Opinion
Petitioner Donald Bray pleaded nolo contendere to a charge of passing checks without sufficient funds (Pen. Code, § 476a). 1 At that time, the indeterminate sentencing law (ISL) was in effect. Petitioner was sentenced to a term of six months to fourteen years. (Former §§ 18a, 476a.)
He was first paroled on this charge, on May 11, 1976. He thereafter violated parole and was returned to prison. He was in prison custody for parole violation on July 1, 1977, when the Uniform Determinate Sentencing Act 1976 (Stats. 1976, ch. 1139, pp. 5061-5178, as amended by Stats. 1977, ch. 165, p. 639 became operative.
Under the provisions of the determinate sentencing law (DSL), petitioner could be confined for parole violation for a maximum of six months. (Former § 3057; Stats. 1977, ch. 165, § 58, p. 669.) Accordingly, he was again released on parole on January 1, 1978, six months after the operative date of the DSL.
*509 He absconded from the jurisdiction and was again confined for parole violation on April 30, 1978. He was again paroled on September 1, 1978. Petitioner was scheduled to be discharged on February 21, 1979. The DSL mandated that petitioner could be retained under.parole supervision or in custody for a maximum of 18 months. (Former § 3000, subd. (d); Stats. 1977, ch. 165, § 42, p. 664.) His discharge date was fixed in accordance with the provisions of the DSL, taking account of the time that petitioner was a fugitive from justice (§ 3064).
The parole provisions of the DSL were amended by Statutes 1978, chapter 582, page 2002. The parole term (if there is no confinement for parole violation) was increased from one year to three years, and the maximum statutory period of parole (if there is a confinement for parole violation) was increased from eighteen months to four years. (§ 3000; Stats. 1978, ch. 582, § 1, p. 2002. 2 The maximum period of confinement for a parole violation was increased from six months to twelve months. (§ 3057; Stats. 1978, ch. 582, § 4. p. 2004.) These new provisions became effective on January 1, 1979.
The Department of Corrections did not honor the discharge date previously set for petitioner but notified him that he was to be retained on parole for a period of three years from January 1, 1978.
Petitioner contends that, as applied to him, the amended parole provisions are unconstitutional as an ex post facto law. He further argues that Penal Code section 3 requires that the new parole provisions may not be applied retroactively, and also that due process requires that his time in parole custody may not be extended without a hearing. Amicus curiae argues that the retroactive application of the new longer parole terms violates equal protection.
Because we hold that, as to petitioner, the amended parole provisions have an ex post facto effect, we need not consider petitioner’s remaining contentions.
*510
“A statute has an ex post facto effect when it alters the situation of an accused to his disadvantage by: (a) making criminal an action innocent when done; (b) making more serious an act already criminal when done; (c) inflicting greater punishment than that attending the act at the time it was committed; or (d) permitting a person to be convicted with less evidence than was required when the act was done.
(Kring
v.
Missouri
(1882)
Petitioner argues that, as to him, new section 3000, increasing the length of the parole term, is unconstitutional as an ex post facto law.
The Attorney General argues that, since petitioner was subject, at the time the crime was committed, to a combined prison and parole term of up to 14 years, new section 3000 does not impose a punishment greater than that attending the act at the time it was committed, and that therefore it has no ex post facto effect.
The Attorney General is correct that the four-year maximum parole term under new section 3000 is less than the term to which petitioner was subject at the time the crime was committed. The Attorney General’s view, however, overlooks the effect of the DSL, as operative on July 1, 1977.
The DSL as operative on July 1, 1977, restructured the entire sentencing and parole system. The Legislature clearly intended the DSL to apply retroactively. The Legislature expressly made many provisions of the DSL, including the parole provisions, applicable to those prisoners who committed crimes before July 1, 1977. (See, e.g., former § 3000, subd. (b); Stats. 1977, ch. 165, § 42, p. 664.)
The DSL could only have an ameliorative effect as applied to prisoners sentenced under the ISL.
(In re Greenwood
(1978) 87 Cal.App.3d,
777,
784 [
The Attorney General argues, nevertheless, that any entitlement to the one-year parole (or the eighteen months maximum parole period) under former section 3000 was not vested. The Attorney General relies on
In re Fain
(1976)
The present case is distinguishable from
Fain
in two significant respects. First, although Fain argued that his parole release date was “final,” the language of the statute and the parole board regulations did not in fact state that the action was final.
3
Thus the Adult Authority was not precluded from reconsidering its decision. On the other hand, former section 3000 precisely set forth that parole was not to exceed one year, or in any event a maximum period of eighteen months. Second, Fain had been set a parole release date, but had not been paroled. In contrast, petitioner has actually been released on parole. Although the Community Release Board (CRB) had discretion under section 1170.2 to reconsider a decision whether to grant parole, it had no power, once petitioner was paroled, to “reconsider” its decision and retain petitioner on parole beyond the 18-month maximum period. The CRB is required to apply the DSL to ISL offenders as prescribed.
(People
v.
Alcala
(1977)
“ ‘An
ex post facto
law is one which, operating retrospectively and on penal or criminal matters only, renders a previously innocent act
*512
criminal, aggravates, or increases the punishment for, a crime, alters the rules of evidence, penalizes an innocent act while assuming to regulate civil rights and remedies,
deprives an accused of some protection or defense previously available, or alters his situation to his
disadvantage.’ ”
(Ellis
v.
Dept. of Motor Vehicles
(1942)
The emphasized portion of the definition
4
delineates a distinct category of ex post facto cases. In
In re Murphy
(C.C.D.Mo. 1867)
In
State
v.
Keith
(1869)
Similarly in the instant case, it is evident that, in respect of the retroactive portions of the DSL, its effect was to place ISL prisoners such as petitioner in a position as if the DSL were the law at the time they committed their offenses.
The Legislature expressly stated that the DSL was retroactive. Petitioner and many other ISL prisoners received the benefits expressly provided for in the DSL. Although a redetermination of an ISL offender’s term under the DSL is not a resentencing
(In re Greenwood, supra,
“Ex post facto laws are prohibited by both the federal and state Constitutions. (U.S. Const., art. I, § 9, cl. 3; Cal. Const., art. I, § 9.) It is settled that among such laws are those which retroactively modify the time of discharge from custody to the substantial detriment of the defendant, thereby in effect increasing the punishment previously imposed for his crime. [Citations.]”
(In re Dewing
(1977)
Against this conclusion, the Attorney General sets three cases:
Dobbert
v.
Florida
(1977)
Dobbert is clearly distinguishable from the case at hand. The defendant was neither tried nor sentenced under the old death penalty law. The only effect of the statute on him was to provide a sufficient warning of the seriousness which Florida ascribed to first degree murder. Defendants in his position were not expressly granted the benefit of some lesser penalty. 5 In the instant case, petitioner was tried and sentenced under the ISL. His judgment of conviction was final. The Legislature expressly *515 granted to prisoners in his position the benefits of the DSL, which benefits are now sought to be taken away.
Moreover, even upon the question of law involved in
Dobbert,
the result in California may differ. Two California cases held that a reinstated death penalty law could not constitutionally apply to cases arising before the effective date of the new law. “Although the electors at the November 7, 1972, General Election adopted Proposition 17 which added section 27 to article I of the Constitution purporting to nullify
Anderson’s
holding of the invalidity of the death penalty, the constitutional prohibitions against ex post facto laws (U.S. Const., art. I, § 10;
Kring
v.
Missouri
(1882)
In
People
v.
Benefield, supra, 67
Cal.App.3d 51, the defendant, a minor, was tried as an adult in the superior court. Upon conviction, he was sentenced to state prison. The law at that time permitted such a sentence. Afterwards, a new statute was enacted which provided, as relevant, that a minor under 18 years of age at the time of the offense could not be directly sentenced to state prison. A year later, the statute was amended to provide that the minor could be sentenced to state prison after an evaluation and report by the California Youth Authority. Either of the statutory changes would benefit, and in effect impose a lighter penalty on, the defendant. It was apparent, however, that the new statute as originally enacted would be the lighter of the two. The defendant argued that only the new statute as originally enacted could be applied to him, because the amendment was harsher. The court rejected this contention, relying, on the rule of statutory interpretation enunciated in
In re Estrada
(1965) 63
*516
Cal.2d 740 [
We are not here concerned with whether the Legislature intended the first or the second of two ameliorative statutes to retroactively apply. This is not a situation in which the Legislature has made no express provision for retroactive application of either statute. We therefore are not called upon to ascertain the legislative intent by means of statutoiy interpretation. The Legislature expressly stated that the DSL as operative on July 1, 1977, was applicable to petitioner, and expressly conferred the ameliorative benefits of the DSL on him. Thereafter, the legislative intent is irrelevant with respect to any amendatoiy act which imposes a harsher penalty, even though such penalty may be less than that under the ISL.
The Attorney General argues that
Greenholtz
v.
Nebraska Penal Inmates, supra,
In Nebraska Penal Inmates, the United States Supreme Court faced the question whether the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment applies to discretionary parole release determinations made by the Nebraska Board of Parole.
The Supreme Court rejected the argument that whenever the state provides a possibility of parole it creates a reasonable entitlement to the
*517
conditional liberty afforded by parole. The court distinguished between parole revocation, i.e., the loss of freedom which one already has; and the possibility of parole release; i.e., a mere hope of freedom. A liberty or property interest is protected under the due process clause only if the claimant has a legitimate claim of entitlement to it. The mere anticipation or hope of receiving a grant of conditional liberty does not rise to the level of a protectible right.
(Greenholtz
v.
Nebraska Penal Inmates, supra,
The Attorney General argues from this that petitioner likewise had a mere anticipation or hope of discharge from parole. Consequently, no substantial or vested right was harmed by the decision to extend his parole.
The Attorney General has misconstrued
Nebraska Penal Inmates
as it applies to the instant case. First, the United States Supreme Court held that, despite the general principle that the mere possibility of parole does not create an entitlement to parole, the language of the Nebraska parole statute at issue did in fact create a legitimate expectation of release on parole which was subject to the requirements of due process.
(Greenholtz
v.
Nebraska Penal Inmates, supra,
In concluding, we take note of the particular circumstances of this case. First, of paramount importance, is the fact that the Legislature expressly stated that the DSL as operative on July 1, 1977, was applicable to prisoners who committed their crimes before that date. The Legislature expressly conferred the benefits of the DSL on petitioner and placed him in the position as if the DSL parole provisions were the law at the time he committed his offense. Second, petitioner was actually paroled under the provisions of the DSL as operative on July 1, 1977, and was required under that statute to be discharged on the date set. Third, petitioner *518 committed no parole violation between the effective date of the amendment to the parole provisions and the date of his scheduled discharge. In these, enumerated circumstances, we hold that the application of the new longer periods óf parole to petitioner violates the constitutional prohibition against ex post facto laws, because it acts retroactively to deprive him of a vested right to which he became entitled under the prior statute.
The parties have argued at considerable length the question whether' the Legislature intended the new DSL parole terms tó apply retroactively. Petitioner argues that, as a matter of statutory construction, the amended parole provisions were not intended to be applied retroactively. He cites Penal Code section 3, which provides: “No part of [the Penal Code] is retroactive, unless expressly so declared.” The Attorney General argues, on, the other hand, that the Legislature did intend the new parole terms to apply retroactively.
The statute before us is, however, unambiguous. Section 3000, subdivision. ,(b) provides for a three-year parole period and clearly states that “[t]his subdivision shall be also applicable to inmates who committed crimes prior to July 1, 1977, to the extent specified in Section 1170.2.” (Italics added.) 7 It is unnecessary to inquire into legislative intent or to engage in statutory construction. The statute on its face clearly applies the new three-year parole period to persons in petitioner’s situation. The question then becomes simply whether the application of the new parole period to petitioner is constitutionally permissible. We have held that it is. not The legislative intent is irrelevant to such a determination.
Disposition
The petition for writ of habeas corpus is granted. For the reasons heretofore stated, petitioner is entitled to be discharged from custody.
Gardner, P. J., and Kaufman, J., concurred.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise stated.
The provision for the maximum statutory period of parole is relevant here since petitioner has twice violated his parole.
Former section 5076.1 did not provide that the parole action by case-hearing representatives would be final if certain procedures were followed, but rather took the form that an action recommending parole would not become final until approved by a panel of members of the Adult Authority.
A similar definition is set out in
People of United States
v.
McDonnell
(N.D.Ill. 1934)
Interestingly, Florida prisoners who had been tried and sentenced under the unconstitutional death penalty statute were ail resentenced to life imprisonment.
(Dobbert
v.
Florida, supra,
Petitioner relies on
People
v.
Teron
(1979)
Although this clause was initially included in the DSL as originally enacted in 1976, it was retained when the subdivision was amended in 1978. Therefore, as amended, the subdivision is expressly applicable to inmates who committed crimes prior to July 1, 1977. We can only conclude that the Legislature intended that the new parole terms should apply to such inmates.
