In Re Peeler

266 Cal. App. 2d 483, 72 Cal. Rptr. 254, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 1534
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 10, 1968
DocketCrim. 4969
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 266 Cal. App. 2d 483 (In Re Peeler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Peeler, 266 Cal. App. 2d 483, 72 Cal. Rptr. 254, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 1534 (Cal. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

PIERCE, P. J.

Petitioner had been granted probation after a plea of guilty on a charge of possession of marijuana (Health & Saf. Code, § 11530). Thereafter she requested modification of the conditions of probation. The basis of her petition was that she had married one James Peeler after her plea but before sentence and that certain conditions of the probation were inimical to her status as a married woman. The petition was heard and resulted in a modification of probation by the imposition of conditions more stringent than those originally imposed.

Petitioner filed with this court a petition for habeas corpus seeking inter alia a vacation and nullification of conditions of probation which effectually denied her the right of cohabitation with her husband.

We granted an order to show cause limited to test the validity of two of the attacked conditions with a stay of the enforcement thereof. The two conditions were: (1) Condition Two: that for the first year of a three-year period of probation she must live with her parents, and (2) Condition Four: that defendant was not to associate with any known or reputed user or possessor of marijuana, dangerous drugs, or other narcotics.

For reasons stated below we have concluded that the writ must be denied and the stay heretofore ordered, vacated.

*485 Facts Summary

On February 28,1968, petitioner was accused by indictment of the sale of marijuana (Health & Safety Code § 11531). On April 26, 1968, she pleaded guilty of the lesser included offense of possession of marijuana. The matter was referred to the probation officer. His report was filed May 6, 1968. A copy was in the possession of petitioner before May 9, 1968. Summarized, the report shows: Petitioner, 20 years of age, is one of three children of parents who have been married 23 years and who have resided in Butte County nearly all of that time. They have lived at their present address in Oroville for 15 years. Petitioner’s father is a prosperous logging contractor. The home life has been normal. Petitioner had been educated through one semester of junior college. At the time of her offense she was attending a beauty college. She told the probation officer she had started using marijuana approximately one year before her arrest, had used it off and on since then but did not think she was addicted to its use. The police report of the offense for which she had been arrested differed in one respect quite markedly from petitioner’s statement to the probation officer. According to the police officer an undercover agent had been told by an informant that he (the informant) had been solicited by petitioner to purchase a “lid” of marijuana. The informant and the agent called at a residence in a Butte County community near Oroville. Three girls, of whom petitioner was one, were present. The girls told the two men they used marijuana, methedrine and had access io heroin. Petitioner was a principal spokesman for the trio and an active participant in the sale which followed. A purchase of marijuana by the men for $10 (paid to petitioner) was negotiated and later consummated. The marijuana had been hidden in a field. Petitioner’s story was that the “informant” mentioned was an old friend of hers whom she had not seen recently. Her version was that he had asked her if she could get marijuana for him. She had phoned a friend who had told her where marijuana was “stashed.” Asked regarding her motivation she said: “I did it because he (the informant) was my friend and I figured he’d do the same thing for me if I needed it.” Significantly she admitted having used marijuana since her arrest'. Nevertheless she told the probation officer she would “have [no] difficulty in refraining from the use of marijuana in the future, or from associating with others who do, were she to be granted. probation. ’ ’

*486 The report stated: “A strong tendency to minimize and rationalize her involvement with narcotics was noted.” The probation officer had been informed by the police "that a strong possibility exists that she may have been ‘dealing’ in marijuana since her release. ...” The officer hesitantly recommended probation with a disciplinary period in the county jail. The report recommended the conditions which were subsequently imposed.

As to petitioner’s marital status, then the report states: ‘ ‘ The defendant is not now, and never has been, married, but is in the process of firming up plans to do so at this time. She indicates that she plans to marry ... [a young man] presently in the United States Army, ...” this summer. Testimony in the record taken at a subsequent probation hearing will clarify that statement. The soldier referred to was a boy with whom petitioner had been “dating” since she was 15. He had, during late March and April—after petitioner’s arrest—been home on leave. The couple during this period had become engaged to be married. Before and after the period of the soldier’s leave, petitioner had also been keeping company with one James Peeler. According to defendant, she had decided after the serviceman’s departure that she preferred Peeler to him.

On May 9, 1968, she and Peeler were married in Reno. The marriage was in the morning. The couple returned the same day.

On May 10, the hearing was held on the probation officer’s report. Petitioner was represented by an attorney. Before the hearing she asked her attorney what he thought the court might feel regarding her possible marriage to James Peeler. The attorney told her that he believed that Peeler was involved in narcotics and that mention of his name at the hearing would jeopardize her chances for probation. Petitioner did not inform the attorney that she and Peeler had already been married.

The fact of the marriage or even of the acquaintanceship between petitioner and Peeler was not mentioned at the hearing. The court granted probation on the terms recommended. Condition One was that petitioner would be incarcerated in the Butte County jail for 30 days. When she reported to serve her period in jail she was released on a “work furlough program” in order that she might continue attendance at Oroville Beauty College. She completed her period in custody on *487 June 2, 1968. (She had been given credit for time served before sentence.)

On June 3d petitioner appeared with James Peeler before the probation officer who was informed of the May 9th marriage. She petitioned for the elimination of Conditions Two and Pour and of a third condition which required her to be at home by midnight during the first year of probation. Hearing on this petition was held June 14, 1968. Another probation report had been prepared which was read at that hearing. It appeared therein that Peeler was then under arrest for the sale of marijuana and dangerous drugs and for keeping a place where marijuana was sold. The evaluation in the report was that petitioner had “accepted probation under false pretenses, and that she further wilfully failed to disclose the fact of her marriage for almost a month after its occurrence. ’ ’ In addition to receipt of the report evidence was taken at the hearing. Both petitioner and her mother testified. That testimony disclosed the facts we have related above regarding the engagement between petitioner and the soldier.

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Bluebook (online)
266 Cal. App. 2d 483, 72 Cal. Rptr. 254, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 1534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-peeler-calctapp-1968.