Court Opinion

ID: 1037276
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-08-12 16:05:40.754707+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:09:25.019410
License: Public Domain

Filed 6/7/13
                    CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*

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

THE PEOPLE,                                                         C070271

               Plaintiff and Respondent,            (Super. Ct. Nos. 09F06395, 11F03888)

        v.

JOSHUA CROSS,

               Defendant and Appellant.

       APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Sacramento County, Greta
Curtis Fall, Judge. Affirmed with directions.

      William W. Lee, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant.

      Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Dane R. Gillette, Chief Assistant Attorney
General, Michael P. Farrell, Assistant Attorney General, Carlos A. Martinez and
Catherine Tennant Nieto, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.

* Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1100 and 8.1110, this opinion is certified
for publication with the exception of part II. of the Discussion.

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       A jury found defendant Joshua Cross guilty of felony infliction of corporal injury
on the mother of his child, and misdemeanor infliction of abuse on the child (case
No. 11F03888). It was unable to reach a verdict on a charge of robbery (which the trial
court dismissed on the prosecutor’s motion). The jury also sustained an allegation of a
prior conviction in 2010 for inflicting corporal injury on the mother of defendant’s child
in 2009. The trial court sentenced defendant to a term in state prison for the felony, with
a consecutive jail term for the misdemeanor. The trial court further found defendant in
violation of the grants of probation in the 2009 incident (case No. 09F06395) and in
another 2009 case (case No. 09F05116). It imposed a consecutive state prison term in
case No. 09F06395, terminating probation in case No. 09F05116. It calculated conduct
and custody credits only with respect to his current (May 2011) offense.

       On appeal, defendant argues that trial counsel’s stipulation that defendant was
convicted in 2010 for the 2009 incident of domestic violence was “tantamount to an
admission of a prior conviction,” and thus required the trial court to advise defendant of
his fundamental trial rights and solicit his waiver of them before it could give effect to the
stipulation. In the published part of this decision, we conclude the stipulation to the
existence of a prior conviction was not tantamount to admitting all the elements of an
enhancement; rather, the existence of the prior conviction was instead a sentencing factor
authorizing the trial court to impose a more severe alternative sentencing scheme. As a
result, the trial court was not required to advise defendant of his fundamental trial rights
and solicit waivers of them before giving effect to the stipulation. We shall therefore
affirm the judgment in case No. 11F03888. Defendant also maintains he was not
awarded presentence credits that he had accrued in connection with case No. 09F06395.1

1 Although his notice of appeal includes only the case number of his current offense, we
deem it to embrace case No. 09F06395 as well, which was part of the judgment from
which he was appealing. On the other hand, as he does not raise any arguments in
connection with case No. 09F05116, we deem him to have abandoned any appeal in that

                                              2
The People concede defendant is entitled to the credits. We shall affirm the sentence in
case No. 09F06395, but as we explain in the unpublished part of the decision, we must
remand for the trial court to calculate the conceded credits because the record on appeal
is unclear.

       The circumstances underlying defendant’s present or prior convictions are not
relevant to his contentions. We therefore omit any factual summary and proceed to the
Discussion.

                                       DISCUSSION

        I. Advisements and Waivers Were Not Necessary to Effect Stipulation

       Before trial, the prosecutor successfully moved to admit defendant’s prior acts of
domestic violence against the victim, including the August 2009 incident that resulted in
his conviction in case No. 09F06395. At trial, the prosecutor submitted a stipulation with
the defense, which recited that defendant had been convicted in January 2010 for an
incident of domestic violence in August 2009 with the same victim as the current offense.
The court later instructed the jury that it must accept the facts in a stipulation as true, and
that the People had the burden of proving a prior conviction for domestic violence
beyond a reasonable doubt (but reminding the jury that the fact of the prior conviction
had been the subject of a stipulation). Defendant argues on appeal that before accepting
the stipulation, the trial court should have advised him of his fundamental trial rights and
solicited his waiver of them.

       Because courts will not presume on a silent record that a defendant pleading
guilty—an act that constitutes a conviction of itself—knowingly and intelligently waived
the right to a jury, the right of confrontation, and the right against compulsory self-

case. (Conservatorship of Ben C. (2007) 40 Cal.4th 529, 544, fn. 8; 9 Witkin, Cal.
Procedure (5th ed. 2008) Appeal, § 732, p. 798 & § 739, p. 806.)

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incrimination, a trial court in accepting a guilty plea must expressly advise the defendant
of these rights and solicit a waiver of them on the record. (In re Tahl (1969) 1 Cal.3d
122, 132-133, applying Boykin v. Alabama (1969) 395 U.S. 238, 242 [23 L.Ed.2d 274].)
This process of advisement and waiver applies as well in circumstances “tantamount to a
plea of guilty” where conviction is the inevitable result, such as submitting the issue of
guilt on a preliminary hearing transcript lacking any defense to the charges. (People v.
Adams (1993) 6 Cal.4th 570, 576 (Adams).) This rule applies to both substantive
offenses and enhancements. (Id. at pp. 576-577.) However, a defendant’s admission of
“evidentiary facts” that do not embrace every element of an offense or an enhancement,
and which therefore leaves something “prerequisite to imposition of punishment,”2 is not
subject to the need for advisements and waivers. (Adams, at pp. 577-578, 581.) To
understand defendant’s argument that advisements and waivers were necessary in the
present context, we quickly explain a pair of Supreme Court decisions (People v.
Newman (1999) 21 Cal.4th 413 (Newman) and Adams, supra, 6 Cal.4th at p. 580)
and People v. Little (2004) 115 Cal.App.4th 766 (Little), which distinguished the
Supreme Court decisions.

       Regarding the enhancement for committing secondary offenses while on bail for
a primary offense, Adams concluded a stipulation to the fact of being on bail does not
admit all the elements of the enhancement, because conviction of the primary offense is
also an element of the enhancement (Adams, supra, 6 Cal.4th at pp. 580, 582), in contrast
with the mere “prerequisite” of a conviction for the secondary offense to which the
enhancement was attached (id. at p. 580, fn. 6). Returning to the issue in the context of a
stipulation to felon status in a prosecution for unlawful possession of a firearm, Newman

2 The mere possibility of jury nullification despite admission of all facts necessary for a
conviction or finding is an insufficient prerequisite to conviction to obviate the need for
advisements and waivers. (Adams, supra, 6 Cal.4th at p. 580, fn. 7.)

                                              4
concluded prior Supreme Court dicta regarding the need for advisements and waivers
before accepting stipulations to felon status were no longer viable because this admitted
only one of the elements of the offense. (Newman, supra, 21 Cal.4th at pp. 417, 422-423
& fn. 6.) In Little, the defendant stipulated that he was under the influence of a controlled
substance in violation of Health and Safety Code section 11550. (Little, supra,
115 Cal.App.4th at p. 772.) Little rejected the People’s argument that this stipulation did
not embrace the mens rea of the offense (and thus did not require the process of
advisement and waiver), concluding that the stipulation was not merely to being under
the influence, but being under the influence within the meaning of the statute and thus
was a complete admission of guilt. (Id. at p. 775.) It then held that a stipulation to all of
the elements of an offense must include advisements and waivers to be effective (id. at
pp. 776-778), explaining this was in fact the necessary implication of Adams and Newton
both focusing on whether the stipulations at issue were tantamount to a guilty plea.

       Penal Code section 273.5, subdivision (e)(1) (hereafter § 273.5(e)(1))3 provides in
pertinent part that “Any person convicted of violating this section for acts occurring
within seven years of a previous conviction under subdivision (a)” is subject to a
sentencing triad of two, four, or five years (as opposed to the two, three, or four years
otherwise specified in subdivision (a) of the statute). Based on the principles we have
just outlined, defendant therefore claims that his stipulation admitted the only element of
what he terms is a recidivist “enhancement” of his current offense, because conviction of
the underlying present offense is a mere prerequisite under Adams. The People, other
than adverting to the possibility of nullification (a point that Adams rejected, as we noted)
and attempting to argue defendant somehow retained his fundamental constitutional
rights with respect to the fact of his prior conviction for domestic violence, do not

3 Undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code.

                                              5
identify any element of this “enhancement” that the stipulation did not admit. They also
suggest (at length) that Little was wrongly decided and we should not follow it. Based on
analogous precedent, which we asked the parties to address in supplemental briefing,
we conclude section 273.5(e)(1) is not an enhancement but is simply a sentencing factor
authorizing the trial court to impose an alternate sentencing scheme, and therefore the
principles of Adams, Newman, and Little do not have any application to defendant’s
stipulation.

       Section 666 gives a trial court discretion to treat a conviction for petty theft as a
felony upon proof that a defendant has prior convictions for petty theft or other theft-
related offenses that resulted in imprisonment. People v. Witcher (1995) 41 Cal.App.4th
223 (Witcher), cited with approval in Newman, supra, 21 Cal.4th at page 423, involved a
defendant’s stipulation to the existence of previous theft-related convictions resulting in
imprisonment in order to prevent the jury from receiving evidence about them at trial.
(Witcher, supra, 41 Cal.App.4th. at pp. 226, 228-229.) Based on precedent that the
recidivist factor in section 666 was not an element of any offense and thus properly
subject to a stipulation to keep the fact out of evidence, Witcher concluded the
requirement of advisements and waivers (that we have described above) did not apply to
such a stipulation, particularly where the stipulation had resulted in a benefit to the
defendant of excluding otherwise admissible evidence about his prior offenses and an
offsetting detriment to the prosecution of denying it the opportunity of proving the prior
offenses to the jury. (Witcher, at pp. 233-234.) People v. Robinson (2004)
122 Cal.App.4th 275 reiterated this theme. It held that not only did section 666 not
establish a substantive offense, it also did not establish an enhancement; rather, it
established an alternate sentencing scheme with an elevated punishment for recidivist
thieves. (Robinson, at p. 281.) As a result, an information can be amended to allege the
applicability of section 666 even if the prosecution had not introduced evidence of the

                                              6
prior convictions at the preliminary hearing. (Robinson, supra, 122 Cal.App.4th at
pp. 281-282.) People v. Murphy (2001) 25 Cal.4th 136, 155, in drawing an analogy to
section 666 in the context of section 654, also unequivocally held that section 666 “does
not establish an enhancement, but establishes an alternate and elevated penalty.”
(Accord, People v. Tardy (2003) 112 Cal.App.4th 783, 787, fn. 2 (Tardy) [holding as a
result the defendant could be punished under section 666 even if statute not itself alleged
in the information]; cf. Robert L. v. Superior Court (2003) 30 Cal.4th 894, 899 [§ 186.22,
subd. (d) is not an enhancement “because it does not add an additional term of
imprisonment to the base term” and is instead an alternate sentence].)

       The issue has not, as far as we can determine, been the subject of any holding
under section 273.5(e)(1).4 However, the nature of section 273.5(e)(1)’s provision for an
alternate sentencing scheme with elevated punishment for repeat offenders convicted of
domestic violence convinces us that the authority decided under section 666 is properly
analogous.

       In defendant’s supplemental response, he first attempts to distinguish Witcher
(and section 666) on the ground that section 666’s alternative sentencing scheme requires
proof of both a conviction and a term of incarceration. This simply begs the question: If
neither section 666 nor section 273.5(e)(1) is an offense or an enhancement, then it does
not matter whether a stipulation admits fewer than all of the criteria for the imposition of
the alternative sentencing scheme. Similarly, that his stipulation to a prior conviction has
“penal consequences” ignores the actual distinction drawn in the case between admitting

4 Interpreting an ambiguous record in the course of concluding that the trial court
imposed an unauthorized sentence, People v. Price (2004) 120 Cal.App.4th 224, 242,
described section 273.5(e)(1) as an “offense” that “include[es] the element of a prior
conviction” (italics omitted). As this was dicta without any thorough analysis of the
proposition announced or compelling logic in its support, we do not find it persuasive.
(People v. Smith (2002) 95 Cal.App.4th 283, 300.)

                                              7
a prior conviction for purposes of an alternative sentencing scheme and for the
enhancement in section 667. (Witcher, supra, 41 Cal.App.4th at p. 234.) It is true that,
unlike in Witcher, defendant’s stipulation did not result in the benefit of keeping the facts
of the prior conviction out of evidence. But “benefit” does not play any part in the
analysis of Adams, Newman, and Little, and thus its apparent absence in the present case
is irrelevant for our present purposes. By the same token, the fact that Witcher received
some advisements does not play any part in the holding (because the opinion nevertheless
found these to be manifestly inadequate (Witcher, supra, 41 Cal.App.4th at pp. 232-233))
and thus the complete absence of advisements in the present case is irrelevant. Finally,
Witcher does not in any sense “suggest[]” that express advisements of penal
consequences are required, since the opinion found sufficient notice of these
consequences from the inclusion of a reference to section 666 and the facts of prior
convictions in the allegations of the information (Witcher, at pp. 226, 234), as is true here
with respect to section 273.5 and the prior conviction.

       Defendant next argues we should follow the reasoning of the Fifth Appellate
District in People v. Shippey (1985) 168 Cal.App.3d 879, which required advisements
and waivers before a defendant could be allowed to testify to the existence of a prior
conviction for petty theft. (Id. at pp. 888-889.) However, Shippey did not consider the
distinction at issue here between an alternative sentencing scheme and an enhancement.
It simply cited to precedent that involved the admission of a prior conviction for purpose
of an enhancement and concluded, “This reasoning appears equally applicable to the
instant case.” (Id. at p. 888.) It therefore does not have any significance to us that neither
Adams nor Newman disapproved Shippey (as defendant points out).

       We recognize, as defendant argues, that the issue in Tardy arose in a different
context than in the present case. However, it was necessary to Tardy’s holding to
conclude that section 666 did not create a substantive offense of “petty theft with a prior”

                                              8
but was instead a sentencing factor authorizing the imposition of an alternative sentence
(and therefore only the prior theft-related convictions needed to be alleged) because
otherwise the failure to allege section 666 in the information would have precluded
punishment pursuant to it. (Tardy, supra, 112 Cal.App.4th at pp. 787-788 & fn. 2.)
Tardy thus properly stands for that proposition (as does Robinson for the same reason).
As for the statement in Robinson that section 666 “operates in the same manner” as
recidivist enhancements, this again does not “suggest[]” that the need for advisements
and waivers should apply, as defendant claims. Merely because an alternative sentencing
scheme has the same effect as an enhancement does not mean it must be treated the same
way, and Robinson in fact did not treat section 666 as if it were an enhancement (for
which evidence must be introduced at a preliminary hearing in order to allow amendment
of an information to include it).

       We therefore conclude a stipulation to a prior conviction for domestic violence for
purposes of section 273.5(e)(1) does not require a trial court to engage in the advisement
and waiver process, as defendant asserts. Having rejected the underlying premise of his
argument, we do not find any error.

                            II. Presentence Custody Credits

       Defendant entered his plea of no contest in case No. 09F06395 in December 2009;
the trial court granted probation in January 2010. In March 2011, the trial court found
that defendant had violated probation based on an incident of domestic violence the
previous month; it reinstated defendant on probation, conditioned on a 60-day jail term.
Against the jail term, the trial court credited defendant with 25 days of custody he had
served in connection with the August 2009 incident and 24 days of conduct credit. As

   See footnote, ante, page 1.

                                             9
noted above, the trial court in sentencing defendant to state prison did not calculate any
presentence credits for case No. 09F06395.

       Defendant maintains he is entitled to have the 25 days of custody credit and 24
days of conduct credit that the trial court identified in March 2011 credited against his
consecutive term for case No. 09F06395. The People concede the issue. While we agree
in theory, the present record does not allow us either to accept the 49 days to which the
parties have stipulated or to determine the correct amount of custody credit, so we must
remand for the trial court to make the proper calculation.

       In the first place, the record does not identify the dates of defendant’s custody. If
it occurred in 2009 (close in time to the incident), he would have accrued conduct credits
at the lower rate of two days for every four-day period of custody. (Former § 4019,
subds. (b) & (c) [see Stats. 1982, ch. 1234, § 7, p. 4553]; People v. Brown (2012)
54 Cal.4th 314, 318, 322 [regardless of time of sentencing, conduct credits accrue at rate
in effect at time of custody].) If it occurred after January 25, 2010, but before
September 28, 2010, defendant would have accrued conduct credit at the rate of one day
for every two-day period, as the trial court apparently calculated. (Former § 4019, subds.
(b)(1) & (c)(1) [see Stats. 2009, 3d Ex. Sess. 2009-2010, ch. 28, § 50].) And if it
occurred between September 28, 2010, and the March 2011 hearing, he would have
accrued conduct credit at the rate of one day for every day of custody. (Former § 2933,
subd. (e)(1) [see Stats. 2010, ch. 426, § 1].) We cannot resolve this question on appeal.

       In addition, a defendant is ordinarily entitled to credit against a subordinate term
resulting from a probation violation for any period of custody imposed as a condition of
that probation. (People v. Riolo (1983) 33 Cal.3d 223, 226, 228-229; People v. Cooksey
(2002) 95 Cal.App.4th 1407, 1414.) It would appear from the record that defendant was
supposed to be in custody for an additional 11 days before the present May 2011 incident
as a condition of reinstatement on probation (after his accrued credits were deducted from

                                             10
the 60-day jail term). He would thus appear to be entitled to an additional 11 days of
custody credit with conduct credit at a rate again of one day for every one day of custody
(former § 2933, subd. (e)(1) [see Stats. 2010, ch. 426, § 1]), unless there is some fact not
disclosed in the record for denying him this credit for the ordered 11 days of custody.

       Given the uncertainties in the record and the unexplained omission of the other 11
days of custody from the calculation of the parties, we cannot give defendant the remedy
he requests. The better course of action is to remand the matter to the trial court for a
proper determination of the facts that are relevant to the calculation of the presentence
credits to which defendant is entitled for his subordinate term in case No. 09F06395.
[END OF NONPUB. PT. II.]

                                       DISPOSITION

       The judgment in case No. 11F03888 is affirmed. The sentence is affirmed and the
matter is remanded in case No. 09F06395 for a calculation of the proper amount of
custody and conduct credits. The trial court shall thereafter prepare an amended abstract
of judgment and forward a certified copy to the California Department of Corrections and
Rehabilitation. (CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION)

                                                        BUTZ                   , Acting P. J.

We concur:

             MAURO                  , J.

             HOCH                   , J.

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