A160262
(San Mateo County Super. Ct. No. SC054893C)
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT DIVISION FOUR
Filed 1/12/22
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
Remus Sam Langi appeals the denial of a petition requesting resentencing under
Factual and Procedural History
Langi I describes the events that led to the death of Miguel Martinez as follows: “Martinez and three other friends . . . were out celebrating the 20th birthday of [another] friend . . . . At around 1:45 or 2:00 a.m. . . . they went to a cul-de-sac in East Palo Alto where they continued drinking and celebrating. [¶] They were . . . approached by appellant, Sione Fakalata, Joe Ngaloafe, and a fourth individual who has never been positively identified. At first, everything was very friendly . . . . [¶] Suddenly, Fakalata punched [one of Martinez‘s friends] in the face, knocking him down. [He] immediately felt someone going through his pockets. Appellant then punched Miguel Martinez directly in the face, causing Miguel to fall to the ground, landing on his back, and striking the rear of his head on the sidewalk or curb. Once [Martinez was] on the ground, . . . appellant continued to punch and kick [him] in the head and chest area. [¶] . . . [¶] The police arrived and arrested [appellant, Fakalata, and Ngaloafe]. The fourth individual was never found. . . . [¶] Miguel Martinez never regained consciousness after falling to the ground and hitting his head due to appellant‘s punch to the face. . . . The cause of death was brain death due to blunt head trauma. The pathologist also noted numerous contusions to the head from blunt force trauma, subdural hematomas, and numerous [injuries] to the head and face due to forceful trauma.”2 (Italics added.)
The district attorney charged Fakalata, Ngaloafe, and appellant with Martinez‘s murder. The cases were severed for trial. After Ngaloafe reached a plea
This court affirmed. Appellant‘s main contention on appeal was that the trial court abused its discretion by excluding testimony from a witness named Faasolo, who would have testified that his cousin Paul Toki had admitted, before he died in 2005, that he was the unidentified fourth assailant, and he threw the punch that led to Martinez‘s death. We held that the trial court erred in excluding the testimony, but the error was harmless for several reasons, including that the jury could have found appellant guilty as an aider and abettor even if it believed Faasolo.
Ten years later—after the 2018 enactment of Senate Bill No. 1437, but before the 2021 amendments—appellant filed a form
At a brief initial hearing, the court appointed counsel, and the district attorney‘s office submitted a copy of the appellate record and made an oral motion for summary dismissal of the petition on the ground that appellant was convicted as the actual killer, making him ineligible for relief under
The trial court summarily denied the petition after concluding that the jury had found appellant guilty as the actual killer. In response to the insistence of appellant‘s lawyer that the instructions had not required the jury to find that appellant threw the fatal punch, the court said, “It‘s in the opinion on page 2: ‘Appellant then punched Miguel Martinez directly in the face, causing Miguel to fall to the ground, landing on his back, and striking the rear of his head on the sidewalk.’ [¶] . . . [¶] [I]t‘s basically saying he did it.” Appellant filed a timely notice of appeal.
Discussion
Senate Bill No. 1437 transformed the law of accomplice liability for murder by ” ‘amend[ing] the felony murder rule and the natural and probable consequences doctrine, as it relates to murder . . . .’ ” (People v. Gentile (2020) 10 Cal.5th 830, 842 quoting Stats. 2018, ch. 1015, § 1, subd. (f).) Senate Bill No. 775 expanded the scope of those changes to encompass, among other things, murder convictions “under the natural and probable consequences doctrine or other theory under which malice is imputed to a person based solely on that person‘s participation in a crime.” (
In Gentile, issued before the 2021 amendments, our Supreme Court described the law of aiding and abetting, including the natural and probable consequences doctrine, as follows: “Our law recognizes two forms of liability for aiders and abettors. [Citation.] First, under direct aiding and abetting principles, an accomplice is guilty of an offense perpetrated by another if the accomplice aids the commission of that offense with ‘knowledge of the direct perpetrator‘s unlawful intent and [with] an intent to assist in achieving those unlawful ends.’ [Citation.] [¶] Second, under the natural and probable consequences doctrine, an accomplice is guilty not only of the offense he or she directly aided or abetted (i.e., the target offense), but also of any other offense committed by the direct perpetrator that was the ‘natural and probable consequence’ of the crime the accomplice aided and abetted (i.e., the nontarget offense).” (People v. Gentile, supra, 10 Cal.5th at p. 843.)
The court held that Senate Bill No. 1437 limited the natural and probable consequences doctrine as follows: “In [2014], we held that natural and probable consequences liability cannot extend to first degree premeditated murder [in accord with] ‘reasonable concepts of culpability.’ [¶] In 2018, the Legislature enacted Senate Bill No. 1437 . . . after [finding] further ‘need for statutory changes to more equitably sentence offenders in accordance with their involvement in homicides.’ [Citation.] Senate Bill 1437 amended . . . section 188 to provide that ‘[e]xcept as stated in [the felony-murder statute], in order to be convicted of murder, a
Current law thus provides that the actual killer, or a direct aider and abettor of the killing who knew that his (or her) conduct endangered the life of another and acted with conscious disregard for life, may be guilty of second degree murder. In this case, the trial court treated this court‘s opinion in Langi I as conclusively establishing that the jury found appellant guilty as the actual killer. Although understandable in view of explicit statements in this court‘s prior opinion, the trial court erred in treating those statements as conclusive. The Supreme Court‘s subsequent decision in Lewis, supra, 11 Cal.5th 952, held that although an appellate opinion affirming a conviction may be considered in determining whether a prima facie showing has been made under
Despite the statement in our prior opinion that appellant threw the punch leading to the victim‘s death, for which the record does include evidence, the record as a whole leaves room to question that conclusion. The opinion in Langi I does not identify any express finding that appellant threw the fatal punch, any uncontroverted evidence establishing that fact, or any concession by appellant of its truth. That question was not critical to the resolution of the appeal; the critical question was whether it was reasonably likely that Faasolo‘s improperly excluded testimony would have led to a different outcome at trial.5 As the case was tried, the jury could have found appellant guilty as an aider and abettor even if it found that someone else threw the fatal punch. The jury was not required to find, and did not necessarily find, that it was appellant who threw that punch. Read with the caution dictated by Lewis, the prior opinion does not conclusively establish that appellant was convicted as the actual killer.6
Assuming the jury found appellant guilty of murder as an aider and abettor, the question becomes whether it could have done so “under the natural and probable consequences doctrine or other theory under which malice is imputed to a person based solely on that person‘s participation in a crime.” (
Appellant contends the instructions permitted the jury to find him guilty of murder if it found that (1) the killing resulted from the actual killer‘s intentional act; (2) appellant aided and abetted that intentional act; and (3) the killer “deliberately performed [the act] with knowledge of the danger to, and with conscious disregard for, human life“—whether or not appellant knew of or consciously disregarded the danger to human life. The instructions thus permitted the jury to impute malice to appellant based solely on his participation in a crime, without having to find that he personally acted with malice. (
The Attorney General argues that the jury could have found appellant guilty as an aider and abettor of second degree murder only if it found that he “kn[e]w and share[d] the murderous intent of the actual perpetrator.” (People v. Offley (2020) 48 Cal.App.5th 588, 595-596.) He argues that the jury could not have found appellant guilty on a “theory under which malice is imputed to a person based solely on that person‘s participation in a crime” because it was “instructed that to convict appellant of murder it had to find that he acted with implied malice.”9 But the instruction does not make any such plain statement. The Attorney General
As explained in People v. Powell (2021) 63 Cal.App.5th 689, 712-714 (Powell), the standard aiding-and-abetting instructions are ill suited to the crime of second degree murder. If, as here, a trial court uses such an instruction without tailoring it to the specifics of that crime, the instruction creates an ambiguity under which the jury may find the defendant guilty of aiding and abetting second degree murder without finding that he personally acted with malice.10
The aiding-and-abetting instruction stated that a person aids and abets a crime if he or she acts ”with knowledge of the unlawful purpose of the perpetrator, and . . . with the intent or purpose of committing or encouraging or facilitating the commission of the crime.” (CALJIC No. 3.01, italics added.) However, as noted above, the second-degree-murder instruction specified that the direct perpetrator of that crime need not act with the unlawful intent of causing death. Thus, while the perpetrator must have deliberately performed the fatal act “with knowledge of the danger to, and with conscious disregard for, human life” (CALJIC No. 8.31), his purpose may have been only to strike or to injure, or conceivably only to embarrass, the victim. Since the perpetrator‘s purpose need not have been to kill the victim, the aider and abettor‘s knowledge of that purpose similarly need not have been knowledge that the perpetrator aimed to kill. If the perpetrator need not have had “murderous intent,” certainly the aider and abettor need
The instructions should have explained that, to be guilty as a direct aider and abettor of second degree murder, an accomplice must have acted with the mental state of implied malice. (Powell, supra, 63 Cal.App.5th at pp. 713-714.) More precisely, as Powell holds, the accomplice must have aided the perpetrator‘s commission of the life-endangering act while “personally harbor[ing]” the mental state of implied malice. (Id. at p. 713.) That mental state includes “knowledge that the perpetrator intended to commit the [life-endangering] act, intent to aid the perpetrator in the commission of the act, and knowledge that the act is dangerous to human life, and . . . conscious disregard for human life.” (Ibid., italics omitted.) The standard aiding-and-abetting instruction given in Powell, a CALCRIM instruction identical in relevant substance to the CALJIC instruction used here (see id. at pp. 706-707, citing CALCRIM No. 401), was inadequate as applied to the crime of second degree murder because it did not clarify that an accomplice must personally harbor that mental state of implied malice. (Id. at p. 714.)12
Similarly, nothing in the standard aiding-and-abetting instruction given here states that the accomplice himself must have acted with such knowledge and conscious disregard.13
Disposition
The order denying the petition is reversed. The matter is remanded with directions to issue an order to show cause and hold an evidentiary hearing as specified in this opinion.
POLLAK, P. J.
WE CONCUR:
STREETER, J.
DESAUTELS, J.*
* Judge of the Superior Court of California, County of Alameda, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
| Trial Court: | San Mateo County Superior Court |
| Trial Judge: | Honorable Clifford V. Cretan |
| Counsel for Defendant and Appellant: | Sandra Gillies |
| Counsel for Plaintiff and Respondent: | Rob Bonta Attorney General of California Lance E. Winters Chief Assistant Attorney General Jeffrey M. Laurence Senior Assistant Attorney General Catherine A. Rivlin Supervising Deputy Attorney General Bruce M. Slavin Deputy Attorney General |
