People v. Summers CA1/5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 30, 2016
DocketA144345
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Summers CA1/5 (People v. Summers CA1/5) 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
People v. Summers CA1/5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Filed 9/30/16 P. v. Summers CA1/5 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FIVE

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, A144345 v. KYLE TIMOTHY SUMMERS, (Sonoma County Super. Ct. No. SCR-645700) Defendant and Appellant.

Defendant Kyle Timothy Summers appeals from the trial court’s order revoking his probation. He argues the trial court did not have sufficient evidence to find him in violation of his probation because the only evidence offered was inadmissible hearsay. He argues the admission of the evidence violated his constitutional rights to confrontation, cross-examination, and due process. We disagree and affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND In early June 2014, the trial court suspended execution of Summers’s seven-year prison sentence and placed him on three years’ probation. As a condition of probation, Summers was to complete a residential drug rehabilitation program which he was not to leave without the prior written consent of the program director or probation department (probation). The court ordered Summers to be released to the Jericho Project drug treatment program (Jericho) and advised him, “You may not leave the program without the permission of the Court or the probation office or Jericho Project.” Summers entered Jericho. On June 27, 2014, the court summarily revoked Summers’s probation.

1 After a number of continuances, the court held a probation revocation hearing on October 9, 2014. The only witness was Sonoma County Probation Officer Kelly Dunaway, Summers’s probation officer. She was familiar with Jericho and its practices for communicating with probation. She understood Jericho would contact probation if it discharged a probationer from its program early. Probation relied on Jericho’s updates for its reports and to know how a probationer was doing in treatment. Dunaway testified she discovered Summers was no longer at Jericho on June 24 or 25, 2014 when “[Summers] called [Dunaway] to let [her] know that he’d been discharged from the program.” Summers told her he did not believe he was at fault for the discharge because “they had put their hands on him.” Dunaway could not recall the Jericho staffer he identified. He also informed her he went back to Jericho to try to reenter the program. After speaking with Summers, Dunaway telephoned Jericho because she had not yet received Summers’s discharge summary, though she knew he was no longer there. Dunaway spoke with Nick, a Jericho staffer she believed was the intake coordinator but whose last name she could not remember. Nick provided Dunaway information about Summers’s discharge and said Summers had to be escorted off the premises because he would not leave. He also informed her Jericho had sent her the discharge summary letter, a copy of which Dunaway received by fax later that day and the original which she received in the mail several days later. The one-page letter, dated June 23, 2014, and addressed to Dunaway from Jericho Community Director Damon Casparian, reported the following: “On 6/20/2014, Mr. Summers was discharged from the program due to his consistently argumentative, and confrontational behavior. Shortly after Mr. Summers’ [sic] was discharged he returned to our facility displaying aggressive behavior and had to be escorted off the premises by Jericho Staff. Mr. Summers had been counseled on his aggressive and threatening behavior and was aware of the fact that behavior of this kind would result in his discharge from the program.” The defense questioned Dunaway at length about the contents of the letter. On cross-examination, Dunaway recalled Summers had told her he “left” Jericho because a

2 staffer had placed his hands on him—not that he had been discharged. Asked if Summers told her the Jericho staffer choked him, she replied, “I don’t know. He said put their hands on him is what Mr. Summers said.” She had no recollection Summers told her he was actually choked. In response to defense counsel’s characterization of the contact that allegedly took place as an “assault,” Dunaway testified, “I don’t know that he was assaulted [¶] . . . [¶] I don’t believe that there was an assault that occurred [¶] . . . [¶] [T]he way Mr. Summers presented it to me was not in the manner that he’d been assaulted.” In response to defense counsel’s questions, Dunaway stated she took no steps to investigate Summers’s allegation that he had been assaulted. She also acknowledged she had no knowledge about whether Nick, the Jericho staffer with whom she spoke, was personally involved in Summers’s discharge or whether he was an eyewitness to the any of the allegations contained in the letter. Dunaway had no knowledge about the “argumentative,” “confrontational,” and “aggressive” behavior described in letter. Over Summers’s hearsay objection to the letter, the court accepted the Jericho letter into evidence solely for the fact Summers was discharged from Jericho. The court found the fact of his discharge was corroborated by his call to Dunaway notifying her he left. The court expressly declined to admit the letter for the truth of statements explaining the reasons for Summers’s discharge, namely that he was consistently argumentative and exhibited confrontational and aggressive behavior. The defense presented no evidence and called no witnesses. The court revoked Summers’s probation, finding he violated probation when he left the treatment program without prior consent from probation or the program. The court clarified none of its findings were based on Jericho’s statements Summers was aggressive, argumentative, and confrontational or on Jericho’s statement Summers needed to be escorted off the premises. Summers was sentenced to prison. This appeal followed.

3 DISCUSSION Summers argues that the trial court improperly revoked his probation based on unreliable and inadmissible hearsay which violated his federal constitutional rights to due process and confrontation. I. General Principles It is well established that “relaxed rules of evidence govern[ ] probation revocation proceedings[.]” (People v. Brown (1989) 215 Cal.App.3d 452, 454.) “Under this approach, hearsay evidence that is inadmissible to prove guilt in a criminal trial may be admissible to prove an adult probation violation under certain circumstances.” (In re Eddie M. (2003) 31 Cal.4th 480, 501.) A probationer has only a limited right to cross-examine and confront witnesses at a probation revocation hearing. Probation revocation proceedings are not criminal trials to which the Sixth Amendment right to confrontation applies. (People v. Johnson (2004) 121 Cal.App.4th 1409 (Johnson ).) Instead, a limited right to confrontation at probation proceedings stems from the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. (Id. at p. 1411.) At a probation hearing, due process requires that the defendant generally be given the right to confront and cross-examine witnesses unless the hearing officer specifically finds good cause for not allowing confrontation. (Gagnon v. Scarpelli (1973) 411 U.S. 778, 786.) For the admission of routine documentary hearsay evidence at a probation hearing, due process requires only a showing of sufficient indicia of the document's reliability. (People v. Maki (1985) 39 Cal.3d 707, 709 (Maki) [car rental invoice and hotel receipt]; Johnson, supra, 121 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1410-1413 [laboratory report showing that seized substance was cocaine]; see People v.

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Bluebook (online)
People v. Summers CA1/5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-summers-ca15-calctapp-2016.