Opinion
In thе underlying murder case against Thomas Jerome Mitchell (Mitchell), the trial court excluded multiple prosecution witnesses, dog scent evidence and gunshot residue evidence as a sanction for the People’s failure to provide discovery. By way of writ petition, the People contend that the trial court exceeded its jurisdiction under Penal Code seсtion
FACTS
In 2006, Mitchell was charged with the murder of Nicole Kaster (Kaster) for the benefit of a criminal street gang.
At the preliminary hearing, the trial court heard testimony from members of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department. The investigating officers learned that Michael Minor was shot and killed. As the shooting occurred, somеone yelled, “Eastside Duarte.” Michael Minor’s son was a member of the Du-Roc Crip gang. At the time, the Eastside Duarte gang was at war with the Du-Roc Crip gang. When Mitchell, Lamone Lacy (Lacy), 3 Robert Paden (Paden) and other Du-Roc Crip gang members heard about Michael Minor’s murder, they were upset. They were all at the home of Mitchell’s sister. There was a TEC-9 machinegun near a dumpster on her property. Lacy got a call informing him that his infant son needed medical attention due to breathing problems. He drove his girlfriend Yvette Bodella (Bodella) 4 and son to a hospital.
A few hours later, an Eastside Duarte gang member named Marcus Matutino was standing next to Kaster in front of Raster’s residence drinking beer. About 1:00 a.m. on August 10, 2006, they received gunfire. A witness saw Paden and another Black male shoot at Raster’s residence from across the street. She was shot in the face and killed. The shooting was done for the benefit of the Du-Roc Crip gang as immediate retaliation for the murder of Michael Minor. Mitchell was arrested and interviewed. He said he was the getaway driver but was not involved in the shooting of Kaster. He admitted he saw a gun that night and had а good idea what was going to happen. A confidential informant verified that Mitchell drove the shooters to the scene of the crime.
A TEC-9 machinegun was recovered from Lacy’s residence. He was questioned and said that after Raster’s murder he looked for the weapon at Mitchell’s sister’s house and found an empty gun case. Mitchell told Lacy that the wеapon was “hot” and that it was in the possession of Steven Skills Barron (Barron). Lacy drove to Barron’s residence and obtained the weapon
Over the next several years, the trial court repeatedly ordered Deputy District Attorney Martin J. Bean (Bean) to produce discovery and meet and confer with Deputy Public Defender David L. Canas. In June 2009, Deputy Public Defender Elizabeth Lashley-Haynes (Lashley-Haynes) was assigned to represent Mitchell. Months later, the trial court ordered the People to turn over dog scent evidence and provide a date, time and place for LashleyHaynes to interview Lacy. 6 The deadline was October 7, 2009.
Lashley-Haynes filed a motion to compel production of discovery and requested all reports and tests regarding scientific evidence, and updated information from the murder book. Shе also filed a motion to preclude dog scent evidence and prevent Lacy’s testimony. She submitted a declaration and averred: Prior to October 7, 2009, she spoke to Bean and reminded him that she needed the dog scent evidence and a meeting with Lacy. On the due date of the discovery, Bean said he believed that Lashley-Haynes had received all the dog scent evidence, and that he had not set up a meeting with Lacy.
At the hearing, the trial court precluded dog scent and gunshot residue evidence. Next, the trial court precluded the testimony of Lacy and his fiancée, Bodella. As to the murder book, Lashley-Haynes stated: “[S]ince this case is three years old I would believe that there has been ongoing interviews and investigation by the police department aside from the original murder book that was produced in [2006]. I think it’s logical to assume that the police continue to investigate considering that there are two potential shooters out there in this case and maybe they haven’t but I would request that the court have the [investigating officer] on this case take the stand аnd state that since 2006, he has interviewed no one.” The trial court replied: “I think it would be more efficient to just preclude any testimony by any [of the] People’s witness[es] regarding any information not previously provided to the defense.” 7
DISCUSSION
I. The law of writ review.
In general, the People are barred from seeking an extraordinary writ if it is not authorized by statute.
(People
v.
Superior Court
(Meraz) (2008)
Some courts have taken an expansive view of the phrase “excess of jurisdiction,” holding that where thе law allows a court to act in only one way, the court exceeds its jurisdiction by doing anything else and the error can be corrected through writ review.
(People
v.
Municipal Court (Bonner)
(1980)
Regardless of the split of authority amongst the intermediate courts, we reject Mitchell’s argument that a trial court does not exceed its jurisdiction when its actions are contrary to statutory mandate. He starts by citing
People v. Superior Court (Howard)
(1968)
Howard
disapproved
People
v.
Superior Court (County of Alameda)
(1927)
Our Supreme Court did nothing to alter
Howard
in a second case cited by Mitchell,
People v. Superior Court (Edmunds)
(1971)
Edmunds
summarized
Howard
by stating: “We disapproved certain prior cases which had suggested that every judicial act in excess of power is also an excess of jurisdiction, and which had thereby extended the term ‘jurisdiction’ beyond its traditional sense, ‘i.e., where the trial court has acted without jurisdiction of the subject matter or of the person.’ . . . We cоncluded that mandate should not be available to the People to review every claim of error, and should be denied where there exists a danger of further trial or retrial.”
(Edmunds, supra, 4
Cal.3d at p. 608, citation omitted.)
Edmunds
could be perceived as curtailing writ review unless the People are challenging
What is curious about
Edmunds
is that it never defined what it means to lack subject matter jurisdiction. But elsewhere, our Supreme Court has weighed in on the issue, stating: “Subject matter jurisdiction ... is the power of the court over a cause of action or to act in a particular way. [Citations.]”
(Greener v. Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd.
(1993)
Our analysis leads to the conclusion that we need not choose between the Bonner and Kong lines of cases. An act that exceeds a grant of statutory power qualifies under both lines of cases for writ review.
II. Discovery sanctions.
No order for discovery can be made in a criminal case except as provided in part 2, title 6, chapter 10 of the Penal Code. (§ 1054.5, subd. (a).) If the prosecution does not comply with its discovery obligations under section 1054.1 or 1054.3, the trial court may make any order necessary to enforce those obligations, “including, but not limited to, immediate disclosure, contempt proceedings, delaying or prohibiting the testimony of a witness or the presentation of real evidence, continuance of the matter, or any other lawful
HI. The exclusion of evidence was in excess of jurisdiction.
The trial court did not consider or exhaust other sanctions before precluding the testimony of Lacy and Bodella, and any testimony from the People’s witnesses regarding discovery not previously provided. In doing so, the trial court failed to heed the procedure set forth in seсtion 1054.5, subdivision (c). We easily conclude that the trial court exceeded its jurisdiction because it lacked jurisdiction over the subject matter in the sense espoused in Edmunds and Ludwig. And certainly the trial court exceeded its jurisdiction under Bonner.
Our analysis applies with equal measure to the exclusion of dog scent and gunshot residue evidence. The reason is that we decline to еxalt form over substance. The undeniable impact of the trial court’s order was to exclude the People from calling a dog scent expert and a gunshot residue expert. A trial court must not be allowed to indirectly do what it is barred from directly doing. Otherwise, trial courts could circumvent a lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
IV. The need for writ review versus the harassment of Mitchell.
It is our firm conclusion that the need for writ review outweighs any harassment of Mitchell. Without writ review, section 1054.5, subdivision (c) would go unenforced. Moreover, one of the express purposes of part 2, title 6, chapter 10 of the Penal Code is “[t]o promote the ascertainment of truth in trials by requiring timely pretrial discovery.” (§ 1054, subd. (a).) Permitting trial courts to exclude witnesses’ testimony as a sanction without first placing pressure on the prosecution to produce discovery through lesser sanctions would undermine the search for truth. Given these significant points, we conclude that it is not unreasonably harassing to force Mitchell to defend the trial court’s orders in a writ proceeding. This is all the more true because Mitchell invited the error by requesting preclusion instead of lesser sanctions. And, pivotally, Mitchell will not be asked to endure a further trial or retrial.
V. Writ relief is appropriate.
The trial court’s orders were issued in excess of jurisdiction, and the need for writ review outweighs any harassment of Mitchell. Under the facts of this
For a contrary result, Mitchell urges us to consider
People v. Municipal Court
(Ahnemann) (1974)
Next, Mitchell suggests that we should deny writ review because preclusion orders are like in limine rulings. In general, in limine rulings are not binding because the trial court can reconsider, modify or set them aside.
(People v. Chacon
(2007)
Last, Mitchell contends that the trial court exhausted all other sanctions and therefore had the discretion to preclude testimony. But in making this argument, Mitchell does not provide any record citations establishing that the trial court ever employed a lesser sanction to prompt the People to produce discovery. Instead, Mitchell notes Bean’s failure to comply with numerous discovery orders and argues that the trial court was left with only one choice: preclusion. Certainly the record paints a picture of a prosecutor who often failed to appear for hearings and did not diligently provide discovery to the defense. And the trial court articulated its understandable frustration with
All other issues are moot.
DISPOSITION
Let a peremptory writ issue directing the superior court to vacate the October 16, 2009, sanctions order precluding the People from presenting the following evidence at trial: (1) the testimony of Lacy, (2) the testimony of Bodella, (3) dog scent evidence, (4) gunshot residue evidence, and (5) any witness testimony regarding any information not previously provided to the defense.
Boren, P. J., and Chavez, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied May 24, 2010, and the petition of real party in interest for review by the Supreme Court was denied September 1, 2010, S183615. Moreno, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
All further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise indicated.
This argument was raised for the first time in the reply. We exercise our discretion to consider it. Mitchell filed a letter brief discussing the merits, and his attorney addressed the issue at oral argument.
Lacy is sometimes spelled “Lacey” in the record.
A review of the record reveals that Bodella is periodiсally identified as “Iveth Bedolla.”
There may have been more comparisons. In the writ petition, the People aver: “[A]s seen from the preliminary hearing testimony a dog scent canine unit connected scent pads from the ejected bullet casings found at the murder scene with the clothing worn at the time of Mitchell’s arrest.”
According to the People, Beаn produced background evidence concerning a handler and a dog. However, it was for the wrong dog.
We are told by the People that the trial court precluded “any evidence provided in supplemental reports regarding the murder of [Raster].” The People ask us to reverse that order. We are not aware of any such order. For that reason, we focus only on the orders excluding the dog scent and gunshot residue evidence, and on the orders excluding witnesses.
