Opinion
A jury found Arthur Hector Rodriguez guilty of three counts of forcible rape (Pen. Code, § 261, subd. (a)(2)) and *1400 two counts of forcible genital penetration by a foreign object (id., § 289, subd. (a)), and he was sentenced to prison. On appeal Rodriguez contends that the trial court erred to his prejudice by failing to instruct on its own motion on the defense of reasonable and bona fide belief that the victim had consented and by permitting use of his prior felony conviction of spousal battery to impeach his testimony, that the prosecutor improperly referred to facts outside the record in summation, and that at sentencing the trial court erroneously failed to take his alcoholism into account as a circumstance in mitigation of sentence. We find no reversible error and therefore shall affirm the judgment.
Only our analysis of use of Rodriguez’s prior felony conviction to impeach him meets the criteria for publication of Court of Appeal opinions. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 976(b).) Because our statement of the facts of the offense is not relevant to that analysis we shall not certify it for publication.
2. Use of Prior Felony Conviction to Impeach
Rodriguez had suffered three prior felony convictions. Before jury selection he moved to prevent use of the prior convictions to impeach him should he elect to testify in his own behalf. The trial court denied the motion; Rodriguez did testify, and in the course of his cross-examination the prosecutor obtained his acknowledgment of each of the three prior convictions.
On appeal Rodriguez argues that one of the three prior convictions, for inflicting corporal injury on a spouse or cohabitant in violation of Penal Code section 273.5, did not involve moral turpitude and therefore should not have been used to impeach him.
We disagree with Rodriguez.
In
People
v.
Castro
(1985)
Counsel have identified, and we have found, no California case that reaches the question whether infliction of corporal injury on a spouse or cohabitant involves moral turpitude. To make a requisite abstract determination we look to the statutory definition of the felony. At the time of Rodriguez’s prior conviction Penal Code section 273.5 provided, in part relevant to our inquiry:
“(a) Any person who willfully inflicts upon his or her spouse, or any person who willfully inflicts upon any person of the opposite sex with whom he or she is cohabiting, or any person who willfully inflicts upon any person who is the mother or father of his or her child, corporal injury resulting in a traumatic condition, is guilty of a felony ....
“(c) As used in this section, ‘traumatic condition’ means a condition of the body, such as a wound or external or internal injury, whether of a minor or serious nature, caused by a physical force.”
Each party characterizes the crime defined by Penal Code section 273.5 as a “battery,” and argues the issues in terms of cases which have classified some batteries as crimes involving moral turpitude (e.g.,
People
v.
Lindsay
(1989)
We perceive the crux of
Castro's
definition to be the requisite animus of the felon: Must the crime be attended by knowledge of circumstances and a conscious decision to exploit them sufficient to signify readiness to do evil? To violate Penal Code section 273.5 the assailant must, at the very least, have set out, successfully, to injure a person of the opposite sex in a special relationship for which society rationally demands, and the victim may reasonably expect, stability and safety, and in which the victim, for these reasons among others, may be especially vulnerable. To have joined in, and thus necessarily to be aware of, that special relationship, and then to violate it wilfully and with intent to injure, necessarily connotes the general readiness to do evil that has been held to define moral turpitude. (Compare
People
v.
Lindsay, supra,
It follows that Rodriguez’s prior conviction of violation of Penal Code section 273.5 was properly used to impeach his testimony.
3., 4. *
The judgment of conviction is affirmed.
Cottle, Acting P. J., and Elia, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied July 9, 1992. Mosk, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
