The jury found defendant guilty of domestic violence causing injury, assault with force likely to inflict great bodily injury, and mayhem. The jurors could not agree on the great bodily injury enhancements, and therefore, the court dismissed the enhancements for insufficient evidence. The court also dismissed the prior prison term allegations. Because we must reverse the judgment due to the trial court's failure to hold a competency hearing, we need not address most of the other issues defendant raises on appeal. We conclude, however, there is sufficient evidence to support mayhem for purposes of any future prosecution on the mayhem count.
FACTS
The facts relevant to the dispositive issues on appeal are set forth in our analysis
The second incident of uncharged domestic violence occurred in early 2016. The victim moved out of defendant's grandmother's house and moved home just before Christmas 2015. But afraid defendant would find her at her parents' house, she moved into a women's shelter. She left the shelter to live
The charged incident occurred on February 15, 2016. Defendant and the victim went barhopping together on Valentine's Day. After drinking at various bars, they got into an argument and the victim left. She noticed defendant had left his phone in her car. She went through the phone and discovered defendant had been texting with another woman. Defendant called her from the Hampton Inn. She went to the Hampton Inn after midnight to deliver the phone whereupon they began arguing again. The argument turned violent.
Defendant jumped on the victim and started biting her face and hitting her. He bit her eyelid just underneath her eyebrow. As the victim tried to shove defendant off of her, he repeatedly punched her. He then bit her lips on the left side of her mouth. The victim could feel the blood from the bite on her eyelid ooze down her face. She managed to get out of the car and run to the hotel lobby for help. She was bleeding all down her swollen face. An emergency room doctor glued her eyebrow back together. She had marks on her hands. She had bruising, including around her lips, scratches on her neck, and a cut to the bridge of her nose.
DISCUSSION
I
Right to a Competency Hearing
Defendant's Evidence of Mental Incompetency
Defendant's odd behavior began on June 6, 2016, during court proceedings on the eve of trial. He expressed his frustration with his lawyer to the court and his need to see a doctor for mental problems. He disclosed he had a learning disability and did not understand what had been involved in a Marsden
Defendant's negotiations with the prosecutor to settle the case failed the following day. In the proceedings that followed, he continued shouting "very,
On June 8, defendant did not appear at trial. A guard saw him in a cell "head-butting" the ground. At the same time, defendant was slapping and punching the left side of his face. Bleeding from his left eyebrow, defendant was put in belly chains. His left eye socket was swollen and lacerated. Another guard charged with giving him his civilian clothes, saw defendant crouched on the floor with his hand on the right side of his head, yelling, screaming, and hitting the left side of his face. Rocking back and forth, defendant yelled, "Get out of my head. They made me do it." He hit himself at least six times and held his head as he continued to rock back and forth. He was moaning and screaming as the officers entered to restrain him and then he resumed beating himself. There was a jail incident report documenting that he punched himself in the face, hit his head, and began crying. With mounting evidence defendant was decompensating, defense counsel expressed a doubt about his competency to assist her in his defense. She noted that mental illness can be fluid and he had a history of receiving psychiatric treatment in prison. She lamented the lack of paperwork to document any mental health treatment he had received.
On June 9, defendant appeared at trial with his eye swollen shut. He was wringing his hands non-stop, grabbing and twisting his shirt, and mumbling while looking down and shaking his head. Defense counsel reported that defendant appeared frightened of her, could not assist her, was incapable of testifying, and appeared to have had a complete breakdown. He was reported to have defecated in his pants. A guard stated defendant began mumbling and exhibiting bizarre behavior once he reached the threshold of the courtroom. He never returned to court for his trial.
On June 10, a guard testified defendant was screaming and belligerent while being transported to the court. He refused belly chains and shackles as he was escorted from medical housing. At the jail, he refused to shower and eat. His screaming was so disruptive, the guard took him back to the jail and he was placed on a suicide watch. Again, defense counsel renewed her motion for a competency hearing.
Defendant refused to return to court on June 14, June 15, June 16, June 17, June 21, and June 22. He continued to hear voices and refuse to dress or come out from under the bed. The trial was completed in his absence.
The trial court expressed no doubt about defendant's competency. The court refused defense counsel's multiple requests for a competency hearing based on the belief that defendant's behavior was merely a manipulative ploy to delay the proceedings. The trial judge reached this conclusion on the very first day defendant's behavior began to deteriorate and its view remained constant, in spite of defendant's worsening behavior and defense counsel's increasing alarm.
The trial court warned defendant, when he first expressed his confusion, explained he had a learning disability, and needed to see a medical doctor, that it would not delay the proceedings. It reissued the warning time and time again. It made an extensive record to substantiate defendant's
A Matter of the Fundamental Right to Due Process
Consistent with our most primal instinct for due process, a person cannot stand trial who is not mentally competent to understand the nature of the criminal proceedings or to assist in his or her defense in a rational manner. ( People v. Jones (1991)
The sanctity of this basic principle is not challenged here. But the role of the trial court, and the discretion it is accorded, in assessing a criminal defendant's ongoing competency to stand trial is hotly contested, and in our view, misunderstood by the trial court and the Attorney General. It is true that prior to People v. Pennington (1967)
There has been no retreat from the Pennington rule. "The failure to declare a doubt and conduct a hearing when there is substantial evidence of incompetence, however, requires reversal of the judgment of conviction." ( Rogers, supra ,
The sole question is whether defendant presented substantial evidence he was not mentally competent to stand trial. Substantial evidence is a quantum of evidence that raises a reasonable doubt concerning the defendant's competence to stand trial. ( People v. Young (2005)
Competence to stand trial requires "the mental acuity to see, hear and digest the evidence, and the ability to communicate with counsel in helping prepare an effective defense." (
Analysis
Defendant argues that although the trial court refused to hold a competency hearing, it called witnesses and made a record to substantiate its preordained
The Attorney General contends the evidence does not meet the requisite threshold. Implicit in the Attorney General's argument and the trial court's citation to People v. Medina (1995)
The most glaring deficit in this case is the utter lack of any psychological evaluation of defendant available to the court. Unlike most of the reported cases cited by the parties, no psychiatrist, psychologist, or any other mental health expert testified whether defendant was capable of understanding the nature of the proceedings or was equipped to help his lawyer with his defense. The trial court's decision that defendant was competent was based exclusively on its own observation of defendant's behavior, the observations of the guards, and the absence of any record of any prior findings of incompetency or notations of disruptive behavior.
In the absence of an expert opinion that defendant was feigning his mental health issues (see, e.g, People v. Kroeger (1964)
It is true that disruptive behavior alone may not trigger the necessity for a competency hearing. ( People v. Burney (1981)
It certainly could be the case, as the trial court found, that defendant was a master manipulator and that his antics were designed to delay his trial. But the question is not whether the evidence is sufficient to support the trial court's finding or whether the trial court abused its discretion. The case authority, as reported above, is clear. The question is whether there is substantial evidence to cast a reasonable doubt defendant was mentally competent. Because there was more than substantial evidence defendant was incompetent, the trial court was compelled by fundamental principles of due process to conduct a competency hearing. It may have reached the same conclusion following a full hearing; but in the absence of a hearing, we are compelled to reverse the judgment.
The Attorney General points us to cases in which there was not substantial evidence the defendant was incompetent. The facts in these cases are easily distinguished and the evidence of incompetence far less compelling. In Welch, supra ,
In Young, supra ,
In Rogers, supra ,
And in People v. Howard (1992)
None of these cases are factually apposite, although all of the cases recite the same legal principles. Due process will not countenance the trial of a person who either cannot understand the nature of the proceedings or who cannot assist in his or her own defense. When the evidence of any quirks, physical anomalies, frustrations, anxieties, or borderline intellectual functioning does not interfere with the defendant's understanding of the proceedings or hamper his or her ability to help fashion his or her defense, there is no assault on our notion of fundamental fairness because there is not sufficient evidence to suggest the defendant is mentally incompetent. Where, as here, however, substantial evidence does suggest the defendant might be incompetent, due process
II
Sufficient Evidence of Mayhem
Because the judgment must be reversed, we need address only one of the remaining issues raised by defendant. If there is insufficient evidence to support a conviction, double jeopardy precludes retrial. ( People v. Superior Court (Marks) (1991)
Penal Code section 203 defines simple mayhem as follows: "Every person who unlawfully and maliciously deprives a human being of a member of his body, or disables, disfigures, or renders it useless, or cuts or disables the tongue, or puts out an eye, or slits the nose, ear, or lip, is guilty of mayhem." Under California case law, mayhem has been expanded to include acts not within the original definition of the crime, which, in English common law, required a dismemberment or disabling that caused a substantial diminishment in the victim's ability to fight for the sovereign. ( People v. Santana (2013)
"Though [Penal Code] section 203 contains 'verbal vestiges' of the common law and the Coventry Act of 1670, ' "the modern rationale of the crime
The law of mayhem has evolved to such a degree that a number of cases have affirmed mayhem convictions based on relatively minor injuries. ( People v. Keenan (1991)
Penal Code Section 203 pays particular attention to the face, recognizing the particular pain and emotional scarring that results from disfiguring a person's face. Here defendant savagely bit the victim's face, including her lip and eyelid. She testified he bit her in a semicircle on the top of her lip on the left side clear through her bottom left lip. She explained the bite marks left two scars and, at the time of trial, she could not feel that part of her lip. The bite to her right eyelid resulted in another scar on her face. Her severed eyebrow had to be glued back together and her eye remained swollen shut for a week. Her right eyebrow is permanently shorter than her left eyebrow.
Defendant argues that the victim testified defendant punctured her lip; she did not testify he slit it. He insists that a punctured lip does not meet the statutory definition of mayhem. We disagree. The permanent scars on her lip are precisely
DISPOSITION
The judgment is reversed. Defendant can be retried for mayhem if the trial court finds he is mentally competent to stand trial following a full competency hearing and the prosecution refiles the charges against him.
We concur:
BLEASE, J.
BUTZ, J.
Notes
Defendant was also charged with dissuading a witness by force or threat. The jury found him not guilty. This count has no bearing on this appeal.
People v. Marsden (1970)
