Opinion
Ernesto Diaz Colado appeals following revocation of his probation in case Nos. CR127310 and CR130618. We affirm.
Background
The facts are undisputed. Colado was, in case No. CR127310, convicted of possessing heroin for sale. While on probation from that offense he was, *262 in case No. CR130618, again convicted of sale of heroin, this time while armed with a firearm.
Although sentenced to the five-year upper term with a four-year weapons enhancement in No. CR130618, Colado received probation again in those matters. In case No. CR139920 Colado was again convicted of drug and firearms offenses. He was sentenced in No. CR139920, and his probation was revoked in Nos. CR127310 and CR130618.
The three drug cases were ordered to run concurrently. The nine-year term in No. CR130618 is the longest sentence. Colado now asserts the revoking judge had the power at the time of revocation to modify the earlier imposed sentence. We disagree, and affirm the judgment.
Discussion
Colado asserts the sentencing judge had authority to modify the previously imposed but stayed, and unappealed, sentence in No. CR130618. In sentencing in No. CR139920, the judge said, “I frankly think I would have given the mid term in this matter [No. CR139920], which we can discuss, but in light of the 9 year suspended sentence, which I feel compelled to impose on the underlying matter [No. CR130618], I think it would be academic anyway.”
It would indeed have been academic. Colado did not appeal from the nine-year sentence imposed but not executed in No. CR130618. His subsequent conviction of sale of cocaine base necessitated the revocation of probation in No. CR130618, and because his earlier imposed sentence had long since become final, as was pointed out in
People
v.
Chagolla
(1984)
Colado asserts that
People
v.
Karaman
(1992)
*263 Karaman had nothing to do with a grant of probation and a later revocation, but rather with the mechanics of a short stay of execution of an imposed commitment to state prison, and the time at which jurisdiction to modify such an imposed sentence is lost. Karaman has nothing to do with this matter or the circumstances before us.
Counsel for Colado attempts to read Karaman so as to redefine the term “final” for purposes of modification of a sentence, arguing that here the Attorney General “does not describe in what sense this judgment was final while that in Karaman is not. There is no valid distinction.”
Simply put, in this case, the imposed sentence was “final” in the ordinary sense when the time for appeal had passed, as was observed in
People
v.
Chagolla, supra,
As pointed out in
People
v.
Karaman, supra,
While Karaman does not explicitly address the precise procedural situation here (neither a present commitment to state prison nor a fine only, but a grant of probation), we believe the “minute-entry rule” remains the “appropriate ... act ... to fix the point of expiration of the trial court’s jurisdiction to modify the sentence.”
As
Karaman
has no application herein, contrary to the contentions of Colado, we reach the same result as the court in
People
v.
Chagolla, supra,
Disposition
The judgment is affirmed.
Work, Acting P. J., and Benke, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied May 10, 1995.
Notes
An invalid sentence, of course, may be vacated and a proper sentence imposed at any time the error is brought to the attention of either a trial or a reviewing court.
(People
v.
Chagolla, supra,
