In re KYLE T., a Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law. THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. KYLE T., Defendant and Appellant.
No. B267722
Second Dist., Div. Seven
Mar. 13, 2017
A petition for a rehearing was denied March 30, 2017.
707
COUNSEL
Gerald Peters, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant.
Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Gerald A. Engler, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Assistant Attorney General, Margaret E. Maxwell and Tasha G. Timbadia, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
OPINION
SMALL, J.*—
INTRODUCTION
Kyle T. appeals from juvenile court adjudication and disposition orders. The аdjudication order declared Kyle a ward of the court and sustained a petition that the People filed under
Kyle argues on appeal that there is insufficient evidence to suрport the juvenile court‘s finding on the felony vandalism count that Kyle caused $400 or more in property damage, which is the amount of damage necessary to punish vandalism as a felony rather than as a misdemeanor. (
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On the night of May 28, 2015, Los Angeles Police Department Officer Jonathan Chavez noticed what appeared to be fresh blue graffiti, also known
*Judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
Later that same night, Officer Samuel Leon spotted Kyle walking along South Barringtоn Avenue and stopped him. Kyle confessed to Officer Leon, “I did it. I was painting the wall because I was bored.” Kyle showed Officer Leon his waistband, where he had a can of blue spray paint and a paint marker; Kyle had blue paint on his fingers as well.
On July 20, 2015, pursuant to
The adjudication hearing on the petition was tried in front of the juvenile court on September 22, 2015. Officer Miguel Barragan was the lone prosecution witness to testify whether, for purposes of the petition‘s felony vandalism count, the amount of damage that Kyle caused to the two City-owned properties on South Barrington Avenue was $400 or more.1 Officer Barragan testified that he previously had handled vandalism cases and that part of his assignment is to determine the cost of repairing walls and other structures damaged by vandalism. The prosecutor asked him, “[H]ow is it that you go about determining the dollar amount of City property that needs to be repaired due to vandalism or tagging?” Officer Barragan answered, “[F]or
With implicit reference to the dimensions of the tagging at 2231 South Barrington Avenue, the prosecutor asked Officer Barragan, “Does [the graffiti removal cost list] have a dollar amount for how much it costs to approximate [sic] a two- by three-foot tag on a wall?” “Yes,” Officer Barragan answered. “What is that dollаr amount?,” the prosecutor asked. Kyle‘s counsel objected to that question on the grounds of hearsay and lack of foundation. The court overruled the objections, and Officer Barragan responded, “According to the graffiti removal cost list, it is $400 for each incident of removing graffiti.” Applying that per-incident rate, Officer Barragan stated that it would cost a total of $1,200 to remove the three tags on the two City-owned properties (two tags on one wаll at 2231 South Barrington Avenue and one tag at 2250 South Barrington Avenue).
On cross-examination, Officer Barragan stated that the graffiti removal cost list was one page long. He conceded that he did not prepare the list—someone else, whom he did not identify, prepared it. Nor was Officer Barragan able to explain how the list‘s cost removal determinations were made. Officer Barragan also conceded that he was unaware whether any repаirs had been made to the two City-owned properties in question. Additionally, he conceded that he was unaware of the cost of materials to make the repairs. And he conceded that he did not know how long it would take to make the repairs and how many people would be needed to make them. Officer Barragan did say that he had visited the two properties as part of his investigation. But he acknowledged that his repair cost figures were basеd entirely on the graffiti cost removal list.
At the close of their case, the People did not offer into evidence the graffiti removal cost list, photographs of the tagging, or any other document.
After the People rested, Kyle‘s counsel made an oral motion to reduce the petition‘s felony vandalism count to a misdemeanor, “based on the testimony of the evaluation of the cost of repair.” The court denied the motion.
Kyle did not testify or present any evidence in his defense. After the People waived closing argument, Kyle‘s counsel renewed his argument that the felony vandalism count should be reduced to a misdemeanor because any damage Kyle caused to the City-owned properties was less than $400. The court again denied the request. The court then proceeded to sustain the felony vandalism count, as well as the petition‘s two misdemeanor counts, and memorialized its findings in an adjudication order.
Kyle‘s appeal was timely.
DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review and Governing Law
Our review of a claim of insufficiency of the evidence in a juvenile criminal case is governed by the same deferential standard that applies to an insufficiency of the evidence claim in an adult criminal case. (In re V.V. (2011) 51 Cal.4th 1020, 1026.) Under that standard, we determine whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any reasonable fact finder could have found the elements of the crime to be true beyond a reasonable doubt. (Ibid.) We do not reweigh the evidence or reevaluate the credibility of witnesses (People v. Jennings (2010) 50 Cal.4th 616, 638); and we presume the existence of every fact the trier of fact reasonably could infer from the evidence (In re V.V., supra, at p. 1026). “‘A reasonable inference, however, “may not be based ... on imagination, spеculation, supposition, surmise, conjecture or guess work.“‘” (People v. Sifuentes (2011) 195 Cal.App.4th 1410, 1416.)
Vandalism is proscribed by
B. The Evidence Was Insufficient to Support the Felony Vandalism Finding
Kyle contends that there is insufficient evidence to support the juvenile court‘s felony vandalism finding that he caused $400 or more in damage to the two City-owned properties that were the subject of the felony vandalism
As the People acknowledge, the standard of proof in a restitution case is less exacting than the standard of proof in a vandalism case. Thus, failure to meet the lower restitution standard would, by definition, mean failure to meet the standard of proof of the underlying crime. Here, the evidence of property damage that the People presented does not satisfy either the “actual cost” or “average cost” method for determining rеstitution awards.
1. The People Provided Insufficient Evidence of the Actual Cost to Repair the Property Damage Kyle Caused
The most obvious way for the People to prove that Kyle committed felony vandalism would have been to introduce at the adjudication hearing an
This is not to say that it was necessary for the City already to have made repairs in order for the trial court to find felony vandalism—a contractor‘s estimate of the cost to repair the actual damage that Kyle caused might have sufficed, again assuming proper authentication and foundation. But the People offered no such estimate either.
The one-page graffiti cost removal list formed the basis of Officer Barragan‘s damages calculation. Because the Peoрle did not introduce the list itself and therefore it is not in the record on appeal, we are unaware of its exact contents. What we know about the list is based on Officer Barragan‘s description of it.4 And based on that description, we know that the list did not contain an invoice of actual repair costs. We also know that the list is not an estimate of the actual cost to repair the damage that Kyle caused. Rather, the list apparently sets forth a generic, one-size-fits-all removal cost of $400 for every incident of graffiti on City-owned property. From what Officer Barragan said, this mechanistic flat rate seems to control the City‘s damages calculation in all cases, regardless of the particulars of a given incident, such as the graffiti‘s dimensions,5 the type of material used in creating the graffiti, the nature of the surface on which the graffiti was written, and the method and manpower employed for cleaning uр the graffiti. In short, the list reflects a generalized, non-case-specific damages estimate, not an estimate tethered to the facts of Kyle‘s vandalism.
This deficiency of the graffiti cost removal list is underscored by Officer Barragan‘s acknowledgement that he knew neither the length of time it would take to repair the damages that Kyle caused nor the number of people necessary to make the repairs, as well as his acknowledgment that he did not knоw the cost of the materials to repair that damage. The list‘s flat rate of
To make matters worse, Officer Barragan was unable to explain how the list was prepared and hence how its flat rate of $400 per incident was even derived in the first place. This has left us wondering whether or not it was just a coincidence that the list‘s damаges calculation hit
The People argue that Officer Barragan‘s damages estimate was not based solely on the graffiti cost removal list, but also on his review of the photographs of the graffiti on the two City-owned properties and his observations of the graffiti during his visit to those sites. Yes, Officer Barragan did review the photographs, and he did visit the sites. However, neither the photographs nor any notes summarizing his site visit were introduced into evidence. And more fundamentally, Officer Barragan testified unequivocally that his damage estimate was based exclusively on the graffiti cost removal list.
The People‘s contention that the juvenile court could determine the amount of damage based on the testimony of Officers Chavez and Roh, not just Officer Barragan‘s, is incorrect. Officers Chavez and Roh both testified only about their observations of the tagging. Neither testified regarding the extent of the damage the tagging caused.
Because Officer Barragan was the only prosecution witness who testified regarding damages, and his damage calculation was predicated on the graffiti cost removal list, the juvenile court‘s felony vandalism finding necessarily rested on the list. And because the list‘s damages calculation was not tied to the specific facts of this case, the court‘s finding fails to satisfy even the relaxed scrutiny of sufficiency of the evidence review. The list is an insufficient basis for the juvenile court‘s finding that Kyle caused $400 or more in damages to the City-owned properties and the resulting imposition of felony punishment on Kyle.6
In Luis M., the government entity seeking restitution failed to satisfy that standard because it “had no information abоut the actual abatement costs related to [the juvenile‘s] conduct.” (Luis M., supra, 59 Cal.4th at p. 304.) In particular, the entity introduced no photographs of the juvenile‘s graffiti. (Id. at pp. 303–304.) And it provided “no evidence about the materials, equipment, and labor required to remove it.” (Id. at p. 309.) Under those circumstances, the restitution award was reversed. Luis M. highlights the problems with the People‘s felony vandalism case against Kyle. Just as in Luis M., no photographs of Kyle‘s graffiti were introduced into evidence, and no evidence was offered regarding the cost of labor and materials to remove Kyle‘s graffiti.
People v. Santori (2015) 243 Cal.App.4th 122 is in sharp contrast to Luis M. and our case. In Santori, the restitution award was based on an estimate of the amount of damage actually caused by the defendant‘s graffiti, including manpower necessary to remove the graffiti, not an average based on other incidents of graffiti. (Santori, at pp. 126–127.) Under those circumstances, the award was upheld.
In People v. Aguilar (2016) 4 Cal.App.5th 857, 860, the City derived its claimed amount of restitution from “‘a graffiti removal cost sheet which lists different surfaces and the costs of graffiti removal from those particular surfaces.‘” Whether this is the same list on which Officer Barragan predicated his damages calculation in this case is unclear. In Aguilar, however, the City‘s damages witness did not tie his damages calculation to a per-incident rate generated by the list. Instead, in making his calculation, the witness considered photographs depicting the graffiti at issue in the case, the “size and extent of the graffiti,” the need “for an expedited removal” (it was on a children‘s day cаre center) and “the costs of both paint and manpower.” (Id. at p. 865.) Aguilar reflects a case-specific damages determination and thus is quite different from the generalized damages determination on which the juvenile court‘s felony vandalism finding here rests.
2. The Graffiti Cost Removal List Fails to Satisfy the Criteria for Use of Average Costs in Restitution Cases
The average cost method for determining restitution awards appears to bear some resemblance to the per-incident damages calculation of the
By contrast, a juvenile who comes out on the wrong end of the adjudication of a
It is one thing to use the average cost method used to determine the amount of restitution for juvenile vandalism. It is quite another thing to use that method to determine whether a juvenile‘s vandalism is subject to punishment as a felony. The imposition of that degree of punishment should be based on the damage the juvenile actually caused, not on the average damage that other juveniles cause. The graffiti cost removal list bases the imposition of felony penalties on a per-incident average. We need not decide if this mode of determining punishment would be constitutional. For even if the average cost method of
DISPOSITION
The adjudication order is reversed in part. The juvenile court is instructed to reduce the felony vandalism count to a misdemeanor vandalism count. The
Zelon, Acting P. J., and Segal, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied March 30, 2017.
