Supreme Court of Florida
____________
No. SC13-1828
____________
VICTOR VILLANUEVA,
Petitioner,
vs.
STATE OF FLORIDA,
Respondent.
[July 7, 2016]
QUINCE, J.
Victor Villanueva seeks review of the decision of the Third District Court of
Appeal in Villanueva v. State, 118 So. 3d 999 (Fla. 3d DCA 2013), on the ground
that it expressly and directly conflicts with the decision of the Fifth District Court
of Appeal in Arias v. State, 65 So. 3d 104 (Fla. 5th DCA 2011), on the question of
whether the trial court may order him to undergo mentally disordered sex offender
(MDSO) therapy after a jury acquitted him of any sexual misconduct. We have
jurisdiction. See art. V, § 3(b)(3), Fla. Const. For the reasons expressed below, we
find that the imposed probation condition is not limited to certain enumerated sex
offenses but is invalid under this Court’s decision in Biller v. State, 618 So. 2d 734
(Fla. 1993).1 We therefore quash the decision of the Third District and remand this
case to the trial court to modify the terms of Villanueva’s probation.
FACTS
The Third District summarized the facts of this case as follows:
Villanueva was charged with one count of lewd and lascivious
molestation of a child older than twelve, but less than sixteen years
old. The victim, Y.V., was Villanueva’s daughter, from whom he had
become estranged by the time the girl was nine. When Y.V. was
twelve, her family ran into Villanueva and arrangements were made
for Villanueva to visit with Y.V. During the visit, Villanueva touched
Y.V.’s breast. Y.V. testified that the touching of her breast was not
accidental and lasted for several seconds. When she reacted, he
laughed. Later, in Villanueva’s car, he again put his hand on her
breast. Finally, while Y.V. was in a bathing suit2 at a swimming pool,
he reached out and put his hand on her buttocks which caused her to
exclaim, “hey, you touched me.” He apologized. Y.V. told her
mother and, later, a teacher, who notified the police. Villanueva
testified that he never touched Y.V.’s breasts.
Villanueva, 118 So. 3d at 1001. The jury acquitted Villanueva of lewd and
lascivious molestation but found him guilty of misdemeanor battery—a lesser
included offense of the molestation charge. Id. at 1001. The trial judge sentenced
Villanueva to ninety days in jail followed by one year of probation. Id. As a
1. We clarify and point out that four members of this Court agree that the
probation condition at issue here is not reasonably related to the crime for which
Villanueva was convicted, thereby entitling him to relief.
2. The record in this case indicates that Y.V. wore a shirt and shorts in the
pool, not a bathing suit.
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special condition of that probation, the judge ordered Villanueva to complete
MDSO therapy. See id. at 1000 & n.1. As explained by the Third District, that
term is not mentioned or defined in Florida’s statutory probation scheme, but the
Third District assumed that the trial court was referring to sex offender therapy
imposed pursuant to section 948.30(1)(c), Florida Statutes (2008). Id. at 1000 n.1.
That section sets forth additional conditions that must be imposed where the
probationer has committed certain enumerated offenses and deems these additional
conditions standard, not special, conditions for such probationers. While the
charge of lewd or lascivious molestation is an enumerated offense within the
statute, the crime for which Villanueva was convicted—misdemeanor battery—is
not.
The trial judge explained his rationale for imposing the condition as follows:
I ordered . . . [sex offender] therapy because he was found guilty of
battery which is an illegal touching of someone else. That’s what he
was charged with, was the illegal touching of someone else. They just
didn’t find it to the same degree that the charging people did. Okay.
That being the case, it was still an improper touching of his daughter,
and he can acknowledge that in the sense of what it was and what he
was found guilty of and go do the therapy, because he needs to learn
that he can’t do that to children and family.
Id. at 1001. The judge also explained he was ordering the therapy “so that
[Villanueva] can get some insight into appropriate behaviors,” and specifically
stated, “No, I want him to undergo MDSO therapy. It’s not an MDSO plea, it’s
not an MDSO probation, just a condition of his probation.” The judge did not
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indicate under which statute he was ordering the therapy, but the probation order
indicates that the therapy was imposed as a special condition of Villanueva’s
probation, not as a standard condition.
Villanueva appealed the trial court’s decision, raising two related issues
before the Third District: “(1) whether sex offender therapy as a condition of
probation is restricted by statute to only certain enumerated sexual offenses; and
(2) whether the imposition of that condition here comports with the standards
governing probation announced by the Florida Supreme Court in Biller.” Id. at
1001. The district court determined, as to the first issue, that “while there are
circumstances in which sex offender therapy is a statutorily-required condition of
probation, sex offender therapy can still be imposed as a special condition of
probation outside of those statutorily-required circumstances when the facts of the
crime so warrant.” Id. at 1003. The court explained that section 948.30 “contains
no language that prohibits these conditions from being selectively imposed on the
probation” for crimes other than those enumerated in that section. Id. at 1002. In
fact, the Third District noted instances in which courts and even the Legislature
itself have already authorized “some of the individual conditions listed in section
948.30 to be imposed for offenses other than those listed in the statute.” Id. at
1002. The district court also noted that reading the statute as limiting imposition of
the condition to only the enumerated offenses is inconsistent with the broad
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discretion given trial courts to determine what conditions will promote a
probationer’s rehabilitation. Id. (citing §§ 948.03(2), 948.039, Fla. Stats. (2011)).
Accordingly, the Third District found that “the statute does not prohibit a judge
from selectively requiring sex offender therapy as a special condition of probation
for other offenses where appropriate.” Id. at 1001 (emphasis added).
Villanueva’s second issue involved the application of our prior decision in
Biller. In that case, we held that a special condition of probation “is invalid if it (1)
has no relationship to the crime of which the offender was convicted, (2) relates to
conduct which is not in itself criminal, and (3) requires or forbids conduct which is
not reasonably related to future criminality.” Biller, 618 So. 2d at 734-35 (quoting
Rodriguez v. State, 378 So. 2d 7, 9 (Fla. 2d DCA 1979)). Applying that decision
here, the district court found that in determining whether imposition of MDSO
therapy comports with Biller, the trial judge is not limited to the face of the
conviction but may consider the facts and circumstances of the case, as reflected in
the record. Villanueva, 118 So. 3d at 1003. Considering the record before it in
this case, the Third District concluded that sex offender therapy is rationally related
to Villanueva’s crime because “the only non-consensual physical contacts that
could support the battery conviction” were both sexual in nature. Therefore, the
court found that “[t]he special condition of probation that Villanueva undergo sex
offender therapy [] bears a rational relationship to his rehabilitation” for “the
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illegal and inappropriate touching of the child’s breasts and buttocks.” Id. at 1003.
The district court upheld the trial court’s imposition of MDSO therapy but
remanded the case to the trial court to correct a scrivener’s error in the probation
order. Id. at 1004. Villanueva now appeals on the basis of conflict jurisdiction.
ANALYSIS
Villanueva alleges conflict with Arias, in which the defendant entered a no
contest plea to the charge of burglary of a dwelling with an assault or battery
therein. Id. Although that charge was not one enumerated in section 948.30, the
trial court imposed—as special conditions of the defendant’s probation—the sex
offender conditions found in section 948.30. The Fifth District Court of Appeal
relied on Sturges v. State, 980 So. 2d 1108 (Fla. 4th DCA 2008), to find that it was
improper to impose the sex offender conditions found in section 948.30 unless the
defendant was convicted of a crime specified in that section. Arias, 65 So. 3d at
104.
In Sturges, the Fourth District Court of Appeal held that application of “sex
offender probation pursuant to sections 948.30 and 948.31, Florida Statutes
(2005)” was inappropriate because Sturges was not convicted of one of the
enumerated felonies for which those statutory provisions are imposed. 980 So. 2d
at 1109 (emphasis added). Thus, in that case, the sex offender probation
conditions had been imposed mandatorily pursuant to section 948.30. The Fourth
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District did not have before it the question here: whether the conditions of sex
offender probation can be imposed as special conditions of probation, not pursuant
to the statute. In fact, the Fourth District concluded that a trial court “may impose
probation and special conditions of probation which reasonably relate to the
underlying charges.” Id. (citing Biller, 618 So. 2d 734). That statement implies
that while trial courts may not impose sex offender probation as a mandatory
condition under section 948.30 for crimes not enumerated in that statute, courts
may be able to impose those conditions as special conditions for any crime, as long
as the conditions satisfy Biller.
While the Fifth District in Arias indicated that it was relying on Sturges, it
was instead extending Sturges to prohibit not only the mandatory imposition of sex
offender conditions under the statute for non-enumerated offenses, but also the
imposition of such conditions even as special conditions based on a trial court’s
discretion. The Fifth District explicitly found that although the conditions found in
section 948.30 were imposed as special conditions in Arias, “this distinction does
not negate the holding set forth in Sturges.” Arias, 65 So. 3d at 105. That
conclusion directly conflicts with the holding of the Third District in the instant
case that “while there are circumstances in which sex offender therapy is a
statutorily-required condition of probation, sex offender therapy can still be
imposed as a special condition of probation outside of those statutorily-required
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circumstances when the facts of the crime so warrant.” Villanueva, 118 So. 3d at
1003. To resolve this conflict, we first determine whether the imposition of this
condition is limited to only those crimes enumerated within section 948.30, even if
imposed as a special—rather than standard—condition of probation.
I. Whether Imposition of the Condition is Limited to Statutorily Enumerated
Offenses
Villanueva contends, in line with the Fifth District’s decision in Arias, that
because he was only convicted of simple battery, not lewd or lascivious
molestation, the trial court is not allowed to impose upon him a condition that is
mandatory for convicted sex offenders. The State contends, as found by the Third
District in the decision under review, that the trial court is not restricted by the sex
offender therapy condition being mandatory for sex offenders and has the authority
to impose upon Villanueva any condition that is reasonably related to his
rehabilitation under Biller.
As described above, the trial judge did not indicate the statute under which
he was ordering MDSO therapy. The Third District assumed the imposed therapy
referred to the sex offender therapy required to be imposed upon sex offenders in
section 948.30. However, the trial judge could have instead been acting under one
of the sections that grants broad discretion to trial courts to determine probation
conditions. See §§ 948.03(2), 948.039, Fla. Stats. (2008). Such a view is
particularly persuasive given that the probation order in this case indicates the
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MDSO therapy was imposed as a special, not standard, condition of Villanueva’s
probation and section 948.30 imposes sex offender therapy as a standard condition.
See § 948.30, Fla. Stat. (2008) (indicating that the conditions imposed pursuant to
that section “shall be considered standard conditions of probation or community
control for offenders specified in this section”(emphasis added)). Nonetheless, due
to the conflict issue in this case, we resort to statutory interpretation, starting with
the plain language of the statute, to determine whether section 948.30 prohibits this
condition from being imposed, even as a special condition, for a non-enumerated
offense.
Section 948.30 reads, in relevant part:
Additional terms and conditions of probation or community
control for certain sex offenses.—Conditions imposed pursuant to
this section do not require oral pronouncement at the time of
sentencing and shall be considered standard conditions of probation or
community control for offenders specified in this section.
(1) Effective for probationers or community controllees whose
crime was committed on or after October 1, 1995, and who are placed
under supervision for violation of chapter 794, s. 800.04, s. 827.071,
s. 847.0135(5), or s. 847.0145, the court must impose the following
conditions in addition to all other standard and special conditions
imposed:
....
(c) Active participation in and successful completion of a sex
offender treatment program with qualified practitioners specifically
trained to treat sex offenders, at the probationer’s or community
controllee’s own expense. If a qualified practitioner is not available
within a 50-mile radius of the probationer’s or community
controllee’s residence, the offender shall participate in other
appropriate therapy.
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§ 948.30(1)(c), Fla. Stat. (2008) (emphasis added). The plain language of the
statute indicates that it only applies to “certain sex offenses” enumerated in the
statute. However, the plain language also indicates that the statute only concerns
circumstances in which the conditions must be applied. The statute does not
contain any language prohibiting the permissive, rather than mandatory, imposition
of the conditions within the statute to other offenses, under the trial court’s
discretion. Therefore, the statute is ambiguous as to the question of whether the
conditions contained therein may be imposed for probation when involving non-
enumerated crimes.
We turn next to the canons of construction to aid in interpreting this
ambiguous statute. The first is the well-established rule that we are not at liberty to
add to a statute words that the Legislature itself has not used in drafting that
statute. Lawnwood Med. Ctr., Inc. v. Seeger, 990 So. 2d 503, 512 (Fla. 2008).
While we have supplied omitted words in situations where the legislative intent is
clear, we will not do so where we are uncertain as to the legislative intent.
Armstrong v. City of Edgewater, 157 So. 2d 422, 425 (Fla. 1963) (citing Haworth
v. Chapman, 152 So. 663, 666 (Fla. 1933) (explaining that courts should supply an
omission only when the omission is “palpable,” the omitted word is “plainly
indicated by the context,” and when necessary to make the statute conform to the
Legislature’s obvious intent; but where “legislative intent cannot be accurately
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determined because of the omission, the Court cannot add words to express what
might or might not be intended”)). Thus, “[w]hen there is doubt as to the
legislative intent or where speculation is necessary, then the doubts should be
resolved against the power of the courts to supply missing words.” Id. This
principle is also known as casus omissus pro omisso habendus est or “nothing is to
be added to what the text states or reasonably implies.” State v. C.M., 154 So. 3d
1177, 1180 (Fla. 4th DCA 2015) (quoting Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner,
Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 93 (2012)); see also Greenberg v.
Greenberg, 101 So. 2d 608, 609 & n.3 (Fla. 3d DCA 1958) (citing case for the
principle that “[a] casus omissus can in no case be supplied by a court because that
would be to make laws”). In other words, a matter that is not covered by a statute
is to be treated as intentionally not covered. See C.M., 154 So. 3d at 1180.
This rule of statutory construction applies in several ways here. Section
948.30 indicates the circumstances under which sex offender probation conditions
must be applied. It does not, however, indicate when those conditions may not be
applied. Because this matter is not discussed by section 948.30, we must consider
it purposely unaddressed and must not add any words or concepts to the statute to
address it. Further, because there is some doubt as to whether the Legislature
intended to allow sex offender conditions to be applied to probations for non-
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enumerated offenses, we must resolve this doubt against our supplying of any
“omission” to address the issue.
Even using the doctrine of in pari materia, the result is the same. Sections
948.03 and 948.039 describe the broad discretion given to trial courts to determine
probation conditions. See § 948.03(2), Fla. Stat. (2008) (“The enumeration of
specific kinds of terms and conditions shall not prevent the court from adding
thereto such other or others as it considers proper.”); § 948.039, Fla. Stat. (2008)
(“The court may determine any special terms and conditions of probation or
community control. The terms and conditions should be reasonably related to the
circumstances of the offense committed and appropriate for the offender.”). The
statute at issue here modifies that judicial discretion by requiring courts to impose
certain mandatory conditions in cases involving an enumerated list of offenses.
Reading these two sections and section 948.30 in pari materia reveals the
legislative intent to modify the trial court’s discretion with a mandatory rule only
under certain circumstances. Thus, any circumstance falling outside of that
mandatory rule would remain unchanged and instead be governed by the otherwise
statutorily broad discretion typically afforded to trial courts.
Accordingly, we agree with the Third District’s finding that section 948.30
does not prohibit sex offender therapy from being imposed as a special condition
of probation for an offense not enumerated as part of that statute. We disapprove
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Arias for its holding that sex offender probation conditions cannot be applied to
non-enumerated offenses even when imposed as reasonably related special
conditions under Biller based on the trial court’s broad discretion.
II. Whether Imposing MDSO Therapy as a Special Condition in this Case
Violates Biller
In Biller, we approved the holding of the Second District Court of Appeal in
Rodriguez v. State, 378 So. 2d 7 (Fla. 2d DCA 1979), that:
In determining whether a condition of probation is reasonably
related to rehabilitation, . . . a condition is invalid if it (1) has no
relationship to the crime of which the offender was convicted, (2)
relates to conduct which is not in itself criminal, and (3) requires or
forbids conduct which is not reasonably related to future criminality.
Id. at 9 (emphasis added). In other words, a condition is valid if it satisfies one of
the following Biller factors: (1) has a relationship to the crime for which the
offender was convicted, (2) relates to conduct that is criminal in nature, or (3)
requires or forbids conduct that is reasonably related to future criminality.
In this case, the special condition that Villanueva attend MDSO therapy does
not satisfy any of the Biller factors. As to the first, although he was charged with
lewd and lascivious molestation,3 Villanueva was convicted of the lesser-included
3. The elements of that crime are, in relevant part: the (1) intentional (2)
touching (3) of the breasts, genitals, or buttocks (4) in a lewd or lascivious manner.
§ 800.04(5)(a), Fla. Stat. (2008).
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offense of misdemeanor battery4 for the unwanted touching of his daughter. The
jury’s verdict indicates that the touching was not committed in a lewd and
lascivious manner, thereby removing any indication that Villanueva should be a
candidate for sex offender therapy. Therefore, the imposed special probation
condition of attending MDSO therapy is not reasonably related to Villanueva’s
conviction for misdemeanor battery, and Biller has not been satisfied.
The second Biller factor asks whether the imposed condition relates to
conduct that is criminal on its own. The conduct here—failure to attend
counseling targeted toward sex offenders—is not a crime for someone who has
been convicted of misdemeanor battery absent the imposition of the requirement
by the trial court. Therefore, this factor is also not satisfied.
As to the final Biller factor—that the special condition requires or forbids
conduct that is reasonably related to future criminality—the probation condition
also fails. There is no record evidence that Villanueva had any prior convictions.
Thus, there is no indication that he has a propensity to commit any particular
crime, including child molestation or sexual battery. As such, requiring Villanueva
to attend MDSO therapy cannot reasonably be considered a major deterrent to any
4. As relevant here, misdemeanor battery involves the intentional touching
or striking of another person against that person’s will. § 784.03(1), Fla. Stat.
(2008).
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future criminality. We hold that the imposition of MDSO therapy as a probation
condition in this case is invalid based on our decision in Biller.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated in this opinion, we find that the imposed probation
condition is not limited to certain enumerated offenses but is invalid under Biller.
We quash the decision of the Third District on this basis alone and remand this
case to the trial court for a modification of Villanueva’s probation conditions.5 We
also disapprove the Fifth District’s decision in Arias based on that court’s blanket
holding that the sex offender probation conditions can never be applied to offenses
not enumerated in section 948.30.
It is so ordered.
PERRY, J., concurs.
PARIENTE, J., concurs in part and dissents in part with an opinion, in which
LABARGA, C.J., concurs.
LEWIS, J., dissents with an opinion.
CANADY, J., dissents with an opinion, in which POLSTON, J., concurs.
NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING MOTION, AND
IF FILED, DETERMINED.
5. Due to our holding invalidating the imposition of MDSO therapy in this
case, Villanueva’s argument that imposition of the therapy as a probation condition
violated his constitutional rights to due process of law and trial by jury under the
Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution and
sections Nine and Twenty-Two of Article I of the Florida Constitution will not be
addressed.
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PARIENTE, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part.
In this case, the Court has clearly struggled with two competing interests: the
strong interest in ensuring that defendants who commit crimes of a sexual
character receive both punishment and probation conditions that will assist in
preventing future sexually-motivated crimes, and the due process requirement that
conditions of probation be reasonably related to the crime for which the defendant
was actually convicted. However, in this case the jury did not convict the
defendant of a sex offense. Rather, as the majority explains, the defendant was
convicted only of misdemeanor battery, and not of lewd and lascivious
molestation. Majority op. at 2.
Accordingly, I concur with the result reached by the majority in Part II of the
opinion that the trial court was without authority to order the defendant to undergo
mentally disordered sex offender (MDSO) therapy as a special condition of
probation after a jury acquitted the defendant of sexual misconduct. I agree that
this condition of probation is invalid under the test this Court enunciated in Biller
v. State, 618 So. 2d 734 (Fla. 1993).
I dissent in part, however, because I disagree with the analysis in Part I of
the opinion and would also conclude that the trial court does not have the authority
to impose the special condition of probation of “sex offender treatment” under
section 948.30(1), Florida Statutes (2008), when the defendant is not convicted of
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one of the specified sex offenses enumerated in that section. I would hold,
consistent with the Fourth District Court of Appeal in Sturges v. State, 980 So. 2d
1108 (Fla. 4th DCA 2008), and the Fifth District Court of Appeal in Arias v. State,
65 So. 3d 104, 105 (Fla. 5th DCA 2011), that sex offender treatment is limited
under section 948.30(1) as a condition to probation only to the enumerated felonies
of section 948.30(1), which are specific sex offenses.6 Because the jury in this
case acquitted the defendant of a sex offense outlined in section 948.30(1), the trial
court did not have the authority to impose one of the probationary conditions set
forth in section 948.30(1) for an offense that is not enumerated in the statute. I
thus agree with the Fourth District Court of Appeal’s opinion in Sturges, which
construed the statute to provide that the probationary conditions under section
948.30(1) can be imposed only if the defendant is convicted of one of the
enumerated felonies.
This interpretation of section 948.30(1) follows from the text of the statute
and the rules of statutory construction. As this Court has consistently explained,
legislative intent “is determined primarily from the statute’s text,” and, in any case
6. This is similar to the Fourth District’s holding and the First District Court
of Appeal’s holding that a trial court may not impose drug offender probation other
than for the violation of a drug-related offense listed in the drug offender probation
statute, section 948.034. Parker v. State, 839 So. 2d 736 (Fla. 1st DCA 2003);
Ellis v. State, 816 So. 2d 759, 761-62 (Fla. 4th DCA 2002).
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of statutory interpretation, this Court must begin with the “actual language used in
the statute.” Heart of Adoptions, Inc. v. J.A., 963 So. 2d 189, 198 (Fla. 2007).
Then, if statutory language is “susceptible to more than one reasonable
interpretation,” this Court applies “rules of statutory construction”—such as
reading each word and part of the statute together—“to determine the legislative
intent behind the provision.” Id. at 198-99.
I begin with the actual language used in the statute. Section 948.30 is
specifically entitled, “Additional terms and conditions of probation or community
control for certain sex offenses.” (Emphasis added). The statute provides in
pertinent part that:
(1) Effective for probationers or community controllees whose
crime was committed on or after October 1, 1995, and who are placed
under supervision for violation of chapter 794, s. 800.04, s. 827.071,
s. 847.0135(5), or s. 847.0145, the court must impose the following
conditions in addition to all other standard and special conditions
imposed:
(a) A mandatory curfew from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m.
The court may designate another 8-hour period if the
offender’s employment precludes the above specified
time, and the alternative is recommended by the
Department of Corrections. If the court determines that
imposing a curfew would endanger the victim, the court
may consider alternative sanctions.
...
(c) Active participation in and successful
completion of a sex offender treatment program with
qualified practitioners specifically trained to treat sex
offenders, at the probationer’s or community controllee’s
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own expense. If a qualified practitioner is not available
within a 50-mile radius of the probationer’s or
community controllee’s residence, the offender shall
participate in other appropriate therapy.
§ 948.30(1), Fla. Stat. (2008) (emphasis added). Based on the plain language of
the statute, section 948.30(1) does not authorize the conditions of probation it sets
forth to be imposed for any offenses other than the statutorily enumerated sex
offenses.
The majority concludes that section 948.30 mandates sex offender treatment
for the enumerated sex offenses of that statute, yet concludes the statute does not
preclude the trial court from imposing this sex offender treatment for other crimes
as a special condition of probation under the trial court’s broad discretion so long
as there is a reasonable relationship to rehabilitation under the Biller standards.
But there is no basis for the conclusion that a specific statutory condition of
probation for certain sex offender crimes should be a basis for allowing a trial
court to impose this type of condition on a defendant who is not convicted of a sex
offense. The very notion of imposing sex offender probation for a crime that does
not include a sexual element can cause unintended consequences.
First, the defendant, who was convicted only of simple battery by the jury,
would now be stigmatized by being ordered to sex offender treatment. Not only
does “sex offender treatment” as a special condition of probation require
“successful completion” of the treatment, but the statute specifies that this
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treatment must occur at the probationer’s “own expense.” § 948.30(1)(c), Fla. Stat.
And, of course, violation of a condition of probation may result in the revocation
of probation and the imposition of a prison sentence. Additionally, although we
are not aware of all of the requirements to successfully complete sex offender
treatment, it is clear that the failure to admit that the defendant has engaged in
deviant sexual behavior could itself be grounds for termination from the program
and lead to a violation of probation. See Staples v. State, 161 So. 3d 561 (Fla. 5th
DCA 2014), rev. granted, 171 So. 3d 120 (table decision). In fact, defense counsel
made this point when strenuously objecting to this condition:
The defense explained that in order to complete the Mentally
Disordered Sexual Offender treatment, patients had to admit that they
were indeed mentally disordered sexual offenders. They went on to
argue that since Mr. Villanueva had maintained his innocence
throughout his case, and was indeed acquitted of the sexual crime, he
would not now admit that he was a sex offender. Thus, by
maintaining his innocence he was effectively “set up” for a
subsequent probation violation. The defense requested that the court
allow Mr. Villanueva to go to an evaluation rather than treatment to at
least determine if further therapy was necessary.
The court denied the request, and although it acknowledged that Mr.
Villanueva was in fact only convicted of misdemeanor battery, ruled
that it was sending him to sex offender therapy anyway because “he
needs to learn that he can’t do that to children and family.” The court
characterized the battery as a sexual offense in spite of the verdict,
and declared that the jury “just didn’t find it to the same degree that
the charging people did.”
While undoubtedly some forms of MDSO therapy might be a “good idea”
for a defendant’s rehabilitation, there is no basis for allowing trial courts to impose
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this type of condition unless the defendant is found guilty of a statutorily
enumerated sex offense. Due to the inherent stigma attached to a sex offender-
specific probation, it is critically important that only those offenders who have
committed a statutorily enumerated sex offense are subject to this special
probationary condition.
Under these circumstances, and because this type of probation is tailored to
persons convicted of sex offenses, I would conclude, consistent with the statutory
language and the prior jurisprudence of this Court in Biller requiring a condition of
probation to have a reasonable relationship to the crime for which the offender was
convicted, that the trial court lacked the authority to impose “sex offender
treatment” as a special condition of probation for the defendant’s conviction of
misdemeanor battery.
Accordingly, I concur in part with the result of the majority that sex offender
probation was not a valid special condition of probation in this case but dissent to
the majority’s interpretation of section 948.30. I would construe the statute that
governs “additional terms and conditions of probation or community control for
certain sex offenses” to preclude the imposition of this highly specialized and
stigmatized form of probation to offenses other than those sex offenses enumerated
in section 948.30. I agree, however, that the Third District Court of Appeal’s
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contrary opinion should be quashed and the defendant resentenced without the
condition of sex offender probation.
LABARGA, C.J., concurs.
LEWIS, J., dissenting.
This case presents a morass of unusual facts and interrelated statutes that
govern a trial judge’s discretion with respect to special conditions of probation.
Under these circumstances, I agree with the majority’s reliance on tools of
statutory construction to glean legislative intent regarding the extent to which a
trial judge can order special conditions of probation. However, after considering
Justice Pariente’s concurring in part and dissenting in part opinion, I ultimately
disagree with the majority’s conclusion that the special condition imposed below
violated conditions established in Biller v. State, 618 So. 2d 734 (Fla. 1993). I
therefore dissent.
A review of the record demonstrates the confusion surrounding the judge’s
imposition of probation conditions. In two separate hearings, the trial court
insisted that the defendant undergo “MDSO therapy,” over the strenuous
objections of defense counsel. At the initial sentencing hearing, the trial court
responded to defense counsel’s request for clarification by stating, “I want him to
undergo MDSO therapy. It’s not an MDSO plea, it’s not an MDSO probation, just
as a condition of his probation.” At a subsequent hearing in which defense counsel
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moved to mitigate this particular condition of the sentence, the trial court reiterated
its stance:
COURT: I ordered MDSO therapy because he was found guilty of
battery which is an illegal touching of someone else. That’s what he
was charged with, was the illegal touching of someone else. They just
didn’t find it to the same degree that the charging people did. Okay.
That being the case, it was still an improper touching of his daughter,
and he can acknowledge that in the sense of what it was and what he
was found guilty of and do the therapy, because he needs to learn that
he can’t do that to children and family.
....
. . . [Y]our motion to mitigate is denied. Thank you.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: If I might just, Judge? It specifically, on his
order, says sex offender treatment. He’s not a sex offender.
COURT: It shouldn’t. It’s MDSO therapy.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: They can’t differentiate a [sic] probation.
COURT: They can. We’ve done it before. I’ve done it for years.
When they reduce a count from something to a felony battery and I
give MDSO therapy to go with it . . . .
....
DEFENSE COUNSEL: [M]ay I just add there’s no box on here for
sex offender therapy. There’s . . . a box for sex offender treatment.
COURT: Well, put something else on there.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: I can’t, Judge it’s a probation order.
COURT: Correct the probation orders so it references it as MDSO
therapy.
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DEFENSE COUNSEL: I’m not questioning [the probation officer],
it’s the referring officer who put it down as a sex offender treatment,
and he’s not a sex offender. And there’s no box on here for sex
offender therapy.
COURT: Okay. Well, take that back and tell them to give him a new
form.
As the Third District noted below, the trial court’s chosen term, “MDSO
therapy,” does not actually exist in the probation statutory scheme. Villanueva v.
State, 118 So. 3d 999, 1000 n.1 (Fla. 3d DCA 2013). Furthermore, the trial court
gave no indication of what sentencing statute it relied on when it imposed this
condition. The Third District, and presumably all subsequent parties who read the
opinion, “assume[d] that MDSO therapy refers to ‘a sex offender treatment
program with qualified practitioners specifically trained to treat sex offenders,’
similar to” the required treatment program described in section 948.30(1)(c),
Florida Statutes (2008), which is titled “Additional terms and conditions of
probation or community control for certain sex offenses.” Id. (emphasis added).
Despite this assumption, the ambiguity of the trial court renders it not only
possible, but likely, that the trial court actually acted pursuant to section 948.039,
Florida Statutes, when it imposed MDSO therapy. That section provides: “The
court may determine any special terms and conditions of probation or community
control. The terms and conditions should be reasonably related to the
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circumstances of the offense committed and appropriate for the offender. . . .” §
948.039, Fla. Stat. (2008).7
Thus, it is not clear whether the trial court imposed the disputed condition
under section 948.30, the provision that mandates a lengthy list of conditions for
certain sex offenders, or, as I suspect, section 948.039, which grants trial courts
wide latitude to impose special conditions of probation. Regardless, I agree with
the conclusion reached by the majority that section 948.30 is inherently
ambiguous.
The Third District correctly noted that section 948.30 does not clearly
provide an answer to the question posed to this Court: whether any of the
enumerated conditions in the statute can be imposed upon a person who has not
been convicted of a sex offense specified by the statute. The statute does not
expressly prohibit or allow such action, and therefore I agree with the majority in
its conclusion that section 948.30 is ambiguous on this point. Thus, the majority’s
reliance on principles of statutory interpretation, especially the principle of in pari
materia and the consideration of sections 948.03 and 948.039, is appropriate here.
Section 948.03(2) indicates that the enumeration of specific kinds of terms and
7. Section 948.31, Florida Statutes, which grants a trial court the discretion
to order the evaluation of and treatment for certain sex offenders, is yet a third
possible statute upon which the trial court could have relied when it ordered
Villanueva to participate in “MDSO therapy.”
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conditions shall not prevent the court from adding thereto such other or others as it
may consider proper. This provision supports the conclusion that the provisions
required by section 948.30 are not exclusive to the enumerated offenses in that
statute. Moreover, section 948.039 appears to operate as a limitation on the scope
of special conditions, but does so in a permissive manner: “The court may
determine any special terms and conditions of probation or community control.
The terms and conditions should be reasonably related to the circumstances of the
offense committed and appropriate for the offender.” (Emphasis added). Only by
reading sections 948.03, 948.039, and 948.30 in pari materia can we actually
understand the question presented by this case: is the wide discretion statutorily
granted to trial courts expansive enough to allow a court to impose a condition that
is otherwise mandatorily imposed only upon certain sex offenders?
I part ways with the majority opinion, however, in its conclusion that the
special condition imposed below violated the standards enumerated in Biller. I
agree with a conclusion that the special condition that Villanueva attend sex
offender therapy was reasonably related to the conduct underlying Villanueva’s
conviction. Although Villanueva denied touching his twelve-year-old daughter’s
breasts, it appears undisputed that the unlawful contact was on the victim’s breasts
and buttocks, as opposed to, for example, her arm or leg. See Villanueva, 188 So.
3d at 1004 (“[T]he only inappropriate touching in the record—the only non-
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consensual physical contacts that could support the battery conviction—was sexual
in nature.”). Even if the jury convicted Villanueva of misdemeanor battery alone,
rather than lewd and lascivious molestation, the trial judge heard all of the
evidence presented to the jury, and the trial judge has a great deal of discretion in
fashioning conditions of probation. See §§ 948.03(2), 948.039. Therefore, the
trial judge was in the best position to determine any special conditions of
probation. Having heard evidence that Villanueva touched his adolescent daughter
on her breasts and buttocks, the judge acted well within his discretion to fashion a
special condition of probation that was not only related to the offensive conduct,
but intended to reduce the possibility that Villanueva would act in this manner in
the future. I consider it absurd to conclude otherwise. Therefore, I would affirm
the decision below.
CANADY, J., dissenting.
Because I conclude that the trial court acted within the broad discretion
provided by section 948.03, Florida Statutes (2011), for trial courts to impose
conditions of probation, I would approve the decision of the Third District on
review. I therefore dissent.
The majority’s decision is based on a misreading of Biller v. State, 618 So.
2d 734 (Fla. 1993)—a misreading that unduly limits the discretion afforded to trial
judges by section 948.03 to impose special conditions of probation. The statute
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provides that “[t]he court shall determine the terms and conditions of probation.”
§ 948.03(1), Fla. Stat. (2011). The statute also provides that “[t]he [statutory]
enumeration of specific kinds of terms and conditions shall not prevent the court
from adding thereto such other or others as it considers proper.” § 948.03(2), Fla.
Stat. (2011). We have recognized that this discretion is broad but not unlimited:
“A trial court has the authority to impose any valid condition of probation which
would serve a useful rehabilitative purpose.” Hines v. State, 358 So. 2d 183, 185
(Fla. 1978). More specifically, in Biller we held that a special probation condition
is valid only if it satisfies at least one of the three “circumstances” that were
enumerated by the Second District Court in Rodriguez v. State, 378 So. 2d 7, 9
(Fla. 2d DCA 1979), for “determining whether a condition of probation is
reasonably related to rehabilitation.” Biller, 618 So. 2d at 734-35. Here, the
condition imposed on Villanueva requiring participation in mentally disordered sex
offender therapy readily passes muster under Biller.
Rodriguez states:
In determining whether a condition of probation is reasonably
related to rehabilitation, we believe the condition is invalid if it (1) has
no relationship to the crime of which the offender was convicted, (2)
relates to conduct which is not in itself criminal, and (3) requires or
forbids conduct which is not reasonably related to future criminality.
378 So. 2d at 9. Stated positively, under the Biller/Rodriguez analysis, a condition
is valid if it either (1) has a relationship to the crime of which the offender was
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convicted, (2) relates to conduct that is in itself criminal, or (3) requires or forbids
conduct that is reasonably related to future criminality.
The three-part Biller/Rodriguez analysis is derived from California law
where it was first articulated in People v. Dominguez, 64 Cal. Rptr. 290 (Cal. Ct.
App. 1967), and subsequently adopted by the California Supreme Court in People
v. Lent, 541 P.2d 545 (Cal. 1975). In Lent, the court observed that “a condition of
probation which requires or forbids conduct which is not itself criminal is valid if
that conduct is reasonably related to the crime of which the defendant was
convicted or to future criminality.” Lent, 541 P.2d at 548. The court specifically
considered whether a trial court imposing probation for a grand theft conviction
erred in “imposing as a condition of probation restitution of funds involved in a
related criminal charge of which defendant was acquitted.” Id. at 547. The court
observed that “an order for restitution, i.e., attempting to make a victim whole, has
generally been deemed a deterrent to future criminality . . . , and the court is not
limited to the transactions or amounts of which defendant is actually convicted[.]”
Id. at 548 (citations omitted). The court also observed that the trial court was
“convinced of the defendant’s responsibility” for the funds associated with the
count for which the defendant received an acquittal. Id. Based on the record
developed in the trial court, the California Supreme Court concluded there was no
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abuse of discretion in imposing the restitution that was based on acquitted conduct.
Similar reasoning should be applied here.
Instead, however, the majority here adopts a cramped application of the
Biller/Rodriguez analysis to support its conclusion that the MDSO therapy
probation condition imposed on Villanueva was invalid. In my view, the Third
District correctly held that the probation condition could be upheld based on the
conclusion that “the sex offender therapy at issue is rationally related to the crime
for which Villanueva was convicted—the illegal and inappropriate touching of the
child’s breast and buttocks.” Villanueva v. State, 118 So. 3d 999, 1004 (Fla. 3d
DCA 2013). But the majority reasons with respect to the first Biller/Rodriguez
factor that the jury’s verdict acquitting Villanueva of lewd and lascivious
molestation “remov[es] any indication that Villanueva should be a candidate for
sex offender therapy[,]” and the MDSO therapy probation condition therefore “is
not reasonably related to Villanueva’s conviction for misdemeanor battery[.]”
Majority op. at 14. Contrary to the majority’s reasoning, the evidence at trial
shows that MDSO therapy is reasonably related to the circumstances of the
commission of the offense—a battery involving an illicit touching of the victim’s
breasts and buttocks. The trial court properly considered those circumstances and
imposed a rehabilitative probation condition that is directly related to the
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circumstances of the offense and directly related to preventing the defendant from
engaging in such illicit touching of children in the future.
I would also reject the view that section 948.30, Florida Statutes (2011),
which requires the imposition of sex offender therapy for certain enumerated
offenses, implicitly precludes the imposition of sex offender therapy in connection
with unenumerated offenses. Any such implication is nonsensical in view of the
broad authority granted to trial courts by section 948.03. Nothing in section
948.30 suggests that it in any way limits the authority granted by section 948.03.
There is nothing ambiguous about section 948.30, and there is no basis for the use
of legislative history to rewrite the plain terms of the statute by reading in a
limitation on a trial court’s general authority to impose conditions that the trial
court “considers proper.”
Accordingly, I would approve the decision on review and I would
disapprove the decision in Arias v. State, 65 So. 3d 104 (Fla. 5th DCA 2011), as
well as other decisions that employ similar reasoning.
POLSTON, J., concurs.
Application for Review of the Decision of the District Court of Appeal - Direct
Conflict of Decisions
Third District - Case No. 3D11-2023
(Miami-Dade County)
Carlos Jesus Martinez, Public Defender, Eleventh Judicial Circuit, Miami, Florida,
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for Petitioner
Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General, Tallahassee, Florida; and Richard L. Polin,
Bureau Chief, and Magaly Rodriguez, Assistant Attorney General, Miami, Florida,
for Respondent
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