concurring.
Although I agree with the result reached by the majority opinion, I do not agree with the indirect means by which it reaches that result. I agree that the condition of probation at issue here is impermissible. Unlike the majority, I think that conditions of probation are properly reviewed under ORS 138.050 and not under ORS 138.040. The majority feels compelled to rely on ORS 138.040 because of this court’s holding in State v. Carmickle, 307 Or 1, 762 P2d 290 (1988). For the reasons spelled out below, I submit that Carmickle was wrongly decided.
In Carmickle, a majority of this court held that probation was not a “sentence” under ORS 138.040. It therefore concluded that, although probation was reviewable under ORS 138.040, the standard of review prescribed by ORS 138.040 was inapposite because it applied only to sentences and not to conditions of probation. 307 Or at 6-7. In reaching this conclusion, the Carmickle majority relied on State v. McClure, 295 Or 732, 670 P2d 1009 (1983), a case which arose under ORS chapter 137 and which distinguished probation from a sentence for the purpose of awarding credit for presentence time served.
The first flaw in the reasoning of Carmickle is its assumption that if probation is not a sentence under ORS chapter 137 then the same must be true under chapter 138. This court recently noted that a term might be defined one way in one statute but quite differently in other statutes. State ex rel Frohnmayer v. Oregon State Bar, 307 Or 304, 767 P2d 893 (1989).
The more basic (but perhaps more excusable) shortfall in Carmickle’s reasoning is that it ignores legislative intent concerning ORS 138.040 and 138.050. This flaw is understandable in part because these statutes are imperfectly *468drawn. Read literally and without recourse to legislative history, they could lead one to conclude that probation is not a sentence under these statutes. However, even a cursory review of the legislative history shows that the legislature assumed and intended that “sentence” included probation (or conditions of probation) for the purposes of review under ORS 138.040 and 138.050.
Until 1977, ORS 138.040 provided:
“The defendant may appeal to the Court of Appeals from a judgment on a conviction in a circuit court; and upon an appeal, any decision of the court in an intermediate order or proceeding may be reviewed. A judgment suspending imposition or execution of sentence or placing a defendant on probation shall be deemed a judgment on a conviction and shall not be subject to appeal after expiration of the time specified in ORS 138.071 except as provided in ORS 138.050 and 138.510 to 138.680.” ORS 138.040 (1975) amended by Or Laws 1977, ch 372, § 13.
Likewise, prior to 1977, ORS 138.050 provided in pertinent part:
“A defendant who has plead guilty or no contest make take an appeal from a judgment on conviction where it imposes an excessive fine or excessive, cruel or unusual punishment. * * * On such appeal, the appellate court shall only consider the question whether an excessive fine or excessive, cruel or unusual punishment not proportionate to the offense has been imposed. If in the judgment of the appellate court the fine imposed is excessive or the punishment imposed is excessive, unusual or cruel and not proportionate to the offense, it shall direct the court from which the appeal is taken to impose the punishment which should be administered.” ORS 138.050 (1975) amended by Or Laws 1977, ch 372, § 14.
Interpreting these statutes, this court in State v. Martin, 282 Or 583, 586-87, 580 P2d 536 (1978), held that a defendant who had pleaded guilty and who had been placed on probation could, under ORS 138.050, challenge the conditions of his probation and that the scope of review on appeal was that prescribed in ORS 138.050. 282 Or at 587-88 & n 2.
In 1977, the legislature amended ORS 138.040 and 138.050. See Or Laws 1977, ch 372, §§ 13,14. In relevant part, ORS 138.040 was amended to read:
*469“The defendant may appeal to the Court of Appeals from a judgment on a conviction in a district or circuit court, including a judgment where the court imposes a sentence which is cruel, unusual or excessive in light of the nature and background of the offender or the facts and circumstances of the offense. * * * A judgment suspending imposition or execution of sentence or placing a defendant on probation shall be deemed a judgment on a conviction * * (Emphasis added.)
Similarly, the amended version of ORS 138.050 provided in relevant part:
“A defendant who has pleaded guilty or no contest may take an appeal from a judgment on conviction where it imposes a sentence that is cruel, unusual or excessive in light of the nature and background of the offender or the facts and circumstances of the offense.” (Emphasis added.)
It is the inclusion of the emphasized word “sentence” that has caused the trouble. If (as this court concluded in Carmickle) “probation” is not subsumed within “sentence,” then a defendant may not appeal concerning conditions of probation under ORS 138.050 and must instead appeal under ORS 138.040. Furthermore, assuming that “sentence” does not subsume “probation,” the scope of review under ORS 138.040 would be essentially unlimited, because the limited scope of review provided in that statute applies only to sentences.
Unfortunately, ORS chapter 138 does not define the words “sentence” and “probation.” The discussions of this bill in committee, however, demonstrate that the legislators assumed that probation was a type of sentence. Asked to explain why the bill was adding the phrase “cruel, unusual or excessive” to ORS 138.040, House Judiciary Committee Legal Counsel, Dennis Bromka, explained that the language should appear in “both .040 and .050 because both deal with the appeal of sentences.” Minutes, House Committee on Judiciary, April 26,1977, p 11. Testifying on behalf of the measure, Judge John Beatty declared that the phrase “ ‘cruel and unusual’ might relate to conditions of probation imposed.” Id. Another proponent of the bill, Edward Sullivan, Chairman of the Governor’s Task Force on Corrections, testified that “probation conditions would be included in excessivity cases under the last two provisions of this bill.” Id. at 13. One member of the committee, Representative Ted Bugas, sought to preclude appeals involving probation by introducing a proposed *470amendment that would have limited appeals to “situations in which [there is a] conviction of felony and a sentence of imprisonment has been imposed.” Id. (emphasis added). This proposal was rejected, but it shows that the legislators clearly assumed that “sentence” included “probation,” and that the only way to preclude appeal from a “sentence of probation” was by limiting the bill’s coverage to a “sentence of imprisonment.” Although the question “Does the word ‘sentence’ include ‘probation’?” was never squarely put, the hearings indicate that the legislators assumed that the answer to this question would be “Yes.”
In interpreting the effect of the 1977 amendments on ORS 138.040 and 138.050, the Court of Appeals has addressed this question on several occasions and has answered affirmatively. In State v. Fisher, 32 Or App 465, 467, 574 P2d 354, rev den 283 Or 99 (1978), the defendant pleaded guilty and was given probation. The court concluded that the term “sentence” included an order of probation and that the defendant was therefore entitled to appeal the conditions of her probation under ORS 138.050. 32 Or App at 468. Likewise, State v. Sprague, 52 Or App 1063, 1066, 629 P2d 1326, rev den 291 Or 514 (1981), held that a defendant who had been convicted of a crime could appeal under ORS 138.040 from the conditions of probation imposed. The court concluded that the condition imposed — a curfew — was not cruel, unusual or excessive under the circumstances. 52 Or App at 1065-67. See also State v. Douglas, 82 Or App 222, 728 P2d 548 (1986) (condition of probation imposed in consequence of guilty plea is appealable under ORS 138.050 and is not cruel, unusual or excessive); State v. Jacobs, 71 Or App 560, 563, 692 P2d 1387 (1984) (condition of probation imposed in consequence of probation violation after guilty plea is appealable under ORS 138.050 and is cruel, unusual or excessive under the circumstances).1
The next amendment to the provisions of ORS 138.040 and 138.050 of any consequence to us here came in 1985. A bill receiving strong support from the Court of *471Appeals was introduced, aiming to narrow the scope of review of appeals under ORS 138.040 and 138.050. The proponents of the measure argued that the provision in both ORS 138.040 and 138.050 requiring the appellate courts to determine whether the sentence was “excessive in light of the nature and background of the offender or the facts and circumstances of the offense” was too broad and necessitated de novo review of the record. The measure deleted the scope of review provisions of former ORS 138.040 and 138.050, replacing them with language requiring the appellate court to determine whether the sentence imposed “exceeds the maximum sentence allowable by law or is constitutionally cruel and unusual.” Or Laws 1985, ch 348, § 1, 2.
Opponents of the measure contended, in part, that it would drastically limit review of conditions of probation. Testifying on behalf of the bill, then Court of Appeals Judge (now Supreme Court Justice) Michael Gillette declared that this was incorrect. He opined that under the bill there “are two different ways in which a condition of probation may be challenged. The first is that it violates the constitution. The second — and this turns out to be the more important one — is that it is not related to the purposes for which probation would be imposed on this offender [i.e. it exceeds the maximum sentence allowable by law].” Minutes, Senate Judiciary Committee, June 11, 1985, p 22. Likewise, when Senator Margie Hendriksen expressed concern that the bill might unduly hamper review of conditions of probation, Metropolitan Public Defender Jim Hennings, who testified on behalf of the bill, declared that the amendment would only eliminate the necessity of de novo review of the record by the appellate court to determine whether the condition of probation was excessive in light of the facts and circumstances of this defendant and this crime. He added that under the amendment, probationers “still have a way of raising it [i.e. challenging the conditions of their probation] by changing the assignment of error to say [that] the condition of probation is not reasonably related to the crime and to the individual. This will make the proof element much harder than it is now.” Minutes, Senate Judiciary Committee, June 12,1985, p 15. Hence, in adopting these amendments to ORS 138.040 and 138.050, it is clear that the legislature again assumed that probation was a sentence subject to the scope of review laid out in those provisions.
*472I joined the dissent in Carmickle. Normally I would be content to let the matter rest, the battle having been fought and lost. As I reread ORS 138.040 and 138.050 in the majority opinion, and as I perused the discussion of these statutes on pages 464-65 of the majority opinion, I again thought, “This can’t be right.” This led me to the legislative history discussed above.
ORS 138.040 and 138.050 should be read together. We look to ORS 138.040 to see what decisions are appealable. The third sentence of ORS 138.040 “deems” a judgment suspending imposition of sentence to be a “judgment on a conviction.” ORS 138.050 limits the scope of review on a subspecies of judgments on conviction — those in which the “defendant has pleaded guilty or no contest.” In such cases, “the appellate court shall only consider the question whether a sentence * * * exceeds the maximum sentence allowable by law or is unconstitutionally cruel and unusual.” In this case, the defendant pleaded no contest. Imposition of sentence was suspended and he was placed on probation. The “sentence” is a judgment under ORS 138.040, but because the “sentence” was on a no contest plea, the appeal is under ORS 138.050 and our scope of review is limited by ORS 138.050.1 agree that the condition of probation restricting defendant’s access to a court of law is not authorized by ORS 137.540 (governing conditions of probation). It therefore “exceeds the maximum sentence allowable by law” under ORS 138.050. But for the reasons stated above, I submit that Carmickle should be overruled.2
Jones and Gillette, JJ., join in this concurring opinion.It is worth noting, as did the Court of Appeals in State v. Jacobs, 71 Or App 560, 564 n 1, 692 P2d 1387 (1984), that in dictum in State v. Martin, 282 Or 583, 588 n 4, 580 P2d 536 (1978), this court indicated that orders of probation would remain reviewable under ORS 138.050 even after the insertion of the word “sentence” by the 1977 amendments.
State v. Carmickle, 307 Or 1, 762 P2d 290 (1988), was a 4-3 in banc decision. Only five of the seven present members of the court are participating in this case. Although three of us (all dissenters in Carmickle) constitute a majority in this case and would prefer to see Carmickle overruled, we do not believe that should be done by any majority smaller than that which decided Carmickle in the first place.