delivered the Opinion of the Court.
Fierro petitioned for review of the court of appeals' judgment declaring illegal her three-year sentence to community corrections and remanding for imposition of her previously suspended four-year sentence for robbery. Although the sentencing court had initially placed Fierro on probation, it did so by imposing and suspending a prison term. The court of appeals held that because probation was imposed as a condition of a suspended sentence, the sentencing court did not have the option to resentence her to three years in community corrections upon finding a violation, but was instead required to simply reimpose the four-year sentence it had suspended.
I.
Anna Fierro entered guilty pleas to robbery and attempted felony menacing in December 2000. The district court imposed a sentence of four years in the custody of the department of corrections for robbery and a concurrent term of eighteen months for attempted menacing; however, it immediately suspended both prison sentences on the condition that Fierro successfully complete three years of probation.
In July 2003, the district court revoked Fierro's probation and resentenced her to three years in a community corrections program, but while awaiting admission to that program, she walked away from work release by the Jefferson County jail. After returning about a year and a half later and pleading guilty to escape, Fierro was transferred to the custody of the department of corrections for completion of her three-year community corrections sentence, and in addition, she was sentenced to a consecutive term of one year for escape. She appealed the propriety of her department of corrections sentences to the court of appeals.
Rather than addressing the propriety of the sentencing court's decision to transfer Fierro from community corrections to the department of corrections, however, the appellate court found her 2008, three-year sentence to community corrections to have been illegal from its inception. Because she had been sentenced to probation following the suspension of a prison term, the court of appeals reasoned that upon revocation, the sentencing court was required to execute the previously suspended sentence. Although it affirmed Fierro's consecutive one-year sentence for escape, it therefore remanded for imposition of her concurrent four-year and eighteen-month sentences to the department of corrections for her convictions of robbery and attempted felony menacing.
We granted Fierro's petition for a writ of certiorari, solely to consider whether the court of appeals erred in remanding for imposition of her original prison sentence.
IL
Subject to constitutional limitations not at issue here, it is the prerogative of the legislature to define crimes and prescribe punishments. Shipley v. People,
In 1988, the General Assembly re-enacted, almost verbatim, a provision of the pre-Crim-inal Code and pre-Criminal Procedure Code probation scheme permitting a sentencing court to suspend a prison sentence under specified cireumstances. See ch. 116, sec. 5, § 18-1-105(10), 1988 Colo. Sess. Laws 679, 682
This newly-revived authorization to suspend a sentence continued to be couched in terms virtually identical to those permitting a sentence to probation,
Although no meaningful legislative history of the provision appears to exist, it was almost certainly attached to other 1988 sentencing amendments in response to several actions taken by this court. In 1983, we declared illegal a felony sentence in which the sentencing court expressly rejected probation in favor of a prison sentence, only to suspend that sentence and order the defendant placed in a work-release program of the Denver County jail, a sentencing alternative statutorily available only as a condition of probation. See People v. Dist. Court,
Three years later, however, we rejected an invitation to limit that holding to attempts by sentencing courts to cireumvent legislative sentencing mandates. See People v. Flenniken,
Our holding in Flenniken became final in February 1988, and by May the legislature had enacted section 18-1-105(10). See 1988 Colo. Sess. Laws 679, 682 (Approved May 29, 1988). Without explanation or any other overt attempt to integrate it into the existing sentencing scheme, the legislature simply reenacted the old formula for granting probation. Courts were therefore left with the question whether restoring this authority was intended merely to re-supply sentencing courts with the missing statutory authority to suspend a prison sentence in the course of imposing probation; or whether the legisla
Almost immediately ensued a series of statutory amendments, sometimes in response to the prospect of hybrid sentences, making increasingly clear the intended relationship between suspension of a prison sentence and probation. In 1991, the General Assembly amended subsection (10) by expressly barring suspension of a sentence for any defendant whose prior criminal history would exclude him from a sentence of probation. See ch. 73, sec. 6, § 18-1-105(10), 1991 Colo. Sess. Laws 402, 404-05. One year earlier, it had permitted a waiver of the so-called two-felony rule,
Unfortunately, this court inadvertently ob-secured the effect of the 1991 amendment, in a case addressing a different question altogether and concerning an offense to which the amendment admittedly did not even apply. See Beecroft v. People,
In 19983, during the pendency of an appeal questioning whether subsection (10) permitted the reduction or suspension of even a sentence statutorily mandated by the defendant's status as a probationer, see People v. Munoz,
Over this period, the task of fleshing out the boundaries of the suspension power has fallen largely to the intermediate appellate court. From little more than general due
Given its facially unlimited seope, the court of appeals also embarked on a series of narrowing constructions, finding implicit limitations on the power to suspend sentences where the legislature had already imposed greater than normal restrictions on sentencing ranges. See, e.g., People v. Delgado,
Of perhaps greatest relevance to the question before us today, however, the court of appeals has reasoned that suspension of the execution of a sentence does not result in the withdrawal or replacement of that sentence, and therefore upon the termination or revocation of the suspension of execution, a new sentence is neither necessary nor proper. See People v. Frye,
On its face, the term "suspend" is hardly unambiguous. See Sigala v. Atencio's Mkt.,
The legislature's re-authorization of the power to suspend sentences in 1988 was accomplished by re-enacting virtually verbatim a portion of the former procedure for imposing a sentence of probation in lieu of imprisonment. Suspension at that time in no way provided a distinct sentencing option but was permitted only in conjunction with, and as a step in the process of, substituting probation for imprisonment. By limiting the power of suspension to defendants who are not made ineligible for probation, either by their erimi-nal records or the nature of their current convictions, the subsequent amendments to subsection (10) (currently designated section 18-1.3-401(11)) strongly suggest a similar legislative purpose. Especially in light of these later clarifications, it is far more reasonable to understand the 1988 re-enactment of the power to suspend as providing the statutory authorization for its continued usage (without simultaneously rendering illegal and void an otherwise valid grant of probation) than it would be to presume from the
Limited to defendants and convictions for which probation is a permissible alternative, as is now expressly the case, little purpose could be served by construing suspension as a sentencing alternative separate and distinct from probation. It would be quite extraordinary to infer from these few words an intent to extend to individual sentencing courts, at their choice, the power to relieve defendants of otherwise mandatory conditions of probation, like the payment of restitution to their victims. Similarly, it is difficult to find anywhere in this language a legislative intent to permit sentencing courts on their own initiative, or defendants and prosecutors through plea negotiations, to limit the court's obligation to fairly consider all available sentencing options, at the time of a violation of conditions of probation. See § 16-11-206(5), C.R.S. (2008).
The psychological impact of warning a defendant what the sentencing court considers to be an appropriate prison term, should he violate his probation, remains a significant reason for permitting the imposition and suspension of prison sentences. Nothing in the word "suspend," in and of itself, however, implies the power to abdicate or bargain away the court's sentencing responsibilities or to demand of a criminal defendant that he agree to be bound by a particular sentence in advance of the conditions mandating exercise of the court's resentencing discretion. Cf. People v. Wright,
It is therefore inconsequential whether conditions of probation are imposed alone or in conjunction with suspending either the imposition or execution of a sentence to a term of years. Nor is it consequential whether the sentencing court refers to the conditions of its sentence as conditions of probation or conditions of a suspended sentence, or both. The effect of section 18-1.3-401(11) is to permit sentencing courts to notify defendants of the sentence that would be imposed but for the alternative of probation and to which the defendant remains subject in the event of a violation of probationary conditions, without simultaneously rendering the sentence illegal and void. It does not, however, permit sentencing courts to ignore other legislative sentencing mandates with impunity.
Because the power to suspend a sentence complements, rather than supplants, a sentence to probation; and because any requirements upon which the suspension of a sentence is conditioned must conform to the statutory requirements of and for probation; both revocation for violation of probationary conditions and resentencing upon such revocation are governed by the statutory provisions governing revocation of probation. See § 16-11-206(5), C.R.S. (2008).
IIL.
Following the defendant's guilty plea in this case, entered without any sentence concessions, the district court imposed and suspended concurrent four-year and eighteen-month sentences to the department of corrections and granted an uncontested three-year sentence of probation. Upon revocation of that probationary sentence, the court was statutorily authorized to impose any sentence or grant any probation that might originally have been imposed or granted, regardless of the fact that probation was imposed as a condition of suspending a specific sentence of imprisonment. Id. The sentencing court's subsequent three-year sentence to a community corrections facility was therefore not made illegal by its original imposition and suspension of a four-year sentence.
Because section 18-1.3-401(11), CRS. (2008), must be understood to permit the suspension of a sentence in conjunction with, rather than in contradistinetion to, a grant of probation, the sentencing court's resentenc-ing options upon revocation were dictated by the statutory provisions governing revocation of probation. Because section 16-11-206(5) permits, upon revocation of probation, the imposition of any sentence that might originally have been imposed, the judgment of the court of appeals remanding for imposition of Fierro's suspended sentence is reversed, and the case is remanded for consideration of her remaining issues on appeal.
Justice EID, concurring in the judgment.
I agree with the majority that the probation provision and the suspension provision work in tandem. Unlike the majority, however, I see no tension between those two provisions as they apply to the issue before us today: namely, whether the sentencing court is bound to impose or execute a suspended sentence once the defendant has violated a condition of the suspension. In my view, under both the suspension and probation provisions, the district court judge is not bound by the suspended sentence, and instead has the authority at resentencing to impose any sentence that could have been imposed originally. I therefore concur only in the majority's judgment.
The suspension provision provides that:
When it shall appear to the satisfaction of the court that the ends of justice and the best interest of the public, as well as the defendant, will be best served thereby, the court shall have the power to suspend the imposition or execution of sentence for such period and upon such terms and conditions as it may deem best ....
§ 18-1.3-401(11), CRS. (2008) (emphasis added). The court of appeals found, and I agree, that if the defendant violates the "terms and conditions" of the suspended sentence, the sentence is no longer "suspended" and is instead "imposed" or "executed." Contrary to the majority, then, maj. op. at 464, I believe the term "suspend" is unambiguous, as it connotes a temporary stoppage with resumption at some later date. See Sigala v. Atencio's Market,
The court of appeals was wrong in my view, however, to find that the revived sentence was binding on the district court. Under the suspension provision, the district court has the authority to suspend the sentence onee again and to resentence the defendant to any sentence that it could have imposed originally. And that is precisely what occurred in this case: the district court resuspended the defendant's four-year and eighteen-month DOC sentences, and sentenced the defendant to three years in community corrections. Maj. op. at 465.
This is the same result that occurs under the probation provision, which provides that, once probation is revoked, "the court may then impose any sentence ... which might originally have been imposed." § 16-11-206(5), C.R.S. (2008). Thus, in my view, it does not matter whether the original sentence in this case is characterized as a sentence suspended on a condition of probation, or as a sentence to probation combined with a "notiffication] ... of the sentence that would [have been] imposed but for the alternative of probation." Maj. op. at 465. The court had the same options available to it on resentencing either way-that is, to resen-tence the defendant to any sentence it could have initially imposed.
Notes
. The full text of section 18-1-105(10) as enacted in 1988 was:
*462 When it shall appear to the satisfaction of the court that the ends of justice and the best interest of the public, as well as the defendant, will be best served thereby, the court shall have the power to suspend the imposition or execution of sentence for such period and upon such terms and conditions as it may deem best.
. The text of the enabling statute for probation reads:
When it appears to the satisfaction of the court that the ends of justice and the best interest of the public, as well as the defendant, will be served thereby, the court may grant the defendant probation for such period and upon such terms and conditions as it deems best.
. The two-felony rule, found in section 18-1.3-201(2)(a), C.R.S. (2008), is a restriction on probation for repeat felony offenders, which reads: "A person who has been twice convicted of a felony under the laws of this state, any other state, or the United States prior to the conviction on which his or her application is based shall not be eligible for probation." Cf. Chism v. People,
. Both the majority and dissenting opinions in Sigala agreed that payment of workers' compensation benefits that had been suspended would resume once the suspension was lifted-the analogous question in this case.
