Wofford v. Superior Court , 179 Cal. Rptr. 3d 243 ( 2014 )


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  • Filed 10/22/14
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    COURT OF APPEAL - FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    LAVINA CAROL WOFFORD,                           D064633
    Petitioner,                             (San Diego County
    Super. Ct. No. SCD233212)
    v.
    THE SUPERIOR COURT OF SAN
    DIEGO COUNTY,
    Respondent;
    THE PEOPLE,
    Real Party in Interest.
    Proceedings in mandate after superior court denied released offender's motion for
    permission to apply for transfer of supervision to another state. Desiree A. Bruce-Lyle,
    Judge. Petition granted.
    Robert Booher, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
    Petitioner.
    Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General,
    Charles C. Ragland, Collette C. Cavalier and Amanda E. Casillas, Deputy Attorneys
    General, for Respondent and Real Party in Interest.
    After being convicted of drug-related offenses, Lavina Wofford was sentenced
    under the Realignment Act1 to serve a portion of her prison sentence released into the
    community under the mandatory supervision of the probation department. Among the
    many conditions of her mandatory supervision, Wofford is required to obtain the superior
    court's consent before moving to another state. Apart from mandatory supervision
    requirements, a released offender who wants to transfer his or her supervision to another
    state must also obtain the approval of the California office that administers out-of-state
    transfer requests under the Interstate Compact for Adult Offender Supervision (the
    Compact or Interstate Compact).
    After she was released in the community under mandatory supervision, Wofford
    filed a motion in superior court requesting that she be permitted to submit an application
    to California's Interstate Compact office for a transfer of her supervision to another state.
    The court denied her request to apply to the Compact office, in part based on its
    conclusion that offenders serving mandatory supervision sentences are ineligible to apply
    for transfers under the Compact.
    We conclude the court erred in ruling mandatory supervision releasees serving
    their sentences in the community under the Realignment Act are ineligible to apply for
    1     Our references to the Realignment Act are to the 2011 Realignment Legislation
    addressing public safety (Stats. 2011, ch. 15, § 1) and subsequent related legislation.
    (See Historical and Statutory Notes, 47 West's Ann. Pen. Code (2014 ed.) foll. § 17.5, p.
    90; People v. Cruz (2012) 
    207 Cal. App. 4th 664
    , 668.)
    2
    transfers under the Interstate Compact. Accordingly, we grant the petition for writ of
    mandate.
    BACKGROUND
    At proceedings in 2011 and 2012, Wofford was convicted of several drug-related
    offenses, and the trial court sentenced her to an eight-year prison term, to be served
    locally as a "split sentence" under the Realignment Act. Her sentence consisted of three
    years served in jail and a five-year suspended sentence served while released into the
    community under mandatory supervision by the probation department.2
    Wofford's terms of mandatory supervision while released into the community
    include the condition that she obtain the "court's and [probation officer's] written consent
    before moving out of state." In August 2013, Wofford filed a motion requesting that she
    be permitted to apply for a transfer of her supervision to Virginia through the Interstate
    Compact. She contended she was eligible to apply for a transfer under the Compact
    because (1) she was an offender under supervision as defined in the rules governing the
    Compact, and (2) a transfer was permissible under California's Realignment Act and
    consistent with its rehabilitative goals.
    Wofford told the court she had been in compliance with her supervision terms for
    six months; she has strong family and financial support in Virginia, whereas in California
    she was struggling financially; Virginia (a Compact member) has a supervision protocol
    similar to California's and will be required to supervise her for the length of time
    2      We grant the Attorney General's unopposed request that we take judicial notice of
    the order granting Wofford mandatory supervision. (Evid. Code, §§ 452, 459.)
    3
    established by California; and California retained the right to bring her back to the state.
    Wofford submitted a letter from her daughter which described the stable, supportive
    environment the daughter and her family could provide for Wofford in Virginia and
    expressing the daughter's willingness to assist in Wofford's supervision plan.
    The District Attorney opposed Wofford's request to apply for a transfer, arguing
    that although mandatory supervision releasees could fall within the broad definitions of
    "offender" and "supervision" set forth in the Compact rules, these rules also reflected that
    not all such offenders were eligible. The District Attorney contended that mandatory
    supervision releasees were not meant to be covered by the Compact because, unlike
    probationers, they are inmates serving a prison term in the community. The District
    Attorney also asserted that the Compact should not be applied to mandatory supervision
    releasees because they are subject to specialized supervision mechanisms (including a
    centralized review court, a comprehensive, personalized case plan, and specially-trained
    probation officers), and, concerning this case, Virginia does not have supervision
    comparable to this mandatory supervision. The District Attorney also argued the court
    should deny Wofford's request because she had been on mandatory supervision for only
    six months.
    Both parties submitted e-mail correspondence from, and described phone
    conversations with, personnel at California's Interstate Compact office concerning the
    mandatory supervision eligibility issue. Each party claimed these e-mails and
    conversations supported its position on the eligibility question.
    4
    At a hearing on September 19, 2013, the court denied Wofford's motion for
    permission to apply for a transfer under the Compact. The court reasoned a defendant on
    mandatory supervision is for "all intents and purposes" serving a prison term even though
    the defendant is released in the community; a defendant who is an inmate does not
    qualify for a Compact transfer; and accordingly mandatory supervision releasees were
    not eligible for Compact transfers. The court also stated Wofford was doing well on
    mandatory supervision but she had not been on mandatory supervision long enough to
    determine whether her progress will be consistent, and there was a question as to whether
    Virginia would supervise her in the same manner as she was being supervised in San
    Diego.
    In response to defense counsel's requests for clarification, the court stated its
    ruling was without prejudice to Wofford's right to request reconsideration if she had
    additional time on mandatory supervision with consistent positive results, and if the
    court's findings on the other matters were also addressed.
    Wofford filed an appeal challenging the court's ineligibility ruling. Although the
    court's ruling was without prejudice to Wofford's right to file another transfer request, her
    ability to purse a transfer request would be impeded absent a legal determination on the
    Compact eligibility issue. Accordingly, to resolve this purely legal issue, we treated
    Wofford's appeal as a petition for writ of mandate. (See Thornburg v. Superior Court
    (2006) 
    138 Cal. App. 4th 43
    , 48.) We note that Wofford is not challenging the court's
    factual finding that a transfer application was not appropriate at this juncture, and we
    express no view on this fact-based component of the court's order.
    5
    DISCUSSION
    California is a member of the Interstate Compact through which member states
    coordinate the out-of-state transfer and supervision of offenders who are released into the
    community under the supervision of the authorities. The Compact contains detailed
    provisions governing transfer requests by the offender, implementation of the transfers,
    and supervision of the transferred offender.
    The parties do not dispute that the Compact applies to offenders released into the
    community on traditional parole or probation status. However, they disagree whether it
    applies to the new class of released offenders who, under California's recent Realignment
    Act, are serving a portion of their prison term released into the community under the
    supervision of the probation department.
    For reasons we shall explain, we conclude mandatory supervision releasees are
    eligible to apply for transfers under the Compact.
    I. The Interstate Compact
    The Interstate Compact is an "agreement between member states that seeks to
    promote public safety by systematically controlling the interstate movement of certain
    adult offenders." (Interstate Commission for Adult Offender Supervision Rules (Mar. 1,
    2014) (Compact Rules or Rules), Introduction.)3 California enacted legislation adopting
    3      The Compact is available at  as of October
    22, 2014.
    6
    the Compact in 2000. (Pen. Code,4 § 11180.) The Compact is overseen by the Interstate
    Commission for Adult Offender Supervision (ICAOS or the Commission), which is a
    "quasi-governmental administrative body vested by the states with broad regulatory
    authority." (Compact 
    Rules, supra
    , Introduction.) The Commission promulgates rules
    that "have the force and effect of statutory law" and that take precedence over any
    conflicting laws established in the compacting states. (§ 11180, arts. V, XIV; Compact
    
    Rules, supra
    , Introduction.) To assist with implementation and interpretation of the
    Compact, the Commission also issues advisory opinions (Advisory Opinions) and a
    judicial bench book (Bench Book). (Compact 
    Rules, supra
    , Introduction; ICAOS Bench
    Book for Judges and Court Personnel (2014 ed.).)5 Each member state has a
    commissioner with voting rights on the Commission, and a compact administrator
    responsible for the administration and management of the Compact in the state.
    (§ 11180, arts. III, IV; Compact 
    Rules, supra
    , Rule 1.101.)6
    The current Compact, entitled the Interstate Compact for Adult Offender
    Supervision, was preceded by a 1937 Compact entitled the Interstate Compact for the
    Supervision of Parolees and Probationers. (See § 11180, Preamble.) The change in
    terminology in the current Compact—which uses the broad term "offender"—was
    "intended to correct perceived problems with the [predecessor Compact], which
    4      Subsequent unspecified statutory references are to the Penal Code.
    5      The Bench Book is available at  as of October
    22, 2014.
    6      Subsequent numeric references to Rules are to the Compact Rules.
    7
    encouraged states to claim that certain individuals were exempt from coverage of the
    agreement by use of the explicit language of 'probationers' and 'parolees,' terms that were
    given a narrow definition and application." (Bench 
    Book, supra
    , at pp. 51-52.)
    Explaining its purpose, the Compact states: "The compacting states to this
    Interstate Compact recognize that each state is responsible for the supervision of adult
    offenders in the community who are authorized pursuant to the Bylaws and Rules of this
    compact to travel across state lines both to and from each compacting state in a manner
    so as to track the location of offenders, transfer supervision authority in an orderly and
    efficient manner, and when necessary return offenders to the originating jurisdiction."
    (§ 11180, art. I, Purpose, italics added.) Further, the Compact specifies that its purpose
    is, among other things, "to provide for the effective tracking, supervision, and
    rehabilitation of these offenders by the sending and receiving states." (Ibid., italics
    added.)
    The Compact's general eligibility requirements are derived from the definitions of
    the terms "offender" and "supervision" set forth in the Compact Rules. Offender is
    defined as "an adult placed under, or made subject to, supervision as the result of the
    commission of a criminal offense and released to the community under the jurisdiction of
    courts, paroling authorities, corrections, or other criminal justice agencies, and who is
    required to request transfer of supervision under the provisions of the Interstate Compact
    for Adult Offender Supervision." (Rule 1.101, italics added.) Supervision is defined as
    "the oversight exercised by authorities of a sending or receiving state over an offender for
    a period of time determined by a court or releasing authority, during which time the
    8
    offender is required to report to or be monitored by supervising authorities, and to
    comply with regulations and conditions, other than monetary conditions, imposed on the
    offender at the time of the offender's release to the community or during the period of
    supervision in the community." (Ibid., italics added.)
    The Compact Rules contain several provisions specifying various types of
    offenders who are, or are not, eligible for transfer under the Compact. The Rules state
    offenders subject to deferred sentences are eligible. (Rule 2.106.) The Rules list the
    following types of offenders as ineligible: (1) a person "subject to supervision pursuant
    to a pre-trial release program, bail, or similar program"; and (2) a person "who is
    released from incarceration under furlough, work-release, or other pre-parole program."
    (Rules 2.106, 2.107, italics added.)
    Under the Rules, the sending state (the state sending the offender) has the
    discretion to decide whether to request the transfer of an offender to another state. (Rules
    2.101, 3.101; Bench 
    Book, supra
    , at p. 54.) When a sending state makes a transfer
    request, acceptance of the transfer by the receiving state (the state receiving the offender)
    is mandatory if the offender (1) has more than 90 days or an indefinite period of
    remaining supervision; (2) has a valid plan of supervision; (3) is in substantial
    compliance with the terms of supervision; and (4) either (a) is a resident of the receiving
    state, or (b) has family in the receiving state able to assist with the supervision, and can
    obtain employment or has a means of support. (Rule 3.101.) If these criteria are not met,
    the receiving state's acceptance of the transfer is discretionary. (Rule 3.101-2.)
    9
    To initiate the transfer process, the offender must obtain the approval of the
    sending state's Interstate Compact office, and the sending state then sends the transfer
    request to the receiving state. (Rule 2.101; Bench 
    Book, supra
    , at pp. 54-55.) The
    Compact Rules require that the sending state submit specified information to the
    receiving state, including a description of the offense, the conditions of supervision, the
    presentence-investigation report, any no-contact or sex offender registration orders, and
    the supervision history. (Rule 3.107.) The length of supervision is determined by the
    sending state, whereas the terms of supervision are determined by the receiving state.
    (Rules 4.102, 4.101.)7 The sending state must inform the receiving state of any special
    conditions applicable to the offender; the receiving state must notify the sending state if it
    is unable to enforce a special condition imposed in the sending state; and the receiving
    state may impose its own special conditions. (Rule 4.103.)
    Annually or more frequently upon request, the receiving state must send progress
    reports to the sending state, providing information about the offender's compliance with
    the supervision conditions, participation in treatment programs, any sanctions imposed,
    and the supervising officer's recommendation. (Rule 4.106.) The receiving state must
    notify the sending state if there are significant supervision violations, and the sending
    7       Rule 4.102 states: "A receiving state shall supervise an offender transferred under
    the interstate compact for a length of time determined by the sending state."
    Rule 4.101 states: "A receiving state shall supervise an offender transferred under
    the interstate compact in a manner determined by the receiving state and consistent with
    the supervision of other similar offenders sentenced in the receiving state."
    10
    state has the authority to order the return of the offender to the sending state without use
    of extradition procedures. (Rules 3.109, 4.109, 5.101.)
    II. California's Realignment Statutes
    Entirely distinct from the Compact, California's penal system was substantially
    revamped in 2011 with enactment of the Realignment Act, which shifted responsibility
    for the custodial housing and postrelease supervision of certain felons from the state to
    the local jails and probation departments. (People v. 
    Cruz, supra
    , 207 Cal.App.4th at pp.
    668, 671; § 1170, subd. (h).) In a statement of declarations and findings underlying the
    Realignment Act, the Legislature stated it was committed to reducing recidivism;
    California parolees have recidivism rates greater than the national average; and building
    more prisons was not sustainable and would not result in improved public safety. (§ 17.5,
    subd. (a)(1)-(3); 
    Cruz, supra
    , at p. 669.) The Legislature stated that California must
    support "community-based corrections programs and evidence-based practices that will
    achieve improved public safety," and that realigning low-level felony offenders to
    "locally run community-based corrections programs, which are strengthened through
    community-based punishment, evidence-based practices, improved supervision
    strategies, and enhanced secured capacity, will improve public safety outcomes among
    adult felons and facilitate their reintegration back into society." (§ 17.5, subd. (a)(4), (5),
    italics added.)
    The Legislature explained that " '[c]ommunity-based punishment' means
    correctional sanctions and programming encompassing a range of custodial and
    noncustodial responses to criminal or noncompliant offender activity" that "may be
    11
    provided by local public safety entities directly or through community-based public or
    private correctional service providers . . . ." (§ 17.5, subd. (a)(8).) The Legislature
    delineated a nonexclusive list of community-based punishments, including such options
    as "[s]hort-term flash incarceration" in jail for 10 days maximum; intensive community
    supervision; home detention with electronic or GPS monitoring; mandatory community
    service; restorative justice programs such as victim restitution and victim-offender
    reconciliation; work furlough and work release programs; day reporting; mandatory
    substance abuse treatment and random drug testing; and residential programs offering
    supervision, treatment and other interventions. (Ibid.) The Legislature further explained
    that " '[e]vidence-based practices' " refers to supervision practices "demonstrated by
    scientific research to reduce recidivism . . . ." (Id., subd. (a)(9), italics added.)
    To implement this shift from the state to local communities, the Realignment Act
    provides that eligible felons will serve their prison terms in local jails rather than state
    prison. (People v. 
    Cruz, supra
    , 207 Cal.App.4th at p. 671; § 1170, subd. (h)(1), (2).)
    When imposing these local sentences, the trial court may select a straight commitment to
    jail for the applicable term, or it may select "a hybrid sentence in which it suspends
    execution" of a portion of the term and releases the felon into the community under the
    mandatory supervision of the county probation department. (
    Cruz, supra
    , at p. 671;
    §§ 1170, subd. (h)(5), 19.9.) Describing the split sentence option, section 1170,
    subdivision (h), provides that the court shall "suspend execution" of the portion of the
    term to be served under mandatory supervision in the community, and during the
    mandatory supervision period the defendant shall be supervised by the probation
    12
    department "in accordance with the terms, conditions, and procedures generally
    applicable to persons placed on probation . . . ." (§ 1170, subd. (h)(5)(A), (B), italics
    added.)8
    III. Analysis
    When deciding whether offenders released into the community under mandatory
    supervision are eligible to apply for out-of-state transfers under the Interstate Compact,
    we apply well-established rules of statutory interpretation. We view the statutory
    enactments as a whole; consider the plain, commonsense meaning of the language used
    by the enactors; and seek to effectuate the legislative intent evinced by the enactments.
    (People v. Fandinola (2013) 
    221 Cal. App. 4th 1415
    , 1421.)
    8       Section 1170, subdivision (h)(5) states: "(A) Unless the court finds that, in the
    interests of justice, it is not appropriate in a particular case, the court, when imposing a
    sentence . . . shall suspend execution of a concluding portion of the term for a period
    selected at the court's discretion. [¶] (B) The portion of a defendant's sentenced term that
    is suspended pursuant to this paragraph shall be known as mandatory supervision, and
    shall begin upon release from custody. During the period of mandatory supervision, the
    defendant shall be supervised by the county probation officer in accordance with the
    terms, conditions, and procedures generally applicable to persons placed on probation,
    for the remaining unserved portion of the sentence imposed by the court. The period of
    supervision shall be mandatory, and may not be earlier terminated except by court order.
    Any proceeding to revoke or modify mandatory supervision under this subparagraph
    shall be conducted pursuant to either subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section 1203.2 or
    Section 1203.3 [addressing revocation or modification of probation and other release
    terms]. During the period when the defendant is under such supervision, unless in actual
    custody related to the sentence imposed by the court, the defendant shall be entitled to
    only actual time credit against the term of imprisonment imposed by the court. Any time
    period which is suspended because a person has absconded shall not be credited toward
    the period of supervision." (Italics added.)
    13
    Neither the Compact Rules nor California's Penal Code (including the
    Realignment Act) contain any provisions expressly addressing whether mandatory
    supervision releasees are eligible to apply for transfers under the Compact.9 However,
    the language used in the Compact Rules readily suggests an intent to incorporate these
    releasees into the Compact. Rule 1.101 broadly defines an offender as a person "released
    to the community under the jurisdiction of . . . criminal justice agencies" and broadly
    defines supervision as "the oversight exercised by authorities . . . determined by a court
    or releasing authority." (Italics added.) Persons serving a prison term released in the
    community under the probation department's supervision easily fall within these
    expansive definitions of offenders under supervision set forth in the Compact Rules.
    Likewise, the eligibility of mandatory supervision releasees is consistent with the
    views expressed by the Commission in its judges' bench book, which states that offenders
    need not be on "formal probation or parole status" to qualify for transfers, and explicitly
    recognizes the eligibility of offenders on "release from incarceration with community-
    based supervision . . . ." (Bench 
    Book, supra
    , at p. 8, italics added.) Indeed, as noted,
    when the 1937 predecessor compact was replaced with the current Compact, the broadly-
    defined term "offender" was affirmatively selected in lieu of the more narrow terms
    "probationer" and "parolee" to encourage a wider application of the Compact. (Id. at pp.
    51-52.) As the Commission explained, the broad definition of offender allows it to
    9       In contrast to out-of-state transfers, the California Legislature has addressed in-
    state transfers between counties, stating that mandatory supervision releasees, along with
    probationers, may apply to transfer their supervision or probation to another county.
    (§ 1203.9.)
    14
    "regulate the full breadth of adult offenders," including those "subject to deferred
    execution of sentence if some form of community supervision and/or reporting is a
    condition of the court's order," and those subject to "other 'non-standard' forms of
    disposition as determined by the Commission if some form of community supervision
    and/or reporting is a condition of the court's order." (Ibid., italics added.)
    Advisory opinions issued by the Commission also reflect an intent to encompass a
    broad array of offenders released under supervision in the community. In these opinions,
    the Commission has repeatedly emphasized that "individual states' statutory schemes can
    vary remarkably across the nation" and an offender's eligibility should not be based on
    "the label used by" a particular state legislature, but rather should be based on "the action
    actually taken by . . . the court." (Advisory Opn. 6-2005, p. 3, italics added; Advisory
    Opn. 4-2004, p. 3.) For example, the Commission has explained that an offender
    released on a deferred sentence is eligible under the Compact because the "offender is no
    longer in a pretrial, presumed innocent status, but has [been] found to have committed
    the charged offense notwithstanding the decision of the court to withhold punitive
    sentencing in favor of an alternative program of corrections such as deferment,
    probation in lieu of sentencing, suspended imposition of sentence or suspended execution
    of sentence." (Advisory Opn. 4-2004, pp. 2-3, italics added; see Advisory Opn. 6-2005,
    pp. 2-3 [state's deferred prosecution equates with deferred sentence because offender
    stipulates to guilt in the event he or she fails to comply with release conditions]; Advisory
    Opn. 1-2009 [even though rules of predecessor compact referred to prerelease transfer
    requests from a "paroling offender," the provisions governing prerelease transfer requests
    15
    applied equally to Massachusetts offenders sentenced to "split" jail or prison sentences
    who would be released to probation supervision].)
    It is apparent that regardless of the particular sentencing structure utilized by a
    state, the essential factors that bring an offender within the parameters of the Compact are
    (1) an adjudication of guilt, and (2) release from custodial status into the community
    under supervision. Persons released into the community on mandatory supervision under
    California's Realignment Act fit these requirements.
    To support its contrary position, the Attorney General points to the Compact Rule
    excluding from eligibility offenders who are "released from incarceration under furlough,
    work-release, or other pre-parole program." (Rule 2.107). Typically, these types of
    offenders remain in confinement when they are not working, or are required to report to
    designated work programs which effectively impose a type of confinement. (See § 1208,
    subd. (d)(1) ["Whenever the prisoner is not employed . . . and between the hours or
    periods of employment . . . , the prisoner shall be confined in the facility designated by
    the board of supervisors for work furlough confinement unless the work furlough
    administrator directs otherwise."]; § 4024.2, subd. (c) ["As a condition of participating in
    a work release program, a person shall give his or her promise to appear for work . . . by
    signing a notice to appear . . . and . . . an agreement that the sheriff may immediately
    retake the person into custody . . . if the person fails to appear . . . .]; People v. Bojorquez
    (2010) 
    183 Cal. App. 4th 407
    , 422 [work release program has attributes of confinement].)
    Thus, these offenders are released under programs that can retain a significant custodial
    arrangement. The exclusion of offenders who are confined to work programs does not
    16
    suggest an intent to exclude offenders who are released under other programs, such as
    mandatory supervision, that focus on supervision rather than confinement. (See Bench
    
    Book, supra
    , at p. 58 [the Compact "has application in a broad range of cases and
    dispositions beyond traditional conviction followed by probation"; key consideration is
    whether "the end consequence of the court's action [was] community supervision"].)
    Turning to California's Realignment Act, there are no provisions prohibiting
    application of the Compact to mandatory supervision releasees, and there is nothing in
    the Realignment Act suggesting that the Legislature intended to exclude mandatory
    supervision releasees from Compact eligibility. The community-based punishment
    concept described in the Realignment Act focuses on keeping the offender in the local
    community under supervision, but it does not mandate that the community affording this
    support and supervision must necessarily be a California community. Also, the
    discretionary availability of a transfer to another state could well serve the goals of the
    Realignment Act. As one court observed, "[i]t is apparent . . . that the overall purpose of
    the [Realignment] Act is to reduce recidivism and improve public safety, while at the
    same time reducing corrections and related criminal justice spending." (People v. 
    Cruz, supra
    , 207 Cal.App.4th at p. 679.) If an offender released on mandatory supervision
    shows that he or she has a better chance of avoiding recidivism in another state, it would
    advance the goals of the Realignment Act if the offender could seek transfer under the
    Compact.
    Further, the fact that approval of a supervised offender's request for out-of-state
    transfer is fully within the discretion of the relevant California authorities ensures that the
    17
    goals of the Realignment Act will not be undermined by application of the Compact to
    mandatory supervision releasees. First, based on the mandatory supervision condition
    requiring court and probation officer consent to an out-of-state move, the superior court
    serves as a gatekeeper with discretion to decline permission to pursue a transfer request
    with the Compact office. Thus, Compact eligibility does not lessen the trial court's
    discretionary power to keep an offender within the state because without the court's
    approval there can be no transfer. Second, the Compact office can decline the transfer
    request even if the court and probation officer consented.10 Thus, if there is a concern
    that an offender released on mandatory supervision might not receive the appropriate
    level or type of supervision in the other state, California has full authority to keep the
    offender within its borders. Also, if a transferred offender does not perform well in the
    receiving state, the Compact Rules allow the offender to be returned to California.
    We are not persuaded by the Attorney General's argument that the Compact does
    not apply to mandatory supervision releasees because they are not parolees or
    probationers, but rather inmates who are serving their prison terms in the community.
    (See, e.g., People v. 
    Fandinola, supra
    , 221 Cal.App.4th at p. 1422 [probation supervision
    fee may not be imposed on mandatory supervision releasee because the sentence is "akin
    10      We note that, apart from an offender's mandatory supervision conditions, the
    Commission also requires that the offender's supervising agent (i.e., probation officer)
    first decide if the transfer plan is viable, and if the decision is no, the application is not
    submitted to the Compact office. (See Compact Flow Chart, Overview of the Interstate
    Compact Process, available at
     as of October
    22, 2014.
    18
    to a state prison commitment; it is not a grant of probation or a conditional sentence"].)
    As we indicated, the Commission has made clear that the fact that an offender is not a
    traditional parolee or probationer is not determinative of eligibility; rather, the key
    components of eligibility are (1) adjudicated guilt, and (2) release from custodial status
    into the community under supervision. Regardless of the label placed on the sentence
    being served by the mandatory supervision releasee, these eligibility components are
    satisfied. As to the intent of the California Legislature, the Realignment Act directs that
    the court suspend execution of the portion of the sentence to be served in the community.
    (§ 1170, subd. (h)(5)(A).) The Legislature's reference to a suspended sentence reflects its
    recognition that there is a qualitative difference between an inmate in actual prison
    custody and a felon released in the community under mandatory supervision. Although a
    mandatory supervision sentence may be treated as akin to an actual prison term for some
    purposes, for purposes of Compact eligibility it meets the core requirement of
    noncustodial release into the community under supervision.
    Finally, we reject the Attorney General's contentions that Wofford has no standing
    to present, or has forfeited, her challenge to the court's lack-of-eligibility ruling. She has
    standing because she is aggrieved by the court's ruling that she was not eligible to request
    a transfer (see In re L. Y. L. (2002) 
    101 Cal. App. 4th 942
    , 948), and there was no
    forfeiture because she raised the issue of eligibility before the trial court (see In re S.C.
    (2006) 
    138 Cal. App. 4th 396
    , 406). The federal cases cited by the Attorney General to
    support its claim of no standing are inapposite because they merely hold an offender
    cannot bring a federal cause of action alleging a state's violation of the Compact. (M.F.
    19
    v. State of New York Executive Dept. Div. of Parole (2d Cir. 2011) 
    640 F.3d 491
    , 494-497
    [challenge to conditions imposed by receiving state is matter that is traditionally relegated
    to state law]; Doe v. Pennsylvania (3d Cir. 2008) 
    513 F.3d 95
    , 103-105.) Wofford is
    requesting a legal evaluation of Compact eligibility, which is a proper matter for state or
    federal court determination. (See 
    M.F., supra
    , 640 F.3d at pp. 493-494; Commonwealth
    v. Blaxton (Va. 2012) 
    722 S.E.2d 247
    , 248-249; Hubble v. Bi-State Development Agency
    of Illinois-Missouri Metropolitan Dist. (Ill. 2010) 
    938 N.E.2d 483
    , 489, fn. 3.) Equally
    unavailing is the Attorney General's claim of forfeiture based on Wofford's failure to
    challenge the mandatory supervision condition requiring that she obtain consent from the
    court and probation officer to move out of state. Wofford's acceptance of this condition
    did not mean she was waiving her right to request a transfer under the Compact; rather,
    she merely agreed she would obtain permission from the court and probation officer
    before moving, which thus required her to seek court approval before pursuing a transfer
    under the Compact.
    Given the broad applicability of the Compact to offenders released on supervision,
    and the Realignment Act's goal of recidivism reduction that can be served by out-of-state
    transfer, we conclude an offender released into the community to serve a mandatory
    supervision sentence under the Realignment Act is eligible to apply for a transfer under
    the Compact.
    In the event we reach this conclusion, the Attorney General agrees that Wofford is
    entitled to another hearing on whether she should be permitted to submit a transfer
    application under the Compact. We emphasize that our holding is a narrow one, confined
    20
    to the legal issue of Compact eligibility for mandatory supervision releasees. We express
    no opinion on the factual question of whether the trial court should issue a ruling in favor
    of allowing Wofford to submit a Compact transfer application.
    DISPOSITION
    Let a peremptory writ of mandate issue directing the superior court to correct its
    September 19, 2013 order to the extent the court ruled mandatory supervision releasees
    are ineligible to apply for transfers under the Compact.
    HALLER, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    HUFFMAN, Acting P. J.
    AARON, J.
    21
    

Document Info

Docket Number: D064633

Citation Numbers: 230 Cal. App. 4th 1023, 179 Cal. Rptr. 3d 243, 2014 Cal. App. LEXIS 953

Judges: Haller

Filed Date: 10/22/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/3/2024