In re E.O., a Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law.
THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent,
v.
E.O., Defendant and Appellant.
Court of Appeals of California, Sixth District.
*1151 Jonathan Grossman, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant.
Edmund G. Brown, Jr., Attorney General, Dane R. Gillette, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Gerald A. Engler, Assistant Attorney General, Laurence K. Sullivan and Martin S. Kaye, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
OPINION
RUSHING, P.J.
The trial court placed E.O., a minor, on probation after finding that he came within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court because he possessed a knife on school grounds. On appeal he contends that a condition of probation restricting his freedom to approach or enter courthouses is unconstitutionally overbroad. We agree and will reverse the dispositional order to that extent.
BACKGROUND
Appellant was first found to be a ward of the juvenile court on March 24, 2008, when the court sustained the allegations of a petition charging that he *1152 had engaged in felony vandalism, in that he and a companion painted gang-related graffiti on school property. On January 25, 2010, a second petition was filed alleging that appellant had possessed a knife with a blade longer than 2.5 inches on school grounds in violation of Penal Code section 626.10, subdivision (a).
At the hearing on the petition, the principal at appellant's high school testified that he detained appellant and three schoolmates who were walking around the school grounds while classes were in session. After confirming that they were supposed to be in class, he told them he was going to search them. Appellant moved away and, shielding his hands from view, appeared to remove something from his pockets. The principal heard something hit the floor, and found at that location a plastic garbage bag containing a folding knife with a blade about 3.5 inches long. Testifying on his own behalf, appellant denied that he dropped or possessed the knife, stating that when told to turn out his pockets he did so, and that they contained nothing but a pencil.
Manifestly crediting the principal's account, the trial court sustained the petition and placed appellant on probation. It adopted a number of probation conditions recommended by the probation department, including one directing "[t]hat said minor not knowingly come within 25 feet of a Courthouse when the minor knows there are criminal or juvenile proceedings occurring which involves [sic] anyone the minor knows to be a gang member or where the minor knows a witness or victim of gang-related activity will be present, unless the minor is a party in the action or subpoenaed as a witness or needs access to the area for a legitimate purpose or has prior permission from his Probation Officer."
Appellant filed this timely appeal.
DISCUSSION
(1) "`In granting probation, courts have broad discretion to impose conditions to foster rehabilitation and to protect public safety. . . .'" (People v. Perez (2009)
A probation condition, whether in an adult or juvenile case, may be challenged as unconstitutionally vague or overbroad. (See Sheena K., supra,
(2) Appellant's challenge is primarily one of overbreadth, not vagueness. He contends that the restriction on court attendance unnecessarily infringes on several constitutional rights.[1] The foremost of these is a First Amendment right to attend court proceedings.[2] Much of his argument on this point relies on principles governing the closure of trials to the public, as most recently addressed in Presley v. Georgia (2010)
Defendant gains considerably more traction with Perez, supra,
(3) The court also found distinct infirmities in "the 500-foot court access restriction." (Perez, supra,
Respondent notes that the prohibition on court attendance in Perez was not limited, as the one here is, to gang-related proceedings. However the present condition shares several of the other vices that concerned the court in Perez. The prohibition on being near a building in which gang-related proceedings are known to be underway would prevent appellant not only from attending a gang-related trial but also from attending other proceedings in the same, and perhaps adjacent, buildings, or indeed from entering such a building for any reason, other than as a party or witness, without his probation officer's permission, unless he "needs" to enter for "a legitimate purpose."[3] Indeed appellant could violate the condition if a car or bus in which he is a passenger passes by such a building.
Appellant further contends that the condition unnecessarily infringes his specific right under the state constitution to attend and participate in court proceedings if he or a family member is a victim of a crime. (See Cal. Const., art. I, § 28, subd. (b)(7); see id., subd. (e) [defining "victim"].) The condition not only interferes with these rights, but would also prevent him from testifying voluntarily or addressing the court in a setting, such as a sentencing hearing, where comments from members of the public might be received.
As against these objections respondent makes no attempt to show that the condition is narrowly tailored to its objective. Indeed, apart from allusions to preventing attendance at gang-related proceedings, respondent does not indicate what its objective is. As in Perez, there are other conditions in the dispositional order, not challenged by appellant, that restrict gang-related activities: appellant is directed not to knowingly participate in any gang activity, not to visit areas of gang-related activity without his probation officer's permission, and not to knowingly possess, display, or transmit gang insignia or symbols. It may be that the principal concern behind the challenged restrictions is prevention of intimidation by gang members of witnesses to or victims of crimes with which other gang members are charged. But attending a trial, or loitering outside a courthouse, in order to glower at or otherwise intimidate participants in a trial would seem to already be proscribed by the prohibition on gang-related activity. In any event it should *1156 be possible to achieve at least equal efficacy with a more direct but narrowly tailored restriction than one excluding defendant from the vicinity of whole buildings.
Respondent cites People v. Leon (2010)
(4) Contrary to respondent's contention, Leon is not authority for finding the present condition free of unconstitutional overbreadth. It is true that the condition before us is not marred by the vice corrected there, because it is already limited by its terms to proceedings in which appellant "knows there are criminal or juvenile proceedings occurring which involve[] anyone [he] knows to be a gang member or . . . knows a witness or victim of gang-related activity will be present." However there is no suggestion that the objections raised here were voiced or considered in Leon. It goes without saying that a decision is not authority for a point the rendering court did not address. (People v. Neely (1999)
Respondent also cites In re Laylah K. (1991)
(5) We conclude that, on this record, the challenged condition is indeed overbroad. The court in Perez, after reaching a similar conclusion, did not attempt to fashion a condition free of the infirmities it identified, but struck the offending condition and remanded with the observation that the trial court might "impose a narrower condition if it deems necessary." (Perez, supra,
(6) We take this opportunity to observe that to the extent the goal of precise expression permits, probation conditionsparticularly in juvenile casesshould be as comprehensible as possible. The better practice is generally to frame them in the second person ("You must . . ." or "You must not . . ."), and to use plain lay language whenever it can be made to suffice. According to an online readability tester, the wording used in the condition challenged here corresponds to an average grade level, using five different scoring methodologies, of 28.68 years of education. (Added Bytes, Check *1158 Text Readability, [as of Sept. 29, 2010].) "Scores over 22 should generally be taken to mean graduate level text." (Ibid.) The language in our suggested conditions (see fn. 5, ante) has an average readability rating, according to the above site, of 7.72. (.) Clarity is possible even where the concept is complex.[6]
DISPOSITION
The judgment is modified by striking condition No. 16. If requested by either party within 30 days after this court issues its remittitur, the trial court shall conduct a new disposition hearing. In the absence of such a request, the judgment shall be deemed affirmed as modified.
Premo, J., and Duffy, J., concurred.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Appellant did not raise this objection below, but as respondent tacitly concedes, this failure is not fatal to the present appeal. (See In re Sheena K., supra,
[2] By statute, juvenile court proceedings are generally closed to the public. (See Welf. & Inst. Code, § 676.) This rule is subject to numerous exceptions (see ibid.), but it goes without saying that where appellant is not otherwise entitled to attend a given proceeding, the condition under scrutiny cannot work any interference with his rights.
[3] The quoted language is too vague to effectively limit the restriction. There is no way to tell whether access is "need[ed]" or its purpose is "legitimate." The allowance for "permission" from the probation officer operates independently of the provision for "need[ed]" access and does nothing to cure its vagueness.
[4] It would also seem that the condition there was rendered at least arguably vague by its use of the verb "appear," rather than "attend" or "be present at." The term "appear" is a legal term of art in the context of official proceedings, and while this is presumably not the sense in which the trial court there intended the word, it nonetheless burdened the challenged condition with considerable ambiguity. This court eliminated the ambiguity by substituting "be present" for "appear." (Leon, supra,
[5] You must not attend any gang-related case unless at least one of these things is true:
(1) You are a party to the case.
(2) You or a member of your immediate family is a victim of the activity charged in the case.
(3) You are there to obey a subpoena, summons, court order, or other official order to attend.
(4) A party's attorney has asked you to testify or to speak to the court.
In all other cases, you must stay at least 50 feet away from the entrance to any courtroom where you know there is a gang-related case going on.
A gang-related case is a court case that you know involves charges of gang-related activity, or other charges against a person you know or have been told by your probation officer is a member of a gang. A gang is a "criminal street gang" as defined in section 186.22 of the Penal Code.
You must not try to scare or otherwise cause anyone not to take part in a gang-related case. This includes a witness, victim, juror, or court worker. You must not try to get any witness in any court case not to testify. You must not try to get them to change their testimony.
[6] The phrase "Discretion, like the hole in a doughnut, does not exist except as an area left open by a surrounding belt of restriction," has a readability score of 10.74. The words are from Dworkin, Taking Rights Seriously (Harvard University Press 1978) page 31.
