People v. Lippner

26 P.2d 457, 219 Cal. 395, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 403
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 2, 1933
DocketDocket No. Crim. 3632.
StatusPublished
Cited by82 cases

This text of 26 P.2d 457 (People v. Lippner) 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. Lippner, 26 P.2d 457, 219 Cal. 395, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 403 (Cal. 1933).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment sentencing the defendant to imprisonment in the county jail, *397 after an order revoking defendant’s probation. The defendant pleaded guilty to three counts of an information filed against him in the Superior Court of the County of Los Angeles, charging him with three separate violations of the Corporate Securities Act. Thereafter, and on June 16, 1928, the court, without pronouncing any judgment against said defendant, ordered that all proceedings against the defendant be suspended “and defendant granted probation for a period of five years under the following conditions: Defendant must reimburse the investors within one year and shall comply with such other terms as shall be set forth by the probation officer.” On January 21, 1930, the court made a further order in the case as follows: “Terms of probation are modified as follows: Defendant is allowed four years to reimburse investors. All other terms of probation are to remain the same.” At a hearing before said court, either to modify the terms of said probation, or to determine whether the defendant had violated the terms thereof [the record does not clearly indicate the nature of said proceeding], at which hearing the defendant was present with his counsel, witnesses were examined and evidence was admitted, the court, on June 6, 1932, made the following order: “This defendant having violated the terms of his probation, probation heretofore granted is revoked. No legal cause appearing why judgment should not be pronounced, the court pronounces judgment and sentence as to each of the counts, 1, 6, and 11 of the information.” The court then pronounced judgment against the defendant that he be imprisoned in the county jail for the term of two years upon each of said counts, and that the sentences were to run concurrently.

It is from this order and judgment that the present appeal is taken by the defendant.

The grounds of appeal are threefold and may be stated as follows:

1. That the condition contained in said order of probation that defendant reimburse the investors is void and, therefore, the violation thereof did not warrant revocation of probation.
2. That the trial court abused its discretion in finding that defendant had violated the terms of his probation and in revoking the order admitting him to probation.
*398 3. That the court had lost jurisdiction to pronounce judgment against the defendant of imprisonment in the county jail for the period of two years and for that reason said judgment was void.

It will be observed that the original and amended order of probation set forth only one condition or term of probation, and that condition was that the defendant should “reimburse the investors”. At the hearing at which defendant’s probation was revoked, the trial court said, “The only .purpose of granting probation was to give him an opportunity to reimburse these people.” From this record, the defendant asserts that the sole purpose of defendant’s probation was to enable him to make restitution to those whom he had wronged, and that no provision was made, nor was any term or condition imposed by the court which had for its object or purpose the restoration or rehabilitation of the defendant. The defendant contends that the prime, if not the sole, object and purpose of all legislation providing for the probation of persons convicted of crime is to rehabilitate them and thus enable them possibly to become useful members of society. It is admitted that the court may require, as one of the terms upon which a defendant is granted probation, and in fact it is expressly so provided in section 1203 of the Penal Code, that he make restitution to those he has wronged, but it is insisted that to make this the sole object of probation is such a departure from the spirit and true purpose of all probation legislation from its inception down to the present time, as to render such a condition void and of no effect whatever, and that a violation of such a condition imposed under the circumstances just related would not constitute a legal or valid cause for the revocation of probation granted thereunder. The contention is made that a probationer who is released under the sole condition that he reimburse his victims might continue after probation to carry on his criminal practices and so long as he complied with the condition of his probation, even if the funds used by him for that purpose were the fruits of his criminal acts, the court granting him probation would be powerless to revoke his probation for his subsequent violations of the law, so long as he complied with the condition of his probation to restore to those whom he had injured that of which he had defrauded them. Defendant has, we think, over *399 looked, or at least has failed to recognize, the real import of that provision of section 1203 of the Penal Code which gives to the court, after the re-arrest of a probationer, the power to revoke and terminate such probation, “if the interests of justice so require, and if the court in its judgment, shall have reason to believe . . . that the person so placed on probation is violating any of the conditions of his probation, or engaging in criminal practices, or has become abandoned to> improper associates or a vicious life.” By that portion of the section which we have italicized, the court has been given full authority to revoke the probation of a defendant, who after being granted probation engages in criminal practices or has become abandoned to a vicious life even though there are no such conditions expressed in the order of probation. These grounds of revoking probation are, in effect, made conditions upon which every order of probation is granted. Their object and purpose are for the restoration and rehabilitation of the defendant. They not only are intended as aids to assist him in mending his former ways, but they are designed, in so far as the order of the court may accomplish that purpose, to deter him from future violations of the law. Had the trial court incorporated in its order of probation a condition that the defendant abstain from committing any crime, or from engaging in criminal practices or from becoming abandoned to a life of viciousness, we apprehend that defendant would concede that such a condition had for its purpose his restoration and rehabilitation. As the code section has for all practical purposes made these conditions a part of every order of probation, whether expressly set forth therein or not, it cannot be held that an order of probation omitting any express condition which tended to the restoration of the defendant for that reason only lacks any of the essential elements of a valid and legal order. We do not mean to be understood as intimating that a condition in an order of probation that defendant make restitution has no tendency toward restoring the defendant to a life of rectitude. There can be no real reformation of a wrongdoer unless there is at least a willingness on his part to right the wrong committed. The effect of such an act upon the individual is of inestimable value, and to a large extent determines whether there has been any real reformation. The order admitting de *400

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 P.2d 457, 219 Cal. 395, 1933 Cal. LEXIS 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-lippner-cal-1933.