Opinion
Defendant appeals from the judgment of conviction following her plea of guilty to one count each of forgery and welfare fraud (Pen. Code, § 470; Welf. & Inst. Code, § 11483). She was sentenced to a total term of three years and eight months in state prison.
On appeal, defendant contends: (1) her
Arbuckle
rights were violated
(People
v.
Arbuckle
(1978)
The facts of the offenses are not essential to the determination of this appeal. Suffice it to say that defendant (1) forged an endorsement on a check payable to another person and cashed it and (2) impersonated her sister-in-law in order to receive welfare payments to which she was not entitled.
*574 I
On July 18, 1984, defendant appeared before the Honorable Sheldon Grossfeld and withdrew her not guilty plea to 19 counts of welfare fraud and forgery. She pled guilty to two counts in consideration for which the court dismissed the remaining counts on motion of the People. She was also promised that no additional charges would be filed arising out of the current investigation by the welfare department. Defendant was not advised she had a right to be sentenced by the same judge who accepted her guilty plea
(People
v.
Arbuckle, supra,
A probation and sentencing hearing was commenced before Honorable Darrel W. Lewis. (Pen. Code, § 1204.) Before that proceeding was completed, defendant made a
Marsden
motion to change attorneys
(People
v.
Marsden
(1970)
On December 27, 1984, defendant’s motion to withdraw her guilty plea was denied by Judge Lewis. The court agreed that there had not been an Arbuckle waiver but ruled that Arbuckle was inapplicable as Judge Grossfeld was no longer available.
On January 11, 1985, defendant was sentenced to state prison by Honorable William Lally. Judge Lally also ruled that an Arbuckle waiver was not required as Judge Grossfeld had retired.
Defendant contends she should be allowed to withdraw her guilty plea because she was denied her right under Arbuckle to be sentenced by the same judge who accepted her guilty plea.
People
v.
Arbuckle, supra,
Defendant contends that Arbuckle and the cases construing it do not support the notion that a defendant’s rights are forfeited because the sentencing judge has “retired, died, moved far away or is otherwise unavailable.” Defendant contends it makes no difference why the judge is unavailable; “The trial court’s administrative problems are no concern of hers.”
Arbuckle
specifically dealt with the situation when “internal court administrative practices” render it impossible or impracticable for the judge who accepts a defendant’s plea to impose the sentence.
(Arbuckle, supra,
at p. 757.) As one court has stated:
“Arbuckle
and the cases applying it [citations] involve situations where the original judge was unavailable for sentencing due to internal administrative scheduling problems.
Arbuckle
speaks only of such situations and it is doubtful whether its mandate would apply when, as here, the judge is unavailable due to his death.”
(People
v.
Watson
(1982)
While it is established that the implied term of a negotiated plea first recognized by Arbuckle will override competing administrative practices of the court, it is clear to us that a negotiated plea does not carry with it an implied promise that the judge accepting the plea will not resign, retire, expire or be removed from the bench pending imposition of sentence. The People appropriately bear the risk of a judge’s unavailability due to matters within the control of the court, but no good reason appears why they should bear the risk that the judge before whom defendant plead is no longer vested with judicial power to pass sentence. To the implied term recognized by Arbuckle that the judge accepting the plea will impose sentence must be added an implied condition: if that judge then still actively exercises judicial power.
We hold that
Arbuckle
does not apply in a case where the judge’s unavailability is due not to internal administrative problems or convenience of the court but to retirement of the judge, a matter clearly beyond the power of the court to control. (See
People
v.
Watson, supra,
*576 II *
The judgment is affirmed.
Regan, J., and Blease, J., concurred.
