Court Opinion

ID: 9405201
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-06-27 19:05:41.439291+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:19:40.505833
License: Public Domain

Filed 6/27/23 P. v. Roberts CA1/2
                  NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
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          IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                      FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                   DIVISION TWO

 THE PEOPLE,
           Plaintiff and Respondent,
                                                                        A165569
 v.
 ZACHARY JAY ROBERTS,                                                   (Napa County
                                                                        Super. Ct. No. 21CR001131)
           Defendant and Appellant.

         After a jury convicted Zachary Jay Roberts of two counts of felony
cruelty to animals, the trial court placed him on probation for two years,
subject to various terms and conditions. Roberts’s sole argument on appeal is
that the trial court abused its discretion in imposing a probation condition
that requires him to pay $4,575 in restitution to the Napa County Animal
Shelter for impounding and boarding “Raiderette,” a dog taken from his
possession when he violated a condition of pretrial release that prohibited
him from keeping any animals. Roberts contends that the restitution order is
not related to his crimes or reasonably related to deterring future criminal
conduct. Roberts has not shown error, and we will affirm.
                    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
A.       Proceedings Before Trial
         On May 24, 2021, the Napa County District Attorney filed a complaint
alleging that Roberts committed felony cruelty to animals in violation of

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Penal Code section 597, subdivision (b).1 The complaint alleged two counts,
each associated with a different dog: Avery (count 1) and Princess (count 2).
In a later-filed information, the district attorney added a count as to a third
dog, Raiderette (count 3), and alleged aggravating factors as to all three
counts for great bodily harm, particularly vulnerable victims, and a prior
criminal history showing a pattern of committing crimes of increasing
seriousness.
      At the arraignment on the complaint on June 11, 2021, the court
ordered Roberts released on his own recognizance under the condition that he
not own or possess any dogs, pets, or animals. Princess was dead and Avery
had been taken from Roberts’ possession, but the court was aware that
Roberts had a third dog, Raiderette. The court told Roberts that if he still
possessed Raiderette, he would need to relinquish her to the shelter or find
her a new home. Roberts stated he understood, and he agreed to the
conditions of his release.
      On December 9, 2021, the probation department submitted a petition to
revoke Roberts’s conditional release. According to the petition, Roberts was
accompanied by a dog he claimed to own when he was contacted by Napa
Police the day before in a suspicious vehicle. Roberts was arrested when a
records check showed that he was on felony own-recognizance release with
terms including his not owning or possessing any animal. The dog,
Raiderette, was impounded by animal control and taken to the Napa County
Animal Shelter (shelter). On December 10, 2021, the trial court revoked
Roberts’s conditional release and set bail at $10,000 on conditions including
the same conditions that had been ordered in the prior own-recognizance
release.

      1   All statutory references are to the Penal Code.

                                         2
      At the conclusion of the preliminary hearing on December 16, 2021, the
prosecutor stated that Raiderette remained at the shelter. The prosecutor
asked whether Roberts was interested in relinquishing ownership of
Raiderette. She stated that the shelter would request restitution for each
day the dog was there, and that if Roberts relinquished custody, he would not
be responsible for restitution from that time forward and “the shelter will
work and do whatever they can for Raiderette.” The prosecutor also stated
that if Roberts was convicted or pleaded to one of the counts, there would be a
ban on animal possession. Roberts said he did not want to relinquish
ownership at that time, and the court suggested he discuss the matter with
his attorney.
B.    Trial
      Roberts’s case was tried to a jury in May and June 2022.
      1.      Prosecution Witnesses
      Angela Hopkins testified that she had dated Roberts for about 19
months. She lived with him in Napa until they broke up in December 2020,
and she moved out of town. She and Roberts had four dogs: Spike, an older
male chihuahua; Princess, who Hopkins thought was a terrier-chihuahua
mix; and Avery and Raiderette, who were pit bulls. Hopkins testified that
she did all the work to care for the dogs: she fed them, gave them water, took
them out to relieve themselves, and cleaned their cages. She testified that
when Roberts had been drinking, she would see him punch and kick
Raiderette, and pull her by the tail. And if Princess was barking, he would
throw her in her cage or throw her across the room. Hopkins testified she
wanted to take the dogs with her when she left Roberts, but he would not let
her. By the time she left, Roberts’s mother had taken Spike. Princess,
Avery, and Raiderette had not been spayed.

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      Deassa Binstock, a registered veterinary technician, testified that she
worked with homeless people in Napa County who owned pets, to make sure
that the animals received food and medical care. She first met Roberts near
“Napa Humane,” where she worked at the time, while she was on a lunch
break in December 2020. She noticed that he had four dogs, who she later
learned were Raiderette, Princess, and Avery, as well as an older male
chihuahua, and she stopped to ask if Roberts needed anything. She testified
that he needed dog food and she talked to him about spay and neuter. She
offered to have Raiderette, Princess, and Avery spayed for free if he was
interested. On December 22, 2020, she picked up the dogs from Roberts, took
them to Napa Humane to be spayed, and brought them back to Roberts later
that day after the surgeries were completed.
      Binstock testified that after the spay surgeries, Roberts called her
multiple times. At some point after the surgeries, but before January 16,
2021, Binstock visited Roberts and saw Raiderette, who looked fine, but she
did not recall seeing the other dogs. On January 16, 2021, Roberts informed
her that Princess was dead. Binstock offered to pick up the body because she
did not know what Roberts would do with it, and because she wanted to see
the other dogs. When she met with him the next day, he gave her Princess’s
body, which was skinny and covered in urine and feces, in a dog crate that
contained “days worth of feces and urine.” Binstock saw Avery that day and
noticed that she was very thin and needed help. Roberts agreed to let
Binstock take Avery for medical care, and Binstock took her directly to
Silverado Veterinary Hospital.
      Dr. Renee Michell, a veterinarian at Silverado Veterinary Hospital,
testified that she responded to an emergency call to treat Avery on January
17, 2021. She testified that Avery was “severely emaciated,” “severely

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dehydrated,” and smelled of urine and feces. She believed that Avery would
have died within 24 to 48 hours if she had not been brought in for treatment.
Michell evaluated and treated Avery at the hospital over the course of about
a week. Avery’s bloodwork was consistent with a dog who had not received
proper nutrition and hydration, and Michell concluded that nothing was
wrong with Avery’s health except that she had been starved. Avery’s
condition improved after treatment; and she was cleared for release into
foster care.
      Dr. Mai Yee Mok, a veterinary anatomic pathologist, testified that she
performed a necropsy on Princess. On the basis of the necropsy, she opined
that Princess died from long-term undernutrition. She testified that there
was no disease in the dog’s body or problems with the dog’s teeth or
obstructions in the dog’s mouth or esophagus that would have prevented
Princess from eating if she had access to food.
      Dr. Amanda Vance, who had been a veterinarian for almost 22 years
and whose work almost exclusively involved spaying and neutering dogs,
cats, and rabbits, testified that she performed the surgeries to spay
Raiderette, Avery, and Princess. All three dogs had normal surgeries, and
Vance saw no sign of abuse or neglect as to any of the three. Vance testified
she had never seen or heard of a dog that would not eat to the point of
emaciation after a spay surgery.
      2.       Defense Witnesses
      Despina Saulmon testified that she had known Roberts for about four
or five years, and that about two years earlier she gave him two boxer-pit bull
puppies named Avery and Raiderette. She testified that she had seen him
with other dogs a few times, and gave him the puppies because she thought
he would take care of them.

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      Roberts’ mother testified that she observed Roberts with Princess,
Avery, and Raiderette “pretty much every day.” She saw him feed them and
play with them; she never saw him hit them and never felt that he was
abusing them. She testified that all three dogs looked healthy to her until
they were spayed. Princess was less active after she was spayed, and she
was bleeding in her belly area, and would barely eat, so Roberts used a
syringe to feed her. Avery would not eat or drink after she was spayed, and
Roberts fed her with a syringe that contained water and moist dog food.
      Dale Vough testified that he had known Roberts for about a year, and
had seem him walking Raiderette, who appeared healthy.
      Roberts confirmed that he owned Princess, Avery, and Raiderette, and
testified that he believed they were healthy before they were spayed.
Princess was not eating normally after she was spayed, so he tried to feed her
small portions with a syringe, but that did not work. He noticed she was
bleeding from her vaginal area. On about Christmas Day, he called Binstock
and told her about his concerns. She said she would check on the dog a few
days later, but she did not come. Roberts testified that Avery was not eating,
and that he tried to feed her with a syringe also, but that did not work. He
called Binstock several times and told her there was something wrong with
the dogs and he needed her help, but got no response. He did not bring the
dogs to a vet because he lacked funds. After he called to tell Binstock that
Princess died, she came the next day and took Princess and Avery. He signed
paperwork to surrender Avery so she could get the vet care that he could not
afford.
      Roberts testified that he never kicked any of his dogs, never threw
Princess, and never pulled Raiderette’s tail. He testified that he suffered
from seizures that affected his memory. After his girlfriend left him, he

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drank heavily, and he admitted that his drinking may have interfered with
his memory of events.
      3.    Verdicts
      In verdicts returned on June 2, 2022, the jury found Roberts guilty on
the counts relating to Avery and Princess, and also found true the great
bodily harm and vulnerable victim allegations associated with those counts.
The jury acquitted Roberts on the count relating to Raiderette. The trial
court subsequently found true the allegation of increasing seriousness of
prior convictions.
      After the jurors were excused, the prosecutor asked that Roberts
voluntarily relinquish Raiderette, who had been at the shelter since
December 2021, so she could “be rehomed or go through rescue or the
adoption process.” In the alternative, the prosecutor asked the court to order
Raiderette be relinquished. The prosecutor stated that the shelter was
entitled to restitution for Raiderette’s care, so any delay would result in
additional costs. Roberts relinquished Raiderette to the custody of the
shelter on June 3, 2022.
C.    Sentencing
      At the sentencing hearing on June 30, 2022, the prosecutor informed
the court that the shelter was requesting $4,575 in restitution for Raiderette.
The request was based on a letter from the shelter seeking an impound fee of
$175 and $4,400 in board for 176 days at $25 per day. The prosecutor
acknowledged that there was no conviction on the cruelty charge regarding
Raiderette, and stated that Raiderette was not taken to the shelter because of

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a charge pertaining to her, but instead was impounded when the police found
Roberts with the dog in violation of the condition of his pretrial release.2
      Roberts’s counsel objected that “victim restitution” was inappropriate
in light of the fact that Roberts was acquitted of the charge as to Raiderette.
In response to the court’s question whether Roberts was responsible for the
costs, Robert’s counsel responded, “He probably is civilly, absolutely. Like a
small claims type of thing. But I don’t see how, criminally, he’s responsible
for Raiderette, because he was acquitted of that.”
      The court placed Roberts on two years’ formal probation, subject to
terms and conditions including that he serve 270 days in jail and that he not
own, possess, or have the care or control of any animal during the term of his
probation. The court also ordered Roberts to pay restitution of $4,575 to the
shelter as a condition of his probation.
      Roberts timely appealed.
                                 DISCUSSION
A.    Applicable Law and Standard of Review
      Trial courts have broad discretion under section 1203.1 to impose
probation conditions to foster rehabilitation and protect public safety. (People
v. Carbajal (1995) 10 Cal.4th 1114, 1120-1121 (Carbajal).) Such conditions
may include an order requiring the payment of restitution. (Id. at p. 1121;
see § 1203.1, subd. (a)(3) [“The court shall provide for restitution in proper
cases”].) Under section 1203.1, the trial court has “flexibility to encourage a
defendant’s reformation as the circumstances of his or her case require.”
(People v. Anderson (2010) 50 Cal.4th 19, 29.) Restitution under section
1203.1 is not limited to a “direct victim” of a crime. (Id. at pp. 28-29.) And

      2 Roberts was not charged with animal cruelty as to Raiderette until
after the dog was impounded on December 8, 2021.

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restitution may be ordered even when the loss being compensated is not
caused by the criminal conduct underlying a defendant’s conviction:
depending on the circumstances, restitution may be imposed where loss is
caused by conduct that does not result in a conviction, including uncharged
conduct, conduct underlying dismissed charges, and conduct that results in
an acquittal. (Carbajal, supra, 10 Cal.4th at p. 1121.)
      The trial court’s discretion to order restitution, like its discretion to
order any other condition of probation, is broad but not unlimited. Upon
review, “[a] condition of probation will not be held invalid unless it ‘(1) has no
relationship to the crime of which the offender was convicted, (2) relates to
conduct which is not in itself criminal, and (3) requires or forbids conduct
which is not reasonably related to future criminality.’ ” (People v. Lent (1975)
15 Cal.3d 481, 486.) “Conversely, a condition of probation which requires or
forbids conduct which is not itself criminal is valid if that conduct is
reasonably related to the crime of which the defendant was convicted or to
future criminality.” (Ibid.) “The test for determining the validity of a
restitution order as a condition of probation is the same as for any other
condition of probation that requires or forbids conduct that is not itself
criminal. The condition must be reasonably related either to the crime of
which the defendant is convicted or to the goal of deterring future
criminality.” (People v. Snow (2012) 205 Cal.App.4th 932, 940, citing
Carbajal, supra, 10 Cal.4th at pp. 1121, 1123.)
B.    Analysis
      Roberts asserts that because he was acquitted of animal cruelty toward
Raiderette, the restitution condition has no relation to the crimes for which
he was convicted. We disagree. The costs incurred by the shelter in boarding
Raiderette were related to the felony animal cruelty charges of which Roberts

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was convicted because those charges were the basis of the own-recognizance
release condition that prohibited his possession of any animal. Roberts
agreed to the pre-trial release condition, and his violation of it resulted in the
impoundment of Raiderette, and therefore in Roberts’s responsibility for the
cost to impound and board her when he would not relinquish her. The
release condition, imposed because Roberts had been charged with animal
cruelty, applied to the possession of any animal, regardless of whether
Roberts had been charged with cruelty toward that particular animal.
Roberts violated the condition, and the violation led to the restitution order.
It does not matter whether Roberts was acquitted of animal cruelty as to
Raiderette specifically; the fact remains that the restitution order is related
to the crimes of which Roberts was convicted.
      Even if the restitution order were not related to the crime for which
Roberts was convicted, we would uphold the order because Roberts fails to
show that it is not reasonably related to deterring future criminal conduct.
(See People v. Superior Court (Du) (1992) 5 Cal.App.4th 822, 831 [defendant
who is challenging a condition of probation has the burden to show the trial
court abused its discretion].) Roberts argues that requiring him to pay
restitution is contrary to the probationary goal of deterring future
criminality, including a future act of animal cruelty, because it encourages
criminal conduct rather than deterring it. He contends that the restitution
order encourages him to hide, abandon, or euthanize a dog he cannot care for,
rather than surrender it. The argument is meritless. Raiderette was
impounded and restitution was ordered because Roberts did not surrender
the animal to the shelter or another caregiver. If he had done so, he would

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not have been financially responsible for her care at the shelter.3 In his reply
brief, Roberts asserts that the restitution order “financially penalizes
compliance with a court order.” Not at all. Restitution was ordered because
Roberts did not comply with the court order that granted him own-
recognizance release on the condition that he not possess an animal, even
though the court informed Roberts that he had to relinquish Raiderette or
find a new home for her. If Roberts had complied with the court’s order by
surrendering Raiderette to the shelter or otherwise arrange for her to be
cared for, there would have been no restitution to be paid here.
                                DISPOSITION
      We find no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s requiring restitution
to the shelter as a condition of Roberts’s probation. The judgment is
affirmed.

      3Roberts does not identify anything in the record to suggest that he
would have had to pay the shelter for Raiderette’s care if he had relinquished
the animal to the shelter when he was released before trial on the condition
that he not own or possess any animal.

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                                         _________________________
                                         Miller, J.

WE CONCUR:

_________________________
Stewart, P.J.

_________________________
Markman, J.*

A165589, People v. Roberts

     *Judge of the Alameda Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice
pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.

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