People v. Meyers

Opinion

KAUS, P. J.

In case A438396 defendant pleaded guilty to second degree burglary in August 1975, and was placed on probation, subject to serving one year in the county jail with no credit given for time served. Defendant claims that he was incarcerated from the time of his arrest in April 1975 until the end of his one-year county jail term in October 1976.1 We can assume that as of 1977 defendant had spent more than one year in jail on the 1975 burglary charge.

In February 1977, in case A-017430, defendant was charged in a two-count information with second degree robbery and second degree burglary; a prior felony conviction was alleged. At the same time an alleged violation of defendant’s probation in case A438396 was brought to the court’s attention.

In March 1977 defendant appeared in court in both matters—violation of the August 1975 probation order (A438396) and commission of two felonies with a prior felony conviction alleged (A017430). The following occurred:

Defense counsel asked the court “to consider a motion pursuant to [Penal Code section] 1192.5.” The court agreed and the parties went off the record, presumably to discuss the terms of a plea bargain. Then, on the record, defendant was told that “the Court could require you to spend two years in the county jail, as a result of your pleading guilty to these two charges, coupled with the violation of probation”; that if defendant were placed on probation and “required to spend two years in the county jail, there will be other terms and conditions”; and that “the maximum punishment which [the court] will impose upon you will, be *735two years in the county jail.” Defendant was also told that if after reading the probation report the judge “cannot live up to the promise that he has made to you,” defendant could withdraw his guilty pleas and the case would then be set for trial.

After further waivers, defendant pleaded guilty to counts 1 and 2 in the new information (AO 17430) and admitted the prior conviction.

On April 21, 1977, defendant appeared for sentencing. On the new charges, defendant was sentenced to state prison and execution of sentence was suspended. The court said: “Place him on formal probation on the following terms and conditions:

“One, he serve 365 days in the county jail.
“Secondly, he obey all laws.
“All right. You’re admitting the other matter as far as the violations,...?
“[Defense Counsel]: Yes, Your Honor.
“The Court: That would be on case No. A 438396.
“I’ll find that he is in violation and impose 365 days in the county jail to run consecutive with the other time. No parole.
“[Defense Counsel]: Credit for time served, Your Honor. I think it’s 160 days.
“The Court: I wouldn’t give him credit for time served. He’s lucky he’s not going to the joint,.. . looking at the offenses involved.” (Italics added.)

The court and defense counsel then discussed the length of defendant’s probation in this case; the court decided to extend probation “so that we have at least a four-year tail on him after he gets out.” Defense counsel then clarified that the court was reinstating defendant’s probation in case A438396 “on the same terms and conditions on the condition that .he spend 365 days in the county jail consecutive to AO 17430 [the new charges].” After a brief discussion concerning defendant’s request to make several telephone calls, the court told defendant to straighten himself out; that he had “a lot of good years before” him. The clerk *736asked whether probation in case A438396 was extended for four years; the court said yes;' defense counsel thanked the court, and the proceedings ended. Defendant said nothing.

On May 24, 1977, the superior court denied a written petition for credit under section 2900.5 of the Penal Code. On June 3, 1977, defendant petitioned this court for “credit of presentence incarceration” in case A 017430. That petition was assigned to another division of this court which, on June 23, 1977, made an order directing the superior court to reconsider its denial of such credit in the light of People v. Hunter (1977) 68 Cal.App.3d 389 [137 Cal.Rptr. 299] and Penal Code section 2900.5 as amended. The superior court did reconsider and on September 22, 1977, made an order giving defendant credit for 106 days in case A-017430.2

Meanwhile, on June 6, 1977, defendant filed a notice of appeal. The record was filed in this court on June 21, 1977, and assigned to this division. The parties have properly treated the appeal to apply to both superior court cases. Nevertheless, since the only issue raised in either case is the back-time credit under section 2900.5 and the trial court’s reaction to the order of June 23, 1977, mooted that issue with respect to case A-017430, we are only concerned with case A-438396—the one in which defendant already spent a year in jail as a condition of probation before the reimposition of probation in April 1977.

Discussion

Defendant contends that he is entitled to credit for time previously served as a condition of probation when probation was first imposed in 1975. Leaving aside whatever time defendant had to serve in case A-017430, that contention amounts to an assertion that when the court in April 1977 reimposed probation on condition that defendant serve one more year in jail, that condition was already satisfied. A literal reading of section 2900.-5 as amended in 1976 indicates that defendant is correct. Subdivision (a) demands that “all days of custody . . . including days served as a condition of probation . . .” be credited upon any sentence; subdivision (c) defines “sentence” to include a “period of *737imprisonment imposed as a condition of probation.” One year minus one year equals zero.

Defendant’s plea to two new counts, and his admissions of a prior felony conviction and of a probation violation were concededly part of a plea bargain in which defendant would receive probation rather than be sentenced to prison. He contends, however, that since the plea bargain was made after the 1976 amendment to section 2900.5 of the Penal Code, it cannot “be read as including any express condition that under the then existing law he receive no credit for time served.” Further, he points out that “there was not one word spoken to indicate that as part of the: bargain he was not to receive credit for time served.”3

Up to this point, defendant is correct. The proceedings took place after the present version of section 2900.5 had been the law for some time and it may be difficult to read the record as impliedly waiving the statute’s express credit for “days served as a condition of probation.”4

Nevertheless, whatever the record may or may not indicate about the terms of the plea bargain, it convincingly demonstrates that the court intended that defendant be physically confined in jail for two years. Even if the several references in the record to “two years in the county jail,...” and “365 days in the county jail to run consecutive with the other time,” were not enough, the court’s response to the request for credit—“I wouldn’t give him credit for time served. He’s lucky he’s not going to the joint, . . . looking at the offenses involved.”—leaves no doubt on that score.

Moreover, it is clear that as far as the court was concerned, the condition of two years’ actual custody was “the heart of the probation order; without it, the order would have been quite different or might not *738have been forthcoming at all.” (In re Gonzales (1974) 43 Cal.App.3d 616, 621 [118 Cal.Rptr. 69].)

Generally, if a plea bargain is breached or misunderstood, the most that a disappointed defendant can expect is the right to withdraw his guilty plea. (E.g., People v. Johnson (1974) 10 Cal.3d 868, 873 [112 Cal.Rptr. 556, 519 P.2d 604]; People v. Pinon (1973) 35 Cal.App.3d 120, 124-125 [110 Cal.Rptr. 406].) Defendant would contend, however, that the withholding of jail-time credits in granting probation is no more than an invalid condition of probation, which he is entitled to have struck, leaving the underlying grant of probation intact. (E.g., In re Mannino (1971) 14 Cal.App.3d 953, 956, fn. 1 [92 Cal.Rptr. 880, 45 A.L.R.3d 996].) In re Gonzales, supra, demonstrates, however, that where an invalid condition of probation is “the heart of the probation order” a proper disposition calls for something more drastic than a mere disregarding of the condition.

Defendant cannot have it both ways. If he bargained away his rights to back time credit under section 2900.5 and could legally do so, why is he here? If he did not—and we agree that on this record we cannot say that he did—the appeal has the effect of bringing an illegal sentence to our attention. The trial court attempted the impossible: to incarcerate him physically for one year in spite of the fact that section 2900.5 said it could not be done. The proper remedy is, therefore, to reverse and to remand with directions that defendant be permitted to withdraw his guilty plea. (In re Gonzales, supra, 43 Cal.App.3d 621-622.)

We fully recognize that the end result of this appeal may be a longer period of incarceration than the one which the trial court illegally intended. Nevertheless, as People v. Serrato (1973) 9 Cal.3d 753, 763-765 [109 Cal.Rptr. 65, 512 P.2d 289] demonstrates, the general rule that a defendant should not be penalized for taking an appeal does not apply “when a trial court pronounces an unauthorized sentence. Such a sentence is subject to being set aside judicially and is no bar to the imposition of a proper judgment thereafter, even though it is more severe than the original unauthorized pronouncement.” (Id., 764.)5

*739The judgment (order granting probation) in case number A-438396 is reversed with directions to permit defendant to withdraw his guilty plea in case number A-017430 if he elects to do so.

The appeal in case number A-017430 is dismissed as moot.

Ashby, J., concurred.

This claim is obviously false. The offense to which defendant pleaded guilty was alleged to have been committed on June 25, 1975. We gather from the probation report that in April 1975, defendant had been arrested on another burglary charge, that he eventually pleaded guilty to receiving stolen property and served 90 days in jail as a condition of probation.

We note that this court’s order did not mandate the granting of credit; it merely directed the superior court to reconsider its denial in the light of People v. Hunter, supra. Therefore, to the extent that the previous order may be deemed to be law of the case, it is limited to the self-evident proposition that the rule announced in Hunter applies to this case.

This argument assumes, of course, that a defendant may, by appropriate waivers, bargain away the benefits of section 2900.5. No reported decision that has come to our attention so holds. We express no opinion on the issue. It has not been briefed by the parties and is not necessary to a proper disposition of this case, which is rapidly becoming moot. We understand that the point is presently before another division of this court.

We attach relatively little importance to the fact that defendant’s attorney asked whether his client would be given credit for back time after the court had made its order. It seems highly probable that counsel was only referring to case A-017430 in connection with which defendant had appárently been in custody before the April 1977 proceedings. If we are correct, counsel was obviously not asking for credit for time served as a condition of probation.

In his dissent, Justice Stephens concludes: (1) That the combined effect of sections 19a and 1203.1 of the Penal Code prohibits county jail confinement in excess of a cumulative total of one year per felony, even if imposed as conditions to successive grants of probation; and (2) that, nevertheless, the order granting probation in case A-438396 was legal.

While the first issue may become relevant somewhere down the road, neither side has *739raised it in connection with this appeal, nor is its resolution necessary at this time. We therefore decline to discuss it. We merely point out that even if we agreed with the dissent on that point, we would not agree that the order was legal. As we point out in the opinion, nothing is plainer than that the court ordered one year of actual confinement, not an exercise in subtraction. Whether it was unable to achieve that objective because of section 2900.5 alone, or because of the interplay between sections 19a, 1203.1 and 2900.5, seems irrelevant.