California Court of Appeal Nov 18, 2014 No. D064617Unpublished
Filed 11/18/14 P. v. Cabello CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION ONE
STATE OF CALIFORNIA
THE PEOPLE, D064617
Plaintiff and Respondent,
v. (Super. Ct. No. SCD243965)
RODOLFO CABELLO,
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Howard H.
Shore, Judge. Affirmed.
Michael Clough, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant.
Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Dane R. Gillette and Julie L. Garland,
Assistant Attorneys General, Charles C. Ragland and Kimberley A. Donohue, Deputy
Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
Rodolfo Cabello appeals from a judgment convicting him of assault with a deadly
weapon. He argues the record does not support the jury's finding that the prosecution
carried its burden to show he was not acting in self-defense. We reject this contention
and affirm.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL ARGUMENT
The charged assault occurred at about 1:00 a.m. on October 13, 2012, outside a bar
near where defendant had been drinking. As we detail below, the prosecution's evidence
showed that defendant instigated a fight outside the bar and, during the course of the
ensuing events, ultimately stabbed an off-duty bouncer (Victor Monts) who worked at the
bar. The prosecution witnesses included victim Monts and two other bouncers (Nathan
Fowler and Brian Mathews) who worked at the bars in the area.
On the night of the assault, Monts, a bouncer at the Cheswick's bar (Cheswick's),
was not working and was planning to meet a friend at the bar. Three doors away from
Cheswick's, defendant was at another bar, the Sunshine Company (Sunshine), drinking
with his girlfriend (Vanessa Cuevas) and two friends (Noe Guerrero and Manuel Nazzal).
Monts had gone briefly into the Sunshine bar, and as he was preparing to leave to go to
Cheswick's, he noticed defendant being escorted out of the bar because of an altercation
near a pool table. Defendant appeared to be "more wound up than everyone else in the
crowd" and he was fighting with the Sunshine bar bouncers about leaving.
Defendant then started a fight outside Cheswick's, apparently with a man who had
been involved in the altercation inside the Sunshine bar. When this second fight broke
out, Fowler was in front of the Sunshine bar; Mathews was at Cheswick's front door; and
Monts was inside Cheswick's. Fowler saw defendant outside the Sunshine bar with
Cuevas and Guerrero, and he noticed that defendant appeared to be "kind of pumped" as
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if he was "ready to start something."1 Mathews saw two groups of people (one which
included defendant) walking from the direction of the Sunshine bar and arguing and
yelling at each other. Defendant appeared "heated"; the argument escalated; and a fight
erupted in front of Cheswick's. Fowler testified that defendant was the instigator of the
fight, stating that defendant ran after the man and hit him with his fist. At first just
defendant and the man were fighting and other people were trying to break it up, but then
it turned into a "free-for-all" with "several random fights." Mathews likewise saw
people, including defendant, "just start[] swinging, throwing punches and pushing each
other."
Monts looked outside Cheswick's window and saw a man who, based on his
ripped shirt and bleeding face, looked like he had just been in a fight. A group of women
were with him and were trying to make sure he was alright. Defendant walked up to the
man and "just sucker-punched him"; the man "never saw it coming"; the man and the
women were yelling " 'stop' "; and the man was not fighting back. A crowd of about 30
people had formed around the man and defendant; no one was coming to the man's
assistance; and defendant was the only one fighting. Monts assessed that the man did not
want to fight anymore and that he was getting "beaten up," so Monts went outside, got in
between defendant and the man, pushed them apart, and told them to go home.
After Monts separated defendant and the man, defendant was "mouthing off a little
bit" and "kept wanting to come back," but Monts "stood in the way." Monts observed
1 Defendant's other friend Nazzal was not present at this point because he had gone to Guerrero's truck to sleep. 3
that defendant had slurred speech and bloodshot eyes and appeared to be drunk.
Mathews, viewing them from a distance, saw that Monts and defendant were arguing and
that defendant appeared angry and "hotheaded." Monts, with Mathews's assistance,
succeeded in separating the two groups, and the man whom defendant had attacked left
the area.
While the fight between defendant and the man was occurring, four people (two
males and two females) were trying to leave Cheswick's on their motorcycles parked in
front of the bar. However, as the crowd surrounding the fight backed up, the fight
"spilled over on top of" the bikers, causing them to get pushed and almost knocked over.
People started "mouthing off" and Monts tried to get everyone to leave.
To Monts, it appeared that defendant wanted to continue fighting. Defendant was
"[w]alking around with a ripped shirt covered in blood, and he wouldn't stop mouthing
off to people," saying things like, " 'F-bomb this' "; " 'I don't want to talk to you. I want
to talk to him.' " Defendant's girlfriend (Cuevas) was also angry; she and a female biker
were yelling at each other, and Cuevas pushed the female biker. Monts kept telling them
that they needed to leave.
Defendant, who had initially walked away, returned to the area, apparently
because Cuevas was not coming with him but was continuing to argue and yell.
Defendant told Monts he wanted to apologize to the bikers and acted as if he wanted to
shake a male biker's hand. However, defendant had one of his hands in his pocket; the
manner of his approach did not seem apologetic; and Monts could hear the bikers behind
him saying they did not want his apology. Monts got in between defendant and the
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bikers and would not let defendant get near them, telling defendant he did not need to
apologize, the bikers did not want to talk to him, and the bikers were leaving and he
should do the same. One of the male bikers was able to calm the female biker who had
been arguing with Cuevas, and the four bikers rode away on their motorcycles and left
the area. The bikers did not display any weapons and did not have physical contact with
anyone. Defendant also went back into the crowd.
Shortly after this, defendant again returned to the area of the bar; it appeared to
Mathews that he was still trying to get Cuevas to leave. Monts told defendant, " 'Hey,
man, there's a lot of people here who aren't your best friend. They all saw a fight where
you were just beating up a guy. You should go home. Please go home. You're drunk.' "
Defendant looked angry and Monts had a feeling defendant might "put his hands" on
him. Monts told defendant not to come near him; put his arm out in front with his palm
"flat-out" to create space between defendant and himself; and said, " 'For the last time,
get off our property.' " Mathews was pulling Monts by the back of his t-shirt to separate
him from the crowd, and Monts was moving backwards away from defendant.
Mathews noticed that defendant appeared angry, and he saw him come out of the
crowd, "crouching a little bit" with a knife "kind of tucked behind his leg" as if he was
trying to hide the knife from Monts. No one in the crowd was trying to prevent defendant
from moving towards Monts, and as defendant emerged from the crowd there was no one
between Monts and defendant and the crowd was about 10 feet away from defendant.
Monts looked over his shoulder to see where Mathews was, and as he was turning back,
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defendant walked up to him and stabbed him in his abdomen. Monts had not noticed that
defendant had a knife.
Monts and Mathews testified that when defendant pulled out the knife, no one in
the crowd was attacking him, displaying weapons, or making threats. According to
Monts, after the fight outside Cheswick's between defendant and the man from the pool
table altercation, there was yelling and some pushing and shoving but no more dangerous
physical altercations. Monts and Mathews observed some injuries on defendant, but
Monts did not think they were serious, and Mathews assumed defendant got them when
he was fighting earlier in front of Cheswick's.2 Monts, Mathews, and Fowler all testified
that Monts did not have a weapon and did not engage in any physical aggression or
threaten defendant.
After stabbing Monts, defendant started running away and a group of people
started chasing him, including Fowler. At one point defendant and Guerrero pulled out
shovels from a truck. Defendant was holding one of the shovels and the knife; he
appeared angry and ready to fight; and as people were yelling at him he was saying things
like " '[C]ome get it' " and " 'Come on. Let's go. Let's do this.' " Defendant continued
running away until the police arrived and arrested him. The arresting officer observed
2 Mathews acknowledged that he lost sight of defendant for a few seconds when defendant disappeared into the crowd and before he returned and committed the stabbing. Fowler at one point testified that defendant was not being physically attacked when he pulled out the knife, but at another point testified defendant was in the middle of the crowd fighting when he pulled out the knife; he flailed it around in a stabbing motion as if trying to keep people away from him; and he then purposely stabbed Monts who was right next to him and trying to push people apart and break up the fight. 6
that defendant had a one-inch laceration on his forehead, and defendant was transported
to the hospital.
The knife attack injured Monts's small intestine which had to be partially removed.
Monts underwent surgery, had 32 staples up and down his stomach, and was in the
hospital for five days.
Defense
Defendant's girlfriend Cuevas and his friend Nazzal testified on behalf of the
defense. Nazzal originally was with defendant and the others at the Sunshine bar, but
then left to sleep in Guerrero's truck because he was drunk. Cuevas testified that while in
the Sunshine bar, defendant got into a fight with a man who insulted them; the Sunshine
bar bouncers told defendant, Cuevas and Guerrero to leave; and while defendant was
being escorted out of the bar, the bouncers tackled him to the floor. Outside the bar,
defendant tried to fight the man he had argued with inside the Sunshine bar, but bouncers
from another bar intervened and the man left. As Cuevas was walking back towards the
Sunshine bar, a female biker was yelling racial comments about defendant, saying, "
'Look at that stupid Mexican trying to start shit.' " Cuevas and the woman started yelling
at each other, and another female biker hit Cuevas on the side of her head. Cuevas tried
to swing back at her until Guerrero came between them and told them to back off.
When defendant walked back to where Cuevas and Guerrero were, one of the
female bikers said to him, " 'you sucker-punched him,' " and defendant responded, " 'you
don't even know what happened.' " A male biker said to defendant " 'you better not touch
her . . . you better back off.' " Defendant said, " 'No, everything's cool. I'm not trying to
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start any more problems with you guys. I'm just letting her know that she didn't see what
happened.' " The male biker got off his motorcycle and approached defendant.
Defendant was trying to calm Cuevas because she was still upset, and he told her to walk
with Guerrero and wait by the Sunshine bar.
Guerrero, sounding scared, called Nazzal on the phone to come help because they
were afraid the people in the crowd were going to attack them. When Nazzal arrived, he
saw Monts pushing Cuevas. Cuevas testified that Monts appeared angry and he was
pushing her with his chest, saying she should "get the fuck out of here" and that she
"started this." Guerrero and Nazzal told Monts to stop pushing her. Monts, who
appeared drunk, shoved Nazzal, put his fists up, and said " 'Get your bitch out of here.' "
A fight then broke out. A man tried to choke Nazzal until Guerrero intervened by
hitting the man. A man pushed Cuevas to the ground; when she got up, the man threw
her shoes at her (she had earlier taken them off); and she was being pushed and hit by a
lot of males. Defendant came and hit the man who pushed Cuevas, and defendant fell to
the ground. Cuevas saw a lot of people kicking and hitting, and when she caught sight of
defendant, his face was "drenched in blood"; he appeared dazed and was stumbling; and
she feared for his life.
According to Cuevas, defendant was backing away, but people (including Monts)
were still coming at him as if to hit him. Appearing frightened, defendant started
swinging his arm as if he was trying to punch them. Nazzal similarly testified that
defendant was falling backwards and bleeding profusely, and defendant, appearing
scared, was looking around at everyone and moving his arms. Cuevas and Guerrero did
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not see anyone with weapons, and did not see that defendant had a knife. Cuevas
acknowledged that most of the people in the crowd were "watching, [and] not necessarily
involved in physical fighting." All of a sudden everyone stopped fighting and Guerrero
yelled that they should run. Defendant and Guerrero ran in one direction, and Cuevas
and Nazzal ran in another. People in the crowd ran after Cuevas and Nazzal, continued to
attack them, and yelled racially-derisive comments.
Cuevas and Nazzal testified about the various injuries they and defendant incurred
from the altercation. Defendant suffered a forehead injury that required stitches; swelling
and bruising in his facial area; a lip injury; and scratches and/or bruising on his chest and
shoulder area. Cuevas had bruising around her eye and on her arm and a scratch by her
jaw. Nazzal suffered an injury near his nose and a chipped tooth.
Jury Verdict and Sentence
Defendant was charged with assault with a deadly weapon, with enhancements for
personal use of a deadly weapon and personal infliction of great bodily injury. The jury
convicted him as charged. The court sentenced him to prison for five years, consisting of
two years for the assault charge and three years for the great bodily injury enhancement.
DISCUSSION
Challenging the sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury's verdict, defendant
argues the prosecution did not carry its burden to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that
he was not acting in self-defense.
If the evidence raises a reasonable doubt that the defendant acted in self-defense,
the prosecution has the burden to show the nonexistence of self-defense beyond a
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reasonable doubt. (People v. Saavedra (2007) 156 Cal.App.4th 561, 570-571.) To
support a claim of self-defense, the defendant must reasonably believe there is a threat of
imminent bodily injury and the immediate use of deadly force is necessary, and must use
an amount of force that is reasonable under the circumstances. (People v. Hernandez
(2011) 51 Cal.4th 733, 747; People v. Humphrey (1996) 13 Cal.4th 1073, 1093-1095
(conc. opn. of Brown, J.).) The doctrine of self-defense may not be invoked by a
defendant who initiated a physical assault or engaged in mutual combat, unless the
defendant communicated that he or she had abandoned the assault. (People v. Jackson
(2014) 58 Cal.4th 724, 760-761; People v. Nem (2003) 114 Cal.App.4th 160, 164-165;
see CALCRIM No. 3471.) Similarly, under the doctrine of contrived self-defense, self-
defense is not available to a defendant who seeks out a fight with the intent to create the
need to respond with deadly force. (People v. Hecker (1895) 109 Cal. 451, 462; see
CALCRIM No. 3472.)
In reviewing a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, we examine the entire
record in the light most favorable to the judgment to determine whether there is
substantial evidence from which a reasonable trier of fact could find the defendant guilty
beyond a reasonable doubt. (People v. Nelson (2011) 51 Cal.4th 198, 210.) It is the
exclusive province of the jury to determine credibility and to resolve evidentiary conflicts
and inconsistencies, and we presume in support of the judgment the existence of every
fact the jury could reasonably deduce from the evidence. (Ibid.; People v. Young (2005)
34 Cal.4th 1149, 1181.) If the circumstances reasonably justify the jury's findings,
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reversal is not warranted merely because the circumstances might also be reasonably
reconciled with a contrary finding. (Nelson, supra, at p. 210.)
Here, the prosecution witnesses described a scenario in which defendant was
involved in two altercations (inside the Sunshine bar and in front of Cheswick's); Monts
broke up the fight in front of Cheswick's; defendant appeared angry and drunk and
continued to display signs of aggression; defendant's girlfriend got into an altercation
with a female biker; Monts was continually telling everyone to leave, including
defendant; and defendant returned to the scene with a knife and stabbed Monts as Monts
again ordered defendant to leave the area. Prosecution witnesses testified that Monts
never aggressed towards defendant or threatened him, and that no one in the crowd was
attacking or threatening defendant when he stabbed Monts. Monts never saw the knife,
and a prosecution witness described how defendant was in a slightly crouched position
with his knife behind his leg as he approached Monts. From this evidence, the jury could
reasonably find that defendant did not believe he was in danger from the crowd or Monts
when he stabbed Monts, and he stabbed Monts because he was in a drunken and violent
state of mind and was angry at Monts for continually interfering in his altercations that
night.
To support his challenge to the jury's verdict, defendant makes a variety of
evidentiary claims, including that he left the scene multiple times and only returned to try
to get Cuevas to leave; when he approached the bikers he was trying to stop further
fighting; people in the crowd were hostile against him; they assaulted Cuevas and him
and Cuevas feared for his life when she saw his injuries and disoriented demeanor; he
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had a right to defend himself and Cuevas from the attackers in the crowd; he pulled out
the knife to keep people away from him; and he reasonably feared for his life even if no
one was assaulting him at the exact moment before he stabbed Monts.
These claims present factual evidence and inferences that could support a
conclusion that the prosecution did not disprove self-defense, but as set forth above, the
record also supports the contrary conclusion. The jury was properly instructed on self-
defense and the various circumstances when it is unavailable as a defense. When
deciding how to apply these instructions to the evidence in this case, the jury was
required to sort through the witnesses' differing descriptions of what occurred, including
prosecution witnesses who described Monts as merely trying to send everyone home, an
angry and drunken defendant who kept wanting to fight, and a crowd that posed no
imminent threat to defendant, versus defense witnesses who described Monts as acting in
an aggressive manner and a crowd that attacked defendant and his companions. It was
the jury's role to consider the conflicting claims and decide what testimony to credit and
what inferences to draw, and it was not required to construe the evidence as showing
defendant was no longer instigating the altercations and was acting in self-defense when
he stabbed Monts. Rather, the jury could reasonably find that defendant was an instigator
of the physical confrontations throughout the entire incident, when he stabbed Monts he
had no reasonable basis to believe he or his companions were in danger, and/or he had
started the combative series of events and never communicated an intent to withdraw.
On appeal, it is not our role to second-guess the jury's conclusions that are supported by
the record.
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Defendant's challenge to the jury's verdict fails.
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
HALLER, J.
WE CONCUR:
MCCONNELL, P. J.
AARON, J.
13
AI Brief
AI-generated · verify before citing
Holding. The court affirmed the defendant's conviction for assault with a deadly weapon, holding that sufficient evidence supported the jury's rejection of the defendant's claim of self-defense.
Issues
Whether the evidence was sufficient to support the jury's finding that the prosecution disproved the defendant's claim of self-defense beyond a reasonable doubt.
Disposition. Affirmed
Quotations verified verbatim against the opinion
“The jury could reasonably find that defendant was an instigator of the physical confrontations throughout the entire incident, when he stabbed Monts he had no reasonable basis to believe he or his companions were in danger”
“It was the jury's role to consider the conflicting claims and decide what testimony to credit and what inferences to draw, and it was not required to construe the evidence as showing defendant was no longer instigating the altercations”