Opinion
Here we advise judicial restraint when issuing a restraining order.
Ruben Ponce appeals a sentencing order made after his no contest plea to second degree robbery (Pen. Code, § 211) and his admission that he committed the offense for the benefit of a street gang (§ 186.22, subd. (b)(1)(C)). 1 Ponce was sentenced to an aggregate term of 13 years in state prison. We conclude, among other things, that the trial court erred by issuing a three-year protective order against Ponce per section 136.2 at sentencing. There was no evidence that Ponce had threatened witnesses during the proceedings. We strike the protective order but, in all other respects, affirm.
FACTS
Jesus Lucero was delivering flowers when Ponce and another man approached him. Ponce tucked his hand inside his waistband to simulate “what appeared to be a handgun.” Ponce said, “Eastside Bolen. You bang.” Lucero replied, “I don’t bang.” Ponce repeated, “Eastside Bolen, you better recognize.”
*381 Lucero believed that Ponce and his companion were armed. The two of them took $51 from Lucero. Ponce also took Lucero’s cellular phone from his hand. Ponce and his companion were arrested after Lucero called the police to report that he had been robbed.
At Ponce’s sentencing hearing, the prosecutor requested the court to issue a protective order for Lucero. He did not make an offer of proof or explain the reason for this request.
The court granted this request and signed a criminal protective order using Judicial Council form CR-160, entitled “Criminal Protective Order— Domestic Violence (CLETS-CPO) (Penal Code, §§ 136.2 and 1203.097(a)(2).” The order provides, in relevant part, “GOOD CAUSE APPEARING, THE COURT ORDERS THAT THE ABOVE-NAMED DEFENDANT [Ponce] [][]... must not harass, strike, threaten, assault . . . , follow, stalk, molest, destroy or damage personal or real property, disturb the peace, keep under surveillance, or block movements of . . . [Lucero] . . . . [f] [Ponce] must not attempt to or actually prevent or dissuade any victim or witness from attending a hearing or testifying or making a report to any law enforcement agency or person.”
The order also required Ponce to “have no personal, electronic, telephonic, or written contact” with Lucero. It prohibited him from making contact with Lucero “through a third party, except an attorney of record” and from coming “within 100 yards” of him. The court signed the order on June 10, 2008. The order provides, “[T]his order expires three years from the date of issuance.”
DISCUSSION
The Protective Order
The three-year protective order the trial court issued was not authorized by section 136.2.
A. Waiver
The Attorney General claims Ponce waived this issue by not raising it in the trial court. He is correct that this issue was not raised there. As a general rule, an appellant waives issues on appeal that he or she did not initially raise in the trial court.
(People
v.
Smith
(2001)
B. Statutory Authority
Section 136.2
2
permits the trial court in a criminal case to protect a witness or a victim by issuing a protective order.
(People v. Selga
(2008)
The Attorney General suggests that the trial court did not issue the order under section 136.2. He notes that the court signed Judicial Council protective order form CR-160, which is utilized to issue: (1) criminal protective orders under section 136.2, (2) domestic violence protective orders under section 1203.097, or (3) “posttrial probation condition” orders. He argues that because the court did not check the boxes on the form, it did not necessarily issue the order under category one, the criminal protective order under section 136.2. We disagree.
Category two does not apply because this was not a domestic violence case. Category three is not applicable because Ponce was sentenced to prison and not placed on probation. The court issued the protective order under the remaining category, section 136.2. The minute order reflects that the court was issuing a “protective order
in criminal proceedings
. . . .” (Italics added.) Consequently the order must comply with the requirements of section 136.2.
(People v. Selga, supra,
Ponce contends that the three-year protective order issued during sentencing was unauthorized because under section 136.2 the duration of the order may not extend beyond the trial court’s jurisdiction over the criminal case. The Attorney General disagrees and claims that the statute on its face does not place any time limit on the duration of the order, therefore he claims that the three-year order was proper.
*383
But the Attorney General’s position has been rejected by appellate courts. In
People
v.
Stone
(2004)
The Court of Appeal in
Stone
noted that there were other statutory provisions that provided for long-term protective orders, but those provisions set forth numerous procedural protections for persons subject to them. Consequently, the court concluded that the Legislature intended a “narrower scope” for section 136.2 orders so that they would be limited to “the proceedings before the criminal court.”
(People
v.
Stone, supra,
Stone
held that a three-year restraining order (like the one here) was not authorized by the statute. “Here, the restraining orders were issued for three years. They were not limited to the pendency of the criminal proceeding and were not a probation condition, as appellant was not given probation. The restraining orders therefore transcended the authorization of section 136.2 and must be reversed.”
(People v. Stone, supra,
In
People v. Selga, supra,
162 Cal.App.4th at pages 118-119, a more recent case, the Court of Appeal agreed that this statute authorizes only a limited-duration protective order. It held that section 136.2 protective orders are “operative only during the pendency of criminal proceedings and as prejudgment orders.”
(Selga,
at pp. 118-119.) Consequently the three-year protective order issued in this case during sentencing is invalid. (Ibid.;
People v. Stone, supra,
C. Inherent Authority
The Attorney General argues that, notwithstanding section 136.2, trial courts, independent of statute, have inherent authority to issue appropriate protective orders to protect trial participants.
(Townsel v. Superior Court
*384
(1999)
Moreover, even where a court has inherent authority over an area where the Legislature has not acted, this does not authorize its issuing orders against defendants by fiat or without any valid showing to justify the need for the order.
(Bitter
v.
United States
(1967)
In
People v. Stone, supra,
Here there was no evidence that after being charged Ponce had threatened, or had tried to dissuade, any witness, or had tried to unlawfully interfere with the criminal proceedings. The prosecutor did not make an offer of proof or any argument to justify the need for a protective order. He simply said, “[W]e’d also like to have a stay-away order in this case . . . .” But a *385 prosecutor’s wish to have such an order, without more, is not an adequate showing sufficient to justify the trial court’s action. (People v. Stone, supra, 123 Cal.App.4th at pp. 160-161.)
The Attorney General claims that we should reject
Stone,
and rely instead on the Ninth Circuit’s decision in
Wheeler
v.
United States
(9th Cir. 1981)
The Attorney General also cites a Seventh Circuit case,
U.S. v. Morris
(7th Cir. 2001)
*386 The protective order is stricken. In all other respects, the judgment is affirmed.
Coffee, J., and Perren, J., concurred.
On April 24, 2009, the opinion was modified to read as printed above.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Penal Code.
Section 136.2, subdivision (a) provides in relevant part, “Except as provided in subdivision (c), upon a good cause belief that harm to, or intimidation or dissuasion of, a victim or witness has occurred or is reasonably likely to occur, any court with jurisdiction over a criminal matter may issue orders including, but not limited to, the following: ffl . . . []□ (4) An order that any person described in this section shall have no communication whatsoever with any specified witness or any victim . . .
