Opinion
Fourteen years after pleading guilty to petty theft with a prior and 12 years after having served a three-year prison sentence for the conviction, defendant Hyung Joon Kim invited the trial court to dismiss the action in the interests of justice pursuant to Penal Code section 1385.
BACKGROUND
Defendant immigrated to this country at age six from South Korea, and became a “lawful permanent resident in 1986 and has resided continuously in this country since his initial entry.” (People v. Kim (2009)
All of which, per our Supreme Court, plunged defendant into “a labyrinth of legal problems,” all related to his status as a lawful resident, but not a citizen, of this country. (Kim, supra,
To counter this, throughout 2003 and 2004, defendant “began filing collateral challenges to his various state convictions in an attempt to eliminate them as the basis for deportation.” (Kim, supra,
Among other things, the Supreme Court held that “a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, which relates more to a mistake of law than of fact, is
Undeterred, in 2011, defendant attacked the petty-theft-with-a-prior conviction by filing the underlying pleading, which he deemed a “Suggestion for Dismissal in the Interests of Justice under Penal Code Section 1385.”
The trial court reasoned as follows: “Well, I have a suspicion that given the gravity of this case and the previous positions taken by the appellate courts that... the People’s position is . . . ultimately going to prove correct. And I have some misgivings about going down this road because of, assuming it flies, what the consequences of it might be in terms of legislative response to Courts doing things that the Court thinks is right but other people may not.
The trial court then made written findings in support of dismissal that tracked its remarks in more detail.
DISCUSSION
Section 1385, subdivision (a), authorizes the trial court to “order an action to be dismissed” if the dismissal is “in furtherance of justice.”
Defendant, however, is not seeking dismissal of a pending action or charges or allegations in an indictment or information, but rather vacation of a long since final judgment of conviction. Use of section 1385 in that manner would be inconsistent with the Supreme Court’s strict focus on the language of the statute.
“Our case law has construed section 1385 to permit a court to dismiss individual counts in accusatory pleadings [citation], sentencing enhancements [citation], allegations that the defendant has suffered a prior conviction
Defendant does not dispute the principle that section 1385 does not authorize a dismissal after imposition of sentence and rendition of judgment. Instead, he counterintuitively urges that there has not yet been a judgment in this case. He arrives at this conclusion as follows.
One of defendant’s 2003 collateral challenges was a nonstatutory motion to vacate the three-year petty-theft-with-a-prior sentence (not conviction) and the two-year concurrent first degree burglary sentence (not conviction) on the ground that he did not know that the sentences would subject him to mandatory deportation. The People did not oppose the motion. At the hearing, the trial court inquired of the prosecutor whether he “want[ed] to get into this.” To this the prosecutor replied: “No. I just want to say we’re not opposing it. That’s as far into it as I want to get.” The trial court then granted the motion, vacated the sentences, and ordered nunc pro tunc that defendant be placed on one-day probation with a condition that he serve 364 days in jail and a credit for having served that time.
According to defendant, “By suspending imposition of sentence in the 2003 proceedings, the trial court changed the action against [him] from one in which a judgment was entered and a sentence imposed to one in which no judgment was entered and no sentence was imposed.” (See People v. Howard (1997)
Trial courts do not have unlimited authority to modify a sentence once imposed. The common law rule is that, once a defendant begins serving a sentence, the sentencing court loses jurisdiction to modify the sentence it imposed. (See People v. Karaman (1992)
Here, defendant did not seek to correct a clerical error but sought instead to “ “declare that something was done which was not done.” ’ ” (People v. Borja (2002)
In Borja, the defendant had been initially granted probation conditioned in part on a jail sentence of 365 days. Almost six years later, after the defendant had completed his probation, the defendant sought and obtained a nunc pro tunc modification of the probation condition to a sentence of 364 days. This change was important to avoid the defendant’s deportation for an aggravated felony under federal immigration laws. (Borja, supra, 95 Cal.App.4th at pp. 483-484.) The appellate court found the change invalid, stating that “[t]his case does not involve a clerical order.” (Id. at p. 485.) The defendant was seeking a retroactive change in the sentence “that had been intended, imposed and served.” (Ibid.) The same reasoning applies in this case.
The trial court’s vacation of defendant’s sentences was not only improper but also void because it was an act in excess of jurisdiction. (See, e.g., In re Marriage of Padgett (2009)
Defendant argues, however, that the People’s failure to file an appeal from the nunc pro tunc order resulted in that order becoming final and preclusive. Again, defendant’s analysis is erroneous.
“The doctrine of res judicata is inapplicable to void judgments. ‘Obviously a judgment, though final and on the merits, has no binding force and is subject to collateral attack if it is wholly void for lack of jurisdiction of the subject matter or person, and perhaps for excess of jurisdiction . . . .’ ” (Rochin v. Pat Johnson Manufacturing Co., supra, 67 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1239-1240.) “A ‘final’ but void order can have no preclusive effect. ‘ “A void judgment [or order] is, in legal effect, no judgment. By it no rights are divested. From it no rights can be obtained. Being worthless in itself, all proceedings founded upon it are equally worthless. It neither binds nor bars any one.” ’ ” (Id. at p. 1240.)
In short, judgment had been imposed and defendant had served his prison sentence in this case. The trial court therefore had no authority to dismiss the action pursuant to section 1385.
DISPOSITION
The order dismissing this action is reversed.
Rushing, P. J., and Elia, J., concurred.
Notes
Further unspecified statutory references are to the Penal Code.
The INS is now known as the Department of Homeland Security. The name change occurred at some point during defendant’s legal problems. “Deportations are now prosecuted by United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement [(commonly known as ICE)].” (Kim, supra,
The second motion was one which our Supreme Court treated as essentially redundant with the coram nobis petition. (See Kim, supra,
Under section 1385, subdivision (a), a defendant is not entitled to move for dismissal in the furtherance of justice (the trial court on its “own motion or upon the application of the prosecuting attorney”). A defendant may, however, “ ‘invite the court to exercise its power.’ ” (People v. Carmony (2004)
