People v. Meier CA4/1
D084099
Cal. Ct. App.Mar 11, 2025Background
- Christopher Michael Meier was convicted in 2018 of two counts of first degree burglary and one misdemeanor count of resisting arrest, with prior convictions alleged.
- The trial court imposed a 15 year 8 month sentence, and verbally declined to impose a one-year "prison prior" enhancement.
- On appeal, the convictions were affirmed, but the case was remanded to consider eligibility for mental health diversion and for possible resentencing due to changes in the law affecting prison prior enhancements.
- By April 2021, the trial court found Meier ineligible for diversion and resentenced him to the same term, including (in the abstract) the now-invalid prison prior enhancement.
- Subsequent laws (Senate Bill 483, Penal Code § 1172.75) invalidated non-sex offense prison prior enhancements imposed before Jan. 1, 2020; Meier sought resentencing relief under this statute.
- The trial court denied resentencing in 2024, finding Meier ineligible because his current sentence had been imposed after the relevant statutory date and corrected the record to strike the invalid enhancement.
Issues
| Issue | Meier's Argument | People's Argument | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Eligibility for resentencing under § 1172.75 | April 2021 resentencing does not bar eligibility; any sentence with a prison prior (imposed/stayed) qualifies | Only judgments with a prison prior imposed and executed before 2020 qualify | Meier is ineligible under § 1172.75; judgment imposed after Jan. 1, 2020 does not qualify |
| Effect of court's oral vs. abstract pronouncement | Abstract shows stayed enhancement, so should trigger resentencing | Only actual oral imposition counts; oral pronouncement controls | Oral pronouncement prevails; prior was not imposed, no relief allowed |
| Scope of retroactivity of new statute | Applies to any sentence, regardless of date of resentencing | Applies only to judgments entered before Jan. 1, 2020 | Statute applies only to qualifying judgments imposed before Jan. 1, 2020 |
| Court authority to correct unauthorized sentences | Not directly addressed | Court can correct unauthorized sentence at any time | Court acted properly in striking invalid enhancement |
Key Cases Cited
- People v. Buycks, 5 Cal.5th 857 (Cal. 2018) (full resentencing appropriate after partial reversal and remand)
- People v. Delgado, 43 Cal.4th 1059 (Cal. 2008) (oral pronouncement of sentence controls over abstract of judgment)
- People v. Codinha, 92 Cal.App.5th 976 (Cal. Ct. App. 2023) (trial court may correct unauthorized sentences at any time)
