¶ 1.
Defendant Jeremy Lucas appeals a trial court order finding him in violation of a probation condition, imposed as *241 part of a deferred-sentencing agreement, requiring prior approval from a probation officer before he changed his residence. Defendant argues that because his probation conditions included two inconsistent provisions governing his choice of residence, he did not have adequate notice that his conduct would violate the conditions of his probation. Defendant also argues that the condition in question contained an overly broad delegation of authority to his probation officer, and that the trial court abused its discretion in revoking his deferred sentence because the violation was minor and the probation officer ultimately approved the place to which he had moved. We affirm.
¶ 2. In August 2013, pursuant to a deferred-sentencing agreement, 13 V.S.A. § 7041, defendant pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of disseminating indecent material to a minor, id. § 2802(a)(1). The charge arose from an incident in which defendant sent a photograph of his genitals by text message to two minors, between thirteen and fifteen years old, and received a picture of one of the minor’s breasts. Defendant entered his plea following a competency evaluation, in which defendant was found competent.
¶ 3. The court accepted defendant’s plea, entered a judgment of guilty, deferred defendant’s sentence for two years, and issued a probation order. The probation conditions imposed by the court included what the court referred to as “standard conditions A-P inclusive.” Condition G provided, “If you change your address or move, you must tell your probation officer within two days.” (Emphasis added.) In addition, the court imposed what it referred to as “special sex offender conditions,” which appeared on an attached form produced by the Department of Corrections listing other conditions, which could be checked off if applicable. The final checked box on this attached form stated, “You shall reside/work where your Probation Officer or designee approves. You shall not change your residence/employment withmit the prior permission of your Probation Officer or designee.” (Emphasis added.) During the plea-entry hearing, the trial court outlined some, but not all, of the special conditions of probation to which defendant was subject. The court asked defendant if he understood these conditions. The court did not specifically discuss either residence condition with defendant.
¶ 4. On October 23, 2013, the State filed a probation-violation complaint, alleging that defendant had violated the requirement that he not change his residence without the prior permission of
*242
his probation officer. Before the merits hearing on the probation-violation complaint, defendant moved to dismiss the complaint and strike the residency condition. In support of his motion, defendant argued that under
State v. Freeman,
¶ 5. The undisputed testimony at the probation-violation hearing reflects the following. On October 3, 2013, defendant’s mother telephoned defendant’s probation officer, and left a message asking the probation officer to return her call. The probation officer returned the call, but did not reach defendant’s mother. The following day, defendant’s mother left the probation officer another message informing the officer that defendant had moved from his previous residence to her home. Defendant’s mother testified that she had her son move to her home because she believed that his former residence, which was located near a preschool, two churches, and a school, was not a safe environment given his probation conditions. The probation officer investigated defendant’s new residence with his mother and subsequently approved it. The evidence at the hearing confirmed that defendant had moved to his mother’s home before his probation officer approved the new residence.
¶ 6. Following the hearing, the trial court denied defendant’s motion to dismiss the complaint on the ground that defendant was “ ‘barred from raising a collateral challenge to a probation condition that he was charged with violating, where the challenge could have been raised on direct appeal.’ ”
State v. Amidon,
2010 VT 46A, ¶ 9,
¶ 7. On appeal, defendant first argues that because his probation order contained two conflicting conditions relating to his residence — one requiring prior approval before he moved and one requiring only notification to his probation officer within two days of moving — the order did not provide him adequate notice that his conduct, which complied with one of the two conditions, would constitute a violation. The State argues that because defendant is raising this argument for the first time on appeal, we should not reach the merits of the argument. The State further argues that defendant’s challenge constitutes an impermissible collateral challenge to the probation condition.
¶ 8. We agree with defendant that a challenge to a probation condition based upon lack of notice that the condition prohibits conduct alleged to constitute a violation is not an impermissible collateral challenge to the condition. As we have explained, “To be charged with violating probation, a defendant must have notice before the initiation of a probation revocation proceeding of what circumstances will constitute a violation of probation.”
State v. Sanville,
¶ 9. We agree with the State, however, that defendant did not raise an argument related to lack of fair notice or any argument arising from the asserted conflict in the probation conditions regarding his residence before the trial court at the revocation hearing. “It is the established rule in this jurisdiction not to consider questions that have not been raised below.”
State v. Welch,
¶ 10. We conclude that on this record the trial court’s enforcement of the more restrictive of the two residence-related conditions did not rise to the level of plain error. Assuming without deciding that the conditions at issue are objectively inconsistent and fail to give fair notice, there is no evidence in the record that this defendant was confused about his obligations or misled by the conditions. This is not an extraordinary situation where the error, if any, results in a miscarriage of justice. *
¶ 11. Next, defendant argues that the condition requiring prior approval of his relocation is unduly restrictive of his liberty, and an overly broad delegation of authority to defendant’s probation officer, given our holding in
State v. Freeman,
¶ 12. We revisited
Freeman
recently in the case of
State v. Campbell,
*245 ¶ 13. This understanding of our holding in Freeman, and now Campbell, informs our analysis of the State’s waiver argument. Relying on Freeman, defendant cannot argue that, on its face, the broad probation condition is necessarily unconstitutional, amounting to plain error. Instead, he is necessarily arguing that the broad condition was imposed without the necessary findings to support such a condition.
¶ 14. The conditions in this case were imposed pursuant to a deferred-sentencing agreement. The trial court did not hold a trial on the merits of the underlying charges, and did not have the benefit of evidence at a sentencing hearing. By entering into the plea agreement for a deferred sentence, defendant gave up the chance to obtain factual findings from the trial court to support the broad condition. He then failed to appeal the ensuing deferred sentence and conditions. Defendant has essentially given up the opportunity to challenge the adequacy of the trial court’s findings in support of the otherwise overly broad condition. Under these circumstances, we conclude that the trial court did not err in declining to entertain defendant’s challenge to the enforcement of the condition requiring preapproval of his residence. A
Freeman-style
challenge to the adequacy of the court’s findings in support of a probation condition cannot be raised by collateral attack. See
Austin,
¶ 15. Finally, defendant argues that because he promptly notified his probation officer of his relocation, and because his residence with his mother was subsequently approved, any violation of his probation conditions was de minimis and could not support imposition of his sentence.
¶ 16. As we have said, “[decisions regarding probation status are entrusted to the sound discretion of the trial court.”
State v. Nolen,
¶ 17. The State’s decision to pursue this particular violation even though defendant’s mother promptly notified defendant’s probation officer of his move to her home, and even though her home proved to be an acceptable residence for defendant, had profound consequences for defendant. But we cannot conclude that the trial court abused its discretion in finding a violation of probation and revoking defendant’s deferred sentence. Here, after hearing testimony from defendant’s probation officers, the court concluded that defendant had been informed as to the conditions of his probation, that he signed the conditions, and that he changed residences without the prior approval of his probation officer in violation of the special condition. The court went on to find that the residence-approval condition had been imposed specifically because defendant was convicted for a sex-related offense and that defendant could have called his probation officer and received permission before moving. Given its reasoning, the trial court’s conclusion that defendant violated the conditions of his deferred-sentence probation and its decision to impose sentence were within its discretion.
Affirmed.
Notes
We do not reach the question of whether, if defendant had properly raised his argument at the revocation hearing, he would prevail in his contention that the disparate conditions regulating the same general subject matter create confusion that undermines defendant’s fair notice of his obligations under the probation order.
