Sven Pete TIITSMAN, Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
Harold BLACK, Warden, Respondent-Appellee.
No. 75-1682.
United States Court of Appeals,
Sixth Circuit.
Argued Dec. 1, 1975.
Decided June 10, 1976.
Nicholas J. Pantel, Cincinnati, Ohio (Court-appointed), for petitioner-appellant.
Edward W. Hancock, Atty. Gen. of Kentucky, Raymond M. Larson, Frankfort, Ky., for respondent-appellee.
Before PHILLIPS, Chief Judge, and EDWARDS and PECK, Circuit Judges.
PECK, Circuit Judge.
Petitioner-appellant appeals from the district court's denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. We affirm.
Appellant on November 17, 1972, pleaded guilty in state court to receiving two pistols knowing them to have been stolen, and was sentenced to five years' imprisonment. Appellant, however, immediately moved the court "to withhold rendition of the judgment" (probation), which the court granted, in appellant's absence, on February 8, 1973,1 "on the condition that (appellant) remain on his good behavior and refrain from further trouble for a period of five years." On February 20, 1973, appellant was arrested and charged with grand larceny auto and possession of stolen property; appellant on May 1, 1973, pleaded guilty to the misdemeanor of being an accessory after the fact of grand larceny auto. On May 7, 1973, the commonwealth filed its motion to revoke probation, citing the arrest and charges, and on July 25, 1973, the state court granted the commonwealth's motion, committing appellant to five years' imprisonment.2 Though accepting appellant's claim that he was unaware that he had been placed on probation, and necessarily the conditions thereof, the state court of appeals sustained the revocation of probation.
"(W)e cannot accede to appellant's view that his subsequent commission of crime must be ignored . . . in a revocation hearing. Every person on probation or who has a motion for probation pending must be charged with knowledge that subsequent criminal behavior may have some bearing on his probation or his motion for probation. . . . (Appellant's) knowledge of whether his motion for probation had been sustained or was still pending was immaterial for in either event the court had every right to consider his subsequent criminal behavior in determining on the one hand whether to grant the probation or on the other whether to revoke it if it had already been granted."
Appellant thereafter filed the instant petition for a writ of habeas corpus, claiming that the revocation deprived him of his "conditional liberty" of probation, see Gagnon v. Scarpelli,
"(E)ven if he may not have had direct knowledge that he was on probation, any reasonable person should recognize that punishable criminal conduct could not be excused. It would . . . (elevate) formality over common sense, if probation could not be revoked in such a case for the commission of a crime merely because no one specifically admonished him not to commit a crime . . . ."
On appeal, appellant claims that the district court should have granted habeas corpus relief because placing him on probation in his absence violated due process. Alternatively, but only implicitly, appellant claims that, assuming he was constitutionally placed on probation, revoking his probation for subsequent criminal activity violated due process where he was informed of neither his probation nor the conditions thereof.
Axiomatically, federal habeas corpus relief is available to appellant "only on the ground that he is in custody in violation of the Constitution or laws or treaties of the United States." 28 U.S.C. § 2254(a) (1970); Rose v. Hodges,
Assuming, without deciding, that placing appellant on probation, in absentia, was constitutionally invalid,4 appellant would still be constitutionally in custody pursuant to the five-year sentence imposed on November 17, 1972. Cf. Gaddis v. United States,
Alternatively, assuming that appellant was properly placed on probation, we observe that state and lower federal courts have wide discretion in revoking probation. See, e. g., United States v. Shapiro,
Even if appellant were uninformed of his probationary status and the conditions thereof, we find no gross abuse of discretion "reach(ing) constitutional magnitude." The Supreme Court has established that the issue in probation revocation is
"whether the court is satisfied that its action will subserve the ends of justice and the best interests of both the public and the defendant. . . .
"The duty placed upon the probation officer to furnish to each probationer under his supervision 'a written statement of the conditions of probation' . . . cannot be deemed to restrict the court's discretion in modifying the terms of probation or in revoking it. . . .
"The question is simply whether there has been an abuse of discretion and is to be determined in accordance with familiar principles governing the exercise of judicial discretion." Burns v. United States,
Davis v. Parker,
"The contentions of petitioner rest principally upon a misconception of the power of the Court to revoke probation . . . . Petitioner assumes that the Court may only revoke probation for acts done by petitioner while he was knowingly on probation. But the power to revoke probation is not so circumscribed. . . .
"(P)robation may be revoked for cause if a court is satisfied after a hearing that a defendant's conduct has been such that the ends of justice and the interest of society and the defendant will be served by the revocation. It is not a prerequisite to such a revocation that the conditions of probation be actually operative at the time . . . or for a defendant to know that he is on probation. The mere failure of a defendant to receive notice of the actual commencement of probation does not prevent a court from revoking his probation for good cause."
Courts have often sustained the revocation of probation for criminal activity committed prior to defendants going on probation even though the defendant, not yet being on probation, could not technically violate a condition of probation. See, e. g., United States v. Ross,
In sustaining the revocation against constitutional challenge, we do not imply that probation may be constitutionally revoked for violating any condition of probation regardless of whether the probationer has had notice of his probationary status and of the conditions thereof. Where an act or omission, otherwise lawful, is reprehensible only because it violates a condition of probation, such as failing to report "arrests" (Douglas v. Buder,
Affirmed.
Notes
Originally, the state court was to have ruled on the motion on January 11, 1973, but because appellant was then absent delayed its ruling until February 8, 1973. Appellant's attorney was present in court on both January 11 and February 8
The state court earlier (on June 22, 1973) had sustained the motion to revoke, but four days later vacated that order because appellant had not been afforded procedural due process prior to revocation. See Gagnon v. Scarpelli,
The district court had earlier rejected the petition, but in doing so relied, in part, on erroneous state court records reflecting that appellant was present in court on February 8, 1973. This court vacated the denial and remanded; the district court thereafter considered the petition on corrected state court records reflecting that appellant was not present on February 8
To hold that placing appellant on probation, in absentia, was constitutionally invalid, we would have to find that the court was thereby sentencing him rather than "reducing" the earlier imposed five-year committed sentence, compare United States v. Behrens,
