People v. Leiva

297 P.3d 870, 56 Cal. 4th 498, 154 Cal. Rptr. 3d 634, 2013 Cal. LEXIS 2885
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 8, 2013
DocketS192176
StatusPublished
Cited by143 cases

This text of 297 P.3d 870 (People v. Leiva) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Leiva, 297 P.3d 870, 56 Cal. 4th 498, 154 Cal. Rptr. 3d 634, 2013 Cal. LEXIS 2885 (Cal. 2013).

Opinions

[502]*502Opinion

CHIN, J.

At the relevant times, Penal Code former section 1203.2, subdivision (a) (as amended by Stats. 1989, ch. 1319, § 1, p. 5305),1 provided, in part, that the revocation of probation, “summary or otherwise, shall serve to toll the running of the probationary period.” We granted review to resolve whether, once probation has been summarily revoked, this tolling provision permits a trial court to find a violation of probation and then reinstate or terminate probation based solely on conduct that occurred after the court-imposed period of probation had elapsed. For the reasons stated below, we hold that section 1203.2, subdivision (a)’s (section 1203.2(a)) tolling provision preserves the trial court’s authority to adjudicate, in a subsequent formal probation violation hearing, whether the probationer violated probation during, but not after, the court-imposed probationary period.2

BACKGROUND

In March 2000, defendant Jose Leiva was charged with breaking into several cars and stealing property from them. Pursuant to a plea agreement, he pleaded no contest to three counts of burglary of a vehicle. (§ 459.) On April 11, 2000, the trial court suspended imposition of sentence and placed defendant on formal probation for a period of three years, which meant that probation would expire on April 11, 2003. Included in the terms and conditions of probation were orders that defendant report to his probation officer within one business day of his release from custody and not reenter the country illegally if he left voluntarily or was deported. Because defendant was not a legal resident of the United States, he was deported to El Salvador on the day he was released from jail.

On September 21, 2001, defendant failed to appear at a scheduled probation violation hearing based on an allegation that he had failed to report to the probation department. The trial court summarily revoked defendant’s probation based on the failure to report and issued a bench warrant for defendant’s arrest. It appears that neither the probation department nor the trial court knew that the reason defendant had failed to report or to appear in court was that he had been deported.

[503]*503Seven years later, on November 10, 2008, defendant appeared in the trial court after his arrest on the outstanding warrant, following a traffic stop. The trial court re-called the warrant and ordered that probation remain summarily revoked and that defendant be remanded into custody. It calendared a formal probation violation hearing for February 13, 2009.

Before that date, the trial court received a supplemental probation report that indicated defendant had been unable to report for probation supervision because he was not a legal resident of the United States and had been deported. The report included defendant’s statement that he illegally had returned to the United States in February 2007.

At the February 13, 2009 formal violation hearing, the district attorney, after acknowledging that the trial court could not find defendant in violation of probation unless the violation was willful, conceded the People could not prove that defendant’s failure to report in 2001 had been “willful.” Defendant’s counsel contended “probation must be terminated” because the court had no authority to reinstate defendant’s probation as of 2007 when there was no evidence of a “willful failure to report,” or any other probation- violation, before “the termination of the natural period of probation.”

The trial court found defendant had violated probation. It did not rely on the allegation that had led to the summary revocation on September 21, 2001, nor did it find any other violation of probation during the three-year probationary period imposed on April 11, 2000. Instead, the court found defendant violated his probation in 2007 when he failed to report to probation following his return to the United States. It relied on defendant’s statement that he had been back in the United States since February 2007.3 The court reinstated probation and ordered it extended until June 6, 2011. It additionally ordered that, if defendant voluntarily left the country again or was deported, he must report to his probation officer within 24 hours of his return to the United States and present proof that he was in the country legally. Defendant appealed the order reinstating and extending probation.

Defendant was deported again, this time in March 2009. On May 14, 2009, during the period of probation challenged on appeal in case No. B214397, the trial court calendared a violation hearing based on a supplemental probation report stating that defendant had not reported to his probation officer and had been deported to El Salvador. Defendant was not present, but the court considered his letter to the probation department explaining that he had been deported in March 2009, and that he was trying to contact his probation [504]*504officer by telephone. At the June 9, 2009 hearing, after noting that defendant had been deported, the court summarily revoked defendant’s probation based on his failure to report to his probation officer, and a bench warrant issued for his arrest.

Thereafter, defendant returned to California and was arrested on the outstanding warrant. On September 17, 2009, he appeared in the trial court. His counsel argued the court lacked the authority to reinstate or terminate probation because defendant’s probationary term had expired three years after it began on April 11, 2000, and defendant had not willfully violated any condition of probation during those three years. Assuming its prior order reinstating and extending probation was valid pending appeal, the court ordered that probation remain summarily revoked and that defendant remain in custody.

On October 9, 2009, the trial court held a formal probation violation hearing and found that defendant had violated his probation “for re-entering the country illegally” in 2009. On November 9, 2009, the court ordered that probation remain revoked and sentenced defendant to two years in state prison based on one of the burglary counts to which defendant had pleaded no contest in 2000. Defendant filed a timely appeal from this order.

In each of his two appeals, defendant contended the trial court erred by finding a violation of probation based on conduct that had occurred after the expiration of the original court-imposed three-year probationary period. The Court of Appeal rendered a split decision. The two-justice majority upheld the trial court’s orders. The dissenting justice agreed with defendant’s position. We granted review.

DISCUSSION

Section 1203.3, subdivision (a), empowers the trial court “at any time during the term of probation to revoke, modify, or change its order of suspension of imposition or execution of sentence.” This power includes the power to extend the probationary term. (Ex Parte Sizelove (1910) 158 Cal. 493, 494 [111 P. 527].) Under former section 1203.2(a), a court “may revoke and terminate such probation if the interests of justice so require and the court, in its judgment, has reason to believe from the report of the probation officer or otherwise that the person has violated any of the conditions of his or her probation, has become abandoned to improper associates or a vicious life, or has subsequently committed other offenses, regardless whether he or she has been prosecuted for such offenses.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
297 P.3d 870, 56 Cal. 4th 498, 154 Cal. Rptr. 3d 634, 2013 Cal. LEXIS 2885, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-leiva-cal-2013.