Harris v. State

980 P.2d 482, 1999 Alas. App. LEXIS 32, 1999 WL 342491
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedMay 28, 1999
DocketA-6715
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 980 P.2d 482 (Harris v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. State, 980 P.2d 482, 1999 Alas. App. LEXIS 32, 1999 WL 342491 (Ala. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

In 1987, Alphonso Harris took nude photographs of the 13-year-old daughter of his live-in companion. Even though Harris coerced the girl and her mother to recant their accusations and testify in his favor at trial, the jury convicted Harris of exploiting a minor. 1 Harris was sentenced to 7 years’ imprisonment, but 2 years of this sentence were suspended on condition of Harris’s good behavior during 5 years’ probation. This court affirmed Harris’s sentence in Hams v. State. 2

In April 1996, the Department of Corrections filed a petition (and later a supplemental petition) to revoke Harris’s probation. The petition (as supplemented) alleged that Harris had committed several violations of his conditions of probation. Following a hearing, the superior court found that most of these allegations were proved. The court revoked Harris’s probation and ordered him to serve the previously suspended 2 years.

In this appeal, Harris asserts that the evidence against him was either factually or legally insufficient to prove the violations alleged in the petition. Harris also asserts that his sentence (2 more years to serve) is excessive. For the reasons explained here, we affirm the superior court’s decision.

Three conditions of Harris’s probation are pertinent to this appeal. First, Harris was ordered to “[cjomply with all municipal, state and federal laws.” Second, Harris was ordered to “submit to testing for the use of controlled substances when required by the Probation/Parole Office.” Third, Harris was ordered “to have no contact with minors under the age of sixteen without the written approval of the Probation/Parole Office.” In its petition to revoke Harris’s probation, the Department of Corrections alleged that Harris had violated these conditions by (1) assaulting his live-in companion, a woman named P.B.; (2) refusing to submit to testing for controlled substances; and (3) living in a residence with children under the age of 16 without notifying his probation officer and obtaining the officer’s consent.

With regard to the allegation that Harris assaulted P.B., Harris contends that this assault could not lawfully provide the basis for revoking his probation. Harris points out that the State charged- him with a separate criminal offense (fourth-degree assault) for this conduct, but the State later *484 dismissed the criminal complaint. Harris argues that “[w]hen the district attorney ... dismissed the complaint [charging] assault in the fourth degree, ... the basis for the [probation] violation ceased to exist[.]”

Harris is wrong. The supreme court decided this issue twenty years ago in State v. DeVoe. 3

In DeVoe, a probationer committed a new offense (receiving and concealing stolen property); the State filed a criminal charge and also filed a petition to revoke DeVoe’s probation. However, the State later dismissed the criminal charge. When the superior court judge assigned to the probation revocation matter learned that the criminal charge had been dismissed, he entered an order denying the revocation petition. 4 The judge ruled that it would be fundamentally unfair to revoke a defendant’s probation for criminal conduct when separate criminal charges “have been dismissed or effectively withdrawn before trial”. 5

The supreme court reversed the superior court’s ruling. The court held that a defendant’s probation can be revoked for new criminal conduct even though separate criminal charges are never filed or are dismissed short of trial. “[The superior court’s] denial of the [revocation] petition, solely because the state had elected not to charge and convict DeVoe in ... separate criminal proceedings, was a clear abuse of discretion.” 6

In light of DeVoe, we conclude that the superior court could properly consider Harris’s assault on P.B. even though the State dismissed the separate criminal complaint.

With regard to the allegation that Harris refused to be tested for controlled substances, Harris again asserts that his conduct could not lawfully provide the basis for revoking his probation. Harris points out that the initial petition to revoke his proba-

tion was filed on April 1, 1996, and that his refusals to submit to drug testing occurred later — on April 9th and on May 8th. Harris contends that, once the initial revocation petition was filed on April 1st, he was no longer on probation — and thus no longer subject to the conditions of probation.

In Gage v. State 7 , this court held that the running of a defendant’s probation is tolled ■ by the filing of a petition to revoke probation (if the allegations in the petition are later proved). In Gage, six months elapsed between the filing of the petition to revoke the defendant’s probation and the superior court’s final decision to revoke probation. Gage claimed that he was entitled to six months’ credit against his probationary term — that he should be deemed to have been serving his probation during the six months between petition and disposition. 8 We rejected Gage’s argument:

[When] a petition to revoke probation ... is filed and the court subsequently determines that the alleged violation was in fact committed, there can be no legitimate justification for allowing the probationer to claim credit for time served on probation during the period between the filing of the petition and its ultimate adjudication.

Gage, 702 P.2d at 647-48.

At first blush, the holding in Gage may seem to support Harris’s contention that his probation effectively ended (or was interrupted) when the Department of Corrections petitioned the superior court to revoke the probation. However, the issue in Gage was whether a defendant should receive credit against his period of probation for a period of interruption attributable to the defendant’s violation of probation.

(This court reached a similar result in O’Shea v. State 9 , where this court was asked *485 to decide whether a probationer who had left Alaska without permission should receive credit against his five-year period of probation for his two years’ absence from Alaska— two years during which he was not, in fact, under probationary supervision. We held that “O’Shea’s unauthorized absence from probation tolled the running of his probationary term” 10 — and thus, the superior court could lawfully extend O’Shea’s probation by a corresponding two years, so that his violation of the terms of his release would not result in a benefit to him. 11 )

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
980 P.2d 482, 1999 Alas. App. LEXIS 32, 1999 WL 342491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-state-alaskactapp-1999.