Filed 12/30/15
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
(Sacramento)
----
K. R., C079548
Petitioner, (Super. Ct. No. JV134953)
v.
THE SUPERIOR COURT OF SACRAMENTO
COUNTY,
Respondent;
THE PEOPLE,
Real Party in Interest.
ORIGINAL PROCEEDING in mandate. Stay issued. Petition denied. James P.
Arguelles, Judge.
Paulino G. Duran, Public Defendant, Arthur L. Bowie and Patricia Beza
Contreras, Assistant Public Defenders, for Petitioner.
No counsel for Respondent.
Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Michael P. Farrell, Assistant Attorney
General, Eric L. Christoffersen and Jesse Witt, Deputy Attorneys General, for Real Party
in Interest.
1
The question in this case is whether K. R. (the minor) has a right under our
Supreme Court’s decision in People v. Arbuckle (1978) 22 Cal.3d 749 to insist that Judge
Jack Sapunor preside over the disposition of his admissions that he twice violated the
terms of his probation in a juvenile delinquency proceeding. For the reasons set forth
below, we conclude he does not. While the minor certainly had a reasonable expectation
that he would receive the agreed-upon disposition that was part of the plea agreement
approved by Judge Sapunor, and the refusal by Judge James P. Arguelles to impose that
disposition certainly entitles the minor to withdraw his negotiated plea, the minor has
failed to show that he entered into the plea agreement in expectation of and reliance upon
Judge Sapunor conducting the disposition hearing. Thus, the minor is not entitled to have
the disposition hearing set in front of Judge Sapunor, nor is he entitled to an order
requiring Judge Arguelles to impose the agreed-upon disposition. Accordingly, we will
deny the minor’s petition for a writ of mandate and vacate our stay on the juvenile court
proceeding.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
I
Preliminary Matters
Before we set forth the facts underlying this mandamus proceeding, we first
address two procedural matters.
First, we note that in response to the minor’s writ petition, this court issued an
order to show cause, and in response to the order to show cause, the People filed a
document they labeled a “return,” but which was neither a demurrer nor a verified answer
to the verified allegations of the minor’s petition; instead, the People’s “return” was
essentially in the form of an unverified legal brief like those commonly filed in direct
appeals, separated into three sections: a statement of the case, a statement of facts, and
argument. This is not the proper procedure. (See Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.487(b)(1)
[“If the court issues an alternative writ or order to show cause, the respondent or any real
2
party in interest, separately or jointly, may serve and file a return by demurrer, verified
answer, or both”]; Bank of America, N.A. v. Superior Court (2013) 212 Cal.App.4th
1076, 1085 [noting that, “[b]y filing a responsive brief” rather than a return by demurrer
or verified answer, “the real parties in interest did not follow the correct procedures”].)
“The failure to submit a return with a verified answer or demurrer is not a
technicality, but is an integral and critical step in the procedure for determining the merit
of a petition for extraordinary relief.” (Bank of America, N.A. v. Superior Court, supra,
212 Cal.App.4th at p. 1085.) One possible consequence of filing an unverified return that
is neither a demurrer nor an answer is that the return will be stricken and therefore not
considered in determining the merits of the mandate petition. (See Universal City
Studios, Inc. v. Superior Court (2003) 110 Cal.App.4th 1273, 1287.) That could be fatal.
Fortunately for the People, there is a less catastrophic consequence available to us
to address their failure. “In the absence of a true return, all well-pleaded and verified
allegations of the writ petition are accepted as true.” (Bank of America, N.A. v. Superior
Court, supra, 212 Cal.App.4th at p. 1084; see also Titmas v. Superior Court (2001) 87
Cal.App.4th 738, 741; Shaffer v. Superior Court (1995) 33 Cal.App.4th 993, 996, fn. 2.)
Applying this rule, the People’s “return” is effectively treated as a return by demurrer,
because a demurrer admits the facts pleaded in a writ petition. (Blank v. Kirwan (1985)
39 Cal.3d 311, 318.) Thus, we take the facts below from the well-pleaded, verified
allegations of the minor’s writ petition.1
1 Fortunately for the People, those “facts” do not include certain of the minor’s
assertions in his petition, like that the trial court “illegally and improperly denied [his]
right to have his negotiated disposition imposed by the judge that took his
plea/admission.” That allegation, like others in the petition, is not an allegation of fact,
but rather a legal conclusion, which a demurrer does not admit. (See Daar v. Yellow Cab
Co. (1967) 67 Cal.2d 695, 713 [“A demurrer admits all material and issuable facts
properly pleaded” but “does not admit contentions, deductions or conclusions of fact or
law”].)
3
Second, we note a deficiency involving the exhibits attached to the minor’s writ
petition. A petition for a writ of mandate must be verified. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1086;
Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.486(a)(4).) In addition, “[a] petition that seeks review of a
trial court ruling must be accompanied by an adequate record, including copies of: [¶]
(A) The ruling from which the petition seeks relief; [¶] (B) All documents and exhibits
submitted to the trial court supporting and opposing the petitioner’s position; [and] [¶]
(C) Any other documents or portions of documents submitted to the trial court that are
necessary for a complete understanding of the case and the ruling under review.” (Cal.
Rules of Court, rule 8.486(b)(1).)
Because the petitioner’s right to relief will ordinarily “be resolved upon the
parties’ verified papers” (Star Motor Imports, Inc. v. Superior Court (1979) 88
Cal.App.3d 201, 205), without the taking of additional evidence, it is important that the
verification of the petition encompass not only the allegations of the petition but also the
authenticity and accuracy of the exhibits submitted in support of the petition. (See ibid.
[“A valid petition for mandate and such exhibits as may be referenced or incorporated
therein will ordinarily state facts, verified as required by Code of Civil Procedure section
1086, calling for judicial relief,” italics omitted]; 1 Appeals and Writs in Criminal Cases
(Cont.Ed.Bar 3d ed. 2014) § 8.42, p. 8-37 [“The record should be verified by specific
reference in the verified petition, by separate declaration, or by certificates”].)
Here, at the end of the substantive allegations detailing the underlying facts, the
petition lists 14 exhibits, introduced by the assertion that “[t]he following documents
reflecting the above proceedings are attached hereto and incorporated herein by
reference.” At no point, however, does the petition allege that the exhibits are true and
correct copies of documents submitted to the juvenile court and/or contained in the
juvenile court’s file in this matter, nor did the minor submit a separate declaration
4
attesting to the authenticity and accuracy of the exhibits.2 Thus, when the minor’s
attorney declares in the verification that she has “read the foregoing petition for writ of
mandate and know[s] the contents thereof, and . . . the same [is] true to [her] own
knowledge,” she is not actually verifying that the attached exhibits are in fact what they
purport to be. Nevertheless, because the People have not challenged the accuracy of any
of the minor’s exhibits, we will treat the exhibits as though they were properly
authenticated and verified.
II
The Juvenile Court Proceedings
We turn to the relevant facts. In March 2013, when the minor was 13 years old, a
delinquency petition was filed alleging he had committed the crimes of robbery, criminal
threats, and brandishing a knife. In August 2013, Judge James P. Arguelles presided over
a jurisdictional hearing on the petition in Department 97 and found the allegations true.
At a disposition hearing in Department 97 in September 2013, Judge Arguelles granted
the minor probation with a number of conditions, including 150 days of confinement.
In April 2015, the minor’s probation officer filed a petition alleging the minor had
violated his probation by remaining away from his home overnight without parental
permission; failing to keep his probation officer informed of his address and telephone
number; using marijuana; and committing the crimes of having marijuana on a school
campus, falsely identifying himself to a law enforcement officer, and being a disruptive
presence on a school campus. A week later, the People filed a petition alleging the minor
2 The three exhibits that are copies of reporter’s transcripts of relevant oral
proceedings in the case do include copies of reporter’s certificates certifying the
completeness and accuracy of the transcriptions, but nowhere is it alleged or attested that
these copies are true and correct copies of the original transcripts or certificates.
5
had violated his probation by committing the crimes of brandishing a firearm and
brandishing a replica firearm.
On April 15, 2015, a detention hearing was held on both petitions in Department
92 before Judge Doris Shockley. Judge Shockley ordered the minor detained at juvenile
hall and set a settlement conference hearing for April 28 in Department 97. She also
ordered the probation department to prepare and submit a memorandum with appropriate
recommendations for that hearing.
The probation department subsequently prepared a disposition report in which the
department noted that while “a placement recommendation may be warranted,” “the
family [specifically, the minor’s mother] has moved to the state of Nevada.” Thus, the
department recommended that the minor’s probation be revoked and reinstated, that he be
permitted to travel to Las Vegas to reside with his mother “pursuant to Interstate
Compact protocol,” and that the proceedings be transferred to the juvenile court of Clark
County, Nevada, for final disposition.
On April 28, the parties, appearing before Judge Jack Sapunor in Department 97,
stipulated to continue the settlement conference hearing to May 12. Judge Sapunor is a
“regular visiting judge” in juvenile court in Sacramento County.
On May 12, the parties appeared before Judge Arguelles in Department 97 for the
continued settlement conference hearing, but at the request of the minor’s attorney, Judge
Arguelles continued the hearing again, this time to May 28.
On May 28, the parties appeared before Judge Sapunor in Department 97 for the
settlement conference hearing. The minor’s attorney told the court the minor was
prepared to admit the allegation in the first petition that he remained away from his home
overnight without parental permission and the allegation in the second petition that he
brandished a replica firearm “with an understanding that the disposition would be 54 days
in custody in juvenile hall. He has 47 days as of today. [¶] The intention is in one week
from today to recalendar this for proof that [the minor’s grandmother] has purchased the
6
plane ticket to Nevada as the minor’s mother is currently a resident of the state of
Nevada, and this case would be transferred out for [supervision] to Nevada.” The
following colloquy then occurred:
“THE COURT: We’re going to order the transfer today and then calendar it for a
week to make sure that’s been accomplished?
“[THE MINOR’S ATTORNEY]: Yes.
“THE COURT: That would be the Petitioner’s recommended disposition?
“[THE PROSECUTOR]: Yes, your Honor.”
At that point, the court solicited the minor’s waiver of his right to a hearing on the
alleged violations, his rights to remain silent and against self-incrimination, his right to
confront and cross-examine the witnesses against him, and his right to testify. The minor
then admitted the two violations of probation, the court granted the prosecutor’s motion
to dismiss the remaining allegations, and the court revoked and reinstated all previous
orders. Before the court could finish the disposition, however, the probation officer
serving as the presenter to the court interrupted: “Your Honor, just a thought real quick, I
know we just took the admission. My only concern is if we come back a week from now
and there’s not a ticket bought and if we do the dispo today, we may have to unravel all
that we’re doing right now -- not the admission necessarily, just the disposition.” The
following colloquy then took place:
“THE COURT: Maybe we ought to put this out for a week to make sure that the
disposition goes as planned.
“THE PRESENTER: That was just my thought that it all worked cleanly together.
If for some reason it fell apart, we’ll have to undo everything we’re doing.
“[THE MINOR’S ATTORNEY]: I am fine with putting whatever we need
necessary. My only request is that if we put the case over for one week, the time slots
have to coordinate with the flight information. What is the quickest that he will be able
to be processed to be released to get out to get on the plane?”
7
“THE PRESENTER: If we come in first thing in the morning, 8:30, 9:00, 9:30,
let’s say the flight’s purchased for 1:30, 2:00 in the afternoon, the later the better, we
would be good to go.
“[THE MINOR’S ATTORNEY]: That’s agreeable. We can continue putting
dispo over for the final terms to one week from today in the morning.
“THE PRESENTER: We can sign all the interstate on that date also.
“THE COURT: You want to have disposition one week from today which is going
to be the 4th of June?
“[THE MINOR’S ATTORNEY]: Yes. The intention is for him to be deemed
time served at that time.
“THE COURT: Yes. He’s to be deemed time served on June 4th at 8:30. All the
other conditions, this case would be transferred to Clark County, Nevada, for final
disposition, and then he will be released to go to Las Vegas.
“Okay. So come back, then, on the 4th at 8:30.”
The minute order for the May 28 hearing showed that the minor had admitted two
violations and the remaining allegations had been dismissed, although the parties agreed
they could be considered at the time of disposition. The minute order further showed that
the disposition hearing was set for June 4.
On June 4, the parties appeared again in Department 97; this time, Judge Arguelles
was presiding. Judge Arguelles noted that there was “a minute order saying that May
28th the minor admitted a violation of probation” and “[a]pparently, probation is
recommending that [the minor] just be shipped off to Vegas to live with his mother.”
Judge Arguelles disagreed with that proposal and stated that his intention was “probably
to send him to DJJ [Department of Juvenile Justice] but I’d be willing to hear argument
for Level B.” Because the minor’s regular attorney was not present, however, Judge
Arguelles agreed to continue the disposition hearing to June 8, when she would be back.
8
At the hearing on June 8, the minor’s attorney objected to Judge Arguelles
presiding over the disposition because “we have not affirmatively asserted an Arbuckle
waiver in this case.” She requested that the matter be set for hearing in front of Judge
Sapunor, who she believed was sitting in Sacramento for the next two weeks. Judge
Arguelles reiterated his disagreement with the proposed disposition of sending the minor
to live with his mother in Las Vegas, set a schedule for the parties to brief the application
of Arbuckle, and continued the matter to July 2.
On June 25, the minor commenced the present proceeding in this court by filing a
petition for a writ of mandate, essentially requesting that we order Judge Arguelles to
either: (1) impose the disposition the parties had agreed upon in front of Judge Sapunor
or (2) set the case for a disposition hearing in front of Judge Sapunor. The minor also
requested a stay on further proceedings in the juvenile court pending our resolution of the
matter. We issued the requested stay that same day, excepting from the stay “the superior
court’s determination on the Arbuckle waiver.”
On July 6, Judge Arguelles issued a written ruling in which he denied the minor’s
objection to him conducting the disposition hearing “because the minor did not have a
reasonable expectation that the same judge who took his admission/plea would be the
same judge who imposed the disposition.”3 Judge Arguelles also acknowledged that his
rejection of the proposed disposition that was part of the plea agreement would entitle the
minor to withdraw his plea but noted that the stay ordered by this court precluded him
from either offering the minor the right to do so or proceeding with disposition if the
minor elected not to do so.
3 While the superior court’s order of July 6, 2015, was not part of the record
produced by the minor in support of his petition (because the order did not yet exist when
the minor filed his petition), we take judicial notice of it on our own motion. (Evid.
Code, §§ 452, subd. (d), 459, subd. (a).)
9
DISCUSSION
As we noted at the outset of this opinion, the question in this case is whether the
minor has a right under Arbuckle to insist that Judge Sapunor preside over his disposition
hearing. In support of his writ petition, the minor argues that his case must be sent back
to Judge Sapunor for disposition “because the record does not show he knowingly waived
his right to enforce the implied term of his plea bargain . . . that he would be sentenced by
the same judge who accepted his plea/admission.” Of course, this assertion begs the
question of whether the minor had such a right in the first place -- that is, whether it was
an implied term of his plea agreement that Judge Sapunor would impose the disposition
in the minor’s case. If the minor never had an “Arbuckle right” to be sentenced by the
same judge who accepted his negotiated plea,4 then he had nothing to waive, knowingly
or otherwise. Thus, the real question for us to resolve is not waiver, but whether the
minor ever had an Arbuckle right. To answer that question, we first examine Arbuckle
and many of the cases that have followed in its wake.
In Arbuckle, Judge Robert H. London accepted a negotiated plea of guilty from the
defendant to a charge of assault with a deadly weapon in exchange for dismissal of two
other charges and agreement that the judge would follow the sentencing recommendation
in a diagnostic report from the Department of Corrections. (People v. Arbuckle, supra,
22 Cal.3d at pp. 752-753.) The report ultimately recommended prison, although a
minority report recommended probation with maximum jail time. (Id. at p. 752.) Before
4 We refer to the minor being sentenced, knowing that is not the right term, only to
avoid unnecessarily complicating the discussion in this case. Arbuckle applies equally to
criminal proceedings and delinquency proceedings where wardship is premised on the
minor’s violation of a criminal law. The former cases involve defendants, pleas, and
sentences; the latter cases involve minors, admissions, and dispositions. For ease of
discussion, however, we will sometimes use the terms applicable to the former cases,
although in doing so we intend to encompass the terms applicable to the latter cases as
well.
10
the sentencing hearing, however, Judge London was transferred to another department.
(Id. at p. 753.) When the case was called before Judge Raymond R. Roberts, the
defendant objected to imposition of sentence by Judge Roberts and insisted that he was
entitled to be sentenced by Judge London. (Ibid.) Judge Roberts disagreed and
sentenced him to prison. (Ibid.)
On review, the Supreme Court agreed with the defendant “that the plea bargain
herein was entered in expectation of and in reliance upon sentence being imposed by the
same judge.” (People v. Arbuckle, supra, 22 Cal.3d at p. 756.) The court noted that its
conclusion was “supported by the judge’s repeated use of the personal pronoun when
referring to sentencing in the proceeding in which the plea bargain was accepted.”5
(Ibid.) The court then continued as follows: “As a general principle, moreover,
whenever a judge accepts a plea bargain and retains sentencing discretion under the
agreement, an implied term of the bargain is that sentence will be imposed by that judge.
Because of the range of dispositions available to a sentencing judge, the propensity in
sentencing demonstrated by a particular judge is an inherently significant factor in the
defendant’s decision to enter a guilty plea.” (Id. at pp. 756-757.) The court determined
that “[b]ecause the defendant has been denied that aspect of his plea bargain, the sentence
imposed by another judge cannot be allowed to stand,” and defendant was “entitled to be
sentenced by Judge London, or if internal court administrative practices render that
impossible, then in the alternative defendant should be permitted to withdraw his plea.”
(Id. at p. 757.)
5 Specifically, Judge London told the defendant, “ ‘I have agreed, as has your
attorney, Mr. Kenner, that before I could send you to the State Prison, I would have to get
that 90-day diagnostic study and I would follow the recommendation.” (People v.
Arbuckle, supra, 22 Cal.3d at p. 756, fn. 4.)
11
As can be seen, the brief discussion in Arbuckle of the right to be sentenced by the
judge who accepted a negotiated plea was somewhat confusing. First, the Supreme Court
engaged in an individualized analysis of the case and determined that based on what
Judge London said to the defendant at the plea hearing, the defendant entered into the
plea agreement “in expectation of and in reliance upon sentence being imposed by the
same judge.” (People v. Arbuckle, supra, 22 Cal.3d at p. 756.) Immediately thereafter,
however, the Supreme Court appeared to announce a broad and general rule that
“whenever a judge accepts a plea bargain and retains sentencing discretion under the
agreement, an implied term of the bargain is that sentence will be imposed by that judge.”
(Id. at pp. 756-757, italics added.)
In the first six years that followed Arbuckle, the courts of appeal consistently
applied the general rule stated in Arbuckle, eschewing any individualized analysis as to
whether the defendant in a particular case had reason to believe based on the specific
facts of the case that the judge who accepted the negotiated plea would be the one who
imposed sentence. (See In re Ray O. (1979) 97 Cal.App.3d 136, 139-140 [“In the
absence of clear waiver, whenever a juvenile enters a plea bargain before a judge he has
the right to be sentenced by that same judge,” fn. omitted]; People v. DeJesus (1980) 110
Cal.App.3d 413, 418 [“The court in Arbuckle held that the defendant is entitled to be
sentenced by the judge who accepts the guilty plea pursuant to plea bargain”]; People v.
Pedregon (1981) 115 Cal.App.3d 723, 725 [referring to “the Arbuckle court’s finding of
an implicit term in every plea bargain that the sentence will be imposed by the judge who
accepts the plea”]; In re Thomas S. (1981) 124 Cal.App.3d 934, 937 [“Arbuckle held that
an implicit term of a plea bargain is the trial judge who takes the plea will also be the
sentencing judge”]; People v. Rosaia (1984) 157 Cal.App.3d 832, 837 [referring to “the
rule that a defendant who pleads guilty has the right to be sentenced by the same judge
who accepted the plea”].) This line of cases gave rise to the term “Arbuckle right” (In re
Thomas S., at p. 937) or sometimes, “Arbuckle rights” (Rosaia, at p. 838), which was
12
understood as the right of every defendant who enters a negotiated plea to be sentenced
by the judge who accepted the plea.
The concept of an Arbuckle right, in turn, engendered two related concepts: an
Arbuckle admonishment and an Arbuckle waiver. On the latter point (waiver), the
appellate court in Ray O. observed early on that the right to be sentenced by the same
judge who accepted the negotiated plea could be relinquished by “a clear waiver.” (In re
Ray O., supra, 97 Cal.App.3d at pp. 139-140.) Two years later, the court in Thomas S.
first employed the term “Arbuckle waiver” to describe such a relinquishment. (In re
Thomas S., supra, 124 Cal.App.3d at p. 937.) On the former point (admonishment), the
court in Thomas S. also concluded that “a juvenile court should advise a minor of his
Arbuckle right during the jurisdictional hearing or at the commencement of the
dispositional hearing if another judge is presiding,” although the court declined to
“establish[] a rule for all juvenile cases which would require the Arbuckle admonishment
to be given with the express waiver from the minor to be reflected on the record.” (In re
Thomas S., at p. 940.)
Five years after Arbuckle, the California Supreme Court spoke for a second time
on the issue in In re Mark L. (1983) 34 Cal.3d 171. In applying Arbuckle in Mark L., the
Supreme Court took the opposite course from that charted by the courts of appeal in Ray
O. and its progeny. Specifically, the Supreme Court did not invoke the broad general rule
from Arbuckle and instead looked to the record in the case before it to see whether the
record “indicate[d] an actual assumption by the court and parties that the officer taking
the plea would have final and exclusive dispositional authority.” (Mark L., at p. 177.)
The Supreme Court found that it did because the commissioner “made repeated
references to the dispositions ‘the Court’ could or might impose,” which, construed in the
context of the commissioner’s “interchangeable use of the personal pronoun with the
phrase ‘the Court’ implied that he and ‘the Court’ were one and the same.” (Id. at
pp. 173, 177.) The Supreme Court also noted that the commissioner had given the minor
13
an Arbuckle admonishment and that “considerable effort was expended to ensure that he,
rather than some other judge or referee, would act at the dispositional phase.” (Ibid.)
Notwithstanding the Supreme Court’s individualized analysis of the record in
Mark L., rather than application of the general rule from Arbuckle, some courts of appeal
continued to simply apply the general rule in the wake of Mark L. (E.g., People v.
Rosaia, supra, 157 Cal.App.3d at p. 832.) In March of 1985, however, one court of
appeal heeded and followed Mark L.’s individualized approach to the issue. (In re James
H. (1985) 165 Cal.App.3d 911.) In James H., the appellate court drew from both
Arbuckle and Mark L. in determining that it is not “always an implied term of a plea
bargain that the judge who accepts the admission or plea will impose the sentence”;
instead, the record must be examined to determine whether it contains “the type of factors
relied on in Arbuckle and In re Mark L. to support the assumption that the admission was
entered in expectation of and reliance upon disposition being imposed by the same
judge.” (James H., at pp. 919, 920.)
Two months after James H., this court also applied the individualized approach
from Mark L. in determining whether the defendant had a reasonable expectation that he
would be sentenced by the same judge who accepted his negotiated plea. (People v. Ruhl
(1985) 168 Cal.App.3d 311, 315.) Other courts, however, continued to follow Ray O.
and its progeny, relying on the general rule from Arbuckle and eschewing any
individualized analysis. (E.g., People v. Poole (1985) 168 Cal.App.3d 516, 521.) Still
other courts cited the general rule but nonetheless engaged in an individualized analysis.
(E.g., People v. Santos (1985) 171 Cal.App.3d 67, 70-71.)
In 1989, the Fifth Appellate District -- which was responsible for many of the
decisions following the general rule from Arbuckle rather than an individualized analysis
(including Ray O., DeJesus, and Rosaia) -- broke ranks with its earlier line of cases and
joined the line of appellate court authority represented by James H. and Ruhl. (People v.
Horn (1989) 213 Cal.App.3d 701.) In Horn, the Fifth District specifically disapproved
14
its earlier decisions “to the extent they either hold or suggest the Arbuckle term is implied
in all plea bargains” and instead concluded that Arbuckle applies only “to those cases
where the record affirmatively supports a defendant’s reasonable expectation the judge
accepting his plea will also impose sentence.” (Id. at pp. 707, 708.)
Horn appears to have been the final nail in the coffin for Ray O. and its progeny
and the idea that every defendant who enters a negotiated plea has an Arbuckle right to be
sentenced by the same judge who accepted the plea, as no published case since Horn has
deviated from the individualized approach under which the court examines the record to
determine what the defendant reasonably could have expected at the time the plea was
entered. Still, old rules die hard, and broad statements of the general rule have continued
to appear in cases occasionally since Horn. (E.g., People v. Arata (2007) 151
Cal.App.4th 778, 787 [asserting that Arbuckle “held where a judge accepts a plea bargain
and retains sentencing discretion, there is an implied term of the bargain that sentence
will be imposed by that judge”].) Such broad statements have also continued to appear,
with much greater frequency, in the treatises, which often leave the distinct impression
that the general rule from Arbuckle is still very much alive, despite the stake the Fifth
District tried to drive into its heart more than a quarter of a century ago in Horn. (See,
e.g., 2 Erwin et al., Cal. Criminal Defense Practice (2015) Arraignment & Pleas,
§ 42.44[1], pp. 42-154.8(5)-42-154.9 [“whenever a judge accepts a plea bargain and
retains sentencing discretion, under the agreement, an implied term of the bargain is that
sentence will be imposed by that judge”]; Cal. Criminal Law: Procedure and Practice
(Cont.Ed.Bar 2015) Pronouncing Judgment, § 35.11, p. 1028 [“A defendant who pleads
guilty has the right to be sentenced by the judge before whom the guilty plea was entered
if that judge retained sentencing discretion under the agreement,” italics omitted];
Levenson, Cal. Criminal Procedure (The Rutter Group 2014) Plea Bargaining, § 14:18,
p. 14-20 [“When the plea agreement provides that the judge who accepts the plea retains
sentencing discretion, that judge must sentence the defendant”]; Cal. Judges
15
Benchguides: Criminal Proceedings (CJER 2013) Felony Arraignment and Pleas,
§ 91.29, p. 91-26 [“When a judge accepts a plea bargain and retains sentencing discretion
under the agreement, an implied term of the bargain is that sentence will be imposed by
that judge”].)
Notwithstanding these vestiges of Arbuckle’s “general principle,” it appears to us
to have been settled law for more than 25 years that an Arbuckle right to be sentenced by
the judge who accepted a negotiated plea arises not as a matter of general principle, but
only when the specific facts of a given case show that the plea was given “in expectation
of and in reliance upon sentence being imposed by the same judge.” (People v. Arbuckle,
supra, 22 Cal.3d at p. 756.) Thus, in James H., for example, the appellate court
concluded the minor had no Arbuckle right because (1) “[i]n accepting the minor’s
admission . . . , the Los Angeles Superior Court judge neither used the personal pronoun
in referring to the dispositional hearing, nor expended any effort to insure that he would
act at the dispositional hearing; and (2) the “minor was forewarned a number of times
that the San Bernardino court, not the Los Angeles court, would handle disposition of
minor’s case.” (In re James H., supra, 165 Cal.App.3d at p. 920.) And in Ruhl, this
court concluded the defendant had no Arbuckle right because (1) “[t]he detailed, written
plea agreement expressly set forth all terms of the agreement” and “sentencing by Judge
Keeley was not one of the agreed terms”; (2) “when Judge Keeley took defendant’s plea,
he gave no indication that he would be the sentencing judge”; and (3) “defendant Ruhl
decided to plead guilty long before he ever got to superior court” and thus “the identity of
the judge taking his plea clearly did not influence his decision.” (People v. Ruhl, supra,
168 Cal.App.3d at pp. 315, 316.)
On the other hand, in People v. Serrato (1988) 201 Cal.App.3d 761, this court held
the defendant had an Arbuckle right “because of the judge’s use of the personal pronoun
‘I’ in accepting the plea.” (Id. at p. 764.) Similarly, in People v. Adams (1990) 224
Cal.App.3d 1540, the court concluded the defendant “did have an Arbuckle right”
16
because “[t]he judge at the change of plea hearing asked ‘Do you understand that the
maximum sentence I could impose in this case is up to eight years in state prison and
$20,000 fine?’ ” and “[t]he clerk later suggested a date for sentencing in ‘this
department.’ ” (Id. at p. 1543.)
In light of the foregoing case law, we believe the question for us to answer in this
case is whether the record shows that it was an express or implied term of the minor’s
plea agreement that Judge Sapunor would preside over his disposition hearing on his
admission of the two probation violations, such that it can be said that the minor entered
into the plea agreement “in expectation of and in reliance upon” disposition being
imposed by Judge Sapunor. (People v. Arbuckle, supra, 22 Cal.3d at p. 756.) Such
circumstances are not shown in the record.
Before we address the minor’s arguments, we pause to put to rest an idea the facts
of this case may suggest. Because the plea agreement here was based on a specific
disposition -- release from custody and transfer of the case to Nevada so the minor could
live with his mother in Las Vegas -- it might be argued that Arbuckle does not apply at
all, because Arbuckle applies only when the court “retains sentencing discretion under the
[plea] agreement.” (People v. Arbuckle, supra, 22 Cal.3d at p. 756.) We have two
responses to that argument. First, that language comes from the general principle stated
in Arbuckle, and as we have explained above, that general principle long ago ceased to be
applied by the California Supreme Court (see Mark L.) or by the courts of appeal in
preference to the individualized approach, which asks whether the record affirmatively
supports the conclusion that the defendant entered into the negotiated plea in expectation
and reliance upon sentence being imposed by the judge who accepted the plea. Second,
the fact is that the court always retains sentencing discretion in the event of a negotiated
plea, because if the court decides at sentencing that it does not want to impose the agreed-
upon sentence, the court can withdraw its approval of the plea, in which case the
defendant must be permitted to withdraw the plea itself. This is true both in criminal
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cases (see Pen. Code, § 1192.5)6 and in juvenile delinquency cases (see In re Ricardo C.
(2013) 220 Cal.App.4th 688, 698-699). Accordingly, the fact that this case involved an
agreed-upon disposition has no effect on the application of Arbuckle here.
With that observation out of the way, we turn to the minor’s arguments. In
asserting that he was entitled to have disposition imposed by Judge Sapunor, the minor
argues that he “certainly was under the belief that the dispositional orders of his
negotiated plea would be carried out at his next appearance in that the court that took his
plea/admission [Judge Sapunor] told the parties, when they realized some logistical
problems, ‘Maybe we ought to put this out for a week to make sure that the disposition
goes as planned.’ ” (Bold text omitted.) This argument is unpersuasive for two reasons.
First, to the extent the minor is arguing that he had an Arbuckle right because he had a
reasonable expectation that he would receive the promised disposition, we disagree. A
defendant’s expectation that he will receive an agreed-upon sentence is not the same
expectation with which Arbuckle is concerned: the expectation of being sentenced by the
same judge who accepted the negotiated plea.
Under Arbuckle, when a defendant is denied the benefit of a term of his plea
agreement that he will be sentenced by the judge who accepted his plea, the defendant is
entitled to specific performance of that term -- that is, he is entitled to be sentenced by
that judge -- unless specific performance is impossible. On the other hand, as we have
6 “Where the plea is accepted by the prosecuting attorney in open court and is
approved by the court, the defendant, except as otherwise provided in this section, cannot
be sentenced on the plea to a punishment more severe than that specified in the plea and
the court may not proceed as to the plea other than as specified in the plea. [¶] If the
court approves of the plea, it shall inform the defendant prior to the making of the plea
that (1) its approval is not binding, (2) it may, at the time set for the hearing on the
application for probation or pronouncement of judgment, withdraw its approval in the
light of further consideration of the matter, and (3) in that case, the defendant shall be
permitted to withdraw his or her plea if he or she desires to do so.” (Pen. Code,
§ 1192.5.)
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seen, when a defendant is denied a promised disposition, the defendant is not entitled to
specific performance of that promise; instead, he is only entitled to withdraw his plea.
Thus, the two issues are simply not the same. What that means here is that even though
the minor had a reasonable expectation that he would receive the agreed-upon
disposition, that expectation did not entitle him to have Judge Sapunor preside over his
disposition hearing. To establish that he is entitled to the same judge at sentencing, the
minor has to show that it was agreed -- either expressly or implicitly -- that Judge
Sapunor would sentence him.
Second, to the extent the minor may be suggesting that Judge Sapunor’s use of the
word “we” in the statement, “[m]aybe we ought to put this out for a week to make sure
that the disposition goes as planned,” implied that Judge Sapunor would preside over the
disposition hearing because Judge Sapunor would be one of those who would “make sure
that the disposition goes as planned,” that argument is also unavailing. As we have
explained, expectations that the disposition would go as planned are different from
expectations that the same judge would preside over the disposition. Here, the use of the
word “we” evidences the former but not the latter. The plea agreement -- as succinctly
summarized by the minor’s attorney at the very outset of the hearing on May 28 --
included nothing that either explicitly or implicitly suggested that Judge Sapunor would
preside over the disposition hearing on June 4.
Examining the remaining arguments in the minor’s petition, we discern that they
are all variations on the theme we have discussed already: namely, that the minor
reasonably expected that he would receive the promised disposition. Thus, the minor
argues as follows:
1) “Although Judge Sapunor did not use the personal pronoun ‘I’ when he took
[the minor]’s admission, it was clear he intended that the negotiated plea and disposition
be carried out”;
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2) “It is clear in this case that the parties assumed that disposition would be carried
out as anticipated by Judge Sapunor in that it was the only possible disposition
contemplated by the court at the time of the negotiated settlement and beginning of the
dispositional hearing on May 28, 2015”; and
3) “Judge Sapunor certainly anticipated the plea/admission agreement and
disposition would be carried out as agreed.”
As we have explained already, however, the fact that an agreed-upon disposition
was part of the plea agreement does not give rise to an Arbuckle right to be sentenced by
the same judge who accepted the plea. For the minor to have had an Arbuckle right, there
must be something in the record that affirmatively supports the conclusion that he entered
into the plea agreement “in expectation of and in reliance upon” disposition being
imposed by Judge Sapunor. (People v. Arbuckle, supra, 22 Cal.3d at p. 756.) Saying that
the parties and Judge Sapunor expected the minor to receive the agreed-upon disposition
is not the same as saying they expected Judge Sapunor to impose that disposition, let
alone the same as saying that the minor entered into the plea agreement based on the
understanding that Judge Sapunor would preside at the disposition hearing.
Nothing in the minor’s traverse alters our conclusion that he has not shown any
basis for finding he had an Arbuckle right to have disposition imposed by Judge Sapunor.
In the traverse, he argues that he reasonably expected Judge Sapunor to conduct the
disposition hearing because of “the uniqueness of the disposition itself.” Frankly,
however, it does not matter that “this was going to be a transfer out to another jurisdiction
after an agreement between two states, California and Nevada, based on an interstate
compact,” (italics added) or that “[t]he details of the agreement had all been worked out,
except [the minor]’s travel arrangements,” or that “the disposition would have been
completed on May 28, 2015” “[b]ut for the in-court probation officer’s request for [the
minor]’s grandmother to bring [the minor]’s travel documents to court to insure that the
interstate compact not have to be reconstituted.” None of these factors bears on the
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question of whether the minor entered into the plea agreement based on the reasonable
belief that Judge Sapunor would preside over the disposition hearing.
To the extent the minor relies on various statements Judge Sapunor made
beginning with his statement, “[m]aybe we ought to put this out for a week to make sure
that the disposition goes as planned,” we have answered that argument already above.
Nothing Judge Sapunor said reasonably tends to show that the minor entered into the plea
agreement based on the belief that Judge Sapunor would impose the disposition.
To the extent the minor argues that “Judge Sapunor’s participation in the
settlement of the minor’s case in this instance was certainly the most ‘significant factor’
in [the minor’s] decision to admit to the violation of probation and to resolve his case,”
(bold text omitted) we have two responses. First, the truth of that assertion is not shown
as a matter of record; rather, the minor asks us to speculate based on “the history Judge
Arguelles had with [the minor]” that the presence of Judge Sapunor at the hearing on
May 28 was a significant motivating factor in the minor deciding to enter into a plea
agreement. Second, even if we could say that Judge Sapunor’s presence at the settlement
conference was a significant factor in the minor deciding to enter a negotiated plea, that
still is not the same as saying that the minor entered into the plea agreement “in
expectation of and in reliance upon” disposition being imposed by Judge Sapunor.
(People v. Arbuckle, supra, 22 Cal.3d at p. 756.) There has to be something in the record
to show that the minor entered into the plea agreement at least in part because he
expected and relied on Judge Sapunor being the judge who would impose disposition. As
we have explained, the minor has not identified any such factor.
To the extent the minor argues that our refusal to find an Arbuckle right here “will
have a significant chilling effect on future plea negotiations in this jurisdiction, simply
because counsel and minors will not know to what degree of certainty they can rely on
the negotiated settlement[s]” approved by Judge Sapunor and “other regularly scheduled
visiting judges,” we have three responses. First, we are not aware of any provision of law
21
that would allow us to recognize the existence of an Arbuckle right just because refusing
to do so could be deemed to have negative consequences in other cases. The Arbuckle
right does not come and go to suit various perceived policy objectives; it is a contractual
right that arises, or does not arise, in a given case based on the specific facts of that case,
which will show, or not show, that the defendant entered into a plea agreement in
expectation of and reliance upon sentence being imposed by the same judge who
accepted the plea. That predicate factual basis for the right simply has not been shown to
exist here.
Second, to the extent the minor’s argument rests on the lack of certainty as to
whether an agreed-upon disposition will actually be imposed, such uncertainty is inherent
in the law that provides that a promised disposition is never specifically enforceable, and
the court can always decide to impose a different disposition, provided the defendant is
given the opportunity to withdraw his or her plea if the court exercises that option. (See
Pen. Code, § 1192.5; In re: Ricardo C., supra, 220 Cal.App.4th at pp. 698-699.)
Whether we find an Arbuckle right in this case cannot affect, in any manner, the inherent
uncertainty in promised dispositions.
Perhaps the best way of fostering certainty and settled expectations in light of
these concerns would be to encourage the use of an Arbuckle request. That is, a
defendant considering entering into a plea agreement who decides that he or she wants to
be sentenced by the same judge to whom the plea agreement is being presented for
approval can request that the prosecution agree to, and that the court approve, the
inclusion of an Arbuckle right in the agreement. Making the Arbuckle issue explicit in
the course of plea negotiations by expressly requesting an Arbuckle term in the plea
agreement will necessarily eliminate the uncertainty that comes with trying to discern
from an often vague record whether the defendant entered into the plea agreement in
expectation of and reliance upon sentence being imposed by the judge who accepted the
plea, such that the right to be sentenced by that judge is implicit in the agreement.
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In the meantime, the minor has failed to persuade us that he entered into the plea
agreement here in expectation of and reliance upon Judge Sapunor presiding over the
disposition hearing. Thus, the right to have Judge Sapunor impose disposition was
neither an express nor an implicit term of his plea agreement. Accordingly, the minor is
not entitled to the relief he seeks in this proceeding.
DISPOSITION
The petition for writ of mandate is denied, and the stay issued by this court on
June 25, 2015, is vacated upon finality of this opinion.
Robie, Acting P.J.
We concur:
Mauro, J.
Murray, J.
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