*326 Opinion
Does admission to probation upon a felony conviction require that the defendant be granted probation after reversal of the judgment and conviction upon retrial? That is the issue presented by this appeal.
In 1968, a jury convicted defendant of grand theft. Imposition of sentence was suspended, and he was admitted to probation for three years on condition he serve eight months in county jail and make restitution to each of his victims. He appealed and the judgment was reversed May 23 (1 Crim. No. 7149, unpublished) for error in instructions. Upon retrial, a jury again found him guilty. He was then sentenced to state prison. He now asserts that the greater punishment after reversal and retrial is impermissible.
In 1963, California first adopted the rule that a defendant who has been convicted, appeals, and secures reversal, cannot be subjected to a greater penalty when reconvicted, upon his second trial, of the same offense in the same degree
(People
v.
Henderson,
None of these cases concerns a grant of probation at the first trial, and all make absolute the bar of increased punishment after retrial. We recognize, of course, that admission to probation is a matter of grace, and that a broad discretion in such matters is reposed in the trial court. It could well be unsound to extend the absolute bar to cases in which probation has been granted at first trial, if new circumstances which would have readily warranted denial or revocation of probation in the first instance, are revealed at the second trial or in the probation report filed after the second conviction. A reasonable solution, however, is suggested by a recent
*327
federal decision
(North Carolina
v.
Pearce,
Since our Supreme Court has not spoken on the subject of probation at retrial, we feel free to apply the analogy of Pearce to such cases. It is argued that the record and the second probation report here suggest reasons for denial of probation in, e.g. the disclosure of a new victim since the first trial, and possible efforts of defendant to render himself immune to restitution of his victims’ losses. Upon the present record, however, we have no indication of the court’s finding of any such facts to warrant present denial of the probation which was granted after the first trial.
Appellant also asserts that the trial court erred when it failed to have the reporter read some testimony requested by the jury. But the failure was due to the illness (apparently quite sudden) of the reporter. The court explained the situation to the jury, and suggested alternatives to it. We find no indication of any threat to keep the jury locked up until it reached a decision without reading of the testimony. Thus there is no error
(see People
v.
Gonzales,
The judgment is reversed insofar as it imposes sentence and the case is remanded for further consideration of defendant’s application for probation, with direction that if probation be denied, the trial judge state the circumstances which warrant deviation from the earlier determination.
Brown (H. C.), J., and Caldecott, J., concurred.
