Filed 12/26/13 In re Robert L. CA4/3




                      NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
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              IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                     FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                DIVISION THREE


In re ROBERT L., a Person Coming Under
the Juvenile Court Law.


THE PEOPLE,
                                                                       G048032
     Plaintiff and Respondent,
                                                                       (Super. Ct. No. DL043942)
         v.
                                                                       OPINION
ROBERT L.,

     Defendant and Appellant.



                   Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Cheryl L.
Leininger, Judge. Affirmed.
                   Renee Paradis, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant
and Appellant.
                   No appearance for Plaintiff and Respondent.
              After a contested jurisdictional hearing, the juvenile court upheld a petition
alleging appellant Robert L. had committed four offenses: aggravated assault (Pen.
Code, § 245, subd. (a)(4)); false imprisonment by violence, menace, deceit, or fraud (Pen.
Code, § 236); domestic violence battery (Pen. Code, § 243, subd. (3)(1)); and damaging a
wireless device to prevent report of a crime (Pen. Code, § 591.5). A vandalism charge
was found not to be true.
              The court found the first two charges to be felonies, and computed
appellant’s maximum exposure to custody at five years, three months. The court
declared appellant a ward of the court, placed him on supervised probation, and required,
inter alia, that he serve 127 days in juvenile custody. Robert timely filed a notice of
appeal.
              We appointed counsel to represent him on that appeal. Counsel filed a brief
which set forth the facts of the case. Counsel did not argue against his client, but advised
the trial court he could find no issues to argue on appellant’s behalf. Appellant was
invited to express his own objections to the proceedings against him, but did not. Under
the law, this put the onus on us to review the record and see if we could find any issues
that might result in some kind of amelioration of appellant’s lot. (People v. Wende
(1979) 25 Cal.3d 436.) It should be emphasized that our search was not for issues upon
which appellant would prevail, but only issues upon which he might possibly prevail.
              We have examined the record and found no arguable issue. This is not
surprising. In fact, it is what we find in the vast majority of cases in which appellate
counsel files a Wende brief. Even the most cynical observer of the appellate system
would have to recognize that appellate counsel has a financial incentive for finding
issues. The simple matter is counsel makes more money if he/she finds an issue that is
arguable than if he/she does not. So while it sometimes happens that an appellate court
will find issues after appellate counsel has thrown in the towel, it is unusual.



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              This case is not unusual – at least not in any way that would benefit
appellant. It is somewhat unusual in that counsel has provided us with a lengthy list of
case citations and statutory references to evaluate, and a detailed statement of facts. We
have adopted that statement of facts as background for our opinion and it is reproduced
below; we have examined the issues suggested by the cases and statutes cited and find
nothing arguable.
                                                 FACTS
              “Only two witnesses testified at the hearing: the alleged victim of the
offenses, appellant’s girlfriend, Veronica Ponce,1 and a responding officer, Salvador
Lopez. Lopez testified both to events he witnessed and prior inconsistent statements that
he asserted Ponce had made at the time he reported to the scene.
              “Ponce testified that she and Robert L., the minor, had been dating for
approximately two and a half years at the time of the incident. She and Robert have an
infant child together. Robert lives with his parents at an apartment in Santa Ana on North
Harbor Boulevard. On December 29th, Ponce spent the day at Robert’s house, where the
two of them got into a fight. Ponce described the origin of the fight as Robert being mad
because he had woken up in a bad mood. Robert’s parents had left the apartment when,
at around one or two in the afternoon, Ponce took a walk outside and Robert followed
her. They were arguing and Robert was yelling a little bit. At some point, Robert took
her phone, put it on the ground, and stepped on it. There was no damage to the phone.
Robert told her to go back to the apartment and get her stuff and leave. She went into the
bedroom that she and Robert occupied. Ponce began to pack her and her child’s things
into her duffle bag; after about two minutes, Robert came in and closed the open door
behind him, but did not lock it. Ponce felt afraid at this point because she couldn’t get
out of the room, because he was standing behind her angrily. Robert began to call her


       1      Ponce was eighteen at the time of the incident.


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names and Ponce ignored him. He pushed Ponce ‘pretty hard’ and she fell over the edge
of the bed, hitting her head on his football helmet, which was on the floor of the room.
Ponce got up and Robert pushed her back onto the bed. At some point in this sequence,
he head-butted her and bit her lower lip. At a later point, Ponce was on the floor and
Robert started to pull off her boots. She began kicking at him and he backed away.
Robert left the bedroom and went to the living room; Ponce got up and went into the
bathroom to get away from Robert. She locked the door and sat against it so he couldn’t
open the door. Robert tried to push the door open but was only able to push open the top
part. He started pulling Ponce’s hair, which made her unable to keep the door closed, at
which point he entered the bathroom. After he got inside the bathroom, he told Ponce
that if she didn’t call the cops, it would just get worse. Ponce tried to hit him but he
stopped her; he punched her once in [the] stomach and once in the arm and kicked her
once on her upper body while they were in the bathroom. After this encounter, Robert
left the bathroom to get his phone and call the police himself. Ponce had heard Robert’s
side of the conversation; at this point, the 911 call was played for the court. In the
conversation, Robert stated that he had hit his girlfriend and that she did not need a
paramedic and was not hurt. He indicated he had hit Ponce on a previous indication. He
said Ponce was lying on the ground and crying, and that she did not want to talk to the
911 operator. When the 911 operator asked him where he had hit her, Robert said he had
slapped her once in the face and pulled her hair, and done something to her stomach.
After the incident, Ponce had a bruise under her lip from where Robert had bitten her, a
bruise on her shoulder from where he had punched her, and redness on her forehead from
the head-butt. Ponce hadn’t called the police during or after the incident because she
didn’t want Robert to get in trouble.
              “On a previous occasion, Ponce and Robert had been driving to the movies
when Robert had slapped her one time with an open hand, which she indicated was the
only other time he had hit her.

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              “Salvador Lopez is an officer with the Santa Ana police department. On
December 29th, he was working patrol and was dispatched around 3:20 pm to North
Harbor Boulevard to respond to a domestic violence incident. When he arrived, he spoke
to Robert about the incident. Robert told Lopez that he and Ponce had been arguing
throughout the day after Ponce refused to cook breakfast for him that morning. At one
point, Ponce had left the apartment building and Robert followed her and continued the
argument. At that point, Ponce slapped Robert across the face, at which point Robert told
her he wanted her to leave and she should get her things and get out of the house. She
went into their bedroom; Robert followed her and closed and locked the bedroom door,
because he didn’t want Ponce to leave. At that point, Ponce began throwing his
possessions around the bedroom. Robert began yelling at her and she yelled back. He
became upset and pushed Ponce to the ground. She hit her head on his football helmet,
which was on the ground. He stood over her and continued yelling. When she got up,
Robert pushed her back down onto the bed. He got on top of her and slapped her across
the face and head-butted her. Robert said he had felt dizzy after head-butting Ponce. He
left the room at that point and Ponce locked herself in the bathroom. The top of the door
was bent from a previous fight that the two had had; Robert reached through the opening
the bent part of the door created and pulled Ponce’s hair. Robert got into the bathroom
and punched Ponce eight times in the stomach. Ponce said she was going to call the
police, and got her phone out. Robert took her phone, threw it on the ground, and then
stepped on the phone, still in the bathroom. Robert told Lopez they had fought in the
past.
              “Lopez also spoke with Ponce. She told him that when Robert had
followed her into the bedroom, he had locked the door behind him and that she had felt
afraid and vulnerable because she couldn’t get out. She had also told Lopez that she
intended to call the police while in the bathroom and that after she had told that to Robert,
he grabbed her phone from her, threw it on the ground, and stepped on it.”

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                                       DISCUSSION
              It is easy to see from this recitation of the facts – which accurately reflects
the transcript of the hearing – why appellate counsel was unable to find anything to argue
on appeal. There was no search, no arrest issue, and appellant essentially confessed
twice: once to the 911 operator and once to the officer sent to the scene. Photos
introduced at the hearing corroborated the victim’s account, and Robert did not testify.
              Appellate counsel conscientiously investigated several possible avenues of
appeal: whether the evidence was sufficient, whether the 911 call was properly
authenticated, whether appellant’s shackling during the proceeding could be the
foundation of an assignment of error, whether it was error to introduce evidence of the
prior acts of violence toward the victim committed by Robert. None of them was fruitful.
There was an abundance of evidence, the phone call was properly authenticated,
shackling could hardly be argued to have prejudiced the case where there was no jury,
and section 1109 of the Evidence Code rather clearly allows for introduction of evidence
of prior acts of violence in a domestic violence case.
              We searched for other possible issues, scrutinizing the cross-examination of
the victim by Robert’s counsel, and his closing arguments. He was vigorous and
effective, even asserting a Welfare and Institutions Code section 701.1 motion at the
close of petitioner’s case, which was successful in that it resulted in the court’s dismissal
of the vandalism charge against appellant, but failed on the greater charges.
              The evidence against appellant – largely from his own mouth – was
overwhelming, and there were no rulings that involved anything but the most




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straightforward application of the law. Appellate counsel was correct that there were no
arguable issues for her to raise. The judgment is affirmed.




                                                BEDSWORTH, ACTING P. J.

WE CONCUR:



MOORE, J.



ARONSON, J.




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