Opinion
Dаvid Lee Scroggins pleaded guilty to receiving stolen property (Pen. Code, 1 § 496, subd. 1) in return for a commitment not to oppose local time. On appeal from the ensuing judgment, he seeks to overturn a condition of probation that he pay restitution to various burglary victims of $2,366 during his five-year period of probation. He also complains on appeal he was denied a hearing to establish the actual losses proximately caused by his criminal conduct and he was not given full credit for time he had already served.
Facts
On December 13 and 14, 1985, burglaries occurred in four apartment units in a Pacific Beach complex. Items taken included video cassette recorders, television sets, camerаs, jewelry, telephone answering machines, purses and a blood pressure cuff. Scroggins was residing in the complex with his sister. She discovered several pieces of property, which she knew did not belong to her brother. She contacted the apartment manager and a security officer who identified the property as listed stolen by other complex residents. Police were summoned. The officers confiscated the stolen items (a blood pressure cuff, a television and a cassette player) and arrested Scroggins.
At the sentencing hearing, the trial court considered a probation report that stated the property still not recovered from the burglaries was valued at “somе $2,366.” The probation report also stated that one burglary victim had recovered his property while the other three still had not recovered all of their goods. These three burglary victims told the probation department the total value of their still missing property was $2,366.
As a condition of probation, the trial court ordered Scroggins to pay restitution in the amount of $2,366. Defense counsel then requested a hearing *505 regarding the amount of restitution and the trial court resрonded that counsel could get an accounting from the probation department and put the matter back on calendar.
The trial court committed the defendant to the custody of the sheriff for 270 days with credit for 7 actual days served with 3 section 4019 credits for a total credit of 10 days.
Discussion
I
Scroggins contends the restitution order compelled him—as a condition of probation—to pay restitution for crimes that he did not commit and for damages not proximately caused by him. He argues the restitution order is therefore inconsistent with the state’s statutory directives and case law. We agree.
Section 1203.1 grants the trial court broad discretion to prescribe conditions of probation, including restitution.
(People
v.
Lafantasie
(1986)
In
Richards,
our Supreme Court held that absent extraordinary circumstances probation may nоt be conditioned on restitution involving a purported crime for which the defendant was acquitted. The
Richards
court noted that California law does not limit restitution to the actual losses caused by the crime proved.
(People
v.
Richards, supra,
The Richards сourt observed that a probationary condition requiring a defendant to pay a third party for losses not actually caused by defendant’s crime is in effect requiring the defendant to choose between accepting incarсeration and righting a wrong he may not in fact have committed. “If a restitution order is to redirect a defendant to acceptance of responsibility for the crime he has committed, the order must be directly related to that crimе.” (Id. at p. 622.)
The Richards court concluded that to be valid a restitution order that exceeds the loss caused by defendant’s offense must serve a rehabilitative *506 purpose and such purpose cannot be served “unless the act for which the defendаnt is ordered to make restitution was committed with the same state of mind as the offense of which he was convicted____” (Id. at p. 622.)
Here, Scroggins was never charged with or found to be criminally responsible for the burglaries. He was charged and convicted of receiving stolen property, and those items of property were recovered by the police and presumably returned to the rightful owners. Nevertheless, the trial court ordered Scroggins to pay restitution to burglary victims, whose losses were not connected to Scroggins’s crime. The court did not conclude—nor from this record could it have—that Scroggins was responsible for these other losses that it ordered paid.
In short, the instant restitution order has no rеlationship to the crime for which Scroggins was convicted, and we can find no relationship between it and the potential for a “salutary” rehabilitative effect it could have on the defendant. (See
People
v.
Richards, supra,
For similar reasons, the instant rеstitution order also fails on a statutory basis. Section 1203.04, subdivision (d) provides in pertinent part: “ ‘ [Restitution’ means full or partial payment for the value of stolen or damaged property ... which losses were caused by the defendant as a result of committing the crime for which he or she was convicted.” There was no showing in this case that Scroggins’s conduct proximately caused the $2,366 in losses suffered by the burglary victims.
The case of
In re Maxwell C.
(1984)
We cannot agree with respondent’s contention that
Richards
and
Maxwell C.
are inapplicable. Nor can we accept respondent’s statement that the state of mind for burglary and the state of mind for receiving stolen property are congruent because each crime results in deprivation of property to the victim. The statement ignores the explicit holding in
Maxwell C.
that the two crimes involve different states of mind.
(In re Maxwell C., supra,
Respondent’s argument that the instant restitution order will have a rehabilitative deterrent effect also ignores the well-established principle proclaimed in Richards that restitution must be directly related to the crime for which the defendant was convicted.
We are cognizant that California courts have on occasion approved restitution orders that exceeded the losses for which a defendant has been held culpable.
(People
v.
Lent
(1975)
II
Scroggins contends the trial court should have conducted a restitution hearing tо determine the victims’ actual losses proximately caused by his criminal conduct and the appropriateness as well as the amount, if any, of restitution in this case. We agree.
At the sentencing hearing, the trial court and defense counsel engaged in the following exchange: “[Defense Counsel]: Your Honor, one point: Could we ask for a hearing regarding the amount of restitution? [11] He was convicted of receiving stolen property. All the property was recоvered.
“The Court: Let me say that that order will be amended to say that the amount of restitution is subject to modification which means that you may *508 then go to the probation department, get an accounting, and the matter may be put baсk on calendar and we’ll deal with it at that time.”
In
People
v.
Hartley
(1984)
It is clear that in ordering Scroggins to pay $2,366 in restitution, the trial court relied entirely on the probation department, whiсh apparently derived the figure solely from the burglary victims’ statements. No independent verification of the amounts supplied by the victims was presented, nor was it shown that these amounts were based on the replacement value of the goods. A defendant’s obligation to make restitution is statutorily limited to replacement cost. (See § 1203.04, subd. (d).)
It is unclear if in its remarks the trial court was leaving the door open for a restitution hearing in the future. Regardless of whether this was the cоurt’s intent, it should have conducted a restitution hearing before ordering any specific amount of restitution.
As discussed, ante, in part I, Scroggins should not have been ordered to pay restitution for losses that did not result from his criminal conduct. There should have bеen a judicial determination of whether any of the claimed $2,366 in unrecovered losses was proximately caused by Scroggins’s crime, and, if so, the replacement value of that property. Also, in a restitution hearing, the trial court could consider Scroggins’s ability to pay before fashioning an appropriate restitution order. (See Cal. Rules of Court, rule 419(a)(8)(iii).) Without such a hearing, Scroggins’s rights of due process under the law were severely curtailed.
Ill
Respondent concedes there was error in calculating Scroggins’s credit for time served because fractions of days were not counted as full days served. (See
In re Jackson
(1986)
*509 Disposition
We strike the condition of probation requiring the payment of $2,366 in restitution. We remand the case to the trial court for (1) a restitution hearing to determine (a) the appropriateness, (b) the amount, if any, and (c) the terms of payment of restitution in accordance with the principles stated in this opinion; and (2) a recalculation of actual days served using the appropriate calendar-day measure and a readjustment of the section 4019 credits. In all other respects, the judgment is affirmed.
Wiener, Acting P. J., and Work, J., concurred.
Notes
A1I statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise specified.
