
                                                       (Tehama)
                                                            ----

    ELFEGO CHAVEZ ACEVEDO,                                                                     C097689

                    Petitioner,                                                   (Super. Ct. No. 22CR1892)

           v.

    THE SUPERIOR COURT OF TEHAMA COUNTY,

                    Respondent;

    THE PEOPLE,

                    Real Party in Interest.

         After the Tehama County District Attorney’s Office (the prosecution) filed a
murder charge against Elfego Chavez Acevedo (Acevedo) for a third time, he moved to
dismiss the charge, relying on Penal Code sections 1387 and 1387.1.1 Section 1387
provides the general rule that two previous dismissals of a charge for the same offense
bars the filing of a new felony charge for that offense. But section 1387.1 provides an

1   Undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code.
                                                             1
exception to that general rule, permitting the prosecution to file a violent felony charge a
third time if either of the prior dismissals were due to “excusable neglect” and the
prosecution did not act in “bad faith.”
       After the trial court denied Acevedo’s motion, he challenged the ruling by filing a
petition for writ of prohibition in this court. Because we conclude the trial court did not
abuse its discretion after considering the evidence, we deny the petition.
                                     BACKGROUND
       After charging Acevedo with murder in December 2020, the prosecution
dismissed the charge and refiled it in February 2022. On the first day of trial in May
2022, and over Acevedo’s objection, the prosecution dismissed the charge again. After
the prosecution filed a murder charge against Acevedo for a third time, in August 2022,
Acevedo sought to dismiss the charge, relying on sections 1387 and 1387.1. As a
prosecutor later explained in written declarations and at a hearing,2 there were two
reasons for the second dismissal.
       First, two weeks before the May 2022 trial the prosecution requested from the Red
Bluff Police Department enlarged photographs (enlargements), which were essential to
the prosecution’s case. However, the enlargements were not available on time due to
equipment problems at the private company responsible for creating them. The
prosecution asserted that the photograph reproductions were essential because identity of
the murderer was a major issue in the case: (1) no witness was willing to identify
Acevedo in a photographic lineup but witnesses were willing to describe the murderer
and confirm that the person in the pictures was the person who committed the fatal
shooting; and (2) the enlargements were still photographs that came from a security

2  Attorney representations to a trial court are “tantamount to sworn testimony.” (People
v. Wolozon (1982) 138 Cal.App.3d 456, 460, fn. 4; see People v. Smith (2003) 30 Cal.4th
581, 608, 611 [the trial court properly “accepted the district attorney’s representation as
an officer of the court without requiring him to testify formally” regarding that attorney’s
efforts to locate a witness].)
                                              2
camera video showing Acevedo, with very distinctive tattoos, walking toward the scene
of the crime. Similar past requests for enlargements normally took one or two days to
process.
         Second, the prosecution found it impossible, by the start of trial, to translate from
Spanish and transcribe a recently discovered recorded statement of a key witness. The
witness was the only person who heard Acevedo allegedly bragging about the murder
before his arrest. In a telephone conversation with the witness a few days before trial, the
prosecutor could tell the witness was afraid and reluctant to testify. Worried about the
witness’s future testimony, the prosecutor conducted more research and located a
recorded statement the witness made to the Corning Police Department while being
interviewed in an unrelated matter. The Corning Police Department did not investigate
the murder at issue here, and never provided the witness’s statement to the prosecution in
connection with the murder charge. In the recorded interview, the witness “sort of out of
the blue brought up issues regarding her knowledge” of the murder. The prosecution
wanted to have the recorded statement transcribed and translated in case the witness’s
trial testimony differed from her recorded statement.
         At the December 2022 hearing on Acevedo’s motion to dismiss the murder charge
pursuant to sections 1387 and 1387.1, defense counsel argued that neither of the
prosecution’s two reasons for the second dismissal were “akin to clerical mistakes,”
which was the relevant standard. “I don’t think those are mistakes that a reasonably
prudent person would make,” defense counsel asserted.
         Regarding the enlargements, counsel argued that so much time had elapsed
between the initial filing and the second dismissal (December 2020 to May 2022) that
“those issues should have been dealt with long before. I don’t think the photographs that
were proposed are anything new.” Regarding the witness, counsel argued that while the
prosecution was unaware of the recorded interview, it knew about the witness, and in any
event, prosecution’s knowledge is implied because it is the “head of the law enforcement
team.”

                                                3
       After confirming with the parties there was no material dispute regarding the first
dismissal of the murder charge in February 2022, the trial court asked if the prosecutor
had “any knowledge of the technical issues” regarding the photographs. “I never was
able to find out,” the prosecutor replied. “We kept contacting” the company, the
prosecutor explained, “and they said, oh, we’re just getting started on them and we’ll
have them tomorrow. [¶] Day or two passed, nothing would happen. The same thing
would happen. And finally, right before trial, they said, actually, we’re having trouble
with our equipment and we don’t know when they’ll be ready.”
       The trial court inquired: “Without the photograph of the distinctive tattoos that
they were producing, would it have been either difficult [or] impossible to prove
identity?” To which the prosecutor responded: “I believe so, yes.”
       After confirming that as soon as the witness’s recorded statement was discovered
the prosecutor informed defense counsel and tried to get a transcript prepared, the trial
court asked the prosecutor: “Without that witness, did you have any other admissions or
confessions from any other witness?” “No,” the prosecutor replied.
       Defense counsel responded that while using the security camera video at trial
would have been less convenient for the prosecution, relying on enlargements of the
video footage was a convenience issue and an insufficient basis for not proceeding. As
for the witness’s recorded statement, defense counsel responded that the prosecution
already knew about “the meat of her testimony”—that Acevedo “made admissions at
some point after the killing.” “What we’re talking about are unrelated but somewhat
related statements that were made to Corning Police Department that may or may not be
admissible or relevant or whatnot.”
       The trial court concluded the second dismissal was due to solely excusable
neglect, explaining that “in looking at excusable neglect, we look to whether . . . it was
some type of malice or bad faith. And Acevedo’s not arguing that it’s the case of
vindictiveness or bad faith; it’s just arguing that it’s not excusable.” Regarding the
enlargements, the trial court concluded the prosecution established the “photographs were

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not only essential but” they “almost couldn’t go forward with the case without them.”
The prosecution requested enlargements a couple weeks before trial, but the private
company was not able to create them because of their equipment.
       “[N]othing in bad faith of . . . the [prosecution] that they were purposely waiting to
the last minute.” “Yes, it would be nice if everything was prepared months before trial;
but, as we all know as trial attorneys, trials are very fluid and things develop” in “the
days before, and hours before” trial. “I believe that it is excusable neglect in the
definition given [in] the case law,” the trial court explained, “especially [when] coupled
with the second reason.”
       Regarding that second reason—the witness’s recorded statement—the trial court
explained it understood the witness “was known about for some time before trial. [¶]
The thing that was not necessarily known about was the feeling the prosecutor got that
this witness was reluctant and afraid . . . . So that fluid situation of trying to determine or
trying to be able to prove this person is testifying to something in court—in other words,
maybe she recants if she’s afraid to testify, that certainly is within the realm of possibility
and very reasonable for a prosecutor to think if she’s that afraid, she might recant, she
might not come” to court.
       The trial court explained it was excusable that the prosecution found out about the
recorded statement so close to trial, because “it was another agency with another case, so
they wouldn’t necessarily know -- well, the People certainly wouldn’t know, the D.A.’s
office. [¶] And then the police agency would not necessarily know that in a separate
case, in a separate agency, that this report would be something discoverable.”
       And to know what the witness said, the trial court reasoned , “you have to have it
not only transcribed but interpreted to English . . . and that does take some time. [¶] And
for all those reasons, the taking of that time to do the transcription and interpretation, it
was . . . excusable neglect to have to dismiss this second time in order to prove the case.”
The trial court concluded because identity of the killer “was so important, and because

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the sole witness for a confession was important, the [c]ourt will deny the motion to
dismiss, find it was excusable neglect.”
       In January 2023, Acevedo filed in this court a petition for writ of prohibition and
application for an immediate stay of proceedings. He argued sections 1387 and 1387.1
barred a trial on the murder charge filed against him a third time, because the prosecution
did not show excusable neglect in connection with the second dismissal of the charge in
May 2022. We ordered trial proceedings stayed and requested real party in interest (the
People) serve and file in this court an informal written response addressing all issues
raised in the petition and to address “whether and to what extent the prosecution’s
apparent failure to request a continuance should be considered in determining whether the
dismissal was due to excusable neglect.”
       In their informal response the People urged us to deny the petition. In support of
its response, the People included a January 2023 declaration of the prosecutor, who
explained a continuance was not requested because although the trial court raised the
possibility of a continuance, the People elected not to ask for a continuance because
Acevedo was in custody and would not waive time. Acevedo did not file a reply and we
issued an order to show cause.
                                       DISCUSSION
       In their return, the People contend there was no abuse of discretion because the
trial court: (1) found credible the prosecutor’s assertions the enlargements were
necessary to establish Acevedo’s identity as the shooter; (2) found that under the realities
of a busy trial schedule, “unexpected technical problems of a private company outside of
[the prosecutor’s] control” was “not inexcusable”; and (3) reasonably concluded the
“critical witness[’s] new hesitancy to cooperate could pose a fatal defect to the People’s
case,” and that potential defect could be remedied by the witness’s “newly discovered
statement,” whose existence the prosecutor had no reason to know of until shortly before
trial. The People also argue “the absence of a continuance request was not part of the
[trial] court’s excusable neglect analysis or petitioner’s challenge.”

                                              6
       In his reply to the return, Acevedo contends the trial court abused its discretion
because the prosecution’s neglect was not clerical in nature but due to “disorganization
and unpreparedness.” Acevedo further contends the prosecution’s failure to seek a
continuance “has a great deal of significance,” as it goes to the prosecution’s lack of
diligence. We conclude the trial court did not abuse its discretion.
                                               I
                                      Legal Background
       “Under section 1387, felony prosecutions are generally ‘subject to a two-dismissal
rule; two previous dismissals of charges for the same offense will bar a new felony
charge.’ [Citation.] . . . [Section 1387.1] provides an exception to the ‘two-dismissal
rule’: it permits the prosecution to file a violent felony charge a third time if either of the
prior dismissals were due to ‘excusable neglect,’ and the prosecution did not act in ‘bad
faith.’ (§ 1387.1, subd. (a); see Miller v. Superior Court (2002) 101 Cal.App.4th 728,
739.)” (People v. Trujeque (2015) 61 Cal.4th 227, 255-256.) Section 1387.1,
subdivision (b) explains that “ ‘excusable neglect’ includes, but is not limited to, error on
the part of the court, prosecution, law enforcement agency, or witnesses.”
       “Excusable neglect” is neglect that might have been the act or omission of a
reasonably prudent person under the same or similar circumstances. (Miller v. Superior
Court (2002) 101 Cal.App.4th 728, 741 (Miller); People v. Massey (2000)
79 Cal.App.4th 204, 211 (Massey); People v. Woods (1993) 12 Cal.App.4th 1139, 1149
(Woods).) In Miller, the appellate court denied a writ petition challenging the denial of a
section 1387 motion to dismiss the prosecution of charges, including robbery and first
degree burglary, after a third filing. (Miller, at pp. 734, 748.) The appellate court ruled
the record supported the notion a prosecutor made reasonable efforts to secure the
attendance at trial of the defendant’s girlfriend (a recalcitrant witness who was also
crucial to the case), who had told police the defendant confessed to her he had entered the
home of an old man, pushed him to the ground, tied him up, and taken his car. (Id. at
pp. 735, 741-742.) The prosecutor’s declaration recounted repeated efforts by the

                                               7
prosecution team to locate the girlfriend before the trial, including repeatedly calling the
home telephone of her last known address and driving there at least once. (Id. at pp. 736,
741-742.)
       In Massey, the appellate court ruled the trial court abused its discretion in
disallowing the prosecution of a murder charge that was filed a third time. The appellate
court determined that both previous dismissals resulted from excusable neglect. (Massey,
supra, 79 Cal.App.4th at pp. 207, 211-212.) Regarding the second dismissal, the
prosecution presented evidence in the trial court that a detective tried to locate witnesses
and had a miscommunication with the trial prosecutor regarding the witnesses’
availability for trial. (Id. at p. 212 [a detective “believed he had explained to the
prosecutor that the witnesses were available,” and “the only reasonable inference from
the detective’s testimony is that the prosecutor had misunderstood the detective”;
“miscommunication in this context constitutes excusable neglect under section 1387.1”].)
       In Woods, the appellate court reversed the trial court’s order dismissing a murder
charge filed a third time. The trial court had overruled the earlier ruling of a magistrate,
who granted the prosecution’s motion to file a third complaint after hearing evidence.
(Woods, supra, 12 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1143-1144, 1147.) It is unnecessary for our
purposes to recount the lengthy procedural background leading up to the second dismissal
of the murder charge in the case. Important here is that the second dismissal arose due to
a combination of “word processing error” and human error: “The first negligent
omission leading to the second dismissal was” a prosecutor’s “fail[ure] to read count 2
carefully enough to notice a word processing error” in the second complaint. The
prosecutor “read the first count, found it complete and paid less attention to the second.
She relied in part on the accuracy of the computer’s retrieval capabilities. . . . A
reasonably prudent person might have made the same mistake in the circumstances.” (Id.
at p. 1150.)
       The appellate court found “[m]ore troubling” that same prosecutor’s “failure to
catch the identical error in the second information.” (Woods, supra, 12 Cal.App.4th at

                                              8
p. 1150.) Though the error in the second complaint “was brought to [the prosecutor’s]
attention by the magistrate at the preliminary hearing, who amended the pleading and
held Woods to answer,” the prosecutor “signed a defective information just five days
later.” (Ibid.)
       This second mistake occurred because the prosecutor “assumed . . . that the
problem had been cured” after she gave written instructions to a new secretary regarding
the drafting of the second information. “This, of course, implies fault of another sort,”
the appellate court observed. (Woods, supra, 12 Cal.App.4th at p. 1150.) But drawing all
inferences in favor of the magistrate’s ruling (because the magistrate heard the evidence)
(id. at pp. 1143-1144), the appellate court determined the prosecutor’s second mistake
was still excusable neglect. Because the prosecutor knew the case would be reassigned,
the magistrate could infer the prosecutor “began devoting her energy to other cases” after
the preliminary hearing, and “she would have been less focused on the case” when she
read the second information. (Id. at p. 1150.)
                                              II
                                           Analysis
       A.         Standard of Review and Petitioner’s Burden on Appeal
       We review the trial court’s ruling for an abuse of discretion, cognizant that the
trial court was required to apply a preponderance of the evidence test in the first instance.
(Miller, supra, 101 Cal.App.4th at pp. 740-741, 748; Massey, supra, 79 Cal.App.4th at
p. 211.) Further, when construing “remedial statutes, such as section 1387.1, . . . a lower
court’s decision” precluding trial on the merits should be “more carefully scrutinized than
an order” allowing a trial to proceed. (Massey, at p. 211.)
       “A judgment or order of the lower court is presumed correct. All intendments and
presumptions are indulged to support it on matters as to which the record is silent, and
error must be affirmatively shown.” (Denham v. Superior Court (1970) 2 Cal.3d 557,
564.) Accordingly, to the extent the decision being challenged rests upon factual
findings, we must draw every legitimate inference in favor of the ruling and cannot

                                              9
substitute our judgment, on the credibility or weight of the evidence, for that of the
judicial officer who heard the evidence. (Massey, supra, 79 Cal.App.4th at p. 210;
Woods, supra, 12 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1147-1148.)
       “Quite similar facts might result in one trier of fact granting relief and another
denying it, yet each ruling might be upheld. [Citation.] Appellate review thus respects
this sometimes divergent exercise of discretion. The abuse-of-discretion standard
requires us to uphold a ruling which a reasonable judge might have made, even though
we would not have ruled the same and a contrary ruling would also be sustainable.”
(Woods, supra, 12 Cal.App.4th at p. 1153.)
       B.     Excusable Neglect
       We agree with the People that, considering the deferential standard of review, the
trial court did not abuse its discretion in determining the prosecution’s May 2022
dismissal of the murder charge was due to excusable neglect and done without bad faith.
(§ 1387.1, subd. (a).) Acevedo has never asserted bad faith by the prosecution in
connection with the May 2022 dismissal. As for excusable neglect, it is clear the trial
court found credible the prosecutor’s representations regarding the enlargements and the
witness. We cannot substitute our judgment in this regard. The prosecutor’s
representations reflect mistakes that a reasonably prudent person under the same or
similar circumstances also might have made.
       Regarding the enlargements, the trial court explained that, while “it would be nice
if everything was prepared months before trial[,] . . . trials are very fluid and things
develop” in “the days before, and hours before” trial. Thus, the trial court ruled that
because past similar requests by the prosecution took only one or two days, the
prosecutor’s request for preparation of enlargements made two weeks before trial was
excusable neglect. That determination was reasonable.
       Regarding the witness to Acevedo’s alleged murder confession, the trial court
explained the important thing was that the prosecutor learned the witness “was reluctant
and afraid” only days before trial. That too was a “fluid situation,” the trial court

                                              10
observed. “[M]aybe [the witness] recants if she’s afraid to testify, that certainly is within
the realm of possibility and very reasonable for a prosecutor to think.” And that
possibility made a transcription of the recorded statement, after its translation to English,
important for the prosecution, but difficult to do with so little time. That determination
was reasonable.
       The trial court’s further determination that it was excusable that the prosecution
found out about the recorded statement only days before trial also was reasonable. As the
trial court explained, the recording came from “another agency with another case, so . . .
the People certainly wouldn’t know, the D.A.’s office. [¶] And then the police agency
would not necessarily know that in a separate case, in a separate agency, that this report
would be something discoverable.” We agree with that analysis. The Red Bluff Police
Department was helping the prosecution on Acevedo’s murder trial. But the witness
made the recorded statement to the Corning Police Department during the investigation
of a matter unrelated to Acevedo’s murder charge. (Cf. In re Brown (1998) 17 Cal.4th
873, 881 [In the context of Brady v. Maryland (1963) 373 U.S. 83, “the duty to disclose”
belongs “solely and exclusively to the prosecution; those assisting the government’s case
are no more than its agents”]; People v. Uribe (2008) 162 Cal.App.4th 1457, 1475
[“ ‘[T]he individual prosecutor has a duty to learn of any favorable evidence known to
the others acting on the government’s behalf in the case, including the police.’ ”].) The
trial court did not abuse its discretion.
       C.      Acevedo’s Contentions
               1.     “Clerical Mistakes”
       Acevedo argues “excusable neglect” as used in section 1387.1 governs acts or
omissions by the prosecution in the nature of clerical mistakes. The three cases he cites
in support do not stand for that proposition.
       In People v. Rodriguez (2013) 217 Cal.App.4th 326, the appellate court affirmed
the trial court’s order barring prosecution of various twice dismissed charges against the
defendant. (Id. at pp. 328, 336.) The prosecutor had elected not to appeal the first

                                                11
dismissal of the charges, which arose out of a motion to dismiss pursuant to section 995.
(Rodriguez, at p. 329.) Later, when seeking to attack the merits of that earlier order in its
opposition to the defendant’s section 1387 motion, the prosecution “attempt[ed] to
characterize the [earlier] ruling as ‘excusable neglect’ which might justify an additional
opportunity to refile the charges under section 1387.1.” (Rodriguez, at p. 331.) The
magistrate disagreed, “explaining that he viewed the notion of ‘excusable neglect’ by a
court to be restricted to essentially clerical errors, rather than substantive legal rulings.”
(Ibid.) The appellate court agreed with the magistrate, stating: “a court’s ‘excusable
neglect’ under section 1387.1 must be limited to errors which are essentially clerical in
nature, and would not include the sort of legal errors which are properly reviewable on
direct appeal.” (Rodriguez, at p. 336.)
       Thus, Rodriguez stands for the proposition that “error on the part of the court”
(§ 1387.1, subd. (b)) is excusable neglect only when the error is clerical in nature. As the
opinion’s italicization of the word “court’s” above indicates, the opinion does not stand
for the proposition that “error on the part of the . . . prosecution, law enforcement agency,
or witnesses” (ibid., italics added) is excusable neglect only when clerical in nature.
       Acevedo also cites Woods for support of the “clerical mistakes” proposition. But
as explained above, Woods was about clerical mistakes and human error. (See Woods,
supra, 12 Cal.App.4th at p. 1150.) Lastly, Acevedo cites Tapp v. Superior Court (1989)
216 Cal.App.3d 1030. In that case, the appellate court ruled a prosecutor’s failure to file
a technically correct affidavit was excusable neglect. (Id. at p. 1036.) Contrary to
Acevedo’s assertion, the Tapp holding does not stand for the proposition that “excusable
neglect” within the meaning of section 1387.1 is limited to such “technical” errors.
(Cf.Massey, supra, 79 Cal.App.4th at p. 212 [excusable neglect arose out of oral
miscommunication between a detective and trial prosecutor].)
              2.      Diligence
       Acevedo also argues the prosecutor was not diligent in his effort to be prepared for
the May 2022 trial. “A diligent and reasonably prudent person, given almost two years

                                               12
. . . would have had necessary pictures and witness statements available for trial,” he
contends. “It should be remembered,” Acevedo argues, “that the witness was available to
testify at trial and her prior statements implicating [Acevedo] were well known to all
involved for almost two years.”
       As a threshold matter, we are not convinced that “diligence” is a necessary
element for an “excusable neglect” finding by a trial court under section 1387.1, as the
statute does not use the word. Acevedo invokes language in Massey wherein the court
found “[t]he magistrate’s finding of diligence is equivalent to a finding of excusable
neglect under section 1387.1.” (Massey, supra, 79 Cal.App.4th at p. 211.) But that brief
discussion does not lead to the conclusion that diligence is a necessary element of
excusable neglect for statutory purposes. (Cf. Woods, supra, 12 Cal.App.4th at p. 1150
[excusable neglect where the prosecutor’s mistake occurred because she was “devoting
her energy to other cases” and was “less focused on the case”].)
       Further, as explained above, the trial court implicitly disagreed with Acevedo’s
contention that a reasonably prudent person necessarily would have had available for the
May 2022 trial the enlargements and a transcription of the witness’s previously unknown
statement. “[T]rials are very fluid and things develop” in “the days before, and hours
before” trial, the trial court observed. The prosecutor requested the enlargements two
weeks before trial with the expectation it would take one or two days. And, the trial court
found, the prosecutor discovered the witness’s recorded statement only days before trial
because of a new concern the witness was afraid to testify.
              3.      Prosecution’s Failure to Seek a Continuance
       Though we are troubled by the absence of a request for a continuance, we agree
with the People that because Acevedo did not raise at the December 2022 hearing the
issue of the prosecution’s failure to seek a continuance, it would be inappropriate for us
to consider it in our deferential review of the trial court’s discretionary ruling.
(Cf. People v. Myles (2012) 53 Cal.4th 1181, 1200 [“In assessing a claimed abuse of
discretion, we assess the trial court’s ruling by considering the record then before the

                                              13
court”]; Shank v. County of Los Angeles (1983) 139 Cal.App.3d 152, 158 [an issue raised
in the reviewing court “was not before the trial court and therefore [was] irrelevant in
determining on appeal whether the court abused its discretion”].)
                                      DISPOSITION
       The petition for writ of prohibition is denied. The previously ordered stay is
vacated upon finality of this opinion. The matter is remanded for further proceedings.
No costs are awarded. (See Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.493(a).)

                                                      /s/
                                                  BOULWARE EURIE, J.
We concur:

    /s/
ROBIE, Acting P.J.

    /s/
EARL, J.

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