Filed 2/2/16 P. v. Stecker CA1/2
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION TWO
THE PEOPLE,
Plaintiff and Respondent,
A141586
v.
DANIEL DUANE STECKER, (Contra Costa County
Super. Ct. No. 05-122136-5)
Defendant and Appellant.
Defendant Daniel Duane Stecker was convicted after a bench trial on stipulated
facts of violating Penal Code section 290.013, subdivision (a),1 a sex offender registrant
who failed to report a change of address. Defendant contends that the judgment must be
reversed because he never had a statutory duty to register as a sex offender; instead, his
registration requirement arose in 2008 as part of a probationary sentence after a
negotiated plea bargain. We agree with defendant, and reverse the judgment.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
After a short bench trial before Judge Theresa Canepa, on November 21, 2013,
defendant was convicted in Contra Costa County Superior Court of violating section
290.013, subdivision (a), a felony, failure to register a change of address or location, from
on or about September 1 through December 28, 2011. The parties acknowledged that the
underlying facts were not in dispute, and defendant stipulated to the use and admissibility
of the district attorney’s trial exhibits rather than live testimony.
1
All statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise stated.
1
The bench trial centered on what happened in San Luis Obispo Superior Court in
2008, and for this the trial court relied on the change of plea and sentencing hearings.
The Underlying Plea and Sentence in San Luis Obispo County
On April 7, 2008, defendant was charged in a two-count information with oral
copulation with a person under 18, in violation of section 288a, subdivision (b)(1); and
intercourse with a person under 18 and more than three years younger than defendant, to
wit 16 years old, in violation of section 261.5, subdivision (c). It was alleged that the
offenses were committed on September 8, 2007. Defendant was 20 years old at the time.
On September 8, 2008, defendant pleaded no contest to both counts of the
information, pursuant to a negotiated disposition. Before he entered his change of plea,
the following exchange took place between Judge Ernest Borunda and counsel:
“MR. MACKAOUI [defense counsel]: Well your honor, I believe we have a
resolution of Mr. Stecker’s case. The discussions have led to his understanding that if he
were to enter a no-contest plea to both count 1 and count 2 of the complaint that he would
be placed on felony probation. The matter would be referred to the probation department
for report and recommendation on sentencing, with the understanding he would serve no
more than one year in the county jail.
“It is his further understanding, your honor, that he would—and by the agreement
of the parties that during the period of probation, he would be required to register
pursuant to Penal Code 290. [(Emphasis added.)]
“The parties—this is going to be on the central discussion of the case. That is the
offer that the People have made for quite some time and that it is his understanding that at
the conclusion of the probation period or by agreement of the parties he would be
allowed to come back and ask the court for relief under the registration requirements
pursuant to Penal Code 290.
“There is no set agreement as to the amount of jail time. The other terms and
conditions would be standard for cases of this type and he understands that if he were to
fail probation and be sent to prison, the maximum penalty is three years, eight months.”
The court asked the prosecutor to respond, which he did:
2
“MR. CADENA [prosecutor]: Yes, your honor. The only thing I would add is at
the time of sentencing, People would be willing to put this on the record: Mr. Stecker’s
registration could be for a lifetime. However, after the five years probation if he were to
come in we would not oppose the court, following successful probation, excluding him
from registering under Penal Code 290. The reason we’d like the language that way is it
puts the burden on Mr. Stecker to come in and take a proactive role and show the People
he has been successful and he has been rehabilitated.
“We believe that is the state of law as well as the Hofsheier matter as well as the
Garcia matter. However I don’t have a citation for the court. . . .”
At this point, defense counsel interjected and provided the court the case names
and cites on the record.2
Before he accepted the no contest pleas, Judge Borunda advised defendant:
“THE COURT: . . . We are going to send this out for a report but the attorneys
have already evidently agreed there is going to be a minimum or maximum of five years
felony probation. It is going to be five years you are going to be put on probation. Do
you understand that?”
“THE DEFENDANT: Yes, sir.
“THE COURT: And the people indicated they are going to argue between 270
days and 360 days in the county jail. Do you understand that?
“THE DEFENDANT: Yes, sir. . . .
“THE COURT: All right. There is a one-year lid. It cannot go over 360 days.
They cannot go over the 360 at this point in time. That has nothing to do with future if
you have any violations.
“Okay. In addition to that, the law requires that you register under 290. We have
new case law that has come down that seems to suggest, and I think it does suggest, if
there is relief from that under certain circumstances, the attorneys have both said if you
2
The prosecutor was referring to People v. Hofsheier (2006) 37 Cal.4th 1185,
overruled by Johnson v. Department of Justice (2015) 60 Cal.4th 871; and People v.
Garcia (2008) 161 Cal.App.4th 475.
3
are successful for five years, you can come into the court and petition to be relieved of
that responsibility.
“Now, petitioning is a right that you are given under this agreement but what the
outcome is is completely up to the court at that point in time, and also up to any changes
in law that may occur. You need to understand that. Do you understand?
“THE DEFENDANT: Yes, sir.
“THE COURT: Okay. So it is not a lock. I don’t want you to walk out of here
thinking in five years if I’m a great guy I’m out of this registration issue because it is not
a lock. You have to earn it. And I think [the prosecutor] put it very well when you said
that, you do have to earn it. Okay?
“THE DEFENDANT: Yes, your honor.”
The court then accepted the plea.
Defendant was sentenced in San Luis Obispo County on December 16, 2008, by
Judge Ginger E. Garrett. Defense counsel addressed the court at the beginning of the
hearing, apparently with regard to the probation report:
“MR. MACKAOUI [defense counsel]: . . . The rest of the report is in
understanding that the court is going to place [defendant] on a five-year felony grant of
probation. The understanding is there is going to be a registration requirement as a
condition of that probation. But that if he’s successful on probation, he could come back
to the court and petition to seek relief from that. That was the offer from the People and I
think that was his understanding when he entered the plea. [(Emphasis added.)]
“The rest of the terms of probation appear to be pretty much in accord with what
this type of charge normally would have.”
The prosecutor addressed the court about various matters relating to sentencing
(and unrelated to this appeal), and did not respond to or contradict any of defense
counsel’s statements about the section 290 registration requirement as a condition of
probation.
The court, without further comment or question on the section 290 registration
requirement, then sentenced defendant:
4
“THE COURT: I’ll indicate I’ve read and considered the report. The imposition
of sentence is suspended for five years.
“Mr. Stecker, I’m placing you on formal probation, you’re to serve 270 days in
county jail beginning December 30, 2008, at 8:00 a.m. You’re to receive credit for 12
days.
“I’m imposing the registration requirement. And as discussed when you entered
your plea, and again today, you can petition the court to have that requirement removed if
you don’t have any other law violations at the end of your probationary period. I can’t
make any promises about whether it will be removed at that time, but you are in a
position to make that request. [(Emphasis added.)]
“You’re to contact probation within 72 hours of your release from custody.
You’re to comply with all of the terms and conditions of probation; including no alcohol,
no illegal drugs.
“Sir, have you gone over all these terms and conditions with your attorney?
“THE DEFENDANT: Yes, your honor.
“THE COURT: And are you agreeing to abide by the terms and conditions?
“THE DEFENDANT: Yes, your honor.
“THE COURT: I’m entering no contact orders for both of the victims. . . . It
would be a violation of this protective order to own or posses[s] any firearms.
“Do you understand the terms of the protective orders, sir?
“THE DEFENDANT: Yes, your honor. . . .
“THE COURT: . . . Mr. Stecker, I hope you get it now. I don’t think you got it
the first time. I hope you get it this time that this is not any kind of conduct that you can
engage in again, or, really, there’s no one [sic] more places for you to go and you’ll put
yourself right into state prison in all probability if this kind of behavior occurs again.
[¶] Do you understand that, sir?
“THE DEFENDANT: Yes, your honor.
“THE COURT: All right. Good luck to you.”
5
The Order of Probation signed by Judge Garrett sets forth the terms and conditions
of probation. It is a printed four-page form. Among the items “x’d” is item 7a. , which
requires defendant to “[r]egister pursuant to: [¶] Penal Code Section 290 (sex
offender) . . . .” On the last page of the form is defendant’s signature, stating that “I have
read and understand the terms and conditions of my probation and will receive a copy of
the Order.”
Defendant Fails to Register in Contra Costa County in 2011
It was undisputed at the bench trial in Contra Costa County that defendant
complied with the section 290 registration requirements in San Luis Obispo County, and
later, when he moved to Pleasant Hill, in Contra Costa County, until sometime in
September 2011. A woman from whom defendant had been renting a room went to the
Pleasant Hill police station to report that defendant had moved out of his last registered
address in Pleasant Hill, allegedly without paying rent. A Pleasant Hill police officer
determined that defendant was on probation in Contra Costa County, subject to updating
his section 290 registration, and that he had not done so. The police officer contacted
defendant’s Contra Costa County probation officer, and a probation violation warrant was
issued. Defendant was arrested on this warrant in San Francisco on December 19, 2011.
This Felony Case Is Filed in Contra Costa County
On December 28, 2011, the Contra Costa County District Attorney filed a felony
complaint against defendant for failure to register change of address location (§ 290.013,
subd. (a)), which set in motion the eventual trial and judgment in November 2013 that is
now the subject of this appeal.3
3
The original Contra Costa County complaint was dismissed after preliminary
hearing, by Judge Nancy Davis Stark, who concluded that “this case has a jurisdictional
problem in that it should not have been charged at all,” and defendant “could only be
revoked on his probation, but failure to file—to register cannot constitute [a] new
offense.” Judge Stark stated that this “court will not make a holding order, and it’s not
based on insufficiency of the evidence.” Another superior court judge (Judge John
Laettner) then granted the prosecution’s motion to reinstate the complaint pursuant to
section 871.5. A second preliminary hearing was held and defendant was held to answer.
Defendant filed a motion pursuant to section 995 to dismiss the information on the
6
Defendant agreed to a bench trial and stipulated to all relevant facts. Judge
Canepa, the trial judge in Contra Costa County noted, “This Court is not an Appellate
Court. This Court has absolutely no jurisdiction to invalidate an order of the San L[uis]
Obispo court, whether lawful or unlawful, because there are other remedies that Mr.
Stecker has for that and that he potentially still has for that. Those are on habeas. [¶] But
in terms of this Court sitting as an Appellate Court, this Court is not going to do that. It
does not have the jurisdiction. I am not going to violate that rule by—which says that I
have to grant comity to that ruling. . . .” Later Judge Canepa stated, “I consider the order
of the San L[uis] Obispo court an order that this Court must acknowledge. I cannot
overturn that order. [¶] And if the defendant was required to register, which he was by
virtue of all of the transcripts I read, and he failed to do so, then you’re asking this Court
to ignore a violation of the law.” Judge Canepa found defendant guilty as charged for
failing to report a change of address pursuant to section 290.013, subdivision (a).
By this point, defendant’s probation had been transferred to San Francisco County,
and was scheduled to expire on December 16, 2013. Judge Canepa agreed to postpone
sentencing until after defendant’s probation matter would be resolved in San Francisco.
On April 4, 2014, Judge Canepa heard and denied defendant’s motion for new
trial. It was a subject of some discussion at the motion for new trial and at the sentencing
that followed that defendant’s underlying probation had been terminated in San Francisco
County Superior Court, and he was no longer required to register as a sex offender under
section 290. Judge Canepa made clear that she was not basing her denial of motion for
new trial or her sentence on what had happened in San Francisco Superior Court. She
stated:
ground that the failure to register could only be a probation violation, not a separate
charge, which was denied on February 15, 2013. Defendant filed another motion to
dismiss, after receiving a transcript of the sentencing hearing from the San Luis Obispo
case, which was also denied. We summarily denied a petition for a writ of prohibition.
(Stecker v. Superior Court of Contra Costa County, No. A139213.) All of this happened
before the bench trial in this case presided over by Judge Canepa.
7
“Well, [the registration requirement] was ended by the San Francisco court.4
However, it’s been a contention that he has had that 290 registration since it was imposed
by the court in San L[uis] Obispo. And it was under that probation that he violated in
Contra Costa County, he had that requirement to register, because clearly he was late on
it. But he did go to do so in San Francisco, as I understand it. [¶] So the fact that the San
Francisco court has now terminated, I don’t think is dispositive. So I’m imposing it.”
Judge Canepa then pronounced sentence. Imposition of sentence was suspended,
and defendant was placed on probation for three years, with various terms and conditions,
including that he serve 105 days in the county jail, credit for time served of 60 days, and
the remainder to be served on electronic home detention program. He was required to
register pursuant to section 290 for the rest of his life.
This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
The sole issue on appeal is whether defendant’s prior duty to register as a sex
offender was a statutory duty under the Sex Offender Registration Act, or whether it was
a negotiated condition of probation. If it was the former, both sides agree that he could
be charged with a felony violation of failing to register, and the Contra Costa conviction
stands. If it was the latter, a failure to register could only be a violation of probation, and
the Contra Costa conviction must be reversed.
4
We do not have the record of the San Francisco probation hearings, and they are
in any event not dispositive. It appears from the record of the Contra Costa proceedings
that defendant (represented by the San Francisco Public Defender) made a “Motion to
Remove Probation Registration Requirement per Plea Agreement,” which motion was
unopposed and granted in San Francisco Superior Court in early December 2013, without
the San Francisco trial court knowing that defendant had suffered a conviction in Contra
Costa County on the failure to register charge. Although the record is not clear,
apparently the district attorney in San Francisco made a motion to reconsider the San
Francisco trial court’s ruling. At the Contra Costa County District Attorney’s request,
sentencing in Contra Costa was postponed until the San Francisco matter was concluded,
but, as we have noted, Judge Canepa ultimately stated that the San Francisco disposition
did not affect her ruling or sentence.
8
The facts are undisputed as to Stecker’s conviction and sentencing in San Luis
Obispo. This appeal presents a mixed question of law and undisputed fact. (People v.
Cromer (2001) 24 Cal.4th 889, 894 [“[m]ixed questions are those in which the ‘historical
facts are admitted or established, the rule of law is undisputed, and the issue is whether
the facts satisfy the [relevant] statutory . . . standard, or to put it another way, whether the
rule of law as applied to the established facts is or is not violated’ ”].)
We review questions of pure law and statutory interpretation de novo. (People v.
Jones (2001) 25 Cal.4th 98, 107-108.) Where a mixed question of law and fact requires
an appellate court to “ ‘ “ ‘consider legal concepts in the mix of fact and law and to
exercise judgment about the values that animate legal principles, then the concerns of
judicial administration will favor the appellate court, and the question should be
classified as a legal one and reviewed de novo.’ ” ’ ” (Ghirardo v. Antonioli (1994) 8
Cal.4th 791, 801.)
The Statutory Framework
The Sex Offender Registration Act requires that individuals convicted of certain
crimes register as sex offenders under the act. (§ 290, subd. (c).) As to other offenses,
the trial court is vested with discretion to impose the registration requirement “if the court
finds at the time of conviction or sentencing that the person committed the offense as a
result of sexual compulsion or for purposes of sexual gratification.” (§ 290.006.) Before
a trial court can impose the discretionary registration requirement, the statute requires
that it “shall state on the record the reasons for its findings and the reasons for requiring
registration.” (Ibid.) As we have seen, the trial court in San Luis Obispo County did not
follow this two-step process.
Whether registration is mandatory or discretionary, once the court imposes
registration, the same statute imposes the same lifetime obligations as to when to register
and where. (§§ 290, 290.006, 290.013.) This includes, among other requirements, that
the registrant notify law enforcement about a change of address (§ 290.013), and annually
provide current information to the police department in the registrant’s place of residence
(§ 290.012).
9
After mandatory or discretionary registration is imposed on a defendant, the
statute provides for limited proceedings for relief from the lifetime registration
requirements for defendants convicted of certain crimes. To this end, section 290.5
establishes certain prerequisites including successfully petitioning for a certificate of
rehabilitation, which in defendant Stecker’s case could not be issued until long after his
probation expired. (See § 4852.03, subds. (a)(2) and (a)(3).)
The Sentence Imposed in San Luis Obispo County
It remains for us to determine whether the trial court in San Luis Obispo County
imposed a statutory duty to register pursuant to section 290.006. We conclude it did not.
It is undisputed on appeal that at the time of his change of plea and sentencing, the
two crimes for which Stecker was convicted were not subject to mandatory sex offender
registration. Stecker’s conviction for intercourse with a minor under section 261.5,
subdivision (c) is not included in section 290, subdivision (c). Further, at the time he was
convicted of oral copulation with a 16-year-old minor under section 288a, subdivision
(b)(1), that crime was subject to discretionary but not mandatory registration. (People v.
Hofsheier, supra, 37 Cal.4th at pp. 1207-1209.)
The record is clear—and undisputed by the Attorney General—that the San Luis
Obispo county trial court did not engage in or comply with the two-step process required
by section 290.006 for imposing a discretionary registration requirement. There was no
determination at the time Stecker was sentenced that he committed the offenses as a
result of sexual compulsion or for purposes of sexual gratification, nor was a statement of
reasons given on the record for requiring registration, all of which is required by section
290.006 for discretionary registration.
It is also undisputed that the “relief” that was afforded to defendant by the
sentencing court in San Luis Obispo—that he could ask the court to relieve him of the
duty to register at the end of his term of probation—finds no authority in the sex offender
registration statutory scheme. There is one way to be relieved of the registration
requirement, and that is by the procedure set forth in section 290.5, as we described
above.
10
So what does the record show happened when Stecker changed his plea and was
sentenced in San Luis Obispo Superior Court?
People v. King (2007) 151 Cal.App.4th 1304 (King) is instructive because it
addressed the same issue we face in this appeal. Defendant King pled no contest to one
count of unlawful sexual intercourse with a minor (§ 261.5) in exchange for a five-year
grant of probation with various terms and conditions, including that he register as a sex
offender during the probationary period. King was convicted of two offenses which, as
in Stecker’s case, were subject to discretionary sex offender registration requirements.
About four years later, a new felony complaint was filed against King for violating the
registration requirements of section 290, subdivision (a)(2)(E)5 for failing to register a
change of address. King argued that his obligation to register as a sex offender was only
as a condition of probation for a nonregistrable sex offense, and that his failure to register
could not be the basis of a conviction for violating section 290.
The Court of Appeal in King agreed with defendant, concluding that while “the
trial court could have imposed a registration requirement pursuant to section 290,
subdivision (a)(2)(E), the record establishes that it did not.” (King, supra, 151
Cal.App.4th at p. 1308.) The court reasoned that under section 290, subdivision
(a)(2)(E), the registration requirement was “ ‘for the rest of his or her life’ ” and yet the
trial court limited King’s registration requirement to the five-year period of his probation.
Further, section 290 required that before imposing a discretionary registration
requirement, the trial court had to undertake a two-step process of finding that the person
committed the offense as a result of sexual compulsion or for purposes of sexual
gratification, and stating on the record the reasons for its findings and for requiring
registration. The trial court did not make these required statutory findings in imposing
sentence on King. The Court of Appeal wrote, “We presume that the trial court was
aware of and correctly applied the applicable law (People v. Coddington (2000) 23
5
According to the Attorney General, this section has now been renumbered
section 290.006.
11
Cal.4th 529, 644, disapproved on other grounds in Price v. Superior Court (2001 ) 25
Cal.4th 1046, 1069, fn. 13) and that, had it intended to impose a registration requirement
under section 290 . . . it would have imposed a lifetime requirement in the required
fashion.” (King, supra, 151 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1308-1309.) The Court of Appeal
concluded that the registration requirement was not imposed under the statutory
provisions of section 290, but rather as a condition of probation, noting that a trial court
has broad discretion to impose conditions of probation that “foster rehabilitation of the
defendant and protect the public and the victim.” (Id. at p. 1309.)
In addition, the court in King looked to the record where the trial court advised
King of the consequences of his plea. King was told he was facing “ ‘[f]ive years
probation, five years of registration.’ ” The trial court told defendant the possible
consequences of violating probation (“ ‘two years, nine months in state prison that I can
impose upon you’ ”), but the trial court “did not suggest that a violation of one of the
conditions of probation, the registration requirement, would constitute a new felony
offense, and [King] did not agree to any such condition.” The court summed up: “A
discretionary registration requirement under section 290 . . . may not be grafted onto a
plea bargain when it was not included in the agreement.” (King, supra, 151 Cal.App.4th
at p. 1309.)
Without question, Stecker’s sentencing in San Luis Obispo County was not as
clear as the sentencing in King. But on these facts we reach the same conclusion as the
court did in King. We, too, presume the trial court in San Luis Obispo was aware of the
applicable law and applied it correctly. If the trial court had intended to impose a
statutory duty to register, it would have made the statutory findings required by section
290.006 before imposing this requirement. It did not do so, either when it accepted the
terms of the plea agreement or at the sentencing hearing. Further, defense counsel
reiterated at the sentencing hearing that the registration requirement would be “as a
condition of that probation.” The prosecution did not dispute this characterization, nor
did the sentencing court. The trial court could not—and did not—graft a discretionary
12
registration requirement under section 290.006 onto the parties’ plea bargain. (See King,
supra, 151 Cal.App.4th at p. 1309.)
Of course in King, unlike here, the trial court explicitly limited the registration
requirement to King’s five-year period of probation. In the matter before us, Judge
Garrett, the sentencing judge, told Stecker that he could petition the court to have the
registration requirement removed if “you don’t have any other law violations at the end
of your probationary period.” Judge Garrett’s discussion of the hybrid mechanism by
which defendant could relieve himself of the registration requirement, while not a model
of clarity, does not comport with or describe the statutory provisions for relief from the
registration requirement for section 290 registrants that we discussed above. Put another
way, the San Luis Obispo court created a mechanism for relief from the registration
requirement that was statutorily unavailable. It was as equally at odds with the statutory
lifetime registration requirements as was the mechanism in King, which permitted King
to be relieved of registration after five years. This is a further indication that the
registration requirement here was fashioned as part of the court’s broad authority to set
terms of probation, and not because Stecker had a statutory duty to register under section
290.006.6
The Attorney General contends that defendant forfeited his right to object to the
San Luis Obispo County trial court’s non-compliance with the statutory fact finding
requirements of section 290.006 by not appealing it. This contention misses defendant’s
point: the registration requirement was an agreed-upon term of probation as part of a
plea agreement; it was never understood to be the statutory imposition of a discretionary
section 290 registration. There was no reason for defendant to appeal what he (and his
counsel) understood was a term of probation, not the imposition of a discretionary
registration requirement under section 290.
6
We need not address that the trial judge appeared to leave open the possibility
that a term of probation could extend beyond the maximum statutory period of probation.
This issue never arose because the San Francisco Superior Court eventually terminated
Stecker’s probation and the original registration requirement.
13
Equally without merit is the Attorney General’s argument that it is “significant”
that when defendant complied with the registration requirements in the years after his
sentence, he signed form documents indicating that his registration requirement was for a
lifetime. Defendant correctly points out that the use of pre-printed forms and notices is
simply reflective of and consistent with his compliance with the when, where, and how
requirements of registration until such time as he was relieved of the duty to register.
More practically, there is no evidence in the record that there was any way Stecker could
have complied with the ongoing registration requirements imposed as a term of his
probation other than using the pre-printed forms presumably provided by law
enforcement agencies. The use of pre-printed forms which reference section 290 cannot
create a discretionary registration duty after the fact.
The Attorney General also claims that it is “telling” that the trial court addressed
conditions of Stecker’s probation separately from the registration requirement at
sentencing. This is not a fair reading of the transcript.
The Contra Costa County Conviction
Having found that there was no statutory duty to register under section 290, the
next issue is whether the conviction in Contra Costa County can stand. This issue is
readily addressed. The linchpin of the conviction in Contra Costa County was
defendant’s violation of section 290.013, which depended on the conclusion that
defendant had a statutory duty to register. The Attorney General’s entire argument (and
the Contra Costa County prosecution itself) depended on the conclusion that defendant
had a statutory duty to register as a sex offender pursuant to section 290.006. Because we
find he did not, and indeed that he never had a statutory duty to register, he could not
have committed a felony violation of the Sex Offender Registration Act and the judgment
of conviction in Contra Costa County must be reversed.
DISPOSITION
The judgment is reversed.
14
_________________________
Miller, J.
We concur:
_________________________
Richman, Acting P.J.
_________________________
Stewart, J.
15