After petitioner had been committed to prison upon suspension of parole for another offense, the court here revoked the probation it had previously granted as to the offense which was submitted to it, rendered judgment and imposed sentence pursuant to section 1203.2a of the Penal Code in the absence of petitioner and without his representation by counsel. While we have found no decision which passes upon the issue, we do not believe the section applicable unless petitioner waives the rights of appearance and representation. The opportunity to be heard and to be represented by counsel at the crucial point of conviction are basic rights which, inherited from the common law, are cornerstones of due process. Waiver of such rights cannot be lightly constructed: it can be granted only knowingly and intelligently; we do not find such waiver here.
We set out categorically petitioner’s record of conviction and probation, grant and suspension of parole:
*60 1. On or about November 13, 1952, petitioner was committed to the California State Prison at San Quentin from Los Angeles County pursuant to a conviction by a jury upon two counts of forgery, and upon his plea of guilty to one count of receiving stolen property.
2. In August of 1954, the petitioner was released on parole.
3. On September 28, 1955, his parole was suspended and he was ordered returned to prison.
4. On March 20, 1956, he was again released on parole as of May 2, 1956.
5. In March of 1957, the petitioner was arraigned in Los Angeles County on a charge of petty theft with a prior felony conviction. (Pen. Code, § 667.) He entered a plea of guilty. The court, without imposition of judgment, granted probation for a period of three years on June 19, 1957. Counsel represented petitioner during these proceedings.
6. On March 28, 1957, between appellant’s arraignment and the grant of probation, appellant’s earlier parole was suspended and he was ordered returned to prison.
7. On August 2, 1957, petitioner was again released on parole.
8. On December 26, 1957, the Division of Adult Paroles suspended petitioner’s parole and ordered that he be returned to the penitentiary.
9. In February 1958, pursuant to the provisions of section 1203.2a of the Penal Code, the court without notice to petitioner, without his presence, and without his being represented by counsel, revoked the earlier grant of probation ■ of March 1957, and sentenced petitioner to the state penitentiary, the sentence to run concurrently with the sentence he was then serving upon the conviction of November 13, 1952.
10. Petitioner did not receive notice of the revocation of probation and the pronouncement of judgment agаinst him until February 27, 1958, an elapse of a period of 14 days.
The record shows that when the court revoked probation and imposed sentence in petitioner’s absence, in February 1958, he was incarcerated in the state prison for another offense, having been imprisoned as a parole violator subsequent to the grant of probation. Prior to the offense for which he had been granted probation in March 1957, he had been first tried, convicted and sеntenced in November 1952, then granted parole, and finally, after a series of parole grants and subsequent violations, again returned to the state prison.
*61 Petitioner on habeas corpus raises two issues, which we shall discuss separately: first, whether section 1203.2a of the Penal Code applies only in the event the imprisonment after the grant of probation results from a conviction and sentence rendered subsequent to such grant of probation and not if such imprisonment results from revocation of parоle; second, whether the application of the section, in the imposition of sentence in his absence, without a showing that petitioner understandingly had waived his right to be present and to be represented by counsel at that time, deprived him of his constitutional rights.
Turning to the first point, we believe that section 1203.2a applies since petitioner’s return to prison for violation of his parole constituted a commitment “to a prison . . . for another offensе” within the meaning of the statute. Both the literal interpretation of the word “commitment” as well as the purpose of the Legislature show the pertinence of the section.
Section 1203.2a of the Penal Code reads in part: “If any defendant who has been released on probation is committed to á prison in this State for another offense, the court which released him on probation shall have jurisdiction to impose sentence, if no sentence has previously been imposed for the offеnse for which he was granted probation, in the absence of the defendant.”. (Emphasis added.)
In the first place, the prisoner was “committed to a prison” upon his violation of parole. Webster’s New International Dictionary (2d ed., 1943) defines the word “commit” as follows: “To put in charge of a jailer; to imprison.”
People
v.
Scherbing
(1949)
In the second place, the construction of section 1203.2a itself indicates that it is not limited to those eases in which the prisoner’s return to the penitentiary results from a subsequent conviсtion. Commitment for another offense within the context of section 1203.2a is broad enough to include commitments both for an offense committed prior to, as well as subsequent to, the offense which engendered probation. That the words “another offense” are not limited only to subsequent offenses becomes clear from paragraph four of the same section. The Legislature there provides specifically as to the commencement of the term of imprisonment for those defendants guilty of a subsequent offense. Thus treatment of subsequent offenses is differentiated from treatment of offenses in general; such subsequent offenses are excepted for special handling from the whole category of offenses. The whole category covers all offenses, including prior offenses.
We conclude that although petitioner had been imprisoned because of parole violation rather than a convictiоn subsequent to the original judgment, the parole violation produced a “commitment.” There is no distinction between a commitment for parole violation and a commitment after judgment either in the sense of the word commitment or in the legislative purpose expressed in the section.
The second issue turns upon whether the court in applying the section could properly impose sentence upon petitioner in his absence and without counsel in a case in which he had not waived those rights. We shall point out why we have concluded that rendition of judgment under such circumstances violated petitioner’s constitutional rights.
At the threshold we must distinguish between a case in which the court has properly pronounced judgment but suspended execution during probation and a ease in which the court has not rendered judgment but granted probation and, after the revocation of probation, pronounced judgment. The courts have uniformly held that in the first instance no constitutional rights apply to the revocation of probation. A probation proceeding is not a prosecution; the convicted person can claim no right to probation; he is accorded probation as a privilege.
(In re Levi
(1952)
The rendition of judgment and the imposition of sentence take place in an entirely different legal setting than the grant of probation. Basic constitutional protections attach to the judicial act that deprives the defendant of status, liberty and sometimes property. Constitutional and statutory safeguards surround so grave a prononncement. At this point in the proceedings the defendant must be afforded the opportunity to appear and to defend through counsel. As we shall point out, one of the heritages of Anglo-Saxon common law, which expresses itself in constitution and statute, is this basic right of the dеfendant, at the time of sentencing, to appear and defend in person with counsel.
Article I, section 13, of the California Constitution provides that “ [i]n criminal prosecutions . . . the party accused shall have the right ... to appear and defend, in person and with counsel.” Section 1193 of the Penal Code declares that “If the conviction be for a felony, the defendant must be personally present when judgment is pronounced against him” unless his presencе cannot be procured after the exercise of reasonable diligence or defendant has absconded. 1 Penal Code section 1043 provides that “ [t]he defendant must be personally present at the trial” and imposes special provisions for the defendant who, in a felony case, fails to appear at any time during the course of trial. Penal Code section 686 states that “ [i]n a criminal action the defendant is entitled ... [t] o be allowеd counsel ... or to appear and defend in person and with counsel.” As to arraignment of defendant for judgment, Penal Code section 1200 specifies: “When the defendant appears for judgment he must be informed by the court, or by the clerk, under its direction, of the nature of the charge against him and of his plea, and the *64 verdict, if any thereon, and must he asked whether he has any legal cause to show why judgment should not be pronounced against him.”
Article I, section 13, of the Constitution was applied in
People
v.
Fields, supra,
The right to be present when sentence is pronounced derives from the common law.
(Schwab
v.
Berggren
(1891)
In the instant case, the deprivation of the right to be present and the right to counsel worked substantial detriment to petitioner. As Justice Traynor stated in
In re Levi, supra,
Petitioner suffered a more finite disadvantage here. Violation of section 667 of the Penal Code carries punishment either as a felony or as a misdemeanor; petitioner or his attorney could have offered evidence in mitigation of punishment pursuant to section 1204 of the Penаl Code. (See
In re Miller
(1959)
Indeed the Attorney General concedes that it “seems beyond argument” that “there is a constitutional right to appear in person and with counsel in a proceeding to revoke probation granted without imposition of sentence and to pronounce judgment. ...” Respondent’s sole contention is that petitioner, in accepting probation, impliedly acquiesced in the sanction of section 1203.2a that sentence could be imposed in his absence; that thereby petitioner waived his constitutional rights.
Can a party be held to have waivеd his fundamental rights by taking a benefit granted by one statute if another related statute forfeits those rights 1 The court did not inform petitioner that his acceptance of probation constituted a waiver of his right of presence or representation upon sentencing. The court did not so much as ascertain if petitioner knew of the statute which removed these rights. Are *66 these rights thus subject to silent and ignorant relinquishment?
The acceptance of probatiоn should not work such automatic waiver in the absence of the court’s record of petitioner’s “knowledgeable waiver of those rights. . . .”
(In re Turrieta
(1960)
54
Cal.2d 816, 819 [
While these cases passed upon the right to be represented by counsel, they surely apply to the twin right to be present personally at rendition of judgment. If we may paraphrase in reverse Justice Traynor’s language in
In re Levi, supra,
*67 Respondent’s attempted distinction of the three decisions cited supra and its submitted contrary authorities do not refute the above analysis. Respondent would distinguish the cases upon the ground that they do not deal directly with section 1203.2a of the Penal Code. While the rights we describe here obviously do not originate in the section, they control it.
Respondent’s cases,
People
v.
Banks
(1959)
The issue here really crystallizes into the problem of how far the rights of due process should be preserved in relation to proceedings terminating probation and rendering judgment. The purpose of probation is to rehabilitate the prisoner; it is granted as a mаtter of grace. Obviously the prisoner does not enjoy the protection of due process in the revocation of probation itself or as to restrictions reasonably related to it. 3
We deal here, however, in a case which both involves proceedings after the termination of probation and the preservation of fundamental constitutional rights. Whatever the legal disabilities of the prisoner during probation, such disabilities *68 must terminate with the rеvocation of probation; at least when the probation ends, the due process protection should take hold. Moreover, in the instant case, the denial of due process did not involve minor matters but deep-rooted rights of presence and representation by counsel at the date of rendition of sentence. Petitioner suffered a loss of due process at the very time when the court should have afforded him that protection.
The record fails to demonstrate a knowledgeable waiver by defendant of basic constitutional rights. 4 The court in granting probation did not determine or record that petitioner at that or any other time knowingly or upon information waived the right to be present or to be represented by counsel at a later rendition of judgment in the event that he suffered imprisonment for another offense. In the absence of such showing we believe that the court in prоnouncing judgment against petitioner in his absence and without representation by counsel denied to him protections fundamental to the concept of due process.
The petitioner is discharged from the custody of the authorities at San Quentin Prison and committed to the custody of the Sheriff of Los Angeles County with directions that he be arraigned for pronouncement of judgment in accordance with this opinion.
Bray, P. J., and Sullivan, J., concurred.
Respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied January 9, 1962.
Notes
See
People
v.
Brown
(1951)
The common law did not require the presence of the defendant in a case in which sentence was pronounced imposing a fine for a misdemeanor; the common law possessed other means than imprisonment for collection of the fine. Today apparently in some jurisdictions the courts hold that even if defendant is imprisoned for failure to pay the fine, the court may render sentence in his absence, the theory being that imprisonment serves as a means to collect the fine and not as incident to punishment. (15 Am.Jur. § 455, p. 113.) Following the provision in Penal Code section 1043 that if a defendant upon a misdemeanor charge absents himself with full knowledge that a trial is to be or is being conducted, the trial may proceed in his absence, this court, in
In re Baird
(1957)
Indeed, the impact of due process protections upon such rehabilitatory processes as probation, juvenile court proceedings, commitments for the mеntally ill, and like matters, has engendered grave concern and widespread discussion. See Margolin, Eight to Counsel and Compulsion to Testify, 7 Howard L.J. 1 (1961) ; Breitenbach, Vue Process of Law for Touthful Offenders, 32 State Bar J., 665 (1957); S. Kadish, A Case Study of the Signification of Procedural Vue Process: Institutionalization of Mentally III, 9 W.Polit.Q. 93 (1956).
A commentator has pointed out that the opportunity of the informed prisoner to reject the conditions imposed upon probation is academic and that acceptance of probation should not in any event be held to constitute an agreement to waive constitutional rights. Thus the note “Legal Aspects of Probation Revocation’’ (59 Colum.L.Rev. 311 (1959)), states: “By accepting conditional liberty the . . . [defendant] is said to have agreed to procedures authorized by the probation statute or specified in the probation order. As a practical matter, however, a person faced with no alternative but imprisonment is likely to accept whatever conditions are imposed, and analogies to contract therefore seem inappropriate. Moreover, an agreement made under these coercive circumstances may not he effective to waive constitutional rights.” (P. 324; footnotes omitted.)
