Opinion
A dеfendant shoplifts property from a store in a shopping mall and forcibly resists the mall security guards who apprehend him and recover the property. Can the guards be victims of a robbery when they are not the owners of the stolen property and are not directly employed by the store that owned the property? We conclude the answer in this case is yes, because the guards had a special relationship with the store and had the duty
*1348
and authority to retrieve its stolen property. We also reject defendant’s claims that the jury instructions on this point were defective and that his midtrial motion for self-representation under
Faretta v. California
(1975)
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Defendant Richard Gary Bradford went to the Solano Mall in Fairfield where he stole six bottles of perfume from the front of a Victoria’s Secret store. Nina Paiz, a shift manager for Victoria’s Seсret, noticed defendant walking out of the store with the perfume as she arrived for work. Defendant stood near a kiosk and then briefly returned to Victoria’s Secret carrying a bag from another store with the stolen perfume inside. Paiz spoke to two mall security guards, Steven Conyers and Arthur Sandoval, and reported the theft.
After speaking to Paiz, Conyers and Sandoval followed defendant as he walked away from Victоria’s Secret and into a nearby Mervyn’s. They contacted defendant just inside the Mervyn’s and asked if they could look inside the bag he was carrying. Defendant refused and Conyers told defendant he was being placed under citizen’s arrest. Defendant pulled a knife from his pocket, waved it at the guards, and ran away.
Conyers and Sandoval chased defendant outside Mervyn’s and Conyers tackled him. The two men wrestled on the ground and Sаndoval saw defendant pull the knife from his pocket and try to stab Conyers. Sandoval grabbed appellant’s hand and forced him to drop the knife. Another security guard joined the struggle and handcuffed appellant, who was turned over to Fairfield police officers.
Defendant was tried before a jury and convicted of two counts of second degree robbery with knife use enhancements and one count of assault by means likely to cause great bodily injury. (Pen. Code, §§ 211, 245, subd. (a)(1), 12022, subd. (b)(1).) 1 Conyers and Sandoval were the named victims of the robbery counts and Conyers was the named victim of the assault count. Appellant was sentenced to prison for an aggregate term of 12 years after admitting prior conviction allegations. (§§ 667, subd. (a), 1170.12, subds. (a)-(d).)
*1349 DISCUSSION
A. Substantial Evidence Supported the Jury’s Determination that Security Guards Conyers and Sandoval Were Robbery Victims
Defendant argues that his robbery convictions must be reversed because the prosecution failed to show that Conyers and Sandoval were victims of a robbery. Noting that California law limits robbery victims to persons who have actual or constructive possession of the property taken (see
People v. Nguyen
(2000)
Robbery is “the felonious taking of personal property in the possession of another, from his person or immediate presence, and against his will, accomplished by means of force or fear.” (§211; see
People v. Scott
(2009)
A robbery cannot be committed against a person who is not in possession of the property taken or retained.
(Scott, supra,
In
Scott, supra,
In this case, Conyers and Sandoval were not employees of Victoria’s Secret. They did, however, have a special relationship with the store (and presumably, with other businesses in that mall) by virtue of their position as mall security guards. The evidence showed that they were employees of a company called Professional Security Consultants (PSC), which was contractually obligated to provide security services to businessеs in the mall. PSC guards wore uniforms while on duty and were responsible for dealing with store thefts and other disturbances inside the mall. The guards were usually the first people the stores called in cases of theft, and Conyers was called to Victoria’s Secret “all the time.” Paiz, the shift manager of Victoria’s Secret, testified that her store would call on mall security services when there had been a theft and that it relied on the seсurity guards to contact suspects and recover the property if they could. As security guards employed by PSC, Conyers and Sandoval could be “expected to resist the taking” of property from Victoria’s Secret, and as such were in constructive possession of the property stolen by defendant.
(Scott, supra,
Moreover, Paiz specifically asked Conyers and Sandoval to assist Victoria’s Secret in recovering its stolen property. This case is therefore akin to
People
v.
Bekele
(1995)
Defendant argues that the relationship of the security guards to Victoria’s Secret was too attenuаted to regard them as robbery victims. The cases on which he relies are inapposite. In
People v. Ugalino
(2009)
Defendant also argues that the private security guards in this case are akin to police officers who encounter resistance when attempting to recover stolen property on behalf of a member of the public. He asserts that a police officer acting in that capacity cannot be the victim of a robbery, and claims that the security guards in this case should be treated no differently for analytical purposes. We are not persuaded. A law enforcement officer has a duty to protect the public at large, but under ordinary circumstances lacks a special relationship with a particular theft victim. In this case, by contrast, the guards did have a special relationship with the theft victim by virtue of their employment. The question under Scott is not whether a security guard sometimes performs functions similar to those of a police officer, but whether he or she has the requisite special relationship to the owner of stolen property in a particular case.
*1352
From the evidence presented at trial, a reasonable trier of fact could determine that Conyers and Sandoval had a special relationship with Victoria’s Secret, along with the authority and responsibility to protect stolen property on its behalf. (See
Scott, supra,
B. Defendant Was Not Prejudiced by the Jury Instruction Defining the Circumstances in Which a Security Guard May Be a Robbery Victim
In a related argument, defendant contends the jury instruction defining robbery did not accurately describe the circumstances in which a security guard who is not a store employee may be a robbery victim. We conclude the instruction was not misleading and did not prejudice defendant.
The court gave a version of CALCRIM No. 1600, which listed the elements of robbery and was modified to include the following language: “A mall security guard may be robbed if property of a store or business in the mall is taken even though he or she does not own the property and was not, at that moment, in immediate physical control of the property. If the facts show that the security guard was a representative of the owner of the property аnd the security guard expressly or implicitly had authority over the property, then that security guard may be robbed if property of the store or business is taken by force or fear.” 3 Defendant argues this instruction was defective because it did not advise the jury it needed to find “a special relationship that imbued Conyers and Sandoval with authority or responsibility to protect Victoria’s Secret property before it was stolen.”
Under
Scott, supra,
In any event, the main difference between the standard articulated in
Scott
and the instruction given is the latter’s omission of the “special relationship” requirement. Having necessarily determined under the instruction given that Conyers and Sandoval were “representatives” of Victoria’s Secret with express or implicit authority over the stolen proрerty, there is no reasonable likelihood the jury failed to find a “special relationship” within the meaning of
Scott. (See People
v.
Moon
(2005)
C. The Trial Court Properly Denied Appellant’s Motion for Self-representation
After the close of evidencе, but before closing argument began, defendant filed a written request to represent himself pursuant to
Faretta, supra,
A criminal defendant may waive the right to counsel and represent himself at trial.
(Faretta, supra,
422 U.S. at pp. 834-835.) The right of self-representation is absolute, but only if a request therefor is knowingly and voluntarily made and is asserted a reasonable time before trial begins.
(People
v.
Doolin
(2009)
*1354 The trial court in this case correctly determined that appellant’s Faretta motion was not timely for purposes of invoking an absolute right of self-representation. It gave defendant the opportunity to state his reasons for the motion, and defendant indicated that he felt he could speak better than his attorney and was generally unhappy with his attorney’s performance. After hearing from defendant and ascertaining that defense counsel was ready to go forward with closing argument, the court denied the motion, noting that defense counsel had “done a fine job.”
Considering the
Windham
factors and the record as a whole, the court did not abuse its discretion in requiring defendant to proceed with counsel. Although defendant seemed generally dissatisfied with the quality of his representation throughout the case, we agree with the trial court that counsel acted competently during the trial. Defendant had a history of discord with his attorneys based primarily on their rejection оf strategies he wanted to pursue, and he had obtained an order under
People v. Marsden
(1970)
Defendant argues that we cannot rely on any of these circumstances to affirm the trial court’s order because they were not explicitly cited by the trial court. We disagree. The court in
Windham,
though requiring the trial court to inquire into the reasons behind a defendant’s untimely
Faretta
request, “decline[d] to mandate a rule that a trial court must, in all cases, state the reasons underlying a decision tо deny a motion for self-representation which is based on nonconstitutional grounds.”
(Windham, supra,
Citing
People v. Butler
(2009)
The record in
Butler
demonstrated thаt the trial court had not believed the defendant’s out-of-court misconduct was a basis for revoking proprio persona status the second time. The Supreme Court therefore declined to rely on that misconduct to uphold the order on appeal.
(Butler, supra,
47 Cal.4th at pp. 825-827.) By contrast, our consideration of
Windham
factors not specifically cited by the trial court is simply a variation of the broader rule that аbsent a showing to the contrary, the trial court is presumed to have known and followed the applicable law and to have properly exercised its discretion. (See
People v. Martinez
(1998)
Finally, defendant suggests that because he advised the court he would not need a continuance to present his closing argument, he had an absolute right to represent himself without regard to the
Windham
factors. We disagree. We are bound by
Windham
and the standard it established for
Faretta
motions brought after the commencement of trial.
(Auto Equity Sales, Inc.
v.
Superior Court
(1962)
*1356 DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
Jones, P. J., and Simons, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied December 15, 2010, SI87057.
Notes
Further statutory references are to the Penal Code.
In
Nguyen, supra,
This language is an adaptation of the standard used before the
Scott
decision to determine whether store employees qualified as robbery victims.
(Scott, supra,
