This is an interlocutory transfer without ruling from the Hillsborough District Court (Hatfield, J.), see Sup. Ct. R. 9, asking whether a non-criminal violation-level offense can trigger the imposition of a suspended sentence conditioned upon only the defendant’s “good behavior.” We respond in the negative.
‘We accept the statement of the case presented in the interlocutory transfer.” Trovato v. Deveau,
We have previously held that there is a condition of good behavior implied in both suspended and deferred sentences. See State v. Budgett,
A suspended or deferred sentence need not expressly state that committing a crime will trigger its imposition because such a condition is “so basic and fundamental that any reasonable person would be aware of [it].” Budgett,
These principles apply with equal force to express conditions of “good behavior.” Thus, a suspended or deferred sentence expressly conditioned only upon the defendant’s continued “good behavior” may not be imposed absent a finding that the defendant engaged in criminal conduct. In this case, the defendant committed a violation-level offense. As “[a] violation does not constitute a crime,” State v. Dery,
Remanded.
