Filed 7/17/14 P. v. Salgado CA 6
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
THE PEOPLE, H038981
(Santa Clara County
Plaintiff and Respondent, Super. Ct. No. FF509618)
v.
EDIE LILY SALGADO,
Defendant and Appellant.
Defendant Edie Lily Salgado appeals from an order reinstating and extending her
probation. She contends the trial court lacked jurisdiction to do so because her maximum
probationary term had already expired. Alternatively, she argues her trial counsel was
ineffective for failing to object to the extension as an act in excess of the court’s
jurisdiction.
The People concede the trial court lacked jurisdiction to extend Salgado’s
probation, and we agree the concession is appropriate.1
We will therefore reverse the trial court’s order reinstating probation and direct the
trial court to discharge Salgado from probation.
1
We therefore need not reach Salgado’s alternative argument that she received
ineffective assistance of counsel.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
A. Initial sentencing
In November 2005, Salgado pleaded no contest to one count of driving under the
influence with a blood-alcohol level of 0.08 percent or more (Veh. Code, § 23153, subd.
(b)) and one count of felony hit and run (id., § 20001, subds. (a), (b)(1)) and admitted an
allegation she personally inflicted great bodily injury on another while driving under the
influence. At her sentencing hearing on January 9, 2006, the trial court suspended
imposition of sentence and placed Salgado on probation for six years conditioned, in part,
on serving one year in county jail. As one of several probation conditions, Salgado was
ordered to pay restitution to the victim.2
On August 30, 2007, after Salgado missed a restitution payment, the trial court
held a hearing on her probation status. This was not a formal revocation hearing, and
Salgado did not admit violating her probation, but the trial court nonetheless revoked her
probation and directed her to “keep on paying.”
From September 2007 through August 2011, Salgado made regular monthly
payments, many of which exceeded the minimum payment due. At each restitution
hearing, however, the trial court continued Salgado in revoked probationary status.
On August 16, 2011, Salgado asked the court to reinstate probation based on her
consistent payment record. The court ordered Salgado to continue paying $150 per
month for the next six months and to provide the probation department with a current
financial history to evaluate if she could increase the payment amount. The trial court
2
The victim, a passenger in the car driven by Salgado, was seriously injured in the
crash. Her pelvis was broken, her left leg was fractured in several places, both lungs
were punctured and one of her vertebra was fractured. She also suffered multiple
lacerations to her right leg, right arm and forehead. Salgado waived her right to a
restitution hearing and stipulated that she owed restitution to the victim in the amount of
$55,346.40.
2
expressed its intent to reinstate probation at the February 2012 hearing and extend
probation for the maximum allowable period.
At the February 2012 probation status hearing, the trial court indicated Salgado
still owed $37,440 in restitution and could not recall why it may have previously
considered reinstating probation. The trial court advised it would review its notes and
revisit the issue at the next hearing. The case was continued with Salgado in revoked
status.
On October 16, 2012, a further probation status hearing was held. Salgado, who
still owed $36,032 in restitution, renewed her request that probation be reinstated due to
her consistent payment history. The trial court denied Salgado’s request and set another
hearing for November 2, 2012. The trial court stated it would reconsider reinstating
probation at the next hearing after giving the victim an opportunity to be heard.
At the November 2012 hearing, Salgado again asked to have probation reinstated.
The People argued that Salgado should be kept on revoked status until she pays the full
amount of restitution owed. However, even if Salgado’s probation were reinstated, the
People contended her probationary period was tolled during the time probation was
revoked and the court could extend probation for an additional five year period.
Salgado disagreed, arguing that she had never admitted violating probation and
there had not been a formal probation revocation hearing. Furthermore, her probationary
period could not be extended past her maximum sentence of six years eight months which
would expire on September 9, 2013.3
The trial court agreed with the People’s argument and reinstated Salgado’s
probation, extending her probation period an additional five years to November 11, 2017.
3
Salgado contends, and the People do not dispute, that her counsel miscalculated
the maximum probationary period. The maximum potential sentence for her offenses
expired on September 9, 2012--just less than two months prior to the November 2, 2012
probation status hearing.
3
Salgado was directed to make monthly restitution payments of $150 and complete a new
financial history form.
Salgado timely appealed.
II. DISCUSSION
On appeal, Salgado argues the trial court was without jurisdiction to reinstate and
extend her probationary period for any length of time because her maximum term of
probation (six years eight months) had expired nearly two months before the November
2012 hearing. We agree.
In People v. Freidt (2013) 222 Cal.App.4th 16, we held that a trial court is without
jurisdiction to reinstate probation where a defendant has been placed in revoked status,
without the benefit of a formal revocation hearing, for years beyond the expiration of the
maximum probationary period. We expressly concluded in Freidt that summary
revocation and Penal Code section 1203.2, subdivision (a)’s tolling provision did not
permit trial courts to indefinitely retain jurisdiction to modify or extend a probationary
term. In so holding, we relied on the California Supreme Court’s reasoning in People v.
Leiva (2013) 56 Cal.4th 498 that giving trial courts such power “would be contrary to our
statutes that authorize the courts to grant probation for a period not to exceed a specified
time.” (Id. at p. 509.)
Here, the court summarily revoked Salgado’s probation based on an apparent
concession that she had failed to pay restitution. No formal hearing was held to
determine whether her failure to pay was willful or not. Regardless, her probation
remained summarily revoked for more than five years, beyond the expiration of the
maximum probationary period of six years eight months. The court then reinstated and
extended her probation an additional five years to November 2017. In doing so, the court
reasoned it could do so because Salgado’s probationary term had been tolled since
August 2007 pursuant to Penal Code section 1203.2, subdivision (a). This was error.
4
Because the court neither found a willful failure to pay restitution, nor formally
revoked Salgado’s probation, it lacked the authority to extend probation once her
maximum probationary term expired in September 2012.
III. DISPOSITION
The order reinstating probation is reversed. The trial court is directed to discharge
Salgado from probation.
Premo, Acting P.J.
WE CONCUR:
Elia, J.
Mihara, J.
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