State Ex Rel. Robertson v. Maggio
This text of 341 So. 2d 366 (State Ex Rel. Robertson v. Maggio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
STATE of Louisiana ex rel. Fred O. ROBERTSON
v.
Ross MAGGIO, Warden.
Supreme Court of Louisiana.
Robert Glass, New Orleans, for plaintiff-relator.
William J. Guste, Jr., Atty. Gen., Barbara Rutledge, Asst. Atty. Gen., Harry F. Connick, Dist. Atty., Louise S. Korns, Asst. Dist. Atty., for defendant-respondent.
DENNIS, Justice.
On May 18, 1970, Fred O. Robertson, having entered a plea of guilty to a charge of simple burglary, La.R.S. 14:62, was sentenced to serve five years at hard labor. The trial judge, however, suspended execution of sentence and placed Robertson on active probation for five years.[1]*367 On August 20, 1974, Robertson's probation officer advised the judge by letter that he had lost contact with Robertson, and requested that the judge issue a warrant for his arrest. The arrest warrant was issued on September 3, 1974, and Robertson was taken into custody on December 13, 1974. On January 10, 1975, the district attorney filed a rule to show cause why Robertson's probation should not be revoked. The rule, in describing the violations with which Robertson was charged, stated:
"Condition No. 4that he make no changes in his residence of [sic] employment. On May 10, 1974 this subject's wife was contacted and it was learned that he had moved from his residence of 4013 Jumonville Street and his whereabouts were unknown.
"Condition No. 7that he remain within the jurisdiction of the Court unless given written permission to leave. Inasmuch as this subject moved without notifying his Probation Officer of his new address, a warrant was issued for his arrest on September 3, 1974 for absconding from supervision."
A hearing on the rule was held January 24, 1975.
At the hearing Robertson's probation officer testified that Robertson had fully complied with his probation conditions for the first four years of his probation; he had successfully completed the federal drug rehabilitation program in which he had been required to participate as a condition of probation; he had maintained steady employment as a truck driver or mechanic for the City of New Orleans since 1971; and he had resided with and provided for his wife at their residence at 4013 Jumonville Street, New Orleans, until May 10, 1974, at which time, because of marital difficulties, he moved to his mother's home at 5622 N. Robertson Street, New Orleans. After less than two months, Robertson and his wife resolved their difficulties and took up residence together at 4219 N. Claiborne Street, New Orleans. The probation officer testified that Robertson failed to obtain prior approval of these changes in residence, and that he had been unable to locate Robertson during the summer of 1974.
The probation officer's unsuccessful efforts to locate Robertson during this brief period consisted of two or three telephone calls to his wife, who was temporarily estranged from Robertson at the time, and who denied knowing his whereabouts, and of mailing a single "appointment letter" to Robertson at his mother's address. The letter was returned by the Post Office inexplicably marked undeliverable. Robertson testified that he received all of his mail at *368 his mother's address, and offered no explanation why the appointment letter was returned to the probation department by the post office. The probation officer had Robertson's mother's address in his file, but, with the exception of the appointment letter, never attempted to contact Robertson there. Likewise, although the probation officer knew Robertson was employed by the City of New Orleans, he apparently made no effort to locate Robertson through his job.
No evidence was adduced at the hearing that Robertson failed to submit the required monthly written reports to the probation department. Robertson testified at the hearing that he had hand-delivered the reports to the probation office each month, leaving them with "the lady at the desk." The probation officer admitted that the written reports for September and October of 1974 were received in his office, and that they contained notification of Robertson's Claiborne Street address. The probation officer, however, did not see these reports until after Robertson's arrest on December 13, 1974, because the case had been transferred to his supervisor when the arrest warrant issued on September 3, 1974.
At the conclusion of the hearing, Robertson's counsel urged the trial judge to regard any violations that might have been proved as insubstantial and unintentional. The judge responded,
"No, I can't do that, * * *. Probation would be absolutely no good to anybody if I went back on my word. I make it a point to tell everyone of these people that this is the last chance you're getting. Don't ever come back. I practically beg them not to come back. Because if they do, I got to stick to what I told them. If I don't, they'll all be doing it. Where would the probation system be then.
* * *
"I have no alternative but to stick to my word. If I don't, every probationer from this court will be doing the same thing, and I'm not going to have that. * * *" (Emphasis added.)
The judge then revoked Robertson's probation and ordered that the original five year sentence be made executory; he declined to give Robertson credit for the time previously served on probation.
In March of 1976, Robertson filed a pro se petition for writ of habeas corpus in the Criminal District Court for the Parish of Orleans. The writ was denied by the court without a hearing on May 27, 1976. On July 8, 1976, Robertson filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in this Court. Subsequently, this Court, having obtained a transcript of the probation revocation hearing, issued a writ of certiorari and set the matter for hearing on November 8, 1976. By separate order, this Court appointed counsel to represent Robertson in the presentation of his case.[2]
After full consideration of this case, we are of the opinion that Robertson was not afforded due process in the revocation proceeding, and that the trial judge abdicated his responsibility to exercise the sound discretion mandated by the legislature in determining the severity of the probation violation, if any, and in imposing the appropriate sanction therefor. Accordingly, the district court's order revoking Robertson's probation must be overturned, and, because the probationary period expired in May, 1975, Fred O. Robertson must be immediately released from custody and discharged from further supervision by the State.
In making its factual allegation that Robertson violated the terms of his probation the State asserted that Robertson "had moved from his residence of 4013 Jumonville Street and his whereabouts were unknown," and that Robertson had "moved without notifying his Probation Officer of his new address."
Under the terms of condition number eight of Robertson's probation, he was to "notify the probation officer or [the Criminal *369 District Court] of any change in [his] address or employment." This condition did not prohibit Robertson from making changes in his residence nor require prior approval of them. By its terms Robertson's sole obligation was to give notice of any change in residence to the proper authorities. The uncontradicted evidence adduced at the hearing on the rule to show cause indicated that notice was given by Robertson of his change in addressat the latest in his September, 1974 monthly report.
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