Opinion
Many criminal matters are resolved not by trial but by plea agreements between the prosecution and the defendant. Typically, a plea agreement allows the defendant to plead guilty to one or more charges in exchange for dismissal of one or more other charges.
Implicit in the plea agreement, which is in the nature of a contract, is the understanding that the trial court cannot use the facts of a dismissed charge to impose “adverse sentencing consequences” unless the defendant consents or a transactional relationship exists between the admitted charge and the dismissed charge. (People v. Harvey (1979)
I
In July 2008, defendant Louis Lambert Martin lived with his girlfriend in an apartment in San Bernardino. On July 27, police officers responded to a
Later that same day, the officers returned in response to the girlfriend’s call that defendant was back. Upon arrival, the officers saw defendant walk up a staircase towards the apartment. They ordered defendant to stop. When defendant failed to do so, the officers ran up the staircase after him. As defendant entered the apartment’s front door, one of the officers put his foot in the door to keep it open. Defendant shut the door on the officer’s foot and ankle, injuring him. Defendant then fled, pursued by the officers, who later found him in a carport trying to hide under a car. When the officers handcuffed defendant, he put up a fight.
Defendant was charged with the felony of resisting an officer by the use of force or violence (Pen. Code, § 69; all further statutory references are to the Penal Code) and the misdemeanor of corporal injury to a cohabitant (§ 273.5, subd. (a)). The prosecution and defendant negotiated a plea agreement. In exchange for dismissal of the misdemeanor offense, defendant agreed to plead guilty to the felony charge, for which he would be placed on probation, which was to include service of 120 days in county jail.
The plea bargain did not mention that defendant would be subject to probation conditions based on the facts of the dismissed domestic violence charge. But at a later hearing the trial court stated its intention to impose such probation conditions.
On appeal, defendant argued that the imposition of domestic violence probation conditions was improper because the plea agreement did not include his consent to probation conditions flowing from the dismissed domestic violence charge. The Court of Appeal upheld the challenged conditions. It noted that Harvey involved an increased prison term and therefore did not apply to probation, which it characterized as an act of grace or clemency. It rejected the contrary conclusion of the Court of Appeal in
n
As noted earlier, the charges against defendant were resolved not by trial but by a plea bargain. We begin with a brief description of the basic nature of plea agreements. A plea bargain is a negotiated agreement between the prosecution and the defendant by which a defendant pleads guilty to one or more charges in return for dismissal of one or more other charges. (People v. Segura (2008)
Because a negotiated plea agreement is in the nature of a contract, “it is interpreted according to general contract principles.” (People v. Shelton (2006)
Ill
Central to the issue here is our decision in Harvey, supra,
Defendant relies on Beagle, supra,
As discussed earlier, a negotiated plea agreement is in the nature of a contract. Thus, when the trial court accepts it, the agreement is binding on the parties and the court. (§ 1192.5; Segura, supra, 44 Cal.4th at pp. 930-931.) Thereafter, material terms of the agreement cannot be modified without the parties’ consent. (Segura, supra, at p. 935.) And, as we stated in Harvey, supra,
In prohibiting “adverse sentencing consequences” related to the facts of a dismissed charge and not agreed to in the plea agreement, this court in Harvey, supra,
Similarly unpersuasive is the Attorney General’s argument that a general statutory grant of authority to a trial court relating to probation, such as section 1203.1, subdivision (j)’s provision authorizing a trial court to impose any reasonable conditions, overrides the terms of a plea agreement. We recently rejected a closely related argument in Segura, supra,
After the defendant in Segura was released from jail, federal authorities detained him and initiated deportation proceedings because he had been convicted of an “ ‘aggravated felony,’ ” which federal law defines as an offense that is subject to imprisonment of at least one year, or 365 days. (Segura, supra,
Our decisions in Harvey, supra,
To summarize, when under a plea agreement a defendant pleads guilty to one or more charges in exchange for dismissal of one or more charges, the trial court cannot, in placing the defendant on probation, impose conditions that are based solely on the dismissed charge or charges unless the defendant agreed to them or unless there is a “transactional” relationship between the charge or charges to which the defendant pled and the facts of the dismissed charge or charges. (Harvey, supra,
IV
When the trial court, before accepting the plea bargain, expressed its intention to impose certain probation conditions related to the dismissed domestic violence charge, defense counsel objected. The trial court stated that it would reject the plea bargain unless defendant agreed to the domestic violence conditions. After defense counsel conferred with defendant, the following colloquy between defense counsel and the court occurred:
“[Counsel:] He wants to stand by his plea, Your Honor.
“[Court:] I don’t know what that means.
“[Counsel:] Based on the Court’s indicated sentence and probation terms, he’s willing to accept those probation terms.
“[Court:] And the D.V. [(domestic violence)] terms?
“[Counsel:] Yes, Your Honor.” (Italics added.)
The trial court then accepted the plea agreement and placed defendant on probation. Because defendant expressly agreed to the domestic violence conditions of probation, they were validly imposed. As that conclusion resolves this case, we need not and do not decide whether the admitted charge and the dismissed charge were “transactionally related.” (Harvey, supra,
George, C. J., Baxter, J., Werdegar, J., Chin, J., Moreno, J., and Corrigan, J., concurred.
Notes
Defendant has not described the challenged probation conditions. Like the Court of Appeal, we presume that those conditions were these: requiring him to complete a 52-week “domestic violence batterers’ program,” to pay $400 to a domestic violence fund, and to pay $400 to a battered women’s shelter.
To be clear, we are concluding, as a matter of substantive law, that the trial court did not err when it imposed the domestic violence probation conditions, which were based on a dismissed charge, because defendant expressly agreed to those very conditions, thereby waiving the right this court recognized in Harvey, supra,
