Filed 2/26/20
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION ONE
STATE OF CALIFORNIA
THE PEOPLE, D074935
Plaintiff and Respondent,
v. (Super. Ct. No. SCD277673)
FERNANDO L. COTA,
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County,
Esteban Hernandez, Judge. Affirmed in part, reversed in part and remanded.
Justin A. Behravesh, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant
and Appellant.
Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, Gerald A. Engler and Lance E. Winters, Chief
Assistant Attorneys General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General, Steven T.
Oetting and Anthony Da Silva, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
Fernando L. Cota pled guilty to the felony offense of carrying a concealed dirk or
dagger in exchange for three years of probation and the possibility that the charge might
be reduced to a misdemeanor at the end of one year. The trial court imposed various
probation conditions that Cota objected to in the trial court and challenges on appeal.
Based on the Supreme Court's recent decision in In re Ricardo P. (2019) 7 Cal.5th 1113,
1122 (Ricardo P.), we conclude that the electronics search condition that the court
imposed is unreasonable, but remand for further consideration of a potentially appropriate
electronics search condition. We uphold the remaining challenged conditions. Cota also
challenges the trial court's imposition of various fees and a restitution fine, arguing that
due process requires a finding of ability to pay before such charges may be imposed. He
requests remand to the trial court for a hearing to consider his ability to pay the fines and
fees assessed at sentencing. We conclude that due process does not bar the imposition of
the assessments and fine that Cota challenges and that remand on this issue is therefore
not required. In all other respects the judgment is affirmed.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Cota was seen swinging a machete attached to a long stick in a San Diego public
park. His clothes were visibly soiled. Someone who observed his behavior called the
police, describing Cota as a violent mentally ill man. When police arrived, they found
Cota standing near a water fountain with the machete balanced on top of the fountain. In
view of the officers, Cota sat down and pulled a six-inch drywall knife from his
2
waistband, placing it next to him. The officers arrested Cota for an outstanding
misdemeanor warrant after running a records check.
Cota was charged with a felony for unlawfully carrying a concealed weapon (dirk
or dagger). (Pen. Code, § 21310.)1 He pled guilty to the charge in exchange for a
recommendation of three years formal probation and the anticipated reduction of his
felony conviction to a misdemeanor once he completed drug treatment and mental health
counseling.
The trial court accepted the recommendation and sentenced Cota to three years of
probation with several conditions. Cota objected to a condition compelling him to submit
electronic devices for search at any time when required by a probation or law
enforcement officer. He also objected to conditions that he attend anger management
counseling and refrain from alcohol use if directed by his probation officer. The trial
court imposed these conditions over Cota's objections.
DISCUSSION
Cota argues that we should strike the electronics search condition, the anger
management condition, and the alcohol use condition as unreasonable. We agree that
permitting warrantless searches of Cota's electronic devices was an abuse of discretion
based on the Supreme Court's recent Ricardo P. decision. We uphold the remaining
conditions as reasonable.
1 Further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise indicated.
3
1. Electronics Search Condition
Cota challenges the electronics search condition as unreasonable because it is
unrelated to future criminal conduct. We review probation conditions for abuse of
discretion. (People v. Olguin (2008) 45 Cal.4th 375, 379 (Olguin).)
Trial courts have wide latitude to impose conditions consistent with the twin aims
of probation: rehabilitation of the defendant with minimal risk to the community.
(§ 1202.7; People v. Carbajal (1995) 10 Cal.4th 1114, 1120.) Nonetheless, any
conditions must be reasonable. (§ 1203.1; see also People v. Beal (1997) 60 Cal.App.4th
84, 86 (Beal).) A condition of probation will be upheld as reasonable unless it meets all
three criteria outlined in People v. Lent (1975) 15 Cal.3d 481 (Lent): the condition
" ' "(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." ' " (Ricardo P., supra, 7 Cal.5th at p. 1118;
Olguin, supra, 45 Cal.4th at p. 379.)
The electronics search condition satisfies the first two Lent criteria. There was no
relationship between electronic devices and the crime Cota pleaded guilty to—possession
of a concealed weapon, and using electronic devices is not inherently criminal. Since the
condition meets the first two prongs, it can survive review for abuse of discretion only if
it regulates conduct that is reasonably related to future criminality.
The California Supreme Court recently clarified that the reasonableness inquiry of
Lent's third prong "contemplates a degree of proportionality between the burden imposed
by a probation condition and the legitimate interests served by the condition." (Ricardo
4
P., supra, 7 Cal.5th at p. 1122.)2 When significant privacy interests are implicated by a
probation condition (such as sweeping electronics searches without a warrant), the burden
imposed on a defendant is a heavy one. Such a condition is unreasonable unless it is
"proportional to achieving some legitimate end of probation." (Id. at p. 1127.)
Reasonableness necessitates "more than just an abstract or hypothetical relationship
between the probation condition and preventing future criminality." (Id. at p. 1121.) In
other words, to justify a burdensome condition, there must be a specific relationship—
grounded in the facts of the case—between the condition and preventing future
criminality.
Ricardo P. involved a juvenile who admitted having committed a felony burglary
and subsequently challenged a probation condition allowing warrantless searches of his
electronic devices and accounts. (Ricardo P., supra, 7 Cal.5th at p. 1115.) The trial
court justified the search condition as useful in monitoring Ricardo's compliance with the
terms of his probation because it allowed officers to look for electronic communications
about drugs. Nothing on the record showed that the juvenile had in fact used his phone to
purchase drugs. The trial court's reasoning was based on a generalization that juveniles
use their phones to buy drugs and brag about drug use online. (Id. at p. 1119.) The
Supreme Court struck the condition under Lent, finding that the condition was not
2 Ricardo P. was decided after the initial briefing in this case was complete. We
later requested supplemental briefing from the parties on this issue in light of Ricardo P.
5
reasonably related to Ricardo's future criminality because it disproportionately burdened
his privacy interest without specific and substantial justification. (Id. at p. 1126.)
The same issues that were of concern to the Supreme Court in Ricardo P. are
present in this case. Under the terms of his probation, Cota's electronic devices can be
searched at any time without a warrant. This implicates a significant privacy interest. As
in Ricardo P., the trial court imposed the condition to make it easier to monitor Cota's
compliance with other probation terms.3 In both cases, the condition was premised on a
general assumption that drug users routinely negotiate drug purchases with their phones.
There was no reference to Cota's specific actions.4 A case-specific rationale that would
make this burden proportional is no more present here than it was in Ricardo P. Mere
convenience in monitoring a parolee's conduct, coupled with generic descriptions of how
some people use cell phones, are not sufficient to render this burden on Cota's privacy
interests reasonable.
The Supreme Court made it clear that "requiring a probationer to surrender
electronic devices and passwords to search at any time is . . . burdensome and intrusive,
and requires a correspondingly substantial and particularized justification." (Ricardo P.,
3 At sentencing, the People explained they were asking for the electronics search
condition because "he's got to be successful for a year, and the People feel it's appropriate
to have the appropriate tools to monitor him for that year to make sure he's successful."
4 At sentencing, the prosecutor remarked that "the People think [the electronics
search condition is] absolutely appropriate especially in a case in which he's currently
involved in drug treatment. . . . [C]ertainly people acquire drugs usually by the means of
a cell phone or some other electronic device . . . ."
6
supra, 7 Cal.5th at p. 1126.) There is no substantial and particularized justification in the
record in this case. The electronics search condition thus meets all three Lent criteria and
is therefore unreasonable.5
Indeed, the People concede in supplemental briefing that the electronics search
condition is overly burdensome and request that we remand to permit the trial court to
craft a more narrowly tailored search condition. We do not foreclose the possibility that a
narrower electronics search condition might be appropriate in this case based on facts that
are not reflected in the current record. We strike the condition, but do so without
prejudice to the People, who may demonstrate to the trial court with additional facts that
a more narrowly drawn electronics search condition is proportionate to the burden on
Cota's privacy interest.
2. Other Challenged Probation Conditions
Cota argues that the imposition of alcohol-related probation conditions is
unreasonable under Lent because it is not reasonably related to future criminality. We
disagree.
Defense counsel challenged only one of four alcohol-related conditions at
sentencing—8.b.—which requires that Cota not knowingly use or possess alcohol if so
directed by his probation officer. As Cota concedes, any challenge to alcohol-related
5 Because we find the electronics search condition unreasonable under Lent, we
need not reach Cota's assertion that the condition is unconstitutionally overbroad.
7
conditions other than 8.b. is forfeited. (People v. Welch (1993) 5 Cal.4th 228, 230.) We
therefore proceed to address Cota's challenge to 8.b.
As with Cota's challenge to the electronics search condition, the first two Lent
criteria are met. Possessing or using alcohol is unrelated to Cota's offense and is legal for
someone his age.6 This leaves the third criterion for our consideration—whether
restricting Cota's use and possession of alcohol is reasonably related to his future
criminality.
Cota relies on People v. Kiddoo (1990) 225 Cal.App.3d 922, in which the
appellate court struck a probation condition restricting alcohol use because it was not
related to the defendant's offense of possessing methamphetamine. (Id. at pp. 927–928.)
However, alcohol is a drug—albeit a legal one. This court has previously made clear that
"we disagree with the fundamental assumptions in Kiddoo that alcohol and drug abuse
are not reasonably related and that alcohol use is unrelated to future criminality where the
defendant has a history of substance abuse." (Beal, supra, 60 Cal.App.4th at p. 87;
accord People v. Balestra (1999) 76 Cal.App.4th 57, 69.)
Cota disclosed to the probation department that he is a habitual user of
methamphetamine and a daily user of marijuana. He has prior convictions for being
under the influence of a controlled substance, possession of marijuana for sale,
possession of a controlled substance, and possession of drug paraphernalia. His history
6 We do not find support in the record for the People's speculation that Cota may
have been under the influence of alcohol when he was arrested in the park.
8
of substance abuse is well documented. In the past, in upholding alcohol conditions like
the condition that the trial court imposed on Cota, we have noted that there is an
empirical nexus between drugs and alcohol. (Beal, supra, 60 Cal.App.4th at p. 87.) It
would make little sense to deprive Cota's probation officer of the power to direct Cota
away from alcohol as a substitute mind-altering substance when his substance abuse
history is so clearly demonstrated.
The Beal court noted that "alcohol use may lead to future criminality where the
defendant has a history of substance abuse."7 (Beal, supra, 60 Cal.App.4th at p. 87.) We
therefore conclude that the trial court's imposition of alcohol-related probation conditions
was reasonably related to preventing future crimes, given Cota's history of drug use.
Cota next challenges the anger management condition as unreasonable under the
third prong of Lent. We conclude that it, too, is reasonable under the circumstances.
Cota cites his lack of convictions for violent crimes and an unclear connection
between his crime and displays of anger. But a history of violent crime and overt
displays of anger are not necessary preconditions for giving a probation officer discretion
to direct a probationer to an anger management program. Several facts in the record
7 Cota asks us to distinguish his case from Beal because Beal was charged with a
drug crime (Beal, supra, 60 Cal.App.4th at p. 85), whereas Cota was charged with
illegally possessing a weapon. While we recognize that Cota's case differs factually from
Beal's in this respect, review of a probation restriction on alcohol use is a fact-specific
inquiry. (People v. Lindsay (1992) 10 Cal.App.4th 1642, 1644.) The fact that Cota was
not, in this instance, convicted of a drug-related offense would clearly be relevant to
Lent's first prong, but it does not mean that the reasoning in Beal with respect to an
alcohol condition being reasonably related to future criminality is inapplicable to Cota's
situation.
9
make the condition reasonable. Cota encountered the police because he was swinging a
machete in a public park, and he frightened someone enough to prompt a call to law
enforcement. The caller described Cota as violent and mentally ill. When the police
arrived, Cota revealed another weapon—the six-inch knife that led to the charge of which
he was ultimately convicted. He has a prior conviction for the manufacture of weapons
and has been diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder.8 These facts could reasonably
lead the trial court to conclude that Cota might benefit from anger management and that
such a tool could help prevent future criminal activity.9
3. The trial court did not violate Cota's right to due process in
imposing various fees and a restitution fine without first
determining his ability to pay
At his sentencing in November 2018, Cota was assessed a $40 court operations fee
(§ 1465.8), a $30 criminal conviction fee (Gov. Code, § 70373), a $300 minimum
restitution fine (§1202.4, subd. (b)), and a $30 county collection fee (id., §1202.4, subd.
(l)). Cota did not challenge the fine or fees and the trial court did not conduct a hearing
to determine his ability to pay.
8 Clinical evidence links schizophrenic conditions with violence. This correlation is
exacerbated with comorbid substance abuse. (Walsh et al., Violence and schizophrenia:
examining the evidence (June 2002) British Journal of Psychiatry, Vol. 180, pp. 490–
495.) We do not intend to imply that all people with schizophrenic conditions are prone
to violence. Rather, we merely observe that it is not irrational to consider Cota's mental
health in determining the reasonableness of an anger management program.
9 The court's imposition of anger management was qualified; the court invested
Cota's probation officer with the authority to direct Cota to a program if the officer deems
it a helpful supplement to his other mental health treatment. Creating this option seems
manifestly reasonable to us given the facts of the case.
10
Two months after Cota's sentencing hearing, the Court of Appeal decided People
v. Dueñas (2019) 30 Cal.App.5th 1157 (Dueñas), holding that criminal defendants have a
due process right to an ability to pay hearing before fines and fees are imposed. (Id. at p.
1172.) Cota relies on Dueñas to argue that he is entitled to such a hearing.
The People's primary response to Cota's argument is that any ability to pay
argument was forfeited because he did not object to the fines and fees at sentencing. We
exercise our discretion to consider Cota's claim on the merits, notwithstanding any
possible forfeiture. (See People v. Williams (1998) 17 Cal.4th 148, 161, fn. 6 [reviewing
courts have discretion to excuse forfeiture].)
In Dueñas, supra, 30 Cal.App.5th 1157 at page 1167, the court held that due
process precludes a trial court from "impos[ing]" certain assessments and fines when
sentencing a criminal defendant in the absence of determination that the defendant has a
"present ability to pay" those assessments and fines. Specifically, Dueñas held that "due
process of law requires [a] trial court to . . . ascertain a defendant's present ability to pay
before it imposes" (1) "court facilities and court operations assessments" (under § 1465.8
and Gov. Code, § 70373, respectively), or (2) a restitution fine (under § 1202.4).
(Dueñas, supra, at pp. 1164, 1167, 1172.)
More recently, however, another Court of Appeal opinion questioned whether
"Dueñas's expansion of the boundaries of due process" to provide an additional
"protection not conferred by either [of Dueñas's] foundational pillars" is a "correct
interpretation," and ultimately concluded that it is not. (People v. Hicks (2019) 40
Cal.App.5th 320, 327, review granted Nov. 26, 2019, S258946 (Hicks).) In considering
11
the issue, the Hicks court noted that Dueñas rests on "two strands of due process
precedent," the first of which "secures a due process-based right of access to the courts"
(italics omitted), and the second of which "erects a due process-based bar to incarceration
based on the failure to pay criminal penalties when that failure is due to a criminal
defendant's indigence rather than contumaciousness." (Id. at p. 325–326.) Hicks
explains, neither of these strands "dictate[s]" Dueñas's result. (Id. at p. 326.) For this
reason, and because Dueñas "is inconsistent with the purposes and operation of
probation" (id. at p. 327), the court in Hicks concluded that "due process does not speak
to [the] issue [of how best to balance the competing interests of indigent defendants and
an operable court and victim restitution system] and . . . Dueñas was wrong to conclude
otherwise." (Id. at p. 329, first italics added.)
We find the Hicks court's analysis of the due process issue to be persuasive, and
adopt the holding in Hicks that "[n]either strand [of due process precedent] bars the
imposition of [the] assessments and the . . . restitution fine" even as to a defendant who is
unable to pay. (Hicks, supra, 40 Cal.App.5th at p. 329.) Like the defendant in Hicks,
Cota has not, to date, been denied access to the courts or been incarcerated as a result of
the imposition of these financial obligations. No remand for an ability to pay hearing is
therefore necessary.
DISPOSITION
We strike the electronics search condition and remand to the trial court to permit
the court to attempt to fashion a more narrowly drawn electronics search condition,
12
consistent with this opinion. We uphold all other probation conditions and the fine and
fees that the trial court imposed. In all other respects the judgment is affirmed.
AARON, J.
I CONCUR:
HALLER, Acting P. J.
13
Dato, J., Concurring and Dissenting.
I join the majority opinion's conclusions as to each of Fernando Cota's challenges
to the conditions of his probation, but depart from its determination that he is not entitled
to remand for a hearing on his ability to pay the imposed fines and fees.
In People v. Dueñas (2019) 30 Cal.App.5th 1157 (Dueñas), Velia Dueñas sought
relief from a poverty-driven cycle of debt-to-incarceration. As a teenager, she incurred
three citations and over $1000 in assessments. When she could not pay, the state
suspended her driver's license. She could not afford the fees for reinstatement and
accumulated misdemeanor convictions and further debt from driving on the suspended
license. When given the choice, she opted for incarceration over incurring further debt
for nonpayment. The court of appeal agreed with Dueñas that imposing fines and fees1
on defendants without consideration of their ability to pay violates due process. (Id. at
pp. 1161, 1164.)
That Dueñas was a homeless mother of two with cerebral palsy undoubtedly
highlighted the unfairness of her situation. But her appeal called attention to issues of
broad and increasing significance: whether and to what extent is it appropriate to finance
government services—in particular, the judicial system—with fines and fees assessed
against convicted criminal defendants? And what recourse does an indigent defendant
1 Specifically, Dueñas addressed the imposition of a restitution fine (Pen. Code,
§ 1202.4), court operations fee (Pen. Code, § 1465.8), and court facilities fee (Gov. Code,
§ 70373).
have to challenge the imposition of fines and fees on the basis that he or she lacks the
ability to pay?
Fines have long been a part of criminal sentencing.2 But fees are a relatively
recent addition, coinciding with the exponential growth of the American correctional
population in the last 40 years.3 As criminal justice costs skyrocketed,4 states
increasingly sought to offset expenditures without raising taxes.5 Between the early-
1980's and the mid-2000's, the national percentage of prisoners who were assessed fees
2 See Gorod & Frazelle, Timbs v. Indiana: Mere Constitutional Housekeeping or
the Timely Revival of A Critical Safeguard? (2019) Cato Sup. Ct. Rev., 215, 222.
3 See generally Bureau of Justice Statistics, Prisoners Series
[as of February 25, 2020], archived at .
4 "From 1983 to 2012, criminal justice costs grew by more than 650 percent. One
study found that the cost of the expansion in the criminal justice system during the thirty-
year period was $3.4 trillion. By 2012, criminal justice costs were over $270 billion[.]"
(Sobol, Fighting Fines & Fees: Borrowing from Consumer Law to Combat Criminal
Justice Debt Abuses (2017) 88 U. Colo. L.Rev., 841, 857, fns. omitted.)
5 See Martin et al., Shackled to Debt: Criminal Justice Financial Obligations and
the Barriers to Re-Entry They Create (2017) U.S. Department of Justice, National
Institute of Justice, p. 4 [as of February
25, 2020], archived at ; see also Counsel of Economic
Advisers Issue Brief: Fines, Fees and Bail, Payments in the Criminal Justice System that
Disproportionately Impact the Poor (Dec. 2015) p. 2 .
2
and fines rose from about 12 percent to over 65 percent,6 making monetary sanctions a
fixture of the criminal justice system. California has been no exception to this national
trend.7 Indeed, two of the three fees in Cota's case are authorized by statutes aimed at
revenue generation that were passed in the 2000's. (Pen. Code, § 1465.8; Gov. Code,
§ 70373; see Dueñas, supra, 30 Cal.App.5th at p. 1165.)
Four decades into this monumental shift, two realities have become clear: fines
and fees put a significant burden on indigent defendants,8 and these defendants (who
constitute the vast majority of defendants in the criminal system) cannot pay their court-
6 See Harris et al., Drawing Blood from Stones: Legal Debt and Social Inequality in
the Contemporary United States (2010) 115 American Journal of Sociology, 1753,
1769‒1770 (hereafter Harris et al.).
7 As of 2006, the state had "over 269 separate court fines, fees, forfeitures,
surcharges . . . [from] statutes in 16 different government codes . . . in addition to the
many fees, fines, and special penalties that local governments may impose on most
offenses." (Nieto, Who Pays for Penalty Assessment Programs in California? (2006)
California Research Bureau, p. 1 [as of February 25, 2020], archived at .)
8 Defendants often struggle to pay their fines and fees and can carry the debt long-
term. This "indebtedness contributes to the accumulation of disadvantage in three ways:
by reducing family income; by limiting access to opportunities and resources such as
housing, credit, transportation, and employment; and by increasing the likelihood of
ongoing criminal justice involvement." (Harris et al., supra, p. 1756; see Colgan,
Reviving the Excessive Fines Clause (2014) 102 Cal. L.Rev. 277, 284‒295.)
3
related debts.9 By any metric, the experiment of leveraging compulsory user fees to fund
the justice system has been less than an unqualified success for governments and a
personal tragedy for many individuals.
9 Statewide, there is a "lack of complete and accurate data on fine and fee
collections." (Legis. Analyst, Improving California's Criminal Fine and Fee System
(2016) p. 3 [as of February 25, 2020], archived at .)
Available statistics often include infractions, making it difficult to determine the
collection and default rates for criminal defendants convicted of felonies and
misdemeanors. (See Judicial Council of California, Report to the Legislature: Revenue
Collected for Fiscal Year 2018-19 (2019) [as of February 25, 2020],
archived at .) But it is clear California collects only a
small percentage of what it is owed each year. Outstanding delinquent debt has increased
from five to ten billion in the last decade, while revenue collections have fallen from a
peak of $2 billion to $1.4 billion; "these two trend lines propose . . . an ominous prospect
for California about the durability and sustainability of a criminal fine, fee and penalty
system as a revenue stream . . . . (Martin Hoshino, Administrative Director of the
Judicial Council of the California Courts, updating the Judicial Council on Fines and Fees
(Dec. 2019) [as of February
25, 2020], archived at .) Much of this delinquent debt
may be uncollectable—meaning the cost of collection exceeds the potential recovery.
(Legis. Analyst, Governor's Criminal Fine and Fee Proposals (2017) pp. 7‒8
[as of February
25, 2020], archived at .)
Los Angeles and San Francisco report low rates of collection on local fees. Los
Angeles may collect as little as four percent. (County of Los Angeles, Chief Executive
Office, Report Back on Addressing Fines and Fees Associated with Criminal Justice
System Involvement (Dec. 13, 2019) p. 59 [as of February 25, 2020], archived at
.) San Francisco estimates its collection rate is less than
20 percent. The city abolished local fees and canceled outstanding debt in 2018. (The
Financial Justice Project, et al., Criminal Justice Administrative Fees: High Pain for
People, Low Gain for Government (2018) pp. 1, 6
[as of February 25, 2020], archived at .)
4
The problem has now captured the attention of key figures in the legal profession.
The American Bar Association identified monetary sanctions as a primary factor in the
erosion of public trust in the justice system and has suggested reforms, such as
considering an individual's ability to pay "at each stage of proceedings, including at the
time the fees are imposed and before imposition of any sanction for nonpayment . . . ."
(ABA, Ten Guidelines on Court Fines and Fees (Aug. 2018), Guidelines 1 & 210.) A
task force convened by the National Center for State Courts has similarly released a
practice guide that emphasizes safeguards based on ability to pay, including granting
judges discretion to "impose Legal Financial Obligations based on an individual's income
and ability to pay." (See Nat. Center for State Cts., National Task Force on Fines, Fees,
and Bail Practices, Principles on Fines, Fees, and Bail Practices (2019), principle 6.2,
p. 611.) Here in California, our Chief Justice underscored the urgency of this issue in her
2019 State of the Judiciary address, stating that we "must ensure . . . fines and fees no
longer fall on those least able to afford them." (Tani G. Cantil-Sakauye, Chief Justice of
the Cal. Supreme Ct., State of the Judiciary address to the Cal. Legis. (Mar. 19, 2019)12.)
10 [as of February 25, 2020],
archived at .
11 [as of February 25, 2020], archived at
.
12 [as of
February 25, 2020], archived at .
5
Echoing her concerns, the Administrative Director of California's Judicial Council has
remarked that fines and fees create a "destitution pipeline." Among other reforms, he
suggests setting fees in accordance with individual ability to pay. (Levi et al., Fixing
Fees, Fines & Bail: Toward a Fairer System of Justice (2019) vol. 103, No. 3,
Judicature, at pp. 17‒19 [comments of Martin Hoshino, Administrative Director of the
Judicial Council of the California Courts]13.)
So there is a problem. But is it a constitutional problem? In summary fashion,
and relying exclusively on People v. Hicks (2019) 40 Cal.App.5th 320, review granted
November 26, 2019, S258946 (Hicks), the majority dismiss Cota's arguments as devoid
of any legitimate constitutional concerns. Hicks, we are told, persuasively concluded that
Dueñas got it wrong when it comes to a due process analysis. Cota wasn't denied access
to the courts, and he wasn't incarcerated for failing to pay any fines or fees. That's the
sum and substance of the due process guarantee. If there is a problem, it's the
Legislature's to address.
But is there more to it?
In the year since its filing, the Dueñas decision has generated abundant discussion
and debate. Outside of Hicks, however, the bulk of that discussion has not concerned
whether a criminal defendant's ability to pay has any role to play in defining a
constitutional threshold for the assessment of fines and fees. Rather, the principal debate
13 [as of February 25, 2020], archived at .
6
has focused on how to frame and analyze a constitutional challenge, and specifically
whether due process principles or the Eighth Amendment's Excessive Fines Clause
provide the most appropriate vehicle for the analysis.
The essence of Cota's argument is that certain fines and fees, even though they are
"mandatory" by terms of the applicable statute, cannot be constitutionally imposed on
him because he has no ability to pay them. Cota requests a hearing at which he can
present evidence of his inability to pay. Because his opening brief was filed less than
three months after Dueñas was decided, Cota's counsel understandably relied on a due
process analysis, but the particular constitutional label he attaches to his argument is
unimportant. (See City of Revere v. Massachusetts General Hosp. (1983) 463 U.S. 239,
243−244 [plaintiff's claim, mislabeled as an Eighth Amendment issue, properly found to
be a violation of due process].) The critical question is whether a defendant's ability to
pay is appropriately considered in determining whether there are constitutional
limitations on the amounts of fines and fees imposed. If it is, Cota should be afforded a
hearing at which he can attempt to make his case.
The United States Supreme Court "has long been sensitive to the treatment of
indigents in our criminal justice system." (Bearden v. Georgia (1983) 461 U.S. 660,
664.) The Due Process Clause provides a general framework to "analyze the fairness of
relations between the criminal defendant and the State." (Id. at p. 665; see id. at
pp. 672−673 [revoking probation based on a failure to pay without finding such failure
was willful "would be contrary to the fundamental fairness required by the Fourteenth
Amendment"].) Although Dueñas applied a due process framework, another approach
7
invokes the Eighth Amendment, which aims "to limit the government's power to punish."
(Austin v. United States (1993) 509 U.S. 602, 609 (Austin).) Tracing its roots to Magna
Carta, the Excessive Fines Clause restricts the government's power to extract payments as
punishment for some offense. (Timbs v. Indiana (2019) ___ U.S. ___, [139 S.Ct. 682,
687] (Timbs).) Sanctions fall within the scope of this clause if they are at least partly
punitive. (Austin, at p. 621 [rejecting argument that civil in rem forfeiture was not
punitive simply because "the forfeited assets serve to compensate the Government for the
expense of law enforcement activity and for its expenditure on societal problems"].)
One of the flaws in Hicks, supra, 40 Cal.App.5th 320, review granted—and in the
majority's reliance on it here—is its failure to even consider an alternative Eighth
Amendment analysis, applicable to some or all of the fines and fees, that would include
an evaluation of the defendant's ability to pay.14 Even as they have questioned aspects
of its due process reasoning, several post-Dueñas opinions have recognized that a
defendant's ability to pay is an appropriate and sometimes critical factor in applying the
Eighth Amendment's Excessive Fines Clause. Indeed, the California Supreme Court has
acknowledged that both due process and Eighth Amendment analyses incorporate similar
14 In People v. Caceres (2019) 39 Cal.App.5th 917, the court rejected a Dueñas due
process challenge and declined to discuss an Eighth Amendment approach suggested by
the Attorney General, citing a case for the generic proposition that an appellate court can
refuse to consider issues not properly raised in the opening brief. (Id. at p. 923.) But the
issue here has been properly raised—whether criminal defendants may be
constitutionally assessed fines and fees in an amount they have no ability to pay. The
only defect, if there is one here or in Caceres, is defense counsel's failure to attach the
right constitutional label to the argument. A mistake in labeling is an insufficient basis to
refuse even to consider an otherwise proper and potentially meritorious argument.
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concepts—including ability to pay—and that it often "makes no difference whether we
examine the issue as an excessive fine or a violation of due process." (People ex rel.
Lockyer v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. (2005) 37 Cal.4th 707, 728.) Dueñas made the
same observation in charting its course. (Dueñas, supra, 30 Cal.App.5th at p. 1171, fn. 8;
see also People v. Belloso (2019) 42 Cal.App.5th 647, 660.)
Given the procedural posture of this case—Cota has never had a hearing at which
he could present evidence of his financial condition—it is unnecessary at this juncture to
extensively analyze or definitively resolve how a defendant's ability to pay should affect
the imposition of fines and fees. I am inclined to agree with those courts, including ours,
that have preferred an Eighth Amendment analysis at least as to fines such as the
restitution fine in this case. (See, e.g., People v. Kopp (2019) 38 Cal.App.5th 47, 96,
rev.gr. Nov. 13, 2019, S257844; People v. Aviles (2019) 39 Cal.App.5th 1055, 1071.)
Fines are clearly punitive, and given an available Eighth Amendment analysis that
considers ability to pay (along with other factors), the safety net provided by broader
principles of due process seems unnecessary.15 Whether fees and assessments imposed
on convicted defendants are sufficiently punitive to invoke the Eighth Amendment
presents a closer question, but we must keep in mind that the standard asks merely
whether they are partially punitive. (Austin, supra, 509 U.S. at pp. 610, 621; see Timbs,
supra, 139 S.Ct. at p. 689 [noting in an Eighth Amendment discussion that " 'state and
15 "Where a particular Amendment 'provides an explicit textual source of
constitutional protection' against a particular sort of government behavior, 'that
Amendment, not the more generalized notion of "substantive due process," must be the
guide for analyzing these claims.' " (Albright v. Oliver (1994) 510 U.S. 266, 273.)
9
local governments nationwide increasingly depend heavily on fines and fees as a source
of general revenue' "]; Aviles, supra, at p. 1071 [applying an Eighth Amendment analysis
to both fines and fees]; see also Colgan, The Excessive Fines Clause: Challenging the
Modern Debtor’s Prison (2018) 65 UCLA L.Rev. 2, 35‒40 [suggesting fees are partially
punitive].)
We will have plenty of time to debate doctrinal nuances after Cota has been
afforded the opportunity to make a complete record. At this point, however, it is
sufficient to conclude that he should have the chance to prove the extent of his inability to
pay the assessed fines and fees as well as to argue—based on either the Eighth
Amendment, or the Due Process Clause, or both—why his inability makes their
impositions constitutionally invalid.
DATO, J.
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