Filed 1/20/99
CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION
*IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION TWO
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THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. JOSE RODRIGUEZ, Defendant and Appellant. |
A078553 (San Mateo County Super. Ct. No. SC39477) |
PUBLISHED PART
I. INTRODUCTION
Jose Herrera Rodriguez (Rodriguez) was convicted by a jury of auto theft (Veh. Code, § 10851, subd. (a)), assault on a police officer (Pen. Code, § 243, subd. (c)), resisting a police officer (§ 69 ) and driving with a .08 percent or more blood alcohol level (Veh. Code, § 23152, subd. (b)). Rodriguez admitted three prior prison terms and, during a bifurcated proceeding, the jury found two prior strike convictions to be true. Rodriguez was sentenced to three concurrent terms of 25 years to life for the first three counts and three consecutive one-year enhancements for the prior prison terms.
Rodriguez contends the trial court made several errors when instructing the jury which mandate reversal of (1) his conviction for resisting an officer and (2) the finding that Rodriguez’s prior conviction for resisting an officer resulting in bodily injury constitutes a "second strike." We hold that the second strike finding must be reversed, but affirm the judgment in all other respects.
II. FACTS
At approximately 5:15 a.m. on September 23, 1996, a South San Francisco police officer, Robert Eastman, was dispatched to the home of Joanna Rodriguez, Rodriguez’s wife, in response to a report of domestic disturbance. Ms. Rodriguez appeared upset, reported that Rodriguez had been using drugs for several days, and stated that she felt threatened by him. Eastman checked the area for Rodriguez, but did not find him. Officer Richard Amador responded to another call from the Rodriguez home at approximately 8:00 a.m. Ms. Rodriguez told Amador about Rodriguez’s drug "binge," and also reported that Rodriguez entered the house in the middle of the night and was acting very aggressively. Amador had previously dealt with Rodriguez, believed that he presented a threat of violence, and decided Rodriguez should be detained. Amador advised other on duty officers to look for and detain Rodriguez.
At approximately 9:30 a.m., Officer Sam Langi encountered Rodriguez standing on the center island of Airport Boulevard in South San Francisco, talking to passing drivers. When Rodriguez walked to a nearby Shell gas station, Langi approached in his police car and asked Rodriguez what he was doing. Rodriguez responded that he was waiting for a bus to San Francisco, but then got on the bus going southbound, away from San Francisco. Langi used his P.A. system and asked Rodriguez to get off the bus. Rodriguez obeyed, but walked away from Langi and ran behind the gas station. Langi pursued with his sirens activated, found Rodriguez hiding behind a trailer across the street, and told him to stop running. Rodriguez continued to run and evaded Langi. Two other officers arrived. Rodriguez led them on a chase as he, among other things, ran back behind the gas station, attempted to climb a hill, climbed a fence, ran in and out of a bar, and then ran down the street away from the officers. At one point, an officer used his pepper spray to stop Rodriguez, but he continued to evade officers and ran back to the gas station where Thomas Byrum was filling his truck with gas. When Byrum went inside to pay, Rodriguez jumped into the truck and sped away. Rodriguez hit a van and another truck. Police tried to follow, but Rodriguez escaped.
Officers found the stolen truck about ten blocks away from the gas station. A bystander directed officers to a nearby construction site on San Bruno Mountain. Officer Amador, who had previously investigated the call from Rodriguez’s wife, also arrived on the scene. Amador chased Rodriguez up San Bruno Mountain and told him to get on the ground. Rodriguez picked up a surveyor’s stake, which was about three-and-a-half feet long with a sharp point and began to run toward Amador. Amador tried to defend himself and stop Rodriguez by hitting him below the knees, but Rodriguez continued to run down the hill. He then jumped into an unmarked police car where Sergeant Mike Massino attempted to stop Rodriguez, but he escaped again.
Finally, Rodriguez was restrained and arrested. After Amador put Rodriguez in the police car, he continued to struggle and, at one point, broke free from the seat belt. When Amador tried to restrain him, Rodriguez verbally threatened him. A blood sample taken from Rodriguez showed that, at the time of his arrest, his blood alcohol level was approximately .26 percent.
END PUBLISHED PART
III. DISCUSSION
A. Alleged Instructional Error as to Section 69
Rodriguez was convicted of resisting arrest in violation of section 69, which provides: "Every person who attempts, by means of any threat or violence, to deter or prevent an executive officer from performing any duty imposed upon such officer by law, or who knowingly resists, by the use of force or violence, such officer, in the performance of his duty is punishable by a fine . . . or by imprisonment in the state prison, or in a county jail not exceeding one year, or by both . . . . "
Rodriguez argues his conviction for violating section 69 by resisting an officer must be reversed because (1) the trial court did not give a unanimity instruction, and (2) the court erroneously instructed that section 69 is a general intent crime, instead of a specific intent crime.
1. Failure to give unanimity instruction
Rodriguez contends the prosecution based the section 69 charge on three "separate" acts involving Officer Amador: an altercation on the hill, a struggle in the patrol car, and threats made to Amador. Thus, he maintains the trial court had a sua sponte duty to give an unanimity instruction because the jury may not have agreed on which act supported the crime, causing a lack of unanimity in the jury verdict.
It is well settled in this state that a criminal defendant is entitled to a unanimous jury verdict. (Cal. Const., art. I § 16; People v. Jones (1990) 51 Cal.3d 294, 305; People v. Brown (1996) 42 Cal.App.4th 1493, 1499.) Thus, the trial court has a sua sponte duty to give a unanimity jury instruction in a criminal case when there are multiple acts that could have been charged as separate offenses or when more than one act could support a charged offense, and the prosecutor does not elect to rely on any one particular act. (People v. Forbes (1985) 175 Cal.App.3d 807; People v. Diedrich (1982) 31 Cal.3d 263, 280-282; People v. Haynes (1998) 61 Cal.App.4th 1282, 1294 (Haynes).) Giving a unanimity instruction, such as CALJIC No. 17.01, avoids a situation in which a jury disagrees on the specific underlying criminal act the defendant committed, but still finds the defendant guilty of the charged crime. (People v. Gonzalez (1983) 141 Cal.App.3d 786, 791-792, disapproved on other grounds in People v. Kurtzman (1988) 46 Cal.3d 322, 330.)
The People contend a unanimity instruction was not required because Rodriguez’s acts constituted "continuous conduct." (See Haynes, supra, 61 Cal.App.4th at p. 1295; People v. Diedrich, supra, 31 Cal.3d at p. 282.) The "continuous conduct" exception applies "‘when the [defendant’s] acts are so closely connected as to form part of one transaction.’" (Haynes, supra, 61 Cal.App.4th at p. 1295; People v. Diedrich, supra, 31 Cal.3d at p. 282.) Acts form part of one transaction when there is no reasonable basis for the jury to distinguish between them. (People v. Harris (1994) 9 Cal.4th 407, 431; Haynes, supra, 61 Cal.App.4th at p. 1295.) When the defendant in a case offers "essentially the same defense to each of the acts, and there is no reasonable basis for the jury to distinguish between them," the need for a unanimity instruction is negated. (People v. Stankewitz (1990) 51 Cal.3d 72, 100; Haynes, supra, 61 Cal.App.4th at p. 1295.)
This court recently applied the continuous course of conduct exception in Haynes, supra, 61 Cal.App.4th 1282. The Haynes defendant was convicted of second degree robbery on a theory that he aided and abetted the direct perpetrator of the robbery, who attacked the victim twice, in close succession, for the same property. The robber first approached his victim in a bank parking lot, initiated a struggle through the victim’s open car window and took part of the victim’s cash before the victim drove away. During the struggle, defendant approached and kicked the victim’s passenger side window. After the victim fled, defendant followed with the robber as his passenger and made the victim stop a few blocks away. After a second struggle, the robber took the rest of the victim’s cash and the defendant drove him away. (Id. at p. 1286.)
The Haynes defendant argued that, although the incident was charged as a single robbery, a unanimity instruction was required because the facts supported two separate robberies, and the jurors may have split their verdict regarding defendant’s guilt for aiding in the crime between the two robberies. (Haynes, supra, 61 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1294-1295.) We acknowledged that "the unanimity requirement ‘typically applies to acts that could have been charged as separate offenses. [Citations.]’" (Id. at p. 1295.) However, we rejected the Haynes defendant’s argument because, even if the case could have been charged as two separate robberies, the continuous course of conduct exception to the unanimity requirement applied. (Id. at p. 1295.)
We applied the continuous course of conduct exception in Haynes because the two incidents occurred just minutes and blocks apart, the robber’s acts were successive, compounding and part of a single objective, i.e., getting all of the victim’s cash. Further, the stolen money was not carried away to a place of temporary safety until all of it was obtained. Since the altercations were successive and were part of a single objective to rob the victim, the unanimity instruction was not required. (Haynes, supra, 61 Cal.App.4th at p. 1296.) Similarly, in the present case, the encounters between Amador and Rodriguez were on the same morning, close in time, and close in geographic location. Further, the encounters were related because they occurred during a period while Amador was trying to arrest Rodriguez, and Rodriguez was trying to evade arrest. The struggles with Amador were successive and Rodriguez’s actions were all part of one objective to resist arrest by Amador.
This is not a case in which Amador went off duty and then attempted to arrest Rodriguez on a separate occasion, nor a case in which the prosecution tried to link many unrelated acts together. Rodriguez did not even present different defenses to the alleged acts in order to help support his argument that a jury could reasonably distinguish between the acts. Since the acts, which Rodriguez calls "separate," were actually related and amount to continuous criminal conduct, the jury had no reasonable basis upon which to distinguish between them. Therefore, a unanimity instruction was not required in this case.
2. Failure to instruct on specific intent
Rodriguez contends the trial court erred by failing to instruct the jury that section 69 requires proof of specific intent. As noted above, section 69 sets forth two separate ways in which the offense can be committed. Violation of the first portion of the statute is a specific intent crime. (People v. Roberts (1982) 131 Cal.App.3d Supp. 1 (Roberts); People v. MacKenzie (1995) 34 Cal.App.4th 1256, 1280.) However, the "second portion [of § 69] constitutes a general intent offense." (Roberts, supra, 131 Cal.App.3d Supp. at p. 9.)
In Roberts, the appellant argued that willfully resisting a public officer performing his duty, in violation of section 148 was a specific intent crime. (Roberts, supra, 131 Cal.App.3d Supp. at p. 8.) To support his contention, appellant relied on cases holding that section 69 is a specific intent crime, and argued that, since the crimes described in section 148 and section 69 are pari materia, section 148 is also a specific intent crime. (Id. Supp. at p. 8.) The Roberts court rejected this argument. It pointed out that section 69 has two separate prongs and concluded that the first portion of the statute is a specific intent crime, while the second portion is a general intent crime. (Id. Supp. at p. 9.) Since section 148 is analogous to the second prong of section 69, the court concluded a specific intent instruction was not required. (Ibid.)
The Roberts court relied on our Supreme Court’s interpretation of "general" and "specific" intent in People v. Hood (1969) 1 Cal.3d 444, 456-457, where the court stated: "[w]hen the definition of a crime consists of only the description of a particular act, without reference to intent to do a further act or achieve a future consequence, we ask whether the defendant intended to do the proscribed act. This intention is deemed to be a general criminal intent. When the definition [of a crime] refers to defendant’s intent to do some further act or achieve some additional consequence, the crime is deemed to be one of specific intent." The Roberts court reasoned that "[t]he legislative definition of the offense proscribed by section 148, as in the offense described in the second portion of section 69 ‘consists of only the description of a particular act, without reference to intent to do a further act or achieve a future consequence’ [citation] and it is therefore a general intent crime." (Roberts, supra, 131 Cal.App.3d Supp. at p. 9.)
Roberts went on to say that if the Legislature intended to require proof of specific intent in the two statutes, it would have used "language that is either precise or is clearly susceptible of such interpretation." (Roberts, supra, 131 Cal.App.3d Supp. at p. 9.) The court found no such precise language, and further stated that the Legislature’s use of the word "willfully" in section 148 and the word "knowingly" in section 69 does not magically convert either section into a specific intent crime. (Ibid.)
Rodriguez asks us to find that Roberts was wrongly decided, but he offers no reasoning or case law to rebut it. Instead, he argues that specific intent is implicit in the concept of "resist" as used in section 69. We are persuaded by Roberts, the only published decision we have found which addresses this issue, and adopt its reasoning in holding that resisting an officer in violation of section 69 is not a specific intent crime.
In summary, we find no error in the jury instructions pertaining to the section 69 charge. A unanimity instruction was not required, and violating section 69 by resisting an officer is a general intent crime, so an instruction on specific intent was not required.
PUBLISHED PART
B. Alleged Instructional Error Regarding Strike Allegation
Rodriguez has a 1992 conviction for violating section 148.10 which provides: "Every person who willfully resists a peace officer in the discharge or attempt to discharge any duty of his or her office or employment and the willful resistance of the person proximately causes death or serious bodily injury to a peace officer, shall be punished by imprisonment in the state prison for two, three, or four years, or a fine of not less than one thousand dollars ($1,000) . . . or both . . . ."
The jury found that Rodriguez’s section 148.10 conviction was a "serious felony" and, therefore, constituted a second strike. (§ 1170.12, subd. (b)(1).) Section 1192.7, subdivision (c)(8), provides that a "felony in which the defendant personally inflicts great bodily injury on any person, other than an accomplice" is a "serious felony." Rodriguez contends the trial court erroneously instructed the jury regarding the "personally inflicts great bodily injury" requirement specified in that section.
1. Background
At trial, the prosecution used a preliminary hearing transcript to introduce the following evidence regarding Rodriguez’s prior: On November 24, 1991, Rodriguez was being transported with other prisoners from a police station to a jail. He escaped custody and began running away, instigating a chase by Officer Martin. At one point during Martin’s pursuit of Rodriguez, a bystander handed Rodriguez a bicycle to aid in his escape. Martin tackled Rodriguez on the bicycle and both men fell to the ground. Martin testified that during the tackle he hit his head, either on the ground, the concrete sidewalk, or the lamp post, and was knocked unconscious. Martin received medical care and testified that he experienced a tremendous amount of pain after the incident with Rodriguez. The prosecution also introduced evidence of Rodriguez’s resulting conviction for resisting an officer proximately causing serious bodily injury in violation of section 148.10.
In asking the jury to decide whether Rodriguez’s conviction under section 148.10 constituted a serious felony under the three strikes law, the trial court instructed the jury as follows:
"Now, a person personally inflicts injury to another when he directly performs [an] act or acts that cause the physical injury. To prove personal infliction, the People need not prove that the defendant intended to cause the great bodily injury, but only that the great bodily injury was personally inflicted as a result of the defendant’s conduct. The term serious bodily injury is [sic], as used in Penal Code section 148.10, has obviously the same legal meaning as the term great bodily injury. Serious bodily injury may include loss of consciousness.
"Great bodily injury as used in these instructions means a significant or substantial physical injury. Minor, trivial or moderate injuries do not constitute great bodily injury. To constitute the personal infliction of great bodily injury there must be in addition to the injury an unlawful act which was a cause of such injury.
"Criminal law has its own particular way of defining cause. A cause of injury is an act that sets in motion a chain of events that proceed a direct, natural and possible consequence of the act, the injury, and without which the injury would not occur."
The foregoing instruction is not a CALJIC instruction. Rather, it was drafted by the prosecuting attorney and submitted for the trial court’s approval. The definition of "cause" set forth in the last paragraph of the instruction incorporates the definition of proximate cause from CALJIC No. 3.40. Rodriguez’s attorney objected to the last paragraph of the instruction on the grounds that the prosecution had to prove personal infliction, not proximate cause, so the causation definition went beyond the meaning of personally inflict. The trial court disagreed and used the instruction as drafted by the prosecution.
As Rodriguez notes, the jury asked for clarification of the court’s definition of cause. It wanted to know if "a cause of an injury that sets in motion a chain of events can also include the word ‘indirect,’" and the court answered in the negative. The jury also requested a legal definition of the word "probable," and the court provided a dictionary definition: "‘likely to be or become true or real as it relates to events.’" Thereafter, the jury found Rodriguez’s prior constituted a strike.
2. Analysis
Rodriguez contends the trial court erroneously defined the second strike requirement that defendant must have personally inflicted great bodily injury. He argues that the instruction improperly equated "personally inflict" with "proximate cause" because it used the standard definition of proximate cause to define causation in this context. Rodriguez maintains that the instructional error was prejudicial, warranting reversal of the second strike finding. The People maintain the jury could not have been misled or confused about the instruction because it expressed two separate ideas to the jury: the type of act required and the type of causation required to find that there was personal infliction of great bodily injury. The People argue that the inclusion of a proximate cause definition was, at the most, unnecessary, but not error.
We reject the People’s characterization of the challenged instruction as expressing two separate ideas. The instruction expressly equates "personally inflict" with "proximate cause." It tells the jury that personally inflict means to directly perform an act that causes injury and then expressly defines cause as proximate cause. The problem with the instruction is that the definition of cause is inaccurate in this context. To "personally inflict" an injury is to directly cause an injury, not just to proximately cause it. The instruction was wrong because it allowed the jury to find against Rodriguez if the officer’s injury was a "direct, natural and probable consequence" of Rodriguez’s action, even if Rodriguez did not personally inflict the injury. Several factors discussed below support our conclusion.
First, our Supreme Court has indicated that the statutory term "personally inflict" has a distinct meaning, which is something different than proximate cause. (People v. Cole (1982) 31 Cal.3d 568 (Cole).) In Cole, the defendant instructed his accomplice to kill their robbery victim while he blocked the victim’s escape. In sentencing the defendant, the trial court imposed an enhancement under section 12022.7, which, like the second strike allegation at issue in this case, contains the requirement that the defendant must have personally inflicted great bodily injury on a person other than an accomplice. Section 12022.7 states "[a]ny person who, with the intent to inflict such injury, personally inflicts great bodily injury on any person other than an accomplice in the commission or attempted commission of a felony shall, in addition and consecutive to the punishment prescribed for the felony . . . be punished by an additional term of three years. . . ."
The Cole court reversed the enhancement finding. In so doing, it focused on the fact that the defendant did not directly or personally act himself, but instead directed another person to act. The court found that, since section 12022.7 applies only to a person who "directly acted to cause the injury," a defendant cannot receive an enhanced sentence under section 12022.7 on a theory of vicarious liability. (Cole, supra, 31 Cal.3d at p. 572.) Since the Cole defendant did not strike his victim, he did not "personally inflict" injury as required by the enhancement statute. (Id. at p. 571.)
The Cole court noted that its conclusion was consistent with the legislative intent underlying section 12022.7 as evidenced by the clear and unambiguous statutory language of that section. The Legislature’s "choice of the word ‘personally’ [in section 12022.7] necessarily excludes those who may have aided or abetted the actor directly inflicting the injury." (Cole, supra, 31 Cal.3d at p. 572.) The court also noted that the requirement that the defendant act "personally" was added to section 12202 in 1977. The court interpreted the amendment as "express[ing] a legislative intent to endorse a uniform, restricted definition of the class of individuals subject to the enhanced penalty for the infliction of great bodily injury, while rejecting the broad definition of the class that had been applied to the predecessor of section 12022.7." (Id. at p. 579.)
Cole illustrates that the term "personally inflict" has a distinct meaning and that its use in a statute signifies a legislative intent to punish only the actor who directly inflicts an injury. The same reasoning that led the Cole court to conclude that an aider and abettor does not "personally inflict" injury compels us to hold that the challenged instruction in the present case was erroneous. As already noted, that instruction specifically used the concept of proximate cause to define the "personally inflict" requirement of the second strike allegation. We think it obvious that an individual can and often does proximately cause injury without personally inflicting that injury. For instance, as noted in Cole, an aider and abettor of a crime can commit a direct act -- affirmatively blocking a victim’s exit -- which proximately causes injury, but does not constitute personal infliction of an injury. (Cole, supra, 31 Cal.3d at p. 571.)
The People argue, and specifically contended at oral argument, that Cole actually supports their position that the challenged instruction was not erroneous. They interpret Cole as holding only that the statutory term "personally" does not extend to an aider and abettor because such an actor is not the direct perpetrator of a crime. This restrictive interpretation of Cole furthers the People’s general claim that a requirement that a defendant "personally inflict" injury is separate from a requirement that the defendant cause injury. According to the People, Cole does not address the causation requirement at all.
The Cole court focused on the word "personally" to find the enhancement at issue in that case did not apply to an aider and abettor. However, the court expressly addressed the broader concept of personal infliction, which it described as applying to "a person who himself inflicts the injury," a "person who directly acted to cause the injury," and the "one who actually inflicts the injury." (Cole, supra, 31 Cal.3d at pp. 572-573.) We cannot ignore the second part of this concept which clearly pertains to causation and requires that the defendant have acted personally and directly to inflict or cause the injury. Contrary to the People’s contention, personal infliction and causation are not two distinct concepts but two interrelated ones. The problem with the challenged instruction in this case is that the trial court used the wrong concept to explain the inter-relationship. To "personally inflict" injury, the actor must do more than take some direct action which proximately causes injury. The defendant must directly, personally, himself inflict the injury. This fact was not explained to the jury. Rather, they were erroneously instructed that a defendant personally causes injury by proximately causing it. The jury could have found Rodriguez guilty of the second strike allegation for doing an act (fleeing on a bicycle) which proximately caused injury, without finding that he personally inflicted the injury.
Established rules of statutory construction offer a second basis for our conclusion that the challenged jury instruction was erroneous. "‘It is a well recognized principle of statutory construction that when the Legislature has carefully employed a term in one place and has excluded it in another, it should not be implied where excluded.’" (Grubb & Ellis Co. v. Bello (1993) 19 Cal.App.4th 231, 240, disagreed with on other grounds in Stirlen v. Supercuts, Inc. (1997) 51 Cal.App.4th 1519, 1538-1539.) To illustrate, the Legislature included "proximate cause" in Penal Code section 12022.53; the enhancement applies if a defendant "personally discharged a firearm and proximately caused great bodily injury." (§ 12022.53, subd. (d).) However, the Legislature did not employ the proximate cause concept when it articulated the requirements for enhancement under section 12022.7, but instead used the language "personally inflicts great bodily injury." (§ 12022.7, subd. (a).) Similarly, the statutory definition of a "serious felony," which was the basis for the second strike allegation in the present case, requires that the defendant have personally inflicted great bodily injury and does not include the phrase "proximate cause." (§ 1192.7, subd. (c)(8).) We decline to impute the proximate cause concept into the statute when the Legislature left it out.
Third, we are guided by CALJIC No. 17.20, which was specifically designed as a model for the parallel requirement under section 12022.7 that the defendant must have personally inflicted injury. That instruction states:
"It is alleged [in count[s] ___________] that in the commission or attempted commission of the crime[s] therein described the defendant[s] ___________, personally inflicted great bodily injury on [a person] [not an accomplice to the crime]. [¶] If you find a defendant guilty of ___________, you must determine whether that defendant personally inflicted great bodily injury on [some person] [not an accomplice to the crime] in the commission or attempted commission of ____________." [¶] ‘Great bodily injury,’ as used in this instruction, means a significant or substantial physical injury. Minor, trivial or moderate injuries do not constitute great bodily injury. [¶] The People have the burden of proving the truth of this allegation. If you have a reasonable doubt that it is true, you must find it to be not true. [¶] Include a special finding on that question in your verdict, using a form that will be supplied for that purpose."
CALJIC No. 17.20 does not employ or even reference the concept of proximate cause to define causation. The exclusion of the proximate cause concept in the model instruction supports our conclusion that "personally inflict" does not mean proximate cause.
The People argue that People v. Dominick (1986) 182 Cal.App.3d 1174 (Dominick) supports their contention that the challenged jury instruction is proper. In Dominick, the defendant and two co-defendants were charged with, among other things, kidnapping a man and a woman, murdering the man and raping and injuring the woman. At one point during the crime, the defendant grabbed the woman and pulled her head back so one of the co-defendants could strike her with a pole. The victim broke away after being struck and fell down a nearby mountainside, seriously injuring her shoulder during the fall. (Dominick, supra, 182 Cal.App.3d. at pp. 1184-1186.) These actions were the basis of defendant’s sentence enhancement for personal infliction of great bodily injury under Penal Code section 12022.7. The defendant argued that, under Cole, the enhancement did not apply to him because he was just an aider and abettor and did not personally inflict injury on the woman. (Id. at p. 1210.) The Dominick court rejected this argument and held that defendant’s acts of grabbing the victim and holding her head back directly caused her to fall, so defendant was personally responsible for the injury the victim suffered from her fall down the mountainside. (Id. at pp. 1210-1211.)
The People interpret Dominick as affirming a personal infliction of bodily injury enhancement when the defendant proximately caused his victim’s injury. The People ignore the evidence in Dominick that the defendant not only proximately but directly caused injury to the victim. The Dominick defendant initiated contact with the victim by holding her head down and struggling with her. He then physically restrained his victim while his co-defendant struck her. The combined effect of the two defendants’ affirmative and direct conduct caused the victim to fall down the mountainside and incur injury. In contrast, in this case Rodriguez did not initiate a struggle or any other physical contact with the officer. Nor can we find evidence in this record of any act by Rodriguez that directly caused the officer injury.
Further, Dominick is of limited value because there was no jury instruction regarding the enhancement in that case. The enhancement finding was made by a judge and the issue on appeal was whether substantial evidence supported the finding that the defendant was not an aider and abettor but was directly responsible for inflicting injury on the victim. (Dominick, supra, 182 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1210-1211.) In any event, we find no language in Dominick to support the People’s contention that "personally inflict" means proximately cause. Neither Dominick nor any other case we have found holds that proximate cause is enough to establish personal infliction.
In summary, we find the jury instruction defining "personally inflict bodily injury" for purposes of the second strike allegation was erroneous. Proximately causing an injury is clearly different from personally inflicting an injury. Including the definition of proximate cause in the jury instruction wrongly incorporated the concept into the meaning of "personally inflict great bodily injury."
3. Prejudice
Rodriguez contends the instructional error regarding the second strike allegation implicates his federal constitutional right to a jury trial and, therefore, requires reversal unless the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. (Chapman v. California (1967) 386 U.S. 18.) Our Supreme Court rejected a similar contention in People v. Wims (1995) 10 Cal.4th 293, and stated that the standard set forth in People v. Watson (1956) 46 Cal.2d 818 governs this type of instructional error. Under People v. Watson an appellate court must affirm a judgment unless, "it is reasonably probable that a result more favorable to the [defendant] would have been reached in the absence of the error." (People v. Watson, supra, 46 Cal.2d at p. 836.)
Rodriguez argues he was prejudiced by the erroneous instruction because the jury was asked to decide the wrong question. The People do not address the issue of prejudice. We conclude the error was prejudicial. The instruction allowed the jury to find the second strike allegation true if it believed that Rodriguez proximately caused the officer’s injuries but did not directly cause, or personally inflict those injuries. In fact, the record affirmatively suggests the jury relied on the proximate cause theory to find Rodriguez guilty of the allegation. During deliberations, the jury asked the trial court specific questions about the meaning of proximate cause. Further, although the record contains evidence Rodriguez proximately caused the officer’s injury, we conclude that, as a matter of law, this record does not establish that Rodriguez directly inflicted the injury. According to the record, Rodriguez did not push, struggle or initiate any contact with the officer during the 1992 incident. Instead, the evidence shows that Rodriguez was trying to escape arrest on a bicycle and the officer injured himself when he tackled Rodriguez. Not only is it reasonably probable that a properly instructed jury would not have found Rodriguez personally inflicted the injury, there is in fact no evidentiary basis in this record for a jury to find he personally inflicted that injury.
IV. DISPOSITION
The finding that Rodriguez’s prior conviction for resisting an officer constitutes a second strike is reversed. We remand to provide the People the option to re-try Rodriguez on the second strike allegation. (People v. Monge (1997) 16 Cal.4th 826.) In all other respects the judgment is affirmed.
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Haerle, J.
We concur:
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Kline, P.J.
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Ruvolo, J.
Trial Court: Superior Court of San Mateo County
Trial Judge: Hon. Lawrence Stevens
Attorney for Appellant John A. W. Halley
By appointment of the Court of Appeal under the First District Appellate Project Independent Case System
People Daniel E. Lungren
Attorney General
George Williamson
Chief Assistant Attorney General
Ronald A. Bass
Senior Assistant Attorney General
Richard Rochman
Lisa H. Ashley
Deputy Attorneys General