Kevin A. Canty appeals the suspension revocation of his February 2008 sentence for possession of heroin. Canty argues the trial court erred by finding him in violation of the terms of his probation and suspension because the violation he committed, while after the date of his initial sentence, was before his prior revocation hearing. We find the trial court had the power to revoke the suspension because though the violation committed by Canty was before his most recent revocation hearing, the trial court had not previously considered that conduct. Therefore, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
I. BACKGROUND
Canty was convicted of heroin possession in February 2008. The trial court sentenced him to two years incarceration and suspended the entire sentence conditioned upon the successful completion of two years of supervised probation. In August 2008, Canty’s probation officer filed a report with the trial court alleging Canty violated the terms of his probation 1 and a show cause capias was issued. When the capias was executed and Canty was taken into custody, the police found heroin in his possession but did not charge him with drug possession at that time. 2 In October 2008 (the first revocation hearing), the trial court found Canty violated the terms of his probation and revoked the previously suspended sentence, reimposed the sentence of two years incarceration, and resuspended one year and eight months. The fact that Canty was in possession of heroin when taken into custody in September was not revealed to the trial court and not considered. 3
Subsequently, Canty was indicted for heroin possession. The charge was based on his possession of the drug when he was taken into custody on the probation violation.
4
In January 2009, Canty was found guilty on the September 2008 drug possession charge and his probation officer filed a report
stating that Canty had violated the conditions of his
II. ANALYSIS
Canty argues the trial court erred in finding he violated the conditions of his probation because he committed no violative act after the first revocation hearing. Canty contends the holdings in
Hamilton v. Commonwealth,
“[U]nder Virginia law once a defendant receives a suspension] [of] sentence, a judge’s power to revoke the suspension ... is governed by statute.”
Carbaugh v. Commonwealth,
By the plain language of the statute, a trial court is empowered to revoke a suspended sentence for misconduct
occurring after the initial suspension of sentence and prior to the expiration of the period of suspension.
Collins v. Commonwealth,
When the trial court initially imposed Canty’s sentence in February 2008, it conditioned the suspension of his sentence on his successful completion of two years supervised probation and his compliance “with all the rules and requirements set by the Probation Officer.” Condition 1 of the Conditions of Probation/Post-Release Supervision required Canty to “obey all Federal, State and local laws and ordinances.” In accordance with Code § 19.2-306(A), the trial court was empowered to revoke the suspension of Canty’s sentence for conduct that occurred subsequent to the February 2008 suspension and within the probation period, which therefore included Canty’s heroin possession in September 2008.
In addition to the explicit conditions in the original sentencing order, the implicit
Code § 19.2-306 addresses the effect of a prior hearing on the court’s authority to consider alleged violations and contains its own statutory preclusionary rule: “If any court has, after hearing, found no cause ” to “revoke a suspended sentence,” then “any further hearing” for that purpose, “based solely on the alleged violation for which the hearing was held, shall be barred.” Code § 19.2-306(D) (emphasis added). Therefore, had Canty’s September 2008 drug possession been raised at the first revocation hearing, and had the trial court determined it was not grounds for a revocation, Code § 19.2-306(D) would have precluded it from being used in any later hearing for this purpose. 6
No Virginia precedent, however, has interpreted this statute to preclude a trial court from relying on a ground
not
raised at a prior hearing and
not
previously found to be “no cause” for revocation. Code § 19.2-306(D). Doing so would be to “judicially graft” an unwritten provision into the statute,
Cent. Va. Obstetrics & Gynecology Assocs., P.C. v. Whitfield,
42 Va.App.
264, 280,
Contending the trial court was barred from considering acts that occurred prior to the “new” period of suspension and probation in October 2008, Canty misplaces his reliance on
Hamilton
and
Oliver.
In
Hamilton,
the Supreme Court held a defendant could not be found in violation of his probation for conduct occurring prior to initial sentencing. In
Oliver,
this Court similarly held revocation of a suspended sentence must be for conduct occurring after the imposition of the suspended sentence. But these holdings, which recognize the common sense principle that a defendant cannot be found in violation of conditions not yet in existence,
7
have no application here since the probation condition violated by Canty was in place from the time of his initial sentencing in February 2008 and, therefore, at the time of his September 2008 drug possession.
8
In neither
Hamilton
nor
Oliver
did the courts suggest that the trial court is precluded from considering conduct occurring after the initial sentencing but prior to a subsequent
Therefore, since the September 2008 drug possession was not raised at the first revocation hearing, the trial court had the power to rely on it at the second revocation hearing in finding Canty violated the terms of his probation.
See Bease,
For these reasons, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Canty’s probation officer alleged Canty failed to report to the officer as instructed, failed to be truthful with the officer, and unlawfully used, possessed, or distributed controlled substances or related paraphernalia.
. The Commonwealth asserted Canty was not charged with possession at that time because he agreed to aid police in their investigation of other drug offenders. There is no evidence of any such agreement in the record, and we have not considered the Commonwealth’s assertion in this regard in reaching our holding.
. In his supplemental brief, Canty argues "there is nothing in the record to indicate” his possession of heroin in September 2008 was not considered by the trial court in the first revocation hearing. To the contrary, the trial court found that "only two people knew about [the September 2008 drug possession]” — Canty and the Commonwealth — at the first revocation hearing. Thus, the record affirmatively shows it was neither known nor considered by the trial court at the first revocation hearing.
. According to the Commonwealth, Canty was charged in connection with the September 2008 heroin possession when he failed to cooperate with police as he had previously agreed to do. Again, because there is no agreement to this effect in the record, we do not consider the Commonwealth's contention.
. On appeal from a revocation proceeding, a trial court’s revocation of a suspension of sentence will not be disturbed in the absence of an abuse of discretion.
Allison v. Commonwealth,
. There is "no requirement ... that the suspension may be revoked only upon the conviction of a subsequent criminal offense.”
Slayton v. Commonwealth,
185 Va.
357, 365,
. Even this proposition must give way to the " 'principle that revocation of probation is permissible when defendant’s acts prior to sentencing constitute a fraud on the court.’ ”
Bryce v. Commonwealth,
. Because the probation violation found in October 2008 was not itself a criminal conviction, the revocation and resuspension of Canty’s suspended sentence in October was merely a modification of the original suspended sentence.
See Alsberry v. Commonwealth,
. Canty argues because “each revocation of a previously suspended sentence and the resuspension of some or all of that previously suspended sentence is a 'new sentencing event,' ” the trial court cannot consider acts prior to the most recent sentencing event. Although we have referred to the revocation and resuspension as a “new sentencing
event,”
we did so in the context of recognizing the trial court’s power to place new conditions on resuspensions. We explained the trial court is “restricted only by limitations that it may not extend the length of the original sentence or the length of the period of suspension and, as is the case with an original suspension, that any conditions of suspension be reasonable.”
Reinke v. Commonwealth,
