Although we agree with the trial court that appellant was not entitled to relief under section 1381, his due process claim has merit. Moreover, appellant suffered prejudice as a result of the due process violation. Accordingly, we reverse.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In 2013, in Ventura County case number 2012039191, appellant pled guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm (§ 29800, subd. (a)(1) ) and admitted serving two prior prison terms (§ 667.5, subd. (b) ). He was sentenced to three years in state prison. In December 2014, he was released on PRCS (§ 3455 et seq.).
In April 2015, appellant was arrested for violating the terms and conditions of his PRCS. The Ventura County Probation Agency (the Probation Agency) filed a petition to revoke PRCS pursuant to section 3455. After appellant submitted on the allegations of the petition, the court found him in violation of PRCS and ordered him to serve 90 days in county jail. The following July,
On October 1, 2015, the Probation Agency filed a request for a PRCS warrant (§ 3455, subd. (b)(1) ) on the allegation that appellant had absconded from supervision and that his whereabouts were unknown. A week later, the trial court issued a warrant for appellant's arrest pursuant to section 1203.2, subdivision (a), summarily revoked his PRCS, and ordered that the running of the period of PRCS be tolled.
In December 2015, in Monterey County case number SS143073A, appellant pled guilty to bringing a controlled substance into a custodial facility (§ 4573, subd. (a) ) and admitted serving a prior prison term. He was sentenced to three years in Monterey County Jail.
On April 7, 2016, appellant sent the Ventura County District Attorney a section 1381 "demand[ ] to be brought to trial and/or sentenced" on the PRCS violation matter in Ventura County case number 2012039191. The following July, appellant sent the Ventura County Superior Court a section 1381 motion to dismiss along with an accompanying affidavit and proposed order. The court clerk forwarded the documents to the District Attorney's office.
On September 16, 2016, the Ventura County Public Defender's Office filed a motion to dismiss on appellant's behalf. The motion alleged that "[s]ince more than 90 days have passed since [appellant] submitted his [section] 1381 demand to the
The People opposed the motion, contending that section 1381 did not apply because appellant "has already been convicted and sentenced." The People added that "even if [section] 1381 did apply, there is no outstanding petition of revocation to be dismissed as one has not been filed. Currently, there is only an active warrant, which does not qualify for dismissal under [section] 1381." At the November 3, 2016 hearing on the motion, the prosecutor stated: "I don't believe there is a due process issue, definitely not one that's thoroughly laid out in [the] Defense moving papers. But recalling the warrant, ... it's something that probation could simply submit again. [¶] ... [¶] So it seems like this is a futile exercise and request, because it's something that really has no weight."
Appellant's counsel replied that "the reason why it would be a due process issue is because his PR[C]S is tolling during the time he's out to warrant. ...
The court denied the motion, reasoning that section 1381 did not apply "because there was nothing pending here except a warrant." The court added: "[T]he due process argument troubles me. I think there might be a very good due process argument if everybody waits until he serves his sentence up there and then transports him here on a warrant, I can see a due process argument there, since we know where he is. But when you file[d] a 1381, there was nothing pending here at all."
On April 12, 2017, appellant completed his three-year sentence in the Monterey County Jail. The following day, he was arrested on the PRCS warrant and was returned to Ventura County. A week later, the Probation Agency filed a petition to revoke appellant's PRCS. On June 6, 2017, following a PRCS revocation hearing, the court found appellant in violation of his PRCS, revoked and reinstated PRCS, and ordered him to serve 120 days in the Ventura County Jail.
DISCUSSION
Section 1381
Appellant contends the court erred in concluding that section 1381 did not apply to his PRCS arrest warrant. We agree with the trial court that appellant was not entitled to relief under section 1381.
Section 1381 provides in relevant part that "[w]henever a defendant has been convicted, in any court of this state, of the commission of a felony ... and has been sentenced to and has entered upon a term of imprisonment in a state prison ... and at the time of the entry upon the term of imprisonment ... there is pending, in any court of this state, ... any criminal proceeding
Section 1381 did not apply here. Even assuming that the issuance of a PRCS arrest warrant would otherwise qualify as a "criminal proceeding" for purposes of section 1381, it is not a proceeding in which a defendant "remains to be sentenced." Appellant's PRCS in the Ventura County case is part and parcel of the sentence already imposed in that matter. (§ 1170, subd. (c) [at sentencing, "[t]he court shall ... inform the defendant that as part of the sentence after expiration of the term [of imprisonment] he or she may be on ... [PRCS] for a period as provided in Section 3451"]; see also People v. Steward (2018)
Appellant's citation to Rudman v. Superior Court (1973)
Rudman is inapposite. In that case, the imposition of sentence was suspended; here it was not. "[T]he plain meaning of the phrase 'there is pending ... any criminal proceeding wherein the defendant remains to be
Due Process
Appellant also contends that the failure to bring him to Ventura County to resolve the PRCS revocation matter within a reasonable time after he made his demand constitutes a violation of his due process rights. We agree.
The People do not dispute that persons arrested for an alleged PRCS violation and charged in a revocation petition with violating PRCS have a due process right to a prompt determination of probable cause followed by a timely revocation hearing with the opportunity to appear in court and provide a defense. ( People v. Gutierrez (2016)
We need not decide whether Morrissey and its progeny apply in this context because appellant's due process claim has merit under the standard set forth in Mathews v. Eldridge (1976)
A balancing of the three Matthews factors plainly weighs in appellant's favor. The PRCS warrant was issued on the allegation that appellant had absconded from supervision. In issuing that warrant, the court summarily revoked and tolled appellant's PRCS. Once appellant notified the authorities in Ventura County of his circumstances and demanded that the PRCS revocation matter be resolved, he could no longer be said to be absconding.
Moreover, the People concede that if the PRCS revocation matter had been timely addressed pursuant to appellant's demand, any term of incarceration imposed as a sanction for violating PRCS would have had to run concurrent to the jail sentence he was then serving in Monterey County. ( People v. Garcia (2018)
None of these assertions are persuasive. As we have explained, appellant had a compelling interest in the timely resolution of his alleged PRCS violation. Moreover, appellant correctly notes that his conviction in Monterey County was based upon conduct that took place before he was on PRCS.
The authorities in Ventura County violated appellant's due process rights by refusing his demand for a timely resolution of his alleged PRCS violation. Moreover, appellant plainly suffered prejudice as a result of the due process violation: his PRCS continued to be tolled, and he was deprived of concurrent sentencing on the 120-day jail term that was subsequently imposed as a sanction for the PRCS violation. Accordingly, the order denying his motion to recall the PRCS warrant and dismiss the related revocation proceedings must be reversed.
DISPOSITION
The order denying appellant's motion to recall the PRCS warrant and dismiss the related PRCS revocation proceedings is reversed. On remand, the trial court shall recalculate the tolling period of appellant's
We concur:
GILBERT, P. J.
TANGEMAN, J.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Penal Code.
Appellant was awarded 112 days of presentence credit, with the remainder of the term stayed pending our resolution of this appeal.
We grant appellant's request for judicial notice of the complaint in Monterey County case number SS143073A. As that complaint reflects, the charge in the case was based on a crime appellant committed while he was serving the prison sentence imposed in the Ventura County case, i.e., before he was placed on PRCS.
Our conclusion that appellant's due process rights were violated is also supported by the leading treatise on criminal sentencing, which states that "[d]efendants who are confined in out-of-county jails are making demands under section 1381 to be produced to the county where the defendant is subject to supervision on PRCS.... Technically, section 1381 may not apply to these defendants. ... Even though the defendant may not qualify for relief under section 1381, ... there may be a due process obligation to produce the defendant within a 'reasonable time' once the court becomes aware of defendant's circumstances." (Couzens & Bigelow, Felony Sentencing After Realignment (May 2017) p. 104.)
