People v. Douglas M. ( 2013 )


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  • Filed 10/24/13
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    A136993
    v.
    DOUGLAS M.,                                       (San Mateo County
    Super. Ct. No. SC068572A)
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Douglas M. appeals from an order modifying his probation, pursuant to amended
    Penal Code section 1203.067,1 which sets forth various new probation conditions for
    registered sex offenders.2 Because the presumption of prospectivity of Penal Code
    statutes, mandated by section 3, cannot be rebutted, we conclude that the provisions of
    revised section 1203.067 may not be applied retroactively to change the terms and
    conditions of probation for probationers who committed their offenses before the
    effective date of the amendment. As appellant‟s offenses occurred well before that date,
    the trial court improperly modified the terms and conditions of his probation to include
    the new provisions.
    1
    All further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise indicated.
    2
    At appellant‟s request, and due to the nature of the underlying offenses of which
    he was convicted, we do not use his full name in this opinion. (See In re E.J. (2010)
    
    47 Cal. 4th 1258
    , 1267, fn. 4 [in “a departure from [its] usual practice (see Cal. Style
    Manual (4th ed. 2000) § 5:9, pp. 179-180),” our Supreme Court granted petitioners‟
    request to not disclose their identities, “given the particular subject matter of [the]
    proceedings”].)
    1
    PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    On May 10, 2006, appellant was charged by complaint in Shasta County Superior
    Court with one count of continuous sexual abuse of a child (§ 288.5, subd. (a)), and one
    count of lewd or lascivious acts on a child under age 14 (§ 288, subd (a)). The offenses
    allegedly were committed between July 2005 and March 2006.3
    On September 8, 2006, pursuant to a negotiated disposition, the complaint was
    amended and appellant pleaded guilty to two counts of lewd and lascivious acts on a
    child under age 14.
    On December 14, 2006, the trial court imposed a total sentence of 10 years in state
    prison, suspended execution of sentence, and placed appellant on formal probation for
    seven years.
    On April 2, 2009, Shasta County transferred probation supervision to San Mateo
    County, where appellant now lives.
    On October 19, 2012, over defense counsel‟s objections, the trial court modified
    the terms and conditions of appellant‟s probation, pursuant to amended section 1203.067.
    The court stayed the modification order for 30 days.
    On November 1, 2012, appellant filed a notice of appeal from the probation
    modification order.
    On January 23, 2013, we granted appellant‟s petition for a writ of supersedeas and
    stayed the trial court‟s probation modification order pending resolution of his appeal.
    DISCUSSION
    Appellant contends the trial court erred when it applied the provisions of amended
    section 1203.067 to modify the terms and conditions of his probation.
    I. Trial Court Background
    Appellant was convicted in 2006 of committing offenses that took place between
    2005 and 2006.
    3
    The specific facts underlying appellant‟s convictions are not relevant to the
    issues raised on appeal.
    2
    In the presentence report, the probation officer reported that Dr. David Wilson, a
    clinical psychologist, had assessed appellant and rated his risk factor for sexual re-offense
    as low. Dr. Wilson had also described appellant‟s primary psychiatric problems as
    flowing “directly from his health problems, for which he has anxiety disorder.
    Dr. Wilson did not identify any emotional or personality disorder, no antisocial
    personality disorder or a propensity toward criminal behavior or sexual offenses.”
    Dr. Wilson rated appellant as a good candidate for probation.
    Appellant received a suspended sentence and was placed on probation in
    December 2006. Among other conditions of probation, the court ordered appellant,
    pursuant to former section 1203.067, to “meaningfully participate in, comply with and
    follow all the rules and requirements of, and complete a recognized adult sex offender
    treatment program as directed by the Probation Officer,” and further ordered that he
    “submit to a polygraph examination, for compliance with probation conditions, at the
    direction of the Probation Officer.”
    In August 2010, Dr. Wilson, the same psychologist who performed the original
    psychological evaluation of appellant in 2006, conducted a reevaluation related to the
    immigration application of appellant‟s wife. In his report, Dr. Wilson noted that, aside
    from his 2006 offenses, appellant “has never before nor after been in trouble with the
    law.” In addition, appellant‟s probation officer had indicated that appellant “has abided
    by the conditions of his probation and appeared to be „progressing well.‟ ” Dr. Wilson
    also noted that appellant was no longer required to see a psychotherapist. Finally,
    Dr. Wilson believed that appellant‟s “subsequent performance on probation has borne out
    my assessment of him as a „low risk‟ for re-offense and a good candidate for treatment
    and rehabilitation.”
    In September 2012, the San Mateo County Probation Department initiated
    proceedings in this case and several others to modify the terms of probation due to the
    recent amendment of section 1203.067, subdivision (b). There was no allegation that
    appellant had violated any of the terms of his probation. Instead, in a memorandum to
    the trial court, appellant‟s probation officer asserted that, “[a]s of July 1, 2012, the law
    3
    requires the imposition of specific sex offender conditions to all individuals on probation
    who are required to register as a sex offender,” and that those “conditions are to be
    imposed retroactively to all individuals currently on probation. This includes those who
    have already completed a non-certified sex offender program.”
    In her memorandum, the probation officer also discussed appellant‟s personal
    circumstances, stating that appellant “is married and the father of two young boys. He
    appears to have stabilized significantly in his personal life over the years and has been
    compliant while on supervised probation. His records reflect that he participated in
    treatment . . . from August, 2007 through January, 2010 when services were then
    terminated by his provider. This was a result of the therapist‟s contractual agreement
    with San Mateo County Mental Health Services in that he could no longer treat clients
    with Medi-[Cal] insurance, which included the defendant. This agreement was
    applicable to other San Mateo County treatment providers as well. As a result of this
    circumstance, the defendant was not further directed by probation to participate in
    treatment and he was deemed satisfied of this condition.”
    On October 19, 2012, over defense objections, the trial court ordered the terms and
    conditions of appellant‟s probation modified such that “he is required to participate in an
    approved sex offender management treatment program. That participation will be
    for . . . a minimum of one year.
    “[¶] And he is to submit to random polygraph examinations, waive any privilege
    against self-incrimination and the psychotherapist-patient privilege will be waived to
    enable communication between the sex offender management professionals and the
    probation officer.”
    II. Legal Analysis
    A. Section 1203.067’s Provisions
    When appellant was initially placed on probation in 2006, the terms and
    conditions of his probation included those found in former section 1203.067, which
    provided in relevant part:
    4
    “(a) Notwithstanding any other law, before probation may be granted to any
    person convicted of a felony specified in Section 261, 262, 264.1, 286, 288, 288a, or 289,
    who is eligible for probation, the court shall do all of the following: [¶] . . . . [¶]
    “(b) If a defendant is granted probation pursuant to subdivision (a), the court shall
    order the defendant to be placed in an appropriate treatment program designed to deal
    with child molestation or sexual offenders, if an appropriate program is available in the
    county.
    “(c) Any defendant ordered to be placed in a treatment program pursuant to
    subdivision (b) shall be responsible for paying the expense of his or her participation in
    the treatment program as determined by the court. The court shall take into consideration
    the ability of the defendant to pay, and no defendant shall be denied probation because of
    his or her inability to pay.”
    In October 2012, after appellant had completed some two and one-half years of
    treatment, in accordance with the terms of his probation, and after the probation
    department deemed the treatment requirement satisfied, appellant‟s probation was
    modified to include the provisions of amended section 1203.067, which provides in
    relevant part:
    “(b) On or after July 1, 2012, the terms of probation for persons placed on formal
    probation for an offense that requires registration pursuant to Section 290 to 290.023,
    inclusive, shall include all of the following:
    “(1) Persons placed on formal probation prior to July 1, 2012, shall participate in
    an approved sex offender management program, following the standards developed
    pursuant to Section 9003, for a period of not less than one year or the remaining term of
    probation if it is less than one year. The length of the period in the program is to be
    determined by the certified sex offender management professional in consultation with
    the probation officer and as approved by the court.
    “(2) Persons placed on formal probation on or after July 1, 2012, shall successfully
    complete a sex offender management program, following the standards developed
    pursuant to Section 9003, as a condition of release from probation. The length of the
    5
    period in the program shall be not less than one year, up to the entire period of probation,
    as determined by the certified sex offender management professional in consultation with
    the probation officer and as approved by the court.
    “(3) Waiver of any privilege against self-incrimination and participation in
    polygraph examinations, which shall be part of the sex offender management program.
    “(4) Waiver of any psychotherapist-patient privilege to enable communication
    between the sex offender management professional and supervising probation officer,
    pursuant to Section 290.09.
    “(c) Any defendant ordered to be placed in an approved sex offender management
    program pursuant to subdivision (b) shall be responsible for paying the expense of his or
    her participation in the program as determined by the court. The court shall take into
    consideration the ability of the defendant to pay, and no defendant shall be denied
    probation because of his or her inability to pay.”
    The effective date of the amended statute was September 9, 2010, but its
    provisions did not become operative until July 1, 2012. (§ 1203.067, amended by Stats.
    2010, ch. 219 (A.B. 1844), § 17, eff. Sept. 9, 2010; § 1203.067, subd. (b).)4
    B. Amended Section 1203.067 May Not Be Applied Retroactively
    Section 3 provides: “NOT RETROACTIVE. No part of [the Penal Code] is
    retroactive, unless expressly so declared.” Our Supreme Court has “described section 3,
    and its identical counterparts in other codes (e.g., Civ. Code, § 3; Code Civ. Proc., § 3),
    as codifying „the time-honored principle . . . that in the absence of an express retroactivity
    provision, a statute will not be applied retroactively unless it is very clear from extrinsic
    sources that the Legislature . . . must have intended a retroactive application.‟
    [Citations.] In applying this principle, we have been cautious not to infer retroactive
    4
    “ „ “The effective date [of a statute] is . . . the date upon which the statute came
    into being as an existing law.” [Citation.] “[T]he operative date is the date upon which
    the directives of the statute may be actually implemented.” [Citation.] Although the
    effective and operative dates of a statute are often the same, the Legislature may
    “postpone the operation of certain statutes until a later time.” [Citation.]‟ [Citation.]”
    (People v. Alford (2007) 
    42 Cal. 4th 749
    , 753, fn. 2. (Alford).)
    6
    intent from vague phrases and broad, general language in statutes. [Citations.]
    Consequently, „ “a statute that is ambiguous with respect to retroactive application is
    construed . . . to be unambiguously prospective.” ‟ [Citations.]” (People v. Brown
    (2012) 
    54 Cal. 4th 314
    , 319-320 (Brown); accord, Tapia v. Superior Court (1991)
    
    53 Cal. 3d 282
    , 287 (Tapia).)
    In the present case, appellant argues that, in light of section 3‟s presumption of
    prospectivity, “the most tenable construction” is that revised section 1203.067 applies to
    all probationers whose offenses occurred on or after September 9, 2010, including both
    those already on probation as of July 1, 2012, and those granted probation after that date.
    Respondent‟s entire argument in response is that “the Legislature expressed its
    intent that the statute apply retroactively by specifying that probationers placed on parole
    [sic] before July 1, 2012 must participate in approved sex offender management
    programs. [Citation.] Giving the statutory language its „usual and ordinary meaning,‟
    there is no ambiguity. [Citation.] Thus, the statute applies to those placed on probation
    before July 1, 2012.”
    This interpretation, however, completely ignores both section 3‟s presumption of
    prospectivity and the context in which the amendment of section 1203.067 came about.
    The revised statute was enacted as part of Assembly Bill 1844, the Chelsea King Child
    Predator Prevention Act of 2010 (Chelsea‟s Law) (Stats. 2010, ch. 219), which altered
    numerous statutes governing sex offenses and sex offenders. Although the bill was
    enacted in September 2010 as urgency legislation, intended to take effect immediately
    (id. at § 29),5 the section 1203.067 amendments did not become operative until July 2012,
    almost two years later. The apparent reason for this delayed implementation is reflected
    in other stated requirements of the bill (see, e.g., § 9003 [requiring development and
    updating of standards for certification of sex offender management professionals and
    5
    “ „Under the California Constitution, a statute enacted at a regular session of the
    Legislature generally becomes effective on January 1 of the year following its enactment
    except where the statute is passed as an urgency measure and becomes effective sooner.‟
    [Citation.]” (People v. Camba (1996) 
    50 Cal. App. 4th 857
    , 865.)
    7
    programs]), which were prerequisites to application of the new provisions of section
    1203.067. There is nothing in this legislative history that provides “ „ “a clear and
    compelling implication” ‟ ” that the Legislature intended the revised statute to apply
    retroactively. (Alford, supra, 42 Cal.4th at p. 754 [“Even without an express declaration,
    a statute may apply retroactively if there is „ “a clear and compelling implication” ‟ that
    the Legislature intended such a result”].)
    Given this context, the most reasonable interpretation of the language of amended
    section 1203.067, subdivision (b), regarding “persons placed on formal probation prior to
    July 1, 2012,” is that, for those probationers whose offenses occurred between the
    effective date of September 9, 2010 and the operative date of July 1, 2012, their
    participation in—though not necessarily completion of—“an approved sex offender
    management program” would be required. (Ibid.; see Brown, supra, 54 Cal.4th at
    pp. 319-320.) This interpretation fulfills the Legislature‟s intention that this portion of
    the urgency legislation would take effect immediately upon enactment, applying to
    probationers whose offenses occurred on or after that date, even though its provisions
    could not actually be implemented until July 1, 2012. (See Brown, at pp. 319-320; see
    also People v. Camba, supra, 50 Cal.App.4th at p. 865.)
    Moreover, construing the new statute as retroactive would raise serious questions
    about its constitutionality. First, people who were on probation before its effective date
    would now be required to participate in and pay for a new mandatory treatment program,
    even after many of them had already participated in, paid for, and perhaps completed,
    court-ordered treatment under their prior probation conditions. (See § 1203.067,
    subds. (b)(1), (c).) Second, they would have to waive both their privilege against self-
    incrimination and their psychotherapist-patient privilege. (See § 1203.067, subd. (b)(3)
    & (4).) Application of these provisions retroactively to such probationers could arguably
    implicate the federal and state Constitutions‟ prohibition against ex post facto laws.
    (U.S. Const., art. I, § 10; Cal. Const., art. I, § 9; see, e.g., People v. McVickers (1992)
    
    4 Cal. 4th 81
    , 84 [ex post facto clause is implicated when a new statute is both
    retrospective and, inter alia, “ „ “makes more burdensome the punishment for a crime,
    8
    after its commission” ‟ ”]; People v. Delgado (2006) 
    140 Cal. App. 4th 1157
    , 1170
    [“statutory changes that retroactively impose greater punishment in probation cases
    violate the ex post facto clause”].)
    These constitutional concerns further support a finding of non-retroactivity under
    section 3, given the rule of interpretation providing that, “ „[i]f a statute is susceptible of
    two constructions, one of which will render it constitutional and the other
    unconstitutional in whole or in part, or raise serious and doubtful constitutional
    questions, the court will adopt the construction which, without doing violence to the
    reasonable meaning of the language used, will render it valid in its entirety, or free from
    doubt as to its constitutionality, even thought the other construction is equally reasonable.
    [Citations.] The basis of this rule is the presumption that the Legislature intended, not to
    violate the Constitution, but to enact a valid statute within the scope of its constitutional
    powers.‟ [Citations.]” (People v. Superior Court (Romero) (1996) 
    13 Cal. 4th 497
    , 509,
    italics added; see, e.g., Tapia, supra, 53 Cal.3d at pp. 298-299 [refusing to apply
    provisions of several new statutes to crimes committed before statutes‟ effective date
    because such application both would be “retrospective” in that it would change legal
    consequences of defendant‟s past conduct, and “would also likely violate the rule against
    ex post facto legislation, since each of these provisions appears to define conduct as a
    crime, to increase punishment for a crime, or to eliminate a defense”].)
    In sum, there is nothing in either the language of the statute or its legislative
    history clearly indicating a legislative intent for revised section 1203.067 to be applied
    retroactively to probationers whose crimes occurred before its effective date. (See
    Brown, supra, 54 Cal.4th at pp. 319-320; Alford, supra, 42 Cal.4th at p. 754.) Moreover,
    to construe the statute as applying to those probationers would raise serious constitutional
    questions under the federal and state ex post facto clauses. Therefore, in keeping with the
    mandate of section 3, the amended statute must be viewed as “unambiguously
    prospective,” applying to probationers who committed their crimes on or after the
    statute‟s effective date of September 9, 2010. (See Brown, at p. 320.) Because
    9
    appellant‟s offense occurred before September 9, 2010, the provisions of revised section
    1203.067 were improperly applied to him and must be stricken.6
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is modified to strike the new terms and conditions of probation
    imposed on appellant pursuant to amended section 1203.067. As so modified, the
    judgment is affirmed.
    6
    Appellant also asserts that the trial court acted in excess of its jurisdiction when
    it modified the conditions of his probation to add the new provisions, since there has been
    no probation violation or other relevant change in circumstances that could trigger any
    modification to the terms and conditions of his probation. (See People v. Cookson (1991)
    
    54 Cal. 3d 1091
    , 1095 [“[a] change in circumstances is required before a court has
    jurisdiction to extend or otherwise modify probation”]; In re Clark (1959) 
    51 Cal. 2d 838
    ,
    840 [“An order modifying the terms of probation based upon the same facts as the
    original order granting probation is in excess of the jurisdiction of the court, for the
    reason that there is no factual basis to support it”].) Appellant further suggests that
    “section 3 may also arguably allow application of section 1203.067[, subdivision] (b) to
    probationers with pre-September 2010 crimes who committed some violation of probation
    on or after September 9, 2010.” However, in light of our conclusion that amended
    section 1203.067 is inapplicable to probationers like appellant who committed their
    offenses before September 9, 2010, we have no reason to address these jurisdictional
    arguments.
    Similarly, there is no need for us to resolve the constitutional issues raised on
    appeal. (See Santa Clara County Local Transportation Authority v. Guardino (1995)
    
    11 Cal. 4th 220
    , 230-231 [“ „A fundamental and longstanding principle of judicial
    restraint requires that courts avoid reaching constitutional questions in advance of the
    necessity of deciding them‟ ”].)
    10
    _________________________
    Kline, P.J.
    We concur:
    _________________________
    Richman, J.
    _________________________
    Brick, J.*
    A136993, People v. Douglas M.
    * Judge of the Alameda County Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice
    pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    11
    Trial Court:                San Mateo County Superior Court
    Trial Judge:                Honorable John L. Grandsaert
    Attorneys for Appellant:    First District Appellate Project
    Jonathan Soglin, Executive Director
    J. Bradley O‟Connell, Asst. Director
    Attorneys for Respondent:   Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General
    Dane R;. Gillette, Chief Asst. Atty. Gen.
    Gerald A. Engler, Sr. Asst. Atty. Gen.
    Laurence K. Sullivan, Supervising Dep. A.G.
    Rene A. Chacon, Supervising Dep. A.G.
    12
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A136993

Judges: Kline

Filed Date: 10/24/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/3/2024