OPINION .
Appellant pled guilty to one count of theft of property having a value of more than $100 but less than $250, a class 6 open-ended offense, and was placed on three years’ probation. After petitioner admitted to violating two of the conditions of his probation, he was continued on probation with additional conditions, including that he not have any personal contact with his wife, his codefendant, without the prior written consent of his probation officer. Appellant timely appealed from the disposition order. For the reasons stated below, we affirm.
Appellant contends that the trial court committed reversible error by imposing the additional condition that he not have contact with his wife without the written permission of his probation officer, arguing that the condition results in a violation of his fundamental right to privacy in his marital relations and is not reasonably related to his rehabilitation. He contends that strict scrutiny is required when determining whether the conditions of probation are constitutionally permissible where the condition impinges on a fundamental right and that the condition here does not withstand such scrutiny, particularly because there are less restrictive alternatives.
The state contends that appellant waived any objection to the condition by failing to raise it below, citing
State v. Mears,
Nor do we find that, as appellant contends, the imposition of the condition constituted fundamental error which may not be waived. In
State v. Montgomery,
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that the defendant would submit to the search and seizure of his person or his property at any time by a police officer or a probation officer without a search warrant. Noting that the probationer’s expectations of privacy are less than those of other citizens, the court found that the condition did not constitute “an unreasonable or an unconstitutional limitation upon his right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures.”
The condition in this case is not an unconstitutional violation of appellant’s right to privacy. Appellant and his wife are both required to attend counseling and they will, therefore, be permitted to interact with one another, albeit it in a controlled environment. By requiring that they seek the probation officer’s consent before having personal contact, defined by the trial court as “being in the physical presence of your spouse,” the contact will also be controlled, a goal which the record reveals is reasonable under the circumstances.
Finally, the record amply supports the trial court’s apparent conclusion that separating appellant and his wife for a period of time and limiting their contact to counseling sessions, telephone conversations, and visits within the discretion of the probation officer, serves a rehabilitative purpose. As discussed above, appellant’s trial counsel conceded at the disposition hearing that separation of the two was beneficial to appellant’s rehabilitation. We find no fundamental error in the imposition of this condition.
Affirmed.
