California Court of Appeal Jan 30, 2026 No. E085685Unpublished
Filed 1/30/26 P. v. Lara CA4/2
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION TWO
THE PEOPLE,
Plaintiff and Respondent, E085685
v. (Super.Ct.No. FVI19000897)
MATTHEW ANDREW LARA, OPINION
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL from the Superior Court of San Bernardino County. Bryan K. Stodghill,
Judge. Dismissed.
Matthew Andrew Lara, in pro. per.; Justin Behravesh, under appointment by the
Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant.
No appearance for Plaintiff and Respondent.
Defendant and appellant Matthew Andrew Lara appeals from the trial court’s order
denying his postjudgment motion, which he filed in propria persona several years after
the jury’s verdict convicting him of attempted voluntary manslaughter (Pen. Code,
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§§ 664, 192, subd. (a)) as a lesser included offense of attempted murder (id., §§ 664, 187,
subd. (b)), among other offenses.1 Defendant filed his motion under section 1172.1 “to
Correct” what he claimed was his unauthorized sentence. He asserted his sentence was
incorrect and unauthorized on several grounds, including for lack of corpus delicti and
under the Racial Justice Act (RJA).
On appeal, defendant’s appointed appellate counsel asks us to review the matter
under People v. Delgadillo (2022) 14 Cal.5th 216 (Delgadillo), or, alternatively, to treat
defendant’s appeal in our discretion as a petition for a writ of mandate. Defendant has
also filed his own supplemental appellate brief. (Id. at p. 232.) We briefly explain post
that dismissal of the appeal is required under this court’s precedent in People v. Faustinos
(2025) 109 Cal.App.5th 687 (Faustinos) and People v. Boyd (2024) 103 Cal.App.5th 56
(Boyd). Nothing in defendant’s brief undermines this conclusion, nor is writ treatment
appropriate. We therefore dismiss the appeal.
BACKGROUND
In addition to finding defendant guilty of attempted voluntary manslaughter in
count 1, the jury convicted him of misdemeanor violation of a domestic relations court
order (§ 273.6, subd. (a); count 2) and illegally possessing a firearm as a felon (§ 29800,
subd. (a)(1); count 3). The jury found two firearm allegations to be true on count 1:
personally and intentionally discharging a firearm (§ 12022.53, subd. (c)) and personal
use of a firearm (id., subd. (b)). The court scheduled a bifurcated bench trial on multiple
1 All further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise indicated.
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prior conviction allegations, two of which the court found true as reflected in the sentence
it imposed. In October 2019, the court sentenced defendant to an aggregate term of
15 years four months in prison. This included doubling of the principal term on count 1
for the prior strike the court found true (criminal conspiracy; § 182, subd. (a)(1)), and
further included the penalty terms for defendant’s prior serious felony conviction (§ 667,
subd. (a)) and one added firearm enhancement on count 1 under section 12022.5,
subdivision (a), in place of the two under section 12022.53 that the trial court dismissed.
More than five years later, defendant filed his section 1172.1 motion. Defendant
requested that his “sentence be corrected” in several respects. This included reducing his
sentence by “amending” his conviction from attempted manslaughter to assault, imposing
only the low term for assault, and staying his lone felon-in-possession conviction under
section 654. Defendant argued this was required because he “fired only one bullet at
close point-blank range between his former girlfriend and her new boyfriend,” missing
them both, and was thus “overcharged with attempted manslau[gh]ter . . . rather than
assault for his attempt to ‘scare or harass’ the victim and her new boyfriend.” Defendant
also suggested in his motion that the court “consider” dismissing his 5-year prior serious
felony punishment. Defendant noted in conclusion that, if necessary, he “retain[ed] the
right of appeal . . . the court’s refusal to correct this unauthorized sentence.”
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The trial court denied defendant’s motion in a subsequent minute order, finding it
had “no jurisdiction to consider this motion.” The court indicated defendant’s “remedy”
for alleged error in his sentence was by “writ or appeal.”2
Defendant appealed, and this court appointed appellate counsel. After reviewing
the record and applicable law, defendant’s counsel subsequently filed a no-issue brief.
(See Delgadillo, supra, 14 Cal.5th at pp. 231-232 [where counsel could identify no issue
of arguable merit in appeal from postconviction proceedings, independent review was in
appellate court’s discretion].) Counsel did not argue against his client, but instead set
forth a statement of the case, a statement of facts, and attested he found no issues to
advance on appeal, including after consultation with Appellate Defenders, Inc. Counsel
noted one issue for our potential independent review: Whether the trial court erred by
denying defendant’s postjudgment motion under section 1172.1 and the RJA on the basis
that it lacked jurisdiction?
We gave defendant the opportunity to file a personal supplemental brief, and he
has done so. (See Delgadillo, supra, 14 Cal.5th at p. 232 [absent a supplemental brief,
the appellate court “may dismiss the appeal as abandoned”].)
DISCUSSION
Defendant’s appeal of the denial of his postjudgment motion seeking correction of
his sentence must be dismissed. (See People v. Burgess (2022) 86 Cal.App.5th 375, 381,
2 The court did not specify in its order whether by “appeal” it meant defendant’s right to appeal from his original conviction and sentence, nor did the court mention any specific writ avenue.
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302 Cal.Rptr.3d 461 [“ ‘a defendant who wishes to challenge a sentence as unlawful after
the defendant’s conviction is final and after the defendant has begun serving the sentence
must do more than simply file a motion in the trial court making an allegation that the
sentence is legally infirm’ ”]; Faustinos, supra, 109 Cal.App.5th at pp. 695-696 [trial
court’s ruling declining to act on the defendant’s statutorily unauthorized petition was not
appealable and required dismissal of appeal]; Boyd, supra, 103 Cal.App.5th at pp. 66-71
[“Because the defendant’s ‘freestanding motion’ was ‘not a proper procedural mechanism
to seek relief,’ the court dismissed the appeal”]; People v. Hernandez (2024) 103
Cal.App.5th 1111, 1124 [when “the court lack[s] jurisdiction on the only . . . issue raised,
the appropriate disposition is dismissal of the appeal”].)
Defendant’s invocation of section 1172.1 to redress alleged sentencing errors
under the RJA and other bodies of law does not aid him. To the contrary, section 1172.1
specifically provides: “A defendant is not entitled to file a petition seeking relief from
the court under this section. If a defendant requests consideration for relief under this
section, the court is not required to respond.” (§ 1172.1, subd. (c).)
As this court explained in Faustinos, because a defendant-initiated petition is not
authorized by section 1172.1, such a motion “carries neither a right to a resentencing nor
an obligation for the court to consider initiating one.” (Faustinos, supra, 109
Cal.App.5th at p. 696.) It follows that a trial court order declining to grant relief on the
unauthorized petition “does not affect the defendant’s substantial rights,” “whether
couched as a denial, dismissal, or any other statement that the court is not acting.” (Ibid.;
see also, e.g., People v. Brinson (2025) 112 Cal.App.5th 1040, 1045 [“we agree with the
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growing body of caselaw concluding a trial court’s decision not to take any action on a
section 1172.1 request initiated by a defendant does not affect his or her substantial
rights”].) Defendant, however, premises his appeal here on section 1237, subdivision (b),
which provides that a defendant may appeal from any postjudgment order that affects the
substantial rights of the party. It follows that because the trial court’s order did not affect
defendant’s substantial rights, it therefore was not appealable, and defendant’s appeal
must be dismissed. (Faustinos, at p. 697 [“there is no appellate jurisdiction over an order
declining to act on a defendant’s unauthorized section 1172.1 petition”].)
Defendant’s broad alternate suggestion in his supplemental brief that a trial court
always has “inherent authority” to correct an allegedly unauthorized sentence also fails
here. As this court explained in Boyd: “[T]he availability of habeas relief to correct
unauthorized sentences suggests that trial courts do not have inherent jurisdiction to
correct such sentences, as habeas relief would be superfluous if a freestanding trial court
motion could at any time achieve the same result without the procedural limitations that
habeas law imposes.” (Boyd, supra, 103 Cal.App.5th at p. 68.)
Thus, there is no proper basis for defendant’s appeal, and we discern no persuasive
reason to depart from Faustinos or Boyd. (See Estate of Sapp (2019) 36 Cal.App.5th 86,
109, fn. 9 [“Absent a compelling reason, the Courts of Appeal are normally loath to
overrule prior decisions from another panel of the same undivided district or from the
same division”].) We also decline appellate counsel’s bare request to treat defendant’s
appeal as a petition for a writ of mandate—to thereby reach the merits of defendant’s
sentencing complaints. Defendant may not evade in this manner the restrictions the
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Legislature enacted in section 1172.1, nor is there any reason to bypass the habeas corpus
procedural requirements noted in Boyd.
DISPOSITION
The appeal is dismissed.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
MILLER J.
We concur:
McKINSTER Acting P. J.
CODRINGTON J.
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AI Brief
AI-generated · verify before citing
Holding. The court held that a trial court's order declining to act on a defendant-initiated motion for resentencing under Penal Code section 1172.1 is not an appealable order because it does not affect the defendant's substantial rights. Consequently, the court dismissed the appeal for lack of appellate jurisdiction.
Issues
Whether a trial court's denial of a defendant-initiated motion under Penal Code section 1172.1 is an appealable order.
Whether a trial court has inherent authority to correct an allegedly unauthorized sentence via a freestanding postjudgment motion.
Disposition. Dismissed
Quotations verified verbatim against the opinion
“A defendant is not entitled to file a petition seeking relief from the court under this section. If a defendant requests consideration for relief under this section, the court is not required to respond.”
“there is no appellate jurisdiction over an order declining to act on a defendant’s unauthorized section 1172.1 petition”