This dispute raises the issue of whether the detailed findings required before probation is revoked are also required when intermediate sanctions 1 are imposed by a district court for probation violations.
The court of appeals affirmed the imposition of local incarceration for the probation violation, holding that the
Austin/Modtland
analysis does not apply to the imposition of intermediate sanctions.
State v. Cottew,
We conclude that the Austin/Modtland analysis only applies to the revocation of probation and execution of the underlying sentence — not to the imposition of intermediate sanctions — for probation violations. We also conclude that the Rules of Criminal Procedure do not require that the district court extend a defendant’s probation when imposing intermediate sanctions for a probation violation. Accordingly, we affirm in part and reverse in part.
On February 2, 2004, Toyie Diane Cot-tew pleaded guilty in Aitkin County District Court to one count of fourth-degree driving while impaired (DWI). Cottew was sentenced to 90 days in jail and ordered to pay a $1,000 fine and $565 in other fees. Execution of the 90-day jail sentence was stayed, however, and Cottew was placed on supervised probation for 2 years subject to the conditions that she follow the rules of probation, make monthly payments toward the fine and fees, complete a chemical use assessment, and attend a DWI clinic.
Cottew’s probation agent filed a probation violation report with the district court on September 1, 2004, alleging that Cot-tew had violated the conditions of her probation by failing to make monthly fine payments, complete a chemical use assessment, attend a DWI clinic or MAJDD Victim Impact Panel, and report to her probation agent as directed. This violation report was subsequently dismissed.
Cottew’s probation agent filed another violation report on January 3, 2006. According to this report, Cottew did not make several monthly fine payments, still owed $1,095 in fines and fees, and had failed to stay in contact with the probation agent. The report also noted that Cot-tew’s probation was scheduled to expire on February 1. When the district court held a hearing on the probation violation on February 6, 2006, Cottew waived her right to representation and to a hearing and admitted that she had failed to pay her financial obligations and to report to her probation agent. Cottew stated, however, that she had paid all but $125 of the remaining fine and fees the day of the hearing. Based on the admitted violations, the court ordered “that 20 days of the remaining jail sentence be executed, and that [Cottew] report to the jail on February 26th.” The court also ordered that Cottew’s jail time would be reduced to 10 days if the remain
On February 24, 2006, before the start of the scheduled jail sentence, an attorney representing Cottew asked the district court for a hearing to review the disposition from the February 6 hearing because the court failed to address the findings required by our Modtland, decision. The court granted Cottew’s request, scheduled a hearing for March 20, 2006, and deferred Cottew’s jail sentence pending that hearing.
At the hearing, Cottew’s attorney argued that the district court failed to inquire into whether the probation violations were intentional or inexcusable, and whether incarceration was the only way to address the violations. The court clarified its previous order, stating, “Well, I did not order that her sentence be executed. The sanction that was imposed was meant to be just that: A sanction for a violation. And not to be an executed sentence.” Cottew’s attorney explained that the fine and fees had not been paid earlier because Cottew was unemployed. The attorney asserted that the failure to pay was only a technical violation because Cottew had paid the vast majority of the fine and fees before the February hearing and paid the remainder 2 or 3 days later. Cottew’s attorney also claimed that Cottew had tried to contact the probation agent, but her calls were not answered and telephone messages were not returned. The probation agent stated that Cottew had contacted her before the hearing, but not before the violation report was filed.
The district court clarified that the jail term imposed at the February hearing was “a sanction for failure to report to the probation department,” not for failure to make the required fine payments, and that it “was more in the nature of reinstating [Cottew] on probation, with ten days being the sanction for the violation,” rather than a revocation of the probation and execution of the sentence. The court also noted “that it’s been the policy of this Court to routinely impose additional probationary jail time when a person fails to be in contact with the probation department,” but that the length of that jail time varies with the circumstances of each case. Based on the mitigating circumstances presented by Cottew’s attorney at the March hearing, the court decided that half of the 10-day sentence could be served on electronic home monitoring. The court ultimately concluded “that the violation was intentional” because the probation agent told Cottew that she needed to report, Cottew knew of that requirement, and Cot-tew failed to report to the agent before the violation report was filed with the court.
Looking to the policy considerations underlying our holding in
Austin,
the court of appeals concluded that the district court is not required to make
Austin
findings before imposing intermediate sanctions and therefore affirmed the district court’s imposition of jail time.
Cottew,
I.
Minnesota Rule of Criminal Procedure 27.04 governs probation revocation proceedings and sets out a detailed framework for handling violations. The process begins with a written report containing “a description of the surrounding facts and circumstances upon which the request for
When a probationer challenges the probation violation, the state must prove the violation by clear and convincing evidence. Id., subd. 8(2). If the district court “finds that a violation of the conditions of probation has not been established by clear and convincing evidence,” it must dismiss the proceedings and continue probation “under the conditions theretofore ordered by the court.” Id. But if the court finds that there is clear and convincing evidence that the probationer violated a condition of probation, or if the probationer admits the alleged probation violation, the court may either (1) continue to stay execution or imposition of sentence under the previously stayed conditions or under modified conditions, or (2) revoke the defendant’s probation and execute the previously stayed sentence. Id., subd. 3(3).
Revocation of probation, like revocation of parole, “ ‘deprives an individual, not of the- absolute liberty to which every citizen is entitled, but only of the conditional liberty properly dependent on observance of special [probation] restrictions.’ ”
Gagnon v. Scarpelli,
Consequently, before a district court revokes a defendant’s probation, it must, in addition to designating the condition of probation it found was violated, “find that the violation was intentional or inexcusable” and “that need for confinement outweighs the policies favoring probation.”
Id.
at 250. Although a district
A.
Cottew argues that the three Austin findings are required when a district court orders “incarceration as a consequence [of] a probation violation.” But this conclusion is not supported by our prior decisions.
The “threshold question” we decided in
Austin
was “what findings a trial court must make before
revoking probation.” Austin,
Although our definition of the third
Austin
finding considers the “need for confinement,”
Modtland,
Intermediate sanctions are imposed when the district court has determined that the defendant has violated his probation but that revocation of the defendant’s probation and execution of the underlying sentence is not appropriate, at least in part, because rehabilitation is still possible.
See
Minn.Stat. § 609.14, subd. 3 (2006) (permitting the imposition of intermediate sanctions when a stayed sentence is continued following a probation violation). In this situation, there is no need for
Austin
findings to ensure that the district court considered any claims by a defendant that revocation is not warranted under the circumstances because the district court necessarily agrees that revocation is not warranted. Athough the intermediate sanction serves as a punishment
In concluding that the
Austin
analysis does not apply to the imposition of intermediate sanctions, however, we emphasize that the procedural safeguards contained in Rule 27.04 of the Minnesota Rules of Criminal Procedure apply to all probation violation proceedings, including those that result in the imposition of intermediate sanctions rather than the revocation of a defendant’s probation and execution of the defendant’s sentence. Thus, as discussed above, the defendant is entitled to receive a copy of the written violation report describing the circumstances of the violation and must be told which probation condition she is accused of violating. Minn. R.Crim. P. 27.04, subds. 1-2. The defendant is also entitled to a hearing at which the district court must determine whether there is clear and convincing evidence that a condition of probation has been violated.
Id.,
subd. 3. If a probation violation has been established, the court has broad discretion in determining whether to impose an intermediate sanction. But that discretion is not unlimited. This decision, like all exercises of judicial discretion, requires “conscientious judgment, not arbitrary action,”
Burns v. United States,
B.
Turning to the record of the present case, the district court initially ordered “that 20 days of [Cottew’s] remaining jail sentence be executed.” But at the March 20 hearing, the court clarified that the incarceration was intended to be “a sanction for failure to report to the probation department” and “in the nature of reinstating [Cottew] on probation” rather than an executed sentence. Based on this record, we conclude that the district court did not revoke Cottew’s probation and execute her underlying sentence, and that the incarceration ordered in this case was instead an intermediate sanction for the probation violation. Therefore, we hold that the district court did not err in imposing the sanction without making the three Austin findings.
Cottew also argues that the district court abused its discretion by imposing the incarceration in this case because of its “consistent policy” of ordering jail as a sanction for failing to contact the probation agent, rather than basing its judgment on the unique facts and circumstances of this case. But the record of this case demonstrates that the court considered the mitigating circumstances presented by Cottew and adjusted its order to permit electronic home monitoring for half of the jail term based on those circumstances.
II.
The court of appeals considered sua sponte whether “the district court imposed the intermediate sanctions in a manner authorized by Minn.Stat. § 609.135 (2004) and Minn. R.Crim. P. 27.04.”
Cottew,
Minnesota Statutes section 609.135, subdivision 1(a) (2006), provides that the district court “may stay imposition or execution of sentence and: (1) may order intermediate sanctions without placing the defendant on probation; or (2) may place the defendant on probation with or without supervision and on the terms the court prescribes, including intermediate sanctions when practicable.” According to the court of appeals, the requirement in Rule 27.04 that the district court place the probationer on probation when imposing intermediate sanctions for a probation violation conflicts with the permissive language of Minn.Stat. § 609.135.
Cottew,
Whenever reasonable, we construe statutory provisions to avoid unnecessary conflict with other statutes. Minn.Stat. § 645.26, subd. 1 (2006);
State by Beaulieu v. Indep. Sch. Dist. No. 624,
Based on our reading of the record, it appears that the district court did extend Cottew’s probation for the duration of the local incarceration it imposed. We hold that such an extension is permitted, but is not required, by rule 27.04 of the Minnesota Rules of Criminal Procedure. Thus, to the extent that the court of appeals modi-. fied the district court’s order, we reverse the court of appeals and reinstate the district court’s order.
Affirmed in part and reversed in part.
Notes
. Under Minnesota law, "the term ‘intermediate sanctions’ includes but is not limited to incarceration in a local jail or workhouse, home detention, electronic monitoring, intensive probation, sentencing to service, reporting to a day reporting center, chemical dependency or mental health treatment or counseling, restitution, fines, day-fines, community work service, work service in a restorative justice program, work in lieu of or to
. Similarly, when imposition of the defendant’s sentence is initially stayed, Rule 27.04 provides that “the court may again stay imposition of sentence or impose sentence and stay execution thereof, and in either event place the probationer on probation pursuant to Minn.Stat. § 609.135, or impose sentence and order the execution thereof.” Minn. R.Crim. P. 27.04, subd. 3(3)(a).
