Opinion
In this аppeal we determine the application of Penal Code section 2900.5 in a complicated, broken plea bargain case. 1
Stated as simply as possible, defendant, Irving Schuler, was arrested in Oakland, California, on October 1, 1969. Between that date and April 21, 1970, and while defendant remained in custody, six separate felony informations were filed in the Alameda County Superior Court charging defendant with a total of eleven separate felony offenses which had occurred prior to his arrest. Pursuant to a plea bargain, 2 he pleaded guilty to two of the offenses and was sent to prison to serve concurrent terms. 3 The remaining charges were dismissed as part of the negotiated plea. 4
*328 Defendant served 785 days in prison pursuant to these convictions, and was then released on parole. The parole was not a success. On March 16, 1973, an information, No. 54911, was filed in the Alameda County Superior Court charging defendant with four counts of robbery (Pen. Code, § 211). As to each count it was alleged that during the course of the robbery, defendant was armed with and used a firearm (Pen. Code, § 12022.5).
While awaiting trial on the new offenses, defendant brought a writ of habeas corpus, as a result of which the convictions for which he had been sent to prison were found to be constitutionally invalid. Whereupon, all of the original 11 counts set forth in the 6 separate informations were reinstated.
Defendant was then tried and convicted of the four counts of robbery committed while he was on parolе. As to each such count the allegation that he was armed with and used a firearm was found to be 5 Following the trial, defendant entered into a second plea bargain as to the eleven original offenses, pursuant to which he pleaded guilty to four of them, and seven were dismissed. 6
None of the four counts to which defendant pleaded guilty in the second plea bargain were the same offenses as the two counts in the first plea bargain.
Following the second plea bargain, the entire matter was referred to the Probation Department, and on June 7, 1973, defendant was sentenced to prison on the eight counts of felony violation. The terms have been ordered to run concurrently. 7
*329 Defendant has been given credit for all the time he has spent in custody as an unsentenced prisoner. 8 He has been given no credit at all for the time he spent in prison on the two counts that were subsequently dismissed as part of the second plea bargain. He now contends he is entitled to credit for that time.
Application of Penal Code section 2900.5:
At the outset we make it clear that this appeal does not in anyway affect the sentences imposed in information No. 54911. Defendant asks credit for the time he spent in prison only as to those offenses which occurred prior to his arrest on October 1, 1969. He does not, nor could he ask credit for such prison time as to offenses that occurred thereafter, while he was on parole.
Defendant has presented several arguments in support of his assertion that he is entitlеd to credit for the time he spent in prison pursuant to charges that have since been dismissed, but primarily he relies on Penal Code section 2900.5. 9
Section 2900.5, to the extent it is applicable herein, provides: “(a) In all felony . . . convictions, either by plea or by verdict, when the defendant has been in custody, including but not limited to any time *330 .spent in a jail, camp, work furlough facility, halfway house, rehabilitation facility, hospital, prison, or similar institution, all days of custody of the defendant. . . shall be credited upon his sentenсe, ... [11] (b) For the purposes of this section, credit shall be given only where the custody to be credited is attributable to proceedings relating to the same conduct for which the defendant has been convicted. [H] (c) For the purposes of this section, ‘sentence’ includes . . . any term of imprisonment, including any period of imprisonment prior to release on parole and any period of imprisonment and parole, prior to discharge, . . . [1Í] (d) It shall be the duty of the court imposing the sentenсe to determine the total number of days to be credited pursuant to the provisions of this section. The total number of days to be credited shall be contained in the abstract of judgment provided for in Section 1213.” (Italics added.)
The Attorney General contends that section 2900.5 cannot apply because the express language of subdivision (b) limits the application of the section to credit for time in custody attributable to proceedings relating to the same conduct for which defendant has been convicted. The Attorney General asserts that the 785 days defendant spent in prison were attributable to offenses which have since been dismissed and cannot be attributable to offenses of which defendant now stands convicted.
While at first blush this assertion may appear to have merit, it overlooks the fact that time in custody pursuant to a judgment of conviction may also be attributable to other charges pending trial or awaiting judgment.
It is a basic rule that where an accused pеrson is held in custody on a number of charges and upon conviction he is ordered to serve concurrent sentences, the time to be credited pursuant to section 2900.5 must be credited to each of them. (
This rule has been held to apply where the defendant is serving a prison sentence for one offense, while awaiting trial for another.
(In re
*331
Bentley
(1974)
The question then is: How does this rule apply to the present case?
In re Sutherland
(1972)
*332
As a general rule the credit to be given pursuant to section 2900.5 runs from the date of arrest and not from the filing of the charging document. (See
People
v.
Anderson
(1975)
We are led then to the conclusion that when the writ of habeas corpus was granted defendant stood before the court charged with 11 counts of felony as to each of which he had, in effect, been in custody from the date of his arrest on October 1, 1969, until the date of his parole on July 14, 1972. When he pleaded guilty to four of the counts and was sentenced to serve concurrent terms therefor, he was entitled to credit for all of the time he was in custody from the date of arrest to the date he was sentenced, including the time he was in prison pursuant to the ineffectual plea of guilty. 13 Once the plea of guilty was set aside, the order dismissing nine of the offenses was just as ineffectual as the plea of guilty to the two offenses had been.
Application of Penal Code section 2900.1.
Appellant contends that Penal Code section 2900.1 required the trial court to credit him with the 785 days he served in prison pursuant to his invalid plea. Section 2900.1 provides: “Where a defendant has served any portion of his sentence under a commitment based upon a judgment which judgment is subsequently declared invalid or which is modified *333 during the term of imprisonment, such time shall be credited upon any subsequent sentence he may receive upon a new commitment for the same criminal act or acts.”
The Attorney General contends that the plain meaning of the words “same criminal act or acts” precludes an application of the statute. We agree.
The essential difference between section 2900.1 and 2900.5 is that 2900.5 provides a broad range of credit for time a defendant spends in custody awaiting the ultimate disposition of his case. Such time is often referred to in prisoner’s jargon as “dead time.” Section 2900.1, on the other hand, is of very limited application. It was enacted well before section 2900.5, 14 and has nothing to do with “dead time” as such. Section 2900.1 is only applicable where defendant has served a part of a sentence for an offense, and the judgment is declared invalid (or is modified), and the defendant is then convicted and/or sentenced again fоr the same offense (or an offense based on the same criminal act or acts).
The essence of our holding 2900.5 to be applicable is that while defendant was in prison serving a sentence imposed for two of the original eleven offenses, he was also in contingent custody as to the remaining nine counts, contingent in the sense that if the plea bargain failed the remaining nine counts would be revived. That is not to say that he was serving a sentence on the other nine offenses so as to bring section 2900.1 into plаy. Such a result would only occur as to offenses that were occasioned by the same criminal act or acts of the defendant, in which event the two sections would provide coextensive protection to the defendant. There is no evidence before us that any of the four of the original eleven counts for which defendant has been sentenced is for the same criminal act or acts as the two offenses for which defendant was imprisoned. 15
Constitutional rights to credit for time in custody.
Defendant presents severаl arguments as to the application of constitutional provisions to his case.
*334 First, defendant argues that it would violate the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article I, section 7, of the California Constitution, if he is denied credit merely because he was held in prison rather than a county jail.
The argument is apparently based on a concern that Penal Code section 2900.5, as it was written at the time defendant was sentenced on June 7, 1973, and not as it is presently worded, would be held to apply. At that time the wording did not include credit for time in prison.
We do not so hold. As pointed out in footnote 9,
supra,
section 2900.5 is completely retroactive.
(In re Kapperman, supra,
The same result would have followed had the statute not been amended. In the case of
In re Jordan
(1975)
Also in
People
v.
Cowsar
(1974)
Similarly the court held in
In re Watson
(1977)
Second, defendant contends that the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article I, sections 7 and 15, of the California Constitution mandate credit for time in custody prior to sentence.
Defendant contends that apart from statutory provisions requiring credit for time in custody, a denial of credit for the time he served in prison pursuant to the dismissed charges will result in a grave miscar *335 riage of justice, and violate traditional concepts of fair play which underline our notion of due process. Appellant asserts that to deny him credit for time served will, in effect, “chill” the exercise of his right to seek redress from an invalid conviction.
Appellant’s contention is well taken. In
Patton
v.
State of North Carolina
(4th Cir. 1967)
In
North Carolina
v.
Pearce
(1969)
While both Patton and Pearce involve a second conviction for the same offense as the first, the same traditional notions of fair play which underline the due process concept as stated in Patton compel the conclusion that where defendant is charged with a number of offenses, and he enters into a plea bargain that is set aside for reasons of unconstitutional process employed in taking the plea; 16 and then enters into a second plea bargain involving the same charges, he is entitled to credit for time spent in prison pursuant to the first plea bargain, even though the precise counts to which he pleaded guilty in each bargain were not the same.
*336 Lastly, defendant contends that he has been denied due process because the terms of the second plea bargain were harsher than the first.
This argument is not well taken. In
North Carolina
v.
Pearce, supra,
The California Supreme Court has held that the California Constitution’s guarantee against double jeopardy precludes the imposition of a more severe sentence upon retrial.
(People
v.
Henderson
(1963)
In
People
v.
Hughes
(1975)
Conclusion.
Pursuant to Penal Code section 2900.5 and constitutional provisions which guarantee an.accused pеrson due process of law, we hold that defendant, Irving Schuler, is entitled to credit for an additional 785 days as to each of the following offenses: Two counts of robbery in the first degree (Pen. Code, § 211) as alleged in counts two and three of information No. 45857; one count of burglary in the second degree (Pen. Code, § 459) as alleged in information No. 46169; and one count of *337 assault with intent to commit murder (Pen. Code, § 217) as alleged in information No. 47259. 17
We therefore order that the cause be remanded to the trial сourt with direction to amend the judgments in each of the above cases in conformity with this opinion.
This opinion does not in any way affect the judgment imposed in information No. 54911.
Taylor, P. J., and Kane, J., Concurred.
Notes
Assigned by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
The issue is appropriately raised on a direct appeal.
(People
v.
Brasley
(1974)
Plea bargains have been approved by the California Supreme Court provided the bargain is fully disclosed in open court and made a part of the record.
(People
v.
West
(1970)
The offenses to which defendant entered a plea of guilty in this plea bargain included: Count one of information No. 45857, to-wit, robbery in the first degree (Pen. Code, § 211), as to this charge an allegation that defendant was armed with and used a firearm (Pen. Code, § 12022.5) was stricken; and robbery in the first degree as alleged in information No. 46414.
The offenses which were dismissed were: Three counts of robbery as alleged in counts two, three and four of information No. 45857 (arming/use clauses as to each count were stricken); three counts of credit card forgery (Pen. Code, § 484f) as alleged in counts one, two and three of information No. 46120; burglary (Pen. Code, § 459) as alleged in information No. 46167; burglаry as alleged in information No. 46169; and assault with intent to commit murder (Pen. Code, § 217) as alleged in information No. 47259 (an arming/use clause as to this offense was stricken).
Defendant filed an appeal from this conviction. The conviction has been affirmed and is now final. (People v. Schuler (May 30, 1974) 1 Crim. 12400.)
In the second plea bargain, defendant pleaded guilty to two counts of robbery in the first degree (Pen. Code, § 211) as alleged in counts two and three of information No. 45857; burglary in the second degree (Pen. Code, § 459) as alleged in information No. 46169; and assault with intent to commit murder (Pen. Code, § 217) as alleged in information No. 47259. As to this latter charge, an allegation that defendant was armed with and used a firearm (Pen. Code, § 12022.5) was dismissed.
When defendant was sentenced on June 7, 1973, the sentences for counts two and three of information No. 45857 were made to run consecutively with each other. Defendant filed a second petition for habeas corpus, as a result of which the Court of Appeal in an unpublished opinion ordered the sentences to be served concurrently as contemplated by the second plea bargain or that the convictions again be set aside. (In re Schuler (Jan. 9, 1976) 1 Crim. 14741.) As a result, defendant was resentenced on May 24, 1976, to serve concurrent sentences as to all offenses.
As to counts two and three of information No. 45857, defendant was given credit from October I, 1969, the date of his arrest to May 20, 1970, the date these two counts were dismissed as part of the first plea bargain, and from April 20, 1973, the date the charges were reinstated to June 7, 1973, thе date when defendant was sent to prison after the second plea bargain. Defendant was given credit for the same periods of time as to information No. 46169. As to information No. 47259, defendant was given credit from February 13, 1970, the date the charges contained therein were first brought against defendant, to May 23, 1970, the date they were dismissed as part of the first plea bargain, and from April 20, 1973, the date they were revived, to June 7, 1973, the date of sentence.
Section 2900.5 was added to the Penal Code in 1971, after thе date of the offenses here involved. As originally written the section was to be applicable only as to persons delivered to the custody of the Director of the Department of Corrections on or after January 1, 1972. (Stats. 1971, ch. 1732, p. 3686.) This limitation has been held to be unconstitutional as a classification not reasonably related to a legitimate public purpose.
(In re Kapperman
(1974)
Compare
Cerda
v.
Superior Court
(1974)
The procedure adopted by
Sutherland
is the same as the statutory procedure provided for in the case of a conditional plea entered pursuant to Penal Code section 1192.5. Undеr section 1192.5, at the time defendant enters a plea of guilty he may specify the punishment to be imposed. If he does so, and the plea is accepted by the prosecutor and approved by the court, the defendant cannot be given any sentence greater than, that so specified. However, the court must inform the defendant that- the plea is conditional upon final approval by the court on the day of sentence. If at that time the court decides to impose a greater sentence, the defendant must first be permitted to withdraw his plea of guilty.
People
v.
Johnson
(1974)
An analogous procedure may also be found in
People
v.
Cheffen
(1969)
Compare
Burris
v.
Superior Court
(1974)
In Agata, Time Served Under a Reversed Sentence or Conviction—Proposal and a Basis for Decision (1963) 25-26 Mont.L.Rev. 3, 44, the author observes: “[W]hen there has been a conviction on only one charge, but it was in satisfaction of the other charges... the defendant should be deemed to have been serving time for all of the offenses satisfied by the conviction. In the absence of error, this would have been the result, and the new sentence clearly is imposed in lieu of the reversed sentence and as a consequence of the reversal.”
Section 2900.5 was first enacted in 1971. Section 2900.1 was first enacted in 1949.
Our holding .that section 2900.1 is inapplicable to the present case is unlikely to have any future importance. The wide-ranging protection of Penal Code sectiоn 2900.5 now includes credit for time in custody previously only provided by section 2900.1.
In the present case, the pleas of guilty to the two counts of robbery were set aside on habeas corpus because defendant was not advised of the constitutional rights which are surrendered on a plea of guilty.
We decline adoption of the procedure suggested in
In re Handsome
(1977)
In fact, the trial judge stated he believed the Adult Authority was obliged to “take into consideration the time . . . that he served in State Prison on the actions which were dismissed,” and advised the defendant that in the event he was not given such credit he had the right of habeas corpus “against the board for the time to which you’re entitled.”
