Appellant Hardy appeals from the denial of his motion to correct and reduce sentence. 1 He contends that a condition of probation imposed in this case created a possibility of multiple punishments for a single offense and therefore violated the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Constitution. We agree, and therefore we remand this case to the trial court with instructions to vacate the offending condition of probation.
I
Hardy was charged by information with possession of cocaine, a controlled substance, in violation of D.C.Code § 33-541(d) (1988). He pleaded guilty to the lesser included offense of attempted possession of cocaine and in due course appeared before Judge Queen for sentencing. After allocution, he was sentenced to pay a $200 fine and to serve one year in jail. Execution of the jail term was suspended, however, except for the first thirty days. In lieu of the remaining jail time, Hardy was given eighteen months’ probation following his release, on condition that he maintain his employment, continue in a drug treatment program, and commit no further law violations during the term of his probation. Additionally, as a condition of his probation in the instant case, Hardy was ordered to “comply with the restitution order [previously] imposed in M-11480-86 by Judge Taylor.”
In case No. M-11480-86 Hardy had been charged with destruction of property. He pleaded guilty to the charge and was given a suspended sentence, with two years’ unsupervised probation. Judge Taylor, the sentencing judge in that case, also ordered Hardy as a condition of his probation to pay restitution to the victim in the amount of $1100. At the time of sentencing in the instant case, Hardy had not fully or timely complied with that restitution order.
After sentencing in the instant case, Hardy filed a motion to correct and reduce sentence, which the trial court denied. Hardy now contends, as he did below, that his sentence in this case exposes him to double jeopardy because a failure to pay the restitution originally ordered in case No. M-11480-86, and again in the instant case, may subject him to double punishment, i.e., the possibility that his probation may be revoked in both cases for a single act (or failure to act).
II
D.C.Code § 16-711 (1989) expressly authorizes a sentencing court to require a defendant to make restitution to his or her victim as a condition of probation.
See Sloan v. United States,
The order to pay restitution which the judge in the second case imposed as a condition of probation creates a very real likelihood of multiple punishment. For a single omission — the failure to pay the restitution ordered in case No. M-11480-86— Hardy faces the prospect of having his probation revoked in both cases. This court has held, however, that “[w]hen a probationer violates a condition of his probation, the only appropriate sanction is a withdrawal of the previously afforded favorable treatment rather than the imposition of an additional penalty.”
Jones v. United States,
We find no material difference between this case and
In re R.L.C.,
Although the facts here are somewhat different, we think the rationale of
R.L.C.
applies with equal force in the case at bar. Hardy was appropriately ordered in case No. M-11480-86 to pay restitution because of his conduct in that case, on pain of having his probation revoked. Then, however, he was ordered
again,
by a second judge, to pay restitution to his victim in No. M-11480-86, subject to having his probation revoked in
this
case. As in
R.L.C.,
Hardy now faces the possibility that his probation may be revoked in two separate cases for a single act or omission, which “amounts to being punished twice for the same offense.”
Id.
at 225-226,
The duplicative condition imposed in the instant case is invalid for yet another reason. Whereas Hardy originally received only a six-month suspended sentence in No. M-11480-86, Judge Queen’s terms of probation subjected him to the possibility of one year in prison for the offense in that earlier case. Consequently, a failure to make restitution in No. M-11480-86 could subject Hardy to a longer period of incarceration than he would ever have to serve under Judge Taylor’s sentence, even if Judge Taylor revoked his probation. Additionally, Judge Queen’s order created the anomalous possibility that Hardy’s probation might be revoked for failure to make restitution after he was no longer required to make restitution in M-11480-86, contrary to a recent decision of this court:
[Tjoday we make explicit what has previously been implicit in our decisions and *181 hold that, under D.C.Code § 24-104, a trial court cannot revoke probation after the expiration of the probationary term originally imposed, unless the court extends the period of probation, or otherwise acts to preserve its jurisdiction, during the probationary term.
Sumpter v. United States,
It has been said that jeopardy does not attach “in parole, probation, or bond revocation hearings, because these proceedings are not designed to punish a defendant for violation of a criminal law.”
Eighteenth Annual Review of Criminal Procedure,
77 GEO. L.J. 489, 880 (1989). What this means, however, is essentially that the facts supporting a revocation of probation or parole may also support a conviction or a revocation of probation or parole in another proceeding, or vice versa, without running afoul of the Double Jeopardy Clause.
See, e.g., United States v. Miller,
In the instant case the issue is different. Here the trial court’s sentence effected a penalty increase in a different case. None of the opinions which state that jeopardy does not attach in probation revocation proceedings addresses this point. The question before us is whether one court may broaden or extend — or affect in any way — a criminal penalty imposed by another court. For the reasons we have stated, we hold that such action is barred by the Double Jeopardy Clause.
Ill
To make clear the limits of our holding, we stress that we are not prohibiting trial courts from imposing the same condition of probation in two different cases, so long as one is not tied to the other. For example, if a judge in case A ordered the defendant, as a condition of probation, not to commit any new crime while on probation (a stan *182 dard condition of probation which we see in many cases, including this one 6 ), a judge in case B could impose the very same condition without violating the Double Jeopardy Clause, so long as the two conditions are totally independent of each other. As we have said, the error here lay in linking the probation in the second case to a condition imposed by a different judge in the first case, so that a violation of a single condition could subject Hardy to double punishment. That link, as In re R.L.C. demonstrates, makes the condition in the second case unconstitutional.
Accordingly, the order to pay restitution imposed as a condition of probation in this case must be vacated. We remand this case to the trial court with instructions to do so, leaving undisturbed the rest of Hardy’s sentence. 7
Remanded with instructions.
Notes
. Super.Ct.Crim.R. 35(a), (b).
. This court has never held, however, that a defendant in one case may be ordered, consistently with section 16-711, to pay restitution to the victim in an entirely separate case.
See Hill v. United States,
. We recognize, of course, that Hardy’s failure to pay the restitution ordered in case No. M-11480-86 and then duplicatively ordered here would not automatically subject him to revocation of his probation in either case.
See Bearden v. Georgia,
. Another anomaly is that Judge Queen's order placed Hardy’s restitution payments under the supervision of two separate judges, opening the possibility of inconsistent determinations of whether he "willfully refused to pay” or whether he "failed to make sufficient bona fide efforts legally to acquire the resources to pay.”
See Bearden v. Georgia, supra
note 3,
. The pertinent facts of the
Whitney
case are set forth in a previous opinion,
United States v. Whitney,
. Judge Queen ordered Hardy to commit "no further law violations" during his probationary term. Hardy has not challenged that condition.
. Hardy also contends that the trial court abused its discretion in fining him $200. This claim is subject to review only for possible abuse of the court’s "considerable discretion in formulating an appropriate sentence...."
Hill v. United States, supra
note 2,
