In this proceeding, the State seeks cer-tiorari review of the circuit court’s order granting Debra LaFave’s motion for early termination of probation which was entered in direct violation of the negotiated plea agreement she entered into with the State for a downward departure, nonprison sentence. Although the State has no statutory right of appeal in this instance, we hold that we have jurisdiction to review its petition for common law writ of certiorari. We grant the State’s petition in order to correct a departure from the essential requirements of the law resulting in a gross miscarriage of justice.
I. Facts
Debra LaFave, a school teacher, was charged in Hillsborough County with two counts of lewd or lascivious battery, see § 800.04(4)(a), Fla. Stat. (2003), for committing sexual battery on a fourteen-year-old middle school boy. She was also charged in Marion County for committing additional incidents of sexual battery against the same child in that county.
Her two Hillsborough County charges, both second-degree felonies, were each punishable by up to fifteen years in prison. See § 775.082(3)(c), Fla. Stat. (2003). However, under the Criminal Punishment Code, her lowest permissible sentence was 15.1875 years in prison. See §§ 921.0024(2), .00265(1), Fla. Stat. (2003).
Six years into her ten-year nonprison sentence, LaFave unabashedly sought early termination of her probation in 2011 in direct violation of her plea agreement. She asked the circuit court to terminate her sex offender probation four years early. On October 3, 2011, over objections from both the state attorney and the Department of Corrections, the circuit court granted her motion and terminated her probation as requested. The circuit court’s order was filed on October 5, 2011. The State filed its petition for writ of certiorari in this court on October 21, 2011.
II. Analysis
A. Jurisdiction.
i. The State has no right of appeal in this case.
LaFave has forcefully argued, and we agree, that the State has no right of appeal in this case. The State’s right to appeal in a criminal case is available only as provided by statute. See State v. McMahon,
Pursuant to section 924.07(l)(e) and (i) and rule 9.140(c)(l')(M), the State may appeal an illegal sentence or a downward departure sentence. But there is no authority for the State to appeal either a modification or termination of probation because a modification or termination of probation does not result in the imposition of a sentence. See State v. Blackman,
In State v. Brooks,
Because the law is clear that the categories enumerated in section 924.07 are the only bases upon which the State may appeal as a matter of right, see, e.g., McMahon,
ii. This is an extraordinary circumstance under which the State may seek common law certiorari review in the absence of a right to appeal.
In Jones v. State,
Notably, Chief Justice Boyd — in a special concurring opinion — cautioned that the court’s holding should not be read to mean that “when there is no entitlement to an appeal, certiorari is ipso facto not available as a remedy.” Id. at 567 (Boyd, C.J., specially concurring). Rather, Chief Justice Boyd noted that in G.P.,
In State v. Pettis,
In Harris, the Florida Supreme Court was asked “whether the state has the right to seek certiorari from a decision of a district court in which that court in a criminal case rules adversely to the state and favorably to an accused.” Id. at 634. The court rejected the defendant’s assertion that section 924.07 somehow limited the state’s right to seek certiorari review, stating that “[t]he statute deals only with direct appeals in criminal proceedings and clearly does not and was not intended to proscribe the authority of the state to seek either common law certiorari now exercised by the district courts or constitutional certiorari of the variety now exercised by this Court.”
We point out that this court has expressed its agreement with Chief Justice Boyd’s view in Jones. In State v. Wilson,
we choose to follow Chief Justice Boyd’s cautionary special concurrence in Jones and not interpret Jones or G.P. to mean that certiorari is never available where a statutory right to an appeal does not exist. Rather, we choose to adhere to the line of cases which grant[s] the state the right to seek the common law writ of certiorari to review a nonappealable interlocutory order where it demonstrates a departure from the essential requirements of law and where there is no other avenue of review.
Id. at 25 (citation omitted).
We recognize that the order in this case is not a type of interlocutory or pretrial
Accordingly, we rely on the rationale of Harris, Pettis, and Wilson and hold that in this rare instance, the State may seek certiorari review of the circuit court order terminating LaFave’s probation.
Indeed, given the uncertainty of the law in this area (as emphasized by the parties’ briefs in which both sides take inconsistent positions on this issue) and the importance of predictability and availability of review by the state in criminal cases, we hereby certify the following question of great public importance:
IN THE ABSENCE OF A STATUTORY RIGHT TO APPEAL, MAY THE STATE SEEK CERTIORARI REVIEW OF AN ORDER TERMINATING PROBATION WHERE IT CAN SHOW THAT THE CIRCUIT COURT DEPARTED FROM THE ESSENTIAL REQUIREMENTS OF THE LAW BY VIOLATING THE PLEA AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE STATE AND THE DEFENDANT WHICH CALLED FOR NO EARLY TERMINATION?
B. Merits
i. The circuit court was required to honor the negotiated plea agreement which it had previously accepted.
LaFave received the benefit of her bargain by avoiding a lengthy prison sentence required by the Criminal Punishment Code in exchange for her promise not to seek an early termination of probation. Even so, she argues that she should not be held to honor her part of the bargain. She contends that the State is not entitled to relief because it cannot prove that there was an inherent illegality or irregularity that resulted in a gross miscarriage of justice. Her position is that section 948.05, Florida Statutes (2003), allowed the circuit court to terminate her probation early and that the court therefore did not depart from the essential requirements of the law.
Section 948.05 provides that
[a] court may at any time cause a probationer or offender in community control to appear before it to be admonished or commended, and, when satisfied that its action will be for the best interests of justice and the welfare of society, it may discharge the probationer or offender incommunity control from further supervision.
(Emphasis added.) But while section 948.05 generally provides circuit courts with that authority, a key factor in this case is the fact that LaFave accepted the benefits of a very favorable negotiated plea agreement that expressly prohibited early termination of probation.
Florida courts have routinely recognized that circuit courts lack discretion to modify sentences previously imposed pursuant to plea agreements. See State v. Howell,
Thus, where a defendant has enjoyed the benefits of a plea bargain, Florida courts have, not surprisingly, consistently refused to relieve the defendant of his or her burden under the contract. See Carson,
[t]o allow [a defendant] to accept the benefits of a plea bargain, and then years later collaterally attack his own negotiated sentence, would seriously compromise finality, discourage the use of negotiated pleas in the trial courts, deplete judicial resources, and “discourage the state from entering into future plea bargains with other defendants.”
Carson,
With regard to the circuit court, while it is true that “ordinarily a contract cannot bind one who is not a party thereto or [who] has not in some fashion agreed to accept its terms,” CH2M Hill S.E., Inc. v. Pinellas Cnty.,
Accordingly, it was an abuse of judicial power resulting in a gross miscarriage of justice for the circuit court to accept the negotiated plea, which included LaFave’s commitment to not seek early termination of probation in exchange for the State’s agreement to a downward departure sentence, and then later grant her motion for early termination. Permitting the circuit court to go behind the terms of the plea agreement would undermine the public trust and confidence in the judicial branch.
ii. The State was not prohibited from using the “no early termination” provision in the negotiated plea agreement.
LaFave contends that this court’s case law specifically prohibits the use of “no early termination” provisions in plea bargains because such provisions divest the Department of Corrections (DOC) of its authority to recommend early termination pursuant to section 948.04(3) and such provisions prevent future courts from exercising discretion to discharge defendants pursuant to section 948.05. See, e.g., Murphy v. State,
iii. LaFave is bound by the “no early termination” provision of her negotiated plea agreement.
LaFave argues that sections 948.04(3) and 948.05 specifically preclude “no early termination” provisions from being binding, citing Clark v. State,
Furthermore, in Carson, the defendant was placed on drug offender probation pursuant to a negotiated plea, despite the fact that he would not have qualified for that type of probation had he gone to trial and been convicted.
May a court lawfully impose a negotiated sentence that does not exceed the statutory maximum term, but includes terms that the court could not otherwise impose on a defendant without his acquiescence? We think that a trial court has that authority, and we think that the State and the defendant can agree to such terms. Thus, a defendant cannot later collaterally attack his own negotiated sentence.
Id. at 887.
Applying Carson to the facts of this case demonstrates that the State’s inclusion of the “no early termination” provision did not violate sections 948.04(3) and 948.05. Rather, the right to seek early termination was a specific right that LaFave chose to waive in return for a very favorable downward departure sentence that allowed her to avoid going to prison for more than fifteen years. The fact that the circuit court could not have imposed such a condition if LaFave had been convicted after trial or had entered an open plea does not affect the enforceability of the terms of the plea bargain to which she agreed. See Carson,
iv. The “no early termination” provision does not violate the doctrine of separation of powers.
The “no early termination” provision is not unconstitutional because it did not divest DOC of its ability to recommend early termination pursuant to section 948.04(3). In fact, in this case, DOC expressly recommended against early termination. See Arriaga,
The issue in this case is not whether a trial court may interfere with the functions of the executive branch (of which the state attorney is a part), but rather, the issue is whether a party may contract away certain rights. While a non-party to a contract may retain certain rights, if that nonparty’s actions frustrate the contracting parties’ intent, courts will act to effectuate the parties’ intent. See, e.g., Hashem v. State,
III. Conclusion
Accordingly, we grant the State’s petition for writ of certiorari, quash the order of the circuit court, and remand with instructions that LaFave’s probation be reinstated pursuant to the terms and conditions of her negotiated plea agreement and original sentence in this case.
Petition granted; order quashed; question certified.
Notes
. Prior to Jones and Pettis, this court and others have permitted the state to seek certio-rari review where the state has not had a means for appellate review pursuant to statute. See, e.g., State v. Gibson,
Also subsequent to Jones and Pettis, the Fifth District acknowledged that certiorari review is available to review nonappealable orders in criminal cases in limited circumstances. See Rogers v. State,
. In so holding, we note that there are two cases from the Third District that are in conflict with our view that an absence of a right to appeal an order does not automatically preclude the possibility of certiorari review. State v. Jordan,
. Garcia,
