Thoughts on recent Ninth Circuit and California appellate cases from Professor Shaun Martin at the University of San Diego School of Law.
Thursday, February 25, 2021
People v. Hardy (Cal. Ct. App. - Feb. 24, 2021)
Tuesday, February 23, 2021
People v. Barrios (Cal. Ct. App. - Feb. 23, 2021)
The defendant in this case had a fairly decent criminal plan. Not novel or anything, but it works. Take out a gun, approach a guy in a car, take the money in his wallet, tell him to drive you to an ATM and withdraw cash, and there you go: "easy" money.
There was a slight twist here, though. It was 10:30 p.m. when the defendant met up with the victim, and the victim subsequently withdrew his daily limit of $500 from the ATM. But defendant thought that since it was nearly midnight, they could just wait a little bit and it'd then be "the next day" and the victim could withdraw another $500. So they parked on a side street and waited for a little bit until midnight.
Which might have been a workable plan. But defendant added a slight twist that made the whole thing fall apart.
While they were waiting for midnight, defendant decided to take a nap.
Yeah. Generally not a good idea. Particularly during a kidnapping.
The victim texted his friends, the police set up a roadblock, defendant was captured, and was sentenced to a long time in prison.
Maybe rest up before the kidnapping next time. Or just take the original $500 and wallet. Either way works better.
Or maybe not even commit the crime at all.
U.S. v. Olson (9th Cir. - Feb. 22, 2021)
Opinions like this are somewhat rare nowadays. Virtually a relic of a bygone era. Though I'm glad to see 'em make at least the occasional comeback.
You would see in the old days various ways in which courts would make doctrinal shifts, both large and small. Large ones like Marbury v. Madison and incorporation via the Fourteenth Amendment. Smaller ones like Shelley v. Kraemer, the right to appointed counsel and Miranda. There was a well-established legal regime but it was found wanting in various degrees, so the courts changed it. In ways that were not doctrinally easy to establish, but which nonetheless worked -- and that (typically) obtained subsequent popular and legal approval.
So too here, I think. Or at least it's a step in the right direction.
The question is when you get a right to counsel -- an attorney "appointed for you if you cannot afford one" (to use the typical television Miranda warnings). The longstanding rule that's typically applied is that you get an attorney after you're criminally charged. After all, that's typically when you need one, so it makes sense.
But there are problems at the margin, including but not limited to those underlying the present case. Here, the United States informs the defendant that he's the "target" of a federal grand jury investigation and that they're definitely going to indict him, but also lets him know they're potentially willing to make a deal -- and invites him to come on in and negotiate.
The defendant doesn't have his own lawyer, and also can't afford one. But he's no idiot. He knows he definitely needs an attorney if he's going to try to negotiate a plea deal. So he asks the court to appoint one for him.
The question presented is this: Does the defendant have a right to an attorney? Or can the government legitimately say: "Look, we're willing to discuss a plea deal, but if you don't have a lawyer and can't afford one, tough; you're either going to have to do it yourself or get criminally charged. Nobody is entitled to a court-appointed lawyer until we actually decide to file charges, so if we hold off, no lawyer for you."
Hmmmm.
On the one hand, it seems fundamentally unfair to give rich people the superior ability to avoid an indictment and effectively negotiate a pre-charge plea deal while leaving poor people out in the cold. But, hey, it's also a nice bright-line rule to say that you only get a lawyer after you're actually charged. A bright-line rule that also tends to have a fair amount of historical doctrinal support. Including but not limited to circuit precedent.
So what to do?
Judge Berzon writes a concurrence that essentially says "I think we're bound by circuit precedent on this issue, but in an appropriate case, I'd totally vote to take the matter en banc and hold that there's a pre-indictment right to counsel in cases similar to the present one. It's just that this particular case does not qualify." Chief Judge Thomas writes a concurrence that says: "I actually don't think that circuit precedent forecloses a right to counsel in cases like this one, so we don't even need to take the issue en banc, but I do agree with you that the present case doesn't merit relief anyway." And Judge Schroeder joins the per curiam opinion that says what everyone on the panel agrees: that the defendant here, who did get a court-appointed attorney during plea negotiations -- but who then rejected the proposed pre-indictment plea deal and went to trial (and ultimately obtained a worse result therein) -- didn't establish any prejudice from the events at issue in his case.
So we all agree on what happens to the defendant here (Mr. Olson). The larger issue regarding pre-indictment right to counsel remains undecided, but with a couple of judges making clear that they think that -- one way or another -- there should indeed be a right to counsel in settings like those here; e.g., where the government invites pre-indictment plea negotiations. Judges Thomas and Berzon simply disagree on the means through which this result should be accomplished; i.e., through en banc review or otherwise.
Not only do I think that the concurrences make good points (and good law), but they also embody a fancy Marbury-like practical quality. As you undoubtedly recall from law school, in that case, Chief Justice Marshall famously established judicial review while simultaneously holding that it could not provide Marbury with the relief he sought. So there was no relief granted for the individual litigant at issue -- somewhat mitigating what might have been a political backlash to the underlying principle of judicial review -- but the court nonetheless established the broader doctrine for use in future cases.
So too here, albeit in a slightly different way. Mr. Olson gets no relief. But district courts are now told that there are at least two votes on the Ninth Circuit -- and likely plenty more -- for the right to counsel in certain pre-charge settings. As well as the principled reasons supporting such a right. Even the mere existence of those concurrences is likely to have an effect, notwithstanding the undeniable reality that neither of 'em constitutes controlling precedent. District courts in the future are, I suspect, likely to be much more solicitous to requests for pre-indictment appointment of counsel in settings like these as a result of the two concurrences -- if only because no one wants to be reversed in some future case in the event a district court denies a request for counsel. Similarly, since the defendant here gets no relief, it's extraordinarily unlikely that the government seeks (or that the Supreme Court would grant) certiorari over the present opinion, since, after all, the government won.
Yet it'll still have the practical effect of getting counsel to a variety of defendants in various pre-indictment settings. Even though "precedent" won't compel it.
A neat little trick.
Sure, nothing stops a district court from saying "Well, I don't agree that there's such a right, so I'm not appointing any pre-charge attorneys; go ahead and reverse me if you can." But the concurrences still advance the ball both intellectually and practically.
Which is cool.
Thursday, February 18, 2021
Brown v. LAUSD (Cal. Ct. App. - Feb. 18, 2021)
I certainly can't wax as poetic as Justice Wiley. But I can perhaps summarize the points he makes in his concurrence fairly briefly:
(1) Everybody loves the Internet. So while the majority is right that you can't dismiss the complaint here at the pleading stage, it's going to be a pain in the butt for everyone if people get to file suit in California claiming that they need accommodations at work because they allegedly get super sick when exposed to WiFi.
(2) Experts are prostitutes. They'll say anything.
(3) Given (2), trial courts should think a ton about appointing a neutral expert. That'll get the case settled, I bet.
There you have it.
Wednesday, February 17, 2021
Tabares v. City of Huntington Beach (9th Cir. - Feb. 17, 2021)
First, personally, I always blanch a bit whenever I read things that (in my view) grossly exaggerate the alleged unprecedentedly awesome nature of American history and/or leaders. Was the founding of an American democracy great? Yep. Did our elders create a novel nation? Definitely. Was it a material advancement for humankind in general? Sure.
Tuesday, February 16, 2021
Metal Jeans, Inc. v. Metal Sport, Inc. (9th Cir. - Feb. 16, 2021)
Judge VanDyke gives a nicely concise three-paragraph description of the underlying facts behind today's Ninth Circuit opinion:
"Gary Topolewski is the owner of Metal Jeans and the former president and owner of Topolewski America, Inc. (“TA”). In 1990,1 Topolewski began selling METALbranded clothing and initially marketed these products through hard-rock music magazines. Over the years, Metal Jeans has promoted its apparel to a variety of consumer segments, including motorcyclists, skaters, snowboarders, lumberjacks, “head-bangers,” and (naturally) those who “drop[] napalm on the enemy.”
TA obtained the METAL mark for use on jeans, shirts, and boots in 1999. In 2005, Topolewski told the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (“PTO”) that TA had continuously used the METAL mark on jeans, shirts, and boots since 1999. That turned out to be untrue—as to boots—and in a separate 2008 proceeding, Topolewski’s false statement led the PTO to cancel TA’s registration of the METAL mark. Topolewski immediately reapplied for the mark, but this time, through Metal Jeans. Metal Jeans obtained the METAL registration in 2013.
Metal Sport, on the other hand, is the exclusive licensee of a stylized “METAL” mark featuring a blocky, rough-edged font. Owned by retired Finnish powerlifter Ano Turtiainen, the mark is Turtiainen’s own creation. He drew the stylized mark sometime around 1997 and thereafter began selling specialized powerlifting apparel, gear, and accessories featuring his design. Turtiainen registered the stylized mark in August 2016."
So Metal Jeans sues Metal Sports in 2015 for trademark infringement. The case gets litigated for four years, at which point the district judge grants summary judgment to the defendant on an unclean hands defense. The Ninth Circuit reverses, so the case goes back to the district court for yet more litigation.
It's a tiny, niche blue jeans company suing a tiny, niche powerlifting company for trademark infringement. My keen sense is that the parties have spent -- and now will continue to spend -- infinitely more on legal fees than this thing could ever possibly be worth.
But oh well. It's America. You're entitled to spend as much money on lawyers as you'd like.
And we'll happily take your business, thank you very much.
Wednesday, February 10, 2021
People v. Kidane (Cal. Ct. App. - Feb. 10, 2021)
Monday, February 08, 2021
Kipp v. Davis (9th Cir. - Feb. 8, 2021)
Friday, February 05, 2021
Manderson-Saleh v. Regents of the UC (Cal. Ct. App. - Feb. 5, 2021)
Thursday, February 04, 2021
People v. Clements (Cal. Ct. App. - Feb. 4, 2021)
There's wasn't anything from the Ninth Circuit (at all) or the Court of Appeal until late this afternoon. But then out came this one. Which recounts events that I definitely hadn't seen before in a published opinion.
And I've seen a lot.
Here's the first paragraph of the statement of facts:
"In January 1988, Clements and her ex-husband located the victim at a juvenile facility in New Mexico. Clements and the victim, who were brother and sister, had been separated during childhood. The three traveled some and eventually settled in Texas, during which time sexual relations took place between Clements and the victim, and between all three at once."
I'm fairly confident that it's a super bad idea to have a three-way with your sibling. Fairly.
Mind you, I didn't expect that the consequences of these consensual events would be that the sister and the ex-husband killed the brother. But, yep, that's what in fact went down here.
More proof that you can see something new every day.
Wednesday, February 03, 2021
Momox-Caselis v. Donohue (9th Cir. - Feb. 3, 2021)
It's only five sentences in the opening paragraph of this opinion, but it nonetheless consists of a densely-packed tale of depressing woe for everyone involved:
"Sergio and Maria Momox-Caselis are the natural parents of deceased infant M.M. The Department removed M.M. and her siblings from their home in 2013 based on long-term neglect by the parents. The County removed M.M. from her initial placement after receiving a report that the foster parents had abused another foster child, and it placed M.M. with new foster parents, Joaquin and Maira Juarez-Paez (collectively, the Juarez-Paez family). A few months after her new placement, M.M. died from an overdose of allergy medication administered by her foster father. Joaquin Juarez-Paez committed suicide shortly thereafter, and his suicide note stated that he had accidentally killed M.M."
My goodness.
Tuesday, February 02, 2021
People v. Collins (Cal. Ct. App. - Feb. 2, 2021)
This one certainly tugs at the heartstrings in different directions.
First, there's the horrible crime. You're not at all sympathetic to the defendant:
"Dontrell Collins drove his car at nearly 100 miles per hour and collided into a vehicle carrying three young women; two of them died. A test of his blood revealed the presence of alcohol and phencyclidine (PCP). . . . California Highway Patrol Officer Boshers first noticed Collins’s vehicle and registered it on his radar at 95 miles per hour. Boshers made a “U-turn” to follow the vehicle but was unable to catch up. Multiple other people witnessed the same. One witness described Collins’s vehicle “driving really, really fast.” The witness saw Collins swerve and almost lose control. He believed Collins drove through a red light at over 90 miles per hour. Another witness estimated Collins’s vehicle was traveling about 120 miles per hour. The car was moving so fast it was “wobbl[ing] ….” The car drove straight through a red light with other vehicles at the intersection. Yet another person witnessed Collins’s vehicle speeding at “about a hundred miles an hour, jump[] up on the center divider, and then c[o]me down off the divider and r[u]n into the back of another car” that was slowing for a red light. The collision “caus[ed] both vehicles to explode,” engulfing the rear-ended vehicle in flames. Two young women died in the fire and a third survived but with serious, long-term injuries and anguish."
Oh, yeah, and (1) Collins' girlfriend "warned him not to drive 'high' on a near daily basis; (2) Collins had prior strikes and previously served time in prison, and (3) when asked by an officer how often he drove drunk, Collins responded: "Too many times." Not good.
The Court of Appeal is (understandably) just fine with his substantive conviction for murder, but there's a Batson problem. The prosecutor struck an African-American woman from the jury, and the Court of Appeal concludes that there's a decent reason to believe that it was on account of her race.
Not good either.
Yet even here, one's heart -- and head -- may be tugged in two different directions.
After all, I can see lots of reasons why a prosecutor might not want this particular individual on the jury. Here's what the judge and prosecutor said below:
"The court added, “[B]ased on the direct observations that the Court had in having the opportunity to question Ms. [S.], it did appear to the Court that not only based on her profession does she have some understanding of potential evidence that might be presented in this case, even though she can set it aside, but just as importantly, if not more importantly, she herself was prosecuted for petty theft, as she put it, when she was younger, and she also has cousins that have been incarcerated, two in particular, that she shared with us, one being a result of assaulting his or her mother and another for assaultive allegations.”
The prosecutor agreed with the court and added, “[S]he indicated that one of her relatives … was convicted of charges as a result of an assault that resulted from what she termed a mental breakdown, which is psychologically similar, but not the same situation as the defense is arguing in this case.” He also noted that “prospective juror number one [was] also African-American and the People accepted the panel with her on it.”"
Okay. You can see why this might not be the most pro-prosecution juror in the universe, right? If only due to the prior criminal prosecution against her plus the experience of her relatives with the criminal justice system.
On the other hand, take a look at other jurors who the prosecution accepted on the jury:
"Juror 4237967’s brother was arrested for a crime. . . . Juror Micheal B. himself was involved with a crime. He answered he was convicted and the case was dismissed. . . . Juror Betty B. had two sons with cases involving DUI charges. One of her sons was twice imprisoned. She believed she could set aside their experiences and serve fairly as a juror. Juror 4301270’s stepson was arrested once. Her own son was convicted of a DUI by plea. She formed no opinion on whether they were treated fairly and could set their experiences aside and serve impartially. . . . Juror 4552487 was previously convicted of a DUI. . . . Juror John V. himself was convicted of DUI by plea. . . . Juror 4462349’s parents were involved with a crime."
Well, now. Somewhat hard to distinguish the juror struck from the ones left on. Or at least there's no explanation for it on the record below. Which the Court of Appeal thinks might well suggest that the real difference was the color of the relevant juror's skin. So the case gets remanded back to the trial court for more factfinding Because, yes, Mr. Collins did a terrible, terrible thing. But that's not the be-all-end-all in our criminal justice system. The process needs to be fair also. Including but not limited to not being discriminatory.